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Why are democratic politicians so devoid of human traits?

The old who would you like to have a beer with test. Name a democratic politician you would actually like to have a beer with? I have to go all the way back to Lyndon Johnson to say yes, I would like to have a beer with them, LBJ was a good ole boy (racist SOB, but I am sure he had some stories to tell). Since then every democratic politician has effectively been a elite ivy league school prick, or in Hillary's case, a feminist bitch. Even Obama, who could fake oration, was an ivy league prick. JFK, might have been tolerable. And now you see Trump walk in like a freaking Rock Star where ever he goes, while Biden gets booed every place he goes. Reagan was human, Trump is human, GW Bush is human (GH Bush was a prick). It is like Democrats can only appeal to the limousine liberal crowd, they never appeal to the common man, and they seem to be proud they are above the common man. They are really struggling to connect with the working class.

Question for you older clones

I was going down the old rabbit hole on the early 90’s football teams and something stood out to me that at the age of 11, I don’t recall happening.

Calvin Branch had decent numbers his first three years and then transferred to Colorado State where he had a heck of a season. Did he transfer because Walden was canned? I’m sure the 0-7-1 record didn’t exactly help. Like I was saying, I guess in my head he had graduated from ISU and there was no Colorado State.

***RELEASE: Iowa State Women's Basketball Adds Quartet of Transfers***

Iowa State Media Relations

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State women’s basketball head coach Bill Fennelly announced the signing of four transfers to the 2024-25 Cyclones roster Monday afternoon. Lily Hansford (Oregon State), Kenzie Hare (Marquette), Sydney Harris (TCU) and Lilly Taulelei (Massachusetts) will join Iowa State later this summer.

“Roster management is the hardest thing to do in coaching. We are all forced to focus on next year’s team only,” said Fennelly. “We were very focused on getting people first that fit the Iowa State Way while adding very skilled players with experience and winning mindsets who embraced the Iowa State Way.”

Lily Hansford · 6-2 · G · Green Bay, Wis.

Hansford comes to Ames following two seasons at Oregon State, helping the Beavers to an Elite Eight appearance in 2024, their first since the 2018 season. She played in 34 of Oregon State’s 35 games this season, averaging 5.1 points per game while shooting over 45 percent from 3-point range. She has made 67 career triples while shooting 41.9 percent from deep.

In the Beavers’ deep NCAA Tournament run, Hansford matched her career high with 12 points against top-seeded South Carolina in the Elite Eight, finishing with four 3-pointers, three rebounds, one assist and one steal.

Fennelly on Hansford: “We love Lily’s ability to play both ends of the floor. She is another player who comes to Iowa State with a winning mindset. Lily can impact the game at both ends with her excellent 3-point range and defensive length.”

Hansford scored in double figures seven times throughout the 2023-24 season, also scoring 12 points on perfect shooting (4-4) from beyond the arc against Utah. She finished 17 games shooting .500 or better from 3-point range. Hansford enters 2024-25 with two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Kenzie Hare · 5-9 · G · Naperville, Ill.

Hare, a 2024 All-Big East Honorable Mention, joins the Cyclones following two seasons at Marquette. She averaged 14.0 points, 2.4 assists and 2.1 rebounds while starting 31-of-32 games for the Golden Eagles in 2023-24. Also a sharp shooter, Hare broke Marquette’s program record for 3-pointers made by a sophomore with 91 triples this season. Her total also ranked first in the Big East and 13th in the nation.

Fennelly on Hare: “Kenzie is a perfect fit for Iowa State. She is a winner and extremely skilled. We felt she was one of the best 3-point shooters in the portal. Our fans are going love how she plays the game.”

Hare finished the season with a 3-point percentage of .425 which also led the conference and was 13th in NCAA DI. She made her 100th career triple in her 49th career game. Scoring in double figures 24 times this season, she also registered four 20-point games with a career-high 25 points against Boston College (Nov. 24). Also a high-level distributor, Hare passed out a career-high seven assists in a win over Illinois (Nov. 11).

Hare was a two-time member of the Big East Weekly Honor Roll in 2023-24, a Big East All-Freshman Team selection in 2022-23 and the Big East Freshman of the Week on Jan. 30, 2023. She joins the Cyclones with two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Sydney Harris · 6-1 · G/F · Edwardsville, Ill.

Harris joins the Iowa State roster following a season at TCU. She was a standout for Central Michigan as a freshman the season prior, the Mid-American Conference’s (MAC) Freshman of the Year in 2023 and an All-MAC Third Team selection.

Fennelly on Harris: “Sydney fills a need for us at many positions while being an excellent scorer at all levels. She fits in many ways with our style of play.”

At TCU, Harris appeared in 16 of the Horned Frogs’ final 18 games after being forced to sit out all of nonconference play due to an ankle injury sustained at the end of fall camp. Making the most of her time on the court, Harris averaged 9.4 points and 3.2 rebounds per game while shooting 40 percent from behind the arc. She ranked fourth nationally in 3-pointers per 40 minutes (4.4). Harris was one of only three Horned Frogs to score in double figures in five consecutive games alongside All-Big 12 players Madison Conner and Sedona Prince. She knocked down three or more triples in five games this season and scored a season-high 27 points behind 5-of-12 shooting from deep in TCU’s 79-72 road win at Cincinnati (Feb. 17).

