78 thoughts on “Keep Calm-ala and Carry On-ala”

  1. Famous Quotes: Abraham Lincoln – The Last Best Hope of Earth – Wolf & Iron

    https://www.battlefields.org/learn/primary-sources/abraham-lincolns-1862-annual-message-congress-final-remarks
    [… he concluded with …]

    We can succeed only by concert. It is not “can any of us imagine better?” but, “can we all do better?” The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise — with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country.
    Fellow-citizens, we cannot escape history. We of this Congress and this administration, will be remembered in spite of ourselves. No personal significance, or insignificance, can spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass, will light us down, in honor or dishonor, to the latest generation. We say we are for the Union. The world will not forget that we say this. We know how to save the Union. The world knows we do know how to save it. We — even we here — hold the power, and bear the responsibility. In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free — honorable alike in what we give, and what we preserve. We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth. Other means may succeed; this could not fail. The way is plain, peaceful, generous, just — a way which, if followed, the world will forever applaud, and God must forever bless.

  2. A respected Iowa pollster predicts VP Kamala Harris will win big among that state’s female voters, the Harris-Walz campaign promised a fresh start for the country if they win, and the former president had major trouble with a microphone at one of his rallies.

  3. one more from last night’s Late Show

    Emmy-winner John Oliver won’t be voting early because he likes the excitement of lining up at his local polling place on election day. Stick around for two more segments with John Oliver and watch “Last Week Tonight,” Sundays on HBO.

  4. I’ll start a new Trail Mix thread tonight at 6pm ET

    POLL CLOSING TIMELINE

    7 p.m. ET — 60 electoral votes at stake

    • Georgia
    • Indiana*
    • Kentucky*
    • South Carolina
    • Vermont
    • Virginia

    *Indiana and Kentucky are in split time zones; the earliest results will be seen in the 6 p.m. ET hour.

    7:30 p.m. ET — 37 electoral votes

    • North Carolina
    • Ohio
    • West Virginia

    8 p.m. ET — 171 electoral votes

    • Alabama
    • Connecticut
    • D.C.
    • Delaware
    • Florida*
    • Illinois
    • Maine
    • Maryland
    • Massachusetts
    • Mississippi
    • Missouri
    • New Hampshire*
    • New Jersey
    • Oklahoma
    • Pennsylvania
    • Rhode Island
    • Tennessee

    *Florida and New Hampshire will see some results at 7 p.m. ET. 

    8:30 p.m. ET — 6 electoral votes

    • Arkansas

    9 p.m. ET — 163 electoral votes

    • Arizona
    • Wisconsin
    • Michigan*
    • Colorado
    • Iowa
    • Kansas*
    • Louisiana
    • Minnesota
    • Nebraska
    • New Mexico
    • New York
    • North Dakota*
    • South Dakota*
    • Texas*
    • Wyoming

    *Michigan, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota and Texas will see some results at 8 p.m. ET. 

    10 p.m. ET — 16 electoral votes

    • Nevada
    • Montana
    • Utah

    11 p.m. ET — 78 electoral votes

    • California
    • Idaho*
    • Oregon*
    • Washington

    *Idaho and Oregon will see some results at 10 p.m. ET. 

    12 a.m. ET — 4 electoral votes 

    • Hawaii

    1 a.m. ET — 3 electoral votes 

    • Alaska*

    *Alaska will see some results at 12 a.m. ET.

     

  5. We all know that poll workers just trying to do their job serving their country are going to be harassed, accused, secretly recorded, cursed at, or worse today from Trump supporters all over the country. So let’s try and be extra nice to them and let them know we appreciate them.

    — Ron Filipkowski, Editor-in Chief, MeidasTouchNews

  6. Here is the AP breakdown of what to expect in battleground states (Winners not declared until after Election Day):

    The order of results first reported in 2020 (all times ET): Georgia (7:20pm), North Carolina (7:42pm), Michigan (8:08pm), Pennsylvania (8:09pm), Wisconsin (9:07pm), Arizona (10:02pm), Nevada (11:41pm)

    Arizona

    Polls open at 8 a.m. in Arizona, which Joe Biden carried in 2020 by 0.3%. He was only the second Democratic presidential candidate to do so in nearly 70 years. Polls will close at 9 p.m.

