Author Topic: Politics  (Read 594711 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1252 on: November 08, 2018, 07:31:22 AM »
And what will Max do?

Everything she can to stifle growth and middle class benefits
and all the while saying she is leveling the playing fleld against the financial sector for the average "folks"

Should be a great opportunity to teach AMerica the craziness of her ways.  But doubt the cans can get through the MSM blockade and propaganda
It would be good if Trump can do but not by calling her names but with the facts - doubtful.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1253 on: November 08, 2018, 07:53:10 AM »
"Waters said she’s prioritizing efforts to expand affordable housing,

Whatever

"undo the Trump administration’s weakening of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

This could play very well and put Reps in the Scrooge role yet again

"snuff out predatory financial products

Again, the Scrooge role for Reps

"and bolster federal shelter support for struggling Americans."

The homeless?  Tucker Carlson has been very articulate about looking our for homeless Americans over illegal aliens.  Not impossible that this could play well for her.

Crafty_Dog

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Catnip for Mad Maxine
« Reply #1254 on: November 08, 2018, 09:39:40 PM »
Though technically correct in its logic, the following article misses quite a bit when it comes to the emotions involved.  The fact is that a real strong case can be made that the payday lenders on the whole are a nasty bunch of shits-- I remember seeing a John Oliver episode on this that I thought quite persuasive and which left me feeling quite angry.

Mad Maxine will make hay out of this.

=============

https://www.speroforum.com/a/TVLLLODXSX20/84253-Examples-of-lawlessness-in-the-Department-of-Justice?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=MRVQAHIDTV55&utm_content=TVLLLODXSX20&utm_source=commentary&utm_term=Examples+of+lawlessness+in+the+Department+of+Justice#.W-UcguJRfcs

DougMacG

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Re: Politics - Democrats - Making America Dependent Again
« Reply #1255 on: November 09, 2018, 07:26:30 AM »
"Waters said she’s prioritizing efforts to expand affordable housing,

Whatever
...

Every government intervention lever either causes housing costs go up or incomes to go down.

To translate Leftist-speak to english, replace the word affordable with unaffordable.

What she is saying is that just like Democrats and healthcare she will 'prioritize' making Americans more dependent on government for housing.


Crafty_Dog

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Andrew McCarthy: Rule by Lefty Judges
« Reply #1257 on: November 11, 2018, 06:40:33 AM »
   Obama’s Judges Continue Thwarting Trump
By Andrew C. McCarthy

November 10, 2018 6:30 AM

President Obama at a White House press conference in 2016. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)
To the Lawyer Left, elections represent a policy choice only when Democrats win.

As I write on Friday, the restraining order hasn’t come down yet. But it’s just a matter of time. Some federal district judge, somewhere in the United States, will soon issue an injunction blocking enforcement of the Trump administration’s restrictions on asylum applications.

The restrictions come in the form of a rule promulgated jointly by the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security, and a proclamation issued by President Trump. In conjunction, they assert that an alien who wishes to apply for asylum in the United States must act lawfully: An alien who is physically present here and wishes to apply must be in the country legally; an alien outside the country who wishes to apply must present himself at a lawful port of entry — not attempt to smuggle his way in or force his way in as part of a horde (i.e., no invasions by caravan).

Of course, what used to be assumed is today deemed intolerable. It is no longer permitted to expect of non-Americans what is required of Americans — adherence to American law while on American soil.

Therefore, the fact that the administration’s action is entirely reasonable will not matter. No more will it matter that, contrary to numbing media repetition, the rule and proclamation derive from federal statutory law. Nor will it make any difference that, in part, the president is relying on the same sweeping congressional authorization based on which, just four months ago, the Supreme Court affirmed his authority to control the ingress of aliens based on his assessment of national-security needs.

