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Trump - Make America Great Again!

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Tibs better behave, he's been warned



Sanders supporters better 'behave themselves' when he loses

The chairman of the Philadelphia 2016 Host Committee for this summer’s Democratic National Convention said supporters of presidential candidate Bernie Sanders have to “behave themselves” when the Vermont senator loses the nomination.

“I think it’s gonna be a great convention, but of course the key to it is the Sanders people. Bernie’s gonna have his name placed in nomination; we’re gonna have a roll call; there’s gonna be a demonstration in support of Bernie; he’s gonna lose the roll call,” he said. “His supporters have to behave and not cause trouble. And I think they will, and I think Sen. Sanders will send them a strong message.”

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box...al-convention-chair-sanders-supporters-better

------------------------

I doubt he can restrain himself

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Ed Rendell, a former Pennsylvania governor and Democratic National Committee chairman, laid out his vision for how the convention would play out.
 
Bernie is eventually going to have to tell his flock of retards to vote for Trump.
 
Go Bernie!

1968. "Hello, Democrats!"

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Fight Bernie bots, Fight!

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Tibs again? He's everywhere
 
well, bernie does believe in pro-choice, otherwise he'd have aborted this losing campaign.
 
Rapper Azealia Banks Endorses Trump – Says Hillary Talks to Black People “Like We’re Pets”

1381100958_d18fd22249df92ef14c3510bd86043fb.jpeg


Donald Trump can add another member of Hollywood to his list of supporters.

On Saturday afternoon, singer Azealia Banks expressed her support for the GOP candidate in a spree of tweets, kicking off the conversation with,
“I REALLY want Donald Trump to win the election.”

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/201...mp-says-hillary-talks-black-people-like-pets/

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well, bernie does believe in pro-choice, otherwise he'd have aborted this losing campaign.

As long as it isn't related to the choice of keeping your own money and spending it the way you want, he is pro-choice.
 
Ha Ha - Go Bernie!

Drop Out Hillary!

 
Republican Trump picks NJ Gov Christie to head transition team

WASHINGTON, May 9 (Reuters) - Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said on Monday he has chosen New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a rival turned ally, to lead his White House transition team as he prepares for the general election campaign.

"Governor Christie is an extremely knowledgeable and loyal person with the tools and resources to put together an unparalleled Transition Team, one that will be prepared to take over the White House when we win in November," Trump said in a statement.

Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee in the Nov. 8 presidential election, said Christie will oversee an "extensive team."

Christie endorsed Trump after dropping out of the 2016 Republican primary race in February and has been campaigning with the New York billionaire.

Trump's campaign said the candidate was moving into a general election mode and "implementing an infrastructure capable of securing a victory including making key hires, building a finance operation to benefit the Republican Party and unifying the party by working with several Republican leaders now voicing their support for Mr. Trump and his candidacy."

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...to-head-transition-team/ar-BBsOArt?li=BBnb7Kz
 
Rapper Azealia Banks Endorses Trump – Says Hillary Talks to Black People “Like We’re Pets”

1381100958_d18fd22249df92ef14c3510bd86043fb.jpeg


Donald Trump can add another member of Hollywood to his list of supporters.

On Saturday afternoon, singer Azealia Banks expressed her support for the GOP candidate in a spree of tweets, kicking off the conversation with,
“I REALLY want Donald Trump to win the election.”

The same Azealia that wanted Sarah Palin gang raped by a bunch of thugs.
 
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Must read from today's NYT:

The Making of an Ignoramus
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/09/o...oramus.html?smid=fb-nytopinion&smtyp=cur&_r=0

By Paul Krugman

Truly, Donald Trump knows nothing. He is more ignorant about policy than you can possibly imagine, even when you take into account the fact that he is more ignorant than you can possibly imagine. But his ignorance isn’t as unique as it may seem: In many ways, he’s just doing a clumsy job of channeling nonsense widely popular in his party, and to some extent in the chattering classes more generally.

Last week the presumptive Republican presidential nominee — hard to believe, but there it is — finally revealed his plan to make America great again. Basically, it involves running the country like a failing casino: he could, he asserted, “make a deal” with creditors that would reduce the debt burden if his outlandish promises of economic growth don’t work out.

The reaction from everyone who knows anything about finance or economics was a mix of amazed horror and horrified amazement. One does not casually suggest throwing away America’s carefully cultivated reputation as the world’s most scrupulous debtor — a reputation that dates all the way back to Alexander Hamilton.

