192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
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layman
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 05:57 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
25th Amendment NOW>


You still haven't grasped just how delusory, how impossible, how ridiculous, and, to be blunt, how fuckin STUPID this suggestion is, have you?
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wmwcjr
 
  -2  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 07:46 am
@Olivier5,
You're right. He is disgusting. He shoves his hatred in your face. Instead of discussing issues on an intellectual basis (as William F. Buckley Jr. and other conservative intellectuals did), he goes for the lowest common denominator. He's what I'd consider to be white trash. When he refers to Bill and Hillary Clinton as "KKKlinton," he's merely self-projecting -- which is not surprising since the Ku Klux Klan is (and always has been) politically conservative.

For the record, I'm not just another "cheese-eater." (I didn't vote in '93, and in '94 I voted for Robert Dole. In 2008 I voted for McCain, but I didn't vote in 2012. In other words, I'm neither a Clinton fan nor an Obama fan. Doesn't sound very cheesy to me.) In other words, I'm an independent who's given up on American politics as an exercise in hopeless vanity.
Walter Hinteler
 
  5  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 07:48 am
http://i.imgur.com/WND3pRc.jpg
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Finn dAbuzz
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 07:56 am
@reasoning logic,
Because I know the owner who sets the rules and at least one moderator and they would never do such a thing or allow. There has been a ton of bitching about the thumb feature over the years and I'm sure they would have picked up on a rogue moderator or malware.

Of course I don't know this to be true, but I would bet big money that it is
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MontereyJack
 
  4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:10 am
@gungasnake,
usual snaKKKe bullpucky
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wmwcjr
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:12 am
@layman,
In case you haven't noticed, Anthony Weiner has been disowned by the Democratic Party.

Trump, who is an immoral man himself, makes me yearn for the Reagan and Bush eras. I disagreed with some of their policies; but at least they had style, whereas Trump has none. In fact, he's a narcissistic, thin-skinned bully who has the oratorical skills of a naughty boy in elementary school.

There are plenty of immoral men and "pervs" in both parties. It's called the dark side of human nature. For example, how many times have Trump and Newt Gingrich committed adultery? (By the way, isn't it interesting that the Religious Right has no problem with their lifestyles?) Interestingly enough, Gingrich was having one of his adulterous affairs during the Monica Lewinsky scandal. A bit hypocritical of Gingrich, perhaps? Ever hear of Dennis Hastert, who succeeded Gingrich as Speaker of the Republican-majority U.S. House of Representatives? Apparently, when he was a high-school wrestling coach, he was having sex with teenage boys. As I said, there are many of examples of moral failure in both parties.

Layman, I'm not attacking you personally. I'm just saying this particular comment fails.
layman
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:26 am
@wmwcjr,
wmwcjr wrote:
Layman, I'm not attacking you personally. I'm just saying this particular comment fails.


Why does it fail, Bill? You said it yourself. A perv's a perv, and there aint no profit in actin otherwise, or not saying so, eh?
layman
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:30 am
@wmwcjr,
That's Trump at his best, actually. He aint trying to "act presidential," or any lame-ass **** like that. He's just talkin like ya would to someone at your kitchen table--just sayin what's on his mind.
revelette1
 
  4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:39 am
@layman,
If he was at my kitchen table talking like he does, I would tell him to leave. Most normal people do not carry on like he does.
layman
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:42 am
@revelette1,
revelette1 wrote:
Most normal people do not carry on like he does.


Yeah, right, eh? And nobody ever says "****," either, I bet.
wmwcjr
 
  -2  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:48 am
@layman,
Thanks for not getting mad at me. I'm just tired of the hypocrisy of some people (and I'm not referring to you).

Right now I'm too tired to say anything else. Peace.
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layman
 
  -4  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:51 am
Some Syrian refugee was interviewed for a TV special about refugees in Canada. He basically said the whole town sucked. He had been given a modern 3-bedroom house, but it didn't suit him.

Later he was arrested for beating his wife with a hockey stick. Sounds like he "assimilated" with the hosers enough to know it was an effective tool for hitting ****.

