**** off red! Go back to getting ****ed by your new wife.
Quote:
At the United Nations, Prince Harry calls out "the rolling back of Constitutional rights in the United States" as part of "a global assault on democracy and freedom."
Then why this thread and all the comments about "don't care" when it seems everyone does!?aggie93 said:
So dude is born literally into English royalty and lives the elitist of an elite existence. He then decides that isn't good enough and moves to the US because presumably he thinks the US is much better than being a Prince in England. Then he proceeds to go in front of the UN inside the US and berate and criticize it.
How anyone cares in the slightest about this spoiled little **** I have no idea. What an incredibly insecure attention *****.
jwoodmd said:Then why this thread and all the comments about "don't care" when it seems everyone does!?aggie93 said:
So dude is born literally into English royalty and lives the elitist of an elite existence. He then decides that isn't good enough and moves to the US because presumably he thinks the US is much better than being a Prince in England. Then he proceeds to go in front of the UN inside the US and berate and criticize it.
How anyone cares in the slightest about this spoiled little **** I have no idea. What an incredibly insecure attention *****.
. Is this Orwellian for, "I want to be a dictator?"Quote:
"the rolling back of Constitutional rights in the United States" as part of "a global assault on democracy and freedom."
Jmiller said:
The Supreme Court does not support that law anymore, Harry. Just because induced abortion was legal under English common law, before fetal movement, from the 13th century to the early 19th century, and at least three other Supreme Courts affirmed it was an established right, does not mean the current Court has to continue that legal tradition.
Jmiller said:
The Supreme Court does not support that law anymore, Harry. Just because induced abortion was legal under English common law, before fetal movement, from the 13th century to the early 19th century, and at least three other Supreme Courts affirmed it was an established right, does not mean the current Court has to continue that legal tradition.