#Paul McGovern Jr.
Bad movie I have American Graffiti 1973
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based on this thread, here is a list of famous people who have supported johnny depp and/or made fun of amber heard. fuck all of them:
Aly & AJ
Alissa Violet (Influencer)
Anitta
Ann Coulter
Ashley Benson
Ashley Park (actress from Emily in Paris)
Auli'i Cravalho (actress from Moana)
Bailey Muñoz
Bella Hadid
Ben Shapiro
Booboo Stewart
Chase Hudson (Lil Huddy)
Chase Stokes (actor from Outer Banks)
China McClaine
Chris Rock
Cierra Ramirez (actress from The Fosters/Good Trouble)
Cody Simpson
Connor Swindells (adam groff on sex education)
Cazzie David
Critical Role
Dakota Fanning
Dakota Johnson
Daniel Ricciardo
Diana Silvers
Dillion Francis (DJ)
Dominic Fike
Dove Cameron
Elle King
Emma Roberts
Florence Pugh
Gabby Douglas
Gemma Chan
Halle Bailey
Henry Golding
Ian Somerhalder
Jaime King
Jamie Campbell Bower
Javier Bardem
Jennifer Aniston
Jennifer Coolidge
Jeremy Renner
Jessie J
JK Rowling
Joe Perry (Aerosmith)
JoJo Siwa
Jordan Fisher
Julian Kostov (actor from Shadow & Bone)
Justin Long
Kali Uchis
Kat Von D
Kelly Osbourne
Kelsea Ballerini
Kyle Rittenhouse
LaKeith Stanfield
Lance Bass
Lennon Stella
Lewis Tan
Lucy Hale
Madelyn Cline (actress from Outer Banks)
Maren Morris
Matthias Schoenaerts
Michael Clifford (of 5 Seconds of Summer)
Molly Shanon
Nicholas Braun
Norman Reedus
Nyane (popular instagram model)
Olivia Jade
Paige (from WWE)
Paris Hilton
Patti Smith
Paul Bettany
Paul McCartney
Penelope Cruz
Perrie Edwards
Phillip Barantini (director of Boiling Point)
Pokimane (Twitch Streamer)
Reeve Carney
Robert Downey Jr
Rian Dawson (Drummer of All Time Low)
Riley Keough
Rita Ora
Ryan Adams
Sam Claflin
Samantha Hanratty (actress from Yellowjackets)
Samuel Larsen
Seth Savoy (Director)
Shannen Doherty
Sharon Stone
Sia
SNL cast and writers
Sofia Boutella
Sophie Turner
Stella Maxwell
Tammin Sursok
Taika Waititi
Tony Lopez
Upsahl
Vanessa Hudgens
Vanessa Morgan
Vanessa Paradis
Vincent Gallo
Yungblud
Zachary Levi
Zedd
Zoe Saldana
Zoey Deutch
People who publicly support Amber:
Aiysha Hart
Alex Winter
Alexa Nikolas (actress from Zoey 101)
Amanda Seyfried
Amy Schumer
Anna Sophia Robb
Bianca Butti (Amber's ex)
Busy Philipps
Chace Crawford
Chloe Morello
Christina Ricci
Constance Wu
Contrapoints/Natalie Wynn
Corey Rae
Dana Schwartz (journalist and writer)
David Krumholtz
Dolph Lundgren
Edward Norton
Elizabeth Lail (actress who played Beck from you)
Elizabeth McGovern
Elizaberh Reaser (Esmé in Twilight)
Ellen Barkin
Emeraude Toubia (actress from Shadowhunters and With Love)
Emily Ratajkowski
Evan Rachel Wood
Finneas
Howard Stern
Ira Madison III
Jamelle Bouie (NYT columnist)
Jessica Taylor, Dr
Jon Lovett (podcaster & former White House speech writer & fiance of Ronan Farrow)
John Legend
Julia Fox
Julia Stiles
Julianne Moore
Kate Nash (singer, actress from Glow)
Kathy Griffin
Kristen Bell
Lauren Jauregui
Lena Headey
Lindsay Ellis (YouTuber)
Lindsay Lohan
Lindsey Gort
Mia Farrow
Michele Dauber (Stanford law professor)
Millie Brady (actress in The Last Kingdom)
Mel B
Melanie Lynskey
Melissa Benoist
Monica Lewinsky
Nathalie Emmanuel (actress on Game of Thrones)
Neil Gaiman (writer of Caroline, American Gods, Good Omens, etc.)
Nikki Glaser (comedian)
Patricia Arquette
Rachel Riley
Raphael Bob-Waksberg (creator of Bojack Horseman)
Robin Lord Taylor
Rian Johnson (director of Knives Out)
Ryn Weaver (singer)
Samantha Bee (comedian)
Sarah Paulson
Sarah Steele
Selma Blair
Sophia Bush
Uzo Aduba
Willa Fitzgerald
Zach Kornfeld (from the Try Guys)
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My Voting Record (US Democratic Primaries: 1844-2024):
1844 Democratic Primaries: Martin Van Buren
1848 Democratic Primaries: George Dallas
1852 Democratic Primaries: William O. Butler
1856 Democratic Primaries: N/A (No candidate sounds very good)
1860 Democratic Primaries: N/A (No candidate sounds good)
1864 Democratic Primaries: N/A (No candidate sounds very good).
1868 Democratic Primaries: James E. English
1872 Democratic Primaries: N/A (Democrats supported the Liberal Republicans that year. Their primary is in my Third party primaries notes).
1876 Democratic Primaries: Samuel Tilden
1880 Democratic Primaries: N/A (None of the candidates sound very good, honestly).
1884 Democratic Primaries: Grover Cleveland
1888 Democratic Primaries: Grover Cleveland
1892 Democratic Primaries: Horace Boies
1896 democratic Primaries (Top Four):
1. William Jennings Bryan
2. Richard P. Bland
3. Horace Boies
4. Henry Teller
1900 Democratic Primaries: William Jennings Bryan
1904 Democratic Primaries (Top Two):
1. Alton B. Parker
2. Nelson A. Miles
1908 Democratic Primaries: William Jennings Bryan
1912 Democratic Primaries: Judson Harmon
1916 Democratic Primaries: N/A (although I like Woodrow Wilson's fashion sense, he's also a rascist eugenicist. I can't support him).
1920 Democratic Primaries (Top Two):
1. Thomas R. Marshall
2. Al Smith
1924 Democratic Primaries (Top Three):
1. Al Smith
2. Robert L. Owen
3. Oscar Underwood (mostly just because he hated the KKK)
1928 Democratic Primaries: Al Smith
1932 Democratic Primaries: Al Smith
1936 Democratic Primaries: Upton Sinclair (my protest vote against Roosevelt from the left. How I wish Huey Long could have ran that year…)
1940 Democratic Primaries: Franklin D. Roosevelt
1944 Democratic Primaries: Franklin D. Roosevelt
1948 Democratic Primaries: Harry Truman (although I wish Henry Wallace was one of the candidates).
1952 Democratic Primaries (Top Two Candidates):
1. G. Mennen Williams
2. Estes Kefauver
1956 Democratic Primaries: Estes Kefauver
1960 Democratic Primaries: Wayne Morse
1964 Democratic Primaries: Lyndon B. Johnson
1968 Democratic Primaries: Eugene McCarthy
1972 Democratic Primaries (Top Five Candidates):
1. George McGovern
2. Shirley Chisholm
3. Hubert Humphrey
4. Patsy Mink
5. Terry Sanford
1976 Democratic Primaries (Top Three Candidates):
1: Frank Church
2: Mo Udall
3: Fred Harris
1980 Democratic Primaries: Jimmy Carter (my beliefs might be closer to Ted Kennedy, but I hate the Kennedy Clan. Except Eunice. Eunice is fine).
1984 Democratic Primaries (My Top Three Candidates):
1. Jesse Jackson
2. George McGovern
3. Walter Mondale
1988 Democratic Primaries (my top two candidates):
1. Jesse Jackson
2. Paul Simon
1992 Democratic Primaries: Tom Harkin
1996 Democratic Primaries: Nobody (I hate Bill Clinton)
2000 Democratic Primaries: Bill Bradley
2004 Democratic Primaries (Top Three Candidates):
1. Dennis Kucinich
2. Carol Moseley Braun
3. A tie between Al Sharpton and Howard Dean
2008 Democratic Primaries: John Edwards
2012 Democratic Primaries: Barack Obama
2016 Democratic Primaries: Bernie Sanders (I'd have taken Martin O'Malley too though)
2020 Democratic Primaries (Top Four Candidates):
1. Bernie Sanders
2. Elizabeth Warren
3. Tom Steyer
4. Marianne Williamson (She is definitely weird and new agey, but Wikipedia's summary of her policies don't sound too bad)
2024 Democratic Primaries: Marianne Williamson (I don't expect her to win at all, but I appreciate the challenge to Biden from the left. Remind him the progressive wing is still alive. Also, screw RFK Jr. I hate all the Kennedys. Except Eunice. She made the special Olympics; she can stay.)
