Since now a days it's morally acceptable to fuck another man in the shit hole for your own pleasure, and it's something to be proud of... how long before all the paedophiiles, zoophiles and necrophiles come out of the closet? What makes gay paraphilia OK and all the other forms of paraphilia wrong? Aren't we supposed to share the love and compassion? Why sharing this beautiful gift should be limited to only gays? Why can't the rest share their love with animals and the dead? I mean, who wouldn't want to be loved even after the death? This whole thing is a logical fallacy.
>>132125844
The female in the picture is not an escort, she is the filipino cosplay queen Alodia Gosiegfiao. Shes a good decent and moral gamergirl from a loving catholic home, also he family is from the elite oligarchies that run all the businesses in the phillipines. So i am sure they will sue the pants off whoever published this article online, because I will tell her about it on twitter.
>>132126460
dafuq did you just say to me you little faggot
>>132125844
>le anal sex meme
Daily Reminder to all military fags: your commander in chief is an enemy agent!
Congress just took away his war powers, Joint Chiefs will soon neuter all his military commands, they all know he is a threat and a Putin stooge.
How to soothe big Donny tho anon ?
)))Just put some cash under pillow?((((
fuck off shareblue
sage
>>132125646
Is there someone more annoying than MGTOW-s? A bunch of virgins blaming women for their problems.
They cherry pick story about women doing something and generalize all women. Its like picking a news about man robbing a store and saying all man are criminals.
>>132125563
WIDF is out in full force today I see.
Why would they still have problems to blame on women if they're MGTOW?
>>132126009
>Guys we are MGTOW we couldn't care less about women.
>Also lets spend 24 hours discussing women and strategies
Can /pol/ draw the US states from memory?
No, but what's his face can. That dude who used to be on snl...kikey mckikelstien or whatever.
no
Remembering artificial borders that were estabilished 200 years before is stupid
Why do Jewish people rub their hands together so much?
Do they have a genetic skin condition? Is it a medical condition from ingesting so much goy blood?
I really don't know. Please educate me.
>>132125289
They want to touch their jew-cock every time they jew over a non-jew, but their jew god tells them they can't, so they anxiously rub their hands instead.
>>132126229
I believe you.
>>132126298
Thread accomplished.
Have some tits.
Does anyone know where to download the original vids of Joseph Retrostein?
I don't want stuff that's transcoded for like 20 times.
also fashwave general
bump
What is that circular symbol in the background?
Why is modern day white nationalism so weak?
"Just give us our white ethnostate, we want to be left alone and be isolationists ;_;"
The goal of Nationalists should be to make the rest of the world look like them, while preventing their own country from looking like the rest of the world.
Nationalists shouldn't be isolating themselves from free trade and globalism, they should make globalism work for themselves at the expense of everyone else.
>>132125060
Why can't I take the battery out of my phone anymore?
>>132125060
Extending Chapter 9 bankruptcy procedures to states would implicate the courts in determining whether or not a state is solvent, which would require it to weigh evidence about whether the state could cut expenditures or raise taxes in order to pay its obligations to pensioners and creditors. This would cut rather deeply into the states’ power of taxation, which is, as he notes, “as much at the core of sovereignty as anything could possibly be.”
This problem seems even more severe in a large American state like Illinois than in a municipality like Detroit or in Puerto Rico, where it was relatively clear to all interested parties that the cash was simply not available to make payments and the revenue base was only shrinking as residents and businesses departed. Similarly, a municipality like Washington Park, Illinois—which has attempted to file for bankruptcy twice in the last decade or so—can credibly claim that even a tax increase would not enable it to fund its pension obligations. In the case of Illinois itself, however, bondholders and public sector unions will argue that increased taxes and further cuts to the university system are always possible, even if these would speed up capital flight and undermine future growth prospects. These are thorny questions for a federal judge to answer.
sauce: http://www.libertylawsite.org/liberty-forum/sovereignty-and-orderly-defaults/
A crucial design challenge for a state bankruptcy process would be to avoid making it a politically attractive choice for state governments that, though troubled in the short term, could achieve fiscal sustainability by making reforms. Bankruptcy must be a last resort that is costly to invoke. That is why it typically involves a rather direct loss of sovereignty via the appointment of something like a temporary control or “oversight” board with exclusive authority to negotiate with creditors and make crucial tax and expenditure decisions—as in the case of Washington, D.C. and the legislation recently crafted for Puerto Rico
It is important to understand that the U.S. states are different from provinces or states in many other federations in another closely related respect: The U.S. states are sovereign borrowers. Their fiscal obligations are neither explicitly nor implicitly guaranteed by the federal government.
This independence is rooted in U.S. history—specifically, in a painful episode of defaults by state and territorial governments in the 1840s. After the federal government allowed several states and territories to default in spite of intense pressure from creditors in favor of a federal bailout, voters and creditors learned to treat U.S. states as miniature sovereign borrowers and to assess their credit quality accordingly.
