TRUMP is seriously dangerous

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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Sep 08, 2016 10:35 am

just another Trump supporter :P

Wednesday, September 07, 2016
Our Racist Homophobe Moron Klansman Mickey Mouse Governor Just Got Called Out
byAbby Zimet, staff writer

Image

In the last 24 hours, Maine's unholy Gov. Paul LePage has been honored with several public portraits on the graffiti wall of Portland's wastewater treatment facility: He was painted, entirely deservedly, as a KKK member with the explanatory notes of "Racist, Homophobe, Moron," he was repainted over, he was again exposed as a Klansman, and he was transformed into Mickey Mouse explaining that "Hate Is Hate." Even as city officials struggled to draw the ever-tricky line between free and hate speech - they have never before removed anything from the wall - the public spoke on the image of a guy who is "just a hateful person": "This is an honest portrayal. It is good work."
Image

http://www.commondreams.org/further/201 ... called-out
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 09, 2016 11:00 am

Mexico threatens to cancel treaty that ceded Texas and California to US if Trump gets elected
Sarah K. Burris SARAH K. BURRIS
08 SEP 2016 AT 11:30 ET

While Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump might have taken a victory lap after his meeting with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, those south of the U.S. border are not.

Finance Minister Luis Videgaray resigned Wednesday, after backlash from the invitation to Trump to meet with Peña Nieto. Now, Mexican Senator Armando Rios Piter is proposing legislation that could put Mexico in conflict with the United States.

“It was a historic error for our president to invite a person like that to our country. [Mr Trump] used us as a campaign tool,” the senator told the Telegraph.

In the past, Trump has threatened to cancel the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), claiming it was bad policy that hurt the U.S. manufacturing industry. If Trump were to do this, however, Piter’s bill would trigger a review and possible cancelation of all of the bilateral agreements between Mexico and the U.S.

The bill Piter is proposing would specifically cancel the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War and ceded Texas and California as well as parts of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming to the U.S. if Trump cancels NAFTA.

“The goal is to foresee and prevent any negative effects on Mexico if Trump becomes president of the United States,” he said.

If enacted, the bill would also ban public funds from being used by the finance ministry if it is “against the country’s interest.” This is perhaps in response to Videgaray, who was the individual responsible for inviting Trump to Mexico and ensuring the visit happened. It would not only prevent the country from paying for a Trump visit, but it would also prevent the country from paying for Trump’s border wall that he vehemently demands the country supply.

Another portion of the bill would require that Mexico retaliate if a “President Trump” were to specifically target Mexicans living in the US in any way economically. This is a reference to previous statements Trump has made that he would block remittance payments to Mexico if the country didn’t voluntarily pay for “the wall.” The retaliation would likely be in the form of a similar tax on the more than one million Americans who are currently living in Mexico.

He explained that he wants the U.S. to understand there is a lot to lose if they intend to attack Mexico. Furthermore, if Trump attacks Sen. Piter personally, he isn’t concerned, because “As a Mexican, I already feel attacked and outraged at Trump. That’s why we have to act.”

“We can’t take a partisan view of this,” says Sen. Piter. “All parties in the senate are in agreement that Mexico needs to stand up for itself and strengthen its relationship with the United States. We want to shut Trump’s mouth, which has been spewing this hateful speech.”

He hopes the bill will come to the floor this week.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Fri Sep 09, 2016 12:02 pm

Good luck with all that, dear Mexico.

Christ, not even FedGov could take Texas back from Texans.

Still, I like the trend of treaty chaos. After all, the global hegemon has been disregarding them for centuries now, aye? Why should anyone else keep up the kayfabe? WHAT'S IN IT FER ME, PAL?

I see a similar destabilization ahead for the American West, but not from La Raza: from states. There's a movement afoot, funded because the business plan implications are so obvious, to take back Fed land, which composes a considerable percentage of those states. The overall secular trendline in Washington DC has been so relentlessly Federal Over-Reach, I'd be shocked if we saw a president ever try to march -- or even talk -- in the opposite direction.