Just two things will matter. The first is that the asylum restrictions represent a Trump policy that reverses Obama policies — specifically, policies of more lax border enforcement, and of ignoring congressionally authorized means of preventing illegal aliens from filing frivolous asylum petitions (with the result that many of them are released, evading further proceedings and deportation). The second is that, precisely to thwart the reversal of Obama policies, President Obama made certain that the vast majority of the 329 federal judges he appointed were progressive activists in the Obama mold.

The media-Democrat complex will tell you this is “the rule of law.” In reality, it is the rule of lawyers: the Lawyer Left on the front line of American decision-making, a line that runs through courtrooms, not Capitol Hill.


You can already hear the retort: Conservatives do the same thing — put conservative judges on the bench to dictate conservative results. Au contraire. Conservatives really do want the rule of law, as in the laws that Congress passes and the president signs. That is, we want the country run by accountable office holders who answer to us, whom we can remove if they make bad decisions. We are willing to live under laws we oppose, provided that we have a fair opportunity to repeal or amend them. To take an obvious constitutional-law example: Though we oppose abortion, we are not looking for robed right-wingers to “discover” a prohibition of abortion in, say, the due-process clause. We think it is a matter for legislation, primarily at the state level.

That is not what the Lawyer Left is doing. They talk a good game about “ground-up democracy,” but the actual goal is top-down control. Those judges — their judges — are in place to dictate policy outcomes, not to let democracy happen.

The people of the United States, through their elected representatives, have empowered the president to suspend or impose conditions on the ingress of aliens if he finds their entry would be “detrimental to the interests of the United States.” How can it be denied that the illegal entry of aliens — which patently undermines the rule of law — is detrimental? Yet, there is certain to be a race to be the first judge to issue a restraining order, to champion an imaginary right of aliens to seek asylum however they damn well please.

Just as the administration was readying the new asylum standards, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit ruled that Trump is powerless to reverse Obama’s DACA policy (Delayed Action on Childhood Arrivals). You’ll be shocked, no doubt, to learn the panel’s composition: two Obama judges and one Clinton judge who was on Obama’s short list for elevation to the Supreme Court.

DACA effectively amended deportation law, a presidential usurpation of legislative power. Obama imposed it unilaterally despite several times conceding that he lacked the authority to do so. (If you don’t remember, my friend Hans von Spakovsky reminds you here.) But the judges are enshrining it nonetheless. Mind you, DACA is not even a regulation, much less a law (indeed, Congress declined to enact such a law). Obama decreed it by having his homeland-security secretary issue a policy memo.

Yet the judges would have you think it was engraved on tablets pried from the Ark of the Covenant. The court’s opinion often reads like a bad novel — as if jurisprudence has become Sonia Sotomayor’s world, and we’re just empathizing in it. Otherwise, it reads like a policy memo that borrows liberally from Obama’s policy memo. Bottom line: The Ninth Circuit says Trump did not provide a good enough explanation for changing Obama’s policy.

Do you suppose there would ever be a good enough explanation for the Ninth Circuit?

On the same day, an Obama judge in Montana issued an injunction blocking the Keystone Pipeline. This toed the Obama line, the former president having halted construction of the pipeline — which would transport oil from Canada to Nebraska — in obeisance to his green base and as an exhibition of American global leadership on climate change.

Trump ran against these policies in his presidential bid. He sought to convince the public that the promotion of economic development was essential to national prosperity and would not harm the environment. He urged voters that Obama’s conception of global leadership was to preen while developing countries ignored his greenhouse-gasbaggery and developed countries made commitments that were “aspirational” (translation: economically ruinous) and that they had no intention of trying to keep.

You may have been under the impression that Trump won the election, and that choosing among competing policies is what elections are about. That is how it is supposed to work in our free, constitutional republic. But day by day, the space for free choice is shrinking. To the Lawyer Left, elections represent a policy choice only when Democrats win. The rest of the time, the courts are there to consolidate the Left’s gains, to repel democratically driven policy shifts.

Like his colleagues on the Ninth Circuit, the Obama judge in Montana says Trump did not provide a good enough explanation for changing Obama’s policy. The administration is weighing an appeal. Did I mention that appeals from the District of Montana go to the Ninth Circuit?

