Random Thoughts.

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  1. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 13 days ago

    If Trump had used civilized rhetoric like Biden, Obama, and Bush, two of the three attempts on his life would not have had happened.

    "Trump’s hypocritical crusade on violent rhetoric — and the country’s emerging split reality"

    The one that almost killed him had nothing to do with violent rhetoric from either side, at least directly. The one guy that actually got a shot off did so because he simply wanted to kill somebody who was high profile. Trump just happened to be available.

    From (now I guess I have to highlight this) one of the most trusted news networks -https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/27/politics/trump-violent-rhetoric-analysis

    1. Credence2 profile image81
      Credence2posted 12 days agoin reply to this

      The Trumpers want to blame anti-Trump rhetoric for the violence at the Press dinner, but Trump in his “rhetoric” has attacked Democrats and the left  far more vehemently. I can’t stand the political right as their outrage is obviously selective in nature. So Trump can engage in it, but no one else may apply his modus operandi against the “King” himself?

  2. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 13 days ago

    "Trump calls on ABC to fire Kimmel after he joked Melania was an ‘expectant widow’"

    Now Trump doesn't like being called OLD (which is what Kimmel was referring to). Melania is what, 56? And Trump is close to 80, and in poor physical and mental health.

    I guess "widow" is now a banned word for anybody but MAGA to use in their fight for Political Correctness.

    1. Sharlee01 profile image83
      Sharlee01posted 13 days agoin reply to this

      "And Trump is close to 80, and in poor physical and mental health." ECO

      More misinformation.  The official information that has been released, his physicians’ reports, has consistently described him as being in good health for his age.

      TDS is a very sad condition, in my view, incurable.

  3. Sharlee01 profile image83
    Sharlee01posted 13 days ago

    https://hubstatic.com/17701583_f1024.jpg

  4. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 13 days ago

    Where did the idea from Republicans to put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths come from? Why from history of course, it is not a novel idea on how to intimidate voters. Here is a paragraph from my book on Conservatism in America

    "On the ground, the counterrevolution refined itself from riots into ritual. In Mississippi, the Plan of 1875 perfected a choreography of intimidation—economic pressure, targeted beatings, and election-day menace—precise enough to flip a state without announcing a coup. South Carolina followed with the Hamburg Massacre in 1876 and then with something even more instructive: Red Shirt parades, rifles on shoulders, escorting voters to the polls. It was violence made visible and, therefore, often unnecessary; the point was not chaos but control.[3]"

    1. Sharlee01 profile image83
      Sharlee01posted 13 days agoin reply to this

      " Where did the idea from Republicans to put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths come from?" ECO

      Misinformation needs to be identified and stopped before it becomes accepted as truth by some.

      Misinformation, and pure rhetoric ---   There is no mainstream Republican platform or official policy calling for “the military” to be stationed at voting booths. That would raise serious legal issues:

      The U.S. military is generally prohibited from domestic law enforcement roles under laws like the Posse Comitatus Act. Elections are run by state and local authorities, not the federal military.
      https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/ … hatgpt.com
      https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/R4 … hatgpt.com

      "On the ground, the counterrevolution refined itself from riots into ritual. In Mississippi, the Plan of 1875 perfected a choreography of intimidation—economic pressure, targeted beatings, and election-day menace—precise enough to flip a state without announcing a coup. South Carolina followed with the Hamburg Massacre in 1876 and then with something even more instructive: Red Shirt parades, rifles on shoulders, escorting voters to the polls. It was violence made visible and, therefore, often unnecessary; the point was not chaos but control.[3]" ECO

      That claim is not just inaccurate, it’s detached from how U.S. law actually works. The Posse Comitatus Act explicitly restricts the use of the military in civilian law enforcement, making the idea of troops at voting booths both legally and practically implausible. Presenting it as a serious or imminent threat isn’t grounded in reality; it reads as deliberate fear-based messaging meant to inflame and mislead rather than inform.  Hate is a terrible thing, and this kind of comment foments hate.

      1. My Esoteric profile image85
        My Esotericposted 12 days agoin reply to this

        Oh, give me a break, I am using Republican the same way you always use Democrats. Once you understand that, the rest of your comment falls apart.

