Imgreatagain » 30 Jun 2023, 3:47 pm » wrote: ↑ Damn. .. I was hoping for a DMD offering mike.
[sighs]
omg. I’ve got to check my posts better before posting.
Imgreatagain » 30 Jun 2023, 4:01 pm » wrote: ↑ omg. I’ve got to check my posts better before posting.
just forget what I said.
And I promise I haven’t been drinking. Lol
Freudian slip. Nothing to see here.
Imgreatagain » 30 Jun 2023, 4:14 pm » wrote: ↑ Freudian slip. Nothing to see here.
It was a mistake.
my guess, it is Don't Mind Me
Something tells me you know.
that would be DMM
here is what happened, my brain was wanting to say something else, but my social intellect made me change it. Damn My Democracy.
that’s not true at all . They go to medical school. Idk why people think so poorly of dentistsNostradamus'omh » 30 Jun 2023, 5:22 pm » wrote: ↑ here is what happened, my brain was wanting to say something else, but my social intellect made me change it. Damn My Democracy.
I tried being polite and that messed me up. Didn't think dentists were MD's, since they really didn't do the whole medical school thing. Kind of like chiropractors.
Go to bed. LOLOLOL
She was the daughter of a water plant employee and a secretary at Spiegel’s raised in the South side of Chicago. She graduated Harvard Law, had two beautiful daughters, and became America’s First Lady for eight years.roadkill » 30 Jun 2023, 3:30 pm » wrote: ↑ "Douglas Murray Uses Michelle Obama's Own Words to Rip Her to Shreds"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hsEf6v19II
My God you are an idiot......voted for someone because of their skin color. You've got a Biden brain.Bruce » 30 Jun 2023, 5:44 pm » wrote: ↑ She was the daughter of a water plant employee and a secretary at Spiegel’s raised in the South side of Chicago. She graduated Harvard Law, had two beautiful daughters, and became America’s First Lady for eight years.
Here is what she said, verbatim:
Mrs. Obama’s Statement:
Back in college, I was one of the few Black students on my campus, and I was proud of getting into such a respected school. I knew I’d worked hard for it. But still, I sometimes wondered if people thought I got there because of affirmative action. It was a shadow that students like me couldn’t shake, whether those doubts came from the outside or inside our own minds.But the fact is this: I belonged. And semester after semester, decade after decade, for more than half a century, countless students like me showed they belonged, too. It wasn’t just the kids of color who benefitted, either. Every student who heard a perspective they might not have encountered, who had an assumption challenged, who had their minds and their hearts opened gained a lot as well. It wasn’t perfect, but there’s no doubt that it helped offer new ladders of opportunity for those who, throughout our history, have too often been denied a chance to show how fast they can climb.
Of course, students on my campus and countless others across the country were — and continue to be — granted special consideration for admissions. Some have parents who graduated from the same school. Others have families who can afford coaches to help them run faster or hit a ball harder. Others go to high schools with lavish resources for tutors and extensive standardized test prep that help them score higher on college entrance exams. We don’t usually question if those students belong. So often, we just accept that money, power, and privilege are perfectly justifiable forms of affirmative action, while kids growing up like I did are expected to compete when the ground is anything but level.
So today, my heart breaks for any young person out there who’s wondering what their future holds — and what kinds of chances will be open to them. And while I know the strength and grit that lies inside kids who have always had to sweat a little more to climb the same ladders, I hope and I pray that the rest of us are willing to sweat a little, too. Today is a reminder that we’ve got to do the work not just to enact policies that reflect our values of equity and fairness, but to truly make those values real in all of our schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods.
I’m proud to have voted twice for her husband.
And so sorry, we can’t have him back.
A liar and **** speaker with a resentful wife. Ugly kids too.Bruce » 30 Jun 2023, 5:44 pm » wrote: ↑ She was the daughter of a water plant employee and a secretary at Spiegel’s raised in the South side of Chicago. She graduated Harvard Law, had two beautiful daughters, and became America’s First Lady for eight years.