    Arizona does not release votes until all precincts have reported or one hour after all polls are closed, whichever is first.

    In 2020, The Associated Press first reported Arizona results at 10:02 p.m. ET on Nov. 3, Election Day, and declared Biden the winner at 2:51 a.m. ET on Nov. 4.

    Georgia

    Polls open at 7 a.m. in Georgia, which played a key role in 2020. Biden was the first Democrat in a White House race to carry the state since Bill Clinton in 1992, defeating Trump by less than one-quarter of a percentage point, a margin of 11,779 votes.

    Since then, Trump’s efforts to overturn those results have been at the heart of a criminal case in Fulton County. It is on hold while his legal team pursues a pretrial appeal to have District Attorney Fani Willis removed from the case and the indictment tossed. The Georgia Court of Appeals will hear those arguments after the election.

    Georgia’s polls close at 7 p.m.

    In 2020, the AP first reported Georgia results at 7:20 p.m. ET on Nov. 3 and declared Biden the state’s winner at 7:58 p.m. ET on Nov. 19, more than two weeks after Election Day.

    Michigan

    Polls open at 7 a.m. ET in Michigan, one of the “blue wall” states that went narrowly for Trump in 2016 after almost 30 years of voting for Democratic candidates. Biden won it back four years later. His margin was about 154,000 votes out of more than 5.5 million votes.

    Michigan covers two time zones, but polls in most of the state close at 8 p.m. ET, with the rest at 9 p.m. ET.

    In 2020, the AP first reported Michigan results at 8:08 p.m. ET on Nov. 3 and declared Biden the winner at 5:58 p.m. ET on Nov. 4.

    Nevada

    Polls open at 10 a.m. ET in Nevada, the smallest electoral vote prize of the battlegrounds. But it has one of the best track records as a presidential bellwether. The candidate who won Nevada has gone on to win the White House in 27 of the past 30 presidential elections.

    Polls close at 10 p.m. ET. The state doesn’t release results until the last person in line has voted, so there’s usually been a wait between poll close and the first results.

    In 2020, the AP first reported Nevada results at 11:41 p.m. ET on Nov. 3 and declared Biden the winner at 12:13 p.m. ET on Nov. 7.

    North Carolina

    Polls open at 6:30 a.m. ET in North Carolina, which has been carried by Democrats only two times in presidential elections since 1968. But the state has stayed competitive for both major parties. Trump’s 2020 victory in North Carolina, by about 1 percentage point, was his smallest winning margin in any state.

    Polls close at 7:30 p.m. ET.

    In 2020, the AP first reported results at 7:42 p.m. ET on Nov. 3 and declared Trump the winner at 3:49 p.m. ET on Nov. 13.

    Pennsylvania

    Polls open at 7 a.m. ET in Pennsylvania, another “blue wall” state. Biden’s 2020 margin in Pennsylvania was about 80,000 votes out of more than 6.9 million votes. This year, it’s the spot where Harris and Trump met for the first time at their sole debate in September in Philadelphia.

    Polls close at 8 p.m. ET in a state with more electoral votes, 19, than any of the battlegrounds.

    In 2020, the AP first reported results at 8:09 p.m. ET on Nov. 3 and declared Biden the winner at 11:25 a.m. ET on Nov. 7.

    Wisconsin

    Polls open at 8 a.m. ET in Wisconsin, the third “blue wall” state in this group. Wisconsin is no stranger to close elections; the margin of victory in the state was less than 1 percentage point in 2020, 2016, 2004 and 2000.

    Polls close at 9 p.m. ET.

    In 2020, the AP first reported Wisconsin results at 9:07 p.m. ET on Nov. 3 and declared Biden the winner at 2:16 p.m. ET on Nov. 4.

