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There seems to be a correlation. My friend who worked and lived in Saudi Arabia lived on a compound for expats. It was a nice place and the elementary school was off the compound but right across the street from the compound. They all drove their kids to school even though it was just across the street. Why you might be asking yourselves? Well, there were Saudi men waiting just off the school grounds that would sexually abuse the boys and the girls. I was shocked but he swore it was true. mspart
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Doing hard work, that allows plenty of time to post on internet forums?
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Crooked Bill and Hillary are worth $250,000,000 I think they’ll be ok
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Or rv could find them a 60 hr/wk part time job.
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I'm sure they have other sources of income. mspart
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When you believe news sources that have been shown to continually and maliciously falsify their reports for a political advantage, I'd say the degree of gullibility on your part out weighs most of the free world. Israel has shipped 1.3 million tons of aid. Where is that aid? What happened to it? Apparently the Gazans are not eating it because they are starving. What say you? mspart
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Maybe they could move in with Chelsea.
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Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is facing an ethical complaint from a government watchdog group calling on the Arkansas state bar to probe whether Clinton’s involvement in the Russia investigation into President Trump should affect her ability to practice law in the state. Pretty sure Bill lost his license to practice law in Arkansas quite some time ago. What will they do for income if they can't work? Maybe a gofundme?
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If there’s real famine going on in Gaza then why do they keep using fake pictures to show it?
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I have no doubt there is starvation in Gaza. Why is Hamas not feeding them or arranging to feed them. You would think this would be the top consideration for them. But I heard a top Hamas official a year or two ago asked a similar question and he said that the Palestinians are not Hamas's responsibility, they are the UN's responsibility. https://cis.org/Rush/Hamas-Official-Protecting-Civilians-Gaza-UN-Refugee-Agencies-Funded-US mspart
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That is just so crazy ..... It just might work!!!!! mspart
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sorry to Martin Cosgrove - not a great spell chjekker
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I’ll bet they’d figure out how to do math using numbers if you took away their gov’t checks.
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From the posted new roster for Penn (https://pennathletics.com/sports/wrestling/roster), it looks like Max Gallagher may be out this year and Davis Motyka (greyshirt last year?) may be available at 125 with freshman eligibility. Also, looks like Kaya Sement is back this year - a regular starter two years ago and was not in action last year. Finally, it looks like Alex Almeyda is back at 133 - not sure if he was available last year or burned a year of eligibility? He is listed as a junior but not sure what that tells us in terms of NCAA or Ivy eligibility. With Martin Cosgrove, at least four new faces in the lineup. Not too sure how it will get sorted - plenty of questions in the upper weights particularly and no idea at 174. Maybe: Motyka, Almeyda, Composto, Wasilewski, Swisher, Sement, 174?, Taylor, Coisgrove, Pardo Somebody smarter tell me what might happen at 174 for the Quakers?
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The lady asks a good question in that video. What is the motivation for the police to record crimes as lesser crimes? The answer is crazy. Effectively they are falsifying official records which in DC (and everywhere else I'm sure) is a crime. mspart
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You are the most gullible man alive.
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Blatant propaganda. This happens because Israel severely limits the amount of trucks that are allowed to enter the strip, purposefully limiting the amount of aid that actually makes it into Gaza. Half their cabinet gets on TV and says they shouldn't be allowing any aid into Gaza at all. The other half says they should, but only the bare minimum to avoid the charge of genocide and famine. That is the official Israeli policy. https://www.nbcnews.com/world/middle-east/gaza-food-starvation-aid-distribution-israel-rcna221225 Aid agencies say they would like to deliver aid, but that Israel has riddled the process with delays and denials, changing schedules and routes, sometimes at the last minute, making it difficult or impossible to safely retrieve the aid for distribution. Half of the 138 requests the World Food Programme made in the last week to collect aid from holding sites were denied, the agency said Friday. Even after being approved to load the aid, the WFP said, “convoys are typically delayed” and take as much as 46 hours before receiving the final approval to travel along the strip. Israel has long maintained that the restrictions are in place to prevent Hamas from stealing the food, though an internal U.S. government analysis [conducted by Trump administration] found no evidence of systematic theft of the supplies by Hamas over the past 20 months. Additionally, OCHA, the UN's humanitarian agency, has likewise not seen signs of Hamas diverting aid, and WFP has also previously told NBC News they have not seen evidence of aid diversion. WFP on Friday said it had 300 trucks of aid waiting to be distributed inside Gaza, and UNRWA, the U.N.’s humanitarian agency for Palestinians, said it had about 6,000 aid trucks in Jordan and Egypt also waiting to be approved.
