#bill mckinley
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td-brick · 3 months ago
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TOTAL! PRESIDENTIAL ASSASSINATION!! ISLAND!!!
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Umpire Bill Mckinley (1960)
Source: (Out of the Park) OOTP Developments Forums- Major League Baseball Umpires- Major League Baseball Umpires - Page 7 - OOTP Developments Forums
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barbossas-wench · 4 months ago
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Saw this on TikTok
As someone who has special interests on US presidents and loves pop culture, these are on point!
Part 2
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20thcenturyfox2010 · 14 days ago
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U.S. Presidents from the Angry Birds Terence
-Abraham Lincoln
- George Washington
- William McKinley
- Teddy Roosevelt
- William Howard Taft
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
- William Henry Harrison
- Bill Clinton
- Donald Trump
- Joe Biden
- Thomas Jefferson
- James A. Garfield
- John F. Kennedy
- Woodrow Wilson
- Grover Cleveland
- John Adams
- John Quincy Adams
- Andrew Jackson
- Barack Obama
- George W. Bush
- Ronald Reagan
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super-oddity · 5 months ago
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via wiki:
22/44 assassination plots were against republican presidents.
22/44 assassination plots were against democratic presidents.
Note: It was FDR’s 1932 campaign policies that caused a major shift in party ideologies. Prior to this election, Republican and Democratic conservatism was broadly flipped. Their parties are left black to reflect my inability to equate their affiliation to a modern party.
assassinated United States presidents.
1864– Abraham Lincoln. Republican.
1881– James A. Garfield. Republican.
1901– William McKinley. Republican.
1963– John F. Kennedy. Democrat.
attempts that caused injury.
1912– Theodore Roosevelt. Republican.
1981– Ronald Reagan. Republican.
2024– Donald Trump. Republican.
attempts or plots without injury or death.
1835– Andrew Jackson. Democrat.
1861– Abraham Lincoln. Republican.
1864– Abraham Lincoln. Republican.
1909– William Howard Taft. Republican.
1910– William Howard Taft. Republican.
1928– Herbert Hoover. Republican.
1933– Franklin D. Roosevelt. Democrat.
1943– Franklin D. Roosevelt. Democrat.
1947– Harry S. Truman. Democrat.
1950– Harry S. Truman. Democrat.
1960– John F. Kennedy. Democrat.
1972– Richard Nixon. Republican.
1974– Richard Nixon. Republican.
1974– Gerald Ford. Republican.
1975– Gerald Ford. Republican.
1975– Gerald Ford. Republican.
1979– Jimmy Carter. Democrat.
1993– George H. W. Bush. Republican.
1994– Bill Clinton. Democrat.
1994– Bill Clinton. Democrat.
1994– Bill Clinton. Democrat.
1996– Bill Clinton. Democrat.
2005– George W. Bush. Republican.
2008– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2009– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2011– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2011– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2012– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2013– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2013– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2016– Donald Trump. Republican.
2017– Donald Trump. Republican.
2017– Donald Trump. Republican.
2018– Barack Obama. Democrat.
2018– Bill Clinton. Democrat.
2022– George W. Bush. Republican.
2023– Joe Biden. Democrat.
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imperatorcaesaraugustus · 5 months ago
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we just found my great grandfather's autograph book and oh my god there are some big names in here! William McKinley, William Howard Taft, William Jennings Bryan, William Randolph Hearst, William "Buffalo Bill" Cody, and even some people not named william like Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson
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introspect-la · 1 year ago
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PORTRAIT OF RAY MCKINLEY, HOTEL COMMODORE, NEW YORK IN APRIL 1946 BY BILL GOTTLIEB
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theersatzcowboy · 8 months ago
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The Killing Floor (1984)
A stunning dramatization of the little-known, complex story of integrating the labor movement of Chicago's meatpacking industry, and the Chicago Race Riots of 1919.
Director: Bill Duke
Cinematographer: William Birch
Starring: Damien Leake, Alfre Woodard, Dennis Farina, Ernest Rayford, Moses Gunn, Clarence Felder, Stephen McKinley Henderson, and John Mahoney.
