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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Endless War Champions Back Harris for President
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Endless War Champions Back Harris for President

Writing in the New York Times, retired Gen. Stanley McChrystal has endorsed Kamala Harris for president over Donald Trump. This should surprise no one. Gen. McChrystal, one of the leading commanders in our ill-fated 20-year war in Afghanistan, supported Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020. Trump is the greatest threat to the military-industrial complex since President Dwight Eisenhower. Ironically, McChrystal was fired by President Obama in 2010 after publicly insulting some top administration officials, including then-Vice President Biden. McChrystal is simply the latest graduate of the military-industrial complex to endorse Harris. Former Vice-President Dick Cheney, one of the principal architects of two failed wars under President George W. Bush, also recently endorsed Harris.  (READ MORE from Francis P. Sempa: None Dare Call It a Hostage Crisis) After his firing by Obama, McChrystal released a statement saying, “I strongly support the President’s strategy in Afghanistan and am deeply committed to our coalition forces, our partner nations, and the Afghan people.” McChrystal had previously urged Obama to provide him with more troops to finish the job in Afghanistan, reminiscent of some of the commanders during the Vietnam War who promised to win the war if Washington would just send them more troops to fight and die. Obama later criticized McChrystal in his book A Promised Land, for acting with “the same air of impunity that seemed to have taken hold among some of the military’s top ranks during the Bush years: a sense that once the war began, those who fought it shouldn’t be questioned, that politicians should just give them what they asked for and get out of the way.”  Trump Disapproved of Their Wars This is a trend that began in 2016, when Donald Trump criticized the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Then, Tom Ridge (Homeland Security), Michael Chertoff (Homeland Security), Robert Zoellick (State Department, World Bank), Michael Hayden (CIA, NSA), John Negroponte (DNI) and other “deep state” veterans came out against Trump. Trump called them and Hillary Clinton “the owners of the disastrous decisions to invade Iraq, allow Americans to die in Benghazi, and they are the ones who allowed the rise of ISIS.” McChrystal noted in his New York Times piece the importance of continuing to support the war in Ukraine. That was also a key reason why a group of 700 “National Security Leaders 4 America,” that included Hillary Clinton, John Brennan, Victoria Nuland, Michael McFaul and Leon Panetta, and numerous retired military officers, endorsed Harris for president. They praised Harris’ “relentless diplomacy with allies around the globe [that] preserved a united front in support of Ukraine’s fight against Russian aggression.” “The message coming from Washington’s foreign policy elite, many of them directly responsible for the counterproductive and failed U.S. wars and interventions of the last 40 years, is loud and clear,” writes James Carden in Responsible Statecraft. “They do not like, trust, and indeed, perhaps even fear, the return of Trump to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.” That is because, as John Feehery, a veteran of Capitol Hill politics has noted, Trump is the greatest threat to the military-industrial complex since President Dwight Eisenhower warned Americans against its growing, undue influence in our councils of government. It is not as if Trump while he was president starved the Defense Department of money and weapons. He advocated and supported Defense increases, but like our greatest presidents — Washington, Theodore Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan — he sought to use our military strength to back diplomacy. He did not, to quote John Quincy Adams, go “abroad in search of monsters to destroy.” The Dick Cheneys and Stanley McChrystals did, and they seem convinced that Kamala Harris will, too. Trump, at least in the last two years of his presidency, focused on the real threat to U.S. national security — China.  More War? In the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and the Far East, separate conflicts threaten to spark World War III. As Victor Davis Hanson has noted, World War II started out as separate conflicts in Europe and Asia that evolved and coalesced into the most destructive war in human history. (READ MORE: Hillary Clinton Stokes the Fires of Anti-Trump Demagoguery) For more than two decades many of the civilian and military leaders who are now backing Kamala Harris were responsible for waging futile, costly, and long wars and interventions that have made America less secure while fueling the engines and filling the coffers of the military-industrial complex. Why should anyone listen to them?     The post Endless War Champions Back Harris for President appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Kamala and Tim, Stephanie’s New Best Friends