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The U20 men’s freestyle tournament concluded on Wednesday afternoon, and what a tournament it was! The American squad had mathematically locked up the team title on Tuesday after medals were won by Luke Stanich (gold), Will Henckel (silver), and Connor Mirasola (bronze). That was before the final set of medal round matches and two Americans in the finals - Marcus Blaze (61 kg) and Max McEnelly (86kg). The two American men in gold medal matches won both of their matches, in dominant fashion, to give the USA half of the ten individual champions! Four champions were enough to set an American record; however, five was icing on the cake. Blaze got the party started in his final against Iranian Ahora Khateri. From the outset, Blaze controlled the center of the match, the hand fights, and Khateri was never able to get to his offense. For this, Khateri was deemed passive and put on the shot clock. After he failed to score, Blaze was awarded the first point of the contest. Throughout the match, Blaze was careful to never put himself in a vulnerable position and took what his opponent gave him. That led to five straight step out points and a 6-0 lead for the American in the second period. It wasn’t until under :40 remained in the contest before Blaze even registered his first takedown, but once he did, he also got a match-ending gut wrench for two points and a 10-0 victory. Of Blaze’s five matches, four ended via tech fall and, in the other, his opponent was disqualified for three cautions. This marks Blaze’s second world title - he won a U17 belt back in 2023. It’s also the second time that he’s earned a medal at the U20 World Championships. He was a silver medalist last year. A few minutes after Blaze helped Team USA establish a new U20 record with four titles, McEnelly helped extend that record to five in his win over Russia’s Bozigit Islamgereev. The first period saw McEnelly satisfied with a 2-0 lead after a shot clock violation on Islamgereev and a step out. Twice in the opening period, McEnelly got in deep on shots, but wasn’t able to convert for two points. Constant pressure and movement in the second period opened the door for McEnelley to expand his offense. He rattled off three takedowns in the final period to seal the deal. Holding a 6-0 lead, Islamgereev must have assumed McEnelly would be content to coast to the finish line. That wasn’t the case as McEnelly continued to pour it on and used a well-timed low leg attack for his third and final takedown. Unable to turn the Russian and seeing :14 seconds on the clock, the normally stoic McEnelly broke out in a smile and head nod - knowing the gold medal was his. Shortly after, time expired and he was the victor to the tune of an 8-0 score. This was McEnelly’s first U20 appearance; however, he grabbed a bronze medal at the U17 World Championships back in 2022. The final tally for the men’s freestyle team is five gold medals (Blaze, Stanich, Duke, McEnelly, Rademacher), one silver (Henckel), and two bronze medals (Mirasola, Mirasola). In addition to the men’s freestyle exploits, the first women’s medals were awarded today and four additional weight classes got underway. The only American woman in the medal round matches was Aubre Krazer at 59 kg. Krazer advanced to the semifinals on Tuesday and was placed in a bronze medal matchup after losing in the semis. Unfortunately, Krazer wasn’t able to get past China’s Yifan Zhu and lost a 5-3 bout to settle for fifth place. At 68 kg, Jordan Fouse was eligible for repechage but was downed in her first bout of the day by Tukiye’s Ayse Erkan. From the group of American women whose tournament started on Wednesday, Everest Leydecker at 55 kg, was clearly the standout. Leydecker advanced to a gold medal match tomorrow without surrendering a single point in her three matches. It wasn’t as if Leydecker was the beneficiary of a soft side of the bracket either. In the quarterfinals, she dismantled Japan’s So Tsutsui, a 2024 U17 world silver medalist. In the semifinals, Leydecker methodically broke Turkiye’s Tuba Demir, a returning U20 world bronze medalist. In her bout against Demir, Leydecker turned it on in the second period with four takedowns. The last came in the closing seconds of the period. Tomorrow, Leydecker will face India’s Reena in the gold medal match. Also wrestling for a medal tomorrow is Daniella Nugent at 65 kg. Nugent posted a pair of wild wins to earn a spot in the semifinals. In the Round of 16, Nugent used a pair of takedowns, with under :40 seconds left in the bout, to down Uzbekistan’s Mukhayyo Narzilloeva, 12-10. There was more magic in the quarterfinals, as she got a takedown with :17 seconds left in the bout to go ahead of Sweden’s Saga Svensson and secured a fall, just for good measure. Nugent’s run on the