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The wife doesn't mention marijuana in that link but does say:
The younger Dear was raised Baptist, Ross told the New York Times. She said he was not a regular church goer, but he was religious.
'He believed wholeheartedly in the Bible,' she said, adding that he was never fixated on the book.
'That's what he always said, he read it cover to cover to cover.'
I believe in the sanctity of the lives of real live people who are here now, living and breathing, on this planet. You should be asking that question of the pro-lifer (HA! what a joke that term is) who took three lives in the PP facility. It's patently obvious he doesn't believe in the sanctity of life.
I believe in the sanctity of the lives of real live people who are here now, living and breathing, on this planet. You should be asking that question of the pro-lifer (HA! what a joke that term is) who took three lives in the PP facility. It's patently obvious he doesn't believe in the sanctity of life.
The three dead are a military wife and mother of two, an Iraqi War vet and father of two, and a police officer and father of two, Yet the right still wants to downplay it.
I watched CNN this morning and saw a round table on State of the Union with Donna Brazile, S.E. Cupp and two others (Sean Spicer, a higher up on the RNC and Bakari Sellers) and there was an interesting point made by Sellers, that the problem is the rhetoric being used. For the right to talk about the rhetoric is to admit guilt about doing it. The problem is the far right wants this kind of rhetoric. Look at what you've seen at your garden variety Tea Party rally from several years ago, need I say more?
What's the matter? You don't like that the supposed "pro-life" murderer obviously doesn't believe in the sanctity of life? I don't blame you. Blatant hypocrisy is hard to admit.
I watched CNN this morning and saw a round table on State of the Union with Donna Brazile, S.E. Cupp and two others (Sean Spicer, a higher up on the RNC and Bakari Sellers) and there was an interesting point made by Sellers, that the problem is the rhetoric being used. For the right to talk about the rhetoric is to admit guilt about doing it. The problem is the far right wants this kind of rhetoric. Look at what you've seen at your garden variety Tea Party rally from several years ago, need I say more?
Maybe he wasn't a right-wing extremist, as Ted Cruz pointed out. See picture:
Maybe he wasn't a right-wing extremist, as Ted Cruz pointed out. See picture:
Never seen a woman with the name Robert though...
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