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Nah, you're not getting away with that lame shit. Take another read. The sources are multiple, accurate and verifiable. They include Business Insider, the WAPO and the FBI.
But, as always, the challenge to you is to find data that contradict any that are posed here.
All of the extremist killings in the US in 2018 had links to right-wing extremism, according to new report
The right OWNS this shit and, by extension, so too do Trump and his enablers.
https://www.businessinsider.com/extremist-killings-links-right-wing-extremism-report-2019-1
A new report shows all the extremist killings in 2018 had links to right-wing extremism.
The report's findings are consistent with other fairly recent studies on extremism in the US, which have shown right-wing extremism and violence are on the rise.
There were at least 50 extremist-related killings in 2018, according to the report, making it the fourth-deadliest year on record for domestic extremist-related killings since 1970.
"The extremist-related murders in 2018 were overwhelmingly linked to right-wing extremists," the report states. "Every one of the perpetrators had ties to at least one right-wing extremist movement, although one had recently switched to supporting Islamist extremism. White supremacists were responsible for the great majority of the killings, which is typically the case."
Guns were involved in the vast majority of the killings - 42 of out 50.
The Anti-Defamation League's findings are consistent with other recent research on right-wing extremism in the US, which shows it's on the rise.
"The number of terrorist attacks by far-right perpetrators rose over the past decade, more than quadrupling between 2016 and 2017," the Center for Strategic and International Studies said in a November 2018 report. "The recent pipe bombs and the October 27, 2018, synagogue attack in Pittsburgh are symptomatic of this trend."
Correspondingly, a November 2018 analysis from The Washington Post on global terrorism data showed that far-right violence has been on the rise since President Donald Trump entered the White House.
"Over the past decade, attackers motivated by right-wing political ideologies have committed dozens of shootings, bombings and other acts of violence, far more than any other category of domestic extremist," the report stated.
The report said this has occurred alongside a "decades-long drop-off in violence by left-wing groups," which were considered the top extremist threat in the US three to four decades ago.
Meanwhile, three men and a male high school student were earlier this month charged with plotting to attack a Muslim community in upstate New York with explosives.
In a separate incident, a Colorado man was arrested last Saturday after he posted on social media that he planned to kill "as many girls as I see." Police reportedly feared the man planned to target a Women's March event occurring nearby.
Relatedly, FBI data released in early November 2018 showed hate crimes rose 17% in 2017.
Remember when the assholes in the GOP used to shut the gov down over debt ceiling hikes under Obama?
If the mfr's didn't have double standards they'd have no standards at all.
You see what you want to see, and you apply double standards that render your views unsupportable by objective people.
You live with the much larger number of deaths resulting from RW terrorism over the past two years.
I posted the data yesterday. Read it and don't post your distorted view of the reality you think I should live in; the present reality is as described in what I posted.
You allege slander, I see legitimate criticism. Immigration laws can be changed without the 2/3 vote required to amend the Constitution.
So you're conflating everything that pisses you off with bad mouthing the Constitution.
Trump bad mouthed the shit out of the U.S in his campaign.
You're right, you simply don't know...……...how to read.
Once Trump Talked About ‘American Carnage.’ Now He Says Critics Should Leave.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/16/us/politics/trump-america-criticism.html
By Peter Baker
July 16, 2019
WASHINGTON — America stinks. At least that’s what Donald J. Trump seemed to be saying before becoming president.
He did not believe in “American exceptionalism,” he said, because America was not exceptional. Instead, it was a “laughingstock” that was no better than Vladimir V. Putin’s Russia. By promising to make America great again, he made it clear that he believed it was not great anymore.
Remember the anger from Trump supporters over that remark? Me neither. Put the words in Obama's mouth and it's Lost Shit City for righties.
That was then. Now the president who trash-talked America more than any other in modern times says anyone who trash-talks America should leave.
The president, who took office with an inaugural address decrying “American carnage,” now says that it is unpatriotic to speak ill of the country. And on Tuesday, he went further, equating attacks on him by his political opponents with attacks on “the Country, the Flag.”
The love-it-or-leave-it argument is hardly new, but in recent years, it has rarely played out at the volume and level it has since Mr. Trump on Sunday told a group of liberal, first-year Democratic congresswomen of color to “go back” to their home countries, even though three of the four were born in the United States.
