People keep trying to involve him in the going ons around the world. People want and seek his opinions.
Whose fault is it?
Not like he's making press conferences denouncing and opining on .
ok i'll say it.
the pope should spend several years looking in the mirror while keeping his ing mouth shut.
People keep trying to involve him in the going ons around the world. People want and seek his opinions.
Whose fault is it?
Not like he's making press conferences denouncing and opining on .
This got Anderson is so ty at this asking question.
Guy is asking what favorite chicken Trump likes.
What a huge got. How about asking real questions you moron?
Will you leave?
It was disappointing. Those antiquated buildings could use some Hue lighting. Also they didn't let me bring in my Mossberg.
Probably not. I won't have much time anyway.
Also they didn't let me bring in my Mossberg.![]()
Trump repeats claim that he opposed Iraq war — then backtracks after pro-war interview surfaces
Republican presidential candidate doubled down, then backtracked on Thursday regarding his claim that he had always opposed the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.“I’m the one from 2002, 2003 who said we shouldn’t be doing it,” Trump told CNN’s Anderson Cooper early on during a GOP town hall event in Columbia, South Carolina.
However, Cooper later noted to the real estate mogul that, according to Buzzfeed, he actually backed the war during a 2002 interview with radio host Howard Stern.
“Are you for invading Iraq?” Stern asked at the time.
“Yeah, I guess so,” Trump told him. “I wish the first time it was done correctly.”
When told about the report, Trump replied by saying, “I could have said that. Nobody asked me. I wasn’t a politician. It was probably the first time anybody asked me that question.”
By the time the war began, he added, he opposed the war.
http://www.rawstory.com/2016/02/trum...e+Raw+Story%29
but if you bring your Riva turbo x, the beautiful sounds will distract you from the flaws.
Excavations under St. Peters were pretty cool tbh
Vatican city was walled centuries before Repugs started suckering bubbas, racists, xenophobes by (only) campaigning on immigration, which deflects from whom, what is, has been really ing over the Repug base.
what plays excellently in a slave state
===============
Trump told his supporters the story at a rally in South Carolina.
“He took 50 bullets and he dipped them in pig’s blood,” he said.
“And he had his men load his rifles and he lined up the fifty people, and they shot 49 of those people.
And the 50th person, he said, ‘You go back to your people and you tell them what happened.’ And for 25 years there wasn’t a problem.”
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewir...+%28TPMNews%29
How long has it been since south Carolina was a slave state?
irrelevant question.
If it's really irrelevant then we can go ahead and call new york, new Jersey, and Delaware slave states too. Or you could just clear things up and call SC a former confederate state instead of slave state
SC is both? what a great idea!
Moonbats forget we were a slave nation.
But, there are still quiet a few slave nations extant. I look forward to the moonbat walls of text. And by looking forward, I mean, studiously ignore.
Trump Shows His Inner Rabbit
I am sorry to note that Donald Trump no longer seems to be at war with the pope.
“No, I like him,” Trump said during a town hall on CNN. He added that he had “a lot of respect for the pope. I think he’s got a lot of personality.”
There are several troubling matters here. One is that there is nothing more dangerous than having Donald Trump express a sudden fondness for you.
“I like China.”
“I love Mexican people.”
“I love the Muslims.”
Trump, you’ll remember, got ticked off because Francis said that anybody who obsesses about building walls to keep people out “is not Christian.” Trump retorted that anybody who doubted the moral stupendousness of wall-builders was “disgraceful.”
But on CNN, Trump was reformulating. The pope’s comment was not so disgraceful after all. “I think it was probably a little bit nicer statement than it was reported by you folks in the media,” Trump said.
Now, you could see how he might have jumped to the wrong conclusion if somebody had yelled, “Hey, the pope thinks you’re not acting like a Christian!” while he was walking into McDonald’s for lunch. (He really likes McDonald’s. Thinks they’re clean. I refuse to follow that thought any further.)