PS: I made one of these for the Republican Primaries too. I might post that later.
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Birthdays 7.19
Beer Birthdays
Adrian Tierney-Jones
Five Favorite Birthdays
Benedict Cumberbatch; English actor (1976)
Edgar Degas; French artist (1834)
Anthony Edwards; actor (1962)
Max Fleischer; animator (1883)
Brian May; rock guitarist (1947)
Famous Birthdays
Yael Abecassis; Israeli model and actress (1967)
Muhammad al-Bukhari; Persian scholar (810)
Marianna Auenbrugger; Austrian composer (1759)
Paule Baillargeon; Canadian actress and director (1945)
Theo Barker; English historian (1923)
Buster Benton; singer-songwriter and guitarist (1932)
Heinrich Christian Boie; German author and poet (1744)
Lizzie Borden; accused murderer (1860)
Vicki Carr; singer (1941)
Allen Collins; guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Samuel Colt; inventor (1814)
Mark Crispin; computer scientist (1956)
A.J. Cronin; writer (1896)
Friedrich Dessauer; German physicist and philosopher (1881)
Atom Egoyan; Egyptian-Canadian director (1960)
Michael Fekete; Hungarian-Israeli mathematician (1886)
Thomas Gabriel Fischer; Swiss musician (1963)
André Forcier; Canadian director and screenwriter (1947)
Helen Gallagher; actress, singer, and dancer (1926)
Keith Godchaux; rock keyboardist (1948)
Alan Gorrie; Scottish singer-songwriter (1946)
Kevin Haskins; English drummer and songwriter (1960)
Joseph Hansen; author and poet (1923)
Samuel John Hazo; author (1928)
Pat Hingle; actor (1924)
Florence Foster Jenkins; soprano (1868)
Richard Jordan; actor (1938)
Gottfried Keller; Swiss author and poet (1819)
Aleksandr Khinchin; Russian mathematician (1894)
Lisa Lampanelli; comedian (1961)
Bernie Leadon; guitarist and songwriter (1947)
Robert Mann; violinist, composer, and conductor (1920)
John Martin; English artist (1789)
Charles Horace Mayo; surgeon, clinic founder (1865)
George McGovern; politician (1922)
Tim McIntire; actor and singer (1944)
Freddy Moore; singer-songwriter and guitarist (1950)
Ilie Nastase; tennis player (1946)
Alice Dunbar Nelson; African-American poet (1875)
Garth Nix; Australian writer (1963)
Jim Norton; comedian (1968)
Mark O'Donnell; playwright (1954)
Steve O'Donnell; screenwriter and producer (1954)
Jayne Anne Phillips; writer (1952)
Edward Charles Pickering; astronomer and physicist (1846)
Martin Powell; English keyboard player and songwriter (1973)
Arthur Rankin Jr.; animation director, producer (1924)
Tom Raworth; English poet (1938)
Miltos Sachtouris; Greek poet (1919)
Campbell Scott; actor (1961)
Elizabeth Spencer; writer (1921)
Percy Le Baron Spencer; microwave inventor (1894)
Sue Thompson; singer (1925)
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow; physicist (1921)
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Lord of rigel synth
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Pat Moynihan/Frank Church, Jesse Helms/Larry MacDonald, Mike Gravel/Eldridge Cleaverġ980: Def. William Fulbright, John Rarick/Lester Maddox, George McGovern/Mark Hatfieldġ976: Def. Charles Percy/William Scranton, James Eastland/John Rarick, Eugene McCarthy/George McGovern Harold Stassen/Richard Nixon, Orval Faubus/John StennisĮverett Dirksen/Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. Truman/Alben Barkley, Strom Thurmond/Fielding L. Bobby Rush (Democrat/ Progressive)ġ948: Def. Jesse Jackson (Democrat/Progressive)ġ989- : Rev. Ron Dellums/Lawyer Ralph Nader (Progressive)ġ985-89: Pres. Called the heir to Roosevelt, Javits is pushing for stronger American-Israeli ties, countering the ever-growing threat of Soviet expansionism, and pushed for a greater Civil Rights Act than what Roosevelt and Revercomb had managedġ969-73: Fmr. America's first Jewish president, won in a landslide over Stevenson/Kefauver.
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Stevenson wins by the skin of his teeth and, despite the well-to-do economy, is soundly defeatedģ6. A moderate-to-conservative Democrat, Eisenhower towers over the political establishment though does nothing more for civil rightsģ5. Despite the wave of sympathy over Roosevelt's death, and the end of the war, Revercomb loses the 1948 election in a landslide to.ģ4. Revercomb, a pro-civil rights activist, is thrust into the presidency. Many blamed the stress of the war effort on his passing.ģ3. When war broke out, Roosevelt led America into war - and unfortunately died of a heart attack. Anti-lynching bills were enacted, and the push for African-American civil rights was begun. And who better to right the ship than Teddy Roosevelt, Jr. To many, the Roosevelt name is synonymous with Republican.
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Facing anti-Catholics, a slowly declining economy (then full on economic depression), and a growing liberal-conservative Republican Party, Smith would be decimated by the 1929 economic collapse.ģ2. Smith, the first Catholic president, faced an uphill battle. He is also remembered for being the man to push through Prohibition.ģ1. McAdoo is remembered more as an economic president, turning the US into the main economic superpower. Though President Wilson's son-in-law, William Gibbs McAdoo, avenged the Democratic loss four years later. The 1916 election remains a textbook example of a narrow election, with Hughes winning by a hair the states of California and New Hampshire.ģ0. 1961-incumbent: Jacob Javits (Republican)ġ960: Adlai Stevenson / Estes Kefauver (Democratic)Ģ9. Eisenhower (Democratic)ġ948: Chapman Revercomb / Earl Warren (Republican)ġ952: Earl Warren / Everett Dirksen (Republican)ģ5. Smith / Albert Ritchie (Democratic)ġ936: John Nance Garner / Pat McCarran (Democratic)ġ940: Paul V. 1921-1929: William Gibbs McAdoo (Democratic)ġ920: Charles Evans Hughes / Frank Orren Lowden (Republican)ġ924: Gifford Pinchot / John W. 1917-1921: Charles Evans Hughes (Republican)ġ916: Woodrow Wilson / Thomas R. 1913-1917: Woodrow Wilson (Democratic)ġ912: Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram Johnson (Progressive), William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. So this is a remake of the list I made a while back ( here), with a more liberal-conservative Republican PartyĢ8.
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1960: John F. Kennedy/Lyndon B. Johnson vs Richard Nixon/Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson/Hubert Humphrey vs Barry Goldwater/William E. Miller
1968: Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew vs Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie vs George Wallace/Curtis Lemay
1972: Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew vs George McGovern/Sargent Shriver
1976: Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale vs Gerald Ford/Bob Dole
1980: Ronald Reagan/George H.W. Bush vs Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale
1984: Ronald Reagan/George H.W. Bush vs Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro
1988: George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle vs Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Bentsen
1992: Bill Clinton/Al Gore vs George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle vs Ross Perot/James Stockdale
1996: Bill Clinton/Al Gore vs Bob Dole/Jack Kemp vs Ross Perot/Pat Choate
2000: George W. Bush/Dick Cheney vs Al Gore/Joe Lieberman
2004: George W. Bush/Dick Cheney vs John Kerry/John Edwards
2008: Barack Obama/Joe Biden vs John McCain/Sarah Palin
2012: Barack Obama/Joe Biden vs Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan
2016: Donald Trump/Mike Pence vs Hillary Clinton/Tim Kaine
2020: Joe Biden/Kamala Harris vs Donald Trump/Mike Pence
The same candidates tend to show up year after year. Not just President running for re-election, but Vice Presidents running for the top slot themselves, incumbents or candidates, successful or not; Richard Nixon (1952, 1956, 1960, 1968), Hubert Humphrey (1964, 1968), Walter Mondale (1976, 1980), Bob Dole (1976, 1996), Al Gore (1992, 1996, 2000)
I would expect John Edwards (D-2004) to try and make a comeback, though he was only a one term senator from North Carolina, so that’s looking increasingly unlikely. The state swung for Obama in 2008, but hasn’t voted blue since (except for governor, but he has no power because the Republicans control the state legislature)
Paul Ryan (R-2012) will be back for sure; he retired from the House in part over of disagreements with Trump, but one doesn’t just give up being Speaker and slink away into obscurity (just look at Newt Gingrich, he refuses to shut up or die), so I think Ryan is just biding his time and hoping the whole Trump thing blows over in the next decade. If the party shifts away from Trump, he might offer himself as a slightly more moderate (“moderate*”) alternative.
