Now I have to Vote For Trump (Page 6/27)
newf FEB 29, 11:07 AM

quote
Originally posted by jaskispyder:


What has Trump done to "Make America Great Again"? The guy is still an empty suit, just like Obama. Hope and Change....



I think most that have tried to make much positive change have quickly realized that is near impossible with the dysfunction in Washington. Maybe if someone like Trump does get in it will cause the house of cards to fall and something better will result.

Wasn't there an Ivy league professor that said he would run and if elected would change the way Congress etc. was set up and then resign once that was done?

Edit. Lawrence Lessig presidential campaign, 2016 http://lessig2016.us/the-plan/

[This message has been edited by newf (edited 02-29-2016).]

Formula88 FEB 29, 07:58 PM

quote
Originally posted by jaskispyder:


What has Trump done to "Make America Great Again"? The guy is still an empty suit, just like Obama. Hope and Change....



I agree completely. He's the same thing as Obama, but playing to the other side.
Trump is playing very similar to Obama's first presidential run. He's playing to people's anger and emotions and they're cheering the bluster without actually paying attention to what he's saying and considering what that really means.


Trump, if anything, is proof that conservatives won't necessarily vote for anyone just because there's an (R) after their name.

An open letter from Ben Sasse, the Republican Senator from Nebraska.

quote
AN OPEN LETTER TO TRUMP SUPPORTERS

To my friends supporting Donald Trump:

The Trump coalition is broad and complicated, but I believe many Trump fans are well-meaning. I have spoken at length with many of you, both inside and outside Nebraska. You are rightly worried about our national direction. You ache about a crony-capitalist leadership class that is not urgent about tackling our crises. You are right to be angry.

I’m as frustrated and saddened as you are about what’s happening to our country. But I cannot support Donald Trump.

Please understand: I’m not an establishment Republican, and I will never support Hillary Clinton. I’m a movement conservative who was elected over the objections of the GOP establishment. My current answer for who I would support in a hypothetical matchup between Mr. Trump and Mrs. Clinton is: Neither of them. I sincerely hope we select one of the other GOP candidates, but if Donald Trump ends up as the GOP nominee, conservatives will need to find a third option.

Mr. Trump’s relentless focus is on dividing Americans, and on tearing down rather than building back up this glorious nation. Much like President Obama, he displays essentially no understanding of the fact that, in the American system, we have a constitutional system of checks and balances, with three separate but co-equal branches of government. And the task of public officials is to be public “servants.” The law is king, and the people are boss. But have you noticed how Mr. Trump uses the word “Reign” – like he thinks he’s running for King? It’s creepy, actually. Nebraskans are not looking for a king. We yearn instead for the recovery of a Constitutional Republic.

At this point in Nebraska discussions, many of you have immediately gotten practical: “Okay, fine, you think there are better choices than Trump. But you would certainly still vote for Trump over Clinton in a general election, right?”

Before I explain why my answer is “Neither of them,” let me correct some nonsense you might have heard on the internet of late.

WHY I RAN FOR SENATE

***No, I’m not a career politician. (I had never run for anything until being elected to the U.S. Senate fifteen months ago, and I ran precisely because I actually want to make America great again.)
***No, I’m not a lawyer who has never created a job. (I was a business guy before becoming a college president in my hometown.)
***No, I’m not part of the Establishment. (Sheesh, I had attack ads by the lobbyist class run against me while I was on a bus tour doing 16 months of townhalls across Nebraska. Why? Precisely because I was not the preferred candidate of Washington.)
***No, I’m not concerned about political job security. (The very first thing I did upon being sworn in in January 2015 was to introduce a constitutional amendment for term limits – this didn’t exactly endear me to my new colleagues.)
***No, I’m not for open borders. (The very first official trip I took in the Senate was to observe and condemn how laughably porous the Texas/Mexican border is. See 70 tweets from @bensasse in February 2015.)
***No, I’m not a “squishy,” feel-good, grow-government moderate. (I have the 4th most-conservative voting record in the Senate: https://www.conservativerev...bers/benjamin-sasse/ http://www.heritageactionsc...be…/member/S001197 )

In my very first speech to the Senate, I told my colleagues that “The people despise us all.” This institution needs to get to work, not on the lobbyists’ priorities, but on the people’s: https://youtu.be/zQMoB4aUn04?t=3m8s

Now, to the question at hand: Will I pledge to vote for just any “Republican” nominee over Hillary Clinton?