Here is what she said, verbatim:
Mrs. Obama’s Statement:
Back in college, I was one of the few Black students on my campus, and I was proud of getting into such a respected school. I knew I’d worked hard for it. But still, I sometimes wondered if people thought I got there because of affirmative action. It was a shadow that students like me couldn’t shake, whether those doubts came from the outside or inside our own minds.But the fact is this: I belonged. And semester after semester, decade after decade, for more than half a century, countless students like me showed they belonged, too. It wasn’t just the kids of color who benefitted, either. Every student who heard a perspective they might not have encountered, who had an assumption challenged, who had their minds and their hearts opened gained a lot as well. It wasn’t perfect, but there’s no doubt that it helped offer new ladders of opportunity for those who, throughout our history, have too often been denied a chance to show how fast they can climb.
Of course, students on my campus and countless others across the country were — and continue to be — granted special consideration for admissions. Some have parents who graduated from the same school. Others have families who can afford coaches to help them run faster or hit a ball harder. Others go to high schools with lavish resources for tutors and extensive standardized test prep that help them score higher on college entrance exams. We don’t usually question if those students belong. So often, we just accept that money, power, and privilege are perfectly justifiable forms of affirmative action, while kids growing up like I did are expected to compete when the ground is anything but level.
So today, my heart breaks for any young person out there who’s wondering what their future holds — and what kinds of chances will be open to them. And while I know the strength and grit that lies inside kids who have always had to sweat a little more to climb the same ladders, I hope and I pray that the rest of us are willing to sweat a little, too. Today is a reminder that we’ve got to do the work not just to enact policies that reflect our values of equity and fairness, but to truly make those values real in all of our schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods.
I’m proud to have voted twice for her husband.
And so sorry, we can’t have him back.
He had a mouthful of white teeth, like a piano.DeezerShoove » 30 Jun 2023, 6:06 pm » wrote: ↑ A liar and **** speaker with a resentful wife. Ugly kids too.
Bruce » 30 Jun 2023, 5:44 pm » wrote: ↑ She was the daughter of a water plant employee and a secretary at Spiegel’s raised in the South side of Chicago. She graduated Harvard Law, had two beautiful daughters, and became America’s First Lady for eight years.
Here is what she said, verbatim:
Mrs. Obama’s Statement:
Back in college, I was one of the few Black students on my campus, and I was proud of getting into such a respected school. I knew I’d worked hard for it. But still, I sometimes wondered if people thought I got there because of affirmative action. It was a shadow that students like me couldn’t shake, whether those doubts came from the outside or inside our own minds.But the fact is this: I belonged. And semester after semester, decade after decade, for more than half a century, countless students like me showed they belonged, too. It wasn’t just the kids of color who benefitted, either. Every student who heard a perspective they might not have encountered, who had an assumption challenged, who had their minds and their hearts opened gained a lot as well. It wasn’t perfect, but there’s no doubt that it helped offer new ladders of opportunity for those who, throughout our history, have too often been denied a chance to show how fast they can climb.
Of course, students on my campus and countless others across the country were — and continue to be — granted special consideration for admissions. Some have parents who graduated from the same school. Others have families who can afford coaches to help them run faster or hit a ball harder. Others go to high schools with lavish resources for tutors and extensive standardized test prep that help them score higher on college entrance exams. We don’t usually question if those students belong. So often, we just accept that money, power, and privilege are perfectly justifiable forms of affirmative action, while kids growing up like I did are expected to compete when the ground is anything but level.
So today, my heart breaks for any young person out there who’s wondering what their future holds — and what kinds of chances will be open to them. And while I know the strength and grit that lies inside kids who have always had to sweat a little more to climb the same ladders, I hope and I pray that the rest of us are willing to sweat a little, too. Today is a reminder that we’ve got to do the work not just to enact policies that reflect our values of equity and fairness, but to truly make those values real in all of our schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods.
I’m proud to have voted twice for her husband.
And so sorry, we can’t have him back.