Tweet from Donald in 2013. he used the "A" word.
Donald Trump To Run For President in 2016!!!!!!!!
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Mr KLCBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 12-19-07
- 31097
Comment -
Jayvegas420BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-09-11
- 28213
#4237
Everyone benefits. Especially you.
Nevermind. In your case we are all aware that you're a fukkin idiot whether you type or not.Comment -
brooks85SBR Aristocracy
- 01-05-09
- 44709
#4239
think before you type moronComment -
Jayvegas420BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-09-11
- 28213
#4240You know what it says about me?
It says that the difference between you and I is that, I am aware that I am an idiot!Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4241[IMG]https://****************************/hphotos-xta1/v/t1.0-9/12438975_1535426616757724_22147756171306 80584_n.jpg?oh=8528c8136696503c1f60fcc3e 957bfc3&oe=5731CBBF[/IMG]Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4245She hates hypocritical weak politicians and isn't afraid to say so. I find her interesting. The fact that she takes a lot of abuse from liberals but isn't afraid to take them on is something I respect. She knows her facts, speaks her mind and doesn't care if that offends you.Comment -
CanuckGSBR Posting Legend
- 12-23-10
- 21978
#4246She hates hypocritical weak politicians and isn't afraid to say so. I find her interesting. The fact that she takes a lot of abuse from liberals but isn't afraid to take them on is something I respect. She knows her facts, speaks her mind and doesn't care if that offends you.Comment -
dante1BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 10-31-05
- 38647
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DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4248why wouldn't she believe what she says? Are you saying that because you know her or because you disagree with her? Do you believe half of what you say?Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4252Comment -
d2betsBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-10-05
- 39995
#4253Not necessarily. He will win NH. And probably Iowa. But that's only two states. Bernie might win both too. Doesn't mean he's gonna win.Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
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d2betsBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-10-05
- 39995
#4255Losing Iowa may knock Cruz out. That might not be so good for Trump in the longer run. An alternative will emerge and it's not Cruz. Rubio is pretty smooth and is stalking. The big money is going to get behind him.Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4256Iowa is a huge one. Who knows what'll happen but I am telling you, its feeling like a Trump sweep. I was watching CNN ,I think, yesterday and one guy said if Trump wins Iowa he could very well be the GOP nominee before Hillary becomes the Democrat nominee. Let's see.Comment -
Jayvegas420BARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 03-09-11
- 28213
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scumbagSBR MVP
- 11-02-13
- 3504
#4258scam artist tout wayne allyn root endorsing trump. just a couple of fellows lookin out for the little guyComment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4259Comment -
15805SBR MVP
- 06-10-12
- 3604
#4260'For months, the press and the Republican establishment alike have been expecting the Trump
bubble to implode. Now that it's clear Trump isn't going anywhere, we're seeing stories about a long
slog of a campaign or even a brokered convention. But there's a very real possibility that Donald Trump
could actually "run the table." Ironically, Trump not only could win — he could win more decisively than any non-incumbent Republican contestant for the nomination since the dawn of the modern primary system.
If Trump wins both Iowa and New Hampshire, and then goes on to win South Carolina and Nevada —
as he is favored to do — he could very conceivably win every contest, or at worst lose a favored
son state or two like Cruz's Texas. Nobody has run the table like that — not Nixon in 1968, nor
Reagan in 1980, nor Bush in 2000.
First day Trump is leading in every sportsbook for the nomination. Latest Iowa poll seems to
have sealed it for the books.
At Hollywood & Sportingbet:
For the Republican Nomination
Trump -142
Rubio +250
Cruz +500
Bush +2000
Rest out of any contention
He may win every primaryComment -
d2betsBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-10-05
- 39995
#4261Trump Entertainment Resorts has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy 3 times in the last 11 years. How many times will he bankrupt America in 4 or 8 years?Comment -
Ra77erSBR Posting Legend
- 06-20-11
- 10969
#4262the big lebowski is MVP campaign manager thus far. Trump ready with the traps on any of the candidates.Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4263
Trump +10 billion in the black.
Time to end the incompetence and give someone else a try.