Comments   

The Trump administration has done a great job filling vacancies on the federal appellate courts, but there are still eleven slots open, and 111 open seats on the district courts. There is not going to be much legislating done with Democrats now controlling the House. So let’s use the time wisely. The Republican-controlled Senate, having increased its majority, must prioritize the conveyor-belt confirmation of Trump nominees.

If the courts are to be prevented from dictating an ideological agenda, rather than allowing the nation to govern itself, rule-of-law judges must be installed. If not, you can elect Republican presidents to govern, but you’ll be ruled by the Lawyer Left.

G M

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1258 on: November 11, 2018, 02:36:07 PM »
We are watching the country die right in front of us.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1259 on: November 11, 2018, 02:43:23 PM »
Only if we give up!

Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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All up to Sen. Mitch McConnell
« Reply #1264 on: December 08, 2018, 03:04:12 PM »
Will he be like General Grant / Patton  Jackson or like the gutless phony George B. McClellan?

https://www.conservativereview.com/news/schumer-and-pelosi-play-hardball-with-republicans/

Crafty_Dog

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Our Founding Fathers were wise
« Reply #1265 on: December 10, 2018, 12:41:51 PM »


Macron’s Warning to America’s Ascendant Left
The French president thought he could steamroll the rural minority on fuel taxes. Riots ensued.
384 Comments
By Joseph C. Sternberg
Dec. 6, 2018 6:34 p.m. ET
French President Emmanuel Macron speaks in Paris, Nov. 21.
French President Emmanuel Macron speaks in Paris, Nov. 21. Photo: pool new/Reuters

The most common explanation for France’s gilets jaunes protests against fuel-tax hikes is that they arise from too little democracy. Lower-income and rural citizens feel left behind by President Emmanuel Macron’s aggressive economic reform agenda, which ignores their interests and benefits an urban elite. The opposite is true. The protests are happening because France has too much democracy. What it’s lacking is politics.

Mr. Macron’s political movement was born of the notion that France needed to become more democratic. As a young technocrat-in-training and junior government minister, he became convinced that special interests within the traditional parties obstructed national progress.

As Economist correspondent Sophie Pedder notes in her illuminating biography of the president, the premise is that as a numerical matter there are enough actual or potential winners from economic reform and globalization that a leader could cull those voters from the old parties and unite them under a new banner. It would then be possible to steamroll minority opposition.

Which is precisely what Mr. Macron did. It helped that his rise came in an era when French politics was becoming steadily more democratic overall.

A 2000 constitutional amendment shortened the presidential term to five years from seven—explicitly to align the presidential and legislative election calendars. This amplifies a president’s mandate (already bolstered by a runoff voting system meant to exaggerate electoral support for the eventual winner) by reducing the risk that he might have to “cohabit” with a National Assembly controlled by the opposing party. Mainstream parties have adopted the U.S. style of intraparty primary campaigning, allowing party members to pick who leads them into general elections.

The inexorable logic of all this democratization: If the rural, low-income yellow-vest protesters feel left behind, well, leave them behind. Christophe Guilluy, the geographer who coined the phrase “peripheral France” to describe this segment of the population, estimates it at about 60%. But there’s reason to suspect that’s an overcount. Most conspicuously, the far-right National Front that everyone thinks is the natural home for peripheral voters keeps losing. Marine Le Pen, the party’s presidential candidate last year, scored only 21% in the first round and 34% in the runoff against Mr. Macron.

Similar “peripheral” movements elsewhere, from the Sweden Democrats to the Alternative for Germany, also have discovered there’s a limit to their support somewhere short of one-third of the electorate. Not even Donald Trump represents a full victory of the periphery, having run two percentage points behind Hillary Clinton in the nationwide popular vote.

Yet peripheral voters still are a substantial minority. And the widespread rioting in France shows the dangers of allowing a healthy dose of democracy to transmogrify into a brutal majoritarianism. Majority rule has its place, but it’s no way to knit together a diverse society.

