Yo, Wes Moore might be legit!

wire28

Blade said what up
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
55,850
Reputation
12,977
Daps
205,355
Reppin
#ByrdGang #TheColi
I've seen :whew: .

Jokes aside, I just think it's nasty work.

It's clear that stoller knows payday loans disproportionately affect black people which is why he's attempting to make this argument on behalf of black people.

Problem is, as someone who doesn't need those services he doesn't understand that oversight even if it isn't perfect still benefits the the general public (at least 25% of Marylanders use them).

But why cherry pick a piece of Wes Moore's response when he clearly outlines why he is letting it sign without his signature and where he thinks it needs work.

"I guess it's to..." :mjpls:.

But that's an issue that was brought up earlier. The American left gets in its own way by demanding everything that isn't perfect be vetoed and thrown to the bushes. This just furthers the agenda that dems don't do anything.

Mind you this bill has been in the works for two years and the language isn't much different than Californias.
To say it’s giving :mjpls: vibes is being extraordinarily generous
 

lib123

Superstar
Joined
Jun 16, 2015
Messages
7,955
Reputation
703
Daps
16,701
I read his book and he came off as an empty suit who has spent his entire life building his resume and doesn't understand issues of poverty with any depth at all.

In the book he compares his life (a middle-class kid, college-educated parents, attended elite private schools and was given one extra chance after another) to the life of a poor Baltimore kid (single mother, brother's a drug dealer, attended a shytty public school), and comes to the conclusion that he succeeded in life because of the "stories" he was introduced to in books and role models. Yeah, it was definitely that, not, you know, actually having a stable upbringing, financial security, and a 1-percenter education.

He's also a former soldier, former investment banker at Deutsche Bank and Citibank, and interned in the Bush White House under both Tom Ridge and Condoleezza Rice. He credits reading the autobiography of Colin Powell as being a defining moment in his life. During the Bush Administration he identified as a "social moderate and strong fiscal conservative". So yeah, he talks a good game but it's pretty tough to trust him.

Then again, I trusted Obama a LOT after reading his first book and we saw where that went. Wes Moore to me looks exactly like what Obama eventually became, so who knows.

Are you talking about his book The Other Wes Moore? What I got from it is how despite being born with the same exact name in the same city, it showed how being born into a stable family made a huge difference. And his early life wasn’t without obstacles. His father died when he was very young and his family faced financial struggles.
 
Top