A Trump administration would be a lot like a BushAdmin -- a whole lot of public grand-standing about the irresponsible, over-funded, out of control Federal government but a legislative & regulatory agenda that only targets specific agencies and agendas, while advancing business subsidies for their donors and enhancing the executive branch powers & homeland security police state.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby NeonLX » Fri Sep 09, 2016 12:55 pm

At some point, this country (with us in it) will go past the event horizon into whatever passes for a societal black hole. My sincere hope is that I/we can get out before that passage is complete.
America is a fucked society because there is no room for essential human dignity. Its all about what you have, not who you are.--Joe Hillshoist
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 09, 2016 3:26 pm

Three Things Media Should Know About Harold Hamm, Trump’s Leading Pick For Energy Secretary
Research ››› July 22, 2016 2:31 PM EDT ››› DENISE ROBBINS

Fracking industry billionaire Harold Hamm is the “leading contender” to be energy secretary in a Donald Trump administration, according to a Reuters source, which would make Hamm the first ever U.S. energy secretary drawn directly from the oil and gas industry. Hamm has a history of influencing government officials to promote legislation that benefits his company’s bottom line, exploited the Orlando shooting tragedy to call for more oil drilling, and tried to suppress scientific research that was unfavorable to the fracking industry.
Harold Hamm, Who Would Be First Energy Secretary Drawn From Fossil Fuel Industry, Has History Of Pushing Industry Agenda At Expense Of Public Interest

Reuters: Trump Considering Oil Industry Executive Harold Hamm As Energy Secretary. GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump is considering Continental Resources CEO Harold Hamm to serve as his energy secretary, according to a Reuters report. The article noted that a prominent Republican oil investor said Trump campaign officials told him Hamm is “the leading contender” for the position. If appointed, Hamm would be the “first U.S. energy secretary drawn directly from the oil and gas industry since the cabinet position was created in 1977," according to Reuters. [Reuters, 7/21/16]

Hamm Teamed Up With OK Attorney General Who Has Led Fight Against Environmental And Public Health Protections. In 2014, a New York Times investigation documented that Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt and other Republican attorneys general were engaged in an “unprecedented, secretive alliance” with large fossil fuel companies to “push back against the Obama regulatory agenda," and that Hamm was one of Pruitt’s “closest partners.” Hamm served as chairman of Pruitt’s re-election campaign in 2013 and 2014, and in recent years, Pruitt has been fighting the Environmental Protection Agency’s efforts to protect drinking water from industrial pollution and reduce methane emissions, among other environmental and health safeguards. [The New York Times, 12/6/14; OK Energy Today, 2/4/15; EPA.gov, accessed 7/22/16; OAG.OK.gov, 5/3/13]

Hamm Is A Member Of Lobbying Group Behind Policy Allowing Fracking Companies To Pollute Drinking Water. Hamm is a member of the Interstate Oil And Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC), a “quasi-governmental” organization created by Congress that essentially serves as an oil industry lobbying group and “has been quietly working for decades to restrict federal oversight of oil and gas,” as InsideClimate News (ICN) reported. The IOGCC claimed credit for a measure within the 2005 Energy Policy Act that exempted hydraulic fracturing -- or fracking -- from regulation under the Safe Drinking Water Act. That provision, known as the “Halliburton loophole,” has “helped enable the modern fracking boom that has created vast economic benefits, but also has been implicated in cases of drinking water contamination, air pollution and rising emissions of climate-changing methane,” ICN reported. ICN further stated:

The IOGCC's efforts have helped keep regulation of oil and gas development mostly in the hands of states, resulting in a patchwork of laws that allows companies to pollute more in some states than in others. The dearth of federal energy regulation and inconsistent state practices have played a role in infrastructure disasters such as water contamination and most recently the Aliso Canyon natural gas leak, according to environmental and health groups.

While little known and working with a relatively modest budget of $1 million, the IOGCC has tallied an impressive winning streak of helping to keep federal oversight at bay. When members of Congress tried to close the Halliburton loophole in 2009, several states adopted resolutions to preserve it—using language directly from an IOGCC resolution. Top state regulators have testified on the IOGCC's behalf before Congress to defend fracking's safety. The group also resisted federal rules on underground natural gas storage, and worked with former Rep. John Boehner's office to gather support for a bill to block fracking regulations on public lands. [InsideClimate News, 4/11/16]

Hamm Defended Oil And Gas Subsidies, Which Majority Of Americans Oppose. In 2012, Hamm testified before Congress against proposals to repeal oil industry tax breaks, claiming that removing the subsidies would threaten an industry that “holds the key to job creation, balance of trade and national security,” according to prepared remarks reviewed by The Hill. But a 2011 NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found that 74 percent of Americans totally or mostly approved of “eliminating tax credits for oil and gas industries.” And the bi-annual University of Texas at Austin Energy Poll has consistently shown that only a minority of Americans favor the federal government subsidizing the oil industry. [The Hill, 6/11/12; Wall Street Journal, accessed 7/21/16; University of Texas at Austin Energy Poll, 1/10/16]