Comment -
nyplayer33Restricted User
- 09-27-06
- 8303
#4264He can win and will destroy isisComment -
d2betsBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-10-05
- 39995
#4265"Trump is a philosophically unmoored political opportunist who would trash the broad conservative ideological consensus within the GOP in favor of a free-floating populism with strong-man overtones."
Comment -
d2betsBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-10-05
- 39995
#4266Donald Trump leads the polls nationally and in most states in the race for the Republican presidential nomination. There are understandable reasons for his eminence, and he has shown impressive gut-level skill as a campaigner. But he is not deserving of conservative support in the caucuses and primaries. Trump is a philosophically unmoored political opportunist who would trash the broad conservative ideological consensus within the GOP in favor of a free-floating populism with strong-man overtones.
Trump’s political opinions have wobbled all over the lot. The real-estate mogul and reality-TV star has supported abortion, gun control, single-payer health care à la Canada, and punitive taxes on the wealthy. (He and Bernie Sanders have shared more than funky outer-borough accents.) Since declaring his candidacy he has taken a more conservative line, yet there are great gaping holes in it.
His signature issue is concern over immigration — from Latin America but also, after Paris and San Bernardino, from the Middle East. He has exploited the yawning gap between elite opinion in both parties and the public on the issue, and feasted on the discontent over a government that can’t be bothered to enforce its own laws no matter how many times it says it will (President Obama has dispensed even with the pretense). But even on immigration, Trump often makes no sense and can’t be relied upon. A few short years ago, he was criticizing Mitt Romney for having the temerity to propose “self-deportation,” or the entirely reasonable policy of reducing the illegal population through attrition while enforcing the nation’s laws. Now, Trump is a hawk’s hawk.
He pledges to build a wall along the southern border and to make Mexico pay for it. We need more fencing at the border, but the promise to make Mexico pay for it is silly bluster. Trump says he will put a big door in his beautiful wall, an implicit endorsement of the dismayingly conventional view that current levels of legal immigration are fine. Trump seems unaware that a major contribution of his own written immigration plan is to question the economic impact of legal immigration and to call for reform of the H-1B–**** program. Indeed, in one Republican debate he clearly had no idea what’s in that plan and advocated increased legal immigration, which is completely at odds with it. These are not the meanderings of someone with well-informed, deeply held views on the topic.
As for illegal immigration, Trump pledges to deport the 11 million illegals here in the United States, a herculean administrative and logistical task beyond the capacity of the federal government. Trump piles on the absurdity by saying he would re-import many of the illegal immigrants once they had been deported, which makes his policy a poorly disguised amnesty (and a version of a similarly idiotic idea that appeared in one of Washington’s periodic “comprehensive” immigration reforms). This plan wouldn’t survive its first contact with reality.
On foreign policy, Trump is a nationalist at sea. Sometimes he wants to let Russia fight ISIS, and at others he wants to “bomb the sh**” out of it. He is fixated on stealing Iraq’s oil and casually suggested a few weeks ago a war crime — killing terrorists’ families — as a tactic in the war on terror. For someone who wants to project strength, he has an astonishing weakness for flattery, falling for Vladimir Putin after a few coquettish bats of the eyelashes from the Russian thug. All in all, Trump knows approximately as much about national security as he does about the nuclear triad — which is to say, almost nothing.
Indeed, Trump’s politics are those of an averagely well-informed businessman: Washington is full of problems; I am a problem-solver; let me at them. But if you have no familiarity with the relevant details and the levers of power, and no clear principles to guide you, you will, like most tenderfeet, get rolled. Especially if you are, at least by all outward indications, the most poll-obsessed politician in all of American history. Trump has shown no interest in limiting government, in reforming entitlements, or in the Constitution. He floats the idea of massive new taxes on imported goods and threatens to retaliate against companies that do too much manufacturing overseas for his taste. His obsession is with “winning,” regardless of the means — a spirit that is anathema to the ordered liberty that conservatives hold dear and that depends for its preservation on limits on government power. The Tea Party represented a revival of an understanding of American greatness in these terms, an understanding to which Trump is tone-deaf at best and implicitly hostile at worst. He appears to believe that the administrative state merely needs a new master, rather than a new dispensation that cuts it down to size and curtails its power.