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Kamala and Tim, Stephanie’s New Best Friends

Back in 2020, I began to receive requests from the Biden campaign on one of my email accounts asking for donations . However the messages were addressed to “Stephanie.” I’m not sure who Stephanie really is, but I assume that she mistyped  or otherwise mangled her email address when she signed up as a Democrat. The emails stopped when the election was over. However, Stephanie recently began receiving requests from the Harris/Walz campaign for donations. Kamala and Tim are now Stephanie’s new best friends forever, or at least until the election. They are even offering friendship bracelets. Stephanie wrote back saying that, although she would love to help, she had all her money tied up in bail for her grand theft auto charge. I thought that she would be dropped from their list. I was wrong. They sold her address to another group and she began getting solicitations from law firms offering to represent her, and she continued to get requests for donations, She wrote back saying that, although Harris was a personal role model, her funds were tied up fighting a restraining order keeping her away from elementary schools. That did not deter them. A message saying that she was saving up money for her sex change operation had no effect either. Finally, Stephanie’s mother wrote on her account that she was deceased having been shot in a drug deal gone bad. The pleas for donations continue. I had foolishly forgotten that being dead does not necessarily disqualify Democratic voters. The fact that Stephanie is a felon, a pervert, and quite possibly dead says a lot about the kind of supporters that the Democrats are looking for; it apparently has pitched a big tent. This is a party that regularly portrays Trump supporters as knuckle dragging, violence prone fascists despite the fact that the assassination attempts against Trump as well as the attack on the Republican congressional baseball team that injured Representative Steve Scalise were carried out by professed leftists. The reality is likely that the campaign probably ignores incoming emails that don’t contain credit card numbers. Groucho Marks famously observed that he would not want to be part of any organization that would have him as a member. Independents and undecided voters should ask themselves if they want to be lined up with a party that would have Stephanie as a member. READ MORE from Gary Anderson: Trump Is an Extraordinary Manager of Client Nations Tim Walz, Unreformed Summer Soldier Gary Anderson is a seventy- six year old professed male conservative  and an occasional contributor to The American Spectator. The post Kamala and Tim, Stephanie’s New Best Friends appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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In Minnesota, Tim Walz Had a Covid Snitch Line
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In Minnesota, Tim Walz Had a Covid Snitch Line

On August 1, 2020, Julie McCarthy sent an email to the Department of Public Safety to express her dismay about a recent visit to Sager’s Liquor in Hugo, Minnesota, where she observed numerous people violating the law.  Few people are genuinely evil; systems, however, often are, especially bureaucracy. “Employees were not consistently wearing masks during the 10 minutes my husband spent in the store,” she wrote. “six of eight people present in the store did not wear a mask in the short time he was in the store.”  Like many state leaders across the country in the spring of 2020, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz passed an executive order placing restrictions on the everyday movements of Americans. But Walz went further. His administration set up a hotline and encouraged Minnesotans to report on those in violation of the governor’s Covid mandates. Though the policy was met with controversy, Walz refused to back down.  “It’s for their own good,” Walz told local media in March 2020. Walz, who in August was tapped by Democratic Presidential nominee Kamala Harris as her running mate, did not mention the fines up to $1,000 or 90 days behind bars for violators.  McCarthy’s email is just one of hundreds of “snitch” documents now available online following a public records request. The documents, which have received little attention to date, shed light on a terrifying phenomenon: Americans reporting one another to authorities for the crime of going about their lives.   ‘I Have Attached Photos’  In October 2020, seven months into the Covid pandemic, rumors began to circulate that First Apostolic Lutheran Church was going to hold a church service in contravention of state law. Though Minnesota had eased its Covid emergency order in May to allow “non-essential” businesses to reopen and retailers to operate at 50 percent capacity, churches, synagogues, and mosques were restricted to no more than 10 worshippers. A woman who identified herself as Amy Keranen emailed the Department of Public Safety to inform the agency of Apostolic Lutheran Church’s alleged plan. “I am aware that the apostlic [sic] Lutheran church at 2300 Cox Trail medina MN is planning to hold church services,” she wrote to the hotline. “And they will be serving meals in the church dining hall. I don’t believe this fits with legal requirements.”  It’s unclear if the state took any action against Apostolic Lutheran Church, or if church services were even held. But the email shows the zeal with which some Americans reported on one another in response to Walz’s invitation.   Reporting on one another isn’t exactly new in America.  It’s associated with some of the darkest chapters in American history.  The Salem Witch trials of 1692 saw no fewer than 144 people (including children) accused of witchcraft by their colonial communities. Nineteen were executed — after trials, of course. Christopher Nolan’s recent movie Oppenheimer explored another notorious chapter in America’s accusatory history: the McCarthy Era, a period that saw a “Red Scare” sweep across the country over fears of communism. As Nolan’s movie shows,  communists did exist in America. But it was McCarthy’s calculated and sometimes unsubstantiated accusations against his countrymen that created a climate of fear and political persecution. Minnesota’s Covid snitch line doesn’t exactly mirror these famous historical examples. Citizens in 2020 weren’t being accused of  witchcraft or Soviet spying; they were accused of much more mundane “crimes.”   “A bunch of teens gather in the skateboard park nearby,” reported one unidentified man. “There is definitely not social distancing between them. It’s in Plymouth. Plymouth Creek Park.” An astonishing number of emails show Minnesotans reporting on fellow citizens simply because they were enjoying recreation outdoors in contravention of Walz’s six feet social distancing order. In other cases, informants seem upset that businesses were trying to make a profit to survive.  “There is a bar/grill in Scanlon, MN that refuses to do what has been instructed of us, simply because the owner can not afford the loss in revenue and will continue to keep his bar open despite what the Governor has said or ordered us to do,” wrote a man who identified himself as Jeremy Johnson. “I have attached a few of the photos.”  ‘Ms. Schneider is traveling on Wednesday’ Unlike previous accusatory fevers in American history, the targets were not labeled devil worshippers (the Salem Witch trials) nor treasonous commies (the Red Scare). They were accused of breaking bureaucratic rules and dogmas. (That these were not rooted in rigid science is something architects of America’s Covid response concede today.)  In this sense, Covid snitching is more reminiscent of the reporting network that emerged near the end of the Cold War in East Germany. Many Americans are familiar with the Stasi (abbreviation for Staatssicherheit), the secret police founded in 1950 in the German Democratic Republic. The infamous GDR security unit has received abundant academic and cinematic attention, as has the Stasi’s use of “informal employees” (informants known as “IMs”) to report on their friends, family, and colleagues. But the feared Stasi were just one part of a much larger network of spies that emerged in the 1980s before the collapse of the Soviet Union. In a 2015 Der Spiegel article, author and documentary filmmaker Peter Wensierski helped expose evidence that snitching in the GDR went far beyond the Stasi and included “almost every area of East German society.”  “Government agencies, political parties, associations, companies, universities, cultural institutions: Everywhere, people reported incriminating information about those around them,” wrote Wensierski. “They were totally normal citizens of East Germany who betrayed others: neighbors reporting on neighbors, schoolchildren informing on classmates, university students passing along information on other students, managers spying on employees and Communist bosses denouncing party members.” These were not IMs, Wensierski points out, and they were not snitching exclusively to the Stasi (though reports could certainly end up there). Much like Walz’s snitch line, German citizens reported on neighbors for behavior that hardly seems criminal. A bit of humor directed in the wrong direction could be enough to generate a report, and perhaps land a jokester in prison. Or perhaps holding the wrong political views, or taking an unauthorized trip.  Wensierski recounted a man’s phone call to a police headquarters in Döbeln September, 1987.  “Ms. Marianne Schneider is traveling on Wednesday, Sept. 14, to West Berlin for a visit. She doesn’t intend to return.”  “And who are you?”  