        "“Armed group can monitor Arizona ballot drop boxes, federal judge rules” — AP/PBS. This was the 2022 Arizona case where right-wing associated people showed up near Maricopa County drop boxes armed and in ballistic vests; voters said they felt intimidated."

        "Law enforcement preps for potential election-related unrest” — AP. This describes concerns in 2020 about armed groups from the right at polling places and “vigilante groups” trying to “protect the election.”

        Are you suggesting you don't remember those? I can get many more if you like.

        1. Sharlee01 profile image83
          Sharlee01posted 12 days agoin reply to this

          " Where did the idea from Republicans to put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths come from?" ECO

          You shifted away from the subject of your post. When read in its full context, the statement clearly presents itself as a factual claim. Your inability to apply proper context is a problem. Many people today struggle with this, which is why misinformation is often presented and repeated as fact. That in itself is dangerous.

          Where did the idea from Republicans to put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths come from?

          There is no evidence of an official Republican policy or directive to place the military at voting booths.

          1. My Esoteric profile image85
            My Esotericposted 12 days agoin reply to this

            You are deflecting again. Only you shifted the context to "official" Republican policy - that is simply a red herring.

            Since I wrote it, you might be surprised to know that I understand the context; it is you who are trying to change it. 

            Also, you apparently ignored my factual claim that I am using "Republican" the same you use "Democrat".

            It is ONLY the right wing (i.e., Republican) who have threatened to or actually did put armed men and maybe women at voting places around the country.

            Twist the facts all you want, you can't get away from that truth.

            What is dangerous is ignoring the violent acts of the right-wing.

            1. Sharlee01 profile image83
              Sharlee01posted 12 days agoin reply to this

              " Where did the idea from Republicans to put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths come from?" ECO

              Let me refer to the way this statement is written and address its context. As it is phrased, the placement of the word “Republicans” followed by “put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths” can be read as implying that some form of official directive or congressional order was given. However, that is not actually stated, and the wording creates confusion about what is being claimed versus what is being questioned.

              "Also, you apparently ignored my factual claim that I am using "Republican" the same you use "Democrat"" ECO

              Gosh, again you offer misinformation. You would need a source and a quote to prove such a statement.  When you use the word "claim," it indicates that you feel that you are sharing a fact... But you need to prove your thought with a fully completed quote to prove such a statement.

              Again ---  Where did the idea from Republicans to put the military and paramilitary at our voting booths come from?

              There is no evidence of an official Republican policy or directive to place the military at voting booths.

              I am not an English teacher, but you sure as hell need one.

              1. My Esoteric profile image85
                My Esotericposted 11 days agoin reply to this

                Sharlee, your “English teacher” crack is backwards.

                In NORMAL, modern English, people routinely use party labels like Republicans and Democrats as broad collective nouns to refer not just to an official national platform, but to the party’s politicians, activists, voters, and aligned movement. That is normal usage and you are guilty of that all the time. Nobody hears “Democrats want X” (again something you often do) and assumes the speaker is claiming there was a formal DNC resolution. Regular people understand it politically, not bureaucratically.

                So your reading is not a lesson in grammar; it is a contrived narrowing of ordinary English so you can dodge the point. I did not say “the RNC officially ordered troops to voting booths.” I said Republicans were the source of the idea, and in normal English that plainly includes Republican politicians, Republican activists, and the broader right-wing movement.

                In other words, the problem here is not my grammar. It is your refusal to read an ordinary political statement the way ordinary English speakers (including yourself) actually use political language.

                1. Sharlee01 profile image83
                  Sharlee01posted 11 days agoin reply to this

                  “We have really everything in common with America nowadays except, of course, language.”  King Charles

                  I so agree

                  I must add that he shared a wonderful speech.

                  1. My Esoteric profile image85
                    My Esotericposted 11 days agoin reply to this

                    Yes, that was a good joke from Oscar Wilde.

  5. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 11 days ago

    "Supreme Court limits reach of the Voting Rights Act"

    The conservative Supreme Court has done it again and effectively disenfranchised the Black voter under guise of race-neutrality.