Let’s begin by rejecting naïve purists: Politics has no angels. Politics is not about creating heaven on earth. Politics is simply about preserving a framework for ordered liberty – so that free people can find meaning and happiness not in politics but in their families, their neighborhoods, their work.

POLITICAL PARTIES

Now, let’s talk about political parties: parties are just tools to enact the things that we believe. Political parties are not families; they are not religions; they are not nations – they are often not even on the level of sports loyalties. They are just tools. I was not born Republican. I chose this party, for as long as it is useful.

If our Party is no longer working for the things we believe in – like defending the sanctity of life, stopping ObamaCare, protecting the Second Amendment, etc. – then people of good conscience should stop supporting that party until it is reformed.

VOTING

Now, let’s talk about voting: Voting is usually just about choosing the lesser evil of the most viable candidates.

“Usually…” But not always. Certain moments are larger. They cause us to explicitly ask: Who are we as a people? What does the way we vote here say about our shared identity? What is actually the president’s job?

THE PRESIDENT’S CORE CALLING

The president’s job is not about just mindlessly shouting the word “strong” – as if Vladimir Putin, who has been strongly bombing civilian populations in Syria the last month, is somehow a model for the American presidency. No, the president’s core calling is to “Preserve, Protect, and Defend the Constitution.”

Before we ever get into any technical policy fights – about pipelines, or marginal tax rates, or term limits, or Medicare reimbursement codes – America is first and fundamentally about a shared Constitutional creed. America is exceptional, because she is at her heart a big, bold truth claim about human dignity, natural rights, and self-control – and therefore necessarily about limited rather than limitless government.

THE MEANING OF AMERICA

America is the most exceptional nation in the history of the world because our Constitution is the best political document that’s ever been written. It said something different than almost any other government had said before: Most governments before said that might makes right, that government decides what our rights are and that the people are just dependent subjects. Our Founders said that God gives us rights by nature, and that government is not the author or source of our rights. Government is just our shared project to secure those rights.

Government exists only because the world is fallen, and some people want to take your property, your liberty, and your life. Government is tasked with securing a framework for ordered liberty where “we the people” can in our communities voluntarily build something great together for our kids and grandkids. That’s America. Freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of association, freedom of speech – the First Amendment is the heartbeat of the American Constitution, of the American idea itself.

WHAT IS MOST IMPORTANT TO MR. TRUMP?

So let me ask you: Do you believe the beating heart of Mr. Trump’s candidacy has been a defense of the Constitution? Do you believe it’s been an impassioned defense of the First Amendment – or an attack on it?

Which of the following quotes give you great comfort that he’s in love with the First Amendment, that he is committed to defending the Constitution, that he believes in executive restraint, that he understands servant leadership?

Statements from Trump:

***“We’re going to open up libel laws and we’re going to have people sue you like you’ve never got sued before.”
***“When the students poured into Tiananmen Square, the Chinese government almost blew it. They were vicious, they were horrible, but they put it down with strength. That shows you the power of strength. Our country is right now perceived as weak…”
***Putin, who has killed journalists and is pillaging Ukraine, is a great leader.
***The editor of National Review “should not be allowed on TV and the FCC should fine him.”
***On whether he will use executive orders to end-run Congress, as President Obama has illegally done: "I won't refuse it. I'm going to do a lot of things." “I mean, he’s led the way, to be honest with you.”
***“Sixty-eight percent would not leave under any circumstance. I think that means murder. It think it means anything.”
***On the internet: “I would certainly be open to closing areas” of it.
***His lawyers to people selling anti-Trump t-shirts: “Mr. Trump considers this to be a very serious matter and has authorized our legal team to take all necessary and appropriate actions to bring an immediate halt...”
***Similar threatening legal letters to competing campaigns running ads about his record.

And on it goes…

IF MR. TRUMP BECOMES THE NOMINEE...