The Trump solution would, among other things, deprive the world economy of its most crucial safe asset, U.S. debt, at a time when safe assets are already in short supply.

Of course, we can be sure that Mr. Trump knows none of this, and nobody in his entourage is likely to tell him. But before we simply ridicule him — or, actually, at the same time that we’re ridiculing him — let’s ask where his bad ideas really come from.

First of all, Mr. Trump obviously believes that America could easily find itself facing a debt crisis. But why? After all, investors, who are willing to lend to America at incredibly low interest rates, are evidently not worried by our debt. And there’s good reason for their calmness: federal interest payments are only 1.3 percent of G.D.P., or 6 percent of total outlays.

These numbers mean both that the burden of the debt is fairly small and that even complete repudiation of that debt would have only a minor impact on the government’s cash flow.

So why is Mr. Trump even talking about this subject? Well, one possible answer is that lots of supposedly serious people have been hyping the alleged threat posed by federal debt for years. For example, Paul Ryan, the speaker of the House, has warned repeatedly about a “looming debt crisis.” Indeed, until not long ago the whole Beltway elite seemed to be in the grip of BowlesSimpsonism, with its assertion that debt was the greatest threat facing the nation.

A lot of this debt hysteria was really about trying to bully us into cutting Social Security and Medicare, which is why so many self-proclaimed fiscal hawks were also eager to cut taxes on the rich. But Mr. Trump apparently wasn’t in on that particular con, and takes the phony debt scare seriously. Sad!

Still, even if he misunderstands the fiscal situation, how can he imagine that it would be O.K. for America to default? One answer is that he’s extrapolating from his own business career, in which he has done very well by running up debts, then walking away from them.

But it’s also true that much of the Republican Party shares his insouciance about default. Remember, the party’s congressional wing deliberately set about extracting concessions from President Obama, using the threat of gratuitous default via a refusal to raise the debt ceiling.

And quite a few Republican lawmakers defended that strategy of extortion by arguing that default wouldn’t be that bad, that even with its access to funds cut off the U.S. government could “prioritize” payments, and that the financial disruption would be no big deal.

Given that history, it’s not too hard to understand why candidate Trump thinks not paying debts in full makes sense.

The important thing to realize, then, is that when Mr. Trump talks nonsense, he’s usually just offering a bombastic version of a position that’s widespread in his party. In fact, it’s remarkable how many ridiculous Trumpisms were previously espoused by Mitt Romney in 2012, from his claim that the true unemployment rate vastly exceeds official figures to his claim that he can bring prosperity by starting a trade war with China.

None of this should be taken as an excuse for Mr. Trump. He really is frighteningly uninformed; worse, he doesn’t appear to know what he doesn’t know. The point, instead, is that his blithe lack of knowledge largely follows from the know-nothing attitudes of the party he now leads.

Oh, and just for the record: No, it’s not the same on the other side of the aisle. You may dislike Hillary Clinton, you may disagree sharply with her policies, but she and the people around her do know their facts. Nobody has a monopoly on wisdom, but in this election, one party has largely cornered the market in raw ignorance.
 
Ha ha! Trump is in his head now. The hostile takeover is in full swing.

House Speaker Paul Ryan -- who has yet to endorse Donald Trump as the Republican Party's presumptive presidential nominee -- reportedly has suggested that he’d be willing to step down as Republican Convention chairman if Trump asks.
 
That's for later - we still got a race to decide!


Bernie Sanders Zealots Are Now Shouting Obscenities in the Faces of Hillary Clinton Supporters, Including Children

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"They were cussing at people, calling women ******, and telling people to kill themselves. They were shouting in children's faces, blowing sirens in their ears, and making them cry."

http://thedailybanter.com/2016/05/sanders-shout-obscenities-clinton-rally/
 
First of all, Mr. Trump obviously believes that America could easily find itself facing a debt crisis. But why? After all, investors, who are willing to lend to America at incredibly low interest rates, are evidently not worried by our debt. And there’s good reason for their calmness: federal interest payments are only 1.3 percent of G.D.P., or 6 percent of total outlays.

These numbers mean both that the burden of the debt is fairly small and that even complete repudiation of that debt would have only a minor impact on the government’s cash flow.
so a small portion is insignificant and not enough to worry about.
huh. wow. maybe correlate that with the transgender population bullshit going on?
 
the transgender population bullshit going on

you mean this ****?




Parents sue feds for forcing school to let transgenders in girls locker room

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Chicago-area families who don’t want their 14- to 17-year-old daughters to undress and shower with a boy staring at their naked bodies filed a lawsuit against the Department of Education and their high school.