Those special interests Mr. Macron derided turn out to have provided ballast. A center-right Republican Party under its failed 2017 candidate, François Fillon, would have effected some labor-law and civil-service reforms for which there is now broad support, but that party’s rural base would have precluded the green-energy follies that are sinking Mr. Macron.

The other word for this is “politics,” whose practitioners delicately trade interests and strike compromises to make majority rule more palatable to the minority. Having eschewed this form of politics, and lacking any formal way to account for peripheral concerns in a constitutional system that mercilessly rewards majority rule, Mr. Macron can only flail. The fuel tax that started this mess is on hold. So may be other parts of his agenda, some of which could have enjoyed more durable support.

Do America’s coastal Democrats get the message? They believe they represent an ascendant majority, and election results in recent years suggest they may be right for now. One can sympathize with their frustration that America’s complex federal system doesn’t automatically translate an electoral majority into power where it counts in Congress or the White House. This frustration increasingly leads to rhetorical attacks on the Constitution, whose mechanisms—especially the Senate and the Electoral College—block majoritarianism and make it impossible for progressives to govern from their demographic strongholds on the coasts.

The lesson from France is that restraints on majority rule are a good thing. Democrats would do better to focus on the practice of politics rather than on constitutional re-engineering. Mr. Macron is discovering that those politicians who live by strict majoritarianism can die by the social unrest it triggers. So can their agendas.


Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Uh oh
« Reply #1269 on: January 30, 2019, 02:15:18 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Judicial Scramble Drill
« Reply #1271 on: February 01, 2019, 07:15:13 AM »
Judicial Scramble Drill
The White House walks away from a bad deal but harms a good nominee.
50 Comments
By The Editorial Board

Jan. 31, 2019 7:13 p.m. ET
Our editorial Wednesday on White House negotiations with California Democrats over judicial nominees struck a nerve, and it’s good to know we get results. The Trump Team appears to have backed off this bad idea, though not without treating one nominee as collateral damage.
Potomac Watch Podcast

The White House Considers Concessions

On Wednesday evening the White House announced more judicial selections, including two of the three Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals nominees who were originally nominated last year but went missing from a renominations list earlier in January. The rushed release was damage control after our reporting that the White House counsel’s office had withheld the names while negotiating over nominees with Senators Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris.

Kenneth Lee and Daniel Collins have now been renominated for seats on the Ninth Circuit, and both are lawyers in private practice who have considerable government experience. The White House also nominated Daniel Bress, an appellate lawyer and former clerk for Antonin Scalia, to the Ninth Circuit.

Mr. Bress is certainly qualified, but he replaces Patrick Bumatay, who was nominated to the Ninth Circuit last year but this time was nominated for the federal district court. District judges typically handle trials, while circuit judges handle appeals and constitutional claims. Appellate judges are also the bench from which Supreme Court nominees are often selected.


The 40-year-old gay Filipino-American was the prime target of Ms. Feinstein and Ms. Harris, and this White House concession makes no sense. Mr. Bumatay may now be years away from a circuit-court seat if he ever wins one. Worse, the White House has lent credence to the specious Democratic claims that he isn’t qualified.

Mr. Bumatay’s demotion won no goodwill from Ms. Feinstein, who denounced the appointments. She seems especially upset that our editorial exposed her White House parley. Some on the right are taking White House dictation that this wasn’t a real threat, but they need better sources.

Ms. Feinstein says she merely wants a deal like the one Senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth negotiated on Illinois nominees for the Seventh Circuit. Yet Mr. Durbin negotiated promptly and in good faith, while Ms. Feinstein and Ms. Harris are best known for their starring roles in trying to destroy Brett Kavanaugh. If she wants the courtesy of being consulted about home-state nominees, she should stop taking rote orders from the political left.