Silence.  “You would like to remain anonymous?”  “Yes.” How to Judge Walz’s Snitch Line Defenders of Walz’s Covid hotline might argue Minnesotans’ pandemic  snitching was different. Informants in Minnesota were simply trying to keep fellow citizens safe. But snitchers in Germany could similarly argue they were simply making the world better by protecting the German state and advancing socialism. (READ MORE from Jonathan Miltimore: The Horrors of the Holodomor Must Not Be Forgotten) Judging the human heart is never an easy matter, of course. No doubt many people believed (or convinced themselves) that informing on their fellow citizens served a greater cause. But informants are often driven by motives other than altruism, and the hotline documents show this. In some emails, people seem primarily concerned that others are having fun while they’re following the rules and staying indoors.  “Every night, and during the daytime now too — we have large groups of teenagers and young adults clumped in groups in the park,” one unidentified man reported. “Playing sports games. Playing on all the park equipment.” Others complained that businesses deemed “non-essential” by the state (unlike liquor stores, which were never ordered closed) appeared to be open. “I wanted to report the Harley Davidson in Elk River off 169 appears to continued (sic) to be open,” a woman who identified herself as Meghan Ferguson reported. “I don’t see how this is an essential service.”  Some informant emailers sound genuinely afraid of the virus (an immuno-compromised man reported his neighbors for receiving a group of visitors), others seem less concerned with safety and more concerned with reporting rule breakers, such as one man who was greeted by a staffer at a Chick-fil-A. “I asked her if she thought it was dangerous to be within six feet of a car with no mask or gloves to protect herself,” he wrote on April 1. “She immediately stepped back onto the curb and was still within three feet of my vehicle.” The individual, who identified himself as David Palmer, said he proceeded to the window to receive his food, where he was met by a female manager with whom he shared his dismay. “I was handed my food and told to have a nice day,” he wrote. This doesn’t sound like a person terrified by a deadly virus, nor altruistically concerned for the public welfare. It sounds more like someone who feels powerless, but is trying to exert a measure of control over the behavior of others.   In a way, such a reaction makes sense. In these centrally planned environments, both East Germans and Minnesotans had been largely stripped of their own freedom, and humans who’ve lost their own personal agency often are more tempted to unjustly exert control over others. “The moment we undertake to direct the lives of others,” observed author Leonard Read in his 1964 book Anything Peaceful, “we lose our own moral compass, for we assume a power we do not possess.” Tim Walz and the Banality of Evil In 1961, the philosopher Hannah Arendt flew to Jerusalem to observe the trial of Adolf Eichmann, one of the architects of the Holocaust. Watching the trial, Arendt realized Eichmann was no Iago or Macbeth or Richard III. He was a bland man, not distinguishable in any way except, perhaps, his “diligence in looking out for his personal advancement.” Observing Eichmann, Arendt coined a phrase: “the banality of evil.”  The words come to mind while reading the reports to Walz’s snitch line. Reports of “a large group of adults playing pickleball at Washington Park in Richfield” are nothing if not banal; yet, they are also sinister, which is no doubt what prompted one writer to quip that “totalitarianism consists in reams of paper.” Arendt reminded us that the face of evil is often not what we expect. Like Solzhenitsyn, she understood that the line between good and evil cuts through every human heart. Few people are genuinely evil; systems, however, often are, especially bureaucracy. The dehumanizing nature of bureaucracy is a theme that has been explored by countless thinkers, from Franz Kafka to the Nobel Prize-winning poet Günter Grass to Arendt, who described it as the root of collective evil.   “The essence of totalitarian government, and perhaps the nature of every bureaucracy, is to make functionaries and mere cogs in the administrative machinery out of men, and thus to dehumanize them,” she wrote in Eichmann in Jerusalem, Essay on the Banality of Evil. What made Walz’s snitch line so evil was that it combined the madness of crowds with the bureaucratic power of the state. His policy did nothing to stop the virus and was quietly rescinded in November 2020, much like policies in a dozen or so other states. But fear, paranoia, and tribalism were fruits of the policy, which encouraged people of the Bread and Butter state to snitch on one another much like East Germans during the Cold War.   