A Poker

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  1. A Poker Hand Consists Of Five Cards
  2. Free Party Poker Play Money
  3. A Poker Set Case

I’ve never been much of a poker player, but I understand that expert players can read the “tell” on their opponents’ faces. Maybe I’m wrong, but I think the “tell” on the actions of our Democratic friends informs us that they are afraid.

Naturally, poker fans will be especially interested in the video poker games at Ignition, as well as the poker-based table games like Tri Card Poker, Pai Gow Poker, Caribbean Stud and Hold’em, and Let ‘Em. (Card Games) a card game of bluff and skill in which bets are made on the hands dealt, the highest-ranking hand (containing the most valuable combinations of sequences.

Why would President Biden shovel out a boatload of executive orders in the first week of his presidency advancing climate change and fighting systemic racism?

Why would the Deep State sic the FBI on candidate and then President Trump, and then let Kevin Clinesmith, the guy that falsified a document, off with a tap on the wrist?

Why would the rulers nod and wink through a summer of riots that caused death and destruction in many American cities, and then build fences and call out the National Guard to protect them against a few “far-right” LARPers? And if that isn’t enough, mount an impeachment against a president who has already left office?

Oh, and by the way, how come it was Vice President Pence that ordered up the National Guard to Washington D.C.? Why not Trump, the commander-in-chief? Inquiring minds would like to know.

What is going on here? These “tells” show that the ruling class, for all its power and its domination and hegemony, is terrified by the barbarians at the gates.

Let us tell the recent Story of the Rulers and the Commoners. In the Fifties, the rulers built suburbs and interstates for the commoners. Then in the Sixties commoners were reviled while well-born radical children of liberal parents occupied university offices or became flower children. Then the leaders of the Silent Majority, Nixon and Agnew, were sternly shown the door. Then the Reagan Democrats elected Reagan. Then Bill Clinton was a New Democrat that worked with Republicans once the commoners voted him a Republican Congress, and all good people started to worry about the Religious Right. Then in 2006 Nancy Pelosi got a bunch of moderate Democrats elected to Congress. Then, in the 2010s, first Obama marginalized commoners as bitter clingers, sicced the IRS on the Tea Party, and then Hillary Clinton back-handed commoners as a basket of deplorables. Under Trump, commoners were derided as white oppressors. Then, January 6, 2021, a day which will live (pause) in infamy, the day the commoners suddenly became dangerous insurrectionists, and the Capitol of Panem would now be defended by fences and the National Guard.

(How does a YA writer like Suzanne Collins manage to nail our present ruling class in The Hunger Games, as Frances Hodgson Burnett did the British upper crust a century ago in The Secret Garden? Where does that come from?)

See, I think that the reality behind the poker game is this chart of U.S. government spending as a percent of GDP. It shows 80 years, from 1900 to 1980 of glorious ruling-class growth, with loot and plunder for all, punctuated by a couple of lovely wars. But since 1980, the total spending as a percent of GDP has been flat, at about 35-36 percent GDP.

Now, I don’t know what you think when you look at that chart. But I say to myself that it shows that the game is up. In whatever indirect way the American people speak, they have spoken: no more increases in government spending. But our Democratic friends propose to spend trillions on climate change and on Medicare for All, and I know not what else. And that is after all the massive spending on COVID stimulus.

Ain’t gonna fly, and that is the meaning, I think, of all the Biden executive orders. Biden’s handlers are throwing everything at the wall, hoping something will stick. I doubt it.

The problem is that USG is facing the fact of Chantrill’s Law: “government programs cannot work because you can never reform them.” Pensions? Health care? The only thing our leaders have done recently is try to squeeze in more free stuff with ObamaCare and add stealth income taxes to Medicare. Education? But our teachers don’t feel safe!

Obviously, the only way we will ever reform today’s government -- the backed-up sewer of a century of educated-ruling-class vote-buying -- is through a massive smashup. And if you ask me, the Biden agenda brings that date forward.

Now, our liberal friends can only think within their own worldview, which privileges noble educated youth fighting the oppressors for justice. But in the coming years they will find themselves tangled up in a struggle with a force that is neither revolutionary nor directed from above. The monster that devours progressivism will be an instinctual, chthonic, semiconscious rebellion from the depths of common humanity. And our liberal friends won’t have a clue what to do about it.

But at some level they know that something is wrong, that there is a glitch in the matrix. And so they are afraid. They are right to be afraid. And it shows in their actions.

Christopher Chantrill@chrischantrill runs the go-to site on US government finances, usgovernmentspending.com. Also get hisAmerican Manifesto and hisRoad to the Middle Class.


