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#1777 Oct 26 2016 at 8:06 AM Rating: Good
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Jophiel wrote:
The public's impact was fine.
It caused a concussion.

Speaking of rehashing, Trump supporters are now insisting that the polls are undersampling them to account for a rise in independents.

Edited, Oct 26th 2016 2:20pm by lolgaxe
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#1778 Oct 26 2016 at 4:42 PM Rating: Good
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Jophiel wrote:
Whatever it takes to make yourself feel better about your party's candidate and impending loss Smiley: smile


So for you, it's more important that your "side" wins, regardless of who you win with? Let's set Trump aside here. Do you honestly believe that Clinton is a good choice to be president? That she'll have the best interests of the citizens of the US in mind when making choices? That she'll enact good foreign and domestic policies that will improve our social, economic, and geopolitical outcomes?

Because I don't think so. I think she will be an utter disaster as president. Objectively, she seemed to care more about her own agenda and ambitions when SoS than she did the actual job she was hired to do. Based on the information we have about how the Clinton foundation was run, and how her inner circle operates (and frankly how little they think of those they claim to care about), she certainly looks to be corrupt as heck and doesn't seem to care about who she squashes along the way (or frankly, much of anything, other than "winning"). Now, maybe, we can speculate that once she's in the highest job you can have in government, with the most power possible, she'll suddenly convert into a responsible person who cares about others more than herself, but I seriously wouldn't hold my breath on that one.

Can you honestly say you are happy about a potential Clinton presidency? Or is your need to support your "side" so strong that you just don't care about how you get there? Cause I'm not happy about either candidate. Not close to happy. I tend to agree that our primary process more or less screwed over most of the citizens of this country. And yes, it absolutely is the fault of those who didn't show up and voice an opinion then, but that doesn't change the fact that we have been more or less given a choice between a rotten apple and a sour lemon.

Which isn't much of a choice.

Edited, Oct 26th 2016 3:44pm by gbaji
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#1779 Oct 26 2016 at 5:02 PM Rating: Good
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lolgaxe wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
The public's impact was fine.
It caused a concussion.

Speaking of rehashing, Trump supporters are now insisting that the polls are undersampling them to account for a rise in independents.


Can't speak to what Trump supporters are saying (I've honestly been actively avoiding political news for a while now. Just too freaking depressing). But looking at the polls, it's likely going to come down to whether or not Johnson's actually going to get the number of votes that the polls indicate, or whether those polling numbers are the result of people expressing their displeasure with their choice in a poll, but may not be willing to throw their vote away in the actual election. In pretty much every battleground state (and no, I'm not going to go look them all up just to double check), the margin between Trump and Clinton is somewhere around half of the number of voters polling for Johnson. So yeah, if he actually gets 6-8% of the vote in those states, Trump is toast. But if not, things could be quite a bit of a surprise on Nov. 8th. I'll also point out that in those same polls in which third party candidates are present, Stein consistently gets maybe 1% or 2% of the vote. So not a lot of wiggle room for potential liberal leaning voters for Clinton to pick up, but a ton of conservative leaning voters for Trump (seriously would take a lot of lip biting on the part of those voters though).

And yes, I get the whole "you say that every time gbaji!", but Utah is showing some interesting numbers that support this as a possible trend. Lots of talk about how the Democrats might pick up the state, usually while failing to mention that there's some local popular conservative guy who's running only in Utah who's polling at like 25%. Do we really think that 25% of the voters in Utah are actually going to vote for someone they know has absolutely zero chance of winning (cause, you know, not even on the ballot anywhere else). It's a good bet that most of those voters are just making a point in the polls, but will vote for Trump in the election because they know that voting otherwise will give the win to Clinton.

But hey. I could totally be wrong (hell, it's a good possibility even!). But I'm seeing this pattern in polling all over the place. It could be an honest move by voters towards a third party candidate (think Nader here). But Johnson is no Nader IMO. Smart money says Clinton wins in a landslide, but if there was any election cycle where you could say that the polls are very misleading, this would be it. And you know, I say that every election, so I've gotta point out the possibility this time around. Eventually, I'll be right and then everyone will call me a genius! Right?

Of course, that would mean... Trump. Gah! I'll sometimes, in a random conversation with friends or co-workers, just say "Two words: President Trump", just to scare them. It usually works. Then I cackle. Loudly. Then I think I sob. Yeah. Definitely that.
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#1780 Oct 26 2016 at 5:10 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
Whatever it takes to make yourself feel better about your party's candidate and impending loss Smiley: smile
So for you, it's more important that your "side" wins, regardless of who you win with?

