Turns out, I was wrong. (Merged - Herschel Walker)

Yea, I'ma need a part in dat. Dead ass sears.
Also, I can offer my property as a possible shooting location.

I don't care if its an extra, one maybe three lines...

I'm tryna flex in a suit on the red carpet wit my ankles showing. Det fah real... fut wit me!
You ain’t tryna have all them niggas in yo crib bro

Smoking weed

Tryna fuck on hoes

Nawl man

And I want a spot too. Even if it’s like Luiz Guzman in Boogie nights when he wakes Burt Reynolds’s for a cameo
 
You ain’t tryna have all them niggas in yo crib bro

Smoking weed

Tryna fuck on hoes

Nawl man

And I want a spot too. Even if it’s like Luiz Guzman in Boogie nights when he wakes Burt Reynolds’s for a cameo
Buk wealthy, we'll have trailers... I def have the space for them. Professionals don't smoke reefa while working, we practice our lines.

Maybe in a few more years lil daddy.. keep eating your vegetables and doing push-ups so you can get real strong.
 
GOP midterm hopes aren't looking good all over that's why the turtle has changed his tone.
 



Fegre8YWAAAT1vW
 
BREAKING: Herschel Walker urged a woman to get a SECOND abortion, New York Times reports.

Herschel Walker Urged Woman to Have a 2nd Abortion, She Says
The Georgia Senate candidate’s ex-girlfriend says he wanted her to terminate a pregnancy in 2011. She chose to have their son instead.
  • Give this article


This article is part of our Midterms 2022 Daily Briefing

Herschel Walker, speaking at a campaign stop in Wadley, Ga., on Thursday, did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.

Herschel Walker, speaking at a campaign stop in Wadley, Ga., on Thursday, did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.Credit...Nicole Buchanan for The New York Times

Herschel Walker, speaking at a campaign stop in Wadley, Ga., on Thursday, did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.

Maya KingLisa LererJonah E. Bromwich
By Maya King, Lisa Lerer and Jonah E. Bromwich
  • Oct. 7, 2022Updated 10:12 p.m. ET

ATLANTA — A woman who has said Herschel Walker, the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, paid for her abortion in 2009 told The New York Times that he urged her to terminate a second pregnancy two years later. They ended their relationship after she refused.
In a series of interviews, the woman said Mr. Walker had barely been involved in their now 10-year-old son’s life, offering little more than court-ordered child support and occasional gifts.
The woman disclosed the new details about her relationship with Mr. Walker, who has anchored his campaign on an appeal to social conservatives as an unwavering opponent of abortion even in cases of rape and incest, after the former football star publicly denied that he knew her. He called her “some alleged woman” in a radio interview on Thursday.
The Times is withholding the name of the woman, who insisted on anonymity to protect her son.
In the interviews, she described the frustration of watching Republicans rally around Mr. Walker, dismiss her account and bathe him in prayer and praise, calling him a good man.
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Continue reading the main story


She said she wanted Georgia voters to know what kind of man Mr. Walker was to her.
“As a father, he’s done nothing. He does exactly what the courts say, and that’s it,” she said. “He has to be held responsible, just like the rest of us. And if you’re going to run for office, you need to own your life.”
The interviews and documents provided to The Times together corroborate and expand upon an account about her abortion first published on Monday in The Daily Beast. The Times also independently confirmed details with custody records filed in family court in New York and interviewed a friend of the woman to whom she had described the abortion and her eventual breakup with Mr. Walker as those events occurred.

  • Dig deeper into the moment.
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Mr. Walker’s campaign declined to comment about the woman’s account.
The woman reaffirmed the key details of her account: She and Mr. Walker conceived a child in 2009 and decided not to continue the pregnancy. Mr. Walker was not married at the time. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure at an Atlanta women’s clinic, and a deposit slip showing a copy of a $700 check that she said Mr. Walker gave her as reimbursement. She also shared a “get well” card with a handwritten message — “Pray you are feeling better” — and signed simply, “H.”
Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account, calling it a “flat-out” lie and the work of Democrats and the hostile news media. He has disputed that he signed the card. He told Fox News on Monday that he sends money “to a lot of people.”



“I know this is untrue. I know it’s untrue,” Mr. Walker said on the “Hugh Hewitt Show” on Thursday. “I know nothing about any woman having an abortion.”