Also found in: Thesaurus, Acronyms, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.

pok·er 1

(pō′kər)n.
One that pokes, especially a metal rod used to stir a fire.

pok·er 2

(pō′kər)n.
Any of various card games played by two or more players who bet on the value of their hands.
[Probably from French poque, a card game similar to poker popular in the 18th century, probably from German pochen, to knock, pound, boast, brag (as in (ich) poche, (I) knock, bet (said while rapping the table when opening in the German card game Pochspiel)); akin to German poch, interjection imitative of a knock.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

poker

(ˈpəʊkə) n
1. (Tools) a metal rod, usually with a handle, for stirring a fire

poker

(ˈpəʊkə) n
(Card Games) a card game of bluff and skill in which bets are made on the hands dealt, the highest-ranking hand (containing the most valuable combinations of sequences and sets of cards) winning the pool
[C19: probably from French poque similar card game]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

pok•er1

(ˈpoʊ kər)
Pokern.
2. a metal rod for poking or stirring a fire.

pok•er2

(ˈpoʊ kər)
n.
a card game played by two or more persons, in which the players bet on the value of their hands, the winner taking the pool.
[1825–35, Amer.; perhaps orig. braggart, bluffer; compare Middle Low German poken to brag, play, Middle Dutch poken to bluff, brag]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

Poker

A metal rod about two feet long with a handle on one end and a right angle bend on the other. Pokers were used to stir burning wood or coal in stoves.
1001 Words and Phrases You Never Knew You Didn’t Know by W.R. Runyan Copyright © 2011 by W.R. Runyan
Noun1.poker - fire iron consisting of a metal rod with a handle; used to stir a fire
fire hook, stove poker, salamander
2.poker - any of various card games in which players bet that they hold the highest-ranking hand
card game, cards - a game played with playing cards
draw poker, draw - poker in which a player can discard cards and receive substitutes from the dealer; 'he played only draw and stud'
high-low - poker in which the high and low hands split the pot
penny ante poker, penny ante - poker played for small stakes
straight poker - poker in which each player gets 5 cards face down and bets are made without drawing any further cards
strip poker - poker in which a player's losses are paid by removing an article of clothing
stud poker, stud - poker in which each player receives hole cards and the remainder are dealt face up; bets are placed after each card is dealt
raise - increasing the size of a bet (as in poker); 'I'll see your raise and double it'
poker face - a face without any interpretable expression (as that of a good poker player)
jackpot, kitty, pot - the cumulative amount involved in a game (such as poker)
ante - (poker) the initial contribution that each player makes to the pot
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
بوكِر: لُعبَة في وَرَق اللعْبلُعبَة البُوكَرمِحْراك النّار
pokerildrager
hiilihanko
poker
pókerskörungur
火かき棒
pokers
kutáčpoker
ไพ่โป๊กเกอร์
bài poke

poker

1[ˈpəʊkəʳ]N (for fire) → atizadorm, hurgónm

poker

2[ˈpəʊkəʳ]N (Cards) → pókerm, póquerm
to have a poker facetener una caraimpasible, tener una cara de póker
see alsostiffA3
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

poker

[ˈpəʊkər]n
(= card game) → pokerm
I play poker → Je joue au poker.poker-faced [ˈpəʊkərfeɪst]adjau visageimpassible
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

poker

: poker dicen
(= single dice)Pokerwürfelm; (= set of five)Pokerwürfelpl
poker face
poker-faced
adjmit einem Pokergesicht orPokerface; (= bored)mit unbewegterMiene
pokerwork

poker

1

A Poker Hand Consists Of Five Cards

n (for fire) → Schürhakenm, → Feuerhakenm

poker

2
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

poker

1Poker[ˈpəʊkəʳ]nPoker (for fire) → attizzatoio

poker

2[ˈpəʊkəʳ]n (Cards) → pokerm inv
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

poker1

(ˈpəukə) noun
a kind of card game usually played for money. poker بوكِر: لُعبَة في وَرَق اللعْب покер pôquer poker das Pokerspiel poker πόκερpóquer pokker پوکر pokeri poker פּוֹקֶר कुरेदनी poker póker poker póker poker ポーカーゲーム 포크 카드놀이 pokeris pokers pakau pokerpokerpoker پوكر póquer pocher покер poker poker poker poker ไพ่โป๊กเกอร์ poker 撲克牌,紙牌戲 покер ايک قسم کا کارڈ کا کھيل sự chơi bài 扑克牌,纸牌戏
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

Poker

لُعبَة البُوكَر poker pokerSchürhakenπόκερpóquer

Free Party Poker Play Money

hiilihankopoker pokerattizzatoio 火かき棒 부지깽이pokerildrakepogrzebaczatiçador, pôquerпокер poker ไพ่โป๊กเกอร์poker

A Poker Set Case

bài poke扑克牌
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

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