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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 3, 2016 19:30:06 GMT -6
You stated methods where used in the coyote BMP's did you not? I believe so?
Yes I Have drowned coon, but guess what? No testing protocol for drowning of raccoons. Would be a entire can of worms, what is the correct time to death? Drowning is labeled as death the only rating for death on the scale is a major failing score.
So drowning is not going against protocol as there are no defined protocols for drowning sets. If you or I choose to drowned coons that is up to us . That is a method and that was not tested for raccoons. For obvious reasons.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 3, 2016 16:40:00 GMT -6
No BS on my end .
So I am wrong to think Hillary looked like the joker? Maybe a different shade of lipstick and tone down the smile?
68 or 38 does age really matter?
I post my concerns on issues like BLM and facts that some feel aren't facts . Like the entire made up so called facts in the ferguson case and how our president had to send holder to make sure things where done right? All of that chaos and lack of the National Guard involvement until the chaos was all but done? Will cost the democrats the Govneror race I feel. Also they will not have control of the state legislature either. Nixn was weak and I believe had help in making that decision from the White House. We find out non of what they where staying had any truth to it at all, none what so ever. We now have a police officer who left and is in hiding for trying to save his own life. Then some want to lend credence to the group BLM? I mean really?
That was a city and state issue, Obama had no business sending anyone in , but he liked to stir the pot from the home office.
Never offered an apology to the officer either. total disrespect for our law enforcement from the White House.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 2, 2016 19:48:01 GMT -6
I brought up the BMPs as a whole, you as always want to debate the coon BMP's as that is the only whole to even think about debating on the BMP's. I have read and re read every BMP to date, no where in the process are methods discussed what so ever.
Methods are techniques one uses the equipment in order to capture or restrain the species, the methods where open for coyotes except for all where staked solid. That would be a method versus a drag , but hard to quantify injury so all traps tested where in a staked manner which the majority use them in, never stated any negatives to drags just never tested with drags and I doubt the outcome would have been any worse for the tool tested.
You can beat on the coon BMP's all you wish, the bottom line is your trying to get a passing scores with methods only,, that is not how testing equipment goes. Any changes made from a factory trap was to effect performance of the tool not the methods in which they are set, that goes for any and all BMP's.
None have became law period, some said years back they would in fact become such. Also the AFWA has spent a lot of time and money promoting trapping as a whole, that has been a plus for all trappers and trapping. I have used much of their materials in trappers Educafion in past years. It is some of the best scientific pro trapping media out there to be had. That is fact.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 2, 2016 19:25:16 GMT -6
Tman you like to label people because they disagree with you that is easy to see. So you NEED to label people, Hillary has done the same.
What words exactly prove to you I am racist and anti woman?
I am racist because I think black lives matter is a joke? I am racist because I do not see what some proclaim is taking place, when the FACTS prove otherwise?
Notice did not say all. Perception at times is just that.
This isn't because I feel therefore it makes it real. That is a weak statement used by too many groups in this country.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 1, 2016 12:54:12 GMT -6
No the number of racist has gone way,way down. Many from the old school of thought on race are dead. Racisim still exsist in much smaller numbers than 40-70 years ago.
We have proof of that with a colored president elected 2 times, some would like to tell people racisim is as bad today as it was in the 30,40,50 and 60's. They want that to continue because it gains control for many of those groups that want to make it sound as though their has been little change, when in fact a lot of change has taken place, easy to see really.
All of the non sense claimed under the Banner of racisim really is anything but that. More fear mongering for sure. I could list dozens of examples, we could start with Big Mike in Ferguson.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 1, 2016 5:24:07 GMT -6
Tman some racisim will alway exsist, that is just the facts. Has it gotten better yes, no one can deny such, also some will never let it die because of the gain in control from keeping it in the lime light as well, again another fact.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Oct 1, 2016 5:00:29 GMT -6
The shopping area was not upper class middle income and lower income, no violence more talking or just walking away, in the colored area that all lives matter was met with much aggression, not much talking except for one guy that just wanted him to leave.
I found it interesting that a white guy holding an all lives matter sign is met with aggression instant I might add,but the same white guy holding a black lives matter sign no aggression, talking or just ignoring took place. Pam do you think where he was in the colored neighborhood no woman are there? Or did they just not walk by when they where filming?
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 30, 2016 20:26:38 GMT -6
Tman you said methods where used in the coyote BMP's exactly what, methods where used? I have done 3 of those coyote BMP's I cannot recall any set methods we had to follow?
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 30, 2016 18:15:03 GMT -6
You do not read what I posted by comment on it ? Ok.............