Hamm Behind Successful Campaign To Lift Oil Export Ban. Hamm and his company Continental Resources “spearheaded” the successful campaign to lift the decades-long ban on crude oil exports, DeSmogBlog concluded based on a review of a document detailing the company’s involvement. According to Bloomberg, Hamm himself “visited Capitol Hill almost weekly and testified at some of the at least nine congressional hearings on exports.” DeSmogBlog explained that lifting the oil export ban would “result in large increases in fracking for oil in the U.S.” [DeSmogBlog, 12/28/15; 8/10/15; Bloomberg, 12/21/15]

Hamm Exploited Domestic Terrorism To Push For More U.S. Oil Drilling

Hamm Exploited Orlando Shooting To Call For More Drilling. During his July 20 speech supporting Trump at the 2016 Republican National Convention, Hamm stated: "Every time we can't drill a well in America, terrorism is being funded. Orlando brought this home once again. … Every onerous regulation puts American lives at risk. Developing America's own oil supply is a matter of national security.” Hamm made a similar claim on CNBC’s Closing Bell, saying that crude oil is “the biggest geopolitical weapon that we have … in the world. And certainly we do not need to be funding the nations funding terrorism. And that’s what we’re doing unless we produce more here.” [PR Newswire, 7/20/16; CNBC, Closing Bell, 7/20/16]

But Officials Found No Link Between Terrorist Groups And Orlando Shooter. The CIA chief said he was not “able to uncover any link” between the Orlando shooter Omar Mateen and ISIS, The Guardian reported, despite Mateen pledging allegiance to the group as he killed 49 people at an Orlando nightclub. The FBI similarly found no connection between Mateen and any terrorist groups, according to The Daily Beast. [The Guardian, 6/16/16; The Daily Beast, 6/14/16]

And Evidence Suggests Increased U.S. Oil Production Has Little Impact On -- Or May Even Help -- ISIS. Fortune reporter Chris Matthews described the claim that expanding U.S. energy could harm ISIS as a “specious” argument, in part because the increase in U.S. oil production and subsequent fall in global oil prices has correlated with the rise of ISIS:

[T]he huge increase in American supply as the result of advances in fracking technology has been one of the driving forces behind the sudden fall in oil prices that began in late 2014. And it’s hard to argue, given ISIS, that the Middle East has become any safer for the U.S.

In fact, the decline in the price of oil and the rise of ISIS correlate strongly. In early 2014, ISIS began capturing major cities in Syria and Iraq at the same time that global stockpiles of oil began increasing unsustainably. And though the rise of ISIS and general instability in the Middle East is the result of multifarious, complex forces, the desire to exert power through controlling the flow of oil from that region is undoubtedly a major factor.

One could even argue that the the United States success in nearly doubling its production of oil to 9.3 million barrels per day in 2015 has helped to exacerbate the very same tensions that have given ISIS an opportunity to gain a foothold in the region.

[...]

When one understands the stakes of the game being played—the power that results from supplying natural gas to Europe—it makes more sense why a recession-racked Russia, already expending resources on the conflict in the Ukraine—would decide to begin fighting a second front in the Middle East. It also makes sense why countries like Qatar and Saudi Arabia would risk stoking the flames of Sunni extremism in their support of anti-[Syrian President Basshar al-]Assad movements.

And these dynamics show why the strength of the U.S. energy exploration industry can actually cause headaches for the United States abroad, as countries that could once count on sky-high oil and gas prices to underwrite their power scramble for market share in a world of cheap energy.

CNBC.com similarly reported that security experts “say low oil prices may serve the [ISIS] terrorist network’s goals,” quoting Eurasia group president Ian Bremmer as saying: “The bigger impact of low oil prices is the delegitimization of the gulf monarchies, so paradoxically, a sustained oil crash is actually a plus for ISIS.” CNBC.com quoted other security experts who offered differing opinions about how global oil prices could affect ISIS, but summarized them as saying “it will take a lot more than low oil prices to really damage the funding operations of ISIS.” [Fortune, 12/21/15; CNBC.com, 12/21/15]

