Former President Donald Trump faces a Monday deadline to ask the Supreme Court to extend the delay in his trial on charges he plotted to overturn his 2020 election loss.
You’re now on a list. I know you’re not serious, but be careful when saying this kind of stuff online. You don’t know who may be reading, thinking you’re threatening a former U.S. president, and taking you seriously.
Sure, the first rule is always take Internet comments seriously. That’s super efficient.
Meanwhile, the people who actually call judges offices, and write emails and texts using their full, real name to deliberately, literally threaten them with murder - yeah, nothing.
Hell, the guy who broadcast for them to do that got fined, what, 50 cents?
So i think we can relax a little about random stupid Internet comments. And take this traitor, more seriously.
Sure, the first rule is always take Internet comments seriously. That’s super efficient.
Meanwhile, the people who actually call judges offices, and write emails and texts using their full, real name to deliberately, literally threaten them with murder - yeah, nothing.
Hell, the guy who broadcast for them to do that got fined, what, 50 cents?
So i think we can relax a little about random stupid Internet comments. And take this traitor, more seriously.
This is some kind of psyop to see who snaps first and straight-up murders that motherfucker.
(Spoiler: it turns out to be Mike Lindell on a five day bender.)
You’re now on a list. I know you’re not serious, but be careful when saying this kind of stuff online. You don’t know who may be reading, thinking you’re threatening a former U.S. president, and taking you seriously.
Sure, the first rule is always take Internet comments seriously. That’s super efficient.
Meanwhile, the people who actually call judges offices, and write emails and texts using their full, real name to deliberately, literally threaten them with murder - yeah, nothing.
Hell, the guy who broadcast for them to do that got fined, what, 50 cents?
So i think we can relax a little about random stupid Internet comments. And take this traitor, more seriously.
What’s your source on people threatening judges with their real names?
And you don’t think the secret service take all these things seriously?
Sure, the first rule is always take Internet comments seriously. That’s super efficient.
Meanwhile, the people who actually call judges offices, and write emails and texts using their full, real name to deliberately, literally threaten them with murder - yeah, nothing.
Hell, the guy who broadcast for them to do that got fined, what, 50 cents?
So i think we can relax a little about random stupid Internet comments. And take this traitor, more seriously.