The official COVID-19/Coronavirus Discussion Thread...aka I hope I don't get the Rona

For years, my wife been asking me why am I so obsessed with weapons and ammo

My answer was always "in case these mf'er start trippin"

Needless to say, watching all this dumb sit, I feel vindicated



Living in MI there has been a tension in the air for as long as I can remember. Like a hold over from the riots. The whites here been waiting for an excuse to pop off.

My brothers and sisters, pay attention to these nut jobs and arm yourself accordingly. We might have to take a page from ol' granddaddy and grandma playbook when they came up in the south. They kept some heat for anybody who wanted some.
 


The pastors wanting money is one thing.
But followers that go is another type of thinking.
Arrogance, selfishness, ignorance, defiance, idiocy, all the above?
It's extremely poor behavior to think your faith is superior to something it clearly isn't right now.
 
It’s crazy because

Trump is the swamp.
Does not care about veterans
Does not care about healthcare
Does not buy American
Does not hire American


And all that information is readily available





Jokes wrote themselves
 
Republicans do not believe in Science

Alot of them do, but sometimes its gets in the way of big bizness. So they say fuck it.

Or the big corporations who are doin the polluting have big lobbies that pay them off. Basically bribery
 


How Some Rich Americans Are Getting Stimulus ‘Checks’ Averaging $1.7 Million

A $1.7 million stimulus check?

While wealthy Americans are not eligible for the comparatively measly $1,200 stimulus checks that are now being disbursed to many Americans, they are on pace to do even better. 43,000 taxpayers, who earn more than $1 million annually, are each set to receive a $1.7 million windfall, on average, thanks to a provision buried in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.

You may or may not be surprised that some of the language conveniently inserted into the $2.2 trillion-dollar Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES) skews heavily in favor of the wealthy. The provision doling out literally millions of dollars is aimed at a limitation that was created in 2017 when Republicans overhauled the tax code. It “temporarily suspends a limitation on how much owners of businesses formed as “pass-through” entities can deduct against their non-business income, such as capital gains, to reduce their tax liability,” according to The Washington Post

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