Sometimes, perhaps. But that's not a concern here since I'm comfortable with Clinton. There's God knows how many pages of political talk on the front page of this forum discussing why so, as cute as it is to watch you clutch your pearls and say "You'd LIKE her?!?!??", it's not really a necessary bit of theater at this time. I suppose that, if I were a political virgin, I'd be shocked -- shocked! -- to learn that her campaign operates politically. But I'm a grown man who has followed politics for years and that "shocking" campaign is currently kicking ass over the GOP choice of a jingoistic racist whose idea of campaigning is to yell about Mexicans and Muslims and wait for the average Republican to buy a MAGA hat.
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Cause I'm not happy about either candidate. Not close to happy.

You weren't happy about Obama or Kerry or Gore either. What it looks like is that you're sorry that your party has rallied around the jingoistic racist and desperately trying to make it feel equal by being unhappy that the Democrats have selected, um, a Democrat.

By the way, Pence was campaigning in Utah today. Which is like Kaine trying to save Massachusetts from Jill Stein thirteen days before the election.

Edited, Oct 27th 2016 1:14am by Jophiel
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#1781 Oct 26 2016 at 5:41 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
And yes, I get the whole "you say that every time gbaji!", but Utah is showing some interesting numbers that support this as a possible trend. Lots of talk about how the Democrats might pick up the state, usually while failing to mention that there's some local popular conservative guy who's running only in Utah who's polling at like 25%. Do we really think that 25% of the voters in Utah are actually going to vote for someone they know has absolutely zero chance of winning (cause, you know, not even on the ballot anywhere else).

There's not much talk about Clinton winning Utah, there's considerable talk about Trump LOSING Utah. Clinton is opening a field office there to force Trump to play defense but the real story is that any win by Trump would likely be razor thin and he couldn't afford to lose Utah's 6 EVs. Thus him wasting one of the final days of the campaign with Pence in Utah begging people to "come home" to Trump.

Utah has some interesting demographics that make that 25% very possible. Mormons have a particular dislike for Trump (also helping to make Arizona competitive). Also, if it looks like Trump will lose nationally it's easier to cast a protest vote, pat yourself on the back for your convictions, and not associate yourself with a loser.

Also, Johnson has drawn a fair bit from the more liberal wing of voters (younger, socially liberal, ~25% minority, etc). Assuming that they'll break as a majority for Trump is deluding yourself. Currently, the amount of "undecideds" and third party voters would have to break 4:1 towards Trump for him to catch up. I wouldn't hold your breath.
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#1782 Oct 26 2016 at 8:04 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
we have been more or less given a choice between a rotten apple and a sour lemon.


Interesting. Which is the lemon, which is the apple, in your analogy?
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#1783 Oct 26 2016 at 9:39 PM Rating: Good
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I'm guessing the lemon is the one that didn't rape multiple tweens.
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#1784 Oct 26 2016 at 9:47 PM Rating: Good
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On a totally related note Thomas Sowell, in his column today, argued that we should all vote for Trump.

He says he despises both candidates but a vote for Trump means an easier time impeaching him when the time (inevitably) comes. (He argues that impeaching Hillary for something would be, like, way harder because she's a woman).

What a ringing endorsement!




EDIT: Rouge apostrophe

Edited, Oct 26th 2016 10:02pm by Bijou
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#1785 Oct 26 2016 at 10:22 PM Rating: Good
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I think that it's objectively true that Clinton would be harder to impeach, as her reaction would be to avoid culpability and obfuscate the process, while trump would more likely shoot the accuser on live TV.
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#1786 Oct 27 2016 at 1:48 AM Rating: Good
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Friar Bijou wrote:
'


Edited, Oct 27th 2016 12:51am by stupidmonkey
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#1787 Oct 27 2016 at 7:37 AM Rating: Good
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Friar Bijou wrote:
He says he despises both candidates but a vote for Trump means an easier time impeaching him when the time (inevitably) comes.
Every turd has an aluminum lining. Or something.

Speaking of turds, Newt Gingrich, the serial adulterer, accused Megyn Kelly of being fascinated with sex when she brought up the assault charges being leveled at Trump.

