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Alex Romero

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Jun 26, 2015, 5:29:03 PM6/26/15
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oh man...way to show how you deal with stressful exchanges where your word isn't accepted as scripture Trump...This is not very presidential...I'd say its childish as hell....Sorry man...but just stop...money doesn't make you anything but a pain in the ass, Trumpy....can i call him Trumpy? He does do stupid things?!?.....Its fricken hilarious tho, i can see Jon Stewart's joy meter go up a notch.

Kyle Curtis

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Jun 26, 2015, 5:54:15 PM6/26/15
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There needs to be a t-shirt like this w/ a picture of The Donald & the tag: "Trumpy, You Can Say Stupid Things!"

On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 2:29 PM, Alex Romero <axm...@gmail.com> wrote:
oh man...way to show how you deal with stressful exchanges where your word isn't accepted as scripture Trump...This is not very presidential...I'd say its childish as hell....Sorry man...but just stop...money doesn't make you anything but a pain in the ass, Trumpy....can i call him Trumpy? He does do stupid things?!?.....Its fricken hilarious tho, i can see Jon Stewart's joy meter go up a notch.

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Alex Romero

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Jul 8, 2015, 8:43:43 PM7/8/15
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OMG...LMAO!!!...Jimmy Carter said Trumpy says Stupid things!!

http://www.cnn.com/2015/07/08/politics/jimmy-carter-donald-trump-hillary-clinton/index.html

Juneau Smog

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Jul 9, 2015, 4:25:58 PM7/9/15
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Follow even more exciting misadventures in politics on the Jsmog Live Blog: http://juneausmog.com
LeftBehind.jpg

Juneau Smog

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Jul 10, 2015, 1:03:39 PM7/10/15
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As a growing number of companies have already dumped Trump and, apparently, the FAA is also preparing to dump Trump.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said on Thursday it would rename three navigational waypoints that are currently named after Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump.

FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said the so-called "fixes" are used by pilots as waypoints to determine their position on a route.

Once you start renaming navigational waypoints, you're getting down to the nitty-gritty of erasing someone from existence. Hilarious.

Meanwhile, disgraced terrible person Allen West warns us that this Donald Trump business is really just a distraction from Benghazi!

Juneau Smog

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Jul 10, 2015, 1:04:45 PM7/10/15
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Alex Romero

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Jul 10, 2015, 1:33:23 PM7/10/15
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Trump isn't the first person in History to vilify a whole race, blaming them for the plight of a nation

Inline image 1

although i cant recall someone saying that in the US, and being backed by the racists US Citizens to the extent I see now....at least Hitler tried to hide it a little...lets hope all this hits him where it hurts...his wallet.

Juneau Smog

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Jul 10, 2015, 7:01:29 PM7/10/15
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But Alex, Somebody's doing the raping!

Kyle Curtis

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Jul 11, 2015, 12:32:42 PM7/11/15
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http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/donald-trump-media-dishonest-immigration

Trump Digs In: Media Is 'Dishonest' About My Illegal Immigration Remarks


Republican presidential candidate and real estate mogul Donald Trump said Friday that the media is being "dishonest" in covering his comments on illegal immigration, which have proved divisive within the Republican Party

Trump spoke at a news conference at the Beverly Wilshire hotel in Beverly Hills, California, where he was flanked by people who said undocumented immigrants had killed their family members.

“People came into the country illegally and killed their children," Trump said. "It's a very, very sad thing what's happening in our country."

The topic of illegal immigration has dominated headlines in recent days due to Trump's prior comments referring to undocumented immigrants crossing the border with Mexico as "rapists" and drug dealers. In the news conference, Trump also mentioned the recent, high-profile death of 32-year-old Kathryn Steinle, who was fatally shot at a popular San Francisco tourist spot by an undocumented man who had been deported five times.

Trump insisted that the media has taken his comments about Mexican immigrants out of context because the press "in many cases is very, very dishonest."

"I have great respect for the country of Mexico," he said, adding "They're sending people into our country that we don't want but we take and that they don't want. And you know who they're sending."

The business guru's hardline rhetoric on illegal immigration prompted Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus to allegedly call Trump this week and ask him to tone it down. While Trump disputed that characterization of the call, he did acknowledge that Priebus asked him to soften his tone.

Next, Trump is expected to speak Saturday at a GOP event in Phoenix, Arizona, where he won't get a warm welcome from some top Republicans in the state.

