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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 10:28:46 GMT -5
No. His head is like a big empty balloon. I haven't seen any. If he has he's keeping it a well kept secret. Not about head coaching that's for sure I guess the Bill Parcells of the world should start deferring to you. What is his football philosophy?
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 10:00:42 GMT -5
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 9:32:46 GMT -5
If you were 1/2 as smart as VTN, you might be dangerous. Cutting and pasting from the Daily Kos does take a high level of intelligence. No understanding them is the hard part
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 9:23:32 GMT -5
Belichik shows evidence of having thoughts in his head And Todd Bowles doesn't?... Instead he just magically became one of the hotttest coaching commodities on the market before the Jets hired him. Richie Pettibone was dunce for allowing Bowles to run his SB winning D and Bill Parcells and Bruce Arians know dick about what it takes to be a HC in the NFL. No. His head is like a big empty balloon. I haven't seen any. If he has he's keeping it a well kept secret. Not about head coaching that's for sure
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 8:46:07 GMT -5
LOL... all the unanimated, not a motivator criticisms of Bowles..... all the same things can be said of BB Belichik shows evidence of having thoughts in his head
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 8:41:59 GMT -5
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 8:01:57 GMT -5
I'm not worried:
a 70 yr old needs to undergo a maturation process
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 7:58:10 GMT -5
Bowles is not "introspective ". When he has a (non-Chip Ahoy related) thought, it will be his first one. It was obvious in his very first press conference- he had nothing to say about football or his philosophy, other than "complementary " football , and still doesn't My father was more animated on his deathbed than Bowles ever has been during his conferences. Need some no doze for that guy. I can take unanimated, if he showed any evidence of having a thought enter his head which to date had not happened
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 7:33:41 GMT -5
Macy's to cut 10,000 jobs. Not sure if that applies here, as they were already in America. That's obama's fault. Obviously. Retail is a dying industry. Maybe Trump can promise to put a tariff on every sale Amazon steals from a brick and mortar store and promise all those retail workers their jobs back
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 7:31:47 GMT -5
Bowles is nothing like Parcells. Based on the demeanor he presents during his interviews, he has an introspective personality. With Bruce in Arizona he developed the defensive game plan and called the defensive plays ... which is what he did with the Jets. In Arizona, Bruce dealt with psyching the players. Bowles with the Jets ... Dealing with players at practice and in the locker room? A job for his assistants. Why didn't he fire Rodgers? Defense was just as bad, or worse than the Offense ... Rodgers is still there because Bowles is the defensive guy, developing the game plans and calling the plays. Pepper Johnson and the rest of the assistants were charged with dealing with the players and the locker room. Parcells' in-charge personality thoroughly came across during his interviews, just as Bowles lack of it comes through during his press conferences. If you can't see it you're in denial. Parcells is what he showed to the press ... and Bowles is what he's shown. Bowles is not "introspective ". When he has a (non-Chip Ahoy related) thought, it will be his first one. It was obvious in his very first press conference- he had nothing to say about football or his philosophy, other than "complementary " football , and still doesn't
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 7:25:59 GMT -5
As usual conflating debt and deficit. News flash those are two different things Can't get 10 trillion in debt without a deficit can you? The deficit has gone down for the last five years. Just wait till Trump explodes the deficit, then it won't matter anymore just like it didn't when bush was president
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 7:22:40 GMT -5
This is very constructive. Not to mention presidential
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 4, 2017 20:47:39 GMT -5
I guess no more death penalty. If this guy develops a principle it'll be his first
(CNN)Donald Trump called WikiLeaks "disgraceful" and suggested there be a "death penalty" for their actions during a 2010 interview.
Speaking on camera to preview Brian Kilmeade's radio show, the Fox News anchor brought up the topic of WikiLeaks. At the time, WikiLeaks had published hundreds of thousands of classified documents and videos that were leaked to the organization by Pfc. Chelsea Manning, known at the time as Pfc. Bradley Manning.
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 4, 2017 18:55:49 GMT -5
Rodgers is a bum and Bowles is a dummy. We got the wrong Rodgers
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 4, 2017 18:17:17 GMT -5
Yeah, mandate. Oops
A new poll finds majorities in red and purple states who want their Democratic senators to be a "check and balance" to Republican President-elect Donald Trump.
The poll, conducted for the progressive Center for American Progress and published by The Washington Post, found that between 56 percent and 61 percent of voters in those states want their Democratic senator to be a "check and balance" to Trump.
The survey of 1,206 voters was conducted in 14 states where Democratic senators are up for reelection in 2018.
"Even in states that Trump won handily, Democrats are in a good position," the organization's president, Neera Tanden, told the newspaper.
"Eight years ago, if you asked this question, people were much more inclined to say that everyone should get along. Here, you've got people who voted for Trump but want Democrats to block or oppose his agenda. That seems to be a new thing for American politics."
When the pollster conducting the survey described liberal proposals in a positive light, voters said "no" to many of the Republican Party's goals for the new Congress.
When asked if they would "replace Medicare with private insurance for seniors that costs two thousand dollars more per year on average," 77 percent of respondents said "no."
Seventy-two percent said they would not "cut funding for Medicaid, which states use to provide health coverage for low-income individuals and for nursing home care for seniors and the disabled."
Tanden noted the "big cleavage in the coalition that voted for Trump."
"He won traditional Republicans, but his victory margin came from people who didn't vote Republican before and don't support the party now. That's unique," she said.
"It also suggests that the election was not a mandate for a right-wing agenda, and right now, Trump's misreading that with his Cabinet picks."
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