  7. November 5, 2024. According to the mainstream media, the 2024 election is deadlocked, so Grace Kuhlenschmidt consults a polling expert, a historically accurate predictor, and an astrologist to determine whether Kamala or Trump will win the presidency. #DailyShow #Election #Trump

  8. It’s easy to predict Trump’s vote share tonight: 47%.

    Trump was at 47% four months ago. He’s at 47% today.  In 2020 he got 47%. In 2016 he got 48% (3d party vote in MI, WI only reason he got elected)

  9. 10 Final Presidential Election Forecasts:

    Harris Wins – 8
    Trump Wins – 2

    @FiveThirtyEight
     
    🟦 Harris: 270 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 268
    ——
    @NateSilver538
     
    🟦 Harris: 271 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 267
    ——
    @DecisionDeskHQ
     
    🟥 Trump: 275 🏆
    🟦 Harris: 263
    ——
    Sabato’s Crystal Ball
    🟦 Harris: 276 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 262
    ——
    @TheEconomist
     
    🟦 Harris: 270 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 268
    ——
    @Elections_Daily
     
    🟦 Harris: 292 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 246
    ——
    @CNalysis
     
    🟦 Harris: 308 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 230
    ——
    @DailyMail
    /@J_L_Partners
     
    🟥 Trump: 287 🏆
    🟦 Harris: 251
    ——
    @jhkersting
     
    🟦 Harris: 272 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 266
    ——
    @RacetotheWH
     
    🟦 Harris: 275 🏆
    🟥 Trump: 263

  10. Here’s an early prediction: Donald Trump will unilaterally declare victory sometime this evening. He’ll do it no matter what’s going on. He lies about everything—he lied about where Obama was born, he lied about bleach curing Covid, he lied about winning the election in 2020, and he’s lied about Kamala Harris throughout the campaign, including claiming she just “turned black.” It should come as no surprise that he will lie about the outcome of this election. Trump will lie; he will do it convincingly in the view of his base, more than likely. He will do it without regard for the truth in order to suit his purposes. He makes stuff up, like Monday night when he said there was a 96.2% chance he would win—completely baseless. I know it’s not the prediction you wanted, but we should all be prepared for this. Hopefully the media will be prepared to simultaneously fact-check him as it’s happening.
    Some states will have final tallies, or close to them, tonight. Michigan, for instance, has new rules that are designed for a faster count. Others may take a day or longer, including Arizona and Georgia, especially if it’s close. Litigation can also delay results, but as we know from 2020, just because the Trump campaign or the RNC files a case, it doesn’t mean they’ll win. As Marc Elias is quick to point out, he won 61 of 62 cases in 2020, and the one he lost was just an early-stage procedural issue.
    We may see certification-resister officials at the county level, like the Georgia cases we’ve been tracking. Some of this could delay results too. But, at least so far, courts have taken a dim view of election deniers who claim that state laws that say they have a mandatory duty to certify election results don’t actually mean that. It may take a court decision or two to get final results in some places. We all want to know the outcome of the election as soon as possible, but just like in 2020, delay doesn’t mean fraud is happening or something else is amiss. It means all of the votes are being counted. No matter what Trump says.
    Federal officials continue to be on high alert for the risk of violence at polling places. Again, be cautious as news emerges. There are reports that Russia is circulating disinformation. Wait for confirmation—from credible sources—of anything you hear.– Joyce Vance

  11. OMG! NBC just showed a polling place in Wisconsin and the poll workers are wearing orange, garbage safety vests.  

    You can’t wear candidate-branded gear, so how is this legal when Adolf wore one a couple of times and some at rallies started wearing them? 

    Those poll workers need to be charged with campaigning inside a polling place!  Or maybe it’s meant to intimidate voters.

  12. A sweep for Harris on the battle ground states, plus 3 others.  Iowa, Nebraska statewide, Kansas.
    Jack

  13. I voted for a woman to become president for the 2nd time…  last time I was disappointed…. I feel today will be different.
     
    Never saw so many people at the polls….   and it’s only a one horse town.

  14. The hysterically funny thing about Maggots embracing the garbage imagery — and Trump in the garbage truck — is I saw a focus group of  Latinos who assumed all that symbolism was meant to support the comedian’s “joke” that Puerto Rico was garbage. They had not even heard about Biden calling Trump supporters garbage. So this orange vest gimmick actually outraged them all over again. Too funny.

  15. NYT’s Maggie Haberman at Trump HQ: “There is some anxiety below the surface. In some specific battleground states Republicans have not seen voters of their own coming out today in numbers that they wanted”

  16. Putin is trying. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger says the non-credible threats that briefly disrupted voting at two Georgia polling places originated from Russia. “We identified the source; it was from Russia,” he says.