Sen. Jeff Flake (R-AZ) has called on the group hosting Trump, the Republican Party of Maricopa County, to pull out of the event. Without naming Trump, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) also released a statement Friday that said the recent "circus" surrounding illegal immigration damages the Republican Party.

"If the Republican nominee for president does not support comprehensive immigration reform and border security policy, we have no chance of defeating Hillary Clinton and winning the White House in 2016," the statement read.




Kyle Curtis

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Jul 12, 2015, 12:21:02 PM7/12/15
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David Letterman realizes he made a huge mistake, comes out of retirement with extra-special Top 10 list about Trump:

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/watch-letterman-top-10-donald-trump

Alex Romero

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Jul 13, 2015, 4:59:44 PM7/13/15
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hmmm...so wait...Kyle....RMoney wasn't Conservative enough to win enough votes to get into the big chair (I call BS on that anyway)....so does this mean Trump is "too Conservative" for voters to put him in the big chair? or do they want him thinking like that, just not shouting like that?

Sounds like Mitt's Conservatism is too soft, and Trumpy's is too hard...Goldilocks Syndrome....(i.e. No conservative, with their preachy BS, can win the big chair right now)

Alex Romero

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Jul 13, 2015, 5:41:27 PM7/13/15
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Inline image 1

Gregg Taylor

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Jul 13, 2015, 7:31:42 PM7/13/15
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With fifteen now on board (Scott "I busted a labor union ) Walker) can America be ANY MORE CONFUSED about what Conservative really means (or, doesn't actually with those CLOWNS.  Bernie Sanders is more conservative than ANY of the Republiclowns.

Alex Romero

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Jul 13, 2015, 7:43:15 PM7/13/15
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Well Gregg, I hear ya man.

I think we all know its a safe bet that none of them are going to win in 2016....I am just going to use this election to call BS on the "Not Conservative Enough" argument.

It was said that RMoney stood no chance to win the whole election in 2008 due to being too centered politically, but the most conservative of candidates, are such morons, they can't get past the Republicans themselves...The fact that the brother of the Big Dummy Ex-POTUS is in the lead in the polls, should be a big warning sign, that things aren't moving in any sort of direction with the Republicans.

But, anyway....Scott Walker...right:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/americas-top-union-leader-just-destroyed-scott-walker-in-six-words-20150713

lets add him to the Conserv-o-meter

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Gregg Taylor

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Jul 13, 2015, 11:14:10 PM7/13/15
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Keep slugging you're on point.

Juneau Smog

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Jul 14, 2015, 3:27:59 AM7/14/15
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Every time someone on one of the news networks talks about Donald Trump, the rich Pomeranian/St. Bernard mix running for president, some pundit or other has to say that Trump will flame out or fade away. It depends on whether he says something so outrageous as to alienate any support (which, at this point, would have to be something like "Sex with ferrets? Why yes, I have sex with ferrets. I have sex with ferrets better and more often than Jeb Bush has ever had sex with a ferret. Now watch me have sex with this ferret." Although, really, it still makes him a better choice than Ted Cruz), or he just peaks at the 15% or so he has now, and as other candidates drop out, their support goes to Jeb Bush.

This is a fundamental misunderstanding of the voters of this country, especially Republicans. Because, you see, the one thing Trump has going for him, more than any other candidate running for the Republican nomination, is that the voters are complete idiots who get most of their information from TV news and Trump is more famous than any other candidate. Put it this way: there are people who paid good money to learn business success from Trump at one of his bullshit seminars, totally ignoring that Trump has declared bankruptcy multiple times. You think anyone gives a flying shit if Trump is "qualified" to be president? Hell no. He hosted a TV show. His name is everywhere. He says things that make everyone else angry. He's a blatant racist who claims to love Hispanic people. He's a vulgar monster with voracious sexual appetites who preaches morality in marriage. 

And many, many voters simply will overlook that because he's the most goddamned entertaining clown in the circus, the only candidate they know, and his pop culture status has given him the aura of earthy wisdom instead of nonsensical shit-tossing. He's like most of the other candidates rolled into one: a blithering, idiotic, climate change-denying loudmouth xenophobe who wants endless war, Christian "values" (whatever the hell those are anymore), an economic and health care system that benefits the rich, and a big fuckin' fence with alligators or some such shit to keep out the Mexican rapists. He doesn't need to pander to the baser instincts of the GOP primary voters. He is the living embodiment of the baser instincts of GOP primary voters. That's why he's wiping the floor with virtually every other candidate.