Image
A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

Later on Thursday, he gathered reporters in a lumber yard 150 miles east of Atlanta for his first public event since the report first surfaced and read a statement that did not directly address it. Instead, he blamed his political opponents.
Understand the Herschel Walker Abortion Report
Card 1 of 5
The report. Weeks before the midterm elections, The Daily Beast reported that Herschel Walker, the G.O.P. Senate candidate in Georgia and an avowed abortion opponent, paid for his then-girlfriend to have an abortion in 2009. The woman also told the outlet that she was the mother of one of his children, undercutting his defense that he did not know her identity.
Christian Walker. Following the report, Mr. Walker’s son, a conservative social media star who has not endorsed his father’s campaign, took aim at his father on Twitter. The younger Mr. Walker is now at the center of this drama that could upend one of the most competitive Senate races in the country.
The G.O.P.’s speedy embrace. Republicans, eager to regain control of the Senate, rallied to the former football star’s side less than a day after the report. The quick consolidation behind Mr. Walker exposed a Republican Party that has become increasingly conditioned to discount questions about personal behavior in pursuit of political victories.
Kemp’s non-response. But not every Republican was quick to come to Mr. Walker’s defense. Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia, who has been running a steady, drama-free campaign for re-election this year, dodged several questions about the latest turmoil surrounding Mr. Walker.
Damaging developments. The article is the latest in a series of reports scrutinizing Mr. Walker’s personal and professional life. In addition to the abortion report, it has also been revealed that Mr. Walker lied about and exaggerated his business dealings and that he failed to disclose three children from previous relationships.




“You’re here because Democrats are desperate to hold onto power,” he said. “They are desperate to make this race about my family.”
Mr. Walker is running against Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, in what is one of the year’s most expensive and competitive races as Republicans try to win control of the Senate.
Mr. Walker and his former girlfriend started their relationship around November 2008, according to her paternity suit. She said they first met in Atlanta, where she lived and Mr. Walker regularly visited. She would occasionally travel to the Dallas area, Mr. Walker’s home at the time.
The next year, when they conceived a child, the couple agreed that she should end the pregnancy, she said. Mr. Walker never expressed any moral or religious concerns about abortion, she said. He told her that it was “not a good time” for a baby.





Bruce Evans
Lying liar continues to lie every time he speaks. Truth and responsibility mean nothing to this guy.
 
It was said tonight that the woman that had the abortion was one of his baby's mama. How he didn't know her? He sent a card.
:popcorn: :popcorn:
He fits every stereotype racists think about black people. Violent(domestic abuse), brute(football player), low iq(thinks electric cars need solar panels on the roof), sexual savage(can't remember the names of the women he's hitting raw and cumming in), deadbeat(multiple kids with multiple women).
It seems they don't have a problem with any of that stuff when they own the black person. Just his existence in a run for office is incredibly racist.
 
He fits every stereotype racists think about black people. Violent(domestic abuse), brute(football player), low iq(thinks electric cars need solar panels on the roof), sexual savage(can't remember the names of the women he's hitting raw and cumming in), deadbeat(multiple kids with multiple women).
It seems they don't have a problem with any of that stuff when they own the black person. Just his existence in a run for office is incredibly racist.
If he wins, he won’t hold the seat. They’ll primary him.
 
BREAKING: Herschel Walker urged a woman to get a SECOND abortion, New York Times reports.

Herschel Walker Urged Woman to Have a 2nd Abortion, She Says
The Georgia Senate candidate’s ex-girlfriend says he wanted her to terminate a pregnancy in 2011. She chose to have their son instead.
  • Give this article


This article is part of our Midterms 2022 Daily Briefing

Herschel Walker, speaking at a campaign stop in Wadley, Ga., on Thursday, did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.

Herschel Walker, speaking at a campaign stop in Wadley, Ga., on Thursday, did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.Credit...Nicole Buchanan for The New York Times

Herschel Walker, speaking at a campaign stop in Wadley, Ga., on Thursday, did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.

