Is she a "class act," though? Or does the seeming possession of a hint of class stand out only because the others in her chosen cadre form such a squalid ghetto of the intellect? Like, she claims to be pro-choice and for the ERA, but refuses to consider changing the filibuster rules necessary to actually pass these things, and also helpe…
Is she a "class act," though? Or does the seeming possession of a hint of class stand out only because the others in her chosen cadre form such a squalid ghetto of the intellect? Like, she claims to be pro-choice and for the ERA, but refuses to consider changing the filibuster rules necessary to actually pass these things, and also helped put Injustice Handmaiden on the Supreme Court. She's about as genuinely classy as a Walmart pretending to support a charity.
That being said, when my kids were in HS, two of the parents in our band boosters group were Walmart lower management. They were required to do volunteer hours and used the parent group as their chosen work. (BTW, they were wonderful people who put in easily 10x the amount of hours required) Walmart would donate $500 to the group you did your volunteer work for, so our group got $1000/yr from them. Desperately needed monies, as we had had a referendum to increase the property tax rate for the schools so that they wouldn't cut the arts. (What they always threaten) It did pass, but the band budget was bare bones. We fund-raised to get a better sound system, to get portable backdrops, etc, etc.
Is she a "class act," though? Or does the seeming possession of a hint of class stand out only because the others in her chosen cadre form such a squalid ghetto of the intellect? Like, she claims to be pro-choice and for the ERA, but refuses to consider changing the filibuster rules necessary to actually pass these things, and also helped put Injustice Handmaiden on the Supreme Court. She's about as genuinely classy as a Walmart pretending to support a charity.
Not a Walmart fan. NOT.A.WALMART.FAN. At all.
That being said, when my kids were in HS, two of the parents in our band boosters group were Walmart lower management. They were required to do volunteer hours and used the parent group as their chosen work. (BTW, they were wonderful people who put in easily 10x the amount of hours required) Walmart would donate $500 to the group you did your volunteer work for, so our group got $1000/yr from them. Desperately needed monies, as we had had a referendum to increase the property tax rate for the schools so that they wouldn't cut the arts. (What they always threaten) It did pass, but the band budget was bare bones. We fund-raised to get a better sound system, to get portable backdrops, etc, etc.
Only ONLY good thing I have to say about WalMart.
Will, as an Alaskan I couldn’t agree more with your comments about Lisa Murkowski