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View Poll Results: Do you live in one of America's inner cities? | |||
Yes, I live in a but I got inner city | 41 | 18.55% | |
Yes, I live in a crime infested inner city | 35 | 15.84% | |
Yes, I live in a burning crime infested inner city | 33 | 14.93% | |
Bush burned the crime infested towers | 153 | 69.23% | |
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 221. You may not vote on this poll |
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Russian units have begun patrolling territory separating Turkish-backed Syrian rebels from the Syrian army around the town of Manbij in north-east Syria, in a clear sign that Moscow has become the de facto power broker in the region after the evacuation of U.S. troops.
Despite the prospect of losing the area’s semi-autonomous status, Kurdish officials struck a Russian-brokered deal with Damascus on Sunday for reinforcements to protect Kurdish-held border positions. There are unconfirmed reports that talks are still under way to implement a Russian-enforced no-fly zone over the area. | ||
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Man these goofballs Trump selected for his inner circle make great witnesses at some point. I think Trump's spirit animal is Captain Sobel from Band of Brothers, aside from the enlisted part. [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.] | |||
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New York Governor Andrew Cuomo drops the n-word in radio interview.
Andrew Cuomo dropped the N-word during a discussion around discrimination against Italian Americans while quoting a recent New York Times op-ed on a radio show Tuesday. “Going back to the Italian Americans because now you have me. They used an expression that southern Italians were called quote-unquote, and pardon my language, but I’m just quoting The Times, n----r w--s. N-word wops as a derogatory comment,” he added. | ||
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Whats the second bleeped word? 'Wigs'? Is it an offensive one?
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What even is a wop?!
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The best guess from etymologists is that the source is a southern Italian dialectal word, guappo or guappu, meaning “dandy” or “swaggerer.” That, in turn, is likely from the Spanish word guapo meaning “handsome” or “bold,” imported to Sicily when the island was occupied by Spain. Sicilian immigrants to the United States brought the swaggering word with them. It “connoted arrogance, bluster, and maleficence entwined,” wrote the music journalist Nick Tosches in his 2001 book Where Dead Voices Gather. | |||
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So the spaniard from princess bride but more mafia?
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