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  2. They were setting it up for everyone to expect it was a white guy that shot people to death. Like I said earlier, there is a thread on this board about how white conservatives are the most dangerous people. This plays into that. Somebody shot up people, must be a white guy. Or is probably a white guy. It portrays the political leanings of an individual that would do this. CNN wants so badly to be politically in the middle yet just can't ween themselves off of this leftist ideology. It is apparent and there for all to see. That is what the fuss is about. Another example of rapant leftist media doing what they do and leftists are saying - "What? I don't see a problem. Everyone knows most shooting crime is done by whites. So he probably was white. " We have an example of that right here in this thread. mspart
  3. that would have been extremely useful 12 hours ago lol
  4. Yes; right-wing radio is probably all over this. The ironic thing is that 95% of the wingers pay attention to this while most liberals haven't heard or care about it. It's sort of like the narrative that the liberals want to take away everybody's guns. About 1% of liberals actually want that while 99% of the wingers think it's extremely close to happening. The wingers truly live in an alternative reality.
  5. Why does the ad hark back to Nazi times? I think that is where the issue is. I heard it on the weird radio!! mspart
  6. Somebody obviously cares about it but I can go to right-wing websites and find much, much more ridiculous stuff than that.
  7. You’re one of 200,000,000 that would love to live the American dream. Nice.
  8. The libtardos on here are definitely representative of the average wokester trying to bring communism to America.
  9. It’s obviously not petty to the wokesters
  10. No; I don't care about that. It didn't pop up on my feed and never would because I don't typically pay attention to petty crap like that. Advertisers can generally do whatever they want as far as I'm concerned and the vast majority of liberals don't care about this either.
  11. It popped up on my feed soooooooooooo. Care to elaborate on why wokesters have to play the race card on a blue jeans ad?
  12. Another hat to throw in the ring at 141lbs (if Swiderski and Jamison are 149/157 and not going back down to 141) is Carter Young. He beat Bartlett, albeit in MFS and on the backside at WTT via 10-0 tech. Before anyone clasps on to that being the backside, the match on the frontside at the Open was 5-3 for Bartlett - so not a blow out. I think you go who your best two options are in Jamison, Swiderski, and Teague at 149/157 and I wouldn't care if we see all three at some amalgamation of both weights before the new year, so long as they settled it by then so whoever goes 157lbs can settle in to it by conferences.
  13. The stuff you'll read on here is truly unbelievable. I just look at it as entertainment and try to hope that the idiocy isn't truly representative of the average American, or even people in the wrestling community.
  14. But they're on the same team. I don't think he is beating him, let alone taking the spot from him. I would be okay being proven wrong, though. How sick would that be?
  15. I think there are three non champs with 5 PFs. Dan Gable 2nd place 1970 in 22:08, Darryl Peterson 5th place 1985 in 5:31, and Gary Albright 3rd place 1986 15:34. Both Gable and Peterson benefited from a championship pig tail. You had Albright and Gable with 5 falls in the table in your thread on this award, but Peterson only had 4 falls in the table. Interesting stuff in that thread.
  16. I checked that one. The shift from 3 pt to either 2 or 4 didn't happen until 2016.
  17. You dig deep for any supposed example of "wokeness" that you can find. Do you scrounge the internet for this stuff? WOW!!! Meanwhile, 99% of us (including liberals) probably never even read or paid attention to that article or claim from MSNBC; whatever or whenever it was.
  18. She does look possibly white so ...
  19. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/msnbc-producer-lashes-out-at-american-eagle-s-sydney-sweeney-ads-regressive-shift-toward-whiteness/ar-AA1Jwwvw?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=5be30fee56ac4e4f88ef46c7818bc517&ei=28 You can’t make this crap up. You just can’t.
  20. Honestly, one of the perks of hanging around this forum is that in just a week, I’ve somehow been granted citizenship in at least five different countries. Some unnamed African nation where, apparently, flushing toilets still haven’t caught on. Saudi Arabia, where our women are fully veiled and banned from driving. Afghanistan, where stoning women is still a thing. Nigeria, where I’ve apparently been trading goats for wives. And now I’ve been relocated to a blue city in a blue state in the good ol’ USA. Still scratching my head on that one - how a guy who’s against voting in broken systems ended up in liberal-town USA. The only downside: They wouldn’t let me bring my goat wives with me to America.