    Long before the modern Republican Party, the American conservatives and their predecessors built politics around exclusion, caste order, and rule by the “right” (meaning White) people. Before the founding, political power was restricted to a narrow class. After the founding, democracy was widened mostly for white men while Black people and others were excluded or shoved aside.

    For one brief, shining moment during Reconstruction, America actually tried to build something like a multiracial democracy that reflected the values in our Declaration of Independence. That lasted a few short years before conservative reaction moved to crush it.

    After Reconstruction, the conservative  Supreme Court helped destroy Black voting rights and opened the door to race-neutral Jim Crow, which was discrimination by another means. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was supposed to break that pattern - and it succeeded, for a while.

    Instead, today’s conservative majority has spent years gutting it and has now gone further still, weakening one of the last meaningful tools Black voters had to challenge vote dilution. The method is always the same: wrap domination by Whites in the language of neutrality, call exclusion constitutional, and leave Black citizenship dependent on the good faith of white-controlled institutions.

    That is not democracy. It is the old American order in updated legal prose.

    https://www.cnn.com/2026/04/29/politics … ted-status

  6. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 11 days ago

    WOO HOO!!!! Senator Tom Tillis, R-NC, is sticking it to Trump AGAIN!

    After successfully defeating Trump in his revenge against Fed Chief Powell, he set his sights on Bondi's replacement as AG. Apparently, it will not be Blanche as he is known to downplay what happened on Jan 6.

    Tillis has vowed to stop the nomination of anybody who comes before him that denies what Jan 6 actually was - an insurrection.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/3 … s-00899577

  7. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 10 days ago

    WOW!!! DOIJ prove there incompetence on the world stage yet another time.

    Fist they indict the former director of the FBI because he posted a photo of some seashells.

    Now they argued with a judge to let them tell her why they want Cole Allen detained - AFTER he already conceded to being detained!!!!

    Despite Allen conceding his pretrial detention, prosecutors still fought to present their argument to the judge as to why Allen should remain locked up.

    “The defendant has agreed to be detained. He’s essentially conceding to your motion,” the magistrate judge assigned to the hearing,” Judge Moxila A. Upadhyaya told prosecutors in denying their efforts.

    “I’m denying the government’s request. It’s truly unprecedented,” the judge added.

  8. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 9 days ago

    "CNN video analysis: Gunman raised shotgun as he stormed security at press dinner"

    This report seems to be more about Trump trying to tank the case against his alleged assassin - typical Trump.

    The gist is that his prosecutors, apparently in order to save their jobs, are releasing too many "facts", several of them false, to the public. The magistrate in the case has already scolded them once.

    "“I don’t know what’s going on here. I know that you want to present your case, I guess, to some audience other than the Court,” Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya told three prosecutors in the courtroom on Thursday out of earshot of the public and press. “I don’t want this to turn into a circus.”"

    Pirro says Allen shot twice, once at an agent. Other law enforcement say he shot once. The video evidence doesn't yet support definitively that Allen pulled the trigger at all (not that it makes any difference relative to Trump).

    From one of the most TRUSTED news outlets in America - https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/01/politics … ner-gunman

    1. wilderness profile image82
      wildernessposted 8 days agoin reply to this

      Perhaps a diner there simply elbowed that agent and we concluded it was a shotgun blast, right?  No evidence of anyone shooting a shotgun, after all!

      1. My Esoteric profile image85
        My Esotericposted 8 days agoin reply to this

        When did you change your standards of proof? So far there is no conclusive evidence that I have seen that Allen pulled a trigger. I thought conclusive evidence only brought at trial was your standard.

        1. My Esoteric profile image85
          My Esotericposted 6 days agoin reply to this

          Didn't expect you answer.

  9. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 6 days ago

    Will Democrats IMPEACH Hegseth for perjury to Congress when they take over the House and probably the Senate and finally bring justice back to our government?

    "After saying he rejects the notion that Trump would issue unlawful orders, Hegseth said moments later in the exchange: “I will note that in 2024, troops were depl… – that was Joe Biden by the way, Joe Biden – were deployed to polling locations in 15 states.” He repeated, “2024 – Joe Biden – troops deployed to polling locations in 15 states. Explain that one to me.”

    There’s an easy explanation. Hegseth’s claim is not true."

