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  1. #76
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    I don't know any conservatives who like Trump. Every single Republican voter I know wants Cruz to get the nomination.
    In Illinois, Trump won the conservative vote (36% to Cruz 29%). In Michigan, very conservative (38 Cruz, 35 Trump) and somewhat conservative (23 Cruz, 37 Trump). Trump's doing very well with the conservatives. How else would he have won the entire SE?

  2. #77
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    In Illinois, Trump won the conservative vote (36% to Cruz 29%). In Michigan, very conservative (38 Cruz, 35 Trump) and somewhat conservative (23 Cruz, 37 Trump). Trump's doing very well with the conservatives. How else would he have won the entire SE?
    I guess it's because my friends are college educated?

  3. #78
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ TheSanityAnnex's Avatar
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    no overreaction to Trump, people, even Repugs, see what an amateur, classless, adolescent, racist, sexist pig piece of he is, and how he has dragged the Repug candidate field into the sewer.
    You libs are such pussies

    Trump2016 chalk writing
    triggered
    micro aggressions
    remove immediately

    As anyone who has spent five seconds at a college can attest, sidewalks covered in chalk messages are a pretty common fixture of the campus scene. But Emory University students had their delicate worldview shaken by the sudden appearance of one specific chalk message, "Trump 2016," all over campus. The students were so traumatized that they stormed the offices of Emory President James Wagner, demanding answers and feelings-protection. Wagner sent an email to campus in a desperate and wildly unnecessary effort to make everyone feel safe again. Here is the whole thing, with commentary:
    Dear Emory Community,
    Yesterday I received a visit from 40 to 50 student protesters upset by the unexpected chalkings on campus sidewalks and some buildings yesterday morning, in this case referencing Donald Trump. The students shared with me their concern that these messages were meant to intimidate rather than merely to advocate for a particular candidate, having appeared outside of the context of a Georgia election or campus campaign activity. During our conversation, they voiced their genuine concern and pain in the face of this perceived intimidation.
    The election in Georgia may be over, but it is very much the case that there is still an ongoing national conversation about who the Republican Party nominee will be, and, ultimately, who will win the White House. Trump is one such contender. It's not remotely clear—nor even plausible—that the message "Trump 2016" was non-political in tone (and it shouldn't matter). Students who voiced "genuine concern and pain in the face of this "perceived intimidation" should have been told their perception is at odds with reality, does not supersede other people's free expression rights, and should be recalibrated if "Trump 2016" causes them actual pain. Sadly, this is not what the president told them.
    After meeting with our students, I cannot dismiss their expression of feelings and concern as motivated only by political preference or over-sensitivity. Instead, the students with whom I spoke heard a message, not about political process or candidate choice, but instead about values regarding diversity and respect that clash with Emory’s own.
    It should be perfectly acceptable to challenge "values regarding diversity," even if these values are deeply held by both students and the ins ution itself.
    As an academic community, we must value and encourage the expression of ideas, vigorous debate, speech, dissent, and protest. At the same time, our commitment to respect, civility, and inclusion calls us to provide a safe environment that inspires and supports courageous inquiry. It is important that we recognize, listen to, and honor the concerns of these students, as well as faculty and staff who may feel similarly.
    If the ins ution rushes to the emotional defense of thin-skinned students, can it really be said to support "courageous inquiry"?
    On the heels of work begun by students last fall and advanced last month through the Racial Justice Retreat and subsequent working groups, Emory is taking a number of significant steps:
    • Immediate refinements to certain policy and procedural deficiencies (for example, our bias incident reporting and response process);
    • Regular and structured opportunities for difficult dialogues (like the Transforming Community Project of several years ago);
    • A formal process to ins utionalize identification, review, and addressing of social justice opportunities and issues; and
    • Commitment to an annual retreat to renew our efforts.

    Reminding students that they can sic the campus grievance bureaucracy on people who offend them further weakens Emory's stated commitment to free speech.
    To keep moving forward, we must continue to engage in rich and meaningful dialogue around critical issues facing our nation and our society. I learn from every conversation like the one that took place yesterday and know that further conversations are necessary. More than that, such discussions should lead to action that continues to foster a more just and inclusive Emory.
    Sincerely,
    Jim Wagner

    To recap: Some Emory students are so fragile, and terrified of innocuous political speech they dislike, that they immediately sought comfort from campus authority figures. These figures, of course, were more than willing to coddle them.
    It's enough to make you want to grab a piece of chalk and scrawl "Trump 2016" on an Emory sidewalk, huh? No wonder so many non-liberal students are cheering for Trump—not because they like him, but because he represents glorious resistance to the noxious political correctness and censorship that has come to define the modern college experience.

    http://reason.com/blog/2016/03/22/at...g-trump-2016-o

  4. #79
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    I guess it's because my friends are college educated?
    Pretty sure Trump is leading in every category across the board for registered republicans.

  5. #80
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    I guess it's because my friends are college educated?
    Well, I'm college educated, very conservative and voted for Trump.