The so called right blog , but yeh the truth is hard to swallow at times, I have been there myself.
This is a colored woman trying to grow a business in a colored area and her thoughts and feelings on black lives matter , if you choose to,inform the rest great, the facts are she is having a tough time after all of these "peaceful protest" LMAO, in keeping her business open from the very people who are a part of black lives matter.
I get it the only facts that are facts are ones that side with what some believe. The rest is all right wing banter. Maybe call 911 hair salon and talk with the lady on the entire BLM issue?
I have stayed very close to Ferguson more than a few times , never had issues in that area been to many St Louis Cardinal games and shopped at the stores in this area , no one has ever given me problems. Never felt unsafe being there. Because MOST people are decent. The indecent ones many have the BLM attitude and thought process and to think that is anywhere close to Dr Martin Luther King is well just way off, way,way off.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 29, 2016 5:25:55 GMT -6
Pam how could the location change? He was not in the suburbs, he picked 2 common areas of a larger city. Some people far more calm than others.
Even the responses are far different from the people of you listen close.
So how could he have change the location any different to get a reaction?
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 28, 2016 20:04:03 GMT -6
One year after Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson shot and killed 18-year-old Michael Brown in the St. Louis suburb, protests and riots broke out just as they did last year. 911 Hair Salon, owned by Dellena Jones, was one of the businesses robbed during the protests Sunday night. (Photo: Jim Vondruska/ZUMA Press/Newscom) This week, on the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown’s death, a familiar image came out of Ferguson, Mo., as protesters faced off against police in the city just as they did 12 months ago.
For one business owner, a night of rioting and looting disrupted a year of rebuilding not just her business, but a community.
Over the course of last year, Dellena Jones, owner of 911 Hair Salon on West Florissant Avenue, found an ally eager to help her rebuild: the St. Louis Tea Party Coalition.
But on Sunday, a group of young men shattered the left window of her beauty salon as protests flared once again in the St. Louis suburb.
The Daily Signal is the multimedia news organization of The Heritage Foundation. We’ll respect your inbox and keep you informed.
Sign Up Jones’ shop is located in the epicenter of where the protests occurred last year in Ferguson after Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old black man, was killed by former police officer Darren Wilson.
The looters, who robbed the store after police shot and injured a young black man who allegedly fired several shots at officers, took beauty supplies such as scissors and curling irons and flipped over one of Jones’s hair dryers. It will likely cost hundreds of dollars to purchase a new hair dryer.
“I was hoping for the best and believing for the best,” Jones said in an interview with The Daily Signal of her expectations for the anniversary of Brown’s death. “We were expecting for things to be good, and if it weren’t, not [this] bad.”
For Jones, who worked for more than a decade at the salon before taking over as owner in 2012, the burglary came after a year of struggling to get her business back on its feet.
“It’s been very challenging,” Jones said. “I’ve been trying to keep up the bills here and at home. It’s proven to be very difficult and challenging and almost impossible.”
One year ago, as the nation turned to watch Ferguson following Brown’s death, Jones became a victim of the riots and looting that took place in its wake. Her store was one of more than 30 businesses looted and damaged. One business, a QuikTrip convenience store, was burned to the ground.
Jones estimated that in the last 12 months, the protests have caused her to lose roughly $75,000—a combination of lost revenue from a decrease in foot traffic along West Florissant Avenue and the cost of repairing her shop.
“You have all of these different protesters. They don’t pop into your business and say, ‘Hey, what do you need?’ or ‘Hey, are you all OK?’” Jones said. “It just seems like with the protests, it seems very selfish.”
After last year’s protests, the St. Louis Tea Party Coalition rallied volunteers to participate in “buycotts” of Ferguson businesses to show people that yes, the stores in the town were open for business, and yes, it’s safe to shop in the city.
And over the last few months, the group has also been helping Jones put her store back together.
Volunteers with the St. Louis Tea Party Coalition gather with Dellena Jones outside her shop, 911 Hair Salon. The St. Louis Tea Party Coalition has been helping Jones rebuild after protests erupted in Ferguson, Mo., last year and again on Sunday. (Photo: Dottie McKenna Bailey) Volunteers with the St. Louis Tea Party Coalition gather with Dellena Jones outside her shop, 911 Hair Salon. The St. Louis Tea Party Coalition has been helping Jones rebuild after protests erupted in Ferguson, Mo., last year and again on Sunday. (Photo: Dottie McKenna Bailey) Last night, the St. Louis Tea Party coalition solicited help from a group who offered to stand guard in the store. Four men sat inside Jones’ store to make sure it wasn’t disturbed and offered to stay again Tuesday night.
