45
   

Turning The Ballot Box Against Republicans

 
 
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 01:03 pm
@MontereyJack,
Quote:
Biden definitively put to rest the lying right wing meme of cognitive decline last night

He did?
Quote:
Joe Biden Flubs DNC Speech Climax: ‘There’s Never Been Anything We’ve Been Able to Accomplish When We’ve Done it Together’

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/08/20/joe-biden-flubs-dnc-speech-climax-theres-never-been-anything-weve-been-able-to-accomplish-when-weve-done-it-together/
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 02:09 pm
@coldjoint,
We know what he meant and we listen to all twenty some minutes of the speech and he has his faculties. You should pay attention to trips frequent gaffes in the middle of sentences
BillW
 
  3  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 02:45 pm
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:

We know what he meant and we listen to all twenty some minutes of the speech and he has his faculties. You should pay attention to trips frequent gaffes in the middle of sentences

shaky hands, inability to stay focussed, etc.........and, Drumpty Trumpity has many more. Unstable and not able to perform appropriately! Amendment 25th applies.....
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  2  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 04:59 pm
@MontereyJack,
make that "trump's", not trips. Damned autocorrect.
0 Replies
 
Region Philbis
 
  5  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 05:34 pm

https://i.imgur.com/swtHPqt.jpg
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 05:54 pm
@Region Philbis,
Region Philbis wrote:


https://i.imgur.com/swtHPqt.jpg

"Ridin' with Biden" I wouldn't want him driving a car I am in. Laughing Laughing Laughing
0 Replies
 
BillW
 
  3  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 09:24 pm
Who wants more of this?

Trump’s dark vision of America -

The Boston Globe
President Donald Trump delivers address at Inauguration 2017

Today, Donald J. Trump became the 45th president of the United States and in his inaugural address offered little hope that his presidency will be something other than ugly, dark, and divisive.

Trump’s speech did not offer America a unifying, optimistic, or even honest message. It described an America of broken-down factories “scattered like tombstones,” crime-ravaged inner cities that have robbed the country of potential and of an overall poverty of national spirit. “This American carnage stops right here and stops right now,” Trump bizarrely decreed to a country with more than six consecutive years of job growth, nearly full unemployment, a strengthening economy, and falling crime rates.

What was perhaps most striking is that Trump made no mention of traditional American values like freedom and equality. The Constitution, which he swore to uphold, went unmentioned. There was no sense that Trump even understands or appreciates the basic elements of the American creed. Rather than an invocation of unifying ideals and principles, Americans were assaulted by Trump’s mindless sloganeering, his chauvinistic nationalism, and the troubling invocation of the fascist slogan “America First” as the new president’s governing refrain.

In perhaps the only well-crafted sentence in what was an otherwise pedestrian and cliché-ridden speech, Trump said, “When you open your heart to patriotism, there is no room for prejudice.” And yet, this statement runs completely counter not only to Trump’s racist, xenophobic, nationalist campaign for the White House, but also to centuries of past nationalist movements that have used patriotism as a tool for increasing prejudice.

It was perhaps the darkest inaugural address ever uttered in this nation’s history, but also the one most clearly divorced from any kind of discernible reality.

This was no more evident than when Trump decried a Washington establishment that “celebrated in our nation’s capital” . . . while “there was little to celebrate for struggling families all across our land.” How does one possibly square such comments with his clear support for a conservative Republican legislative agenda that wants to take away health insurance from 20 million people, cut taxes for the wealthy, and slash the social safety net? The abundant disconnect between Trump’s language and reality is unnerving.

Of course, the fact that during the campaign Trump’s description of America was largely a figment of his imagination — and clearly still is today — never seemed to matter to his supporters. Indeed, they were clearly the intended audience for his remarks. Trump’s speech was less of an inaugural address and more a repurposed campaign diatribe that played on the same raw, divisive and populist rhetoric that he used with such regularity on the campaign trail. Rather than rise to the moment, Trump’s rhetoric mired America in the same one-dimensional patriotism that spurred his rise. Others have noted that Trump alone did not divide America. That began long before he took office. But today he gave no indication that he has any interest in binding up the nation’s wounds. If anything, the opposite seems to be true.