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thejugheadparadox · 1 year ago
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gallimaufryish · 6 months ago
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dorothylarouge · 2 months ago
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US Presidents as Dril Tweets
George Washington: another day volunteering at the betsy ross museum. everyone keeps asking me if they can fuck the flag. buddy, they wont even let me fuck it
John Adams: "ah boo hoo hoo i want to post Foul comments to content leaders" Fat Chance, Dimwit. I will annihilate you under bulwark of the Law and God.
Thomas Jefferson: Q: If your post was proven by a counsil of wise men to be racist, or bullshit, would you bar it from the record? A: I do not delete my posts
James Madison: (sniffing a crumpled up one dollar bill i found on the floor of a dog kennel) ah.. thats greenbacks baby
James Monroe: for decades i have traversed the unforgiving mountains and rivers of south america, hoping to catch a glimpse of the fabled "ass downloader"
John Quincy Adams: "This Whole Thing Smacks Of Gender," i holler as i overturn my uncle's barbeque grill and turn the 4th of July into the 4th of Shit
Andrew Jackson: handing Faves over to my enemies is FRAUD !! base, contemptible FRAUD!
Martin Van Buren: Food $200
Data $150
Rent $800
Candles $3,600
Utility $150
someone who is good at the economy please help me budget this. my family is dying
William Henry Harrison: (spends all of 7 seconds skimming some blog posts) yep. just as i knew all along. having pnuamonia is good
John Tyler: fuck "jokes". everything i tweet is real. raw insight without the horse shit. no, i will NOT follow trolls. twitter dot com. i live for this
James K. Polk: thhere is no such thing as charisma, and art is fake. the only metrics by which we must determine the worth of a man are Strength and Wisdom
Zachary Taylor: the doctor reveals my blood pressure is 420 over 69. i hoot & holler outta the building while a bunch of losers tell me that im dying
Millard Fillmore: trying to heal..... please donate to my go fund me... $10 will make me less racist... $100 will make me extremely less racist...thank you...
Franklin Pierce: blocked. blocked. blocked. youre all blocked. none of you are free of sin
James Buchanan: #NationalGirlfriendDay please cherish your gal's.. in honor of us, the single Boys who must sacrifice all companionship to #CarryTheBrand...
Abraham Lincoln: unloading an entire belt of ammo at me with a minigun or some such device will now get you "Blocked"
Andrew Johnson: who the fuck is scraeming "LOG OFF" at my house. show yourself, coward. i will never log off
Ulysses S. Grant: i regret being tasked the emotional burden of maintaining the final bastion of morality and Nice manners in this endless ocean of human SHIT
Rutherford B. Hayes: using the toilet when i hear Our national anthem start to play. i do what i must. i stand tall in complete agony; as shit runs down my leg,
James A. Garfield: too much truth in such little time. feeling the heat cominh down to silence me... signing off........ for now
Chester A. Arthur: i WILL wise the fuck up. i WILL super charge my content for 2017. i WILL get blue check mark
Grover Cleveland: the way i see it, people who come on here and submit content that is not up to par, could possibly be considered the "Villains" of this site
Benjamin Harrison: i help every body, im not racist, i keep myself nice, and when i ask for a single re-tweet in return i am told to fuck off, fuck myself, etc
William McKinley: boy oh boy do i love purchasing large amounnts of Fool's Gold. wait a minute... fools gold fucking sucks. this stuff is no good..!! Fuck !!!
