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Trump still the front runner (Read 207653 times)
Prime Minister for Canyons
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2640 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 9:29am
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 9:28am:
Prime Minister for Canyons wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 9:27am:
Soren wrote on Mar 2nd, 2016 at 5:45pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 2nd, 2016 at 3:57pm:
ian wrote on Mar 2nd, 2016 at 3:56pm:
Lol.


I know.

It's too funny:



This guy is trying to be funny but he just can't get there.




Serious, he's the funniest guy in the US.


Drumpf, or Oliver?




Oliver, because he's intentionally being funny.
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In a time of universal deceit — telling the truth is a revolutionary act.

No evidence whatsoever it can be attributed to George Orwell or Eric Arthur Blair (in fact the same guy)
 
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Neferti
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2641 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:13am
 
Apparently the Yanks are in a panic after the Trump win .... Googling "how to move to Canada".  Grin Grin


Quote:
THE mere thought of President Trump taking the oath of office in January, 2017 has left US citizens so freaked out that they’re already plotting their exit.

While the Republican Presidential hopeful swept the primaries in seven states on Super Tuesday, putting him one step closer to the White House, it also put those who oppose him a step closer to the border — the Canadian border, that is.

In the hours after Trump dominated his Republican rivals on Tuesday, the number of Google searches for “how to move to Canada” jumped more than 10 times in the United States.


http://www.news.com.au/technology/online/voters-frantically-googling-how-to-move...
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greggerypeccary
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2642 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:29am
 
Neferti wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:13am:
Apparently the Yanks are in a panic after the Trump win .... Googling "how to move to Canada".  Grin Grin


Quote:
THE mere thought of President Trump taking the oath of office in January, 2017 has left US citizens so freaked out that they’re already plotting their exit.

While the Republican Presidential hopeful swept the primaries in seven states on Super Tuesday, putting him one step closer to the White House, it also put those who oppose him a step closer to the border — the Canadian border, that is.

In the hours after Trump dominated his Republican rivals on Tuesday, the number of Google searches for “how to move to Canada” jumped more than 10 times in the United States.


http://www.news.com.au/technology/online/voters-frantically-googling-how-to-move...


One could hardly blame them.

Drumpf is certifiably insane, a failure as a human being, and a pathological liar.

I don't think they have anything to worry about though: his 15 minutes will end soon.

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GOP = Guardians Of Paedophiles
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2643 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:39am
 
Yeah.  According to the article, they have also been Googling how to move to Australia, Sweden and Japan.  Grin Grin
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2644 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:43am
 
Neferti wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:39am:
Yeah.  According to the article, they have also been Googling how to move to Australia, Sweden and Japan.  Grin Grin


With Abbott and Turnbull still here, I wouldn't be recommending they come to Australia.

Abbott is just as bad as Trump.
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GOP = Guardians Of Paedophiles
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2645 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:49am
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:43am:
Neferti wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:39am:
Yeah.  According to the article, they have also been Googling how to move to Australia, Sweden and Japan.  Grin Grin


With Abbott and Turnbull still here, I wouldn't be recommending they come to Australia.

Abbott is just as bad as Trump.


They might not like Sweden either with the hoards of "migrants" who have invaded over there.  Best they all go to Canada if they can't face the prospect of Trump in the White House. At least they sound the same. Wink
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2646 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 11:20am
 
A lot of talk going on in here about a voluntary voting system. Surely all elections in the US are null and void, are they not ?
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Our Lives Are Governed By The Feast & Famine Variable
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2647 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 11:43am
 
Neferti wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:13am:
Apparently the Yanks are in a panic after the Trump win .... Googling "how to move to Canada".  Grin Grin


Quote:
THE mere thought of President Trump taking the oath of office in January, 2017 has left US citizens so freaked out that they’re already plotting their exit.

While the Republican Presidential hopeful swept the primaries in seven states on Super Tuesday, putting him one step closer to the White House, it also put those who oppose him a step closer to the border — the Canadian border, that is.