“It’s one thing after another,” Dottie McKenna Bailey, a member of the St. Louis Tea Party Coalition, told The Daily Signal. “Literally, she’s in the wrong spot at the wrong time.”
Bailey, who is white, and Jones, who is black, have formed a tight bond in the wake of the protests sparked by racial tensions in the city. They are both single moms. Bailey even calls Jones her “kindred spirit.”
On Friday nights, Bailey will head down to Ferguson to sit in Jones’ shop, where they laugh, joke, and “love on each other.”
“She’s going to keep going,” Bailey said. “She has a positive attitude. She’s not blaming anybody. She’s not shouting racism. She’s just trying to love on people. I’m white. She’s black, and she loves on me like I’m her sister.”
Bailey started a GoFundMe, an online crowdfunding page, for Jones and hopes to raise enough money to redo the shop, rebrand the company, and help her hire other employees.
Such an overhaul, Jones said, would help remove the “invisible markings” left from last year’s protests and riots.
“A lot of times, people feel like they can intimidate you. They just come back and do more intimidation. If we as a people who are really loving—when these types of things happen, we have to stand up,” Jones said.
One of the biggest hurdles, the women agreed, is shaking the stigma that Ferguson may not be a safe place to visit and work. Jones said it’s been challenging to find people to work in the salon, but she and Bailey believe that the St. Louis suburb can get back on its feet.
All that’s needed is a little love.
“It’s a great community. It’s having its issues right now,” Bailey said. “But what I want to say to people is it all started in Ferguson, let’s end it in Ferguson and let it be done. What a great legacy Ferguson can have: the community came together, we loved on each other. Even the folks that were the rotten element—we welcomed them, we prayed for them, and we rebuilt our community so it’s stronger than ever. What a great message that would be to the rest of the world, so that it doesn’t have to go by the wayside.”
Bailey frequents the city’s stores to show support and makes a point to hold business lunches at the Ferguson Brewing Company. She’s become fiercely loyal toward Jones, and she noted how the “Black Lives Matter” movement leaves out important members of the black community: business owners like Jones working to provide a living for their families.
“I was thinking yesterday,” Bailey said, “she’s a black woman. Everybody’s like, ‘Black lives matter.’ And I’m thinking, do only some black lives matter? What about her life and her livelihood and her business that she’s built and her income for her family? Do her black children’s lives not matter?”
Jones, speaking in a separate interview, agreed.
“It’s just amazing to me. The biggest chant is ‘Black lives matter.’ So many black lives are being affected by this in such a big way,” Jones said. “I’m an African-American, I’m a single parent. I have two kids. I’m affected by this. It’s almost a little bit contradictory with the chants of ‘Black lives matter,’ but it seems that it’s only some black lives matter.”
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 28, 2016 19:59:44 GMT -6
When the African-American police chief of Dallas, David Brown, revealed on July 8, 2016 that the sniper who killed five officers and injured another seven the night before was “upset about Black Lives Matter,” some observers began to realize that BLM did more than just arrange vigils where people could hold candles and sing, after police shot suspects of color in deadly confrontations, no matter what the ethnic background of the law enforcement officer was.
That same month, African-American Harvard economics professor Roland Fryer’s study for the National Bureau of Economic Research, An Empirical Analysis of Racial Differences in Police Use of Force, challenged the very foundations of BLM, concluding that “police were no more likely to shoot non-whites than whites after factoring in extenuating circumstances.” Prof. Fryer noted that “On the most extreme use of force – officer-involved shootings – we find no racial differences in either the raw data or when contextual factors are taken into account,” adding that these findings “were the most surprising result of my career.”
The results of this study not only challenged the widely promoted civil rights groups’ belief that racist cops are singling out blacks, “it is plausible that racial differences in lower level uses of force are simply a distraction, and movements such as Black Lives Matter should seek solutions within their own communities rather than changing the behaviors of police and other external forces,” said Prof. Fryer in the study’s conclusion.
To understand more about the modus operandi of Black Lives Matter, one need only examine their website. “#BlackLivesMatter advocates dignity, justice and freedom,” BLM tweeted after the Dallas attacks, “Not murder.”
ag_lynch_portrait-5Nevertheless, on its website, the group proclaimed: “To assign the actions of one person to an entire movement is dangerous and irresponsible.” Ironically, Attorney General Loretta Lynch delivered an even less measured statement to BLM activists, who organized the protest that preceded the shootings, saying: “Do not be discouraged by those who would use your lawful actions as a cover for their heinous violence.”
