I Want To Punch MAGA Supporters In The Face…

But I don’t

The Spanish Inquisition
3 min readAug 25, 2022
Photo by Natilyn Hicks (Natilyn Photography) on Unsplash

There are days when I want to punch Trump supporters in the face, but I don’t. Why? Because I’m a man of refined taste and civility. I’m smart and kind. In fact, I consider myself a liberal.

Trump continued by saying that he’s also prepared to “take a stand to be fair to both sides — not just the left.” He also said that he believes that President Donald Trump’s comments were unfair to women and women’s rights because they are “wrong on so many levels.”

“There is no room to move ahead in the fight against Islamophobia and bigotry. There remains to be found and clear-headed leadership among many men who agree that a president should respect all people,” he said. “But for men and women who believe women should be free to be a part of society through peaceful transition and to embrace their beliefs, it would be inappropriate.”

The president-elect’s comment was the latest in a long list of comments from last week, which included several examples of men who said they would accept a change to law enforcement if the FBI gave some women a job. Those comments prompted a national backlash. The Justice Department, responding to the comments, has been investigating that one as well.

Former FBI Director James Comey warned in March that the agency will not continue to fight for “political reasons,” rather than “the law.” That means there are “no clear-cut guidelines regarding workplace violence against women in the workplace and for sexual advances.

We would ask you to come in and see if there is any clear policy position on this issue,” says Mr. Leach.

Mr. Leach’s government won a majority of three seats and secured nearly half of what was needed. The government has long been criticized for its policies on the issue (including controversial new laws which banned discrimination against gay or bisexual people), but Mr. Leach is a far more conservative figure, with less than two years until parliament is back in session.

A spokeswoman for his Office of Public Works said that there was also no clear standard around what was being said.” There are many factors at play here and many people in this government may find it difficult to follow the line that’s been laid out for many months in the Queen’s Speech,” says Kathleen McVeigh, the spokeswoman for Mr. Leach’s Office of Public Works. What matters, she says, is that “both sides agree” about what is being said (in public and at the stately offices of the state government).

This is a tough issue, says Ms. McVeigh, with many people “still fighting to know what’s being told”.” This is a debate over different positions in government — the right line, not necessarily on what should come out of it,” she says. ”There are some people who are very scary.”

This is satire and fake.

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