Given what we know about him today, here’s where I’m at: If Donald Trump becomes the Republican nominee, my expectation is that I will look for some third candidate – a conservative option, a Constitutionalist.

I do not claim to speak for a movement, but I suspect I am far from alone. After listening to Nebraskans in recent weeks, and talking to a great many people who take oaths seriously, I think many are in the same place. I believe a sizable share of Christians – who regard threats against religious liberty as arguably the greatest crisis of our time – are unwilling to support any candidate who does not make a full-throated defense of the First Amendment a first commitment of their candidacy.

Conservatives understand that all men are created equal and made in the image of God, but also that government must be limited so that fallen men do not wield too much power. A presidential candidate who boasts about what he'll do during his "reign" and refuses to condemn the KKK cannot lead a conservative movement in America.

TO MAKE AMERICA GREAT

Thank you for listening. While I recognize that we disagree about how to make America great again, we agree that this should be our goal. We need more people engaged in the civic life of our country—not fewer. I genuinely appreciate how much many of you care about this country, and that you are demanding something different from Washington. I’m going to keep doing the same thing.

But I can’t support Donald Trump.

Humbly,

Ben Sasse
Nebraska


https://www.facebook.com/sa...073597391141?fref=nf
Thunderstruck GT FEB 29, 08:02 PM
LOL!
jaskispyder FEB 29, 08:30 PM
Anyone catch John Oliver?
http://www.vox.com/2016/2/2...mp-last-week-tonight

Doni Hagan FEB 29, 10:14 PM

quote
Originally posted by jaskispyder:

Anyone catch John Oliver?



Absolutely friggin' brilliant!! I've been sending links to the segment all week.

pokeyfiero MAR 01, 12:09 AM

quote
Originally posted by jaskispyder:

Anyone catch John Oliver?
http://www.vox.com/2016/2/2...mp-last-week-tonight



Frigging hilarious.


I admit I don't like the guy because he is an arrogant loud mouth egotistic bullshitter so this was all the more funny.

On a political note My views and opinions on the the stupid public this nation is choke full of are completely validated.
Just look at the candidates the two largest political gangs will support and defend. .
Trump and Clinton. LOL
I'll just drop the mic and walk off stage with that.

Doni Hagan MAR 01, 04:08 PM

quote
Originally posted by pokeyfiero:


Trump treats everything like business.
Politically that is sketchy. People don't like that **** .




quote
Former KKK leader David Duke endorsed Trump and said anyone who doesn’t vote for him is betraying their white heritage.

White supremacists and racists love the guy and say he has caused a resurgence in their ranks.

Now, in Iowa, we see that Trump’s bigotry is spreading to high school basketball games. It’s ugly and infuriating.

Dallas Center-Grimes High School in Des Moines is predominantly white. After their basketball team, which appeared also to be predominantly white, lost to Perry High School, fans began chanting “Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump” at the opposing players — many of who were Latino.

The coach confirmed that almost all of his Latino players were actually born right there in Iowa.

Of course, the students were disturbed by it. Staff from Perry High School said the chants, which have actually happened before, were demoralizing.

Players from Perry said they regularly are forced to endure bigotry from opposing teams before, during and after the games.

What’s wild is that to the white students from Dallas Center-Grimes High School even chanting the name, the single word “Trump,” was an intimidating insult. They knew exactly how simply the word “Trump” would make other kids feel.

This is not 1936 or 1966, but here we are, in 2016, with a leading Republican candidate so closely identified with bigotry that kids know saying his name will unsettle students of color.

This is what happened to Jackie Robinson as he broke the color line. Now, the color lines are fully broken, but the same old ugliness is filling sports arenas and white children feel fully empowered to be public bigots.

Hell, if Trump can do it, why can’t they?

As it turns out, what happened in Iowa is not an isolated incident of white students using Trump to intimidate others.

In Indiana, white high school students held a cutout of Trump and yelled “Build the Wall” at opposing students and fans.

What this confirms for all of us is that racism and bigotry aren’t dying with previous generations. They are being gleefully passed from one generation to the next and Donald Trump is absolutely energizing this process.

His campaign is fueled by bigotry. It’s foundation is bigotry. And the deeper and uglier he goes, the more popular he gets.