Assailed for inflaming racial divisions, Mr. Trump this week sought to reframe his attack on the so-called squad of congresswomen into a question of patriotism and loyalty, claiming that they “hate our country.”
The blistering debate that has followed is all the more remarkable given that Mr. Trump spent much of the last few years essentially disparaging America. It was the high-octane fuel for his campaign, the notion that this was no longer the United States of old because it had succumbed to politically correct, multicultural, open-borders globalism and allowed itself to be taken advantage of by allies and adversaries alike.
As president, however, Mr. Trump has wrapped himself in the flag — at one point hugging it at a conservative political gathering — and waged a monthslong campaign against African-American football players for protesting racism by kneeling during the national anthem.
He effectively co-opted the national celebration of the Fourth of July, making himself the red-white-and-blue star on center stage. He has contended that he has transformed the United States into a beacon of strength again, crediting himself with reversing the national decline he identified as a candidate.
“As president, he now sees America as an avatar for himself — it must be great because he’s great,” said Nicole Hemmer, a scholar of conservatism who is taking a position at Columbia University to work on its oral history of Barack Obama’s presidency. “From this perspective, to allow that America has faults would be to allow that Trump himself has them, something he has never been willing to do.”
In a way, this is a struggle over what the United States really stands for. Mr. Trump and his allies argue that the squad and its followers do not share core American values because they are critical of the system and advocate or flirt with socialism, while the president’s critics say it’s the other way around and that he does not subscribe to the core national beliefs in free speech, immigration and the rule of law. At stake is who gets to define what constitutes Americanism.
There is no doubt that Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and her allies made provocative, even incendiary statements that have struck even many of their fellow Democrats as radical. Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota in particular has used anti-Semitic tropes to attack supporters of Israel and suggest Jewish lawmakers were loyal to a foreign country while making comments that seemed to minimize the horror of terrorism, even the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
The Republican National Committee on Tuesday issued a list of what it called the “vile, hateful, anti-Israel and anti-American rhetoric” used by Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, Ms. Omar and Representatives Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna S. Pressley of Massachusetts, citing among other things comments attacking the Border Patrol and accusing the administration of running “concentration camps” on the southeastern border.
“He’s tired, a lot of us are sick and tired of this country — of America — coming last to people who swore an oath of office,” Kellyanne Conway, the president’s counselor, told reporters at the White House on Tuesday.
The squad’s supporters argue that their comments were not anti-American but policy criticisms of an administration they disagree with, just as Mr. Trump’s backers argue that his past remarks were not rejections of America but expressions of frustration with what he viewed as the damaging leadership of Mr. Obama and other presidents of both parties.
Geoffrey R. Stone, a First Amendment scholar at the University of Chicago Law School who has studied the era of McCarthyism, said criticism of the government represents one of the greatest strengths of the United States.
“Not all criticisms are warranted, of course, but it is through such criticism that we improve over time,” he said. “It was criticism that led to the civil rights movement, the women’s rights movement and the gay rights movement. The president should learn to value criticism, even when he disagrees with its message.”
Ben Domenech, a founder and publisher of The Federalist, a conservative online publication, said the debate of recent days reminded him of a “South Park” episode where the characters say that America has problems, but anyone who does not root for the home team should get out of the stadium.
“The president is doing the same thing, with an added tinge of xenophobia,” said Mr. Domenech. “It’s tribal, it ramps up the intensity of everything, but it plays both in his interest and the interests of the congressional members involved from their perspective.”
Mr. Trump was less bothered by criticism of the United States in the years leading up to his election. He repeatedly said “our country is a laughingstock” and took issue with the term “American exceptionalism.” In 2013, he praised Mr. Putin for an “amazing” Op-Ed in The New York Times that said the United States was not special and criticized Mr. Obama for asserting American exceptionalism.
Speaking on CNN, Mr. Trump said, “You think of the term as being fine, but all of a sudden you say, what if you’re in Germany or Japan or any one of 100 different countries? You’re not going to like that term. It’s very insulting, and Putin really put it to him about that.” As for whether Americans were exceptional, he said, “Why would we be?” citing the disastrous Iraq war.