  21. Will be tough. Timberland had 0 state qualifiers in 2025.
  22. Tuesday marked the first day when medals were awarded at the 2025 U17 World Championships and the American Greco-Roman team earned a pair of bronze medals. Michael Rundell at 48 kg and Arseni Kikiniou both had to win multiple matches Tuesday morning to earn their hardware. In his repechage bout against Gurban Majnunov (Azerbaijan), Rundell blocked an arm throw attempt and countered with a four-point head pinch to immediately take a commanding lead on his Azeri opponent. He would hold on to win 7-3. For the bronze medal, Rundell was paired with Japan’s Kaisei Yamamoto. This match started in the opposite fashion. Rundell wasn’t able to stop the arm throw and gave up four points, followed by a fifth on a step-out. Despite the early hole, Rundell didn’t let up. He got back in the match in the final seconds of the opening period by countering an arm throw without letting Yamamoto get back to his feet - instead, he was thrown for four points. With his late throw, Rundell was able to start the second period with a manageable 6-4 deficit. Within the first minute, Rundell took the lead on criteria after countering a Yamamoto throw attempt. With Yamamoto pressing while trailing for the first time, Rundell used his patented head pinch for four points at the edge and a 10-6 lead. In the closing seconds, he would add another takedown for a 12-6 victory and the bronze medal. Kikiniou ended up needing two wins just to wrestle for the bronze. He put himself in that position after a fall and a 5-1 win in the second repechage contest. That set the stage for a meeting with Ukraine’s Yehor Tarasenko with a medal hanging in the balance. The pair exchanged passivity points, and the bout was 1-1 in favor of Kikiniou late in the second period. Tarasenko was desperately pushing for any type of score and got out of position. With that, Kikiniou took him to his back for four points as the final seconds ticked off the clock. The United States already has two medals in 2025 and there’s another possibility in Greco as the 92 kg representative, David Calkins, will be in a repechage match Wednesday morning. Calkins was the only American Greco wrestler to advance to the quarterfinals in this tournament, which happened after wins over opponents from China and Croatia. He dropped a close 7-5 match to Belarus’ Kanstantin Kasyan in the quarters; however, he was pulled back into medal contention when Kasyan won his next bout. In addition to Calkins, four other Americans started their Greco tournaments on Tuesday. Thales Silva, Carter Shin, and Dom Wilson all went 0-1 and were eliminated. Will Detar used a second-period rally that included two scoring sequences from a head pinch that resulted in an 8-7 win over Moldova’s Vlad Duminica. After Wednesday’s repechage matches, the women’s freestyle competition will commence. Madison Healey (43 kg), Morgan Turner (49 kg), Emma Bacon (57 kg), Violette Lasure (65 kg), and Emma Poalillo (73 kg) will all be in action tomorrow. American results 45 kg Round of 16: Abdurrahman Huseynli (Azerbaijan) over Thales Silva 6-3 48 kg Repechage: Michael Rundell over Gurban Majnunov (Azerbaijan) 7-3 Bronze Medal Match: Michael Rundell over Kaisei Yamamoto (Japan) 12-6 51 kg Round of 32: Pavlos Tsentidis (Greece) over Carter Shin 4-2 55 kg Repechage: Lavozier Wadik Maruso (Brazil) over Alexander Pierce 4-3 60 kg Round of 32: Will Detar over Vlad Duminica (Moldova) 8-7 Round of 16: Humoyun Erkinov (Uzbekistan) over Will Detar 7-1 65 kg Repechage: Arseni Kikiniou over Huseyn Isgandarov (Azerbaijan) Fall 3:29 Repechage: Arseni Kikiniou over Kyliane Eddouh (France) 5-1 Bronze Medal Match: Arseni Kikiniou over Yehor Tarasenko (Ukraine) 5-1 71 kg Round of 32: Vinit (India) over Dom Wilson 5-1 92 kg Round of 32: David Calkins over Zong Wu (China) 9-0 Round of 16: David Calkins over Andrija Mikulic (Croatia) 3-1 Quarterfinals: Kanstantin Kasyan (Belarus) over David Calkins 7-5 Repechage: David Calkins vs. Raphael Rodrigues Duarte (Brazil) Wednesday’s Gold Medal Matchups 45 kg: Nurkerim Kumarbekov (Kyrgyzstan) vs. Kuanyshbek Zhangazhol (Kazakhstan) 51 kg: Otabek Tursunov (Uzbekistan) vs. Hikmat Hagverdiyev (Azerbaijan) 60 kg: Ali Nazarov (Azerbaijan) vs. Amangeldi Ysakbaev (Kyrgyzstan) 71 kg: Behruzbek Valiev (Uzbekistan) vs. Dimitrios Soulis (Greece) 92 kg: Amirsam Mohammadi (Iran) vs. Kanstantin Kasyan (Belarus) Final Medal Round Matches 48 kg Gold Medal Match: Bunyod Hansanov (Uzbekistan) over Nurdaulet Kumaruly (Kazakhstan) 10-1 Bronze Medal Match: Michael Rundell over Kaisei Yamamoto (Japan) 12-6 Bronze Medal Match: Amirmohammad Hajivand (Iran) over Baris Soylu (Turkey) 12-3 55 kg Gold Medal Match: Alkham Abdirasulov (Kyrgyzstan) over Nurali Askar (Kazakhstan) 4-1 Bronze Medal Match: Amirreza Tahmasbpour (Iran) over Aditya Gupta (India) Fall 2:24 Bronze Medal Match: Makhdi Barotov (Tajikistan) over Nihat Bahmanov (Azerbaijan) 8-5 65 kg Gold Medal Match: Janes Nazaryan (Armenia) over Erekle Tavberidza (Georgia) 5-4 Bronze Medal Match: Arseni Kikiniou over Yehor Tarasenko (Ukraine) 5-1 Bronze Medal Match: Dosbol Shamil (Kazakhstan) over Anuj 9-0 80 kg Gold Medal Match: Abdulaziz Kholmirzaev (Uzbekistan) over Luka Martiashvili (Georgia) Fall 3:49 Bronze Medal Match: Ismail Bereket (Turkiye) over Nijat Yeylagaliyev (Azerbaijan) 9-0 Bronze Medal Match: Nurislam Oskonbaev (Kyrgyzstan) over Taha Nouri (Iran) 3-1 110 kg Gold Medal Match: Hardeep (India) over Yazdan Delrouz (Iran) 3-3 Bronze Medal Match: Temuri Simsive (Georgia) over Hu Nuerlebieke (China) 1-1 Bronze Medal Match: Anatolii Novachenko (Ukraine) over Emrullah Capkan (Turkiye) 5-1
  23. Today
  24. Yes, I missed the pigtail match
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