
Deplorable_Ohio
67.3K posts

Deplorable_Ohio
@andecoverd
Son, Husband, Father, Grandfather, Imperfect Christian, Marine, THE Ohio State University Graduate, Journeyman Millwright, USW Oilworker.



Women post video using Charlie Kirk assassination sounds for outfit transition… this is gross. The “empathy” side btw.

Professional marksman Chris Cheng playing the Star Spangled Banner with an integrally suppressed Ruger 10/22.

Americans deserve robust competition & affordable airfares. USDOT supports DOJ's antitrust lawsuit, & we plan to deny the JetBlue-Spirit request for an exemption on their merger deal. We will continue with our own investigation while supporting DOJ's work. transportation.gov/briefing-room/…

Hakeem Jeffries: “In the new Congress, we’re going to have to do something about the Supreme Court. Everything is on the table.”


I’ll be in Portland tomorrow with @grahamformaine to kick off his campaign to retire Susan Collins. Let’s go win this thing.



As a small-business owner, wine importer Victor O. Schwartz has plenty of reasons to dislike the president’s policies. For almost 40 years, Schwartz has owned and operated VOS Selections, an importer and distributor of fine wines from 16 countries. Tariffs on wine have frustrated his industry since 2018, making the already heavily taxed business of sourcing from small farms and importing bottles from abroad more expensive. When Trump’s second-term tariffs were first announced last April, it looked like an even worse disaster for American wine importers than the first term. But the tariffs were also when he realized, unlike so many frustrated by Trump, he had an opportunity to do something. The weekend after the announcement of the tax on imports, a relative mentioned that their law professor, Ilya Somin, had put out a call for plaintiffs to challenge the tariffs. Somin a ragtag crew of small businesses who wanted to file a case against the administration: a tackle store on Lake Erie in Pennsylvania, a pipe manufacturer in Utah, a women’s cycling brand in Vermont, the maker of a banana-shaped synth in Virginia, and, eventually, Victor Schwartz and his wine-importing business. Within a few days, Somin, together with attorneys from the Liberty Justice Center, asked Schwartz to be the lead plaintiff. Read more from Matt Stieb’s conversation with Schwartz about how he and his fellow plaintiffs overturned Trump’s tariffs and earned a $166 billion refund: nymag.visitlink.me/tfzyVs