He likewise rejected the term in 2016 as a presidential candidate when asked about his praise for Mr. Putin’s Op-Ed. “And that’s basically what Putin was saying, is that, you know, you use a term like ‘American exceptionalism,’ and frankly, the way our country is being treated right now by Russia and Syria and lots of other places and with all the mistakes we’ve made over the years, like Iraq and so many others, it’s sort of a hard term to use,” he said on Fox News.
During other interviews, he has said the United States was no better than Russia when it came to its moral values on the international front. During a conversation with Bill O’Reilly on Fox shortly after Mr. Trump took office, the host pointed out that “Putin’s a killer.” Mr. Trump replied by saying, “What, do you think our country is so innocent?”
Mr. Trump’s affinity for Russia was so pronounced during the campaign that Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, now the Republican leader in the House, privately told colleagues that “I think Putin pays” Mr. Trump. Last year, Mr. Trump blamed poor relations with Russia on “many years of U.S. foolishness and stupidity” — to which the Russian Foreign Ministry then tweeted, “We agree.”
Asked on Sunday to reconcile Mr. Trump’s latest love-America line with his repeated assertions that America needed to be made great again, and therefore was not great, Tim Murtaugh, a spokesman for the president’s re-election campaign, offered a variation on the slogan: “Keep America great.”
Post the quotes form any member of the 'Squad' that support your assertion.
Chance the Rapper Shares Message for Chance the Snapper
Chance the Rapper, who appeared on "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" Tuesday, shared some words of wisdom to the beloved reptile Chance the Snapper:
https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/chance-the-rapper-snapper-alligator-chicago-humboldt-park-fallon-512816091.html
Published Jul 16, 2019 at 10:08 PM | Updated at 10:17 PM CDT on Jul 16, 2019
Please post exactly how the words Trump said, which were viewable live on the electric TV machines and computers, should be portrayed.
Isn't it hard work for you, denying so much reality?
I realize that reality is unpleasant and disagreeable for you, but c'mon suck it up and stop making a fool of yourself.
The real bullshit is your unwillingness to take the meaning of Trump's words at face value.
I suppose that Trump, like many of his fine supporters, is just...…...slow.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/08/trump-defends-white-nationalist-protesters-some-very-fine-people-on-both-sides/537012/
President Trump defended the white nationalists who protested in Charlottesville on Tuesday, saying they included “some very fine people,” while expressing sympathy for their demonstration against the removal of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee. It was a strikingly different message from the prepared statement he had delivered on Monday, and a reversion to his initial response over the weekend.
Speaking in the lobby of Trump Tower at what had been billed as a statement on infrastructure, a combative Trump defended his slowness to condemn white nationalists and neo-Nazis after the melee in central Virginia, which ended in the death of one woman and injuries to dozens of others, and compared the tearing down of Confederate monuments to the hypothetical removal of monuments to the Founding Fathers. He also said that counter-protesters deserve an equal amount of blame for the violence.
“What about the alt-left that came charging at, as you say, at the alt-right?” Trump said. “Do they have any semblance of guilt?”
“I’ve condemned neo-Nazis. I’ve condemned many different groups. But not all of those people were neo-Nazis, believe me,” he said.
“You had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists,” Trump said. “The press has treated them absolutely unfairly.”
“You also had some very fine people on both sides,” he said.
Trump didn't refer to them as losers but rather swept them up in his moronic 'many fine people' observation.
Don't give him your approval for not having the backbone to use the word that you appropriately used.
Trump Would Be Fired By Any Workplace In America For His Racist Rampage
At the very least he should be sitting in a chair outside of the HR office preparing his defense.
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/07/16/trump-fired-workplace-america-racist-rampage.html
Posted on Tue, Jul 16th, 2019 by Sean Colarossi
Donald Trump remains in the White House on Tuesday after the U.S. House of Representatives voted to condemn his racism, but the presidency is likely one of the only jobs in America that he would be able to keep after spewing such racist garbage.
As MSNBC’s Chris Hayes pointed out on Tuesday, “The crazy thing is that condemnation from the House would be expected in basically any other workplace in America.”