Theodore Roosevelt: IF THE ZOO BANS ME FOR HOLLERING AT THE ANIMALS I WILL FACE GOD AND WALK BACKWARDS INTO HELL
William H. Taft: ah.. the perfect Souffle! cant wait to dig in to t(*EVERY PIPE IN MY HOUSE EXPLODES AT THE SAME TIME, COVERING ME IN SHIT AND BOILING WATER*
Woodrow Wilson: the conflicted supersoldier stares over the horizon as he smokes a cigarette. "war is the most fucked up thing ever." he takes a sip of beer
Warren G. Harding: somebody please Bribe me
Calvin Coolidge: aggressively joyless oaf hhere. painfully obnoxious respect demander checkign in. extremely dim witted frowning man looking for pals
Herbert Hoover: it is really quite astonishing that I have yet to win The Lottery, given how good I am at selecting six numbers and saying them out loud
Franklin D. Roosevelt: ive never heard of this “europe” but it sounds like a big bunch of shit to me
Harry Truman: everybody wants to be the guy to write the tweet that solves racism once and for all because it would look good as hell on a resume
Dwight D. Eisenhower: my "F*&k It!! Let's Go Golfin" t-shirt maintains a tenacious stranglehold on my life. after 1,125 days of Golf my body is twisted, deformed
John F. Kennedy: when you do sutuff like... shoot my jaw clean off of my face with a sniper rifle, it mostly reflects poorly on your self
Lyndon B. Johnson: incredibly handsome , charismatic famous boy credited with ending income inequality after saying that slumlords should be called "dumblords"
Richard Nixon: i attribute the complete failure of my brand to the actions of detractors, oor my “trolls”, as it were, as well as my own constant fuckups
Gerald Ford: shutting computer down until the shitty moods & attitudes can fuck off., if you need me ill be on my other computer, sititng 60° to my right
Jimmy Carter: i warnned you all that bad things would happen if you kept letting your wives wear jeans. AND NOW LOOK! the damn gas prices are up again
Ronald Reagan: spend a lot of time thinking about how sometimes even war criminals can be heroes sometimes... Dont like it? Click the unfollow buttobn
George H.W. Bush: just thought off an idea i believe to be bad ass. lets find the address of the leader of isis, and mail him/ her pieces of our SHIT
Bill Clinton: were at the point now, that when i offer to impregnate my girl followers, people assume my motives are sexual. disgusting, grow the fuck up,
George W. Bush: friday night gathering up together a big pile of things i like to respect (flags, crucifixes ,etc) and just roll around in it ,give kisses,
Barack Obama: my IQ has increased 10 points ever since i stopped tollerating people mucking about, on the time line
Donald Trump: THERAPIST: your problem is, that youre perfect, and everyone is jealous of your good posts, and that makes you rightfully upset.
ME: I agree
Joe Biden: I will shut the fuck up , IF , it will restore the Harmony. I will get on my knees like a dog and make that sacrifice, for the sake of Calm
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genevieveetguy · 2 years ago
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I'm visiting my mother tomorrow.
Beau Is Afraid, Ari Aster (2023)
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mydaddywiki · 15 days ago
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William Howard Taft
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Physique: Heavy-set Build Height: 6'
William Howard Taft (September 15, 1857 – March 8, 1930; aged 72) was the 27th president of the United States and the tenth chief justice of the United States, the only person to have held both offices. Taft was elected president in 1908 as a Republican but was defeated for reelection in 1912 by Democratic nominee Woodrow Wilson. In 1921, President Warren G. Harding appointed Taft to be chief justice, a position he held until 1930.
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Taft is generally listed near the middle in historians’ rankings of U.S. presidents. But to me, he’s top 10 looks whys. Just check out that body. And trust me, I haveTaft was a big boy with a big ass. Topping the scales at over 350 pounds, Taft was the heftiest man ever to occupy the Oval Office. And if you don’t know by now. I love a big man. I bet he would have been a great bottom.
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Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, Taft attended Yale where he was the class salutatorian. After becoming a lawyer, Taft was appointed a judge while still in his twenties, continuing a rapid rise, being named solicitor general and a judge of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1901, President William McKinley appointed Taft civilian governor of the Philippines. In 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt made him Secretary of War, and he became Roosevelt's hand-picked successor.