It is unpopular to say in the year of the “outsider,” but it is not a recommendation that Trump has never held public office. Since 1984, when Jesse Jackson ran for president with no credential other than a great flow of words, both parties have been infested by candidates who have treated the presidency as an entry-level position. They are the excrescences of instant-hit media culture. The burdens and intricacies of leadership are special; experience in other fields is not transferable. That is why all American presidents have been politicians, or generals.
Any candidate can promise the moon. But politicians have records of success, failure, or plain backsliding by which their promises may be judged. Trump can try to make his blankness a virtue by calling it a kind of innocence. But he is like a man with no credit history applying for a mortgage — or, in this case, applying to manage a $3.8 trillion budget and the most fearsome military on earth.
Trump’s record as a businessman is hardly a recommendation for the highest office in the land. For all his success, Trump inherited a real-estate fortune from his father. Few of us will ever have the experience, as Trump did, of having Daddy-O bail out our struggling enterprise with an illegal loan in the form of casino chips. Trump’s primary work long ago became less about building anything than about branding himself and tending to his celebrity through a variety of entertainment ventures, from WWE to his reality-TV show, The Apprentice. His business record reflects the often dubious norms of the milieu: using eminent domain to condemn the property of others; buying the good graces of politicians — including many Democrats — with donations.
Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism. Trump has gotten far in the GOP race on a brash manner, buffed over decades in New York tabloid culture. His refusal to back down from any gaffe, no matter how grotesque, suggests a healthy impertinence in the face of postmodern PC (although the insults he hurls at anyone who crosses him also speak to a pettiness and lack of basic civility). His promise to make America great again recalls the populism of Andrew Jackson. But Jackson was an actual warrior; and President Jackson made many mistakes. Without Jackson’s scars, what is Trump’s rhetoric but show and strut?
If Trump were to become the president, the Republican nominee, or even a failed candidate with strong conservative support, what would that say about conservatives? The movement that ground down the Soviet Union and took the shine, at least temporarily, off socialism would have fallen in behind a huckster. The movement concerned with such “permanent things” as constitutional government, marriage, and the right to life would have become a claque for a Twitter feed.
Trump nevertheless offers a valuable warning for the Republican party. If responsible men irresponsibly ignore an issue as important as immigration, it will be taken up by the reckless. If they cannot explain their Beltway maneuvers — worse, if their maneuvering is indefensible — they will be rejected by their own voters. If they cannot advance a compelling working-class agenda, the legitimate anxieties and discontents of blue-collar voters will be exploited by demagogues. We sympathize with many of the complaints of Trump supporters about the GOP, but that doesn’t make the mogul any less flawed a vessel for them.
Some conservatives have made it their business to make excuses for Trump and duly get pats on the head from him. Count us out. Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot in behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as the Donald himself.Comment -
DwightShruteSBR Aristocracy
- 01-17-09
- 103149
#4267Comment -
15805SBR MVP
- 06-10-12
- 3604
#4268"Trump is a philosophically unmoored political opportunist who would trash the broad conservative ideological consensus within the GOP in favor of a free-floating populism with strong-man overtones."
http://www.nationalreview.com/articl...ovement-menace
against 16 dwarfs, I guess now there are about 10 dwarfs left. The funniest
episode of the campaign yet was this Ted Cruz guy he gets ahead in one outlier
poll & thinks thought he had Iowa rapped up. He's behind in the two latest polls
by 10 & 11 points. 'Earth to Ted Cruz 'Don't try to sink a battleship
with a bee-bee gun." & don't use severely impaired people like Glenn Beck as
surrogates. That's like losing in the 4th quarter 21-0 & sending in the water boy
at quarterback in an effort to spark the team!Last edited by 15805; 01-22-16, 02:25 AM.Comment -
15805SBR MVP
- 06-10-12
- 3604
#4269"Trump is a philosophically unmoored political opportunist who would trash the broad conservative ideological consensus within the GOP in favor of a free-floating populism with strong-man overtones."
http://www.nationalreview.com/articl...ovement-menace
How long do you think it will be before they go bankrupt?Comment -
d2betsBARRELED IN @ SBR!
- 08-10-05
- 39995
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