The Righteous (2021) dir. Mark O'Brien
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The Righteous (2021) dir. Mark O'Brien
THAT METAL INTERVIEW presents Brian Troch of VANTE & MY INFECTED SOUL (recorded October 2022). The Wisconsin frontman Brian Troch speaks about the band's debut self-titled album & also chats about the band's birth. He also talks about different parts of his musical career and reveals future plans. Donate to the channel to help create new content! https://www.paypal.me/thatmetalinterv... That Metal Interview Podcast is FREE and ON DEMAND, stream now on Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, Spotify, Anchor, Google Podcasts, Pandora, Amazon Music, TuneIn, Deezer, Bandcamp. Listen to The #ThatMetalInterviewPodcast: https://lnk.to/uj7sH3k4 Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/InterviewThat Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thatmetalinterview/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThatMetalInterview Subscribe on YouTube: http://youtube.com/JrocksMetalZoneSupport the show
🎅🏽Hair Braiders serve Minnesota Board of Cosmetology Coal for Christmas
Dear Minnesota Board of Cosmetology and its successors,
Naughty Minnesota Board of Cosmetology
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🎅🏽Hair Braiders serve Minnesota Board of Cosmetology Coal for Christmas
Dear Minnesota Board of Cosmetology and its successors,
Naughty Minnesota Board of Cosmetology
It has come to my attention that the Board of Cosmetology has made unauthorized enforcement work fines totaling $1900.00 imposed to eco Hair Braiders Association, LLC. natural hair braiding associates an action that violated a restraining agreed to order by construing Hair Braiding Services and…
View On WordPress
history of audiobooks : What Happened by Scott Mcclellan | History
Listen to What Happened new releases history of audiobooks on your iPhone, iPad, or Android. Get any AUDIOBOOK by Scott Mcclellan History FREE during your Free Trial
Written By: Scott Mcclellan Narrated By: Scott Mcclellan Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks Date: June 2008 Duration: 12 hours 29 minutes
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Scott McClellan's Road to Damascus
I have a lot of sympathy for people in situations like the one in which Scott McClellan, press-secretary to President George W. Bush from 2003 to 2006, must to have found himself when it became clear that Bush and his circle had repeatedly mislead their press-secretary so as to aid him in misleading the press without compunction—and, worse, that this duplicity was the product not of an innocent ignorance à la Oliver Stone's "W.," but of a concerted and intentional effort. If McClellan "believed" in Bush with the ardency necessary to take a job as his press secretary (believed in Bush in the way that those around Obama are said to "believe" in him, or the way those around Dean four years ago were said to "believe" in him: believed that he was worth following and giving up your professional and often personal life to), coming to that realization would be incredibly painful for McClellan, and he'd deny it, deny himself, with escalating vehemence until the shelter of excuses he'd built himself to remain loyal and true to Bush came crashing down on him. This crash may not have happened until well after he left the job. If it happened while he had the job, he may, we cannot deny, have been in a position from which he could expose the duplicity; but simply to make it through the day with his sanity, he absolutely couldn't allow himself to cede the notion that Bush could be being duplicitous. For McClellan as an individual, it was an inadmissible possibility by necessity. Admitting it would mean entirely rewriting himself; it would mean admitting to himself that his legacy as a public presence, or at least the part of it people will remember, largely amounted a set of poorly choreographed distortions. It's likely that many within the Bush Administration—especially now, when the effects of its philosophical and practical failings, and Americans' readiness to be rid of it, are so palpably felt—have undergone, are undergoing, or will undergo variations on that experience: losing faith in a leader who not only isn't as positively transformative as he appeared, but is dishonest and disingenuous to boot. But McClellan's must be the one of the worst. For four years, he was paid to be the cipher of Bush's duplicity. He wasn't just deceived; he was deceived into deceiving, and all while deceiving himself that nothing of the sort was afoot, trusting in the long-compromised yet somehow still compelling integrity of the men and women he served. Reacting to McClellan's recently-released book, which has been received as a frank rebuke of the approaches and actions of the administration leadership, Karl Rove said, "this doesn't sound like Scott. It really doesn't. Not the Scott McClellan I have known for a long time." This makes sense; a revelation of that magnitude should, precisely, effect an effective rebirth. McClellan's has made him a into man who well deserves our solicitude and respect.
Scott McClellan's Road to Damascus
I have a lot of sympathy for people in situations like the one in which Scott McClellan, press-secretary to President George W. Bush from 2003 to 2006, must to have found himself when it became clear that Bush and his circle had repeatedly mislead their press-secretary so as to aid him in misleading the press without compunction—and, worse, that this duplicity was the product not of an innocent ignorance à la Oliver Stone's "W.," but of a concerted and intentional effort. If McClellan "believed" in Bush with the ardency necessary to take a job as his press secretary (believed in Bush in the way that those around Obama are said to "believe" in him, or the way those around Dean four years ago were said to "believe" in him: believed that he was worth following and giving up your professional and often personal life to), coming to that realization would be incredibly painful for McClellan, and he'd deny it, deny himself, with escalating vehemence until the shelter of excuses he'd built himself to remain loyal and true to Bush came crashing down on him. This crash may not have happened until well after he left the job. If it happened while he had the job, he may, we cannot deny, have been in a position from which he could expose the duplicity; but simply to make it through the day with his sanity, he absolutely couldn't allow himself to cede the notion that Bush could be being duplicitous. For McClellan as an individual, it was an inadmissible possibility by necessity. Admitting it would mean entirely rewriting himself; it would mean admitting to himself that his legacy as a public presence, or at least the part of it people will remember, largely amounted a set of poorly choreographed distortions. It's likely that many within the Bush Administration—especially now, when the effects of its philosophical and practical failings, and Americans' readiness to be rid of it, are so palpably felt—have undergone, are undergoing, or will undergo variations on that experience: losing faith in a leader who not only isn't as positively transformative as he appeared, but is dishonest and disingenuous to boot. But McClellan's must be the one of the worst. For four years, he was paid to be the cipher of Bush's duplicity. He wasn't just deceived; he was deceived into deceiving, and all while deceiving himself that nothing of the sort was afoot, trusting in the long-compromised yet somehow still compelling integrity of the men and women he served. Reacting to McClellan's recently-released book, which has been received as a frank rebuke of the approaches and actions of the administration leadership, Karl Rove said, "this doesn't sound like Scott. It really doesn't. Not the Scott McClellan I have known for a long time." This makes sense; a revelation of that magnitude should, precisely, effect an effective rebirth. McClellan's has made him a into man who well deserves our solicitude and respect.