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With Roosevelt's help, Taft had little opposition for the Republican nomination for president in 1908 and easily defeated William Jennings Bryan for the presidency in that November's election. Taft served only one term as president. He was renominated in 1912, but his former ally, Theodore Roosevelt, split off to launch his own candidacy under the banner of the Bull Moose Party. The result divided the Republican vote and Woodrow Wilson (the Democratic candidate) was elected. The split left Taft with little chance of reelection, and he took only Utah and Vermont in Wilson's victory.
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Nicknamed Big Bill, he and his wife Helen Louise (known as Nellie) had three children that they named Robert, Helen, and Charles. A sheer waste as a straight man. You know the sex he got would never have been that good.
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After leaving office, Taft returned to Yale as a professor. In 1921, Harding appointed Taft chief justice, an office he had long sought. Chief Justice Taft was a conservative on business issues, and under him there were advances in individual rights. In poor health, he resigned in February 1930, and died the following month. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, the first president and first Supreme Court justice to be interred there.
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deadpresidents · 1 month ago
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Is George the most common name among presidents?
No, it's "Rutherford". Just kidding, it's "James".
James: 6 (James Madison; James Monroe; James K. Polk; James Buchanan; James Garfield; and, James Earl "Jimmy" Carter)
John: 5 (John Adams; John Quincy Adams; John Tyler; [John] Calvin Coolidge; and, John F. Kennedy)
William: 4 (William Henry Harrison; William McKinley; William Howard Taft; and, William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton)
George: 3 (George Washington; George H.W. Bush; and, George W. Bush)
(TIE) Andrew/Thomas/Franklin: 2 (Andrew Jackson and Andrew Johnson; Thomas Jefferson and [Thomas] Woodrow Wilson; Franklin Pierce and Franklin D. Roosevelt)
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theinquisitxor · 2 months ago
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October Reading Wrap Up
October was a great reading month and I got through ten(!) books in the month. That's more than I've read in a while, so it felt good to be able to know I can still read that many. I read some spooky/halloweenish books, as well as continued a few series, and finished a series.
1.Son of the Shadows (Sevenwaters 2) by Juliet Marillier, 5/5 stars. I started the month with reading the second Sevenwaters book. Just like with book 1, I enjoyed this immensely, and I found the characters and storyline to be strong and engaging. This one is even more romance heavy than the first books. Adult historical fantasy
2.Paladin's Hope (Saint of Steel 3) by T. Kingfisher, 4.5/5 stars. Another good installment in this series and new mystery that our characters are faced with. This one was a bit shorter than the first two books, and I wish this was a little longer, but otherwise it was great as always! Adult fantasy romance
3.The Mother Tongue: English and How it Got That Way by Bill Bryson This was my nonfiction book for the month, and I read this on audio. Enjoyable, but I felt like it was a little dated. I've read other more recent books on linguistics, and enjoyed them more. Nonfiction.
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4.Echo North by Joanna Ruth Mayer, 4/5 stars. This was an enjoyable YA fantasy, and a good blend of fairytales I really enjoy. I don't read a lot of YA anymore, but this reminded me of some of the 'older' YA that is really good. East of the Sun West of the Moon, batb, cupid & psyche retellings all blended together. The author also credits Robin McKinley, DWJ, and Edith Pattou as big inspirations, and I could tell. YA fantasy
5.Last Argument of Kings (First Law 3) by Joe Abercrombie, ?/5 stars. I honestly was so done reading this trilogy, and just wanted to know how it ended so I could just finish it. I skimmed most of it, and only read the Glokta chapters and the ending. This type of fantasy is 100% not for me. I only finished the series because my brother gifted me the boxed set (and he read them). Adult fantasy
6.I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacquline Harpman, 5/5 stars. This is a lesser known classic that's gotten some popularity recently. It's part dystopian, part science fiction, and reminded me a little of The Wall which I read earlier this year. Very poignant, dark, but an exploration of self and a woman on her own. This is translated from French!
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7.A Sorceress Comes to Call by T. Kingfisher, 4/5 stars. Another good T Kingfisher fairy tale retelling (however this was quite loose on the retelling), but also dark, featuring child abuse and animal horror. But there is humor, and a good cast of adult characters trying to fix the situation, and I like how T Kingfisher writes competent adults.
