It is uncommon. North Carolina is a weird state when it comes to politics, and it's impressive that cooper has been as popular as he has been in the state.
I agree with all of the other great games others have mentioned, but I really love the first level of rocket. It's your typical platformer, except it has a physics engine, so when you throw things, they might bounce in fun ways, and there is this dune buggy that you get to drive that bounces off the sand dunes in ways that releases a lot of seratonin in my brain.
In the article it mentions how the evidence came to light after her conviction. I don't know if that means her appeal changes because of this, but it seems to me like this evidence only affected Baldwin's case and how the prosecution handled it.
Expensive lawyers are better about using slip ups to get their clients free, but that doesn't mean that the only difference between the two was money.
Foresters. You have to have a degree(most are 2 years, but still), and you can make less than the fed poverty rate. The exception is a federal job, but those are very competitive.
It's Calvinball. They change how they are making the rules to weed out what they don't like. Don't like Roe? Throw out the 9th amendment. Don't like firearm restrictions? Rewrite how we are supposed to interpret the grammar of the constitution. Don't like other rules? Make up that it has to apply to "history and tradition". It's ruling on top of ruling that are impossible to universally apply meaning they get to remain with all of the power to strike down what they don't like.
President Biden had classified documents when he wasn't president. This is a no no. A special counsel was created to investigate and see if he broke the law (which requires showing a level of intent). The special counsel interviewed Biden and afterwards put out a report and was like "we shouldn't procecute this case, the jury would see him as a forgetful old grandpa" (this is not a real quote).
Now congressional Republicans want the justice department to release the audio of the interview. They say they want this to find evidence of criminal activity (as if the justice department wasn't doing the same thing?) And Merrick Garland is refusing under the reasoning that it wouldn't serve a purpose, and disclosing information on someone who hasn't committed a crime, you are going to prosecute, is bad. Imagine if the government did that to all people they didn't like, start an investigation, get a bunch of dirt, and then publish it?! It's insane to me IMHO. So then they decide to hold Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress which is the only escalation they have in this position.
I'm a huge fan of creating a meme about another person, and using a drawing like this. It allows the person to remain anonymous.