Security Expert Peter Harrell Outlined Series Of Steps To Undercut ISIS’ Oil Trade -- And None Involved Expanding U.S. Oil Production. Peter Harrell, adjunct senior fellow at the Center for New American Security, presented to Congress a set of steps that the U.S. and coalition partners should take to undercut ISIS’ oil and gas revenue, including “escalating the military action against oil and gas targets in ISIS territory,” “put[ting] pressure on Turkey and the Kurdish Regional government in northern Iraq to crack down on the oil smuggling that does exist,” and “escalat[ing] our efforts to target the flow of oil-related equipment to ISIS territory.” None of Harrell’s recommendations involved expanding oil production and drilling in the U.S. [Center for a New American Security, 12/10/15]

Securing America’s Future Energy: Countries Cannot Achieve Energy Security If They Are “Economically Beholden To Oil." The Energy Security Leadership Council, a project of Securing America’s Future Energy -- which describes itself as a “non-partisan, action-oriented organization committed to combating the economic and national security threats posed by America’s dependence on oil” -- released a report in 2012 titled: “The New American Oil Boom: Implications for Energy Security.” The report stated:

The goal of self-sufficiency in energy supplies misdiagnoses the problem as one characterized largely by import levels. In fact, energy security is almost entirely a function of the importance of oil consumption in the domestic economy—oil dependence—and is not related to the original source of that oil. A nation cannot achieve energy security so long as it is economically beholden to oil, which is priced in a global market. [Energy Security Leadership Council, 2012]

Hamm Worked To Suppress Scientific Research Linking Fracking To Earthquakes

Report: Hamm Exerted Pressure On Oklahoma Scientists To Keep Them Quiet About Link Between Fracking And Earthquakes. Scientists have “known for decades that injecting waste fluid in deep disposal wells -- from oil and gas or other industrial activities -- can cause earthquakes in rare cases,” according to E&E News, and in recent years scientists have discovered a connection between Oklahoma’s oil and gas activities and the state’s dramatic increase in earthquakes. Yet according to emails obtained by E&E News, Hamm and other Oklahoma officials worked to suppress the scientists’ findings. From E&E News:

Oklahoma's state scientists have suspected for years that oil and gas operations in the state were causing a swarm of earthquakes, but in public they rejected such a connection.

When the Oklahoma Geological Survey (OGS) did cautiously agree with other scientists about such a link, emails obtained by EnergyWire show the state seismologist was called into meetings with his boss, University of Oklahoma President David Boren, and oil executives "concerned" about the acknowledgement.

One of the oilmen was Continental Resources Chairman Harold Hamm, a leading donor to the university.

[...]

Hamm is also one of the industry executives in Oklahoma who don't believe in a connection between disposal and earthquakes. Asked about the shaking after a 2014 congressional hearing, Hamm told EnergyWire, "It's certainly not related to oil and gas activity."

Perhaps more relevant to Boren and Holland is Hamm's relationship to the university. In March 2011, Boren declared Hamm's $20 million gift launching the Harold Hamm Oklahoma Diabetes Center "the largest single gift in the history of the Health Sciences Center."
In addition, Boren serves on Continental's board of directors. In 2013, he received $272,700 in cash and stock for his service.

In a media outing earlier this year, Holland acknowledged to reporters from the Tulsa World, The New York Times and The Washington Post that the industry has tried to influence his work.

"I can't really talk about it," Holland told the reporters. "We're going to do the right thing."
But Bob Jackman says Holland did talk about it last year and indicated that it was Hamm who was leaning on him. [E&E News, 3/3/15]

Hamm Tried To Have Scientists Conducting Earthquake Research Dismissed. In response to the University of Oklahoma scientists’ earthquake research, Hamm told Larry Grillot, then-dean of the university’s Mewbourne College of Earth and Energy, that he was “upset at some of the earthquake reporting to the point that he would like to see select [Oklahoma Geological Survey (OGS)] staff dismissed,” according to an email from Grillot obtained by Bloomberg News. Grillot also wrote that Hamm indicated that he would be "visiting with Governor [Mary] Fallin on the topic of moving the OGS out of the University of Oklahoma." Bloomberg added that “Hamm's meeting with Grillot resulted in no apparent changes at the university.” [Bloomberg News, 5/15/15]

http://mediamatters.org/research/2016/0 ... ary/211836
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby 82_28 » Fri Sep 09, 2016 3:32 pm

There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby backtoiam » Fri Sep 09, 2016 5:49 pm

Wombaticus Rex » Fri Sep 09, 2016 11:02 am wrote:Good luck with all that, dear Mexico.

Christ, not even FedGov could take Texas back from Texans.

Still, I like the trend of treaty chaos. After all, the global hegemon has been disregarding them for centuries now, aye? Why should anyone else keep up the kayfabe? WHAT'S IN IT FER ME, PAL?