In the hours after Trump dominated his Republican rivals on Tuesday, the number of Google searches for “how to move to Canada” jumped more than 10 times in the United States.


http://www.news.com.au/technology/online/voters-frantically-googling-how-to-move...




Same thing happened with Ronnie Reagan, people were blubbering in the streets when he was elected thinking it was going to be WW3, instead he brought down the Berlin wall without firing a shot and freed hundreds of millions of people that were a prisoner of communism, Reagan is probably the biggest humanitarian the world has ever seen.

Trump is having the same effect, as the left view him as someone that will dismantle the gains they have made towards implementing id1ot leftism for all.
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2648 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 12:05pm
 
Actually, one of the reasons that the republic establishment worry about Trump (aside the fact that he was not one of the boys), is that he is a closet democrat. 

If you look at the debates, in many aspects, he is not as ultra conservative as everyone thought.  For example, he still believes in medicare, and social welfare for the homeless.  He believes better treatment of veterans.  Also, on the issue of abortion clinics.  Other candidates like Rubio, wanted to shut down Planned Parenthood all together, and prosecute individuals.  Where as Trump is alot more soft, saying that Planned Parenthood is doing alot of good works (other than abortion). 

Anyway, its going to be interesting when or if he gets to the white house.   First he'll have to beat Hilliary - who is more popular than him across most polls.   Second, most republican voters do not want him, but the against votes are divided among Rubio and Cruz.   If Trump need to go forward, he will probably need to nominate a relatively moderate republican - may be even a female candidate.

 

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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2649 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 12:16pm
 
The New York Times is of course a left wing newspaper, but they do have journalistic integrity when it comes to facts:

Donald Trump’s Backers Express Deep and Diverse Support
By ASHLEY PARKER and MAGGIE HABERMANMARCH 1, 2016

Donald J. Trump won the vote of a 59-year-old cabdriver in the Boston suburbs who said he lost his trucking business after immigrants began delivering cargo for less.

In Loudoun County, Virginia, one of the country’s wealthiest, he won the backing of a newly separated mother and a longtime Democrat who spoke of the possibility of another terrorist attack, saying, “I don’t think we feel safe right now.”

And Mark Harris, a 48-year-old owner of an antiques shop in Canton, Ga., said he did not much care for Mr. Trump’s ego and worried that his impolitic speech could derail American diplomacy.

But Mr. Harris voted for Mr. Trump, too.

“He’s not afraid to get in the trenches and fight for you,” Mr. Harris said. “He’s going to be a bully, and he’s going to tell them what he thinks, and he’s going to push to get it done. He don’t care who he makes mad in the process.”

Mr. Trump’s string of victories Tuesday, the biggest day of primary voting, was not unexpected. But interviews with Trump voters from the middle-class suburbs of Minneapolis to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains revealed a surprising depth and diversity of support that could sustain him as a front-runner in the critical weeks to come.

They delivered him victories in conservative Southern strongholds like Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee, as well as Northern states like Massachusetts, where centrist Republicans hold sway. And though he lost to Senator Ted Cruz in Mr. Cruz’s home state, Texas, Mr. Trump prevailed in Virginia, fending off Senator Marco Rubio of Florida.

Early exit polls confirmed his broad support; in Virginia, for example, he was winning not only among lower-income voters, his usual base, but also in other categories including veterans and self-described conservatives and white evangelicals. In Texas, those calling themselves political moderates, the kinds of voters some rivals are counting on, were favoring Mr. Trump as well.

In interviews, Mr. Trump’s supporters did not appear defined by a common ideology. But they had a unifying motivation — a deep-rooted, pervasive sense of anxiety about the state of the country, and an anger and frustration at those they felt were encroaching on their way of life.

Asked what they liked in Mr. Trump, his voters described attributes that his opponents have tried to paint as failings. His fierce and sometimes offensive comments on Mexican and Muslim immigrants, and on waterboarding and killing family members of Islamic State fighters, demonstrate, his voters said, a refreshing willingness to disregard political correctness.

“He’s saying how the people really feel,” said Janet Aguilar, 59, clad in a Red Sox jacket, who voted for Mr. Trump in Everett, Mass. “We’re all afraid to say it.”