  17. I voted this morning. I was voter #297 in my precinct. My birthday was yesterday, so I was a little sad that none of the people who looked at my drivers license today said, “Hey…yesterday was your birthday!” Anyway, I’m hoping my late-birthday present is that the orange guy loses today.

  18. I like voting in the afternoon and that is my plan. I did drive by the polling place, it was somewhat busy but no lines. Not anything like the lines for early voting. So we will see. 
    Took the dog out for a walk, Springfield has some good walking trails. Did about 2 miles, took the easy trail. All the rain we’ve had made the harder trail, with hills that give me a good workout was inaccessible as it has a lowwater bridge across the creek and after rain the water flows over it. We’ve had about 5 inches of rain in the last 4 days. 
    Jack

  19. A lot of GOTV going on, when I got back from my walk there was a sticky note on the storm door reminding me to vote. Also a flyer tucked in the handle with a list of Democratic candidates. No mention of Josh Hawley’s Democratic opponent. Guess he believes it is better for him not to be seen with fellow Democrats, or he and the party don’t get along. It was just unusual. 
    Jack 

  20. A quote from a local “man on the street” interview.

    Doby said it makes sense to vote on Election Day the way you celebrate Christmas on Christmas Day or “go trick-or-treating even if it’s on a school night.”

     

  21. So what is your beverage of choice tonight.?
    Here is a couple of suggestions from the folks over at the bulwark

  22. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2024/oct/18/harrison-butker-political-action-committee

    “As well as being the highest-paid kicker in the NFL and the owner of a very impressive beard, Butker is what a polite person might call “traditional” and a more direct person might call “Taliban-adjacent”. He essentially thinks women should stay at home making sandwiches for their husbands and looking after their kids.”

    “In May, the athlete caused a stir when gave a commencement speech at Benedictine College, a Catholic private liberal arts school, espousing these views. In the same speech, Butker also denounced “dangerous gender ideologies”, called Pride month a “deadly sin”, and rattled off various other conservative talking points.”

    “Now it seems Butker plans on riding his newfound notoriety all the way to the White House. Don’t worry, he hasn’t announced a campaign for president yet – though one imagines the thought has crossed his mind – but he has decided to dip his toes into the murky world of political financing.
     Everyone with a chip on their shoulder and some money in their pocket has a Pac these days.”

     
    “Over the weekend, the kicker established a political action committee called Upright Pac,aimed at getting more Christians to vote. “We’re seeing our values under attack every day. In our schools, in the media, and even from our own government,” the website explains. “But we have a chance to fight back and reclaim the traditional values that have made this country great. That’s why UPRIGHT PAC was founded.”

    https://people.com/harrison-butker-says-how-beautiful-it-is-for-women-to-step-aside-and-prioritize-their-family-8727543

    “There’s nothing shameful if you are a woman and you want to spend time with your family and raise your children, so it’s not putting down anyone who maybe wants to go get a great education and have a career,” he said.

    “But it’s more talking about how beautiful it is for women to maybe just step aside and prioritize their family and spend time with their children and raise their family. And that’s what I was just trying to speak love about,” he added.

    Uhhh, “step aside”? Jesus wept.

    Butker and Hawley made a disgusting appearance together. I believe Butker is one of the truly brainwashed by hard-right, misogynistic, Christian dogma. Hawley just seems like a schmuck, a white nationalist who pretends to believe; Christianity is just drag for him.

    I wonder how quickly the MAGAt Mike Johnsons of the world will try to distance themselves from Orange Adolf?

  23. https://europeelects.eu/2024/11/04/u-s-election-europeans-would-vote-for-harris-if-they-could/

    “As has been the case in recent years, most of western and especially northern Europe would vote for candidate of the Democratic Party, Kamala Harris, with wide margins. At the other end of the scale are Russia, Serbia, Georgia and Hungary, who would vote for Donald Trump of the Republican Party if offered a chance. The numbers of above visualisation are from opinion polling on the question with standardisation done by Europe Elects, by considering only those who answered the question and hence removing those being undecided.”
     