I see a similar destabilization ahead for the American West, but not from La Raza: from states. There's a movement afoot, funded because the business plan implications are so obvious, to take back Fed land, which composes a considerable percentage of those states. The overall secular trendline in Washington DC has been so relentlessly Federal Over-Reach, I'd be shocked if we saw a president ever try to march -- or even talk -- in the opposite direction.

A Trump administration would be a lot like a BushAdmin -- a whole lot of public grand-standing about the irresponsible, over-funded, out of control Federal government but a legislative & regulatory agenda that only targets specific agencies and agendas, while advancing business subsidies for their donors and enhancing the executive branch powers & homeland security police state.


Good luck with all that, dear Mexico.


Yes and a threat so hollow as to be an embarrassment to Senator Rios.

There's a movement afoot, funded because the business plan implications are so obvious, to take back Fed land, which composes a considerable percentage of those states.


Yes there is but the locals will have to fight some big power to wrestle land back under their control and make it legal. People that play on the level of Henry Reid and the Clintons and even bigger. I have a hard time seeing a way for states to take back control of land that has the potential for so many lucrative timber, oil, and mining contracts and leasing opportunities, and there is no telling what existing contracts are worth to the Feds.

One of the reasons the Feds say the locals shouldn't have control over their own land is "because they might exploit the resources." :rofl:


A Trump administration would be a lot like a BushAdmin -- a whole lot of public grand-standing about the irresponsible, over-funded, out of control Federal government but a legislative & regulatory agenda that only targets specific agencies and agendas, while advancing business subsidies for their donors and enhancing the executive branch powers & homeland security police state.


Yes and the game of Clue as we dig around in the dirt bag searching for clues will be much more fun if Trump is President than Clinton. I'm tired of digging around in Clinton's dirt bag already because it is boring as hell. When Bush was President digging around in the Republican dirt bag was more fun because Bush was such a never ending buffoon and I doubt Trump will disappoint in being an enormous orange buffoon, sort of like a more articulate Bush buffoon, but spray tan orange. :rofl2

One of the things that will piss me off the most about about a Trump presidency is what he and Harold Hamm the fracking king will do to what is left of our fresh water. Trump, being the egomaniac that he is, has spent his entire life attempting to become a really big time billionaire so he can sit in the back smoky rooms with the really big guys.

With trump and Hamm in the wheel house, if the price of oil goes back up enough make fracking the very lucrative business it once was, we can kiss an enormous amount of what is left of our freshwater good bye because they will pollute the hell out of it for sure.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby PufPuf93 » Fri Sep 09, 2016 6:22 pm

One of the stupidest acts the USA could do would be to disperse the Federal lands to state or private ownership (I would include to a lesser degree Tribal ownership).

What makes the Federal lands attractive is the protection that has already been given because of the status as federal lands. Federal land ownership and management can and should be criticized but one can guarantee that the lands would be less pristine, less natural, less valuable, and more degraded without the current and historic federal ownership.

I cringe over the thought of what would happen if federal lands were to be dispersed and this issue will be with us for a long time (hopefully as long time implies stay in federal ownership).
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby Sounder » Fri Sep 09, 2016 7:12 pm

What makes the Federal lands attractive is the protection that has already been given because of the status as federal lands. Federal land ownership and management can and should be criticized but one can guarantee that the lands would be less pristine, less natural, less valuable, and more degraded without the current and historic federal ownership.

This is the truth and one reason to try to preserve a federal system, although the federal system itself now seems willing to sell bits and pieces. We do not seem to have much of a voice for environmental stewardship. I would love to see Wendell Berry make more noise.
All these things will continue as long as coercion remains a central element of our mentality.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby backtoiam » Fri Sep 09, 2016 8:12 pm

This is sort of clever in a deeply poetic way.


September 7, 2016
Trump’s Last Supper

Image

I was interested in this photo of Trump in Philadelphia last week during a visit to a black church. Although he’s hardly registering any support at all from African-Americans, he’s been catering intently on the community for several weeks now, especially to the churches. Along the way, much of traditional media has been crediting the effort as reflected in this Reuters article, and especially the slideshow.

It’s a painful picture for several reasons. The obvious one has to do with the photo of Iofemi Hightower. A college student at Delaware State who was visiting home in Newark in 2007, she and three friends were killed execution-style while hanging out in a schoolyard. Sitting in front of her mother, Shalga, who is listening to Trump, the presence of the photo creates the unavoidable expectation for a serious exchange. Or at least the appearance of one. Combine the presence of the photo with the overhanging skepticism and resentment toward Trump in the black community and you’d expect some sense of connection. As the four other participants look on in obvious discomfort, however, we see Trump in a characteristic pose, holding court.