Edited, Oct 27th 2016 10:03am by lolgaxe
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#1788 Oct 27 2016 at 8:14 AM Rating: Excellent
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Sex, sexual assault... it's one and the same to Trump's circle. This is a guy who had Roger Ailes helping his campaign for heaven's sake.
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#1789 Oct 28 2016 at 1:43 AM Rating: Good
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Ted Cruz says that if Hillary wins the election, the republicans will just take their ball and go home. Link

Quote:
When asked about taking up Supreme Court nominees under a Hillary Clinton presidency, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said history shows the Supreme Court can function with fewer than nine justices.

“You know, I think there will be plenty of time for debate on that issue,” he said Wednesday when asked whether a GOP Senate would vote on Clinton’s nominees, according to The Washington Post.

“There is certainly long historical precedent for a Supreme Court with fewer justices,” the former Republican presidential candidate added.

“I would note, just recently, that Justice [Stephen] Breyer observed that the vacancy is not impacting the ability of the court to do its job. That’s the debate we are going to have.”


But other, cooler heads disagree

Quote:
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) on Tuesday said the Senate cannot block potential Supreme Court nominations from Clinton if she becomes president.

“We will clearly vet, and then once that’s done, we will make a decision whether we will vote for or against, but…if that new president happens to be Hillary, we can’t just simply stonewall,” the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee told reporters during a conference call.
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#1790 Oct 28 2016 at 6:00 AM Rating: Good
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“We will clearly vet, and then once that’s done, we will make a decision whether we will vote for or against, but…if that new president happens to be Hillary, we can’t just simply stonewall,”


Gosh. It's like that would be stupid or something.
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#1791 Oct 28 2016 at 8:01 AM Rating: Good
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Guess the whole "let the new President pick the new judge" strategy didn't work quite as well as McConnell and crew thought it would.
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#1792 Oct 28 2016 at 11:31 AM Rating: Good
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#1793 Oct 28 2016 at 5:13 PM Rating: Decent
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What an odd way of asking for more funding.
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#1794 Oct 28 2016 at 5:15 PM Rating: Decent
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What an odd way of asking for more funding.
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#1795 Oct 28 2016 at 5:58 PM Rating: Decent
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Professor stupidmonkey wrote:
gbaji wrote:
we have been more or less given a choice between a rotten apple and a sour lemon.


Interesting. Which is the lemon, which is the apple, in your analogy?


Clinton is the rotten apple, because her methods are rotten to the core. Trump is the sour lemon because just thinking about him puts a sour taste in your mouth. I find them both kinda fascinating in that Clinton has a perfectly maintained exterior, but is clearly "bad" on the inside, once you peel away the outer layers, while Trump looks and smells terrible from outside, but (at least as far as we know so far), hasn't done anything close to the level of job applicable corruption.

Friar Bijou wrote:
He says he despises both candidates but a vote for Trump means an easier time impeaching him when the time (inevitably) comes. (He argues that impeaching Hillary for something would be, like, way harder because she's a woman).


Well, for what it's worth, I actually disagree with that (shocker!). Impeachment requires a willful violation of one's oath of office. The president can't be charged with crimes while in office, so anything either of them did prior to taking office arguably doesn't really matter (at least in that regard, public pressure is a totally different animal). Impeachment has to do with what one does while in office. And if the former president Clinton is any indication, nothing we even speculate about Trump doing in office would likely rise to the level of impeachment (much less successful removal from office). Clinton on the other hand?

Yes, I get that he's talking about public willingness to do something like impeach the first woman president on purely social grounds, but if we were actually looking objectively, I'd argue that Clinton would be far more likely to commit an impeachable offense while in office than Trump. Hell. I think she's so far into the world of corrupt politics that she can't avoid continuing it. There's a certain point in such a career, where one has no choice but to continue using the same dirty tactics to maintain power that they've been using all along. Otherwise, the whole thing comes crashing down. She has to keep threatening people with whatever dirt she has, and providing for those who've bought influence from her in the past, or they turn on her.

It's honestly my biggest concern with a Clinton presidency. It's not really about her party policies (although I'm not happy with those, obviously). It's what she might do in terms of abuse of power just to protect herself and her family's legacy. Who must she continue to provide favors for to buy their silence and support? What would she do with her power to gain leverage over more people in order to keep them at bay? While the immediate effects on the average citizen may not be that significant, the corrosive effect of that form of politics in the White House can be huge. I honestly don't even want to think about how much of our policies (especially foreign policy) will more or less be subject to who can pay her the most. We've already seen how donations to the Clinton foundation were used to buy influence when she was SoS. Imagine how much she can charge if she's president? And imagine how much more broadly impacting the results might be.

