Appreciate your thoughts, though I think there is a disconnect somewhere. I asked people to let me know how I could help and heard very little back regarding Pella stuff. As for this, it certainly isn't "wonderful" anyone will see this stuff, I hope I didn't insinuate that it was. Regardless, thanks for the feedback.
McConnell voted against the Respect for Marriage Act. So she didn't even align with him on this! You are right about Rep. Steve King. Your final paragraph is well stated too! Thanks for contributing to the discussion!
Miller-Meeks has a history of being anti-Trump. She called him a "liar" and "corrupt" in 2016. She was one of only 35 Republicanns who voted for it. And President Trump said those were "35 wayward Republicans." Trump called them "ineffective and weak." She said she voted in support of the commission as a sign of support for Capitol Police.
Not necessarily true. If you look, in October the individual got into trouble. And then in January got into trouble again and the request for leniency was denied because of the October incident. The individual never should have been released but was released because he was "transitioning" to a girl.
Mark, Christopher Wright's articles are opinions. We aren't dividing the country -- the insane liberal policies pushed by Democrats are. There is bias in all media. People wouldn't be political reporters if they didn't care about politics. And they wouldn't care about politics if they didn't care about politics -- meaning they have a "horse in the race." Media outlets just need to be honest about their own worldview and allow readers to know that is the perspective from which they are writing. Nonetheless, you are welcome to submit letters to the editor or your own opinion any time --...
Thanks for the comment! I don't think "perfect" is the right word...but I do think people should have some issues that are "non-negotiable." And those issues are likely different for everyone. So, for instance, one of mine would be the life issue. If you don't get life right, your policy on education doesn't matter because most kids don't get a first day of school. Policy on economics doesn't matter because they don't get a first job, buy a first home, drive a first car, etc... I agree with the sentiment of the second paragraph, but in practice it isn't practical...