What also struck me about the photo is how it looks like a section of Michelangelo’s Last Supper. The way Trump is used to laying blame on racial groups, you could imagine how his presence in this photo op, as he performs this incongruous campaign pivot, is a twist on the expectation of new followers and their allegiance. (I couldn’t help noticing how Trump’s body language is also similar to that of Simon the Zealot, the last man at the table in the original painting.)

Image

In a year where skepticism and political gestures ring more hollow than ever, the lack of connection or deeper intent is classically evident here.

Photo via The New York Times On the Trail slideshow: Week of Aug. 28.

(photo: Mark Makela for The New York Times. caption: Mr. Trump on Friday at the Greater Exodus Baptist Church in Philadelphia with Shalga Hightower, 55, whose daughter Iofemi Hightower was killed in 2007.)

http://www.readingthepictures.org/2016/ ... st-supper/
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby 8bitagent » Sat Sep 10, 2016 2:32 am



I have to hand it to the powers that be/globalists/neocons/ect for finding a seriously ingenius way to ensure their candidate got (s)elected...just have your narcissistic pal as the opposition, whip up some Klan/Nazi memes,
and spend hundreds of millions of wealthy donors money on the world's top analytic number crunching scientists...oh, and be ready to hack the election...but claim Russia is trying to hack it
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby backtoiam » Sat Sep 10, 2016 2:39 am

8bit

I have to hand it to the powers that be/globalists/neocons/ect for finding a seriously ingenius way to ensure their candidate got (s)elected...just have your narcissistic pal as the opposition, whip up some Klan/Nazi memes,
and spend hundreds of millions of wealthy donors money on the world's top analytic number crunching scientists...oh, and be ready to hack the election...but claim Russia is trying to hack it


It is absolutely brilliant and practically invisible. The only thing that sort of surprises me this go round is the level of nastiness and rancor Trump is taking it to. I am accustomed to watching these people do the fake boxing routine but this one seems nastier than usual. Maybe it isn't but it seems like it. At times its almost enough to make you think he is serious but he isn't.
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby 8bitagent » Sat Sep 10, 2016 3:27 am

backtoiam » Sat Sep 10, 2016 1:39 am wrote:
8bit

I have to hand it to the powers that be/globalists/neocons/ect for finding a seriously ingenius way to ensure their candidate got (s)elected...just have your narcissistic pal as the opposition, whip up some Klan/Nazi memes,
and spend hundreds of millions of wealthy donors money on the world's top analytic number crunching scientists...oh, and be ready to hack the election...but claim Russia is trying to hack it


It is absolutely brilliant and practically invisible. The only thing that sort of surprises me this go round is the level of nastiness and rancor Trump is taking it to. I am accustomed to watching these people do the fake boxing routine but this one seems nastier than usual. Maybe it isn't but it seems like it. At times its almost enough to make you think he is serious but he isn't.


Like Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, or Timothy Mcveigh, the seemingly controlled patsy does not seem aware he is used as a fool. They're getting Marinus vanderLUBED. As much as it make have been a lark when Trump was prodded into running for prez,
he and his staff may genuinely be ham handedly trying to win...and indeed, CNN and other mainline polls shows him up 2 points against Hillary and neck and neck in key battleground states.

But, like Flight 93 missing it's target, there's always hiccups in these plans I realize. ie: There's an off chance November 8th Trump actually *could* win.

Donald Trump talked politics with Bill Clinton weeks before launching 2016 bid


https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics ... story.html
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby backtoiam » Sat Sep 10, 2016 4:21 am

8bit
But, like Flight 93 missing it's target, there's always hiccups in these plans I realize. ie: There's an off chance November 8th Trump actually *could* win


I have been thinking something along the same lines lately. If Hillary is truly as sick as I suspect she could be and there is nothing hocus pocus about that deal that could be a hiccup too. I guess they could always use her vice pres as a pres candidate though. Trump would garner far more votes than he would but the voting machines can take care of that problem.

If that happens I can just hear Trump....

The Man: "Donald, we have a problem, Hillary is too sick too pull this off. I hate to break it to you but you will have to be President."

Trump: " Whut? Awwww hell no! That wasn't the deal. This was supposed to be a high paying reality show. I didn't sign up for this shit!"
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Re: TRUMP is seriously dangerous

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 10, 2016 1:24 pm

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