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Doc Holliday

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No headscarves for Trump women

First lady Melania Trump and first daughter Ivanka Trump arrived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Saturday morning sporting an absence of headscarves.

Their choice of dress during the first stop on President Donald Trump's inaugural trip abroad is notable because Trump criticized first lady Michelle Obama for making the same decision two years earlier.

President Barack Obama and the first lady visited Saudi Arabia in 2015 to pay respects to the late King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and meet the newly appointed monarch, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud. But Michelle Obama attended without wearing a headscarf, drawing notice back in the United States about her lack of a traditional head covering in the conservative country.

Trump weighed in on his preferred platform, Twitter, saying, "Many people are saying it was wonderful that Mrs. Obama refused to wear a scarf in Saudi Arabia, but they were insulted. We have enuf enemies."

What a fucking big hypocrite!!!!!!! :mad:
 

Sol Tee Nutz

Well-Known Member
Apr 29, 2012
7,694
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Look behind you.
It was the wife and daughter who did not wear the head scarf, perhaos Trump asked them to and they told him to pound sand, you know, like independant women. Hard to call him a hyprocite if he was not the one to do so.
As soon as the media quits reporting everything he does the US may worry about other things, until then the media will have its way since they are still pissed because their hero Hillary did not win. Is Trump good, no. Was option number two any better, no.
Nice that HRC now calls herself part of the resistance, I can see the Hunger Games - US being the next major event.
I still say that in 2 years the US economy will have advanced more than the Canadian economy, their taxes will also drop instead of go up like here.
 

Doc Holliday

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Trump is picking the wrong battle on health care

by Julian Zelizer

Trump getting ready to fuck his voters up the ass!

WASHINGTON - In the budget that President Donald Trump is expected to release Tuesday, it was reported that there will be $800 billion in cuts to Medicaid, which assumes that the reductions contained in the House health care bill become law. With all of the frenzied coverage of President Trump's trip overseas and the ongoing investigation into "Russiagate," one of the biggest stories of the day might have slipped under the radar.

But now it's lighting up on Twitter. The reason: the proposed cuts to Medicaid would be devastating to low-income adults and their children, as well as the disabled and elderly Americans who depend on these benefits to survive.

Indeed, if some voters believed that President Trump might start moderating his tone or moving closer to the political center, this budget should throw some cold water on those kinds of predictions.
And the proposal could have deep ramifications for the political strength of the Republican Party.

Since its enactment in 1965 as part of President Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, a sweeping program of domestic reforms, Medicaid has emerged as a centerpiece of the US social safety net. Although the program started as a small and insignificant complement to Medicare, over the decades it has grown in terms of the types of benefits provided and the number of Americans covered.

Not only are there over 70 million Americans who depend on the health care benefits that Medicaid provides, but state and local governments as well as health care providers (hospitals, insurance companies, physicians) all depend on this steady revenue flow into our troubled medical system.

In contrast to the history of many social programs, this has been a case where stigmatized benefits that help the "poor" and the "disadvantaged' evolved into an enormously popular program that has broad political support.

This is the reason that so many Senate and even House Republicans trembled when the Freedom Caucus worked with the administration to place draconian Medicaid cuts into the health care bill. These Republicans understand that cutting Medicaid in this way is different than abstract warnings about the problems with big government.

Taking benefits away from Americans is as difficult politically as creating new social programs. These proposed cuts are very real. Lower-income Americans would lose access to vital health care benefits that come from Medicaid. Children from these communities would see their access to health care curtailed with cuts to the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), a Medicaid program.

And state governments would struggle as federal funds from Medicaid dry up. States would receive Medicaid as a block grant rather than open-ended entitlement. Even if more citizens needed funds, the amount of federal funds they received would be capped.

The Medicaid cuts come on top of many other proposed reductions that target Americans with the fewest resources. The budget is expected to cut food stamps (a program that over 40 million people received in 2016) and other anti-poverty programs. The budget is also said to include cuts to the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit, which are tax breaks that have been very beneficial to working Americans who are struggling to stay afloat.

If President Trump was serious about being a populist who stood up for struggling Americans, this budget indicates otherwise. Coupled with his proposed tax cuts, these domestic policies would entail a massive redistribution of wealth from the poor to the rich.