Astonishingly, Walz, who has been campaigning across the Midwest, is now lecturing others about the importance of minding one’s own Ps and Qs. “In Minnesota, just like in Wisconsin, we respect our neighbors and the personal choices they make,” he said, “even if we wouldn’t make the same choices for ourselves. We know there’s a golden rule. Mind your own damn business!” The “mind your own business” theme is playing well to audiences. So well, that Walz included the phrase in his remarks at the Democratic National Convention, drawing massive applause.  (READ MORE from Jonathan Miltimore: Nancy Pelosi’s Other Legacy: A Mountain of Debt for Our Children) Minding one’s own business is good advice and a tenet of classical liberalism. Unfortunately, as someone who has lived in Minnesota the last 15 years, I can assure you that Tim Walz is not interested in minding his own businesses. Nor does he respect the personal choices or individual rights of Americans.  Walz may not be evil, but his snitch line was—and Americans should not forget it. The post In Minnesota, Tim Walz Had a Covid Snitch Line appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Spain Is the Best Country in Europe, Zoe
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Spain Is the Best Country in Europe, Zoe

British journalist Zoe Strimpel has written a column against Spain in The Spectator. I don’t know, I wouldn’t want to jump the gun, but it sounds like Strimpel, after visiting us, is not “another satisfied customer.” Well, you will understand that I just had to revisit some of her statements here. I had planned to argue with her over her insults and lies, but I’ve ended up falling in love. I love toxicity. Let’s see: That is true. There is a lot of pickpocketing. Especially among foreign columnists. Thanks to a host of savvy media stories, we’re now supposed to think of Spain not just in terms of package holidays, sangria, and Catholicism but also as chic, romantic, stylishly left-wing. I don’t know who sold you that merchandise, Zoe, but it’s broken. Leftism and stylish are antonyms. Let me explain: for me, James Stewart was stylish, not Judith Butler. Yes, we are festive, holidays, sangria, Catholicism, chic, and romanticism. The cities are dire — some of the least appealing on the continent. Spanish cities are beautiful. Some of the most appealing on the continent. You must, amiga mía, realize: that when it’s everyone who falls in love with Seville, Santiago, Valencia, or Salamanca but you, Zoe, maybe the problem is not with “everyone.” My trips to Seville, Granada, and Córdoba as a kid were marred by the stink of drains in every room we slept in. Really? Are you sure that your roommates remembered to use deodorant? The baked, dull avenues of Madrid, the endless and fruitless quest for the best place for cured meat. Madrid has some of the most majestic avenues in the world, watched over by a sky that only Velázquez, whom you can meet at the Prado museum (he’s dead, I mean his paintings), could capture. For the rest, it is very, very, very difficult to find a bar in Madrid where you get bad cured meat. To eat poorly in Spain is an endeavor that needs to be taken extremely seriously if you are to succeed. Politically, Spain is nasty. Don’t you believe it, Zoe. Let me know if you can recall any other nation going from dictatorship to democracy without firing a single shot, on the initiative of the politicians who held dictatorial power, then going on to celebrate a peaceful transition. We must not be so bad politically if we have achieved something unique in the world. It’s got a loony left and right with far too much power. I’m not going to deny that the left here is crazy, like all postmodern lefts. Does the right have too much power? No, honey, otherwise our economy would be doing just fine for once, damn it. We’re just a great nation in the hands of a moron. In that sense, we’re even. I’d give special mention to its knee-jerk hatred of Israel. If you talked to people on the street you would know that only the extreme left political elites are pro-Palestinian, they love any terrorism, but this is not exclusive to Spain. Israel and Spain have a long tradition of anti-terrorist cooperation. We have particularly enjoyed the mass sex change operation of Hezbollah terrorists. country’s rambunctious anti-tourism? Oh dear, don’t tell me you’ve visited Barcelona! Why did you do that? For decades, the Catalan political elite have hated everyone because they think they are a superior race, and they engage in anti-tourist nonsense. Don’t worry, we’re fixing it. If instead of Barcelona you had visited Madrid, San Sebastian, La Coruna, or Cadiz you would know that it’s hard to find a more open, fun, and welcoming country. Barcelona is a bewildering tundra of tat and dive bars… You should have visited it a few decades ago, before enemies of Spain like you took over and screwed up the region. …dotted with the ugliest architecture on earth – that of Gaudi. Call me perceptive, if you will, but I suspect you’re not too keen on Gaudi’s