A woman in her 30s is accused of assuming the identity of a real child in state custody to pose as a student as young as 13 while working for the Department of Children and Families. The incident has sparked discussions about potential government actions and concerns about election rigging. Meanwhile, the Colorado Supreme Court's decision to strike Trump from the ballot is seen as a confirmation of Democrats' willingness to rig elections. In other news, new technology is aiding Santa Claus in coming to town more efficiently, and City SC is set to open the 2024 play with two home games in February followed by a match against Inter Miami.
I don’t like bullies. In *particular*, I despise Harvard bullies. Most specifically, Harvard faculty bullies using their endowed chairs as cudgels to bludgeon with florid sanctimony and mock academic certainty the mere mortals who dare to merely observe the obvious in public.… https://t.co/99lPtKGXjY
City SC will open 2024 play with two home games in five days in February, plus City goes to Inter Miami https://t.co/bwRiZaNWnw via @stltoday
New technology is helping Santa Claus come to town more efficiently https://t.co/Ok2wSc1qlN 🎅
The Colorado Supreme Court ruling to strike Trump from the ballot will accomplish just one thing in the final analysis: It will just further confirm that the Democrats are willing to rig elections.
The @cubexch team is executing at a focused pace rarely observed in the human species. https://t.co/wAi70pYuhC
Which government position will the Dems offer to that person? https://t.co/vKxTTaTlTE
A woman in her 30s is accused of assuming the identity of a real child in state custody to pose as a student as young as 13 ... all while working for the Department of Children and Families (via @toofab) https://t.co/45GkMgtrhW