As ugly as Trump’s domestic rhetoric was, his foreign policy rhetoric was far worse. He decried “defend[ing] other nations’ borders while refusing to defend our own”; complained about “trillions and trillions of dollars” spent overseas to make “other countries rich” while problems at home went unaddressed.

Above all, he put the world on notice that America is no longer concerned about being a global leader. “Every decision on trade, on taxes, on immigration, on foreign affairs will be made to benefit American workers and American families,” said Trump. “We must protect our borders from the ravages of other countries making our products, stealing our companies, and destroying our jobs.”

These are ugly words and they portend a future of American indifference to the issues happening outside its shores and to the potential decline of the international system.

One wants to feel a sense of hope for the future about any new president. And for most of American history — no matter our partisan affiliation — that has been the case. But today’s ceremony and Trump’s inaugural address make one think not of a new beginning, but of a desultory end to that which has long made America great.

https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2017/01/20/trump-dark-vision-america/w1awHXWS7FWKX4uxqJEhrN/story.html
BillW
 
  3  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 09:36 pm
@BillW,
This is what Drumpty Trumpity speechaifies now:

TRUMP 2020

TRUMP SPENDS HOLIDAY WEEKEND SELLING HIS DARK, DIVISIVE VISION OF AMERICA

So much for national unity! At Mount Rushmore and in Washington, D.C., the president demonized the left and defended monuments, as his reelection campaign seems increasingly focused on “amplifying racism and stoking culture wars.”

BY CHARLOTTE KLEIN
JULY 5, 2020

President Donald Trump celebrated America over the Fourth of July weekend with a pair of ugly speeches at Mt. Rushmore and in Washington, D.C. that attempted to rally conservative support by demonizing the left and defending monuments. “Our nation is witnessing a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values, and indoctrinate our children,” Trump said on Friday night at Mt. Rushmore, as he tried to revive his base following an embarrassing turnout in Tulsa. “Angry mobs are trying to tear down statues of our founders, deface our most sacred memorials, and unleash a wave of violent crime in our cities.”

Trump, who last weekend promoted a video advocating “white power,” has defended honoring the racist Confederacy with statues and at military bases. While Trump has a history of racism, the Washington Post notes that his strategy of “amplifying racism and stoking culture wars” has been especially striking in this particular moment of national reckoning, one that Trump has responded to with stunningly divisive rhetoric “seeking to weaponize the anger and resentment of some white Americans for his own political gain” rather than calming a country in crisis.

Trump has responded to the outcry for reform with a reimagined version of the “American carnage” he cited at his inauguration, during which he painted a dark picture of a United States exploited by immigrants and foreign nations. But unlike in 2016, notes the Post’s David Nakamura, the enemy has also become other Americans who, in challenging the nation’s founding ideals, pose a threat to Trump’s conservative base. “We are now in the process of defeating the radical left—the Marxists, the anarchists, the agitators, the looters,” the president remarked on Saturday. On Friday, he warned of “the violent mayhem we have seen in the streets of cities that are run by liberal Democrats,” drawing battle lines in an attempt to galvanize supporters. “Our children are taught in school to hate their own country,” he claimed.

From the Black Hills of South Dakota, Trump warned of a “new far-left fascism” and “cancel culture” that “is designed to overthrow the American Revolution.” Trump continued to put forth such messaging from the White House on Saturday, during which he vowed to “never allow an angry mob to tear down our statues, erase our history, indoctrinate our children, or trample on our freedoms.” The president pledged to “defend, protect, and preserve American way of life, which began in 1492 when Columbus discovered America.” On Friday, Trump described the goal of protesters to be “the end of America.”

“That’s not just bigotry to the outside world, but now he’s really attacking millions of Americans as worthless, as socialists, as anarchists,” said presidential historian Douglas Brinkley of the “deeply divisive speech.”

The New York Times reported both speeches to be “a reflection of his dire political standing” as he strives to win reelection without “a booming economy or a positive message to campaign on,” a moment that has him instead making appeals to racists and sowing division. In Washington, the president praised his administration’s handling of the pandemic and again suggested increased cases to merely be the result of more testing, a false claim he repeated to Saturday’s crowd.