But Trump pummeled the papacy with a prepared statement at a rally in a golf course clubhouse. Cynical minds might have thought that the candidate jumped on the pope’s comments because it looked like a good way to remind South Carolina voters about his plan for a border wall. The same minds might also suspect that as criticism mounted, the idea of a war with the Vatican looked less enticing.
Perhaps you didn’t see Trump’s town hall on CNN. It was very interesting, but there’s a limit to how many of these things you need to watch. You could learn a foreign language in the time it takes.
The great theme of the night was things that Donald Trump said that he now doesn’t remember, or didn’t necessarily mean. This happens all the time.
Either our great business genius is incapable of mental fact-checking, or he has about as much political courage as a rabbit.
A while ago, Trump joked that his sister Maryanne Trump Barry, a senior judge on the United States Court of Appeals, would make a
great Supreme Court justice. Ted Cruz pretended to take the idea seriously and laced into Judge Trump Barry as a “radical pro-abortion extremist.” (She once wrote the majority opinion in a ruling that found a New Jersey law outlawing partial-birth abortion uncons utional.)
Trump had three possible responses:
1) Point out that Samuel Alito, who is now one of the Supreme Court’s most right-wing members, heard the case, too, and came to the same decision.
2) Challenge Cruz to a duel for talking trash about his sister.
3) Change the subject entirely by describing Michael Jackson’s plastic surgery.
The answer is: None of the above! Although Trump did veer off into a disquisition on the plastic surgery issue later. Here’s the answer:
“I don’t even know what her views are on abortion. I really don’t. … She may have made a decision one way or the other. I never asked her.”
People, how many of you have siblings? Do you know how they feel about abortion? If your sister was one of the most influential jurists in the nation, would you keep up with her major decisions? At least have a minion leave newspaper clips on your desk?
The biggest part of the cornucopia of retractions, evasions and garbled babbling involved Iraq. Trump constantly brags that he was opposed to the Bush administration’s invasion. From the very, very beginning. But while the town hall was underway, BuzzFeed News posted a radio interview from Sept. 11, 2002, in which Howard Stern asked Trump if he thought American troops should go in, and Trump said, “Yeah, I guess so.”
Didn’t count! “When you’re in the private sector, you know, you get asked things and, you know, you’re not a politician, and probably the first time I was asked,” Trump protested. “By the time the war started I was against it. And shortly thereafter, I was really against it.”
In a dramatic highlight of the last Republican debate, Trump accused the Bush administration of deliberately deceiving the American public about the invasion. (“They lied. They said there were weapons of mass destruction. There were none.”) It was a potentially historic moment: a top Republican candidate for president attempts to lead his party into a frank reappraisal of the Bush-Cheney administration’s inherent honesty.
Here we are, one week later: “I’m not talking about lying. ... Nobody really knows why we went into Iraq.”
Meanwhile, reporters continue to ask Trump supporters what the attraction is. And his fans say that he tells it like it is.
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/02/20...er-rabbit.html
Time to Face Facts
What's the number of times one Republican has scored dominating victories in New Hampshire and South Carolina and then gone on to lose the nomination?
Exactly.
Never.
And this isn't some kind of special magic to one state or even group of states.
Though it was disappointing against expectations, even the second place showing in Iowa confirms the general narrative.
Yes, things could change.
Nothing is certain in politics.
But it's time to dispense with any faith-based logic that disputes the fact that Donald Trump is now the overwhelming favorite to win the Republican nomination.
Overwhelming.
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/...+%28TPMNews%29
yooge!
If Trump wins the nomination, it'll probably be a Trump/Rubio ticket.
It certainly won't be Cruz for VP. Their battle got way too personal.
I bet he doesn't take any of the wannabees, just to even more with the Repug establishment
Carl Icahn for Sec of U.S. Treasury or Fed Reserve Chairman or both!!!
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