Or maybe Sarah Palin (R-2008) will try and reclaim the presidency for herself; she’s a hardcore right wing nutjob, she was a Bush supporter AND a Trump supporter, and she’s still relatively young, so I could see her stepping back into the spotlight to try and “being the country back” to the traditionalism of the early 2000s. Nostalgia is cyclical, so I figure around 2028 or 2032 people will start looking back fondly on the Clinton and Bush years (Clinton more so than Bush, what with 9/11 and the wars and such)
Tim Kaine isn’t even one of the famous senators; there are some senators that everybody knows, even if they’re not from your state, like Chuck Schumer, Joe Manchin, Lindsey Graham, Bitch McConnell, big names with big reputations. Tim Kaine is a nobody, just a bland and inoffensive white dude Clinton picked to be as uncontroversial as possible (she couldn’t pick a woman or a black person because then the ticket would have been “too diverse”). He’s not the future of the Democratic party, but I could see him trying to become part of the Senate leadership. Maybe the whip (vice leader), I don’t think he has what it takes to be leader outright.
I don’t think Mitt Romney (R-2012) will run for president again; that ship has sailed. Moderate Republicans are critically endangered, extinct in the wild, with single specimens in captivity (in Vermont, Massachusetts, and Maryland). After back-to-back losses in 2008 and 2012, I don’t think Republicans will run a moderate candidate ever again. Romney could maybe just maybe become the whip if he so desired, he’s a big enough name with support enough to become their presidential nominee, though he’ll never be the leader; McConnell was their golden goose, he gave hem exactly what they wanted and changed the game to give them an advantage even in minority. They will only ever elect hardliners like him from now on. Romney is too soft; he cares too much about the other side (he’s not liberal by any stretch of the imagination, he’s a Mormon for Brigham’s sake, but he voted to impeach Trump twice which means he may as well be a liberal in the eyes of the public)
Mike Pence has committed political suicide. Democrats hate him for his homophobia, sexism, racism, classism, and weird relationship with his wife who he calls “mother.” Republicans hate him because he didn’t break the law to re-elect Trump. Damned if he does, damned if he doesn’t. He’s ultraconservative and super religious, so under normal circumstances he’d be a shoo-in for the nomination, but after breaking with Trump in January he’s dead in the water (he didn’t even really break away, there was literally nothing legal he could do; if he had tried anything it would have been struck down by the courts). And besides that, Pence is boring as hell. He’s milquetoast, he’s a saltine cracker without the salt because it’s too spicy, he orders plain hamburgers with ketchup on the side, all his steaks are cooked well done, he gets a boner when he sees a woman’s ankle and has to self-flagellate for penance, he sends back water if it has too much ice because it makes his teeth hurt. He’s the sacrificial lamb they’d nominate specifically to lose so they can save a stronger candidate for later when there’s no incumbent.
Kamala Harris is basically president-in-waiting (or rather nominee-in-waiting; who knows if she can actually win?) Biden ran on the unspoken promise that he would step down in 2024, making her the front runner, but he has recently walked this back and says he plans on running for a second term himself, pushing Kamala back until 2028 at least. She has good PR and has convinced half the country that she’s a progressive instead of a cop, so if she runs she’ll definitely have an edge over Democratic challengers. The media picks the nominee, and in 24 or 28 they’ll pick her for sure.
It’s becoming increasingly harder for people to stay relevant over multiple decades. I can’t imagine any 2004 candidates running in 2024, but Bob Dole managed to get on as Ford’s #2 and come back as #1 himself twenty years later (he lost both times, but still). Richard Nixon beat the odds and actually got elected in 68 after losing the presidency in 60 and the governorship in 62; he was pretty much coasting on Eisenhower’s legacy, selling himself as the anti-Goldwater, who lost in 64 to LBJ in a landslide.
Trump is acting like he’s going to run again, but whether or not he’ll fully commit is up in the air. On the one hand, his least insane niece says that he doesn’t want to put himself in a position where he could lose again, his ego couldn’t take it, he’s so embarrassed he can’t even admit it happened the first time. On the other hand, he’s too proud to accept defeat and just let some other candidate take his spot as leader of the Republican Party; the Republicans haven’t had a leader since Eisenhower, every other president has disappeared after leaving office.
Nixon resigned in disgrace
Ford was elected out
Reagan disappeared in the 90s because he didn’t want the country to see him deteriorate from Alzheimer’s
Bush Sr was elected out
Bush Jr was despised with approval in the 20s (record low), and could potentially have been tried at The Hague if Obama had balls
Now Trump wants to stick around, even though he’s older than Reagan and FAR less healthy. He’ll probably be dead in 15 years anyway; no way he reaches 90. His mind may already be going, but unlike Reagan he isn’t self aware enough to know it, so he might try to stay in the spotlight even after the dementia sets in. Wo knows?
What his niece says, and what I think is most likely to happen, is that he will pretend like he’s running in order to scam donors out of millions of dollars to pay his exorbitant legal fees, but then bow out of the race before the primaries. Whichever candidate he personally endorses will become the nominee and go up against Biden. Biden will win the popular vote, but I don’t know if he’ll win the electoral college; if this happens for the third time in a quarter century, I expect nothing less than chaos in the streets, perhaps even civil war (well, I expected civil war after 2020, and we’re still standing, so again, who knows?). All I know is that congressional Democrats will throw a hissy fit but do nothing to stop the Republicans from sneaking their way into office without a mandate AGAIN.
The last Republican to legitimately win the presidency was George Bush Sr in 1988. Jr lost to Gore, and only got re-elected in 2004 because he invaded Iraq the year prior. Democrats have won 7 of the last 8 elections, including the last 4 in a row. There are more Democrats and left-leaning independents than Republicans and right-leaners. If the Republicans lose-but-win AGAIN, I don’t think the county could take it; there would be phony calls for secession on TV and legitimate whispers behind the scenes, there would be lawsuits, there would be an even bigger assault on the Capitol than January 6, people would riot, the National Guard would attack brown people with impunity while peacefully corralling the white ones with shields and loudspeakers.
There hasn’t been an assassination since 1963, and no assassination attempt resulting in injury since 1981. Someone threw a grenade at Bush Jr in 2005, but they wrapped a handkerchief around it so the lever didn’t release. I think multiple politicians on both sides of the aisle might be targeted in the event of another electoral college screw up.
Trump could face jail time for his tax crimes, though given his high profile I think he’d get off with a slap on the wrist. He has never faced consequences before, so why would they start now?
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The Best of Soft Rock: More Than A Feeling
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Lowdown Boz Scaggs 5:18
Whenever I Call You “Friend” Kenny Loggins 3:18
Piano Man Billy Joel 5:40
Longer Dan Fogelberg 3:18
Miracles Jefferson Starship 3:33
Lost in Love Air Supply 3:55
More Than I Can Say Leo Sayer 3:39
Rosanna Toto 4:03
More Than a Feeling Boston 3:26
Take It on the Run REO Speedwagon 3:37
Make Me Lose Control Eric Carmen 4:48
Total Eclipse of the Heart Bonnie Tyler 5:35
Living Inside Myself Gino Vannelli 4:25
The Flame Cheap Trick 4:50
Sara Starship 4:23
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Livin’ Thing Electric Light Orchestra 3:34
This Is It Kenny Loggins 3:59
Africa Toto 4:59
Eye In The Sky Alan Parsons Project 4:35
Look What You’ve Done to Me Boz Scaggs 5:18
You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling Daryl Hall & John Oates 4:36
All Out Of Love Air Supply 4:03
Can’t Fight This Feeling REO Speedwagon 4:55
The Search Is Over Survivor 4:14
All by Myself Eric Carmen 7:11
Without You Harry Nilsson 3:21
Year of the Cat Al Stewart 6:38
Dust in the Wind Kansas 3:27
Vincent Don McLean 4:01
Please Come to Boston David Loggins 4:09
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Baby I’m-a Want You Bread 2:32
A Horse with No Name America 4:09
Diamond Girl Seals & Crofts 4:04
I Saw the Light Todd Rundgren 3:01
Blinded by the Light Manfred Mann's Earth Band 3:51
It Might Be You Stephen Bishop 4:14
She’s Gone/Sara Smile/Rich Girl Hall & Oates 3:29
Minute By Minute The Doobie Brothers 3:28
Sentimental Lady Bob Welch 3:46
How Much I Feel Ambrosia 4:44
Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime The Korgis 4:12
If You Leave Me Now Chicago 3:57
Sailing Christopher Cross 4:17
Waiting For A Girl Like You Foreigner 4:52
Against All Odds Phil Collins 3:25
