Maximum Carnage Week Game Thread
Comments
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and trying to find truth on the inter webs is impossible - it all depends on your pov - is it the result I want or not.
https://truth11.com/2021/03/07/25212-total-adverse-events-were-reported-to-vaers-including-1265-deaths-following-covid-vaccination-in-the-us/
https://sciencebasedmedicine.org/covid-19-vaccines-as-dangerous-continue-apace-vaers-edition/
the first truth11.com must be an honest website, the second sciencebasedmedicine.org sounds like it developed sometime after Trump was elected - just one of the silliest named organization I have ever seen. believe one or the other or not. -
They have all the free PR they need in the lapdog mediaGrundleStiltzkin said: -
Well this to me confirms the death numbers as being accurateGrundleStiltzkin said:
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I don't think Joe knows Jill's not an M.D.LebamDawg said: -
Getting it good and hard. Combine the chicom crud panic with the BLM/antifa riot support and leftard cities will continue to be hammered.
https://quotulatiousness.ca/blog/2021/03/15/target-is-careful-to-only-cite-economic-reasons-for-abandoning-their-downtown-minneapolis-headquarters/
Target is careful to only cite economic reasons for abandoning their downtown Minneapolis headquarters
Jon Miltimore explains why the Target corporate headquarters in Minneapolis will be given up — for reasons that go beyond the claimed success of the telecommuting encouraged by the 2020 pandemic lockdowns:
Target Corporation, the eighth largest retailer in the United States, announced in an email to employees on Thursday that it will be leaving the City Center, its primary downtown Minneapolis location.
Company officials cited improved remote work opportunities and less need for space as the drivers for the decision.
“In just one year we’ve proven that we can drive incredible results, together, from our kitchens and basements and living rooms,” said Melissa Kremer, executive vice president and leader of Target’s human resources operations.
Target, the largest employer in Minneapolis with some 8,500 corporate workers, says the 3,500 employees who work at the City Center will still have a “home base,” but it will be at another Minneapolis location or in the nearby suburb of Brooklyn Park.
A Story of Capital Flight?
On one hand, there is little reason to doubt Target’s explanation for abandoning its headquarters. Many anticipated that the pandemic would lead to a normalization of remote work.
“The future of work will be distributed,” Erica Brescia, the chief operating officer of Github, told the BBC last fall. “We’re going to see a big shift from office by default to remote by default.”
Part of that shift, it’s reasonable to assume, would be corporations moving away from high-end corporate real estate. Yet it also shouldn’t be forgotten (or ignored) that Target’s decision comes less than a year after Minneapolis suffered some of the worst riots in US history, prompted by the May 25 death of George Floyd.
The riots — which broke out after a video went viral showing police pinning Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, to the ground for nearly nine minutes before he died — caused an estimated $2 billion in damage.
Though Target made no mention of the riots in its announcement, last summer I noted that an abundance of evidence suggested that the economic damage of the riots would persist long after the wreckage had cleared. -
It's the power of the mask. Tell me you wouldn't take the over on whether we'll be back there by Thanksgiving.GrundleStiltzkin said: -
Minneapolis will join Detroit, Baltimore, Portland and Seattle as previously tuff-liberal, cool places that were transformed into shitholes by the left.WestlinnDuck said:Getting it good and hard. Combine the chicom crud panic with the BLM/antifa riot support and leftard cities will continue to be hammered.
https://quotulatiousness.ca/blog/2021/03/15/target-is-careful-to-only-cite-economic-reasons-for-abandoning-their-downtown-minneapolis-headquarters/
Target is careful to only cite economic reasons for abandoning their downtown Minneapolis headquarters
Jon Miltimore explains why the Target corporate headquarters in Minneapolis will be given up — for reasons that go beyond the claimed success of the telecommuting encouraged by the 2020 pandemic lockdowns:
Target Corporation, the eighth largest retailer in the United States, announced in an email to employees on Thursday that it will be leaving the City Center, its primary downtown Minneapolis location.
Company officials cited improved remote work opportunities and less need for space as the drivers for the decision.
“In just one year we’ve proven that we can drive incredible results, together, from our kitchens and basements and living rooms,” said Melissa Kremer, executive vice president and leader of Target’s human resources operations.
Target, the largest employer in Minneapolis with some 8,500 corporate workers, says the 3,500 employees who work at the City Center will still have a “home base,” but it will be at another Minneapolis location or in the nearby suburb of Brooklyn Park.
A Story of Capital Flight?
On one hand, there is little reason to doubt Target’s explanation for abandoning its headquarters. Many anticipated that the pandemic would lead to a normalization of remote work.
“The future of work will be distributed,” Erica Brescia, the chief operating officer of Github, told the BBC last fall. “We’re going to see a big shift from office by default to remote by default.”
Part of that shift, it’s reasonable to assume, would be corporations moving away from high-end corporate real estate. Yet it also shouldn’t be forgotten (or ignored) that Target’s decision comes less than a year after Minneapolis suffered some of the worst riots in US history, prompted by the May 25 death of George Floyd.
The riots — which broke out after a video went viral showing police pinning Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, to the ground for nearly nine minutes before he died — caused an estimated $2 billion in damage.