After the tragedy occurred, President Obama reacted by saying: “We will learn more about their twisted motivations. Let’s be clear: There is no possible justification.” However, these denunciations of violence came after the fact. It is harder to find admonitions by BLM or, for that matter, nationally elected and appointed officials, to avoid violence that were issued before the protests.
obama dallas 2016William Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, noted on the day after the attack, “I think [the Obama Administration] continued appeasements at the federal level with the Department of Justice, their appeasement of violent criminals, their refusal to condemn movements like Black Lives Matter, actively calling for the death of police officers, that type of thing, all the while blaming police for the problems in this country has led directly to the climate that has made Dallas possible.”
It is worth noting that the Dallas police chief did not say the sniper was instructed by Black Lives Matter, but “upset about” it. Let’s take a look at BLM to see how that might have happened.
Trayvon_Zimmerman_Michael 2016Formed in the aftermath of Trayvon Martin’s death at the hands of would-be neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in 2012, BLM was increasingly visible in protests after the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014 and Freddie Gray while in police custody in Baltimore in 2015.
Hillary_Sanders 2016More recently, both former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, I-VT, have sought support from the group in their respective campaigns for the Democratic nominations. Indeed, devout Democrats show more obedience to BLM than most Catholics do to the pope.
Maryland_Governor_Martin_O'Malley_speaks_at_the_June_2010_Chesapeake_Exe...Earlier in the presidential campaign season, former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley backpedaled after declaring in a Democratic forum that “all lives matter.” More recently, actor Justin Timberlake actually apologized to BLM for saying, “we’re all the same.”
JustinTimberlakeRedCarpet“For the record, since August 2014, more than 1,030 protest actions have been held in the name of Black Lives Matter,” BLM proclaims on its website. “The first national convening in July drew over 1,000 participants.” BLM has chapters in 56 cities across the country. Just about all of them, plus their national spokesmen, have their own twitter pages.
In a previous Accuracy in Media special report published earlier this year, investigative reporter James Simpson showed that left-wing foundations were bankrolling the group. “The Black Lives Matter movement is fueled in large part by left-wing donors such as billionaire George Soros, whose Open Society Foundation donated $33 million to groups that engaged in Ferguson-related protests,” conservative author and activist Star Parker asserted in a column which appeared on August 18, 2015.
Star ParkerParker is not the only black conservative to blast the group. “If Black Lives Matter was a white radical group, doing exactly what these black people are doing, they would be shut down. America would not allow that to happen,” the Reverend Jesse Peterson, president and founder of the Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny (BOND), said on Breitbart News Daily.
Oddly enough, given BLM’s concern over “extrajudicial killings,” the group devotes more space on its pages to Martin, Brown and Gray who had extensive police records and histories of violence than to New Yorker Eric Garner, whose crime was selling loose cigarettes. Garner died when he was waylaid by a cop who had him in a chokehold.
It is worth noting that the Dallas police chief did not say the sniper was instructed by Black Lives Matter, but “upset about” it. Let’s take a look at BLM to see how that might have happened.
Trayvon_Zimmerman_Michael 2016Formed in the aftermath of Trayvon Martin’s death at the hands of would-be neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in 2012, BLM was increasingly visible in protests after the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014 and Freddie Gray while in police custody in Baltimore in 2015.
Hillary_Sanders 2016More recently, both former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, I-VT, have sought support from the group in their respective campaigns for the Democratic nominations. Indeed, devout Democrats show more obedience to BLM than most Catholics do to the pope.
Maryland_Governor_Martin_O'Malley_speaks_at_the_June_2010_Chesapeake_Exe...Earlier in the presidential campaign season, former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley backpedaled after declaring in a Democratic forum that “all lives matter.” More recently, actor Justin Timberlake actually apologized to BLM for saying, “we’re all reporter James Simpson showed that left-wing foundations were bankrolling the group. “The Black Lives Matter movement is fueled in large part by left-wing donors such as billionaire George Soros, whose Open Society Foundation donated $33 million to groups that engaged in Ferguson-related protests,” conservative author and activist Star Parker asserted in a column which appeared on August 18, 2015.
Star ParkerParker is not the only black conservative to blast the group. “If Black Lives Matter was a white radical group, doing exactly what these black people are doing, they would be shut down. America would not allow that to happen,” the Reverend Jesse Peterson, president and founder of the Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny (BOND), said on Breitbart News Daily.
Oddly enough, given BLM’s concern over “extrajudicial killings,” the group devotes more space on its pages to Martin, Brown and Gray who had extensive police records and histories of violence than to New Yorker Eric Garner, whose crime was selling loose cigarettes. Garner died when he was waylaid by a cop who had him in a chokehold.