Maya KingLisa LererJonah E. Bromwich
By Maya King, Lisa Lerer and Jonah E. Bromwich
  • Oct. 7, 2022Updated 10:12 p.m. ET

ATLANTA — A woman who has said Herschel Walker, the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, paid for her abortion in 2009 told The New York Times that he urged her to terminate a second pregnancy two years later. They ended their relationship after she refused.
In a series of interviews, the woman said Mr. Walker had barely been involved in their now 10-year-old son’s life, offering little more than court-ordered child support and occasional gifts.
The woman disclosed the new details about her relationship with Mr. Walker, who has anchored his campaign on an appeal to social conservatives as an unwavering opponent of abortion even in cases of rape and incest, after the former football star publicly denied that he knew her. He called her “some alleged woman” in a radio interview on Thursday.
The Times is withholding the name of the woman, who insisted on anonymity to protect her son.
In the interviews, she described the frustration of watching Republicans rally around Mr. Walker, dismiss her account and bathe him in prayer and praise, calling him a good man.
ADVERTISEMENT
Continue reading the main story


She said she wanted Georgia voters to know what kind of man Mr. Walker was to her.
“As a father, he’s done nothing. He does exactly what the courts say, and that’s it,” she said. “He has to be held responsible, just like the rest of us. And if you’re going to run for office, you need to own your life.”
The interviews and documents provided to The Times together corroborate and expand upon an account about her abortion first published on Monday in The Daily Beast. The Times also independently confirmed details with custody records filed in family court in New York and interviewed a friend of the woman to whom she had described the abortion and her eventual breakup with Mr. Walker as those events occurred.

  • Dig deeper into the moment.
Special offer: Subscribe for $1 a week.

Mr. Walker’s campaign declined to comment about the woman’s account.
The woman reaffirmed the key details of her account: She and Mr. Walker conceived a child in 2009 and decided not to continue the pregnancy. Mr. Walker was not married at the time. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure at an Atlanta women’s clinic, and a deposit slip showing a copy of a $700 check that she said Mr. Walker gave her as reimbursement. She also shared a “get well” card with a handwritten message — “Pray you are feeling better” — and signed simply, “H.”
Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account, calling it a “flat-out” lie and the work of Democrats and the hostile news media. He has disputed that he signed the card. He told Fox News on Monday that he sends money “to a lot of people.”



“I know this is untrue. I know it’s untrue,” Mr. Walker said on the “Hugh Hewitt Show” on Thursday. “I know nothing about any woman having an abortion.”

Image
A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

Later on Thursday, he gathered reporters in a lumber yard 150 miles east of Atlanta for his first public event since the report first surfaced and read a statement that did not directly address it. Instead, he blamed his political opponents.
Understand the Herschel Walker Abortion Report
Card 1 of 5
The report. Weeks before the midterm elections, The Daily Beast reported that Herschel Walker, the G.O.P. Senate candidate in Georgia and an avowed abortion opponent, paid for his then-girlfriend to have an abortion in 2009. The woman also told the outlet that she was the mother of one of his children, undercutting his defense that he did not know her identity.
Christian Walker. Following the report, Mr. Walker’s son, a conservative social media star who has not endorsed his father’s campaign, took aim at his father on Twitter. The younger Mr. Walker is now at the center of this drama that could upend one of the most competitive Senate races in the country.
The G.O.P.’s speedy embrace. Republicans, eager to regain control of the Senate, rallied to the former football star’s side less than a day after the report. The quick consolidation behind Mr. Walker exposed a Republican Party that has become increasingly conditioned to discount questions about personal behavior in pursuit of political victories.
Kemp’s non-response. But not every Republican was quick to come to Mr. Walker’s defense. Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia, who has been running a steady, drama-free campaign for re-election this year, dodged several questions about the latest turmoil surrounding Mr. Walker.
Damaging developments. The article is the latest in a series of reports scrutinizing Mr. Walker’s personal and professional life. In addition to the abortion report, it has also been revealed that Mr. Walker lied about and exaggerated his business dealings and that he failed to disclose three children from previous relationships.




“You’re here because Democrats are desperate to hold onto power,” he said. “They are desperate to make this race about my family.”
Mr. Walker is running against Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, in what is one of the year’s most expensive and competitive races as Republicans try to win control of the Senate.
Mr. Walker and his former girlfriend started their relationship around November 2008, according to her paternity suit. She said they first met in Atlanta, where she lived and Mr. Walker regularly visited. She would occasionally travel to the Dallas area, Mr. Walker’s home at the time.
The next year, when they conceived a child, the couple agreed that she should end the pregnancy, she said. Mr. Walker never expressed any moral or religious concerns about abortion, she said. He told her that it was “not a good time” for a baby.





Bruce Evans
Lying liar continues to lie every time he speaks. Truth and responsibility mean nothing to this guy.

Holy shit! She literally has the receipt.
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