Where others see a twice-divorced ladies’ man now married to a much younger model, his fans saw the head of a successful family whose children, as Albert Banda, the cabdriver from Somerville, Mass., put it, are “respectable and decent members of society” who “aren’t running around like Paris Hilton and dragging their bodies through the mud.”

Mr. Trump’s huge ego? Not necessarily a problem. “He doesn’t just want to be a president. He wants to be the greatest president,” said Elizabeth Burns, the Virginia mother, who said she campaigned for Hillary Clinton in 2008. “That works in our favor because he doesn’t want to fail. He sees himself as too big to fail.”

Those supporting him did not always agree with everything he said, or the way he said it, and they were not even convinced that he would be able to follow through on all of his big, brash promises.

cont . . .
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Know the enemies of a civil society by their public behaviour, by their fraudulent claim to be liberal-progressive, by their propensity to lie and, above all, by their attachment to authoritarianism.
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2650 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 12:17pm
 
But they were willing to give him their conditional support, drawn to him by his tough talk and bravado, as well as their own disappointment and even fatalism about the politicians they were used to seeing on the menu.

“This isn’t about whether he’s going to do a better job or not,” said Ken Magno, 69, leaving his polling place in Everett, Mass., Tuesday morning, wearing a red Donald Trump winter hat. “More or less, it’s the statement: Listen, we’re sick and tired of what you people do. And we’re going to put somebody in there — now that it’s our choice, we’re going to put somebody in there that basically you don’t like.”

Some of the voters supporting Mr. Trump openly expressed skepticism, and even discomfort, with some of his assurances, as well as with his talk. Mr. Harris, for instance, said that broken promises would transform the real estate magnate into an ordinary politician.

And John Rupert, 75, a retired mechanical engineer from Mahtomedi, Minn., said he was torn on Mr. Trump’s promise to deport the 11 million immigrants in the country illegally. “Oh man, that’s a hard one,” he said. “We have laws, and somehow you have to enforce them. I don’t know.”

But Mr. Rupert — a longtime Democrat who supported Jesse Ventura, the former professional wrestler, for governor — added that he had gradually come to accept Mr. Trump’s proposed ban on Muslim immigrants.

“At first I felt bad about the Muslim thing, but boy, you go ask Angela Merkel how she feels now with all the trouble they had with Muslim refugees from Syria in Berlin, so he’s not far off,” he said, referring to Germany’s chancellor. “It’s not a prejudice. It’s more of a racial profiling, and quite honestly, I’d be in favor of it.”

Mr. Trump, he added, “just seems to say things that I feel right about.”
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Know the enemies of a civil society by their public behaviour, by their fraudulent claim to be liberal-progressive, by their propensity to lie and, above all, by their attachment to authoritarianism.
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2651 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 12:22pm
 
ut Mr. Rupert — a longtime Democrat who supported Jesse Ventura, the former professional wrestler, for governor — added that he had gradually come to accept Mr. Trump’s proposed ban on Muslim immigrants.

“At first I felt bad about the Muslim thing, but boy, you go ask Angela Merkel how she feels now with all the trouble they had with Muslim refugees from Syria in Berlin, so he’s not far off,” he said, referring to Germany’s chancellor. “It’s not a prejudice. It’s more of a racial profiling, and quite honestly, I’d be in favor of it.”




So hes not really a lifelong Democrat if he supported Jesse, and he's making random assertions about a country from the reports.
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In a time of universal deceit — telling the truth is a revolutionary act.

No evidence whatsoever it can be attributed to George Orwell or Eric Arthur Blair (in fact the same guy)
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2652 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 12:22pm
 
innocentbystander. wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 11:43am:
Neferti wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 10:13am:
Apparently the Yanks are in a panic after the Trump win .... Googling "how to move to Canada".  Grin Grin


Quote:
THE mere thought of President Trump taking the oath of office in January, 2017 has left US citizens so freaked out that they’re already plotting their exit.

While the Republican Presidential hopeful swept the primaries in seven states on Super Tuesday, putting him one step closer to the White House, it also put those who oppose him a step closer to the border — the Canadian border, that is.