    Interesting charts in link.  The countries who like Harris the most have universal healthcare, paid parental leave, government subsidized daycare, and education through university. 
    I’m stressed. I’m making election night brownies.

  24. It’s getting wiggly out there.

    Capitol Police 1:37pm ET: Our officers just arrested a man who was stopped during our screening process at the Capitol Visitor Center (CVC). The man smelled like fuel, had a torch & a flare gun. The CVC is closed for tours for the day, while we investigate. We will provide more information when we can.

  25. Friend at Politico says Trump campaign has revoked credentials for them and other “legacy media” at Trump election event tonight. Apparently they only want their right wing echo chamber in attendance as Big Lie 2.0 is unveiled.

  26. The civil war is beginning.

    Russian bomb threats at Black precincts, U.S. Capitol shut down after arrest, major media outlets denied access to Trump HQ, and Steve Bannon sets up war room at Willard Hotel as Big Lie 2.0 unveiled.

    I have been watching these people talk about challenging this election in all these ways and many more for a long time. And shutting out “legacy media” is a big part of it 

  27. They’re just waiting for trigger words from Trump. That’s how Jan. 6 happened. It’s coming tonight, unless Trump calls it off or actually wins. Stage 1 is to disrupt counting centers where Harris leads.

  28. Does the Willard Hotel in DC want to be complicit with another right-wingnut riot?  They should kick him out for inciting a riot.   Why the eff is he out of jail already?  No matter.  He’s going back for longer. 

  29. Craig
    They have lost big time.
    There is no way if they believed Trump had a snow balls chance that they would pass up the opportunity to gloat in front of the national media.
    This isn’t the civil war, This is tears and shock.
    Good News!
    Jack, who still has his Harris-Walz and Vote Democrat signs out front and still hasn’t loaded the deer rifle or even tried to remember where he put the ammo.

  30. Treated to a free lunch today:

    Senate Bean Soup (The Official Recipe)
    Senate Bean Soup is a historic recipe that’s always on the Senate menu for a reason. With not much more than navy beans, a ham hock, and water, you can have one of the country’s most satisfying, and famous, ham and bean soups.

    Prep Time15minutes mins
    Cook Time3hours hrs 30minutes mins
    Servings: 4 people

    Ingredients
    1 pound dry navy beans
    3/4 pound smoked ham hock
    2 quarts cold water
    1/2 teaspoon baking soda (optional, but I recommend as it will help the beans soften)
    1 onion, diced
    1 tablespoon butter
    kosher salt, to taste (I do about 2 teaspoons)
    fresh black pepper, to taste

    Instructions
    Rinse the navy beans and pick over. Place beans into large pot with the ham hock and two quarts of cold water and the baking soda, if using. 
     
    PRO TIP: Baking soda is not part of the official recipe, but it is my secret weapon when cooking dried beans. The alkaline pH helps soften the beans’ tough exterior and helps speed cooking a bit.

    Bring just to a boil, then lower to a simmer and cook for approximately three hours (yep) in a covered pot with the lid barely cracked, stirring occasionally, until the beans have fully softened. 
     
    TIP: The water quantity should be accurate, but If the pot of beans starts to look a little dry, add more water until you have a very thick, creamy soup consistency.

    Remove the ham hock and set it aside on a dish to cool. Meanwhile, melt the butter in a skillet over medium heat. Add the onion and cook, stirring, until translucent and lightly brown. (Mmm..butter and onions. Doesn’t that smell good?) Add the diced, buttery onion to the soup. 

    Pull meat from the ham hock into bite-sized pieces and return the meat to soup. Stir. Discard the picked-over ham bone. 
     
    Before serving, bring the soup to a boil and season with salt and pepper. Serve on its own or with a nice green salad to complement the richness of the soup.

    Notes
    This Senate Bean Soup recipe is based on the original. The ingredients and quantities are exactly the same, with the addition of a little optional baking soda to help soften the beans and speed the cooking a bit. 
     
    This soup will keep in the fridge for up to three days, and freezes well.

    https://www.senate.gov/about/traditions-symbols/senate-bean-soup.htm

  31. Sigh, the problem with living in a college town, somebody had the bright idea of reinventing the “I voted” sticker.  You can’t read the “I  Voted”  Not a bold red, white and blue but washed out colors and I assume there is an I Voted but you can’t read it.
    Oh well it goes on my dresser mirror like several others already there.
    Jack

  32. Now that cursive writing is no longer taught seems like we need to rethink signature verification on anything, not just ballots???