Hayes said:
The crazy thing is that condemnation from the House would be expected in basically any other workplace in America. If any one of us said to a coworker like in a meeting what the president said about those congresswomen, we would expect repercussions. In fact, get this. Here is what the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which polices workplace law and civil rights, here is what they say about immigrants employment rights under federal anti-discrimination laws.
I’ll read it: “Examples of potentially unlawful conduct include insults, taunting or ethnic epithets such as making fun of a person’s foreign accent or comments like ‘Go back to where you came from’, whether made by supervisors or coworkers.” That is how crystal clear-cut this issue is.
snip//
If he held any other job in America and launched into the same racist tirade he recently directed at four U.S. congresswomen, he would likely be fired.
Unfortunately, Donald Trump happens to hold the only position in America that would tolerate such a fundamentally unstable and dangerous individual.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100212286322
8. trump never had to answer to a board of directors. If so, he'd be broke & homeless.
However the Tiki torch assholes chanting "the Jews will not replace us" merit no singling out by Trumplethinskin, but rather get lost in his weaselly amoral false equivalence....'many fine people on both sides'. Thanks for the moral clarity.
Trump points out nothing more than his total inadequacy for the office he holds.
Frozen in the amber of the Cold War, you are. Labeling people and States as 'Red' or using dated slogans is the first refuge of a scoundrel.
Got pictures of Joe McCarthy?
Yeah, I'm pretty certain an apology is due for many 4th graders.
But hey, I attributed the vocabulary of a H.S. sophomore to President Used Urinal Cake yesterday.
Guess I've got a few H.S's to visit to offer my apologies, and a hearty 'WTF was I thinking?!'.
See, we got 'em up here. And we name them, after a rapper in this case. Good job CSS!
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/significant-digits-for-wednesday-july-17-2019/
36 hours
Chance the Snapper, a 5-foot-long alligator, has been captured by wildlife officials in Chicago’s Humboldt Park after 36 hours of tracking and surveillance.
“Everybody’s got different blessings. This is my blessing,” said the owner of Crocodilian Specialist Services, who captured the marauding beast.
That’s cool and all, but my blessing is putting together a daily digest of the numbers tucked inside the news. [NPR]
That's not surprising. You could fill one of Ben Carson's Great Pyramid grain storage facilities with what you don't know.
After first removing the grain of course, and the mummy.
Surprised we didn't get a new breakfast cereal out of that bit of lunacy.
Mummy-O's?
And you go right along with Trump's idiocy, amorality and incompetence.
Did YOU know about those Revolutionary War airfields we recaptured?
The man is dangerously stupid and hateful, and you ignore it.
Well that's a fair fight. Do you really imagine that the Dems can't see that hand and raise it with far, far, far more extremist, bat-shit crazy, inane, insulting, semiliterate Tweets from Trump?
Game on.
Memo to Republicans
Before you regurgitate Trump’s remarks about Democrats not loving their country, remember who it was who stood on a stage in Helsinki and sided with the man who attacked us in an attempt to undermine our nation’s democracy.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100212285308
5. And don't forget who crossed the DMZ to kiss Kim Jong Oon's ass.
Bigotry and Donald Trump go back a long way.
.
Tuesday, July 16, 2019 NYTimes.com/David-Leonhardt »
Op-Ed Columnist
His real estate company tried to avoid renting apartments to African-American tenants. He described “laziness” as “a trait in blacks.” He called for five black and Latino teenagers to be executed — and then insisted on their guilt even after DNA evidence proved their innocence.
He rose to prominence in the Republican Party by questioning the citizenship of the first black president. He launched his presidential campaign by saying Mexican immigrants were “rapists.” His political organization created a television advertisement that Fox News pulled for being too racist.
He frequently criticizes prominent African-Americans for being unpatriotic, ungrateful, disrespectful or unintelligent. He mocks Native Americans and uses anti-Semitic stereotypes.
He retweets white nationalists. He said that a violent white supremacist march included some “very fine people.” He regularly appoints people with a history of racist comments.
And over the weekend, he told four nonwhite members of Congress — all citizens, of course, and three of them born in the United States — to “go back” to where they came from.