Right now, Trump is leading in the polls in North Carolina. The far right loves him, and if you get the Confederates and the Stormfront crowd, as well as the "Who's-the-guy-from-the-TV-show-I'll-vote-for-him" crowd on your side, you're gonna poll well. That's why he's first or second in most polls, and, sorry, but he ain't going away. Condemnation only makes him stronger. More attention only makes his ego grow.

You gotta laugh at the idiotic GOP elite who have no idea what to do about Trump's surge. And it's all their fault. These are the idiots who wanted to convince us that Sarah Palin was a legitimate leader. These are the morons who were all chanting "rah rah" four years ago while Trump was making an ass of himself blithering on about Obama's birth certificate. But hey, he was beating up on Obama so they had to get behind him, and now they are stuck with him. Still, you're gonna see all the candidates react to him and condemn him and offer to debate him and dismiss him and every other thing they can try. It won't matter. Their scorn will drive more voters to him than send them away. Who do you think the average voter wants to listen to? Scott fuckin' Walker? No, they wanna hear what the crazy person has to say. It's so amazingly beautiful, watching Trump suck all the filthy air out of the GOP primary balloon, and set the GOP agenda for them on immigration, for which the GOP track record of doing absolutely jack shit about is not something they would like to particularly discuss this election cycle.

Sure, he ain't gonna be president. That's Hillary's prize, unless she stumbles mightily. But Trump's gonna make life a damn misery for the GOP, who had better destroy this Godzilla before he eats all of Tokyo and shits it out on RNC headquarters.

Juneau Smog

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Jul 14, 2015, 3:33:51 AM7/14/15
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Exactly...


Kyle Curtis

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Jul 14, 2015, 11:09:28 PM7/14/15
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http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/attytood/Art-of-the-Con-Why-Trump-is-best-thing-that-ever-happened-to-GOP.html

Art of the Con: Why Trump's the best thing that ever happened to GOP

I didn't watch much TV or follow too much news during my short mini-vacation last week, but on Wednesday night before bed I checked in briefly on MSNBC's "Last Word" with Lawrence O'Donnell, just  to make sure I hadn't missed any truly shocking headlines. And in fact, I was shocked by what I saw, although it was hardly what I'd consider news. Almost the entire show was devoted to one presidential candidate: The bombastic, xenophobic, crass, frequently dishonest Republican billionaire Donald Trump.

It was almost a half-hour into the show, and I wondered what else was going on on the world. (Had Greece's government suddenly found a cache of buried treasure to end its life-of-death financial crisis?) "When we come back," O'Donnell solemnly intoned, "our panel will discuss the latest developments with Donald Trump!" At the bottom of the screen was the chyron that MSNBC, CNN, and Fox News now use 23 1/2 hours a day to scream "BREAKING NEWS," usually when nothing of the sort is occurring. The current crisis: Republican national chairman Reince Priebus had allegedly phoned Trump to plead with the $8.7 Billion Man (probably another lie, FWIW) to tone down his outrageous Mexican-bashing campaign.

I'm so old I remember when Donald Trump was going to save the USFL (spoiler alert: he didn't), not America. But now -- a month before the first debate, six months before the Iowa caucuses, and almost 17 months before America picks our 45th president -- the short-fingerted vulgarian hasn't just sucked all of the oxygen out of the 2016 presidential race, but has shattered a few windows from the ensuing vacuum.

Liberals are clucking that Trump's arrival is the greatest thing to hit the Iowa caucuses since deep-fried corn dogs, that his unvarnished appeals to not-so-soft bigotry -- implying that arrivals from Mexico are criminals and rapists, tweeting and then deleting nasty talk about Jeb (Jeb!) Bush's Mexican-born wife Columba -- are revealing the former Party of Lincoln as a hot, racist mess. The media -- already chafing at the notion that 2016 would be a coronation for the tightly wound, tightly controlled, reporter-corralling Hillary Clinton -- is beside itself with glee. A Donald Trump "exclusive" media interview as about as rare as a stink bug in July, and they come before CNN or MSNBC or Fox News can remove the hyperbolic chyron -- "Trump: Somebody's Doing the Raping"  -- from the last "exclusive" interview.

And, the conventional wisdom goes, the GOP leadership is apoplectic. Priebus and other top party brass are said to be concerned that Trump's comments may kill any hope that Republicans have of winning back Latino voters in 2016 -- even if he's just verbalizing what the Tea Party base of the party is thinking, in the blunt language they prefer. Lindsey Graham, one of the 2 or 3 "moderates" on immigration among the Republicans' Not-So-Sweet 16, hit the panic button today, stating: that if they party doesn't repudiate Trump, "We will have lost the moral authority, in my view, to govern this great nation.”

