Sure, the bulk of the rioters didn’t
mean any harm, exactly… any more than the superspreaders at the Sturgis bike rally last summer
intended to kill themselves & their loved ones. They were just, like,
deeply involved in fun group events with a few thousand of their
closest friends!
… They were mostly older White men and women who lived paycheck to paycheck with plenty of time on their hands retired or close to it, estranged from their families or otherwise without children and Trump had, in a surprising way, made their lives richer. The president himself almost always spent the night in his own bed and kept few close friends. But his rallies gave the [Front Row] Joes a reason to travel the country, staying at one another’s homes, sharing hotel rooms and carpooling. Two had married and later divorced by Trump’s second year in office.
To Trump s hard-core supporters, his rallies weren t politics They were life
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Fluvanna County Public Library adjusts to COVID-19 pandemic – Fluvanna Review
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Community Effort Gives Old Pryor Community Center New Life
Pryor has a new community center, thanks to a real community effort. They said it was a labor of love to bring an old building back to life that will now give seniors, veterans and recovering addicts a place to meet.
The building is the epitome of community, a place once old and falling apart, is now home to three organizations helping people in Pryor.
The 50-year-old Sertoma building used to serve senior citizens is city-owned and had fallen into disrepair.
Wayne Perego, a Sertoma member and the co-founder of the Northeastern Oklahoma Veteran s Freedom Tour, which sends vets to national monuments, wanted to change that.
Community Effort Gives Old Pryor Community Center New Life
Pryor has a new community center, thanks to a real community effort. They said it was a labor of love to bring an old building back to life that will now give seniors, veterans and recovering addicts a place to meet.
The building is the epitome of community, a place once old and falling apart, is now home to three organizations helping people in Pryor.
The 50-year-old Sertoma building used to serve senior citizens is city-owned and had fallen into disrepair.
Wayne Perego, a Sertoma member and the co-founder of the Northeastern Oklahoma Veteran s Freedom Tour, which sends vets to national monuments, wanted to change that.