This episode laid the foundation for a long period characterized by effective market discipline among state governments. While the federal government has flirted with various forms of special assistance (for example, extra Medicaid payments or “Build America Bonds”) in the wake of recessions, it has eschewed overt bailouts of troubled states. Requests from states like California for special assistance in managing obligations to pensioners and bondholders have been denied, and states have been forced to make politically painful decisions on their own. Most recently, the federal government denied requests for a bailout of Puerto Rico in the face of default.
It might seem obvious that these two forms of sovereignty go together. That is, we might expect that states or provinces with the sovereign power to tax and spend without interference from higher-level governments are also sovereign borrowers. However, this is often not the case. Voters and creditors might perceive that a central government that is constitutionally prevented from regulating subnational taxation and expenditures nevertheless provides an implicit guarantee of its debt.
Perhaps the most obvious recent example is the European Monetary Union (EMU). Debt that had been issued by sovereign member states was viewed by creditors as carrying an implicit guarantee from the EMU, in spite of its formal no-bailout pledge. Above all, creditors evaluated the European banking system and understood that the EMU—and Germany in particular—would not be able to allow Greece to default, since this would have led to failures of some of the largest German banks. As a result, bond yields converged in the Eurozone, reducing the incentives for weaker member states to start making prudent fiscal decisions.
A similar logic led to bailouts of the Brazilian states by Brasilia in the late 1980s. While Brazil’s constitution made it very difficult for the federal government to intervene in the fiscal decisions of the states, the center was unable to turn a blind eye to imminent defaults by large states because this would have led to the failure of some of the country’s largest banks and a host of additional negative externalities.
In both cases, lower-level governments were sovereign spenders but not sovereign borrowers—and market discipline failed because market actors harbored strong expectations that officials at the higher level would step in to save the day. When these expectations were fulfilled, bailouts became associated with rancorous efforts to limit the sovereignty of the lower-level governments over their taxing and spending decisions. In Brazil, the central government was able to use its leverage over bailouts to extract concessions that permanently weakened the fiscal sovereignty of the states.
The same logic is at work on a smaller scale in many other settings. Creditors and voters are quick to pick up on any clues that higher-level governments might be induced to provide assistance to forestall defaults of lower-level governments. U.S. state governments worry that defaults by municipalities will raise the cost of credit for the entire state. For example, Pennsylvania has been creative in coming up with ways to funnel additional resources to Harrisburg in order to prevent it from pursuing debt restructuring. In such situations, creditors face weaker incentives to distinguish between the credit quality of different municipalities in a state, which in turn weakens the municipal officials’ will to pursue prudent fiscal policies in order to preserve their towns’ or cities’ creditworthiness.
ITT you tell me what I was so right about.
Pretty much everything.
Except for that alliance with Japan.
>>132124994
Pretty much everything
>>132124994
Da Joos
>>132125171
>And Italy, and annexing czechoslovakia
Seriously out of 100 of them in CS GO i don't think even 3 behaved normally. They act worst then any 3rd worlder, why can't they speak Enligsh and be normal?
>playing videogames
>playing valve videogames
Fat Boy Christie did a great job with Jersey!
Try to blame the democratic legislature, yah no. This guy has been terrible for New Jersey. The democrats fucked up before him and he was supposed to fix it and instead he's taking his trump butt hurt out on the citizens of NJ.
I'm too rich to care, fuck trump and fuck bill Mitchell.
Pic related: it's one of my favorites in my collection.
>>132124714
>IMG_3086.jpg
>>132124714
>blame Christie for the state of New Jersey
>NJ state senate is 24/40 Democrat majority
>senators make laws, not Governors
hmm I wonder who is behind this post
>>132124826
Gee, governor needs to sign budget, Dems make concessions...who is behind this post?
Obviously (you) are missing a few brain cells. Maybe an extra chromasome?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMCO79R-4mM
Does anyone remember what happened to the "free inhabitant"? Was her identity ever discovered?
>>132124404
>gets annoyed by dumb bitch
>arrests her
I dont know whats worse, the deluded cunt, or the obvious abuse of police power.
Mandatory contribution:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCozh_vbYdM
>>132126104
Did you not watch the video you fucking liberal the officer had every right to detain her
Why have you not taken the Balt Pill yet? How else can you keep your country 98% white while obaying EU rules?
Any 911 conspiracy theorist here?
>>132124312
Archives(Did a 9/11 thread a while ago): http://archive.4plebs.org/_/search/subject/knowledge%20bomb/username/anonymous5/tripcode/%21%219O2tecpDHQ6/
I'm a 9/11 conspiracy theorist. I think 9/11 was caused by a conspiracy between a few dozen muslims.
>>132124515
where is the proof of it being muslims, what could they possibly gain