At least the White House avoided a disastrous deal with liberal Senators. But the episode shows that the new White House judicial shop isn’t up to cruising speed. New White House counsel Pat Cipollone doesn’t need to reinvent an operation that worked better than anything else in the Administration. If Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg retires, there won’t be room for amateur mistakes in what would be a ferocious confirmation fight.


G M

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RBG deathwatch
« Reply #1273 on: February 07, 2019, 01:50:58 PM »


DougMacG

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Re: Politics, Dems pick Milwaukee for convention
« Reply #1275 on: March 11, 2019, 10:09:40 AM »
Second place was Miami.  This means the powers believe states like Wisconsin, 86% white, are more likely pickup than states like Florida, much more diverse.  Milwaukee is more black and Miami more Hispanic.  Third place Houston dropped like a bad habit, meaning Texas is again not.in.play.  Interesting.  https://www.tmj4.com/news/local-news/milwaukee-selected-to-host-2020-democratic-national-convention

Republicans 2008 picked St. Paul and lost MN by double digits.  Then picked Florida and Ohio, 2012, 2016.  "Republicans are set to gather in Charlotte, the largest city in battleground North Carolina, on Aug. 24-27, 2020."

The 2020 Dem convention could turn into a food fight, understatement alert, see DNC Chicago 1968.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tv0rI-5ycBU

ccp

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1276 on: March 11, 2019, 11:37:15 AM »
even more obnoxious is the Dems having unlimited airtime to market their candidates on CNN
what her face gabby on last hs is a love fest softball show.

Then all the debates on msm networks.
'
As for GM's post 2posts prior to this,

Even after RPG is gone they will have a look alike Hollywood "actor" (the word 'actress" I noticed seems to have been dropped from the English language as even the women are now called actORS) playing   "RPG" till Trump is out:

https://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/magazine/00000153-3e1f-d365-a5d3-3f5f4a300000



DougMacG

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Re: Politics, war coming in the Democratic party
« Reply #1278 on: March 24, 2019, 07:20:17 AM »
A moderate Democrat friend brought up to me the anger he feels at that the new extreme taking his party leftward. 

The party is split.  37% of Dems support Green New Deal (new Fox poll), 31% support reparations, whatever that means and similar for other extreme positions of the Left.  Two thirds of Democrats roughly oppose those.

If the far Left wins the nomination, they will lose votes from traditional Democrats.  If a moderate centrist type candidate starts to win the Democratic nomination by running against the extreme, there will be civil war on the Left.

In 2016, the more centrist candidate won by cheating and by adopting the positions of the far Left challenger and Bernie stepped aside and was bought off gracefully avoiding that fight.  2020 will be different.
------------
The split in a party reminds me that to convert someone in politics is worth two points.  One point for leaving a party and one if they join the other.

These days we are seeing only one point conversions.  There are Democrats who won't vote socialism or Green New Deal but will also not vote for Trump, and there are Republicans who won't support Trump but will not convert to Democrat.

The far Left is partially backfiring with in your face rhetoric and proposals, energizing some while chasing away others.  Common sense conservative constitutional, limited government views are mostly unspoken, converting no one and hoping young people live long enough to find their way there on their own.



ccp

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American Jews more successful than any other
« Reply #1281 on: March 26, 2019, 07:16:05 AM »
religion in America :

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_and_religion#/media/File:Income_Ranking_by_Religious_Group_-_2000.png

Yet they bash the country they have done so well in .
They promote their party of race gender cultural politics and want open borders to destroy the USA for their beloved Democrat Party
They think that voting for crats and running around telling everyone they are "for the poor" excuses them of any guilt about their success and makes them more virtuous than the Conservatives and thus BETTER than us.

They are wrong.  But don't expect anyone of them to admit it.
Got to remember something else about us Jews - we are very stubborn.



And anyone disputes this just look at so many Jews, who despite 2 yrs of harassing Trump are still  leading the charge against Trump - Cohen of Tennessee , Shifty Schiff, fat Nads, and the "Berg" less Zucker fucker ,  (as well as the "berged" Zucker too) and so many others including the Jews involved in the get Trump crew  from SDNY.

