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Won’t stick, huh? Funny, that. Hey Terry, would you have confidence in omens? Because that yes looks like anyone to united states.
That bumper magnet is definately not being the only real faulty thing Team Obama’s offered. See you in November, honey.
Read more: http://twitchy.com/2012/09/03/terry-mcmillans-obamabiden-bumper-magnet-just-wont-stick/
Multiple news outlets are reporting that @J_tsar is the Twitter handle of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing. As Twitchy reported, the tweets on the account are chilling and one appears to indicate he was a 9/11 truther (something his aunt might endorse).
Tweets and retweets sent from the account on Nov. 6 and 7 seem to suggest Tsarnaev was disenchanted with politics, but supportive of Obama and pleased with the president’s victory. So … your average right-wing Tea Party type:
america is impervious to the fuckery #justforthisoneday
— Jahar (@J_tsar) November 7, 2012
I should of slept through this class, yes obama won and yea a lot of money wasspent #fuckpoliticalscience
— Jahar (@J_tsar) November 7, 2012
These three tweets were retweeted:
WTF Romney is winning ?? twitter.com/WakaFlockaBSM/…
— Waka Flocka Flame (@WakaFlockaBSM) November 6, 2012
This happened because of you. Thank you.
— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) November 7, 2012
Barack you my dawg but we all puppets in this bitch..
— TnL 4/20 Monty (@MonTanA_BaBy) November 7, 2012
Replace “Barack” with “Mitt” and just imagine the celebratory squees from the Left.
Those violent conservatives… RT @jonhenke Here is what the Boston bomber tweeted about the 2012 election –> twitter.com/JonHenke/statu…
— Brady Cremeens (@brady_cremeens) April 19, 2013
Related:
Full Twitchy coverage of the Boston Marathon bombing and the hunt for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

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It’s not yet visible in most of the U.S., but Twitter users in Asia have already posted some spectacular photos. We’ll update this post later tonight with photos taken from the U.S.
annular solar #eclipse as seen from #Tokyo via @HirokoTabuchi http://t.co/EfXl8NLx http://t.co/Yiaylcms – and here http://t.co/cJ5IlAt1
— cristina lombardi (@crislomb) May 20, 2012
https://twitter.com/whsaito/status/204347801281380352
金環日食ではないけど、部分日食はまぐれで撮れた! RT @crux_dlev: a Photo of "a solar eclipse" http://t.co/VrYGNN9O
— くらっくす@1PA-074 (@crux_dlev) May 20, 2012
https://twitter.com/#!/jebusmr/status/204346275347439618
Read more: http://twitchy.com/2012/05/20/happy-solar-eclipse-day/
Bill Bennett and David Wilezol undertake Majority chief Reid in today’s Roll Call:
.@dwilezol and I also have a bit this morning in @rollcall on @SenatorReid's unwarranted attacks regarding the Koch brothers http://t.co/Lqd2VLEvrb
— Bill Bennett (@WilliamJBennett) September 16, 2014
The opener:
It’s no secret Democrats tend to be stressed about November’s midterm elections. Obamacare, though out from the headlines come july 1st, remains unpopular with voters. Twice as many Us americans tend to be saying the law has harmed them a lot more than aided. In foreign matters, the world ended up being aghast within president’s decision in May to swap five captured Taliban commanders for Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, a deserter from the Army. President Barack Obama’s message the other day on ISIL, or perhaps the Islamic State, had been determined to try to overcome his earlier entry that, “We don’t have actually a technique however” to combat the largest national protection challenge america has faced since the 9/11 attacks on our soil.
People in america know the Democrat-held Senate was one of the more unproductive ever. Even Democrats are admitting it. Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia recently remarked, “I’ve never experienced a less productive time in my life than I am at this time, in the us Senate.”
In a panic over tight races, Senate Majority commander Harry Reid, D-Nev., has made a decision to deploy the course warfare method of Obama’s 2012 re-election promotion and blame the rich for America’s continued financial stagnation. Reid has continued to develop a specific obsession with attacking David and Charles Koch, two exclusive people and effective United states business owners and employers.