“The aperture of the campaign is constricting, not expanding—he’s energizing a smaller and smaller group of angrier and angrier Americans,” Peter Wehner, a former speechwriter for president George W. Bush, told the Post. “And to try to energize that base, he has to say more and more extreme things.”

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2020/07/trump-spends-holiday-weekend-selling-his-dark-divisive-vision-of-america
BillW
 
  2  
Reply Fri 21 Aug, 2020 09:48 pm
.....and then this is what we get today - for the sake of Democracy, the choice is easy!!!!!!!!

Analysis | Dark vs. light: Trump declares himself the only barrier to ‘anarchy, madness and chaos’


August 21, 2020 at 12:49 p.m. CDT

It took less than 14 hours for President Trump to reinforce the central theme of former vice president Joe Biden’s Democratic convention acceptance speech.

Biden’s speech centered on an unsubtle contrast: the choice between light and dark.

“I give you my word,” Biden said. “If you entrust me with the presidency, I will draw on the best of us, not the worst. I will be an ally of the light, not of the darkness."

“We can choose the path of becoming angrier, less hopeful and more divided. A path of shadow and suspicion,” he added later. “Or we can choose a different path, and together, take this chance to heal, to be reborn, to unite. A path of hope and light."

Broadly, of course, Biden was referring to Trump’s presidency as much as the toxic, draining public moment. To some extent, the former vice president was also framing the upcoming Republican convention, which will certainly try to present a positive contrast to the negativity Americans are now experiencing. But Biden knows as well as anyone that the Republican convention and its keynote speaker, Trump, will also portray a possible Biden presidency in the bleakest possible terms.

Four years ago, that’s precisely the tack Trump took in accepting his party’s nomination. It was a dark speech, as we wrote at the time, presenting a crime-riddled America in which people were suffering and suggesting that the election of Hillary Clinton would lead the country down an even worse path.

Trump offered himself as a messiah to rebut that fate.

“Nobody knows the system better than me,” he asserted, “which is why I alone can fix it.”

Should Trump’s speech at next week’s convention be similarly grim, Biden’s hoped to serve as inoculation. But, again, it didn’t take that long.

Speaking at a conservative group’s annual meeting on Friday, Trump made an even more explicit presentation of himself as the last defender of America’s future.

“I’m the only thing standing between the American Dream and total anarchy, madness and chaos,” Trump said. “And that’s what it is. I’m representing you. I’m just here. And I’m not sure it’s an enviable position, but that’s what it is."

The crowd applauded.

“You know, when I made that statement, I was a little embarrassed by it because it sounds so egotistical. It’s like an egotistical statement. I was a little embarrassed. I’m the only one, but there was no other way to say it.”

Much of his presentation focused on the purported threat posed by socialists, anarchists and criminals, just as his speech did in 2016. It poses an odd contrast, given that he’s the president. As when Trump said on Thursday that life under Biden was exemplified by “the smoldering ruins of Minneapolis, the violent anarchy of Portland, the bloodstained sidewalks of Chicago” — all things that have already happened during an American presidency: his.

“We have to expose this dangerous left-wing movement. We must defeat it,” Trump said on Friday. “And with an optimistic vision for America’s future, we can be greater than ever before.”

An optimistic vision? “Elect Biden and America will descend into anarchy and chaos” is not an optimistic vision. It is a dark vision, exactly as Biden suggested.

In an interview with Fox News on Friday morning, Vice President Pence criticized Biden and the Democratic convention broadly for offering “a very, very negative view of America.” For example, no mention was made, he said, of “the violence that’s besetting the families in major cities across this country.” (Instead, Pence said, the Democrats offered, among other things, “ad hominem attacks against the president of the United States” — a tactic in which his ticket would presumably never engage.)

None of this even coheres. Trump and Pence concede that things are bleak, demanding both that Democrats focus on crime and that Democrats foster crime. Trump claims an optimistic vision as he offers himself as the sole barrier to the apocalypse.