I Thank God everyday for Levin the Horowitz and the Charens and others.

( and CD )

« Last Edit: March 26, 2019, 07:21:51 AM by ccp »

DougMacG

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"Maybe the time frame to just speak up is a little more lenient than to press charges but not decades or generations."

We were talking Biden but how about Lt Gov Justin Fairfax in Virginia?  The first charge I think is from early 2000s.  She spoke up because somebody else had the same thing happen to her; we are talking rape, date or acquaintance rape.  Seems really credible to me: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/justin-fairfax-accuser-meredith-watson-says-he-targeted-her-because-she-was-allegedly-assaulted-before/  It's  too old to prosecute, so what do you do, ignore it?  If you are the news crew?  Don't take this story, don't hear her out, don't broadcast it?  Or let her story out if you find it credible and let the public sort it out?

ccp

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Clinton
« Reply #1283 on: April 05, 2019, 03:41:21 PM »
is like the Kardashians

shoved in our faces , like it or not , every day

I wish they would all go away for good.

Who cares about any of them.

ccp

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interesting exchange from Mnuchin - Waters
« Reply #1284 on: April 10, 2019, 06:03:08 AM »

DougMacG

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Re: interesting exchange from Mnuchin - Waters
« Reply #1285 on: April 10, 2019, 06:47:35 AM »
https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2019/04/09/watch-maxine-waters-battles-steven-mnuchin-this-is-a-new-way-i-have-the-gavel/

I take it they will not be on each other's holiday card list.

In my moderate suburban congressional district that flipped like the House, people didn't care that a vote for their Democratic moderate business owner, non-flame thrower candidate was a vote for vote for making Maxine Waters chair of the Financial Services Committee and Ocasio-Cortez spokesperson for the house.  In the political minority, the extremist Leftists in the House were far less relevant.  Elections have consequences and so did the Republican legislative failures and perceived failures of the previous two years.

Isn't it interesting that the Trump cabinet member is the sane and responsible one with experience and wisdom, and the most powerful people in the opposition are the nut cases.  Assuming the prestigious mainstream news organizations had it right, shouldn't it be the other way around?
« Last Edit: April 10, 2019, 07:44:19 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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Bad political analogies: Were the Nazis Nationalists?
« Reply #1286 on: April 10, 2019, 09:02:04 AM »
Trump recently labeled himself a "nationalist" in contrast with being a "globalist" and 'mainstream' 'journalists' cringed like he doesn't know the history of nationalism - meaning Nazism.

Candace Owens made a point yesterday that Hitler was not a nationalist. 

Besides having Socialist in their name like the USSR, and Big Government as their enforcement mechanism, like the Left and opposite of our deregulation President pursuing greater individual and economic freedoms, Hitler was most certainly a one-world globalist.  WWII was not a fight about the world attacking Germany's internal nationalism. 

Trump wants to bring us home from foreign conflicts, Afghan, Iraq, Syria, for example.  No one called Hitler an isolationist.  Bad analogy.  Over his dead body was when troops were called home.

Ironically it is the Leftist Climatistas that are explicitly in pursuit of having one world  governance and having their policies govern the world along with the coercion to enforce it. 

When the Left accuses, most often they are projecting. 

Without mass murder or genocide, no one should be called a Nazi.  The Left has no  concentration camps for opponents.  But the leading edge of the Left is jailing their capitalists, the American Left sides with him still, and our rivals in the UN, Russia and China rush in to globalize the crisis.
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/energy/article/Citgo-executives-arrested-by-Maduro-forgotten-13575337.php

« Last Edit: April 10, 2019, 01:54:58 PM by DougMacG »

G M

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1287 on: April 10, 2019, 10:59:22 AM »
"When the Left accuses, most often they are projecting. "

THIS!

ccp

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caveat CNN research
« Reply #1288 on: April 21, 2019, 03:39:11 PM »
which has to piss zucker and mob off:

https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/20/politics/cnn-poll-impeachment-trump-russia/index.html

They are waiting and furiously trying to get the numbers up.

ccp

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graphite pencil neck
« Reply #1289 on: April 22, 2019, 08:24:50 AM »
" Schiff told "This Week" co-anchor Martha Raddatz the decision whether to begin proceedings to impeach President Donald Trump will be made based on the "best interests of the country."

