I'd be surprised if Donald Trump gets less than 30% of the black vote in 2020 and the dems need to get 95%. Those days are over however. Black people are nowhere close to being as stupid as demokkkrats need them to be.
Anyone who is in the US illegally should leave. If some disruption is caused to their families when the law they violated is enforced, they should have considered the consequences when they made the decision to enter the country illegally.
0 Replies
realjohnboy
6
Reply
Mon 28 May, 2018 09:45 pm
The House member from my district in VA, Tom Garrett (R), abruptly announced today that he is withdrawing from his re-election race.
It has been a chaotic week for the one-term Garrett, starting with the resignation of his chief-of-staff. That was followed by news reports that he might resign, and further reports that he and his wife were abusive to his staff and made demands on them, such as personal shopping trips and cleaning up dog poop in his office.
He held a no-questions-accepted news conference at the end of last week where he said it was all "fake news."
Today he said he was an alcoholic and needed to devote time to getting that illness cured.
The 5th district is larger in square miles than New Jersey with a population of 780,000. 70% of us are and 25% black, with similar percentages for rural vs urban dwellers. The district has traditionally been safe for Republicans, although the divide has been narrowing recently. I would say that the split is about 57-43 in favor of the Repubs.
The (D) in the race is Leslie Cockburn (Coe'-burn). She is about 65, wealthy,
with the usual baggage of being a "carpet-bagger." She is for some type of gun reform. Her big issue will probably be access to health care. We have a big opiode problem and a lack of facilities in the rural areas of the district.
The Repubs are going to have to scramble to find a candidate and the dollars
to hold on to the seat. It is too late to hold a primary election and will probably select someone via a hastily arranged, slimmed-down convention.
Trump Still Thinks 'Central Park Five' Are Guilty.
So what?
0 Replies
Real Music
3
Reply
Tue 29 May, 2018 09:14 pm
@nimh,
Quote:
No fan of Ryan, but he never said anything about the poor being like stray cats. The quote on the image RealMusic posted is fake.
You are referring to a meme image.
The majority of modern memes are captioned photos that are intended to be funny.
A meme is an image with a funny or witty caption.
Internet memes can come in the form of pictures that display activism in one way or another, and most of them do so with humor.
Your concern should be with your fascist government, not Trump.
0 Replies
coldjoint
-4
Reply
Wed 30 May, 2018 11:04 am
The orange wave is here.
0 Replies
coldjoint
-2
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Wed 30 May, 2018 11:34 am
Quote:
Polls show people aren’t buying the Democrats’ hysterical narratives
I could have told you that. The hardcore haters of everything American believe differently, but there are just not as many as there were.
Quote:
The American people clearly are not buying what the Democrats are selling.
That is not to say that they are buying everything the Republicans are selling, but it certainly means that the approach of former President Barack Obama and his track of socialism/communism is not resonating with the people. Americans by and large are proud of their history, are more capitalist than communist, are for industry instead of against it, are patriotic and optimistic, and are more wary and skeptical of too-good-to-be-true promises from a bloated government than Democrats are trying to push for.
Add to this the fact that the Democrat Party is split between the actual communist tripe coming from Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders and the corrupt establishmentarians like Hillary and Pelosi.
Republicans and Democrats are running neck-and-neck on the Rasmussen Reports Generic Congressional Ballot again this week.
The latest telephone and online survey finds that 43% of Likely U.S. Voters would choose the Democratic candidate if the elections for Congress were held today. Forty-two percent (42%) would opt for the Republican. Four percent (4%) prefer some other candidate, and 10% are undecided. (To see survey question wording, click here.)