Shots fired at Trump rally, page-1802

  1. 22,247 Posts.
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    Never read any of that -

    Yes you did. Liar! smile.png

    it appears irrelevant -

    Scroll right down to the bottom, concerning Merrick Garland.

    as if you have an inability to accept another sham "gotcha" case against Trump has gone

    No, I said expect an appeal. Who knows where it goes from there?
    How many law students you reckon there are in America since Trump came on to the scene and are eligible to vote?


    Enrollment in Juris Doctor (J.D.) programs at the 196 institutions approved by the ABA to grant the degree was 116,897 in Fall 2023, an increase of 170 students (+. 15%) over 2022. An additional 23,032 students were enrolled in law school programs other than the J.D.

    Say around 8 years or so?
    Probably could nearly double that plus their families.

    And those who study political science.

    If approximately 34,000 students graduate with a political science degree each year, and assuming a 40% attrition rate, we can estimate the initial number of students who started the program:Initial Students=34,0001−0.40=34,0000.60≈56,667\text{Initial Students} = \frac{34,000}{1 - 0.40} = \frac{34,000}{0.60} \approx 56,667Initial Students=1−0.4034,000=0.6034,000≈56,667

    There's some reasonable amount of young students of lefty leaning education that would read the irrelevant stuff.
    Plus their families.

    Then there are these kids that became eligible in 2020 to vote. They have families too!

    Donald Trump’s campaign and election have added an alarming twist to school bullying, with white students using the president's words and slogans to bully Latino, Middle Eastern, black, Asian, and Jewish classmates. In the first comprehensive review of post-election bullying, BuzzFeed News has confirmed more than 50 incidents, across 26 states, in which a K-12 student invoked Trump’s name or message in an apparent effort to harass a classmate during the past school year.

    In the parking lot of a high school in Shakopee, Minnesota, boys in Donald Trump shirts gathered around a black teenage girl and sang a portion of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” replacing the closing line with “and the home of the slaves.” On a playground at an elementary school in Albuquerque, New Mexico, third-graders surrounded a boy and chanted “Trump! Trump! Trump!”

    On a school bus in San Antonio, Texas, a white eighth-grader said to a Filipino classmate, “You are going to be deported.” In a classroom in Brea, California, a white eighth-grader told a black classmate, “Now that Trump won, you're going to have to go back to Africa, where you belong.” In the hallway of a high school in San Mateo County, California, a white student told two biracial girls to “go back home to whatever country you're from.” In Louisville, Kentucky, a third-grade boy chased a Latina girl around the classroom shouting “Build the wall!” In a stadium parking lot in Jacksonville, Florida, after a high school football game, white students chanted at black students from the opposing school: “Donald Trump! Donald Trump! Donald Trump!”

    The first school year of the Donald Trump presidency left educators struggling to navigate a climate where misogyny, religious intolerance, name-calling, and racial exclusion have become part of mainstream political speech.

    These budding political beliefs among some students carry consequences beyond the schoolyard.


    Today’s high schoolers will be eligible to vote in 2020, and today’s fifth graders will be eligible to vote in 2024.


    How did Trump go in 2020?


 
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