The only think I can add to that is....wake up, everybody.

You're being jobbed. The man who wrote "The Art of the Deal" in the 1990s is back to teach us the art of the con, and this one's a blockbuster.

I don't think it's a conscious plot -- top Republicans just aren't that smart... and neither are Democrats. But I do think Trump actually is a savior, not of America but of the GOP's faltering ambitions to re-capture the White House and restore the Bush family dynasty. When Priebus and Co., are leaking to the Times and the Post that they've urged Trump to tone down the rhetoric, what they're really doing is updating a classic kids' fable: Don't throw us in the briar patch!

Think about the debates, which begin next month. The 2012 dog-and-pony-show-turned-clown-circus was an unmitigated disaster for Republicans -- an orgy of science denial and let-him-die health care plans. The 2016 debates will be Donald Trump -- and nine statesmen (sorry, Carly, who hasn't made the cut)...in comparison, anyway.

The script is already written. The salivating cable moderator will ask Trump in the first 10 minutes about Mexico and rapists or what not, and The Donald will launch into his routine. The reply will certainly fall upon Jeb! -- serious and well-spoken, fluent in Spanish, husband and father of Latino-Americans, and he will utter a well-crafted response that will, in essence, be the 21st Century version of, "Have you, at long last, no sense of decency." And the pundits will go wild, declaring the scripted reply to be historic -- the where's-the-beef-no-Jack-Kennedy-Army-McCarthy moment that made John Ellis Bush "a leader."

What's actually historic is this: Jeb Bush may be the least popular figure with the best chance of becoming president in the 239 years of the American experience. One of the two GOP candidates with near-perfect name ID has hovered in the polls at 15 percent of the minority party -- partly because most Americans get that this country was founded to prevent dynastic rule, not foster it. But he's running against 14 candidates evenly splitting most of the rest of the vote, and against Trump, who'll surely implode whenever he leaves his current wife for Miss Teenage America or gets a better reality-TV deal from Spike! TV or some such fiasco. And Bush's role in slaying the Trump "monster" will make him a moderate hero to TV's fickle talking heads, and he could even surge past his rival dynastic heir, Hillary Clinton.

That's the biggest part of the con, because Jeb! Bush is hardly a moderate. He governed Florida in a severely conservative fashion, with the usual mix of tax cuts for the rich and fire and brimstone on stem cell research and keeping Terri Schiavo alive against her husband's wishes, with the worst of corporate ed reform and climate denial thrown in for good measure. Reince Priebus and Friends don't want you talking about that, nor about the $29 million that Jeb! earned for...what exactly does he do, again?

True, their initial choice was to keep the party's over-the-top xenophobia hidden away in the attic, but the better way to deal with a political virus is to bring it out in the open and -- since killing this germ may be impossible -- at least tamping down the symptoms. Trump's over-the-top racism is the vehicle for Priebus and Bush to do exactly that.

Indeed, at least in the short term, everybody wins! Trump gets the kind of eternal fame that only $8.7 (or $4.1) billion can buy. The GOP gets its straw man so that Bush the "moderate" hero can slay before a grateful public's eyes. The media gets what it's craved for the last two decades, a real-time political reality show that would make the Kardashians cringe. And the Democrats get to re-live one of their most common experiences in most even-numbered years: Self-delusion.

Of course, there is one loser here, the American voter. Because the other impact of Trump sucking the air out of 2016 is that he is absolutely strangling whatever hope there was of even a muted conversation about the real, actual issues -- not the Donald J. Trump Memorial Border Fence but how millions of Americans can't afford college tuitions with kids are staring at an ocean of debt, or  how to reach the folks who still haven't been reached with affordable health care insurance, or how the so-called "American Dream" slips further from 99 percent of folks.

Of course, one candidate actually is talking about these things -- Bernie Sanders. So far, TV's Sanders' coverage has been 50 percent, "Look at the size of that crowd!," 20 percent, "Don't forget he's a socialist," and 30 percent "Now back  to our panel on Donald Trump!" The smart money -- the other billionaires who quietly finance the election, who are perfectly fine with either Jeb! or Hillary! -- is loving the Trump reality show, running out the 2016 clock before "real issues" gets a chance to clear its throat. Maybe Trump actually got one thing right. Somebody is doing the raping.


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