My kids and I have not stopped laughing about Trump's taco tweet.
Yeah, that was hilarious. He should've run that one past his daughter first.
My kids and I have not stopped laughing about Trump's taco tweet.
I've given a multitude of reasons here other than I don't like him. That's the least of his problems to me.
Although if you can respect someone who poses with a taco bowl and says "I love Hispanics!" and thinks that will actually appeal to Hispanics, if you think that signals the kind of intelligence and thoughtfulness and tact that we need in the White House, I just really don't know what else to say. My 12 year old laughed at how stupid that was.
I know, I know he's un-PC and we're all supposed to love him for that. Saying something like that doesn't make you politically incorrect, it makes you an asshat.
Dick Cheney passes obedience school....
The world stopped listening to Obama 6 years ago. Just ask Putin, Kim Jong Il, Netanyahu, ISIS, Assad, the Chinese,..............
It's time to take the Donald Trump threat more seriously, says Barack Obama
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ore-seriously-says-barack-obama-a7017786.html
I think you underestimate how stupid the voting public in this country is.
Obama speaks, the world listens
It's time to take the Donald Trump threat more seriously, says Barack Obama
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ore-seriously-says-barack-obama-a7017786.html
President Obama suggests US media is treating the rise of Trump as entertainment and needs to get serious
President Barack Obama has moved to discredit Donald Trump suggesting he would be exposed as unfit to serve in the White House if reporters probed him more urgently.
“I just want to emphasize the degree to which we are in serious times and this is a really serious job,” Mr Obama told the White House press corps on Friday. “This is not entertainment. This is not a reality show. This is a contest for the presidency of the United States.”
Making his first remarks on the Republican race since Mr Trump emerged as the presumptive nominee, Mr Obama told the reporters that deeper reporting of the billionaire and his positions had now become paramount, implicitly criticising them for have fallen short thus far. “Emphasizing the spectacle and the circus, that’s not something we can afford,” he said.
“It's important for us to take seriously the statements he's made in the past,“ Mr Obama went on. “Every candidate, every nominee has to be subjected to exacting stands and genuine scrutiny,”he said. That includes making sure their proposed budgets add up. “If they don’t, that needs to be reported on and the American people need to know that,” he suggested.
“If they take a position on international issues that could threaten war, or has the potential of upending our critical relationships with other countries, or would potentially break the financial system, that needs to be reported on,“ he went on, clearly referencing some foreign policy remarks made by Mr Trump, including suggesting Japan and South Korea acquire nuclear weapons.
At the White House Correspondents’ Dinner last weekend, Mr Obama offered serial cutting jokes about the billionaire businessman. But on Friday he was stern, dismissing out of hand a question about a now infamous Tweet from Mr Trump on Thursday, which was a holiday in Mexico, showing him eating a so-called Taco Bowl salad and declaring his love for Hispanics.
“I have no thoughts on Mr Trump’s Tweets,” he replied. “As a general rule I don’t pay attention to Mr Trump’s tweets.” Nor would he he said, for the next six months until the general election.
Prodded to comment on the schism that MrTrump’s ascendancy has opened in the Republican Party and particularly the refusal of the House speaker Paul Ryan to endorse him, Mr Obama was circumspect, saying he’d leave it up to the Republicans to figure out how to “square their circle”. But he conceded: “There is no doubt that there is a debate that's taking place inside the Republican Party about who they are and what they represent.”
But he seemed to betray confidence that ordinary Republicans, in the end, would see through the billionaire businessman and former reality TV host.
“Voters are going to have to take a decision if this is the guy that speaks for them and represents their values,” he said. “Republican women voters are going to have to decide if that is the I feel comfortable with in representing me and what I care about.”
Already Mr Trump is struggling to bring the Republican Party behind him, with several key figures declaring they are unable to offer their support, including two former Republican presidents - George H.W. Bush and his son, George W. Bush - and the 2012 nominee of the party, Mitt Romney, who has said he will now stay away from the party’s July convention
How much these defections - and Mr Ryan’s reluctance to embrace him - will harm Mr Trump is hard to calculate. He managed to corral so much support during the primary races in part because voters are entirely disgusted with the party establishment and the leaders in Washington, of whom Mr Ryan is clearly one.
Attacks from Mr Obama, meanwhile, are likely to be worn by Mr Trump as a badge of honour.
Mr Obama had come to the press room in the first place to herald a new tax rule unveiled by the US Treasury on Friday that will force banks and investment houses to reveal and report the real owners of companies they serve, in a bid to stop the setting up of shell companies of the purpose of tax evasion or fraud.
“These actions are going to make a difference,“ Mr Obama said, adding that they would help the US authorities to make people are ”paying the taxes they owe rather than using shell corporations and offshore accounts to avoid doing the things that ordinary Americans are doing every day.”
However, he surely will have known in advance that when it came to questions from reporters, the drama surrounding Mr Trump and the ructions in the Republican Party would be the topic of most interest.
Trump-Pierson 2016!!!
Katrina Pierson: Ryan not fit for speaker if he can't back Trump
"The last two presidential cycles we were told John McCain was a conservative. His conservative review score card is a 37%. We were told Mitt Romney was a conservative and he was pro-abortion, pro-gay marriage, pro-adoption, gave us Obamacare. And we were told to hold our noses and vote for the sake of the party. These same people are now telling us that because their guy didn't win, they want to hurt the party. The issue here isn't about Donald Trump -- if you can't hold yourself to the standard you hold everyone else to, the problem is with you."
In one case, Democrats outmaneuvered their GOP colleagues on a measure to block funding for the Environmental Protection Agency’s controversial Waters of the United States rule. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., demanded a 60-vote threshold because he said it wasn’t germane to the bill. Republican leadership acquiesced and the amendment failed, even though it had the support of 54 senators, including four Democrats.
“The strategy is designed to let moderate Republicans get on record voting for nominally good conservative policy while still allowing bad liberal policy to move forward,” an aide to a conservative senator explained to The Daily Signal.
As the energy and water spending bill moved closer to final passage last week, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., announced he would introduce an amendment related to the Iran nuclear deal. The move infuriated Democrats, prompting them to filibuster the spending measure.
Now, the GOP is left wondering if Senate Democrats were ever going to make a good-faith effort to pass appropriations bills or if they just wanted to use the process to load them up with liberal policy and more spending. Ultimately, that might work in Democrats’ favor if lawmakers resort to an omnibus spending bill—a scenario that appears more likely.
http://click.heritage.org/uNr000jH4e0s0E03JWTMTq0
Ryan's latest comments are a testament to how oblivious they are to reality.I am telling you, they pull a stunt like that, the Republican party will be relegated to the dust bin of history. See, a guy like Trump being the nominee is the warning. They just don't seem to understand that their constituents are paying attention to what they do in Washington. The people are pissed at business as usual in Washington. Neither party is getting the message. If Romney runs 3rd party, I will vote for Trump. They should be careful. They may just get their revolution.
Trump-Pierson 2016!!!
Katrina Pierson: Ryan not fit for speaker if he can't back Trump
"The last two presidential cycles we were told John McCain was a conservative. His conservative review score card is a 37%. We were told Mitt Romney was a conservative and he was pro-abortion, pro-gay marriage, pro-adoption, gave us Obamacare. And we were told to hold our noses and vote for the sake of the party. These same people are now telling us that because their guy didn't win, they want to hurt the party. The issue here isn't about Donald Trump -- if you can't hold yourself to the standard you hold everyone else to, the problem is with you."
http://www.wmur.com/politics/pierson-ryan-not-fit-for-speaker-if-he-cant-back-trump/39413056