  6. #81
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Bill Maher would probably disagree. So would a lot of left-leaning comedians.
    Because comedy is, in part, about transgressions of that sort... but it's not comedians I'm talking about, you know exactly the type I'm talking about...

  7. #82
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    Pretty sure Trump is leading in every category across the board for registered republicans.
    Do you have a link to any recent polls showing that? Most political analysis I have seen suggests the opposite. Has that changed since Little Marco dropped out?

  8. #83
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    I'm surprised more people aren't disturbed by what's been going on at universities and the total overreaction to Trump.
    Define total overreaction to Trump.

  9. #84
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    Do you have a link to any recent polls showing that? Most political analysis I have seen suggests the opposite. Has that changed since Little Marco dropped out?
    Illinois exit polls: http://www.cnn.com/election/primaries/polls/il/Rep

    Michigan exit polls: http://www.cnn.com/election/primaries/polls/mi/Rep

    Don't think Arizona or Utah had exit polls.

  10. #85
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    Do you have a link to any recent polls showing that? Most political analysis I have seen suggests the opposite. Has that changed since Little Marco dropped out?
    No link. Heard on the radio on my way home today. It was for registered republicans.

  11. #86
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ TheSanityAnnex's Avatar
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    Define total overreaction to Trump.
    See post #78

  12. #87
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    Illinois exit polls: http://www.cnn.com/election/primaries/polls/il/Rep

    Michigan exit polls: http://www.cnn.com/election/primaries/polls/mi/Rep

    Don't think Arizona or Utah had exit polls.
    Thanks. Looks like he eeked out an advantage over Cruz in Illinois and lost to Kasich in Michigan.

  13. #88
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    Yeah, that's an overreaction. College political groups often think everyone else is re ed. But Trump being portrayed as a white nationalist is justified.

  14. #89
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    Yeah, that's an overreaction. College political groups often think everyone else is re ed. But Trump being portrayed as a white nationalist is justified.
    I'm not even a Trump supporter and I don't see the white nationalist label being legit unless you buy into the media smear (both sides) campaign.

  15. #90
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    I'm not even a Trump supporter and I don't see the white nationalist label being legit unless you buy into the media smear (both sides) campaign.
    Just taking him at his words.

  16. #91
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    it. I'll waste my vote and vote for Trump before I vote for Hillary. These "establishment" Republicans are starting to piss me off with all their back room games. Don't they realize that people are pissed off at the very thing they are doing?
    The establishment republicans are almost as bad as the establishment democrats. Been that way for years.

    They are just now pissing you off?

    Have you been asleep at the wheel?

  17. #92
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    Just taking him at his words.
    If we're taking people by their words you'd be a top 10 racist here easily, possibly top 5

  18. #93
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    maybe its just me, but i don't think he's racist. i don't think he's sexist.

    they certainly want us to think that.
    What's wrong wish wanting clear separation of the sexes? I like a woman who can be my equal, but still sexy! These women who want equality, then use children as excuses, or think they have to shed looking like a woman have no appeal to me.

  19. #94
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    The birther is just stupid, but not necessarily racist. There were McCain birthers and, more recently, Cruz birthers.

    The 35 foot border wall seems more like a metaphor to me. Does anyone really believe this is going to happen? That said, having border walls isn't racist. That's like saying that people who lock their doors are racists.

    Calling for a moratorium on Muslim immigrants until the vetting process is, itself, vetted, just makes good sense, IMHO.
    Race baiters will call anything racist that they can.

    What do you expect from pathetic people?

  20. #95
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    I'm talking about him wanting every American muslim to register.
    Did he say that? Or was he referring to immigrants?

  21. #96
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    most of the " America is too PC " crowd are basically saying "I want to be openly racist/misogynist/islamophobic/xenophobe without being frowned upon"...
    I don't see it that way.

    America is too PC. people will find any little reason to find fault in innocent remarks.

  22. #97
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    If we're taking people by their words you'd be a top 10 racist here easily, possibly top 5

  23. #98
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    Consider Clinton,' former Bush official tells hawkish Republicans
    Source: Washington Examiner


    A former Bush administration official said Wednesday that single-issue Republican voters, who plan to select a candidate based on their foreign policy, should consider likely Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton if Donald Trump is her opponent come November.

    "If you care about that bucket of social issues, pro-life, what not, you can't make the leap to Hillary Clinton," Nicolle Wallace, who served as President George W. Bush's communications chief and a senior adviser to the McCain-Palin campaign in 2008, told MSNBC in an interview Wednesday morning.

    "But if foreign policy is how you vote, if that is your central concern, if counterterrorism is what worries you, how do you not consider Hillary Clinton in November?" she added.

    Earlier in the program, Wallace said "the conversations happening in private with Republican consultants is that if you are not a social conservative, there is less and less rationale for hardened opposition to Hillary Clinton."
    <snip>

    Read more: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/co...rticle/2586644

  24. #99
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    There is Captain Republican playing the PC card. Can't ever talk about racism

  25. #100
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    There is Captain Republican playing the PC card. Can't ever talk about racism
    reverse racism

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