As a freshman at Central Michigan, Harris averaged 17.4 points and four rebounds per game. She led CMU and ranked among her conference peers with 505 points. She also ranked fifth in the MAC playing 35.6 minutes per contest. She accounted for five of CMU’s six top individual scoring performances in 2022-23 and scored a career-high 31 points at Northern Illinois (Feb. 25). Harris comes to Ames with two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Lilly Taulelei · 6-3 · C/F · Wellington, New Zealand

Taulelei played in 31 games and made 22 starts for UMass this season, averaging 6.7 points and 2.5 rebounds as a true post presence. The fifth-leading scorer for UMass, Taulelei finished her freshman season with a .453 field goal percentage, going 91-of-201 from the floor.

Fennelly on Taulelei: “When we first talked to Lilly, we knew she was the perfect fit for our team on and off the court. Lilly will give us depth and experience (playing for New Zealand and in college) in the post which we felt was the last thing we wanted to add to next year’s roster. I know our fans are going to love to get to know her and her family background.”

Prior to UMass, Taulelei was a contracted player with the Tokomanawa Queens in 2022 and made the Wellington U19 Basketball Representative Team. Competing for the New Zealand U14 Basketball Team, she helped the team to a gold medal in Melbourne, Australia. A captain for the U15 team, New Zealand made the National U15 Championships and Taulelei was selected as the Tournament MVP. She aided the New Zealand U16 team to a fourth-place finish at the Asia Cup Championships in 2021, qualifying for the 2022 FIBA U17 World Cup, where the team placed 12th. Taulelei became the first female in New Zealand Basketball history to be selected to the Jr. NBA Global Championship, named the team captain of the Jr. NBA Asia Pacific Team.

The Wellington native was also selected to compete in the Women’s National Basketball League, a professional/amateur competition for elite female basketball players, as the youngest ever to compete at the level. She averaged 20 minutes, 4.5 points and 5.5 rebounds per game in six contests played. Taulelei will have three seasons of remaining eligibility entering 2024-25.

WBB incoming transfer

Looks like we landed Lilly Taulelei, a 6-3 post from New Zealand who averaged 6.7 ppg last year as a freshman for UMass. UMass was turrible last year, finishing with a 5-27 record. I wonder what this does for us with the other Lily, last name Hanford, for whom we were supposedly in the lead to sign, according to sources. She's a 6-2 forward from Oregon State who averaged 5.1 ppg and shot 45 percent from three last year as a soph.

Football: Sept 7 game ?

So we play in Iowa City this fall but we have a bunch of starters back and Iowa may or may not have a healthy D1 QB on the roster. Also their O Line seems to be trending down and hopefully ours is trending up. Both teams should have solid defenses.

It seems we could/should win this game, but it seems to be that way every year. Our coaching approach / schemes and overall (lack of) execution find us sh!tting the bed in this game what - 7 of last 8 years? Plus we have a new OC.

Q: will this fall’s game with Iowa be any different?
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Nightmare Electoral College map coming for Dems in 2030.

Amazing what the projected electoral map looks like in 2030, which will be used in the 2032 election. I know it 8 years away, but for democrats, they really need to be going full blown panic mode for what is coming their way. Lets put it this way, blues states are dying, and dying fast. Projected Apportionment map 2030.

Dem State changes:
Oregon -1
California -4
Illinois -2
Minnesota -1
New York -3
Rhode Island -1
Total hard core Liberal states will lose 12 EC votes and representatives

Toss up (Lean Democrat most times):
Pennsylvania -1

Red States (GOP heavy or lean most times)
Idaho +1
Utah +1
Arizona +1
Texas +4
Florida +3
Georgia +1
Tennessee +1
North Carolina +1

Total gain to GOP states +13 EC votes and representatives.

Kind of surprised that Iowa was able to maintain 4 house seats, thought we might drop to 3.

So think of that the EC map will have the dems with 13 less electoral college votes before the race even starts!

Looking at the 2024 map and the way I think it will go this election, I see Trump with already at 271 votes, enough to win, and that is with Trump losing Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania (all the swing rust belts states even though he leads in them). Now go forward to the 2030 map, and the basically solid red states will pick up 13 more votes, and the blues states will lose 13 votes. This means the GOP has a good solid 284 electoral votes, and the blues states drop to 258 votes. And this is with GIVING the dems the rust belt swing states! So by 2032, the dems will have to win ALL the rust belt swing states and must start picking off states that have traditionally voted for the GOP. That electoral map is going to be a nightmare for the Dems.
This explains why they are filling the country with illegals, they absolutely need illegals to vote by 2032 to have any realistic hope in 2032. Without illegals, they likely will very rarely win a POTUS election in the future. The map is completely against them. And their states will continue to decline for the 2040 EC map.

This is also why Trump must win and must deport all the illegals and shut the border!

What happens when the DNC replaces Biden at the convention?

The Democrats have a huge problem. I have to believe that they plan on replacing Biden at their convention. But several states must have the nominee on the state ballot before the convention. So if the Democrats replace Biden at their convention, it will be too late for that person to get placed on many state ballots. So apparently the DNC has majorly screwed up.
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