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Ride Like the Wind Christopher Cross 4:32
Saturday in the Park Chicago 3:57
Sister Golden Hair America 3:20
You’re So Vain Carly Simon 4:18
If Bread 2:35
Ooh Baby Baby Linda Ronstadt 2:42
Him Rupert Holmes 3:40
You Are the Woman Firefall 2:45
All I Need Jack Wagner 3:32
Walking In Memphis Marc Cohn 4:19
Making Love Out Of Nothing At All Air Supply 5:01
I Want to Know What Love Is Foreigner 5:00
The Living Years Mike + the Mechanics 5:33
Drive The Cars 3:57
One More Night Phil Collins 4:48
I’ll Be There The Escape Club 4:57
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Summer Breeze Seals & Crofts 3:26
Key Largo Bertie Higgins 3:19
Make It with You Bread 3:12
Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? Chicago 3:22
Dream Weaver Gary Wright 4:18
Hello It’s Me Todd Rundgren 3:52
Sara Smile Daryl Hall and John Oates 3:12
Chuck E.’s In Love Rickie Lee Jones 3:28
Black Water The Doobie Brothers 4:16
Still the One Orleans 3:56
Hurt So Bad Linda Ronstadt 3:18
Cool Change Little River Band 4:08
Biggest Part Of Me Ambrosia 5:27
Never Be the Same Christopher Cross 4:41
You Can Do Magic America 3:57
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
The Guitar Man Bread 3:45
Tin Man America 3:27
Wildfire Michael Martin Murphey 4:50
25 or 6 to 4 Chicago 4:52
Lotta Love Nicolette Larson 2:43
What a Fool Believes The Doobie Brothers 2:27
Steal Away Robbie Dupree 3:31
You’re the Only Woman Ambrosia 4:22
Sexy Eyes Dr. Hook 3:00
Kiss You All Over Exile 3:30
Even the Nights Are Better Air Supply 3:59
Arthur’s Theme Christopher Cross 3:55
Dance with Me Orleans 3:21
Beautiful in My Eyes Joshua Kadison 4:10
Black Velvet Alannah Myles 4:48
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
California Dreamin’ The Mamas & The Papas 2:54
Kokomo The Beach Boys 3:36
Ventura Highway America 3:32
Listen to the Music The Doobie Brothers 3:27
I Can See Clearly Now Johnny Nash 2:43
It Never Rains in Southern California Albert Hammond 3:38
Thank You For Being A Friend Andrew Gold 4:45
Everything I Own Bread 3:07
When Will I Be Loved Linda Ronstadt 2:10
I Keep Forgettin’ Michael McDonald 3:41
Baby Come Back Player 2:16
Circle in the Sand Belinda Carlisle 4:27
Hold On Wilson Phillips 3:41
I’ll Be Over You Toto 3:50
Just the Way It Is, Baby The Rembrandts 4:09
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
We Don’t Talk Anymore Cliff Richard 4:13
Baker Street Gerry Rafferty 2:13
When Your in Love with a Beautiful Woman Dr. Hook 2:56
Fool (If You Think It’s Over) Chris Rea 3:33
You’re No Good Linda Ronstadt 3:46
Reminiscing Little River Band 3:17
The Air That I Breathe The Hollies 4:12
Sad Eyes Robert John 1:55
I Go Crazy Paul Davis 5:23
Hearts Marty Balin 4:19
These Dreams Heart 4:17
Jessie Joshua Kadison 4:22
Release Me Wilson Phillips 3:54
The Doctor The Doobie Brothers 3:45
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Maggie May Rod Stewart 5:15
Higher and Higher Rita Coolidge 4:01
Whatcha Gonna Do? Pablo Cruise 4:15
I’m in You Peter Frampton 4:11
Drift Away Dobie Gray 3:56
More Love Kim Carnes 3:37
Babe Styx 4:01
Into The Night Benny Mardones 4:31
It’s a Heartache Bonnie Tyler 3:45
While You See a Chance Steve Winwood 4:06
Show Me the Way Peter Frampton 2:30
Fooled Around and Fell in Love Elvin Bishop 4:37
Lonesome Loser Little River Band 3:54
I’m Not in Love 10 CC 6:07
I Just Wanna Stop Gino Vannelli 3:37
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Daniel Elton John 3:53
I Need You America 3:07
I Can Dream About You Dan Hartman 4:11
Escape Rupert Holmes 3:54
I’d Really Love to See You Tonight England Dan & John Ford Coley 2:38
On and On Stephen Bishop 3:01
Tempted Squeeze 4:01
The Things We Do For Love 10 CC 3:31
The Best of Times Styx 4:18
Cry Godley and Creme 3:55
Your Wildest Dreams The Moody Blues 4:51
Higher Love Steve Winwood 5:46
More Than Words Extreme 5:36
I’d Do Anything for Love Meat Loaf 5:17
Do You Feel Like We Do Peter Frampton 7:20
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
So In to You Atlanta Rhythm Section 4:23
Fly, Robin, Fly Silver Connection 3:50
Sentimental Lady Bob Welch 3:46
Show And Tell Al Wilson 3:29
Wild Flower The New Birth 3:59
Delta Dawn Helen Reddy 3:09
American Pie Don McLean 8:35
Rock Me Gently Andy Kim 3:29
Go All The Way The Raspberries 3:22
Mr. Big Stuff Jean Knight 2:49
Oh Babe, What Would You Say Hurricane Smith 3:26
Hooked On A Feeling Blue Swede 2:53
Having My Baby Paul Anka 2:33
Last Song Edward Bear 3:13
The Streak Ray Stevens 3:18
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Rhinestone Cowboy Glen Campbell 3:16
Too Late To Turn Back Now Cornelius Brothers And Sister Rose 3:20
Boogie Fever The Sylvers 3:30
Reminiscing Little River Band 3:17
I Just Want To Celebrate Rare Earth 2:54
One Bad Apple The Osmonds 2:43
Have You Never Been Mellow Olivia Newton-John 3:33
Magic Pilot 3:05
Boogie Oogie Oogie A Taste of Honey 3:38
Right Back Where We Started From Maxine Nightingale 3:15
Sad Eyes Robert John 1:55
Gonna Fly Now Bill Conti 2:48
My Sharona The Knack 4:02
You Sexy Thing Hot Chocolate 4:05
Puppy Love Donny Osmond 3:06
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Love Train The O'Jays 2:58
Knock Three Times Dawn 2:55
Brandy Looking Glass 3:04
Little Willy Sweet 3:12
Baby Don’t Get Hooked on Me Mac Davis 3:06
Take Me Home, Country Roads John Denver 3:13
It Never Rains in Southern California Albert Hammond 3:38
Brand New Key Melanie 2:26
Come and Get Your Love Redbone 3:32
More. More, More (Part 1) Andrea True Connection 3:02
I Can See Clearly Now Johnny Nash 2:43
Everybody Plays the Fool The Main Ingredient 3:22
Indian Reservation Paul Revere & The Raiders 2:52
The Cover of “Rolling Stone” Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show 2:55
When Will I See You Again The Three Degrees 3:00
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Rich Girl Daryl Hall and John Oates 2:23
Lady Marmalade LaBelle 3:21
Best of My Love The Emotions 3:41
Fire The Pointer Sisters 3:28
Miracles Jefferson Starship 3:33
You Make Me Feel Like Dancing Leo Sayer 2:51
Here You Come Again Dolly Parton 2:58
Disco Lady Johnnie Taylor 4:25
Saturday Night Bay City Rollers 2:56
Rock On David Essex 3:26
Wildfire Michael Martin Murphey 4:50
You Take My Breath Away Rex Smith 3:15
I Go Crazy Paul Davis 5:23
Stumblin’ In Suzi Quatro and Chris Norman 3:31
Torn Between Two Lovers Mary MacGregor 3:44
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Bad, Bad Leroy Brown Jim Croce 3:00
Don’t Pull Your Love Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds 2:41
Love Will Keep Us Together Captain and Tennille with Neil Sedaka 3:24
Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song B.J. Thomas 3:22
She’s A Lady Tom Jones 2:51
How Do You Do? Mouth & MacNeal 4:07
Black and White Three Dog Night 3:51
Escape Rupert Holmes 3:54
Drift Away Dobie Gray 3:56
It’s a Love Beat The DeFranco Family 3:09
I’m in You Peter Frampton 4:11
The Candy Man Sammy Davis, Jr. 3:10
Spiders & Snakes Jim Stafford 3:05
Billy, Don’t Be A Hero Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods 3:40
The Morning After Maureen McGovern 2:20
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves Cher 2:36
Maggie May Rod Stewart 5:15
Baby Come Back Player 2:16
I Just Wanna Stop Gino Vannelli 3:37
Jackie Blue Ozark Mountain Daredevils 3:37
Higher And Higher Rita Coolidge 4:01
I’m Not in Love 10 CC 6:07
Y.M.C.A. Village People 3:45
Will It Go Round in Circles Billy Preston 3:46
I Just Want to Be Your Everything Andy Gibb 3:44
Do You Wanna Make Love Peter McCann 4:01
Signs Five Man Electrical Band 4:02
Disco Duck Rick Dees 3:14
Montego Bay Bobby Bloom 2:55
If I Can’t Have You Yvonne Elliman 3:00
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Play That Funky Music Wild Cherry 3:16
One Toke Over the Line Brewer & Shipley 3:21
Afternoon Delight Starland Vocal Band 3:14
Life is a Rock Reunion 3:31
I Can Help Billy Swan 2:57
My Maria B.W. Stevenson 2:31
Magnet and Steel Walter Egan 3:25
Beach Baby First Class 2:42
The Rapper The Jaggerz 2:45
Brother Louie Stories 3:57
Precious and Few Climax 2:46
O-o-h Child The 5 Stairsteps 3:15
Playground in My Mind Clint Holmes 2:57
Put Your Hand In The Hand Ocean 2:53
Please Come to Boston David Loggins 4:09
SONG TITLE ARTIST TIME
Turn The Beat Around Vicki Sue Robinson 3:24
Ring My Bell Anita Ward 3:31
Sometimes When We Touch Dan Hill 2:22
Rose Garden Lynn Anderson 2:49
In The Summertime Mungo Jerry 3:37
Seasons in the Sun Terry Jacks 3:30
The Night Chicago Died Paper Lace 3:32
Rock The Boat Hues Corporation 3:09
Don’t Give Up on Us David Soul 3:39
Kung Fu Fighting Carl Douglas 3:17
Love Grows Edison Lighthouse 2:51
Sweet Mary Wadsworth Mansion 2:42
The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia Vicki Lawrence 3:36
TSOP MFSB featuring the Three Degrees 3:35
Feelings Morris Albert 3:45
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I have long believed that the word conservative is sullied beyond reclamation, so my immediate answer to the question “What is American conservatism?” is “a Beltway-based racket exploiting the healthy instincts of decent Americans on behalf of the military-industrial complex, Wall Street, and the Republican Party.” But that answer is confuted by this very magazine, founded as it was in opposition to the criminal Iraq war and animated and inspirited, then and now, by principles and precious things that had long been forgotten or repudiated by most of the American Right: peace, place, humility, community, federalism, the Bill of Rights.