"https://www.yahoo.com/gma/congressional-dems-may-impeachment-wake-mueller-report-adam-131757805--abc-news-topstories.html

aka : we're polling up our wazoos to see if we can get away with impeachment proceedings or to see if  it would  backfire on our mob.



ccp

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1291 on: May 20, 2019, 03:15:26 PM »
****https://bigleaguepolitics.com/justin-amashs-business-interests-in-china-underscore-his-push-to-impeach-trump/****

wow.

just nothing is as it seems is it?

I was shocked to see he has a 90% Liberty score on Levin's conservative review

that is better than nearly everyone else
so coming out against Trump who has been the only fighting for the Right is a surprise


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1292 on: May 20, 2019, 05:30:49 PM »
Some of the hard right takes a hard stance against tariffs , , , especially when the tariffs hit in one's own wallet.

DougMacG

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1293 on: May 21, 2019, 06:26:40 AM »
Some of the hard right takes a hard stance against tariffs , , , especially when the tariffs hit in one's own wallet.

True, but plenty of people who are hit in the wallet support the strategy.  These tariffs are part of a strategy aimed at achieving zero tariffs, both ways, and it works only if the country stands behind it.

Notice that the Democrat candidates aren't criticizing Trump for getting tough with China.  They criticize his style not his substance on this.  Plenty of independents and Democrats support his trade policy, cf. 304 electoral votes including Wisc, Pa and Mich.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Politics
« Reply #1294 on: May 21, 2019, 06:30:36 AM »
It was just an observation on his 90% liberty score with Lavin.



Crafty_Dog

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WSJ intrudes on the Acosta lynching with facts
« Reply #1297 on: July 09, 2019, 09:49:44 PM »

Trump and the Sex Offender
Guess why the press makes a villain out of Jeffrey Epstein’s only successful prosecutor?
By Holman W. Jenkins, Jr.
July 9, 2019 6:59 pm ET
Demonstrators protest Jeffrey Epstein in New York, July 8. Photo: shannon stapleton/Reuters

Anybody who has read about Jeffrey Epstein in the past dozen years would come away with the same impression Mr. Epstein apparently had about himself. The guy will soon be back in jail.

In his luxurious Manhattan townhouse, he reportedly commissioned a mural of himself at the center of a prison yard. According to the New York Times, he told a recent visitor, “That’s me, and I had this painted because there is always the possibility that could be me again.’’

Mr. Epstein is back in a holding cell, under indictment by a U.S. attorney in New York. He will have his day in court. Presumably we will find out whether the evidence against the hedge-fund impresario for sexually abusing numerous underage girls in the early 2000s is as strong as it seems.

But one element of the story should give us pause, and that’s the seemingly concerted effort by the press to make a secondary villain out of the only prosecutor who succeeded in holding Mr. Epstein accountable till now because, 12 years later, that prosecutor is Donald Trump’s labor secretary.

A much-cited story in the Miami Herald last November is headlined “How a future Trump Cabinet member gave a serial sex abuser the deal of a lifetime.” The paper thereby invokes a previously unknown form of retroactive quantum action at a distance, since Alexander Acosta’s actions as a U.S. attorney in Florida in 2007 could not have been premised on Mr. Trump being president a decade later.

The headline is also misleading. In fact, the Herald’s 5,000-word exposé tells us very little about the reasons and circumstances behind the 2008 plea deal in which Mr. Epstein agreed to plead guilty to two felonies, serve an 18-month jail sentence, pay restitution to certain victims, and accept designation for life as a registered sex offender.

