Thought the same. "Lanky". Mueller and Comey come to mind, as they are the "Longshanks" in the photos. With Mueller out of commission due to (ostensible) dementia (could be a lie, of course), perhaps that directs the cannons towards Comey.
Yep. That is why I mentioned Mueller (very tall) and Comey (very tall). And indeed why I used "Longshanks", which was the English's name for King Edward I, due to how long his shanks (shins/lower legs) were. He was evidently tall and "lanky".
Check the film and see if Trump looks lanky on the recent tournament. Maybe one of his doubles shot the 67. Odd how he says I am pleased to report, as if talking about someone else.
Thought the same. "Lanky". Mueller and Comey come to mind, as they are the "Longshanks" in the photos. With Mueller out of commission due to (ostensible) dementia (could be a lie, of course), perhaps that directs the cannons towards Comey.
lanky adjective UK /ˈlæŋ.ki/ US /ˈlæŋ.ki/
tall and thin and often moving awkwardly as a result:
Yep. That is why I mentioned Mueller (very tall) and Comey (very tall). And indeed why I used "Longshanks", which was the English's name for King Edward I, due to how long his shanks (shins/lower legs) were. He was evidently tall and "lanky".
Hanky Panky, but the [p] is swapped with [l]?
u/#q67
any relevance?
Keep digging love this stuff
President Lincoln was also tall and lanky. Could it be the [L]? When I first saw this I thought of the extra L in stollen.
Could it be? And this might be huge stretch of the imagination... That the P and L are close to each other on a keyboard?
Check the film and see if Trump looks lanky on the recent tournament. Maybe one of his doubles shot the 67. Odd how he says I am pleased to report, as if talking about someone else.