Anonymous wrote:My dd just turned 14 and is in 8th grade. Almost everywhere in the US, 14 yos are in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Poor lefties continue to cling to a narrative that is suspicious at best 4 weeks out and after 40 years of public life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rootin Tootin Roy better hope no more women start coming out or he will be in even deeper trouble. This guy is the Harvey Weinstein of Alabama politics. Maybe a quick trip to outpatient rehab can cure him too!
He absolutely knows more women are out there in the wings -- why do you think there's been such a ferocious pushback on this story this week? They're trying to intimidate the others into silence.
Here was a very curious paragraph in the Post story:
“According to colleagues and others who knew him at the time, Moore was rarely seen socializing outside work. He spent one season coaching the Gallant Girls, a softball team that his teenage sister had joined, said several women who played on the team. He spent time working out at the Gadsden YMCA, according to people who encountered him there. And he often walked, usually alone, around the newly opened Gadsden Mall — 6 feet tall and well-dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt, say several women who worked there at the time.”
What that suggests is the Post found -- but could not report because they would not go on record -- softball players, YMCA users and mall visitors who were accosted by him.
Yes, careful reading indicates the Post found more women who encountered him through softball, the Y, and the mall. Those women refused to go on the record and who can blame them?
Careful reading indicates you've completely made that up. The post found people (of both genders) who witnessed him coaching, working out, and walking around a mall. There is *nothing* said about "women refusing to go on the record," nothing at all. Why are you lying?
Isn’t it past your bedtime Secretary Sessions?
That's your response? After making up all these other "women refusing to go on the record," and being called out on it, all you can think of is that? Really pathetic.
I think we should put him in jail for coaching, for walking around a mall, and for working out....
Amen brother. Roy Moore is the real victim here. Just like Harvey Weinstein, Donald Trump, and Bill Cosby. These women are just in it for the fame.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rootin Tootin Roy better hope no more women start coming out or he will be in even deeper trouble. This guy is the Harvey Weinstein of Alabama politics. Maybe a quick trip to outpatient rehab can cure him too!
He absolutely knows more women are out there in the wings -- why do you think there's been such a ferocious pushback on this story this week? They're trying to intimidate the others into silence.
Here was a very curious paragraph in the Post story:
“According to colleagues and others who knew him at the time, Moore was rarely seen socializing outside work. He spent one season coaching the Gallant Girls, a softball team that his teenage sister had joined, said several women who played on the team. He spent time working out at the Gadsden YMCA, according to people who encountered him there. And he often walked, usually alone, around the newly opened Gadsden Mall — 6 feet tall and well-dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt, say several women who worked there at the time.”
What that suggests is the Post found -- but could not report because they would not go on record -- softball players, YMCA users and mall visitors who were accosted by him.
Yes, careful reading indicates the Post found more women who encountered him through softball, the Y, and the mall. Those women refused to go on the record and who can blame them?
Careful reading indicates you've completely made that up. The post found people (of both genders) who witnessed him coaching, working out, and walking around a mall. There is *nothing* said about "women refusing to go on the record," nothing at all. Why are you lying?
Isn’t it past your bedtime Secretary Sessions?
That's your response? After making up all these other "women refusing to go on the record," and being called out on it, all you can think of is that? Really pathetic.
I think we should put him in jail for coaching, for walking around a mall, and for working out....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rootin Tootin Roy better hope no more women start coming out or he will be in even deeper trouble. This guy is the Harvey Weinstein of Alabama politics. Maybe a quick trip to outpatient rehab can cure him too!
He absolutely knows more women are out there in the wings -- why do you think there's been such a ferocious pushback on this story this week? They're trying to intimidate the others into silence.
Here was a very curious paragraph in the Post story:
“According to colleagues and others who knew him at the time, Moore was rarely seen socializing outside work. He spent one season coaching the Gallant Girls, a softball team that his teenage sister had joined, said several women who played on the team. He spent time working out at the Gadsden YMCA, according to people who encountered him there. And he often walked, usually alone, around the newly opened Gadsden Mall — 6 feet tall and well-dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt, say several women who worked there at the time.”
What that suggests is the Post found -- but could not report because they would not go on record -- softball players, YMCA users and mall visitors who were accosted by him.
Yes, careful reading indicates the Post found more women who encountered him through softball, the Y, and the mall. Those women refused to go on the record and who can blame them?
Careful reading indicates you've completely made that up. The post found people (of both genders) who witnessed him coaching, working out, and walking around a mall. There is *nothing* said about "women refusing to go on the record," nothing at all. Why are you lying?
Isn’t it past your bedtime Secretary Sessions?
That's your response? After making up all these other "women refusing to go on the record," and being called out on it, all you can think of is that? Really pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is only one accusation that he is a pedophile. You don't find that odd? Usually, there is a pattern.
And, no, it would not be at all unusual for a guy in a small town to go to high school football games. It would be perfectly normal--that's where most of the town would be on a Friday night.
I’m guessing 7th and 8th graders might be a little intimidated to accuse the District Attorney of sexual abuse.
And where was it stated that 7th and 8th graders had anything to do with this?? Lie much?
14 year old girls are in 7th & 8th grade.
Not so much. Nice try, though.
Please tell us, what was the age cut-off date that the Gadsden schools used back in 1965?
Please tell us, where was it stated that this girl was a 7th or 8th grader? We'll wait.
Hits hard when you realize he was grooming and assaulting middle-school age children, huh?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is only one accusation that he is a pedophile. You don't find that odd? Usually, there is a pattern.
And, no, it would not be at all unusual for a guy in a small town to go to high school football games. It would be perfectly normal--that's where most of the town would be on a Friday night.
I’m guessing 7th and 8th graders might be a little intimidated to accuse the District Attorney of sexual abuse.
And where was it stated that 7th and 8th graders had anything to do with this?? Lie much?
14 year old girls are in 7th & 8th grade.
Not so much. Nice try, though.
Please tell us, what was the age cut-off date that the Gadsden schools used back in 1965?
Please tell us, where was it stated that this girl was a 7th or 8th grader? We'll wait.