Last week, Tracy and Dale McMullen sold their vacation home in Buckeye, Arizona, a property they owned for five years. The Alberta residents, who usually spend four to five months in Arizona a year, said they are not planning to come back.

“We decided to sell the property after the current POTUS took office,” said Dale, referring to U.S. President Donald Trump, who was inaugurated for the second time in January.

“It was time to leave. We felt we could not trust what he might do next to us as individuals and to our country. We no longer felt welcome nor safe.”

https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/article/many-canadian-snowbirds-in-us-looking-to-pack-up-and-fly-north-for-good/

  • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    You seem incredibly insincere and dishonest about me. As I have been fighting the Russians full time since 2015 when I contacted the Pentagon

    If this is the case, I’m not quite sure why you didn’t clarify your meaning when asked. Instead you seemed to take further steps to remove blame from Russia

    • RoundSparrow @ .ee@lemm.eeOPM
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      7 days ago

      Im not quite sure why you didn’t clarify your meaning when asked.

      Meaning of what? When asked what?

      You want to waste a bunch more of my time by being non-specific? Start the entire conversation over one word at a time until you clearly define what the question was, other than it being a negging pot-shot non-specific?

      you seemed to take further steps to remove blame from Russia

      More bullshit from you. Prove this happened, where and when? Just non-specific non-quotation claims on your part. Insincere, dishonest. You sound like Donald Trump fabricating claims.

       

      ::: ___________________
      Russia-watcher Catherine Fitzpatrick, who documents Kremlin disinformation for InterpreterMag com, says just as Moscow uses vague Internet laws to encourage self-censorship, trolls inhibit informed debate by using crude dialogue to change “the climate of discussion.” “If you show up at The Washington Post or New Republic sites, where there’s an article that’s critical of Russia, and you see that there are 200 comments that sound like they were written by 12-year-olds, then you just don’t bother to comment,” she says. “You don’t participate. It’s a way of just driving discussion away completely,” she adds. “Those kinds of tactics are meant to stop democratic debate, and they work.” -Daisy Sindelar. August 12 2014