The conservative movement was poisoned at its roots—or, should I say, its rootlessness. After the death of the noble Senator Robert Taft (R-OH) in 1953, “conservatism” at the national level came to be defined, to a grossly disproportionate degree, by ex-communists avid to slay the god that failed them. The resultant movement subordinated domestic felicity and the gloriously idiosyncratic Little America to the frenzied promotion of what William F. Buckley Jr. described as an “instrument of totalitarian bureaucracy within our shores,” which he said we must accept “for the duration” of the Cold War. But when the Soviet Union dissolved, we did not return to being a “normal country,” as Jeane Kirkpatrick, Reagan’s UN ambassador, had recommended, but instead sought out a dreary concatenation of new enemies to justify the warfare state. (Even now, bellicose opportunists have their eye on China, as the scare-by date of shoe-bomb jihadis is about up.)
The wisest, most insightful, most independent-minded men who passed through the late and unlamented conservative movement—Robert Nisbet, Karl Hess, Russell Kirk, Murray Rothbard, Felix Morley—became disaffected and out of step. They understood that a grotesque empire had suffocated and supplanted the erstwhile republic, and that an America that is true to itself and worthy of respect must be decentralist, anti-interventionist, neighborly.
There is a healthy tradition in American political life that breathes this spirit, and that is, in parts and in sum, gentle, rambunctious, lyrical, just, and deeply, deeply American. Its first bloom was the Anti-Federalists, those prophetic backcountry critics of our misbegotten Constitution and champions of a decentralized nation. The tradition stretches on through the Loco Focos, the Populists, the Southern Agrarians, the Catholic Workers, the Old Right, the “freewheeling participatory democracy” wing of the New Left, the Perot-Buchanan-Paul Middle American revolutionaries, the hippie localists….This is the soul, the numen, of political America.
This is not just a literary conceit, or a gallery of lovable romantic losers. I see its expression, in variegated forms, all around us. It’s in farmers markets, grocery co-ops, community-supported-agriculture farms, local theater, and homeschool groups. It’s there wherever Americans gather in defense of the first Ten Amendments (dig all those Ninth Amendment rallies!), or every time a young girl puts up a birdhouse or kids gather for a pickup baseball game. Politically, it takes the form of split-state movements in New York, California, Illinois, and elsewhere; it’s in the Bring the (National) Guard Home campaign and the inchoate yearnings for peace that both parties do their best to snuff out; it’s in the distributist proposals to encourage small shops and home production and in the anarchist calls to expropriate the expropriators; it’s in the libertarian rejection of the surveillance state and in the refusal of those whom Robert Frost affectionately termed “insubordinate Americans” to say hooray for Hollywood. It’s in things hipster (small craft breweries, little libraries, DIY music) and square (Kiwanis, Knights of Columbus, volunteer fire departments).
America is not an idea, an abstraction, or a marketing slogan. It is our home, and the land we love above all others.
At church, or public gatherings in my town, a prayer for the young people in the armed services will usually end with “bring them home safely.” I never have the heart to tell the minister that the architects of U.S. foreign policy do not intend for these soldiers to ever come home en masse. They will be over there—the exact location of there changing every few years—forever. It’s no coincidence that the foreign policy slogan most reviled by the foreign policy establishment—after “America First,” of course—was “Come Home, America,” the patriot George McGovern’s beautiful, even poetic plea in 1972. Because America ain’t ever supposed to come home.
It’s striking how seldom the word home is used in American political discourse. It packs a visceral punch, it can trigger the tear ducts—“Bring the Boys Home,” to echo the great anti-Vietnam War anthem by Freda Payne—but while home touches something in ordinary Americans, it means nothing to those who stride purposefully through corridors of power.
Well, if conservatism doesn’t stand for home then it stands for nothing, and to hell with it.
We owe the carnival barker in the White House profuse thanks on two counts: first, for driving a stake through the heart of the Bush and Clinton dynasties, and second, for bulldozing the barbed-wire fences that confined political discussion to the turbid channel separating Mitch McConnell from Nancy Pelosi.
Alas, Donald Trump is in love with grandiosity, with hugeness, with a bigger-is-better philosophy that is the antithesis of the humane and human-scale Little America whose million and one civic embodiments are the best thing about this country.
Don’t make America great. Make her good by reinvigorating the dormant traditions of local self-government, of confident liberty, of charity and love, and of that wonderful indigenous blend of don’t-tread-on-me defiance of remote arrogant rule with I’ll-give-you-the-shirt-off-my-back communitarianism.
Is that conservatism? I dunno. But it’s American, and it’s good enough for me.
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Mildred Harris (November 29, 1901 – July 20, 1944) was an American film actress during the early part of the 20th century. Harris began her career in the film industry as a child actress when she was 11 years old. She was also the first wife of Charlie Chaplin.
Mildred Harris was born in Cheyenne, Wyoming, to Harry Harris, a telegraph operator, and Anna Parsons Foote. Harris made her first screen appearance at the age of 11 in the 1912 Francis Ford and Thomas H. Ince-directed Western short The Post Telegrapher. She followed the film with various juvenile roles, often appearing opposite child actor Paul Willis. In 1914, she was hired by The Oz Film Manufacturing Company to portray Fluff in The Magic Cloak of Oz and Button-Bright in His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz. In 1916, at the age of 15, she appeared as a harem girl in Griffith's film Intolerance.
In the 1920s, Harris transitioned from child actress to leading lady roles opposite leading men such as Conrad Nagel, Charley Chase, Milton Sills, Lionel Barrymore, Rod La Rocque and the Moore brothers, Owen and Tom. She appeared in Frank Capra's 1928 silent drama The Power of the Press with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Jobyna Ralston and the same year, starred in Universal Pictures first sound film Melody of Love opposite Walter Pidgeon.
She found the transition to the "talkies" difficult and her career slowed dramatically. She performed in vaudeville and burlesque and, at one point, toured with comedian Phil Silvers. She was critically praised for her performance in the 1930 film adaptation of the Broadway musical No, No Nanette. In the 1936 Three Stooges comedy Movie Maniacs, she portrayed a temperamental and demanding film starlet who, while receiving a pedicure, is startled by stooge Curly Howard striking a match on the sole of her foot.
Harris continued to work in film in the early 1940s, largely through the kindness of her former director, Cecil B. DeMille, who cast her in bit parts in 1942's Reap the Wild Wind (starring Paulette Goddard, who, like Harris, was once married to Charlie Chaplin), and 1944's The Story of Dr. Wassell. Her last film appearance was in the posthumously-released 1945 film Having A Wonderful Crime.
The 16-year-old Harris met actor Charlie Chaplin in mid-1918, dated, and came to believe she was pregnant by him, but the pregnancy was found to be a false alarm. They married privately on October 23, 1918, in Los Angeles. She subsequently did become pregnant. The couple quarreled about her contract with Louis B. Mayer and her career. Chaplin felt she was not his intellectual equal. Their child Norman Spencer died in July 1919, at only three days of age, and the couple separated in the autumn of 1919.
Chaplin moved to the Los Angeles Athletic Club. Harris tried to keep up appearances, believing a happy marriage was possible but, in 1920, she filed for divorce based on mental cruelty. Chaplin accused her of infidelity, and though he would not name her lover publicly, actress Alla Nazimova was suspected. The divorce was granted in November 1920, with Harris receiving $100,000 (US$1,276,246 in 2019 dollars in settlement and some community property.
In 1924, Harris married Everett Terrence McGovern. The union lasted until November 26, 1929, when Harris filed for divorce in Los Angeles, on grounds of desertion. The couple had one son, Everett Terrence McGovern, Jr., in 1925. In 1934, she married the former football player William P. Fleckenstein in Asheville, North Carolina.
