Let's just institute a permanent fix.
-
She's Got Marty Feldman Eyes — 7 months ago(August 11, 2025 03:22 PM)
Jinx by me a coke I almost posted the identical message to you!
[Lol]
I find his willingness to hand over governmental control to AI ironically troublesome too. Seems a far stretch for someone that literally believes in the mark of the beast.
All of kno is imma about to ask got to make me a map. -
AnthonySocksss — 7 months ago(August 09, 2025 05:59 PM)
Let’s not forget to wish happy birthday to this fine ass sexy bitch
Melton1 Wanted for Pedophilia:
https://i.ibb.co/6cnPmJVr/IMG-0830.jpg
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/Zjxk307CND0 -
TonyKnox — 7 months ago(August 11, 2025 01:37 PM)
I've always thought they should let a program randomly set districts and run it thousands of times, then pick the average of them all and that would be the least biased district map you could possibly generate.
-
Soul_Venom — 7 months ago(August 11, 2025 11:08 PM)
Democrats would fight it tooth and nail.
They have already gerrymandered to near the max. Even if they finished full gerrymandering the blue states it would only gain them 5 seats. But if the Republicans did what those low down snakes did we would likely pick up 15-20 seats.
Dems are not going to willingly give up what they cheated so hard to steal.
Trump is still your President. Charlie Kirk still Wins! -
/.ㅤ — 7 months ago(August 12, 2025 06:24 AM)
Not even close.
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/who-controlled-redistricting-every-state
Brennan Center for Justice: This non-partisan law and policy institute estimates that in the 2024 election cycle, gerrymandering will give Republicans an advantage of around 16 House seats compared to what would be expected with "fair maps." Their analysis further breaks down the partisan impact, suggesting that Republican-drawn maps create an extra 23 Republican or Republican-leaning seats, while Democratic-drawn maps create an additional 7 Democratic or Democratic-leaning seats.
Center for American Progress: Looking at the 2012, 2014, and 2016 elections, the Center for American Progress found that gerrymandering shifted an average of 59 seats per election. Of those, 39 were to the benefit of Republicans and 20 to Democrats, resulting in a net gain of 19 seats for the Republican party in each of those elections
My password is password.