When arrested he blamed the hosers because no one ever told him it was illegal to beat your wife in Canada.

Yeah, this country needs more like him, eh?
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  3  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:52 am
Quote:
New poll: 70% of Americans think civility has gotten worse since Trump took office

Americans broadly believe their country’s political tone has become less civil since Donald Trump was elected president and that fundamental rights are weakening, according to a new PBS NewsHour/NPR/Marist poll.

Seventy percent of Americans think political civility has worsened since Trump was elected president, according to the poll. That holds true regardless of party, and it marks a substantial increase since a July 2009 Gallup poll showed that just a third of U.S. adults said the nation’s political tone and civility were worse since former President Barack Obama took office.

Trust in Congress and the media is low, while trust in the intelligence community and the courts is high, according to the poll. Americans — 60 percent — said they trust the intelligence community and courts the most and Congress and the media the least.

Two months out from President Trump’s firing of former FBI director James Comey, the nation’s regard for the intelligence community remains largely unchanged in recent months. In March, six out of 10 Americans said they trusted the nation’s intelligence community, including the CIA and FBI, at least a good amount while one out of 10 said they trust these agencies “not at all.”

Overall, 61 percent of Americans said they do not place much trust in the Trump administration. Seventy percent of people who identify as political independents said they do not trust the Trump administration, along with 90 percent of Democrats. Among Republicans, 84 percent of respondents said they trust the president and his administration. And despite the controversies surrounding the White House, the overall numbers remain virtually unchanged since March, according to Marist polling data.

Meanwhile, as Republicans in both the House and the Senate struggle to pass a bill on health care, only six percent of Americans say they have a great deal of trust in Congress, and another 23 percent said they hold a “good amount” of trust in the legislative branch. That response held regardless of political party and remains largely unchanged since March when a quarter of Americans — 27 percent — said they placed at least a good amount of trust in Congress.

When asked if they trust the media, fewer than a third of U.S. adults — 30 percent — said they do at least a good amount. And the differences along party lines show sharp divisions with only nine percent of Republicans saying trust the media, a stark contrast to 56 percent of Democrats and 28 percent of Independents who said the same. And on the media’s right to freedom of the press, four out of 10 Republicans said the nation had “gone too far in expanding the right,” while two out of 10 Independents and one out of 10 Democrats agreed with that statement. Overall, a quarter of U.S. adults said the press had too many rights, while nearly half of Americans — said “things are okay the way they are.”

Delving deeper into the traditional American values, 52 percent of Americans said the nation should preserve the right to protest and criticize the government. But just 41 percent of Republicans think the right to protest should be scaled back, while only seven percent of Democrats and 11 percent of people who identify as independents said they feel the same way.

Overall, half of U.S. adults said freedom of religion in this country is just fine as it is, while an additional third of Americans said the United States now restricts this right too greatly, and one-tenth of all respondents said the country needs to do more to rein in this freedom, something Republicans were more likely to say than Democrats or Independents, according to the survey.

And when asked about the right to vote, six out of 10 Americans overall think the United States needs to change nothing. But among Republicans, a quarter of respondents think the U.S. has gone too far in expanding that right, far more than five percent of Democrats and eight percent of people who are politically independent. And half of U.S. adults said they have at least a good amount of trust that the nation’s elections are fair. Of those, 17 percent of Americans said they trust elections “a great deal.” Nearly as many respondents — 18 percent — said they don’t trust elections at all. Only six percent of Republicans said they had no trust at the ballot box, compared to 19 percent of Democrats and 20 percent of Independents who said they felt the same.

Surely, Americans can agree on their own history, right? The data may surprise (or sadden) you. Three-quarters of U.S. adults say their nation declared independence from Great Britain, but 23 percent guessed a different country — 13 different countries to be exact, including Mexico, Russia, Brazil and Afghanistan.

And seven out of 10 Americans correctly said that happened in 1776, an improvement compared to six out of 10 respondents in 2011, according to Marist polling data.


PBS Newshour
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revelette1
 
  5  
Mon 3 Jul, 2017 08:59 am
@layman,
I would hope if you are a guest at someone house having dinner, you wouldn't.
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