***** frantic after forgetting he put mask in his pocket
President ***** spent 30 seconds frantically looking for a mask he left in his pocket before his outdoor rally in Georgia this week — saying he’d be “in trouble” without it — despite .
Footage from Thursday’s — which marked his 100th day in office — showed the commander in chief immediately hunting for his missing mask after arriving at his podium.
“I can’t find my mask!” he could be heard saying, initially drowned out by the loud welcome music of Jackie Wilson’s “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher.”
First Lady Jill ***** joined him in his desperate searching as he repeated his plea, taking the same folder to flick through and also bending down to look on the floor.
“Looking for my mask — I’m in trouble,” the president finally told the crowd, without explaining exactly what “trouble” he would be in given that he is already .
As a spare mask was finally brought up to him, ***** found his initial face covering, which had been in his suit-pant pocket all along.
He did not leave it for long, however — and went maskless for the speech after he was introduced.
*****’s Secret Service Arrests Illegal Aliens Outside White House
A group of illegal aliens and open borders activists were arrested on Friday by members of President Joe *****’s secret service after blocking an intersection near the White House, demanding that ***** give them amnesty to permanently stay in the United States.
A couple of dozen activists affiliated with the open borders organization Movimiento Cosecha sat by a security checkpoint near the White House complex, reportedly delaying *****’s motorcade, as Secret Service Police officers looked on.
“We are not afraid,” the self-described “comrades” sang. “We will live for liberation because we know why we were made.”
They also chanted in Spanish, demanding “permanent protect for all 11 million” illegal aliens living in U.S.
In a press release the protest, the agitators said they were no longer satisfied with the “crumbs” from the ***** administration, which has included preventing about 9-in-10 deportations through a series of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) orders.
“The current legislation the ********s are pushing only focuses on a small portion of undocumented immigrants,” group organizer Hector Morales said.
“Even though I would qualify under the current Dream and Promise Act, I am risking arrest today to tell President ***** that I won’t accept piecemeal bills that exclude and criminalize my own community members,” he added.
“I won’t accept these crumbs. We need permanent protection for all.”
A protester denounced ********s’ “empty promises” and thanked the “allies” for risking arrest.
“***** originally committed to a pathway to citizenship for all 11 million undocumented immigrants,” organizer Gema Lowe said.
Movimiento Cosecha said Lowe has been living illegally in Michigan for almost 30 years.
“Now he is ready to pursue a ‘piecemeal’ strategy instead that would exclude me and millions of others who have lived in this country for decades. We deserve better,” she declared.
“That is why today I am willing to risk arrest, detention, and deportation to demand papers, not crumbs.”
Now the ***** people are evaluating a presidency by the number of viewers that tuned in to the first address.
My guess is the drop in numbers is attributed to disgruntled ***** supporters who decided not to watch.
Ok.
Not to mention ***** addressing the public had the hate watchers & the guys watching for what wacky sh^t he'd say or do. So I'd argue his numbers were inflated not cuz he was more popular in the positive way, but just like Floyd, Young Ali & other hated people in our culture, he was popular via his haters & those wanting to see what he'd do next.
President Joe ***** is less popular than police and law enforcement agencies and more popular than Major League Baseball, according to a poll April 25 by NBC.
The president notched a 50 percent total positivity rate compared to 58 percent for police and law enforcement agencies and 34 percent for MLB, which last month opted to move its All-Star Game and draft out of Georgia in protest of the state’s new election law.
Law enforcement agencies have been under scrutiny amid a string of fatal police shootings, highlighted last week by the conviction of former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin in the murder of George Floyd.
Chauvin, who is white, kept his knee on Floyd’s neck for at least eight minutes and 15 seconds, even as Floyd, who was Black, lost consciousness and for a full one minute, 20 seconds after paramedics arrived at the scene.
The Justice Department last week said it was opening a sweeping police investigation into policing practices in Minneapolis following the conviction.
The poll, conducted April 17-20, also found:
Former President Donald ***** notched a 32 percent total positivity rate, compared with 55 percent negative
58 percent of Americans say their bigger concern when it comes to voting is “making sure that everyone who wants to vote can do so,” which includes 87 percent of ********s and 65 percent of independents.
38 percent say they are most concerned about “making sure that no one votes who is not eligible to vote.” More than three-quarters of **********s — 77 percent — agree.
Large majorities of Black and Hispanic Americans — 82 percent and 73 percent, respectively — say they are most focused on making sure all eligible voters can vote.
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