EricGarnerIn the Martin, Brown and Gray cases, courts exhaustively reviewed the available evidence and released voluminous reports and transcripts when they gave police, basically, not-guilty verdicts. In the Garner case, a grand jury cleared the police, but the city did offer Garner’s widow $5 million when she brought a wrongful death suit.
Black Lives Matter describes itself as a chapter-based national organization “working for the validity of Black life. We are working to (re)build the Black liberation movement.”
Hard data are difficult to obtain from BLM materials, but when you go outside the group to get it, you find that the facts don’t back up BLM’s mission statement. “For starters, fatal police shootings make up a much larger proportion of white and Hispanic homicide deaths than black homicide deaths,” Heather Mac Donald from the Manhattan Institute wrote in February. She was relying primarily on Justice Department statistics from the Obama Administration.
“The lower proportion of black deaths due to police shootings can be attributed to the lamentable black-on-black homicide rate,” she pointed out. “There were 6,095 black homicide deaths in 2014 — the most recent year for which such data are available — compared with 5,397 homicide deaths for whites and Hispanics combined. . . Almost all of those black homicide victims had black killers.”
One objective that BLM groups have in common is widespread destruction. The BLM rally in Dallas may indeed have been a peaceful protest before the sniper took action, “upset by Black Lives Matter,” but previous rallies in which BLM was involved were hardly violence-free.
In New York after Eric Garner’s death, where the group was relatively dormant, for example, “Demonstrators disrupted New York City streets again Thursday night over the decision not to charge Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the death of Eric Garner,” CBS News reported on December 5, 2014. “While the protests were large and more than 200 arrests were made by NYPD officers, they were mostly peaceful — nothing like the rioting in Ferguson, Missouri . . . surrounding the death of Michael Brown.”
On the other hand, Ben Unglesbee reported in the St. Louis Business Journal on December 14, 2014 that “The value of buildings in the Ferguson area that were destroyed in last week’s riots amounts to nearly $4.6 million.”
“In Ferguson, 17 businesses saw their buildings damaged so badly they are currently deemed ‘unsafe structures,’ according to a list provided by the city manager’s office.”
“Together, the Ferguson buildings have an appraised value of about $3 million, based on St. Louis County assessor records. The businesses destroyed include Little Caesar’s Pizza and Hidden Treasures on North Florissant Road, and McDonald’s, Public Storage and several others on West Florissant Avenue.”
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 28, 2016 19:44:35 GMT -6
A few individuals? Did you not watch the video I posted or the man with 2 different signs and the various reactions? One group was non hostile the other group wanted to kill the guy, guess who was who?
To think there are just a few bad apples in the BLM movement? Did you watch Ferguson and the riots and luting? It was on my local news daily, far more than a few and most not even from the area, but they sucked in the mad dogs as you call them............
Many other areas the same things with the same results.
Then we have a guy in Columbia ,MO at the U of M decried how people of color are mistreated and the oppression he feels, when then find out he is not the oppressed person he made himself out to be, his father was worth millions, the scene got hit and heavy he leaves never to be seen or heard from again in Columiba or the U of M.
Leaves on the lemmings to fight his made up nonsense. Then Uof M wonders why attendance is down?
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 28, 2016 16:49:06 GMT -6
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 28, 2016 5:14:17 GMT -6
Tman the NY times lol. Love there take,on fossil fuels.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 27, 2016 16:31:29 GMT -6
Tman nope because then everyone will wonder what do we do with the millions of dead car cells that are in electric cars? Some of it can be reused but not all of it.
Kind of like fluorescent bulbs they where going to save us a ton of energy nationwide, until they found out that those bulbs in the landfills cause as much or more damage than the lower we where use is standard light bulbs. Took awhile but we now have LED which seems to be better but the price of bulbs sure have went up.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 27, 2016 16:27:00 GMT -6
Sure it is, but how long will it stay peaceful ? That is the question in these days.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 27, 2016 16:23:29 GMT -6
When did MLK riot and lute? When did you here him say, " burn this b**** to the ground? When did you here hims state don't ruin our neighborhood take it to the suburbs and take them out?
Trying to compare MLK to black lives matter? That is a BIG stretch in anyone's mind.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 26, 2016 16:41:58 GMT -6
Who believes a wall will make all minority issues will go away?
A wall will help keep down the a out of illegals who come into the USA, a wall will help keep some terrorist from crossing the boarder, a wall will limit the amount of drugs that enter the USA and a wall will over time save US tax payer dollars,
The wall and minority issues? Who has brought that up?
Tman what has BLM done for positive change to date? I could name many things that are negatives from this group. Or the banner they fly under.
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Post by trappincoyotes39 on Sept 26, 2016 6:52:11 GMT -6
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