  10. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 5 days ago

    DEMOCRATS ON A ROLL

    "Democrat Chedrick Greene’s win in Michigan state Senate election gives the party another over-performance"

    https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/06/politics … n-election

  11. My Esoteric profile image85
    My Esotericposted 4 days ago

    I have to ask - Why does the MAGA here and in general approve of Trump killing hundreds of thousands of people? Is it because those people aren't Americans and aren't worth saving? Maybe some other reason.

    "The Trump administration is trying to divert $2 billion in global health funding to pay for USAID shutdown"

    "The Trump administration plans to redirect $2 billion in funding intended for global health programs to cover the cost of closing the US Agency for International Development (USAID), according to a copy of the notification obtained by CNN.

    The funds would be pulled from money that Congress appropriated for health programs tackling malaria, tuberculosis, maternal and child health, nutrition, global health security, HIV/AIDS and more, two federal health policy experts told CNN. Roughly $1.2 billion originally intended for foreign development assistance would also be redirected."



    https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/07/world/tr … nding-intl

    1. Credence2 profile image81
      Credence2posted 2 days agoin reply to this

      Cheer me up, ESO, with the bad news coming from Virginia the stench of Republicans and reactionary politics seem to be universal. The people were defeated in Virginia over technicalities, while the red state legislatures get to rule by fiat and that’s ok…

      I am putting my pedal to medal to make certain that my every sinew and nerve is devoted to defeating the Republicans where ever they may be found. Can we still expect to obtain at least one chamber of Congress?

      1. GA Anderson profile image86
        GA Andersonposted 2 days agoin reply to this

        Here's an angle for you ....

        In one news cycle, the President has mentioned a glow coming from Iran and, with a political 'shrug', released a bunch of UFO videos.

        There are dots to connect. I bet MyEsoteric can help with that.    ;-)

        GA

        1. Credence2 profile image81
          Credence2posted 2 days agoin reply to this

          Yep this rubbish laced article from Fox News tells the story. Trump is stalling and trying to create a diversion. The only unidentified flying objects is in fact quite identified, rising gas prices and inflationary effects on the cost of living, that is an IFO and its gets my attention. Most people could not make heads or tails out of any of those photos, so Trumps claim to be candid with the release of this information is anything but.

          https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump- … trial-life

          I think that it is all a hoax, what advanced species capable of interstellar space travel would be the least interested in a barbaric planet with hopelessly primitive inhabitants, called Earth?

          Carlin quoted: it’s all (BS) and its bad for you…..

        2. My Esoteric profile image85
          My Esotericposted 2 days agoin reply to this

          Nope, can't help you out there, no dots to connect.

      2. My Esoteric profile image85
        My Esotericposted 2 days agoin reply to this

        How about this. If history is any guide, the Dems will still take the House. If the current reporting holds for another 6-months, they will win in a BIG way.

        For example, Texas drew its maps thinking they had the Latino vote locked in. But then when I asked Geo to analyze that for me, it came up with this:

        But 2025–2026 polling suggests that support has weakened. A UnidosUS Texas poll found Democrats leading the generic 2026 House vote among Texas Hispanic voters 53% to 28%, while also finding that 66% of Texas Latino voters believed Trump/Republicans were not focused enough on the economy. Texas Tribune also reported that Democratic turnout doubled in four Rio Grande Valley counties that Trump had carried in 2024, which could signal a backlash or at least renewed Democratic engagement.

        The same dynamic has shown up in most of the special elections that have been taking place.

        Fortunately, all the Ds need in the House is a majority and that seems likely. They can stop a lot of Trump's agenda. But, to get anything done, they need a supermajority in the Senate as well and THAT does not seem likely at all.

        There is still hope, thought. Trump has another five months to piss everybody off more than he already has.

        1. My Esoteric profile image85
          My Esotericposted 2 days agoin reply to this

          Another piece of great news - Trump is tanking with Asian voters six months out.

          https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/08/politics … day-digvid

        2. Credence2 profile image81
          Credence2posted 45 hours agoin reply to this

          I don’t sympathize with Hispanics who actually believe that Trump and MAGA would allow them to assimilate into their racist and xenophobic  brand. The “Ricky Ricardo” syndrome does not work in reality. Maybe, after ICE, a dragging economy and such, now they will appreciate the straits that they now find themselves in and come home…..

