I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
I thought it was the Christian Right that had all the power.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
So being energy independent and the jobs that come with it is a "resentment"?
Do you realize how stupid that sounds?
The only resentment I am seeing is the butt hurt libs crying about Trump for 5 years
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
Actually I directly refuted your point but I wouldn't expect a dishonest hack like yourself to admit it.
Your party sells nothing but resentment Dazzler. Racial resentment, class resentment, resentment against religious people, against the country and against anyone who doesn't agree with them.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
So being energy independent and the jobs that come with it is a "resentment"?
Do you realize how stupid that sounds?
The only resentment I am seeing is the butt hurt libs crying about Trump for 5 years
But if someone proposes that the fracking industry be regulated so as not to impose its negative externalities on others and/or be required to bear the true costs of its activities, you girls think that's "socialism".
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
So being energy independent and the jobs that come with it is a "resentment"?
Do you realize how stupid that sounds?
The only resentment I am seeing is the butt hurt libs crying about Trump for 5 years
But if someone proposes that the fracking industry be regulated so as not to impose its negative externalities on others and/or be required to bear the true costs of its activities, you girls think that's "socialism".
Fuck off Dazzler, your party isn't backing "regulation" of fracking. They want it banned and eliminated. Fracking is all ready "regulated" you fucking dishonest hack.
Tucker has accidentally tripped over some truths here, though he misinterprets them. Even he won't say Trump loves those people, though he indicts the "ruling class" for not loving them either.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
So being energy independent and the jobs that come with it is a "resentment"?
Do you realize how stupid that sounds?
The only resentment I am seeing is the butt hurt libs crying about Trump for 5 years
But if someone proposes that the fracking industry be regulated so as not to impose its negative externalities on others and/or be required to bear the true costs of its activities, you girls think that's "socialism".
A blanket ban is not "regulated so as not to impose its negative externalities", you are a retard lawyer that takes flights in the middle of the pandemic.
There are people here that actually know O&G, fracking, and the regulatory hurdles... just STFU and get back to posting Vid numbers
Tucker has accidentally tripped over some truths here, though he misinterprets them. Even he won't say Trump loves those people, though he indicts the "ruling class" for not loving them either.
By not hating them and not trying to make them poorer with his policies like Biden and the Rats have done Trump has shown them all the "love" he needs to. Trump doesn't shit on their values and like them he loves the country.
I like Tucker ... quite a bit actually. I think he's at his best when he's a little more pissed off.
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Good poast.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Is banning fracking part of that love of capitalism Dazzler? People living in Butler realize that the economy can't stay the same but they also realize that Rats like Biden are more than willing to sell them out in order to placate the AOC wing of his party.
You're making my point. So Trump was elected on the backs of millions of resentments. I've only been saying that for four years.
So being energy independent and the jobs that come with it is a "resentment"?
Do you realize how stupid that sounds?
The only resentment I am seeing is the butt hurt libs crying about Trump for 5 years
But if someone proposes that the fracking industry be regulated so as not to impose its negative externalities on others and/or be required to bear the true costs of its activities, you girls think that's "socialism".
Fuck off Dazzler, your party isn't backing "regulation" of fracking. They want it banned and eliminated. Fracking is all ready "regulated" you fucking dishonest hack.
Fracking is clearly economical as long as third parties bear enough of its costs. Is it economical when the industry bears them? Maybe. But that isn't what's been happening. Some want it eliminated for that reason, sure.
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In fairness, I suppose any Swanson frozen entree will do
At any rate, a law professor at UC Hastings wrote a piece, I think in the Harvard Business Review, right after the first election. It's a good read. She really gets in to this distinction between the professional class and the elite wealth ruling class.
Tucker, in this piece, is making her same overall point, but he's conflating those two classes. I don't think the professional class is the ruling class. I don't think they are to blame for fucking things up because I don't think they have that much power.
I get what he's getting at ... the upper middle class and well educated professional who will only live on a coast or Chicago who looks down his nose at people with dirt under their finger nails. But are they really the people who fucked things up here? Are they the "ruling class"?
Chintresting either way.
Professionals looking down on rural America isn't why they're not building railroad cars in Butler, Pa. People who allegedly love capitalism need to recognize that creative destruction means someone loses.
Do you realize how stupid that sounds?
The only resentment I am seeing is the butt hurt libs crying about Trump for 5 years
Your party sells nothing but resentment Dazzler. Racial resentment, class resentment, resentment against religious people, against the country and against anyone who doesn't agree with them.
There are people here that actually know O&G, fracking, and the regulatory hurdles... just STFU and get back to posting Vid numbers