General Mills
More often than not I tend to take that L.
This is embarrassing. Dems hold this L. Lots of whining and crying going on.


it's not happening.
Pathetic hollywood liberals....First the Electors arent there to stop "unqualified" candidates..its a fail safe to protect the Ruling elite in case a populist they cant control comes into power

:selfether:do it for the culture. Trump shouldn't be in office.


they say that like they actually get held accountable
do you think they should actually go through with this, all things considered?they cannot fukking do this
dont these arrogant hollywood fakkits know that they're spitting in the face of democracy, what little democracy we actually have, by doing this? trump won the election because the country voted for him with the election rules set up in place
and second of all, 'qualified' for what? getting us twenty trillion in debt? our politicians arent qualified to do shyt
@ThreeLetterAgency im curious what your thoughts on this aredo you think they should actually go through with this, all things considered?
Like @Meta Reign has said, this is "Colin Powell Yellow Cake/ Iraq WMD" status fukkery......13 years later the same shiit is being pulled again...its in the constitution thoughThese POS are trying to pull the the Mega Fukkery of the Decade, outside of Fukushima.
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you know this is in the constitution, right?All of a sudden these low lives are patriotic. Been selling this country out for literally decades and now out n of nowhere they're fukking GI Joe aand shyt.
Man.

its in the constitution though![]()


the electors CAN withhold their vote.Whats' in the Constition? Lying, making counteraccusations, misinforming the public to delegitimize an election is in the Constitution?? ....
I must have skipped that day of 9th grade civics, 11th grade AP US History, and hours I've randomly spent reading and listening to matters regarding the document...![]()
There is no Constitutional provision or Federal law that requires Electors to vote according to the results of the popular vote in their states. Some states, however, require Electors to cast their votes according to the popular vote. These pledges fall into two categories—Electors bound by state law and those bound by pledges to political parties.
The U.S. Supreme Court has held that the Constitution does not require that Electors be completely free to act as they choose and therefore, political parties may extract pledges from electors to vote for the parties' nominees. Some state laws provide that so-called "faithless Electors" may be subject to fines or may be disqualified for casting an invalid vote and be replaced by a substitute elector.