championship side came to a halt in the semifinals with a 12-2 loss to Japan’s Momoko Kitade. Her opponent in tomorrow’s bronze medal match will be determined after the repechage rounds on Thursday morning. Additionally, there were a pair of wrestlers who won medals while representing other nations; however, they are at American Universities. Nebraska’s Omar Ayoub claimed a bronze medal for Puerto Rico at 61 kg. McKendree’s Duda Rodriguez captured a bronze at 68 kg in women’s freestyle for Brazil. In addition to the final three women’s weights (50, 53, 72), Thursday’s action will feature Greco-Roman for the first time. 60 and 82 kg’s will hit the mat first. Wednesday’s American Results Men’s Freestyle 61 kg Gold Medal Match: Marcus Blaze over Ahora Khateri (Iran) 10-0 86 kg Gold Medal Match: Max McEnelly over Bozigit Islamgereev (Russia) 8-0 Women’s Freestyle 55 kg Round of 16: Everest Leydecker over Evdoxia Papadopoulou (Greece) 10-0 Quarterfinals: Everest Leydecker over So Tsutsui (Japan) 10-0 Semifinals: Everest Leydecker over Tuba Demir (Turkiye) 10-0 62 kg Round of 32: Shirin Takemoto (Japan) over Haylie Jaffe 12-2 65 kg Round of 16: Daniella Nugent over Mukhayyo Narzilloeva (Uzbekistan) 12-10 Quarterfinals: Daniella Nugent over Saga Svensson (Sweden) Fall 5:49 Semifinals: Momoko Kitade (Japan) over Daniella Nugent 12-2 68 kg Repechage: Ayse Erkan (Turkiye) over Jordyn Fouse 10-0 76 kg Round of 16: Naomi Simon over Rupinder Johal (Canada) Fall 2:46 Quarterfinals: Tuvshinjargal Tarav (Mongolia) over Naomi Simon 10-4 Final Medal Round Results Men’s Freestyle 61 kg Gold Medal Match: Marcus Blaze (USA) over Ahora Khateri (Iran) 10-0 Bronze Medal Match: Magomedkhan Magamedkhanov (Russia) over Sargis Begoyan (Armenia) 12-11 Bronze Medal Match: Omar Ayoub (Puerto Rico) over Adlan Saitiev (Belarus) 8-6 86 kg Gold Medal Match: Max McEnelly (USA) over Bozigit Islamgereev (Russia) 8-0 Bronze Medal Match: Ahmet Yasgan (Turkiye) over Ryogo Asano (Japan) 9-3 Bronze Medal Match: Abolfazl Rahmani (Iran) over Razmik Yepremyan (Armenia) 4-2 Women’s Freestyle 57 kg Gold Medal Match: Tapsya (India) over Felicitas Domajeva (Norway) 5-2 Bronze Medal Match: Anna Stratan (Kazakhstan) over Tindra Dalmyr (Sweden) 9-1 Bronze Medal Match: Dolzhon Tsyngueva (Russia) over Sowaka Uchida (Japan) FFT 59 kg Gold Medal Match: Sakura Onishi (Japan) over Karin Samuelsson (Sweden) 10-0 Bronze Medal Match: Yifan Zhu (China) over Aubre Krazer (USA) 5-3 Bronze Medal Match: Hiunai Hurbanova (Azerbaijan) over Ella Finding (Canada) 4-1 68 kg Gold Medal Match: Ray Hoshino (Japan) over Srishti (India) 7-0 Bronze Medal Match: Odzaya Erdenebat (Mongolia) over Oleksandra Rybak (Ukraine) 9-8 Bronze Medal Match: Duda Rodrigues (Brazil) over Laura Koehler (Germany) Fall 4:33 Thursday’s Gold Medal Matches 55 kg: Everest Leydecker (USA) vs. Reena (India) 62 kg: Ruzanna Mammadova (Azerbaijan) vs. Yangzhen (China) 65 kg: Momoko Kitada (Japan) vs. Margarita Salnazarian (Russia) 76 kg: Nadiia Sokolovska (Ukraine) vs. Priya (India)
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Ohio accounted for 3 of the 61kg wrestlers: Blaze (US/Perrysburg), Brown (Canada/St. Eds), Ayoub (Puerto Rico/Dublin Coffman). Looked like the Ohio state tournament out there.
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Who is returning from redshirt?
Hoyt Matthews replied to Wrestleknownothing's topic in College Wrestling
Agree and makes sense. Ayoub just won bronze at U20, should be a good battle and a good battle of styles too. Either way with stuff like this you wonder if a guy portals after one way or another. -
If he starts this season, there's some talent at 133/141 but we also have to watch where Forrest ends up weight wise. Both Blaze and Forrest almost have to bulk to 141/149 so they are not too undersized for 65 in '28. There really could be a case where one or both are World Champs and one is an Olympic Champ while still in college and one never wins an NCAA title.
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2+2=4pi/pi mspart
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Trump intervenes to allow pedophile to flee to Israel
Caveira replied to uncle bernard's topic in Non Wrestling Topics
Slight tangent. Change Washington to any “government” …. And change the time frame to —> Since the beginning of humans until the end of humans. Then we’re on to something. -
As season quickly approaches I’d love to hear everyone’s Top 3 dark horses at every weight, someone ranked currently outside the top 7. I’ll start. I know some of these are obvious. 125: Provo, Rivera, Renteria 133: Blaze or Ono, Davino, Ragusin 141: Blaze or Ono, Jack, Valencia 149: Echemendia, sorta lost on this weight 157: Larkin, Swensen, Arrington 165: Brignola, Sparks, Ruiz 174: Facundo, Mantanona, 184: Sinclair, Dean 197: Merrill 285: Mriasola, Catka,