artistic talent. It’s got a bang average beach. Do-it-yourself tip: try the Bay of Biscay for beaches. overpriced food. Really? Since when in your native London do they give it away? And you’ll get pickpocketed as a bonus. That is true. There is a lot of pickpocketing. Especially among foreign columnists. Spanish history is also horrid if one begins with the Inquisition, the bloodiest, most sadistic, most pathological manifestation of Catholic dogma in Europe. Calm down, Zoe. Have a glass of water, you’ve got a bit of Black Legend stuck in your throat. and moves through to Franco and the long love affair with fascism. Franco decided that Spain would remain neutral in WWII. Maybe he should have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Jokes aside, whether you like it or not, he was a dictator acclaimed by the people until his death, peacefully, in bed. I don’t know what your history book says, but thanks to Franco, Spain became a retaining wall against Stalinism, which otherwise would have swept through Europe. If it had happened, probably, neither you nor I could be writing this now. Instead of educating yourself with The Guardian, try reading Stanley Payne one day. And what of a great Spanish literature — is there one? I mean other than Cervantes? Not at all, Zoe. The only thing we know to do with our hands is kill bulls. A word of advice at this point in your article: try putting down the bottle of whiskey when you write. Bringing it all together is the bullfighting; slowly and cruelly torturing animals for sport in view of tens of thousands of baying onlookers. For a moment, I wasn’t sure if you are describing the noble art of bullfighting, or what Madrid looks like every time your hooligan friends decide to pay us a visit to attend Champions League matches at the Bernabeu. (bullfighting) This is not a tradition fit for the modern era. You’re right. I’ll tell my bullfighter friends to trade the bullring for showing off their salami with a gay dance on TikTok. I won’t be troubling Spain with my tourism any time soon. Oh, Zoe. Don’t do that! I’m so sad. I was close to falling in love. How brief our love story has turned out to be. Just as I was about to invite you to dinner at an expensive, stinky, romantic restaurant, full of pictures of Gaudi, and decorated with bull’s heads! Anyway, another Spanish trait: we don’t hold grudges. I’d be delighted to show you this paradise on your next visit, if only you’d let me be your guide, my dear. READ MORE from Itxu Diaz: The UN Circus Begins: The Clowns Start Their Traditional Acrobatics 301 Years Being Right on Sympathy and Nations The post Spain Is the Best Country in Europe, Zoe appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
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MAJOR TECH COMPANIES SET EYES ON DIGITAL ID
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MAJOR TECH COMPANIES SET EYES ON DIGITAL ID

from The HighWire with Del Bigtree: TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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Enough Already: Stop Provoking Russia
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Enough Already: Stop Provoking Russia

by Carus Michaelangelo, SHTF Plan: Like many people, I eagerly await Scott Horton’s upcoming book, Provoked, which will explain in detail the US provocations that led to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But will it come too late? Since the Russia-Ukraine war began, the Biden administration, in collaboration with the Ukrainian government and much of Europe, has […]
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Let's Get Cooking
Let's Get Cooking
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The "So Sleek" Storage Gem That'll Instantly Declutter Your Countertops
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The "So Sleek" Storage Gem That'll Instantly Declutter Your Countertops

A slim countertop solution to chaotic clutter. READ MORE...
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This Boston Cream Pie Is So Good I’ve Made It 5 Weeks in a Row
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This Boston Cream Pie Is So Good I’ve Made It 5 Weeks in a Row

How did it take me this long to make this classic dessert?! READ MORE...
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My Mom’s Brilliant Grocery Trick I’ve Been Following for 4 Years Straight (I Wish She’d Taught Me Sooner!)
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My Mom’s Brilliant Grocery Trick I’ve Been Following for 4 Years Straight (I Wish She’d Taught Me Sooner!)

I do it EVERY time I shop. READ MORE...
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Why This '80s Cocktail Is Now One of the Most Popular in America
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Why This '80s Cocktail Is Now One of the Most Popular in America

It’s a classic for good reason. READ MORE...
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