Apparently Trump absolutely PACKED Madison Square Garden

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
I love how you find comfort in thinking that it is a GOOD thing that the leader of the free world could/should be elected based on the voting prowess of people that follow Bad Bunny, JLO, and Ricky Martin on social media and do THEIR bidding without thinking for themselves..

But...it's (checks notes) BAD BUNNY! You know, that world famous entertainment legend and great political mind? He (she? 🤔 ) sings....you know...that song...
 

Ramp Guy

Well-Known Member

hummmm who wears it better....???

intern.jpeg
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member

Republican SHUTS DOWN CNBC Anchor Pearl Clutching Over Jokes At Madison Square Garden Trump Rally!​



 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
Here is what republicans are saying



Hey you stupid c u n t ...


Puerto Rico HAS A TRASH PROBLEM



Trash Crisis Leaves Puerto Rico Near ‘the Brink’



TOA ALTA, PUERTO RICO — Over the years, Benjamín González has watched his local landfill grow into a mountain of trash. It has polluted his city’s once-pristine ravines. It has tainted the limestone aquifer. And it has left dark, bubbling puddles that infect the air with an ever-present stench.

“There are days that you just can’t deal with it,” says González, who has been part of a years-long effort to close the dump.

The landfill’s trash towers over more than 100 houses in Contorno, a neighborhood in Toa Alta, a lush, tranquil city on Puerto Rico’s northern coast, once known for its famous writers and poets.

Today, residents say, it’s increasingly known for noxious odors that trap them inside and pollution that they suspect has caused serious illnesses. Their worries reflect a decades-long waste-management crisis in Puerto Rico that has only worsened in recent years, as recycling rates remain low even as trash piles up.

Every person in the region generates an average of 5.6 pounds of trash a day, according to a 2019 report card on Puerto Rico’s infrastructure by the American Society of Civil Engineers. That compares with 4.4 pounds elsewhere in the United States.

Because Puerto Rico is a cluster of islands, the trash has nowhere to go, says Carl Soderberg, executive director of the Puerto Rico chapter of the Inter-American Association of Sanitary Engineering and Environmental Sciences.

“We’re one step away from the brink,” he says.

Twenty-nine landfills are spread throughout the region. Eighteen do not meet federal standards because, among other violations, they function as “open dumps.”

The landfills are already so full that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency predicts that they will outstrip their capacity by 2023.
 
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