Though Target made no mention of the riots in its announcement, last summer I noted that an abundance of evidence suggested that the economic damage of the riots would persist long after the wreckage had cleared.
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The irony is that wealthy leftards will flee the city and then vote for more sh*tholes. Sort of like third world immigrants.PurpleThrobber said:
Minneapolis will join Detroit, Baltimore, Portland and Seattle as previously tuff-liberal, cool places that were transformed into shitholes by the left.WestlinnDuck said:Getting it good and hard. Combine the chicom crud panic with the BLM/antifa riot support and leftard cities will continue to be hammered.
https://quotulatiousness.ca/blog/2021/03/15/target-is-careful-to-only-cite-economic-reasons-for-abandoning-their-downtown-minneapolis-headquarters/
Target is careful to only cite economic reasons for abandoning their downtown Minneapolis headquarters
Jon Miltimore explains why the Target corporate headquarters in Minneapolis will be given up — for reasons that go beyond the claimed success of the telecommuting encouraged by the 2020 pandemic lockdowns:
Target Corporation, the eighth largest retailer in the United States, announced in an email to employees on Thursday that it will be leaving the City Center, its primary downtown Minneapolis location.
Company officials cited improved remote work opportunities and less need for space as the drivers for the decision.
“In just one year we’ve proven that we can drive incredible results, together, from our kitchens and basements and living rooms,” said Melissa Kremer, executive vice president and leader of Target’s human resources operations.
Target, the largest employer in Minneapolis with some 8,500 corporate workers, says the 3,500 employees who work at the City Center will still have a “home base,” but it will be at another Minneapolis location or in the nearby suburb of Brooklyn Park.
A Story of Capital Flight?
On one hand, there is little reason to doubt Target’s explanation for abandoning its headquarters. Many anticipated that the pandemic would lead to a normalization of remote work.
“The future of work will be distributed,” Erica Brescia, the chief operating officer of Github, told the BBC last fall. “We’re going to see a big shift from office by default to remote by default.”
Part of that shift, it’s reasonable to assume, would be corporations moving away from high-end corporate real estate. Yet it also shouldn’t be forgotten (or ignored) that Target’s decision comes less than a year after Minneapolis suffered some of the worst riots in US history, prompted by the May 25 death of George Floyd.
The riots — which broke out after a video went viral showing police pinning Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, to the ground for nearly nine minutes before he died — caused an estimated $2 billion in damage.
Though Target made no mention of the riots in its announcement, last summer I noted that an abundance of evidence suggested that the economic damage of the riots would persist long after the wreckage had cleared. -
Ahem, we just call them "migrants" now. It's racist to presume what direction they are crossing the border in.WestlinnDuck said:
The irony is that wealthy leftards will flee the city and then vote for more sh*tholes. Sort of like third world immigrants.PurpleThrobber said:
Minneapolis will join Detroit, Baltimore, Portland and Seattle as previously tuff-liberal, cool places that were transformed into shitholes by the left.WestlinnDuck said:Getting it good and hard. Combine the chicom crud panic with the BLM/antifa riot support and leftard cities will continue to be hammered.
https://quotulatiousness.ca/blog/2021/03/15/target-is-careful-to-only-cite-economic-reasons-for-abandoning-their-downtown-minneapolis-headquarters/
Target is careful to only cite economic reasons for abandoning their downtown Minneapolis headquarters
Jon Miltimore explains why the Target corporate headquarters in Minneapolis will be given up — for reasons that go beyond the claimed success of the telecommuting encouraged by the 2020 pandemic lockdowns:
Target Corporation, the eighth largest retailer in the United States, announced in an email to employees on Thursday that it will be leaving the City Center, its primary downtown Minneapolis location.
Company officials cited improved remote work opportunities and less need for space as the drivers for the decision.
“In just one year we’ve proven that we can drive incredible results, together, from our kitchens and basements and living rooms,” said Melissa Kremer, executive vice president and leader of Target’s human resources operations.
Target, the largest employer in Minneapolis with some 8,500 corporate workers, says the 3,500 employees who work at the City Center will still have a “home base,” but it will be at another Minneapolis location or in the nearby suburb of Brooklyn Park.
A Story of Capital Flight?
On one hand, there is little reason to doubt Target’s explanation for abandoning its headquarters. Many anticipated that the pandemic would lead to a normalization of remote work.
“The future of work will be distributed,” Erica Brescia, the chief operating officer of Github, told the BBC last fall. “We’re going to see a big shift from office by default to remote by default.”
Part of that shift, it’s reasonable to assume, would be corporations moving away from high-end corporate real estate. Yet it also shouldn’t be forgotten (or ignored) that Target’s decision comes less than a year after Minneapolis suffered some of the worst riots in US history, prompted by the May 25 death of George Floyd.
The riots — which broke out after a video went viral showing police pinning Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, to the ground for nearly nine minutes before he died — caused an estimated $2 billion in damage.
Though Target made no mention of the riots in its announcement, last summer I noted that an abundance of evidence suggested that the economic damage of the riots would persist long after the wreckage had cleared.
And we like to say "people-kind," not mankind.
Okay, I'm lying through my teeth about both. Am I electable yet?