    Nevada’s secretary of state, seeing high number of rejected ballots in Clark and Washoe counties, says one of the biggest issues is that the signatures of younger voters don’t always match what’s on their driver’s licenses:

    “It’s mostly the fact that young people don’t have signatures these days. And when they did register to vote through the automatic voter registration process, they signed a digital pad at D.M.V., and that became their license signature.”

  33. Craig
    My signature when written with pen on paper doesn’t match either my drivers license or the signature I gave on the electronic pad. when voting, You can’t do your legal signature on an electronic pad unless your signature is an X
    Jack

  34. Pissed off at MSNBC.  It doesn’t stream live unless you pay $40 – $80 A month for one of the massive number of channels services.  

  35. Speaking of football, I voted against the sports betting and for the Lake of the Ozarks to get a casino. At least with a later there is a chance of keeping some of the money in state.  where as with sports betting it is a big pipeline out.
    Jack

  36. if you have a streaming stick they usually have free news channels bundled in
     
    if i find a live news feed on youtube ill post it

  37. I voted against the sports betting

    good job, this sports betting is going to financially cripple a whole generation of young men

  38. Ivy – I make the Senate Navy Bean Soup (official recipe) several times during the winter.  I do add things like a couple bay leaves, some thyme, a few splashes of Tapatio hot sauce.  I get my smoked ham hocks from the Amish market because they sell the best sizes.

  39. CNN usually gives most detail, and Anderson has a terrible poker face.

    And I could tell Hillary lost when an obviously stunned Jake Tapper reported exit polls at 5pm.

    This year the gender breakdown will tell us everything.

  40. https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/a-werewolf-ripping-off-its-shirt-a-deer-wearing-sunglasses-unique-i-voted-stickers-are-bringing-fun-to-the-democratic-process-145530663.html

    “A werewolf ripping off its shirt. A deer wearing sunglasses. Unique ‘I Voted’ stickers are bringing fun to the democratic process.”

    “Jane Hynous, 12, of Grosse Pointe, drew the werewolf ripping off its shirt in front of an American flag.”

    They are gonna start selling/collecting them like Pokémon cards. 

    Corey – Did you get a werewolf?
     
     
     
     

  41. All the magat chatter about voting machines flipping votes and the only vote is a paper vote, reminds me of the Dems chatter about the same thing.  “proof” that the republicans making voting machines and the software were flipping votes, or not counting votes.  Dems convinced paper ballots were the only way to enforce security in voting, this four years after the “hanging chad” incident the the court formerly known as supreme decided to put the village idiot in the Oval Office. 
     
    I guess this has finally died out in  the meeting halls of those claiming Democratic Party membership.

  42. Blue Bronc, good to hear. Mr. Ivy and I stopped by the butcher shop and discovered the free soup. Hottest cup of soup I ever slurped, almost burned my lips, but delicious on a suddenly on a cold day in Northern Colorado. I’d never heard of Senate Bean Soup as a thing before. 

  43. Blink my stick is fire tv.  Its preloaded with prime, netflix, Disney and hulu.  If you find a live feed let me know.

  44. will do but search “news” on that fire stick

    i feel like hulu, if you pay for that, should have news but am not sure

  45. My peacock has NBC live but MSNBC programs a day later.  Really aggravating.  I’ve got CNn on max so It’s Anderson.

  46. I can see Adolf’s idiotic whining now: There can’t be more than 100%.  The extra 50% are illegally voting.
    Ha! 

  47. I stumbled onto Brian Williams wit Doug Brinkley on antenna tv.      Guess I’ll watch that awhile
    Sheep smith

    Harry litman

  48. Bink, Thanks for all the help.  Learned some new tricks.  Unfortunately, it didn’t solve the MSNBC problem.  If you want it live the cheapest is Sling for $40.

  49. nothing free in this World eh

    I got a Roku stick just for the free 24 hour Doctor Who and gardeners world channels. It is all my TV plays.

    free in quotes #Don’tTextAndDrive

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