          1. My Esoteric profile image85
            My Esotericposted 36 hours agoin reply to this

            Just like there are few Black MAGA, there are even more Latino MAGA, at least those of the machismo bent. But my take is that most of the Hispanics who voted for Trump believed 1) the propaganda against Biden and his role in inflation and 2) were conned by Trump in his false promises he would lower prices.

            Now that they know the truth, they are going back to those who really care about them.

      3. My Esoteric profile image85
        My Esotericposted 2 days agoin reply to this

        Democrats are appealing the 4-3 Virginia Supreme Court ruling striking down the will of the voters to redistrict. Their 4-3 ruling is being appealed to SCOTUS.

        In Virginia, the legislature choses the judges. Three in the majority were Republicans and one was from a split legislature. Two of the dissenters were also from a split legislature and one Democratic legislature.

        The four in the majority had to change the meaning of "election day" to arrive at their conclusion. In doing so, they departed from the logic of cases like Foster v. Love (1997), where SCOTUS emphasized that federal elections are to be decided on the federally prescribed Election Day itself, not over an extended period. Instead, they broadened it to mean from when early voting starts through election day.

        For SCOTUS to find against the Democrats, they would have to reverse their opinion. But given how this conservative SCOTUS is willing to reinstitute Jim Crow and stack the deck in favor of Republicans, it would surprise me that reverse yet another precedent.

        https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/08/politics … istricting

        1. Credence2 profile image81
          Credence2posted 47 hours agoin reply to this

          Thanks, i spell relief, E-S-O

          The Rightwing tribunal passing for non partisan, impartial jurists would have to reveal pure partisanship to uphold the Virginia Supreme Court ruling, while permitting only “gerrymandering” that benefits Republicans. Alas, the court is a right wing tribunal and would discard their role as arbiters of the Constitution in exchange for voting in favor of Trump toadyism and reactionary politics. I don’t trust SCOTUS to rule rationally, anymore.

          1. GA Anderson profile image86
            GA Andersonposted 45 hours agoin reply to this

            With such a strong opinion, you certainly read the Court's decision, so what part did they get wrong?

            Is Election Day the only day of an election, or is it the end of an election? The Court's decision provides a detailed explanation of its reasoning. Do you think they got that part wrong?

            How about context and accepted interpretations (what 'everybody' knows 'is' is): did you follow their reasoning from way back in the 1800s and as recent as the 1971 amendment? Did you disagree with that?

            What about your 'Virginia court ruling permitting only Republicans to gerrymander'? Where did that come from? The Court didn't rule on the "who," they ruled on the "how."

            GA

            1. My Esoteric profile image85
              My Esotericposted 36 hours agoin reply to this

              Remember, this was a 4-3 decision and the dissenters' opinions were just as detailed in why the majority was wrong, as does federal law.

              1. GA Anderson profile image86
                GA Andersonposted 36 hours agoin reply to this

                I saw the majority's addressing of the dissenting opinions' points in the final decision. My opinion didn't need to go any deeper than that. The decision was logically and rationally sound to me.

                GA

                1. My Esoteric profile image85
                  My Esotericposted 29 hours agoin reply to this

                  Understood

        2. GA Anderson profile image86
          GA Andersonposted 45 hours agoin reply to this

          It's Deja vu all over again ... First it was the definition of "is", now it's the definition of "election."

          The Court's decision read as reasonable to me. Watching CNN and BBC, since this ruling, seems to show the majority of Democrat spokesfolks — experts and talking heads — agree with the Court in this matter, and criticize their party's efforts.

          Looks like you're the fringe on this one.

          GA

          1. My Esoteric profile image85
            My Esotericposted 36 hours agoin reply to this

            I will agree there is room for debate. But since 1) "early voting" did not exist in Virginia at the time the law was written, 2) SCOTUS has ruled previously that the definition of "election" is the day it is officially counted and 3) several  federal laws say that the election is the Tuesday after the first Monday in November on even numbered years including 2 U.S.C. § 7  and 3 U.S.C. § 1.

            It seems to me the Virginia majority is on very shaky grounds.