I'm not sure I'm comfortable with even the idea that our president might be making decisions about whether to pursue a treaty, or start a war, or set or remove tariffs, or any of a number of things that a president has vast direct influence over, based on how much a given party has paid up to her family. Actually, I know I'm not comfortable at all with it. The best we can hope for with a Clinton presidency is to endure it and hope things can be fixed afterwards.
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#1796 Oct 28 2016 at 6:20 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
It's honestly my biggest concern with a Clinton presidency. It's not really about her party policies (although I'm not happy with those, obviously). It's what she might do in terms of abuse of power just to protect herself and her family's legacy. Who must she continue to provide favors for to buy their silence and support? What would she do with her power to gain leverage over more people in order to keep them at bay? While the immediate effects on the average citizen may not be that significant, the corrosive effect of that form of politics in the White House can be huge. I honestly don't even want to think about how much of our policies (especially foreign policy) will more or less be subject to who can pay her the most. We've already seen how donations to the Clinton foundation were used to buy influence when she was SoS. Imagine how much she can charge if she's president? And imagine how much more broadly impacting the results might be.

I'm not sure I'm comfortable with even the idea that our president might be making decisions about whether to pursue a treaty, or start a war, or set or remove tariffs, or any of a number of things that a president has vast direct influence over, based on how much a given party has paid up to her family. Actually, I know I'm not comfortable at all with it. The best we can hope for with a Clinton presidency is to endure it and hope things can be fixed afterwards.
A perfectly reasonable concern, I suppose, since people made basically those same arguments concerning 'lil Dubya.
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#1797 Oct 28 2016 at 7:17 PM Rating: Decent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
gbaji wrote:
It's honestly my biggest concern with a Clinton presidency. It's not really about her party policies (although I'm not happy with those, obviously). It's what she might do in terms of abuse of power just to protect herself and her family's legacy. Who must she continue to provide favors for to buy their silence and support? What would she do with her power to gain leverage over more people in order to keep them at bay? While the immediate effects on the average citizen may not be that significant, the corrosive effect of that form of politics in the White House can be huge. I honestly don't even want to think about how much of our policies (especially foreign policy) will more or less be subject to who can pay her the most. We've already seen how donations to the Clinton foundation were used to buy influence when she was SoS. Imagine how much she can charge if she's president? And imagine how much more broadly impacting the results might be.

I'm not sure I'm comfortable with even the idea that our president might be making decisions about whether to pursue a treaty, or start a war, or set or remove tariffs, or any of a number of things that a president has vast direct influence over, based on how much a given party has paid up to her family. Actually, I know I'm not comfortable at all with it. The best we can hope for with a Clinton presidency is to endure it and hope things can be fixed afterwards.
A perfectly reasonable concern, I suppose, since people made basically those same arguments concerning 'lil Dubya.


Sure. But one of those was pure speculation, while the other has some serious evidence of past behavior supporting it. It's one thing to think "Hey, this guy has family connections, who also have business connections which maybe might be used for influence peddling" and be a bit concerned about the possibility. It's a whole different animal when you have direct and strong evidence that this exact form of influence peddling was used by a given politician in the past, the structural components of the process of influence peddling are still completely intact, and the players involved are the same players said politician will be engaging with as president.

I'm not aware of any evidence showing a foreign party paying money to any fund associated with the Bush family, followed almost immediately by arranged meetings by a Bush family member in office between said foreign party and someone with influence in the government. We know this happened, multiple times, while Clinton was Secretary of State. And the Clintons have not only not promised to do anything to distance themselves, they're more or less going "what's the problem?" and pretending it's just not an issue at all.

Remember when Liberals spent years complaining about Cheney's connection to Halliburton, despite Cheney having removed all financial connections to the company prior to taking office and placing the remainder of his assets in a blind trust? Now imagine that he not only didn't do that, but maintained direct financial connections to the company, had family members running it, and wasn't just vice president but was president? Yeah. Now imagine that this isn't just some company that gains profit based on government contracts, but is a charity that can take money from any source, and provide funds to any target. The scope is much more massive, and much more global. The worst Halliburton could have represented was the potential for the president to choose to engage in activities that would require said contract work, thus padding profits (or course, he'd still have to get congress to go along as well). But no foreign influence could result from this. The Clinton foundation creates the ability for anyone with money anywhere in the globe to buy influence with our government. Iran doesn't want us shutting down their nuke program? They could spend hundreds of billions of dollars building concealed sites that we might bomb anyway, or just a few billion to the right charity (or even just a few hundred million would likely be sufficient, cause... lets not be greedy, right?). Russia wants us to back off on the whole Ukraine thing? Give a donation! The potential abuse is pretty much unlimited.