The couple remained married until Harris's death on July 20, 1944, of pneumonia following a major abdominal operation. She had been ill for three weeks. She is interred in the Abbey of the Psalms Mausoleum at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles.
Harris has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6307 Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles. In 1992, she was portrayed by Milla Jovovich in the biographical film Chaplin.
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A Joseph Agnello, Lad.118 Lt. Brian Ahearn, Bat.13 Eric Allen, Sqd.18 (D) Richard Allen, Lad.15 Cpt. James Amato, Sqd.1 Calixto Anaya Jr., Eng.4 Joseph Agnello, Lad.118 Lt. Brian Ahearn, Bat.13 Eric Allen, Sqd.18 (D) Richard Allen, Lad.15 Cpt. James Amato, Sqd.1 Calixto Anaya Jr., Eng.4 Joseph Angelini, Res.1 (D) Joseph Angelini Jr., Lad.4 Faustino Apostol Jr., Bat.2 David Arce, Eng.33 Louis Arena, Lad.5 (D) Carl Asaro, Bat.9 Lt. Gregg Atlas, Eng.10 Gerald Atwood, Lad.21
B Gerald Baptiste, Lad.9 A.C. Gerard Barbara, Cmd. Ctr. Matthew Barnes, Lad.25 Arthur Barry, Lad.15 Lt.Steven Bates, Eng.235 Carl Bedigian, Eng.214 Stephen Belson, Bat.7 John Bergin, Res.5 Paul Beyer, Eng.6 Peter Bielfeld, Lad.42 Brian Bilcher, Sqd.1 Carl Bini, Res.5 Christopher Blackwell, Res.3 Michael Bocchino, Bat.48 Frank Bonomo, Eng.230 Gary Box, Sqd.1 Michael Boyle, Eng.33 Kevin Bracken, Eng.40 Michael Brennan, Lad.4 Peter Brennan, Res.4 Cpt. Daniel Brethel, Lad.24 (D) Cpt. Patrick Brown, Lad.3 Andrew Brunn, Lad.5 (D) Cpt. Vincent Brunton, Lad.105 F.M. Ronald Bucca Greg Buck, Eng.201 Cpt. William Burke Jr., Eng.21 A.C. Donald Burns, Cmd. Ctr. John Burnside, Lad.20 Thomas Butler, Sqd.1 Patrick Byrne, Lad.101
C George Cain, Lad.7 Salvatore Calabro, Lad.101 Cpt. Frank Callahan, Lad.35 Michael Cammarata, Lad.11 Brian Cannizzaro, Lad.101 Dennis Carey, Hmc.1 Michael Carlo, Eng.230 Michael Carroll, Lad.3 Peter Carroll, Sqd.1 (D) Thomas Casoria, Eng.22 Michael Cawley, Lad.136 Vernon Cherry, Lad.118 Nicholas Chiofalo, Eng.235 John Chipura, Eng.219 Michael Clarke, Lad.2 Steven Coakley, Eng.217 Tarel Coleman, Sqd.252 John Collins, Lad.25 Robert Cordice, Sqd.1 Ruben Correa, Eng.74 James Coyle, Lad.3 Robert Crawford, Safety Lt. John Crisci, H.M. B.C. Dennis Cross, Bat.57 (D) Thomas Cullen III, Sqd. 41 Robert Curatolo, Lad.16 (D)
D Lt. Edward D'Atri, Sqd.1 Michael D'Auria, Eng.40 Scott Davidson, Lad.118 Edward Day, Lad.11 B.C. Thomas DeAngelis, Bat. 8 Manuel Delvalle, Eng.5 Martin DeMeo, H.M. 1 David DeRubbio, Eng.226 Lt. Andrew Desperito, Eng.1 (D) B.C. Dennis Devlin, Bat.9 Gerard Dewan, Lad.3 George DiPasquale, Lad.2 Lt. Kevin Donnelly, Lad.3 Lt. Kevin Dowdell, Res.4 B.C. Raymond Downey, Soc. Gerard Duffy, Lad.21
E Cpt. Martin Egan, Jr., Div.15 (D) Michael Elferis, Eng.22 Francis Esposito, Eng.235 Lt. Michael Esposito, Sqd.1 Robert Evans, Eng.33
F B.C. John Fanning, H.O. Cpt. Thomas Farino, Eng.26 Terrence Farrell, Res.4 Cpt. Joseph Farrelly, Div.1 Dep. Comm. William Feehan, (D) Lee Fehling, Eng.235 Alan Feinberg, Bat.9 Michael Fiore, Res.5 Lt. John Fischer, Lad.20 Andre Fletcher, Res.5 John Florio, Eng.214 Lt. Michael Fodor, Lad.21 Thomas Foley, Res.3 David Fontana, Sqd.1 Robert Foti, Lad.7 Andrew Fredericks, Sqd.18 Lt. Peter Freund, Eng.55
G Thomas Gambino Jr., Res.3 Chief of Dept. Peter Ganci, Jr. (D) Lt. Charles Garbarini, Bat.9 Thomas Gardner, Hmc.1 Matthew Garvey, Sqd.1 Bruce Gary, Eng.40 Gary Geidel, Res.1 B.C. Edward Geraghty, Bat.9 Dennis Germain, Lad.2 Lt. Vincent Giammona, Lad.5 James Giberson, Lad.35 Ronnie Gies, Sqd.288 Paul Gill, Eng.54 Lt. John Ginley, Eng.40 Jeffrey Giordano, Lad.3 John Giordano, Hmc.1 Keith Glascoe, Lad.21 James Gray, Lad.20 B.C. Joseph Grzelak, Bat.48 Jose Guadalupe, Eng.54 Lt. Geoffrey Guja, Bat.43 Lt. Joseph Gullickson, Lad.101
H David Halderman, Sqd.18 Lt. Vincent Halloran, Lad.8 Robert Hamilton, Sqd.41 Sean Hanley, Lad.20 (D) Thomas Hannafin, Lad.5 Dana Hannon, Eng.26 Daniel Harlin, Lad.2 Lt. Harvey Harrell, Res.5 Lt. Stephen Harrell, Bat.7 Cpt. Thomas Haskell, Jr., Div.15 Timothy Haskell, Sqd.18 (D) Cpt. Terence Hatton, Res.1 Michael Haub, Lad.4 Lt. Michael Healey, Sqd.41 John Hefferman, Lad.11 Ronnie Henderson, Eng.279 Joseph Henry, Lad.21 William Henry, Res.1 (D) Thomas Hetzel, Lad.13 Cpt. Brian Hickey, Res.4 Lt. Timothy Higgins, S.O.C. Jonathan Hohmann, Hmc.1 Thomas Holohan, Eng.6 Joseph Hunter, Sqd.288 Cpt. Walter Hynes, Lad.13 (D)
I Jonathan Ielpi, Sqd.288 Cpt. Frederick Ill Jr., Lad.2
J William Johnston, Eng.6 Andrew Jordan, Lad.132 Karl Joseph, Eng.207 Lt. Anthony Jovic, Bat.47 Angel Juarbe Jr., Lad.12 Mychal Judge, Chaplain (D)
K Vincent Kane, Eng.22 B.C. Charles Kasper, S.O.C. Paul Keating, Lad.5 Richard Kelly Jr., Lad.11 Thomas R. Kelly, Lad.15 Thomas W. Kelly, Lad.105 Thomas Kennedy, Lad.101 Lt. Ronald Kerwin, Sqd.288 Michael Kiefer, Lad.132 Robert King Jr., Eng.33 Scott Kopytko, Lad.15 William Krukowski, Lad.21 Kenneth Kumpel, Lad.25 Thomas Kuveikis, Sqd.252
L David LaForge, Lad.20 William Lake, Res.2 Robert Lane, Eng.55 Peter Langone, Sqd.252 Scott Larsen, Lad.15 Lt. Joseph Leavey, Lad.15 Neil Leavy, Eng.217 Daniel Libretti, Res.2 Carlos Lillo, Paramedic Robert Linnane, Lad.20 Michael Lynch, Eng.40 Michael Lynch, Lad.4 Michael Lyons, Sqd.41 Patrick Lyons, Sqd.252
M Joseph Maffeo, Lad.101 William Mahoney, Res 4 Joseph Maloney, Lad.3 (D) B.C. Joseph Marchbanks Jr, Bat.12 Lt. Charles Margiotta, Bat.22 Kenneth Marino, Res.1 John Marshall, Eng.23 Lt. Peter Martin, Res.2 Lt. Paul Martini, Eng.23 Joseph Mascali, T.S.U. 2 Keithroy Maynard, Eng.33 Brian McAleese, Eng.226 John McAvoy, Lad.3 Thomas McCann, Bat.8 Lt. William McGinn, Sqd.18 B.C. William McGovern, Bat.2 (D) Dennis McHugh, Lad.13 Robert McMahon, Lad.20 Robert McPadden, Eng.23 Terence McShane, Lad.101 Timothy McSweeney, Lad.3 Martin McWilliams, Eng.22 (D) Raymond Meisenheimer, Res.3 Charles Mendez, Lad.7 Steve Mercado, Eng.40 Douglas Miller, Res.5 Henry Miller Jr, Lad.105 Robert Minara, Lad.25 Thomas Mingione, Lad.132 Lt. Paul Mitchell, Bat.1 Capt. Louis Modafferi, Res.5 Lt. Dennis Mojica, Res.1 (D) Manuel Mojica, Sqd.18 (D) Carl Molinaro, Lad.2 Michael Montesi, Res.1 Capt. Thomas Moody, Div.1 B.C. John Moran, Bat.49 Vincent Morello, Lad.35 Christopher Mozzillo, Eng.55 Richard Muldowney Jr, Lad.07 Michael Mullan, Lad.12 Dennis Mulligan, Lad.2 Lt. Raymond Murphy, Lad.16
N Lt. Robert Nagel, Eng.58 John Napolitano, Res.2 Peter Nelson, Res.4 Gerard Nevins, Res.1