Fifty-one families, representing 73 parents and 63 students, joined with the Alliance Defending Freedom and Thomas More Society to challenge the feds’ interpretation of Title IX and the legality of the agency’s guidance in federal court,

In response to the policies, according to the suit, “some girls actively avoid the locker rooms at school,” some avoid the restrooms, one is wearing gym clothes under her school clothes all day, some are “risking tardiness by running to the opposite end of the school, during short 5 minute passing periods, to try to find an empty restroom,” and

other girls are changing as quickly as possible in the locker room, avoiding all eye contact and conversation, all the while experiencing great stress and anxiety over whether a biological male will walk in while they are unclothed.

The lawsuit claims that the biological male spurned the school’s repeated and increasingly favorable offers to accommodate him short of letting him in the girls’ locker room. (The suit also names the Justice Department, which enforces Title IX.)

http://www.infowars.com/parents-sue...ool-to-let-transgenders-in-girls-locker-room/
 
Why anarchists might secretly vote for Donald Trump
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/pol...-secretly-vote-donald-trump-article-1.2630345

I believe Donald Trump is a dangerous, offensive, ill-prepared bigot who must never become President of the United States. That he has made it this far is a disgusting indictment on the heart and soul of our nation.

We can no longer conveniently blame the South for the rise of bigotry in America — Donald Trump won New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. He was crushing it in California before he became the presumptive nominee. He got this far because people voted him into power.
He might also make sense to anarchists — who see a Trump presidency as a shortcut to mass chaos, protest, dissidence, and anger in our nation.

Increasingly, I am hearing voices from many different anarchist and revolutionary communities thinking out loud about exactly what might happen if Trump somehow won the election in November.

While we've heard people say before that they would "move to Canada" if so and so got elected, I think we do have to be realistic with the notion that a Trump presidency would spark a visceral, volatile reaction unlike anything we've ever seen before.
Imagine, for instance, that Trump wins and then attempts to make good on his pledge to "round up" 11 million undocumented immigrants in two years or less (that's over 458,000 people per month) and drop them off in Mexico. What does this look like?

To me, it looks like a civil war in which millions of Americans begin hiding their friends and family members while armed police forces go door to door, car to car, searching for their daily quota of undocumented people to put on busses and trains to some unknown location.

Do you sincerely think this would be a peaceful endeavor? Do you sincerely believe that 11 million people will be rounded up in an orderly fashion and go willingly to some undisclosed location?

If you think Donald Trump could oversee and enforce such an endeavor without mass rebellion in this nation then maybe you are simply out of touch or don't have any undocumented friends. I can only speak for myself, but I would not obey such a command from President Trump — ever.
Imagine, for instance, that Trump wins and then attempts to ban all Muslims who are not U.S. citizens from entering the United States.

How will he do this? Will we all have to take religious tests at the airport? Will Muslims have to carry a special identification or wear an armband through customs? Will blonde hair and blue eyed European Muslims be treated differently than those from Iran or Iraq or Syria? Will relatives of Muslims who have not quite made the commitment to Islam be banned for will only fully committed Muslims be banned? What if you convert to another faith right before you enter the country and then convert right back as soon as you get through customs?
Now I would never vote for Donald Trump under any circumstance, but for people who may want to see this country devolve into a horrific state of mass chaos, I think they're right — voting for Donald Trump would send our nation down a path unlike anything we've experienced here before. I think this is why white supremacists, armed militias, and hate groups are so enthusiastic about a Trump presidency — they see what anarchists see — the very real possibility of an ethnic, religious war in which even regular folk decide to choose a side.
If all of this sounds alarmist, maybe it is. Every single day, good people reach out to me and tell me they are scared to death of what might happen if this man gets elected. The more I think about it, I believe their fears are justified.
 
Must read from today's NYT:

The Making of an Ignoramus
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/09/o...oramus.html?smid=fb-nytopinion&smtyp=cur&_r=0

By Paul Krugman

Truly, Donald Trump knows nothing. He is more ignorant about policy than you can possibly imagine, even when you take into account the fact that he is more ignorant than you can possibly imagine.

THIS ^^^^^^ is the best part of the article. Just stop reading there. No group of Americans is better suited to deal with this than Republicans. We have tolerated 8 years with a domestic and foreign policy imbecile at the wheel. We can handle this ride while we sit around and watch Liberal/Democrat heads assplode.
 
Just stop reading there.

I stopped right here....