In the hours after Trump dominated his Republican rivals on Tuesday, the number of Google searches for “how to move to Canada” jumped more than 10 times in the United States.


http://www.news.com.au/technology/online/voters-frantically-googling-how-to-move...




Same thing happened with Ronnie Reagan, people were blubbering in the streets when he was elected thinking it was going to be WW3, instead he brought down the Berlin wall without firing a shot and freed hundreds of millions of people that were a prisoner of communism, Reagan is probably the biggest humanitarian the world has ever seen.

Trump is having the same effect, as the left view him as someone that will dismantle the gains they have made towards implementing id1ot leftism for all.



Whereas the right have traditionally never minded having Democrat presidents at all.


Oh wait, they spent the last eight years whining and arguing to have the president impeached on a conspiracy theory.
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In a time of universal deceit — telling the truth is a revolutionary act.

No evidence whatsoever it can be attributed to George Orwell or Eric Arthur Blair (in fact the same guy)
 
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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2653 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 1:36pm
 
Prime Minister for Canyons wrote on Mar 3rd, 2016 at 12:22pm:
ut Mr. Rupert — a longtime Democrat who supported Jesse Ventura, the former professional wrestler, for governor — added that he had gradually come to accept Mr. Trump’s proposed ban on Muslim immigrants.

“At first I felt bad about the Muslim thing, but boy, you go ask Angela Merkel how she feels now with all the trouble they had with Muslim refugees from Syria in Berlin, so he’s not far off,” he said, referring to Germany’s chancellor. “It’s not a prejudice. It’s more of a racial profiling, and quite honestly, I’d be in favor of it.”




So hes not really a lifelong Democrat if he supported Jesse, and he's making random assertions about a country from the reports.


Jesse Ventura.   Grin Grin


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Re: Trump still the front runner
Reply #2654 - Mar 3rd, 2016 at 2:34pm
 
Trump released a 7-point healthcare plan:

Quote:
Congress must act. Our elected representatives in the House and Senate must:

1.Completely repeal Obamacare. Our elected representatives must eliminate the individual mandate. No person should be required to buy insurance unless he or she wants to.
2.Modify existing law that inhibits the sale of health insurance across state lines. As long as the plan purchased complies with state requirements, any vendor ought to be able to offer insurance in any state. By allowing full competition in this market, insurance costs will go down and consumer satisfaction will go up.
3.Allow individuals to fully deduct health insurance premium payments from their tax returns under the current tax system. Businesses are allowed to take these deductions so why wouldn’t Congress allow individuals the same exemptions? As we allow the free market to provide insurance coverage opportunities to companies and individuals, we must also make sure that no one slips through the cracks simply because they cannot afford insurance. We must review basic options for Medicaid and work with states to ensure that those who want healthcare coverage can have it.
4.Allow individuals to use Health Savings Accounts (HSAs). Contributions into HSAs should be tax-free and should be allowed to accumulate. These accounts would become part of the estate of the individual and could be passed on to heirs without fear of any death penalty. These plans should be particularly attractive to young people who are healthy and can afford high-deductible insurance plans. These funds can be used by any member of a family without penalty. The flexibility and security provided by HSAs will be of great benefit to all who participate.
5.Require price transparency from all healthcare providers, especially doctors and healthcare organizations like clinics and hospitals. Individuals should be able to shop to find the best prices for procedures, exams or any other medical-related procedure.
6.Block-grant Medicaid to the states. Nearly every state already offers benefits beyond what is required in the current Medicaid structure. The state governments know their people best and can manage the administration of Medicaid far better without federal overhead. States will have the incentives to seek out and eliminate fraud, waste and abuse to preserve our precious resources.
7.Remove barriers to entry into free markets for drug providers that offer safe, reliable and cheaper products. Congress will need the courage to step away from the special interests and do what is right for America. Though the pharmaceutical industry is in the private sector, drug companies provide a public service. Allowing consumers access to imported, safe and dependable drugs from overseas will bring more options to consumers.


https://www.donaldjtrump.com/positions/healthcare-reform
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In the fullness of time...
 
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