O Dennis O'Berg, Lad.105 Lt. Daniel O'Callaghan, Lad.4 Douglas Oelschlager, Lad.15 Joseph Ogren, Lad.3 Lt. Thomas O'Hagan, Bat.4 Samuel Oitice, Lad.4 Patrick O'Keefe, Res.1 Capt. William O'Keefe, Div.15 (D) Eric Olsen, Lad.15 Jeffery Olsen, Eng.10 Steven Olson, Lad.3 Kevin O'Rourke, Res.2 Michael Otten, Lad.35
P Jeffery Palazzo, Res.5 B.C. Orio Palmer, Bat.7 Frank Palombo, Lad.105 Paul Pansini, Eng.10 B.C. John Paolillo, Bat.11 James Pappageorge, Eng.23 Robert Parro, Eng.8 Durrell Pearsall, Res.4 Lt. Glenn Perry, Bat.12 Lt. Philip Petti, Bat.7 Lt. Kevin Pfeifer, Eng. 33 Lt. Kenneth Phelan, Bat.32 Christopher Pickford, Eng.201 Shawn Powell, Eng.207 Vincent Princiotta, Lad.7 Kevin Prior, Sqd.252 B.C. Richard Prunty, Bat.2 (D)
Q Lincoln Quappe, Res.2 Lt. Michael Quilty, Lad.11 Ricardo Quinn, Paramedic
R Leonard Ragaglia, Eng.54 Michael Ragusa, Eng.279 Edward Rall, Res.2 Adam Rand, Sqd.288 Donald Regan, Res.3 Lt. Robert Regan, Lad.118 Christian Regenhard, Lad.131 Kevin Reilly, Eng.207 Lt. Vernon Richard, Lad.7 James Riches, Eng.4 Joseph Rivelli, Lad.25 Michael Roberts, Eng.214 Michael E. Roberts, Lad.35 Anthony Rodriguez, Eng.279 Matthew Rogan, Lad.11 Nicholas Rossomando, Res.5 Paul Ruback, Lad.25 Stephen Russell, Eng.55 Lt. Michael Russo, S.O.C. B.C. Matthew Ryan, Bat.1
S Thomas Sabella, Lad.13 Christopher Santora, Eng.54 John Santore, Lad.5 (D) Gregory Saucedo, Lad.5 Dennis Scauso, H.M. 1 John Schardt, Eng.201 B.C. Fred Scheffold, Bat.12 Thomas Schoales, Eng.4 Gerard Schrang, Res.3 (D) Gregory Sikorsky, Sqd.41 Stephen Siller, Sqd.1 Stanley Smagala Jr, Eng.226 Kevin Smith, H.M. 1 Leon Smith Jr, Lad 118 Robert Spear Jr, Eng.26 Joseph Spor, Res.3 B.C. Lawrence Stack, Bat.50 Cpt. Timothy Stackpole, Div.11 (D) Gregory Stajk, Lad.13 Jeffery Stark, Eng.230 Benjamin Suarez, Lad.21 Daniel Suhr, Eng.216 (D) Lt. Christopher Sullivan, Lad.111 Brian Sweeney, Res.1
T Sean Tallon, Lad.10 Allan Tarasiewicz, Res.5 Paul Tegtmeier, Eng.4 John Tierney, Lad.9 John Tipping II, Lad.4 Hector Tirado Jr, Eng.23
V Richard Vanhine, Sqd.41 Peter Vega, Lad.118 Lawrence Veling, Eng.235 John Vigiano II, Lad.132 Sergio Villanueva, Lad.132 Lawrence Virgilio, Sqd.18 (D)
W Lt. Robert Wallace, Eng.205 Jeffery Walz, Lad. 9 Lt. Michael Warchola, Lad.5 (D) Capt. Patrick Waters, S.O.C. Kenneth Watson, Eng.214 Michael Weinberg, Eng.1 (D) David Weiss, Res.1 Timothy Welty, Sqd.288 Eugene Whelan, Eng.230 Edward White, Eng.230 Mark Whitford, Eng.23 Lt. Glenn Wilkinson, Eng.238 (D) B.C. John Williamson, Bat.6 (D) Capt. David Wooley, Lad.4
Y Raymond York, Eng.285 (D)
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hey i alphabetized your list of celebs for you to copy/paste into your post to make it easier to read/search, and got rid of a few duplicates. hope this makes it easier to add new people too. hope this is helpful and if not then feel free to ignore me lol.
People who are supporting Depp:
Aly & AJ
Anitta
Ashley Benson
Ashley Park (actress from Emily in Paris)
Auli'i Cravalho (actress from Moana)
Bailey Muñoz
Bella Hadid
Booboo Stewart
Chase Stokes (actor from Outer Banks)
China McClaine
Chris Rock
Cierra Ramirez (actress from The Fosters/Good Trouble)
Connor Swindells (adam groff on sex education)
Dakota Fanning
Dakota Johnson
Diana Silvers
Dove Cameron
Elle King
Emma Roberts
Florence Pugh
Gabby Douglas
Gemma Chan
Halle Bailey
Henry Golding
Jaime King
Jamie Campbell Bower
Jason Momoa
Javier Bardem
Jennifer Aniston
Jennifer Coolidge
Jeremy Renner
Jessie J
JoJo Siwa
Jordan Fisher
Julian Kostov (actor from Shadow & Bone)
Kali Uchis
LaKeith Stanfield
Lance Bass
Lewis Tan
Madelyn Cline (actress from Outer Banks)
Matthias Schoenaerts
McKenna Grace
Molly Shanon
Nicholas Braun
Nyane (popular instagram model)
Paris Hilton
Patti Smith
Paul McCartney
Penelope Cruz
Perrie Edwards
Robert Downey Jr
Sam Claflin
Samantha Hanratty (actress from Yellowjackets)
Samuel Larsen
Shannen Doherty
Sharon Stone
Sia
SNL cast and writers
Sofia Boutella
Sophie Turner
Taika Waititi
Vaness Morgan
Vanessa Paradis
Vincent Gallo
Zachary Levi
Zedd
Zoe Saldana
Zoey Deutch
People who publicly support Amber:
Alex Winter
Amy Schumer
Anna Sophia Robb
Bianca Butti (Amber's ex)
Chace Crawford
Chloe Morello
Contrapoints/Natalie Wynn
Corey Rae
Courtney Love
David Krumholtz
Dolph Lundgren
Elizabeth Lail (actress who played Beck from you)
Elizabeth McGovern
Ellen Barkin
Emily Ratajkowski
Evan Rachel Wood
Jessica Taylor, Dr
Julia Fox
Julia Stiles
Julianne Moore
Kathy Griffin
Kristen Bell
Lauren Jauregui
Lena Headey
Lindsay Ellis (YouTuber)
Lindsay Lohan
Lindsey Gort
Mia Farrow
Melissa Benoist
Monica Lewinsky
Nathalie Emmanuel (actress on Game of Thrones)
Rachel Riley
Robin Lord Taylor
Sarah Steele
Sophia Bush
Uzo Aduba
Willa Fitzgerald
Zach Kornfeld (from the Try Guys)
shoutout to you anon, this is such a big help and i'm fixing the post as we speak!
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TIME MACHINE: Assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy (1925-1968)
TIME MACHINE: ASSASSINATION OF SENATOR ROBERT F. KENNEDY (1925-1968)
This week marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy of New York, in Los Angeles, California. Kennedy was fatally shot by a gun man, while walking through the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel with his wife Ethel Kennedy, former FBI agent William Barry, Olympian athlete Rafer Johnson and former football player Rosey Grier.
Kennedy was the seventh child of former U.S. Ambassador to Britain and businessman Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy. Following the election of his older brother John F. Kennedy as the 35th U.S. President in 1960, Kennedy served as Attorney General for his brother's administration. In November 1968, Jack Kennedy was assassinated by a sniper in Dallas, Texas. Nine months following his brother's death, Robert Kennedy ran for a seat in the U.S. Senate, representing the State of New York and beat his opponent, Kenneth Keating. Kennedy spent his years in the Senate, Kennedy advocated gun control and the Johnson Administration's Great Society program for the elimination of poverty and racial injustice. He served on the Senate Labor Committee and supported the campaigns for better working conditions for laborers. And by 1968, Kennedy had shifted his opinion on American involvement in Vietnam by advocating the eventual withdrawal of American and North Vietnamese soldiers from South Vietnam.