Trump’s campaign strategy in 2016 was to present everything as terrible and himself as the best solution. That meant accepting his unpopularity but emphasizing Clinton’s. It meant casting the country as teetering.

His strategy now, weirdly, is the same. Attacks on Biden as horrifying and socialist and anarchic and doddering, all at once. Paint a picture of a nation more precarious than the one he criticized four years ago. Yet offer himself, again, as the solution.

All of this plays into Biden’s framing. The Democratic convention did suggest that times are dark, but most Americans agree. Polling data from Gallup indicates that only about 1 in 8 Americans is satisfied with the direction of the country, with a fifth pointing to the coronavirus pandemic as the most serious problem and another fifth pointing to the economy. If the moment seems dark, that’s in large part because it is.

Biden’s argument was that he can lighten the stress and tension. That he can right the course. Trump’s argument as presented on Friday is that he’s the only thing keeping things from being worse. A case for optimism vs. a case for pessimism — a contrast Biden is happy to have.

While Biden’s speech drew that comparison with an explicit, obvious metaphor, it was much better captured by a speech that preceded his.

Brayden Harrington, 13, described meeting Biden at a campaign event in New Hampshire earlier this year and discussing the stutter that each had dealt with over the course of their lives. It was an immensely moving speech and one that made explicit what Biden was getting at.

There was a shadow hanging over Harrington’s life, and that conversation with Biden offered a ray of light. That was the promise Biden was making in his acceptance speech, casting Trump as part of the darkness he hoped to combat.

It was an analogy that Trump then echoed.

------The Washington Post (a Republican Newspaper)
0 Replies
 
Region Philbis
 
  7  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 03:39 am

https://i.imgur.com/pizpR7j.jpg
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 10:35 am
@Region Philbis,
Region Philbis wrote:


https://i.imgur.com/pizpR7j.jpg

A lot like the authors of tell all books about Trump. They sell a lot to very stupid people.
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 10:37 am
@BillW,
Vanity Fair has always been on the cutting edge of politics. Laughing Laughing Laughing Anything from "16"?
0 Replies
 
RABEL222
 
  4  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 10:41 am
@coldjoint,
You mean people who can read the written word unlike your hero trump.
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 10:44 am
@RABEL222,
RABEL222 wrote:

You mean people who can read the written word unlike your hero trump.

So Trump cannot read? Do you realize how stupid that is and how stupid you sound? Of course you don't. Carry on.
RABEL222
 
  4  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 11:29 am
@coldjoint,
You mean the democrats have been lying to us about Trump not reading the daily intelligence reports due to the fact his reading comprehension is nil? Sort of like yours.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 11:35 am
Quote:
Known serial plagiarist Joe Biden STOLE from Jack Layton for his DNC speech, say Canadians

At least he, Biden, is consistent at one thing.
Quote:
Joe Biden is already a known serial plagiarist. So it shouldn’t come as a huge surprise he’s been caught at it again.

Canadian Twitter users noticed it after Biden’s big speech that CNN said was the greatest ever and which was actually full of doom and despair. In one of the spots where he attempted to express that the world might continue existing, he had to borrow from someone else. Guess when you’re a Democrat it’s only despairing apocalypse stuff that comes naturally. For the rest you need outside help. In this case, Canadian liberal politician Jack Layton, somewhat of a hero on the left.

“Jack Layton is trending. One of Canada’s most beloved politicians. As Biden butchers his dying words left to us,” wrote one left-wing trans activist, who deleted the tweet after the American right started sharing it.[/quote]
https://therightscoop.com/known-serial-plagiarist-joe-biden-stole-from-jack-layton-for-his-dnc-speech-say-canadians/
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 12:57 pm
http://patriotretort.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Crazy-Eyes-Redux.jpg
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 01:06 pm
https://media.townhall.com/Townhall/Car/b/gv082220dAPR20200821034539.jpg
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 01:12 pm
https://media.townhall.com/Townhall/Car/b/afb081920dAPR20200819044507.jpg
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 22 Aug, 2020 01:15 pm
https://media.townhall.com/Townhall/Car/b/afb081620dAPR20200816064515.jpg
 

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