Good get em the fuck out of here
How do I share this video if I don’t have Tik tok?
They have to have TikTok to view this video you got you can find out if this user has another account like on Facebook or YouTube and post that. You can copy this over from your TikTok account to your Instagram account and didn’t post itHow do I share this video if I don’t have Tik tok?
It’s possible this ”story” was created to find a mole in the Department of Defense.
According to all involved, it’s not true.
I usually search the user name then go to their page and search the videos. You can get the url by clicking on the video.How do I share this video if I don’t have Tik tok?
Orange Idiotus Maximus Caesar giving incentives to idiots now !
Cocaine is a helluva drug
ThanksI usually search the user name then go to their page and search the videos. You can get the url by clicking on the video.
His page is
https://www.tiktok.com/@mrstraightfacts23
"A review of Quinnipiac University’s annual first-quarter congressional polling reveals that, for the first time in the poll’s history, congressional Democrats are now underwater with their own voters in approval ratings.
Just 40 percent of Democrats approve of the job performance of congressional Democrats, compared to 49 percent who disapprove. That’s a dramatic change from this time last year, when 75 percent of Democrats approved compared to just 21 percent who disapproved. The Democratic base’s disillusionment runs so deep that it’s eerily reminiscent of Republican grassroots sentiment in the period leading up to Donald Trump’s takeover of the Republican Party.
The numbers suggest that the fury is at least partly fueled by the Democratic base’s dissatisfaction with congressional leadership’s relatively conciliatory approach to Trump this time around, and their inability to stop him. Recent polls from CNN and Data For Progress both found supermajorities of Democratic voters calling for the party’s congressional leadership to do more to oppose the president — a sentiment that sparked the fierce backlash against Schumer’s recent move to facilitate the GOP’s passage of a continuing resolution funding the government.
Historic precedent suggests it would be extremely unusual for this kind of dissatisfaction to persist without any major changes in the party, especially because these voters don’t have anywhere else to go.
There are 13 Democratic-held Senate seats up for reelection next year — many of them involving veteran senators in the bluest states — raising the prospect of a stream of younger, insurgent candidates more closely aligned with the party base, similar to what the GOP has contended with over the past 15 years."