And again, this would just be speculation except that we already know that it has been used for just this kind of purpose already. The only difference is that Clinton will be in a position as president to directly make executive orders to benefit donors, rather than just arrange some meetings, and make some recommendations on their behalf as she could do as SoS.

Which, you know, is where the potential of impeachment comes in. And yeah, I suppose we could speculate that Trump might engage in executive actions that benefit parties (foreign or otherwise) that do something that benefit his businesses. But that's speculation. Also, the means by which one may benefit a business is far less direct than how one benefits a charity. People don't just write checks to businesses because they're feeling philanthropic or something. So it's a bit harder and more indirect to funnel funds into a for-profit business. A charity? Just write a check. It's set up specifically for that purpose. And while you may think that writing a check to a charity is "good" in a way that taking some action that adds to the bottom line of a business is not, that's not the point here. It's about whether there's a quid pro quo involved that matters. What action is taken to buy that response isn't relevant to the potential for corruption and abuse of power.

I honestly don't think she'll be able to avoid this, because if past actions and her own statements and response to the criticisms of those actions are any indication, she doesn't actually seem to think there's anything wrong with any of this. She actually seems to think that it's perfectly fine to reward people, organizations, or even countries who donate to that charity with whatever she has in her power to do. It's honestly hard to even imagine it, but that's the perception I get from all of this. She actually thinks it's ok. The "good" done with the money being in the charity apparently outweighs the problematic means by which it got there. Maybe I'm grossly misreading things, but it really does look like she's spent so long inside the power broker environment that she doesn't seem to know where that line you're not supposed to cross is.

Cause she looks like she crossed it long ago.
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#1798 Oct 28 2016 at 10:06 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Sure. But one of those was pure speculation, while the other has some serious evidence of past behavior supporting it.
Cute, but wrong.


gbaji wrote:
I'm not aware of any evidence showing a foreign party paying money to any fund associated with the Bush family, followed almost immediately by arranged meetings by a Bush family member in office between said foreign party and someone with influence in the government.
Because without that exact, specific set of events there is no corruption or influence pedaling. Again; cute, but wrong.

gbaji wrote:
Remember when Liberals spent years complaining about Cheney's connection to Halliburton, despite Cheney having removed all financial connections to the company prior to taking office and placing the remainder of his assets in a blind trust?
Cuter and cuter. And wronger and wronger.

gbaji wrote:
The worst Halliburton could have represented was the potential for the president to choose to engage in activities that would require said contract work, thus padding profits (or course, he'd still have to get congress to go along as well).
The worst Halliburton did, though was take billions of dollars meant for reconstruction, fail to build, well anything they were supposed to and still end up with massive profits. With, y'know, taxpayer money.

gbaji wrote:
And yeah, I suppose we could speculate that Trump might engage in executive actions that benefit parties (foreign or otherwise) that do something that benefit his businesses.
My concerns lean more toward theft and child rape but I guess my priorities are all messed up, right?


gbaji wrote:
She actually seems to think that it's perfectly fine to reward people, organizations, or even countries who donate to that charity with whatever she has in her power to do.
So in a side-by-side comparison between the Clinton charity and the Trump charity, you think the Trump one is the more honest, transparent and harmless one? That's...scary.
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#1799 Oct 29 2016 at 1:36 AM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
It's what she might do in terms of abuse of power just to protect herself and her family's legacy.
My concern is that "start WW3 to distract from domestic issues" seems to be on the table.
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My concern is that "start WW3 to distract from domestic issues" seems to be on the table.

Awwww.. you forgot the #DraftMyDaughters part! If you're going to parrot meme material, do it with some conviction Smiley: laugh
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#1801 Oct 29 2016 at 12:07 PM Rating: Good
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I'm not parroting meme material. If I was, I would have linked a bunch of those. Or used a tongue emoji.

I've been watching what she says and I'm legitimately worried that she really is planning to pick a fight with Russia. Granted, it'll likely be over the competing pipelines in Syria(and because she seems to have a lady ***** for regime change over there) rather than just to distract from domestic issues, but that does NOT make me feel any better.

Edited, Oct 29th 2016 12:10pm by Poldaran
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