Of course you did. That's the reason Trump has made the type of inroads he has within the Republican party and its fringes. Let's just hope the rest of America doesn't stop reading, and be so dismissive - and fearful - of any type of rational, criticial analysis of Trump's candidacy. I have not given up hope for the country yet.
 
Must read from today's NYT:

The Making of an Ignoramus
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/09/o...oramus.html?smid=fb-nytopinion&smtyp=cur&_r=0

By Paul Krugman

Truly, Donald Trump knows nothing. He is more ignorant about policy than you can possibly imagine, even when you take into account the fact that he is more ignorant than you can possibly imagine. But his ignorance isn’t as unique as it may seem: In many ways, he’s just doing a clumsy job of channeling nonsense widely popular in his party, and to some extent in the chattering classes more generally.

Last week the presumptive Republican presidential nominee — hard to believe, but there it is — finally revealed his plan to make America great again. Basically, it involves running the country like a failing casino: he could, he asserted, “make a deal” with creditors that would reduce the debt burden if his outlandish promises of economic growth don’t work out.

The reaction from everyone who knows anything about finance or economics was a mix of amazed horror and horrified amazement. One does not casually suggest throwing away America’s carefully cultivated reputation as the world’s most scrupulous debtor — a reputation that dates all the way back to Alexander Hamilton.

The Trump solution would, among other things, deprive the world economy of its most crucial safe asset, U.S. debt, at a time when safe assets are already in short supply.

Of course, we can be sure that Mr. Trump knows none of this, and nobody in his entourage is likely to tell him. But before we simply ridicule him — or, actually, at the same time that we’re ridiculing him — let’s ask where his bad ideas really come from.

First of all, Mr. Trump obviously believes that America could easily find itself facing a debt crisis. But why? After all, investors, who are willing to lend to America at incredibly low interest rates, are evidently not worried by our debt. And there’s good reason for their calmness: federal interest payments are only 1.3 percent of G.D.P., or 6 percent of total outlays.

These numbers mean both that the burden of the debt is fairly small and that even complete repudiation of that debt would have only a minor impact on the government’s cash flow.

So why is Mr. Trump even talking about this subject? Well, one possible answer is that lots of supposedly serious people have been hyping the alleged threat posed by federal debt for years. For example, Paul Ryan, the speaker of the House, has warned repeatedly about a “looming debt crisis.” Indeed, until not long ago the whole Beltway elite seemed to be in the grip of BowlesSimpsonism, with its assertion that debt was the greatest threat facing the nation.

A lot of this debt hysteria was really about trying to bully us into cutting Social Security and Medicare, which is why so many self-proclaimed fiscal hawks were also eager to cut taxes on the rich. But Mr. Trump apparently wasn’t in on that particular con, and takes the phony debt scare seriously. Sad!

Still, even if he misunderstands the fiscal situation, how can he imagine that it would be O.K. for America to default? One answer is that he’s extrapolating from his own business career, in which he has done very well by running up debts, then walking away from them.

But it’s also true that much of the Republican Party shares his insouciance about default. Remember, the party’s congressional wing deliberately set about extracting concessions from President Obama, using the threat of gratuitous default via a refusal to raise the debt ceiling.

And quite a few Republican lawmakers defended that strategy of extortion by arguing that default wouldn’t be that bad, that even with its access to funds cut off the U.S. government could “prioritize” payments, and that the financial disruption would be no big deal.

Given that history, it’s not too hard to understand why candidate Trump thinks not paying debts in full makes sense.

The important thing to realize, then, is that when Mr. Trump talks nonsense, he’s usually just offering a bombastic version of a position that’s widespread in his party. In fact, it’s remarkable how many ridiculous Trumpisms were previously espoused by Mitt Romney in 2012, from his claim that the true unemployment rate vastly exceeds official figures to his claim that he can bring prosperity by starting a trade war with China.

None of this should be taken as an excuse for Mr. Trump. He really is frighteningly uninformed; worse, he doesn’t appear to know what he doesn’t know. The point, instead, is that his blithe lack of knowledge largely follows from the know-nothing attitudes of the party he now leads.

Oh, and just for the record: No, it’s not the same on the other side of the aisle. You may dislike Hillary Clinton, you may disagree sharply with her policies, but she and the people around her do know their facts. Nobody has a monopoly on wisdom, but in this election, one party has largely cornered the market in raw ignorance.

The same Paul "Bubble Boy" Krugman that advised the the Clinton Regime to create the tech and housing bubbles that popped just as Bush 43 took over? Yeah I will write this off as not being from a credible source.
 
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