            As to your claim that the "majority of Democrats ..." agree with the majority, you will need to provide proof of that. As you are aware, I am big consumer of things like CNN, Politico, The Hill, etc and I don't recall seeing even one Democrat siding with the majority on the court. That isn't to say a couple have, I am just saying I haven't see it yet.

            My take is that we are smack dab in the vast majority view.

            1. GA Anderson profile image86
              GA Andersonposted 36 hours agoin reply to this

              I have only read the decision. And it was your comment that prompted that. So my only authority is what I've listened to or 'clicked on' since election night.

              Asking for 'proof" of what I claimed to have heard is silly. I was only relating the perception I had from my news diet since then. Which was nearly identical to your list.

              The lament I heard, and intended to imply, was about the Democrats' premonition/foreknowledge/worry that their procedure would fail a court challenge, but they plowed ahead anyway.

              Their Court's decision seemed right to me.

              GA

  12. Credence2 profile image81
    Credence2posted 47 hours ago

    A quote from Salon editor, Jason Howard.

    Interesting article

    https://www.salon.com/2026/05/07/the-da … -makeover/

    When I was an undergraduate student at The George Washington University in the early 2000s, I used to take a couple of textbooks and trek down 23rd Street — past the Watergate and the Kennedy Center in the distance on my right, and the State Department complex on my left — to the Lincoln Memorial. I had a study spot I considered my own that offered a respite from university life, as well as a reminder of the weight of history surrounding me in the city I was learning to call home. Reaching the memorial’s terrace after climbing the small mountain of steps, I would bypass the temple housing Daniel Chester French’s famous statue of the 16th president and walk along the colonnade until I reached the quiet rear, where most Washington tourists never think to venture. There, I’d sling my backpack to the ground and, reclining into one of the large grooves in the monument’s columns, I’d read and study for hours, with the Potomac River and Memorial Bridge as my personal vista. In the distance, across the river in Virginia, was Arlington National Cemetery, and when the gloaming fell, I could see the flicker of the eternal flame marking the graves of John and Jacqueline Kennedy, with Arlington House illuminated by floodlights on the slope above.

    Now, each time I read about or see plans for the president’s proposed triumphal arch, which would stand in a traffic circle that marks the end of the bridge and the beginning of the cemetery’s formal entrance, I think of that view and how it could soon be no more. Plans for the arch were preliminarily approved in mid-April by Trump devotees who sit on the Commission of Fine Arts. The graves of America’s fallen soldiers will be obstructed, the eternal flame blocked — and from the cemetery, the majestic view of the Lincoln Memorial obscured — by a 250-feet monument. To Donald Trump.

    Last year, when he was asked whom the arch would honor, the president was, perhaps admirably, honest: “Me,” he replied. According to reporting from the Atlantic’s Ashley Parker and Michael Scherer, Trump “has privately started talking about himself as being on par with great, norm-defying, historical figures [like] Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar and Napoleon Bonaparte.” By including himself in such company, he believes he should be memorialized in stone. And so, in his second term, he has turned his attention to leaving his mark on the nation’s capital.
    —————-

    This is total madness, how long are supposedly decent intelligent people supposed to sit by with their thumbs up their arses and ignore what is clearly right before them? Trump is determined to leave his stain on our nations capitol in perpetuity. It should also be noted that only TYRANTS create national monuments of and for themselves.

    I implore Democrats if they take the House, to give Trump ABSOLUTELY nothing!!!

    1. My Esoteric profile image85
      My Esotericposted 37 hours agoin reply to this

      "ME"

      That is Trump, the felon and sexual predator, in a nutshell.

 
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Author Google AnalyticsThis is used to provide traffic data and reports to the authors of articles on the HubPages Service. (Privacy Policy)
ComscoreComScore is a media measurement and analytics company providing marketing data and analytics to enterprises, media and advertising agencies, and publishers. Non-consent will result in ComScore only processing obfuscated personal data. (Privacy Policy)
Amazon Tracking PixelSome articles display amazon products as part of the Amazon Affiliate program, this pixel provides traffic statistics for those products (Privacy Policy)
ClickscoThis is a data management platform studying reader behavior (Privacy Policy)