While meeting with labor activist Cesar Chavez in Delano, California in February 1968, Kennedy decided to challenge President Lyndon B. Johnson for the Democratic nomination for U.S. President. However, Johnson changed his mind about running for re-election following the Tet Offensive in Vietnam that occurred between late January and late March 1968. Kennedy officially announced his candidacy on March 16, 1968. His main opponents for the Democratic nomination were Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota and later, Vice-President Hubert Humphrey. Kennedy ran on a platform of racial and economic justice, non-aggression in foreign policy, decentralization of power, and social change. His policy objectives did not sit well with the business community, where he was viewed as something of a liability. Many businessmen also opposed Kennedy's support of tax increases to social programs.
Kennedy learned of the assassination of civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee; while visiting Indianapolis, Indiana. Riots broke out in many cities following King's death, with the exception of Indianapolis. There, Kennedy gave his famous "On the Mindless Menace of Violence" speech on April 5, 1968. Later, he attended King's funeral with his younger brother Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and his sister-in-law, former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy. He won the Indiana Democratic primary on May 7, 1968; and the Nebraska primary on May 14. But he lost the Oregon primary to Senator McCarthy on May 28. The Kennedy campaign hoped that the senator would beat McCarthy for the California primary, knocking the latter out of the race; and eventually face Vice-President Humphrey in Chicago, Illinois.
The 1968 California presidential primary elections were held on Tuesday, June 4, 1968. Kennedy claimed victory over McCarthy at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, four hours after the California polls closed. He spoke on the telephone with one of his major supporters, Senator George McGovern of South Dakota. Then around 12:10 a.m., Kennedy addressed his campaign supporters in the hotel's Embassy Room ballroom. He ended his speech with the following words:
"My thanks to all of you; and now it's on to Chicago, and let's win there!"
Since presidential candidates were not entitled to Secret Service protection back in 1968, Kennedy's only official security was William Barry, a former F.B.I. agent. Both Rafer Johnson and Rosey Grier served as unofficial bodyguards. He had planned to meet another gathering of supporters in another part of the Ambassador Hotel by making his way through the Embassy Room ballroom. However, reporters wanted a second press conference and Kennedy's campaign aide, Fred Dutton, suggested to Barry that the senator should forgo the second gathering and instead head for the press area, via the hotel's kitchen and pantry area behind the ballroom. After his speech, Kennedy started to leave the ballroom, when Barry stopped him and suggested the alternate route through the kitchen corridor. Both Barry and Dutton tried to clear a path for Kennedy, but he was hemmed in by a crowd and followed maître d'hôtel Karl Uecker through a back exit. While Kennedy allowed Uecker to lead him through the hotel's kitchen area, he shook hands with people he encountered. As they started down a narrow passageway, Kennedy turned and shook hands with busboy Juan Romero. At that moment, Sirhan Sirhanstepped down from a low tray-stacker beside the ice machine, rushed past Uecker, and fired a .22 caliber Iver Johnson Cadet revolver at Kennedy at least three times or more, before the latter fell to the floor.
Romero cradled the wounded Kennedy's head, while sitting on the floor. Sirhan was subdued by Barry, Johnson, Grier, and writer George Plimpton, while he continued to shoot in random directions. Five other people were wounded:
*William Weisel of ABC News
*Paul Schrade of the United Auto Workers union,
*Democratic Party activist Elizabeth Evans
*Ira Goldstein of the Continental News Service
*Irwin Stroll, Kennedy campaign volunteer
Ethel Kennedy, who was three months pregnant, stood outside the crush of people at the scene seeking help. Someone led her to her husband and she knelt beside him. Thirty minutes later, Kennedy was transferred to the Hospital of the Good Samaritan. Surgery began at 3:12 a.m. and lasted three hours and forty minutes. Spokesman Frank Mankiewicz announced at 5:30 p.m. that Kennedy's doctors were concerned over his failure to show any improvement. Kennedy had been shot three times. Despite extensive neurosurgery to remove the bullet and bone fragments from his brain, he was pronounced dead at 1:44 a.m. on June 6, 1968; nearly 26 hours after being shot.
Historians believed that Sirhan Sirhan, a Palestinian Arab with Jordanian citizenship, had shot Kennedy in retaliation for the latter's support of Israel during the Six Day War. However, others have criticized this oversimplification of Sirhan's motives, pointing out that these historians have failed to take account of his psychological problems. Sirhan's lawyers attempted to use a defense of diminished responsibility during the trial, while he tried to confess to the crime and change his plea to guilty on several occasions. With Lynn Compton serving as prosecutor, Sirhan was eventually convicted of the murder of Robert F. Kennedy on April 17, 1969. He was sentenced to death six days later. However, the sentence was commuted to life in prison with the possibility of parole in 1972; after the California Supreme Court invalidated all pending death sentences that were imposed prior to 1972. This was due to the California v. Anderson ruling. Since that time, Sirhan has been denied parole 15 times and is currently incarcerated at the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in southern San Diego County.
Robert Kennedy's funeral was held on June 8, 1968 at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. His brother, Ted Kennedy, gave the eulogy. Following the mass, Kennedy's body was transported by a slow-moving train to Washington, D.C., where he was buried near his older brother John, in Arlington National Cemetery.
After the assassination, Congress altered the Secret Service's mandate to include protection for presidential candidates. Ethel gave birth to Rory Elizabeth Katherine Kennedy in December 1968. Although he had a slight lead over Kennedy at the time of the latter's death, Vice-President Humphreys became the leading Democratic nominee for the 1968 Presidential election and won the nomination during the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Illinois, later that summer. He eventually lost the election to the Republican candidate, former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, in November 1968.
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Birthdays 7.19
Beer Birthdays
Adrian Tierney-Jones
Five Favorite Birthdays
Benedict Cumberbatch; English actor (1976)
Edgar Degas; French artist (1834)
Anthony Edwards; actor (1962)
Max Fleischer; animator (1883)
Brian May; rock guitarist (1947)
Famous Birthdays
Yael Abecassis; Israeli model and actress (1967)
Muhammad al-Bukhari; Persian scholar (810)
Marianna Auenbrugger; Austrian composer (1759)
Paule Baillargeon; Canadian actress and director (1945)
Theo Barker; English historian (1923)
Buster Benton; singer-songwriter and guitarist (1932)
Heinrich Christian Boie; German author and poet (1744)
Lizzie Borden; accused murderer (1860)
Vicki Carr; singer (1941)
Allen Collins; guitarist and songwriter (1952)
Samuel Colt; inventor (1814)
Mark Crispin; computer scientist (1956)
A.J. Cronin; writer (1896)
Friedrich Dessauer; German physicist and philosopher (1881)
Atom Egoyan; Egyptian-Canadian director (1960)
Michael Fekete; Hungarian-Israeli mathematician (1886)
Thomas Gabriel Fischer; Swiss musician (1963)
André Forcier; Canadian director and screenwriter (1947)
Helen Gallagher; actress, singer, and dancer (1926)
Keith Godchaux; rock keyboardist (1948)
Alan Gorrie; Scottish singer-songwriter (1946)
Kevin Haskins; English drummer and songwriter (1960)
Joseph Hansen; author and poet (1923)
Samuel John Hazo; author (1928)
Pat Hingle; actor (1924)
Florence Foster Jenkins; soprano (1868)
Richard Jordan; actor (1938)
Gottfried Keller; Swiss author and poet (1819)
Aleksandr Khinchin; Russian mathematician (1894)
Lisa Lampanelli; comedian (1961)
Bernie Leadon; guitarist and songwriter (1947)
Robert Mann; violinist, composer, and conductor (1920)
John Martin; English artist (1789)
Charles Horace Mayo; surgeon, clinic founder (1865)
George McGovern; politician (1922)
Tim McIntire; actor and singer (1944)
Freddy Moore; singer-songwriter and guitarist (1950)
Ilie Nastase; tennis player (1946)
Alice Dunbar Nelson; African-American poet (1875)
Garth Nix; Australian writer (1963)
Jim Norton; comedian (1968)
Mark O'Donnell; playwright (1954)
Steve O'Donnell; screenwriter and producer (1954)
Jayne Anne Phillips; writer (1952)
Edward Charles Pickering; astronomer and physicist (1846)
Martin Powell; English keyboard player and songwriter (1973)
Arthur Rankin Jr.; animation director, producer (1924)
Tom Raworth; English poet (1938)
Miltos Sachtouris; Greek poet (1919)
Campbell Scott; actor (1961)
Elizabeth Spencer; writer (1921)
Percy Le Baron Spencer; microwave inventor (1894)
Sue Thompson; singer (1925)
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow; physicist (1921)
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