President Trump doesn’t just make racist comments. He is a racist. He’s proven it again and again, over virtually his entire time as a public figure. His bigotry is a core part of his worldview, and it’s been central to his political rise.'
Anyone who claims otherwise — like Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin; Senator Steve Daines of Montana; Marc Short, the vice president’s chief of staff — is simply enabling his hate.
(Mnuchin now has a pattern of defending racism, as a way of pleasing his boss.)
Now what did I tell you about that false equivalence shit? Numbers, dummy, numbers....
And yeah you earned the 'dummy' because this info was posted by me on this board within the past week. But I apologize if it's a cognitive decline issue.
All of the extremist killings in the US in 2018 had links to right-wing extremism, according to new report
the right OWNS this shit and, by extension, so too do Trump and his enablers.
https://www.businessinsider.com/extremist-killings-links-right-wing-extremism-report-2019-1
A new report shows all the extremist killings in 2018 had links to right-wing extremism.
The report's findings are consistent with other fairly recent studies on extremism in the US, which have shown right-wing extremism and violence are on the rise.
There were at least 50 extremist-related killings in 2018, according to the report, making it the fourth-deadliest year on record for domestic extremist-related killings since 1970.
"The extremist-related murders in 2018 were overwhelmingly linked to right-wing extremists," the report states. "Every one of the perpetrators had ties to at least one right-wing extremist movement, although one had recently switched to supporting Islamist extremism. White supremacists were responsible for the great majority of the killings, which is typically the case."
Guns were involved in the vast majority of the killings - 42 of out 50.
The Anti-Defamation League's findings are consistent with other recent research on right-wing extremism in the US, which shows it's on the rise.
"The number of terrorist attacks by far-right perpetrators rose over the past decade, more than quadrupling between 2016 and 2017," the Center for Strategic and International Studies said in a November 2018 report. "The recent pipe bombs and the October 27, 2018, synagogue attack in Pittsburgh are symptomatic of this trend."
Correspondingly, a November 2018 analysis from The Washington Post on global terrorism data showed that far-right violence has been on the rise since President Donald Trump entered the White House.
"Over the past decade, attackers motivated by right-wing political ideologies have committed dozens of shootings, bombings and other acts of violence, far more than any other category of domestic extremist," the report stated.
The report said this has occurred alongside a "decades-long drop-off in violence by left-wing groups," which were considered the top extremist threat in the US three to four decades ago.
Meanwhile, three men and a male high school student were earlier this month charged with plotting to attack a Muslim community in upstate New York with explosives.
In a separate incident, a Colorado man was arrested last Saturday after he posted on social media that he planned to kill "as many girls as I see." Police reportedly feared the man planned to target a Women's March event occurring nearby.
Relatedly, FBI data released in early November 2018 showed hate crimes rose 17% in 2017.
Wow, good catch.
Last week I emailed a friend "which one is Bacharach, which one is Epstein?"
And yeah, Burt is still around at age 91.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burt_Bacharach
Let's hope some serious rain drops start fallin' on fucko's head and nothing seems to fit but a nice orange jumpsuit.
And Everything's.... Worryyyingg…. Him.
Released
October 1969
Trot out that smarmy comment the next time a RW nutter shoots up, blows up or pipe bomb mails multiple targets of their paranoid, conspiracy theory, fake news driven rage.
We all know, history instructs us, that it will come from the right sooner than from the left.
And no, I don't claim that the same shit doesn't drive violence from the left but rather that it is MUCH, much, much more prevalent from the right. Stats support that, so spare me the usual, righty default, false equivalence response.
Al Franken and Prince
Texas Republican Quits GOP: 'Trump Is the Worst President in the History of This Country'
Another lifelong Republican has left the party — this time, a Texas judge — citing her love for her country and her disdain for President Trump.
Following the departure of Rep. Justin Amash (I-Michigan) earlier this month, Texas Republican jurist Elsa Alcala announced on Facebook her leaving the Grand Ole Party. She, like Amash, specifically called attention to President Trump and the willingness of Republicans to excuse support for the President.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100212283961
And since those suffering the effect are unlikely to Google it because...……….why? Why do I need to know what I'm suffering from?
So, I'm going to use the 'rolled up newspaper on the snout' method to see If I can induce an ah HA learning moment.