My sincere guess is that Donald Trump is going to crush it in the 13 Super Tuesday states tomorrow. Many of them are in the old confederacy and they adore Trump.

What we see here, though, is that real children are already paying the price for his popularity.



http://www.nydailynews.com/...-1.2547682?cid=bitly

[This message has been edited by Doni Hagan (edited 03-01-2016).]

pokeyfiero MAR 01, 04:51 PM

quote
Originally posted by Doni Hagan:


http://www.nydailynews.com/...-1.2547682?cid=bitly




Yeah, I agree that he inspires the worst in people and gives them the courage to let out their repressed opinions they might normally consider distasteful uncouth or god forbid just wrong and immoral.
But it is the kind of courage that isn't really courage. The reason they repress these things is the same reason they will release them openly. It has to do with being apart of a big enough group of people to remain safe.
If society rains on you for being an insecure uneducated troglodyte racist chances are you won't be showing those colors.
If there is suddenly some one of importance creating a large enough umbrella group they will get under it and those colors won't run.

But is it a bad thing?

I think it works both ways.
Many people have these things brought to their attention and decide that isn't what they want to be and change for the better.

Now I realize that Racism is your thing Doni but it is so much more.
This upsetting of the taboo's in our social divide is more than a rift of races.
Mixing up the interests of all the social demographics we have only brings more people on board the awareness train.
The more people onboard regardless of differences at least we start going in the same direction instead of pulling ourselves apart.

[This message has been edited by pokeyfiero (edited 03-01-2016).]

rogergarrison MAR 01, 04:52 PM
Oliver is a comedian. So this is his Trump show, whats he got on Obuma and Hillary ? It has to be a worse picture than this. Heres some Hillary material for him...


" This one is more about why we don’t want Hillary.

I think this sums it up well !

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are in a bar. Donald leans over, and with a smile on his face, says,

"The media are really tearing you apart for That Scandal."



Hillary: "You mean my lying about Benghazi?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "You mean the massive voter fraud?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "You mean the military not getting their votes counted?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Using my secret private server with classified material to Hide my Activities?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "The NSA monitoring our phone calls, emails and everything Else?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Using the Clinton Foundation as a cover for tax evasion, hiring cronies, and taking bribes from foreign countries?

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "You mean the drones being operated in our own country without The Benefit of the law?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Giving 123 Technologies $300 Million, and right afterward it Declared Bankruptcy and was sold to the Chinese?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "You mean arming the Muslim Brotherhood and hiring them in the White House?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Whitewater, Watergate committee, Vince Foster, commodity Deals?"

Trump: "No the other one:"



Hillary: "The IRS targeting conservatives?"

Trump: "No the other one:"



Hillary: "Turning Libya into chaos?"

Trump: "No the other one:"



Hillary: "Trashing Mubarak, one of our few Muslim friends?"

Trump: "No the other one:"



Hillary: "Turning our backs on Israel?"

Trump: "No the other one:"



Hillary: "The joke Iran Nuke deal? "

Trump: "No the other one:"



Hillary: "Leaving Iraq in chaos? "

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "The DOJ spying on the press?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "You mean HHS Secretary Sibelius shaking down health insurance Executives?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Giving our cronies in SOLYNDRA $500 MILLION DOLLARS and 3 Months Later they declared bankruptcy and then the Chinese bought it?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "The NSA monitoring citizens' ?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "The State Department interfering with an Inspector General Investigation on departmental sexual misconduct?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Me, The IRS, Clapper and Holder all lying to Congress?"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: "Threats to all of Bill's former mistresses to keep them quiet"

Trump: "No, the other one."



Hillary: “You means taking the $145,000,000.00 from Putin for the Uranium Bribe ? “

Trump : “ No the other one .”



Hillary: "I give up! ... Oh wait, I think I've got it! When I stole the White House furniture, silverware and China when Bill left Office?"

Trump: "THAT'S IT! I almost forgot about that one".



**********

Everything above is true. Yet she still gets the Democratic votes. Could there be that many stupid people in this country? "
pokeyfiero MAR 01, 04:58 PM

quote
Originally posted by rogergarrison:

. So this is his Trump show, "



Trump is the Trump show. LOL

That Hilary joke is funny too. But more sad.