Since January, Reid features assaulted the Koch brothers by name over 22 times on the floor of this Senate, derisively phoning them, “power-drunk billionaires,” among other things. Reid also stated the Kochs tend to be “single-handedly financing an attack about this nation’s middle-class.” The Nevada senator, the Kochs are “un-American,” and a “cult.” Perhaps the most preposterous declaration that Reid made is his insistence the Koch brothers were to blame for delaying US help to Ukraine. The malice behind the rhetoric is evident when we give consideration to that 50 % of most Us citizens have zero notion of which the Koch brothers are. Neither people features ever before fulfilled the Koch brothers or received anything of their money, but we discover Reid’s attempt to fill America’s knowledge gap with poisoned a few ideas towards Kochs despicable.
The remainder here.
Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/09/16/icymi-read-bill-bennetts-op-ed-on-harry-reids-class-warfare-strategy/

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Ten years ago, my first novel Prep came out. Three novels later, here’s what I’ve learned about the publishing industry and writing since then.
1. When it comes to fellow writers, don’t buy into the narcissism of small differences. In all their neurotic, competitive, smart, funny glory, other writers are your friends.
2. Unless you’re Stephen King, or you’re standing inside your own publishing house, assume that nobody you meet has ever heard of you or your books. If they have, you can be pleasantly surprised.
3. At a reading, 25 audience members and 20 chairs is better than 200 audience members and 600 chairs.
4. There are very different ways people can ask a published writer for the same favor. Polite, succinct, and preemptively letting you off the hook is most effective.
5. Blurbs achieve almost nothing, everyone in publishing knows it, and everyone in publishing hates them.
6. But a really good blurb from the right person can, occasionally, make a book take off.
7. When your book is on best-seller lists, people find you more amusing and respond to your emails faster.
Summit Entertainment / Via Tumblr
8. When your book isn’t on best-seller lists, your life is calmer and you have more time to write.
9. The older you are when your first book is published, the less gratuitous resentment will be directed at you.
10. The goal is not to be a media darling; the goal is to have a career.
11. The farther you live from New York, the less preoccupied you’ll be with literary gossip. Like cayenne pepper, literary gossip is tastiest in small doses.
12. Contrary to stereotype, most book publicists aren’t fast-talking, vapid manipulators; they’re usually warm, organized youngish women (yes, they are almost all women) who love to read.
13. Female writers are asked more frequently about all of the following topics than male writers: whether their work is autobiographical; whether their characters are likable; whether their unlikable characters are unlikable on purpose or the writer didn’t realize what she was doing; how they manage to write after having children.
NBC / Via buzzfeed.com
14. If you tell readers a book is autobiographical, they will try to find ways it isn’t. If you tell them it’s not autobiographical, they will try to find ways it is.
15. It’s not your responsibility to convince people who don’t like your books that they should. Taste is subjective, and you’re not running for elected office.
16. By not being active on social media, you’re probably shooting yourself in the foot. That said, faking fluency with or interest in forms of social media that don’t do it for you is much harder than making up dialogue for imaginary characters.
17. If someone asks what you do and you don’t feel like getting into it, insert the word freelance before the word writer, and they will inquire about nothing more.
18. If you read a truly great new book and feel more excited than jealous, congratulations, you’re a writer.
19. Fiercely, fiercely, fiercely protect your writing time.
Fox / Via Giphy
20. It’s OK to let your book be published if you can see its flaws but don’t know how to fix them. Don’t let your book be published if it still contains flaws that are fixable, even if fixing them is a lot of work.
21. Talking about how brutally difficult it is to write books is unseemly. Unless you’re the kind of writer who’s been imprisoned by the dictatorship where you live and is being advocated for by PEN American Center, give it a rest.
22. Books bring information, provocation, entertainment, and comfort to many people. You’re lucky to be part of that.
23. Sometimes good books sell well; sometimes good books sell poorly; sometimes bad books sell well; sometimes bad books sell poorly. A lot about publishing is unfair and inscrutable. But…
24. …you don’t need anyone else’s approval or permission to enjoy the magic of writing — of sitting by yourself, figuring out which words should go together to express whatever it is you’re trying to say.
Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/curtissittenfeld/things-no-one-ever-tells-you-about-the-publishing-industry