Another triumph of hope over experience.
Dunning–Kruger effect
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the field of psychology, the Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people mistakenly assess their cognitive ability as greater than it is. It is related to the cognitive bias of illusory superiority and comes from the inability of people to recognize their lack of ability. Without the self-awareness of metacognition, people cannot objectively evaluate their competence or incompetence.
There is no plausible reason for Trump not to do what other candidates for the presidency and elected presidents have done, and you would have ripped Obama a new one for engaging in the same lack of transparency.
Not a single statement I posted is not empirically verifiable, virtually every day. Except by those suffering from the same educational and moral impairments as Trump.
Then I will continue to point out when you fall abysmally short of...manifesting some logic and fact-based critical thinking in your critiques of my posts.
Implicit in 'fix it' is retaining coverage for pre-existing conditions and no cap on lifetime coverage. No one on that stage suggested abandoning those coverages while expanding availability as single payer would do.
You have no point.
Yes, by all means. I'm sure it will be easy to separate fact from insult.
Trump IS hiding his tax returns from us. Obama IS a natural born citizen with a valid birth certificate. It was highly insulting and disrespectful to hold conspiracy theories to the contrary.
Trump IS historically illiterate, inarticulate, has the working vocabulary of a 15 year old, maybe, and is an adulterous moral imbecile. Obama is exactly none of those things.
There's your head start, work on it and get back to us.
Steve Scalise says House Republicans didn't disrespect Obama's position. Let's go to the tape.
I don't know whether or not it's failing memory or selective memory or a little of both, but it's clear you Trumpanzees have memory 'problems'.
So here's a little Cyber-Gingko for you. Gonna be painful, cognitive dissonance usually is. Take the pain.
By JM Rieger
July 16 at 1:40 PM
House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) made quite quite an assertion Tuesday about how Republicans treated President Barack Obama while he was in office.
-snip-
While it is true that House Republicans often used the word “president” when referring to Obama, some conservative media personalities, such as Sean Hannity, pointedly did not.
Others called him president but questioned his patriotism, for instance in 2015, when Rudolph W. Giuliani said he did not “believe” Obama “loves America."
But when Obama invited congressional Republicans to the White House, they often ignored him.
The New York Times in 2011 reported:
Congressional Republicans have turned down requests for White House meetings, refused to return the president’s call and walked out of budget talks. [And] Speaker John A. Boehner became what historians say was the first ever to tell a sitting president that no, he could not deliver an address to a joint session of Congress on the date of his choice.
Here are some other times Republican “respect” for Obama was on display.
In 2009, Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) yelled “You lie” at Obama during an address to Congress.
In 2011, Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-Colo.) apologized to Obama after calling him a “tar baby.”
In 2012, Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) said it was time to send Obama “home to Kenya.”
Amid negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program in 2015, Republican leaders broke normal procedure and invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to address Congress.
In 2016, Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) prayed that Obama’s “days be few, and let another have his office.”
A House Republican staffer resigned in 2014 after she told Sasha and Malia Obama to show “a little class.”
And in 2011, Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) said first lady Michelle Obama, “lectures us on eating right while she has a large posterior herself.” (Sensenbrenner apologized the next day).
Over a dozen congressional Republicans did not dismiss the birther conspiracy in 2009. In conservative media, there was endless coverage of Obama’s religion, vacations, golf trips and alleged communist and socialist ties throughout his presidency, examples of which you can watch in the video I made for HuffPost in 2016.
Not even close to a 'bankrupt point'. The context of Trump's remarks was clear, as well as is his legacy of birtherism and numerous racist remarks and behavior.
When you can come back and manifest some logic and fact-based critical thinking, THEN criticize me.
Fix at a minimum and expand availability with a single-payer buy in OPTION. That is the direction of the debate,
Now, WTF has the GOP proposed let alone done?
They are smart, pithy and just barely up to the demand.
And Trump's love is....requited.
Horseshit, you cried about the Kenyan Muslim incessantly and wanted him and his healthcare reform gone. A LOT of whining about both.
Catchy, never gonna happen.
No, but I didn't assume your inability to read for comprehension with a vocabulary below that of a sophomore in H.S. either.