8.Witch Week (Chrestomanci 3) by Diana Wynne Jones, 3/5 stars. I started this on audio, but finished with the physical book. Can't say I enjoyed this one as much as the first two. This just reminded me of how horrible middle school was! A good halloween time read though. Middle grade fantasy.
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9.The Wolf in the Whale by Jordanna Max Brodsky, 4/5 stars. This is a historical fantasy that has been on my tbr since 2019. This is light on the fantasy elements, and about first contact between Inuit and Vikings in present-day Canada about 1000 years ago. Our main character is an Inuit shaman, and they and a viking have to team up to save the land and their peoples. Super detail rich and well written.
10. Graveyard Shift by ML Rio, 4/5 stars. A good read for Halloween, and excited to see that ML Rio is publishing again! A thriller about 5 people trying to discover who made a new grave in an abandoned graveyard. As someone who works in academia, I liked the academia element in this story, I only wish it was longer!
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I'm on track to finish my Goodreads Reading Challenge this year, which is 80 books. Usually I get somewhere in the 90s, but not this year I guess. For Nov and December, I'm planning on finishing the Sevenwaters series, and Chrestomanci, so I'll be prioritizing those books.
November tbr:
The Scorpio Races (reread on audio)
Child of the Prophecy (Sevenwaters 3)
Heir to Sevenwaters (Sevenwaters 4)
Chrestomanci: The Magicians of Caprona (book 4)
Paladin's Fate (Saint of Steel 4)
Nonfiction
The Word for Woman is Wilderness
Cape Cod (on audio?)
The Virgin in the Garden
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autumnal-thunder · 5 months ago
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The Hepburn Act killed regulated the railroad industry to death. Private railroads couldn't survive, and we're left with the government rails you see today.
Continued McKinley's Philippine-American War that exacerbated American imperialism and caused the deaths of 200,000 to 1 million Filipino civilians
Huge protectionist in a time where international trade was vital and expanding most rapidly
Loved unions and regulating industries
Pushed for income tax, laid the groundwork for Woodrow Wilson to establish income tax and federal reserve
Illegally gave congress the power to own the majority of the land in the west. Some might see this as a positive but I think private parks are generally superior to national parks.
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I know Teddy is beloved by a lot of people, including conservatives. He's a manly man, loves nature, is charismatic. "Speak softly and carry a big stick." He finished his speech after being shot. I admire that.
But he was a socialist-lite, and the beginning of the modern "progressive" left. A habitual user of executive orders, Teddy felt congressional approval was merely a suggestion. He was only supportive of selective personal liberties - generally the things he and the progressives believed were the freedoms some individuals should be allowed to enjoy under their supervision as well as in context of a greater obligation to the nation as a whole. He believed in collective power over personal liberty and dressed it up in a quaint justification to deliver justice and equality to “the people.”
An excerpt on his legacy from the Miller Center of Public Affairs reads:
He made the President, rather than the political parties or Congress, the center of American politics. Roosevelt did this through the force of his personality and through aggressive executive action. He thought that the President had the right to use any and all powers unless they were specifically denied to him. He believed that as President, he had a unique relationship with and responsibility to the people, and therefore wanted to challenge prevailing notions of limited government and individualism; government, he maintained, should serve as an agent of reform for the people. His presidency endowed the progressive movement with credibility, lending the prestige of the White House to welfare legislation, government regulation, and the conservation movement.
"I find [Roosevelt] naively indifferent to the restraints of duty and even unaware of them; ready to kick the Constitution into the back yard whenever it gets in the way; and whenever he smells a vote, not only willing but eager to buy it, give extravagant rates for it and pay the bill not out of his own pocket or the party's, but out of the nation's, by cold pillage.
—Mark Twain, 16 February 1905
Thanks for the question! @hst3000. I should have dropped him to F tier actually, so i will. sorry lol.
See the rest of my Presidential Tier List:
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