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TIME MAG PERSON OF THE YEAR
#81
(12-11-2018, 05:36 AM)Duchess Wrote: Please let it be Special Counsel Mueller.

Mueller came in third, after runner-up Donald Trump.  http://time.com/person-of-the-year-2018-...ns-choice/
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#82
I'm satisfied it was anyone but that dumbass buffoon. I say that knowing that getting the cover isn't always a good thing but he would have seen it that way and commented proudly.
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#83
Can you imagine the outrage if Putin got it? I would have laughed.
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#84
He hasn't influenced our news in the way others have. Whether one is decent or wretched matters not, the bottom line is how the person/s have influenced current events.
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#85
What do I win?
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#86
(12-11-2018, 04:52 PM)BigMark Wrote: What do I win?

Congratulations! You have won an all expense paid trip to Cabo! Pack your bags, babe, you leave in a couple days! Winna winna chicken dinner! Love025
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#87
Fry Guy Wrote:Can you imagine the outrage if Putin got it? I would have laughed.
Is it a coincidence that Dave Mustaine and Vlad Putin have never been seen in the same place at the same time? I say Nyet.
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#88
https://youtu.be/NpodyQmdGt8
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#89
London-based "The Financial Times" has left some high-profile right-wing figures and authoritarian leaders rankled this morning.

The paper named billionaire mogul and philanthropist George Soros its 'Person of the Year'.

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The paper stated that Soros is being honored not for his achievements but rather for 'the values he represents' in the face of rising 'nationalism and populism'.

Soros is often featured in right-wing conspiracy theories floated by U.S. President Donald Trump and his loyalists, Russian President Vladimir Putin's allies, and British pro-Brexit leaders.

Soros says that the false rhetoric about him hurts him deeply, but he figures it's indicative that he must be doing something right considering the sources.

George Soros puts his money where his values are; he's donated $18billion of his $26billion fortune towards democratic and liberal causes.

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#90
Mr Soros was born in Budapest on August 12, 1930, and by the Nazi invasion in 1944 was living a life of middle-class comfort with his father Tivadar, mother Elizabeth, and brother Paul in an idyllic home on Lupa Island in the Danube.

To escape the Gestapo death squads, the young Mr Soros was given the name Kiss Sandor, along with a set of Christian papers. He was then taken in by a man called Baumbach, also known as Baufluss, whom Tivadar paid to protect his son.
Baumbach was an official at the Ministry of Agriculture who had worked with Soros' father. 

Baumbach was also a Nazi collaborator, and sometimes took the young boy on visits to write up lists of confiscated property.

This experience, which Soros had no control over, would later lead to inaccurate claims by Vladimir Putin and others that he chose to help the Nazis. Soros managed to survive the rest of the occupation, which cost the lives of 500,000 Hungarian Jews.

Aged 17, Soros fled to London and worked as a porter and waiter before enrolling in the London School of Economics. He moved to America and became a naturalized citizen in 1956, spending time as a trader before setting up his own hedge fund, Soros Fund Management, in 1969.

A ruthless speculator, in 1992 he became known as 'The Man Who Broke The Bank Of England' after he shorted the pound to send Britain crashing out of the ERM. The move earned him a billion dollars in a day.

Some of Soros' earliest political work was helping pro-democracy groups in the Soviet Union, an action that has gained him the hatred of Putin, who pines for the former USSR.

A key landmark in his political career was the establishment of the Open Society Foundation in 1984. This has invested money in a wide variety of causes including migration, drugs policy, and the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar.

He has also earned the ire of  Donald Trump by becoming one of the largest donors to Hillary Clinton's 2016 US presidential campaign.

Trump has without basis accused Soros of everything from funding migrant caravans from Central America headed for the U.S. to paying Kavanaugh protesters.

Full story:  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article...-Year.html
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#91
He sounds like an intelligent and generous person.
Sally, the flaming asshole of MockForums
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#92
No doubt, I will bestow upon him the most prestigious title "FryGuy Of The Year Award".
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#93
That award should be reserved for Trump when he's on trial along with the rest of his mob family.
Sally, the flaming asshole of MockForums
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#94
Whatever you say Frytilda.
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#95
How old is that fucker? He looks like he went to high in an airplane. 
He ain't heavy, he's my brother.
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#96
(12-20-2018, 04:34 PM)BigMark Wrote: Whatever you say Frytilda.

I'm going to kill you.
Sally, the flaming asshole of MockForums
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#97
hah
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#98
2019 Person of the Year

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16-year-old Greta Thunberg began a global movement by skipping school: starting in August 2018, she spent her days camped out in front of the Swedish Parliament, holding a sign painted in black letters on a white background that read Skolstrejk för klimatet: “School Strike for Climate.” 

In the 16 months since, she has addressed heads of state at the U.N., met with the Pope, sparred with the President of the United States and inspired 4 million people to join the global climate strike on September 20, 2019, in what was the largest climate demonstration in human history. 

After noticing a hundredfold increase in its usage, lexicographers at Collins Dictionary named Thunberg’s pioneering idea, climate strike, the word of the year.

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#99
“We can’t just continue living as if there was no tomorrow, because there is a tomorrow,” she says, tugging on the sleeve of her blue sweatshirt awaiting a sail boat. “That is all we are saying.”

It’s a simple truth, delivered by a teenage girl in a fateful moment. The sailboat, La Vagabonde, will shepherd Thunberg to the Port of Lisbon, and from there she will travel to Madrid, where the United Nations is hosting this year’s climate conference.  It is the last such summit before nations commit to new plans to meet a major deadline set by the Paris Agreement. 

Unless they agree on transformative action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the world’s temperature rise since the Industrial Revolution will hit the 1.5°C mark—an eventuality that scientists warn will expose some 350 million additional people to drought and push roughly 120 million people into extreme poverty by 2030. 

For every fraction of a degree that temperatures increase, these problems will worsen. This is not fearmongering; this is science. For decades, researchers and activists have struggled to get world leaders to take the climate threat seriously. 

But this year, the unlikely teenager somehow got the world’s attention.

More:  https://time.com/person-of-the-year-2019...-thunberg/
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I think that's great! The whole world is talking about Greta. Go, Greta, go!

...and public servants are Time's Guardians of the Year. That's pretty awesome too.

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