Instead, the paper tells us what its own sources are willing to say now about Mr. Epstein more than a decade after the prosecution. What a newspaper can report in 2018 and what a prosecutor can prove in 2007 are two very different things. A fact the Herald also should have made plain: It was precisely Mr. Epstein’s conviction at the hands of Mr. Acosta that helped fuel the filing of civil lawsuits and emergence of newly declared victims that became the basis for the Herald’s own reporting.

Making an even bigger joke of the paper’s positioning of Mr. Acosta as Mr. Epstein’s protector is this glaring fact: It wasn’t Mr. Acosta but New York County’s district attorney—a member of the city’s ruling Democratic elite, with the illustrious name of Cyrus Vance Jr.—who in 2011 sought to undo Mr. Acosta’s work by relieving Mr. Epstein of his Level 3 sex offender status in New York state.

But then Mr. Vance is not a member of the Trump administration.

Maybe none of the prosecutors involved in this matter belong in the pantheon, but Mr. Acosta convicted Mr. Epstein and ended his depredations. Ninety-seven percent of federal prosecutions end in plea deals. The Herald tells us almost nothing about why this one did as well, except to note in passing that Mr. Vance later argued before a New York judge that Mr. Epstein’s “underage victims failed to cooperate in the [Florida] case.”

In fact, our best information right now comes from a three-page letter Mr. Acosta himself wrote to the Daily Beast in 2011. He described how his office was recruited into an already-existing prosecution by Palm Beach police who feared their state prosecutor intended to let Mr. Epstein off with probation. Mr. Acosta’s role was hindered by the need to find a federal crime to charge. He also had to show deference to Florida. Mr. Epstein’s well-connected legal team—including Alan Dershowitz and Kenneth Starr—kept appealing over his head to Washington. It sought dirt on Mr. Acosta’s staff in hopes of disqualifying key underlings from the case. He fretted about a drawn-out prosecution in which Mr. Epstein would walk free. He had no role in Florida’s subsequent decision to let Mr. Epstein out of jail six days a week to continue his business. Mr. Acosta also says that with the witnesses who subsequently have come forward, he could have made a stronger case.

The outcome may not have been deeply satisfying, but Mr. Acosta persevered to a conviction despite Mr. Epstein’s deep pockets and his constantly invoked list of powerful “friends,” including Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew and Donald Trump (though it was Mr. Trump who, in typically Trumpian fashion, raised an eyebrow as early as 2002 with a comment to New York magazine about the apparent youth of Mr. Epstein’s girlfriends).

It also bears asking: Would the Herald even have invested in reporting the Epstein story if it couldn’t also have flounced up an anti-Trump angle?

Yes, it’s been rough couple of decades for the newspaper business. At the kindest, the Herald should have had the confidence to rest its claim to public attention on what it had to reveal about Mr. Epstein’s behavior rather than trying so pathetically to annex its reporting to an au courant anti-Trump narrative.

ccp

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savage : makes some good point imo
« Reply #1298 on: July 16, 2019, 09:02:12 AM »
https://michaelsavage.com/podcast-a-tweet-too-far/

he is right :
what happened to the arrests last wknd of illegals?
died without a peep.

and yes, Trumps impulsiveness makes for another political blunder

liberal Jews helped Omar get elected ?  hopefully they will vote otherwise next time around.

and speculates the Indian Nationalist is behind AOC feeding her the talking points.
I speculate he is only one - of many radical Democrat liberals telling her things to say and how to say them.


« Last Edit: July 16, 2019, 09:08:19 AM by ccp »

ccp

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OTOH
« Reply #1299 on: July 16, 2019, 09:29:15 AM »
liberal jews still play they are above it all and call Trump racist:
https://www.jpost.com/American-Politics/How-Jews-have-reacted-to-Trumps-tweet-targeting-Democratic-congresswomen-595783

so they may vote her back in because they are stubborn in their self perceived virtuosity .

my opinion