Passing this budget won't be easy. As a result of the political scandal engulfing his administration, Trump is a severely weakened President. Even his standing among Republicans has finally started to slip. With members of Congress watching each day to see the latest news about Russia and potential obstruction of justice charges, it will be difficult for the President to whip up the necessary votes, especially for spending cuts that are not very popular with large parts of the electorate. Out of the 52 Senate Republicans, 20 of them represent states that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.

In addition, Republican senators and representatives from swing states and districts may be concerned that voting for Medicaid cuts could hurt their chances of re-election in 2018. At this point in a turbulent presidency, Republicans are looking for Trump to say and do things that will help them solidify their shaky support rather than cause more tensions within their constituencies. They are tired of going to town hall meetings where they encounter furious residents who don't like the direction of the nation.

Nothing will do more to energize Democrats than this budget. Even the investigation pales in comparison to what proposed spending cuts like these mean to the opposition party. With this budget, Democrats gain a very clear understanding of what's at stake if Republicans retain control of Congress and President Trump goes on to finish his term.

The risks are not simply about corruption and undermining the reputation of the nation's leadership -- the risks are about serious slashes to basic social programs that Americans depend on. For all the rhetoric about which party cares more about struggling Americans, punitive cuts such as these make it more difficult for Republicans to claim the high ground.

Today, President Lyndon Johnson must be shedding some tears from his grave. As he watches President Trump attempt to go even further than President Ronald Reagan on dismantling the welfare state, he would be deeply saddened given his understanding of what these kinds of programs meant to "middle America." Medicaid and Medicare were not about providing government "handouts," nor where they about accepting some sort of nanny state. The programs were designed to ensure that all Americans had basic access to health care so that they could be good citizens and participate in the marketplace.

Our current President is moving in the opposite direction, and this budget indicates what his real priorities are despite all the bluster from the campaign trail. The problem for President Trump is that this budget, coming when it does in this presidency, might end up being more a part of his undoing than his triumphant political success.


Trump getting ready to fuck middle and lower class with proposed budget cuts to health care programs
 

Carmine Falcone

Well-Known Member
Feb 11, 2017
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Fucking his voters is all he knows how to operate-- but they still support him. Republican voters that are not rich are like hostages that willingly had babies with their kidnapper. The healthcare bill that passed the House disproportionately affects areas that voted for Trump. Trump's leaked budget plans to slash Medicaid, which many Trump supporters also rely on. Instead of truly kicking out the party that has essentially turned American government into a plutocracy, they keep rewarding them. Democrats rely on big money too but at least they support many government programs like healthcare and an increased minimum wage that help little people. Trump's party governs only for the 1% and culture warriors.
 

westwoody

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Jul 29, 2016
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Winterpeg
God help anyone in the US who gets cancer or has a heart attack. Nobody thinks it will happen to them, but it does.

There are lots of videos of town hall meeting with Republican congressmen defending Trump. Their contempt and disregard for the serfs is obvious.

And look at the absurd university tuition now. Graduate with a massive debt that takes years to pay off.

The country is being run by the wealthy, for the wealthy. It's becoming a feudal state.

Now consider how heavily armed the populace is. A violent insurrection is possible. There are lots of fanatical militias who claim to be sovereign and disregard government. Add in people who are angry and have nothing to lose. Trump's foolhardy promises that will never be kept are another breach of trust.

How long can they keep the lid on?
 

Sol Tee Nutz

Well-Known Member
Apr 29, 2012
7,694
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Look behind you.
You people need to be reminded, it was the working class that voted Trump into power not the 1% wealthy who were the ones voting for HRC. The media is all over Trump, his wife and daughter let their hair down in Saudi, his wife would not hold his hand coming off a plane, what the fuck is that for news. As I said before, option #2 really sucked, give it two years and the " working " Americans will be better off than they are now. HRC was so corrupt that by the time she would have been done the US would have been worse off than now. Not a fan of Trump but hate HRC more, sad that these were the only two choices. Just my opinion but Obama sucked big time.
 

Doc Holliday

Hopelessly horny
Sep 27, 2003
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God help anyone in the US who gets cancer or has a heart attack............

Hard to disagree with you. It wouldn't surprise me if it's not just a matter of time before some of the desperate that will be badly damaged by Trump's policies won't do the unthinkable and take matters into their own hands. I foresee a return to the violent 60's if things continue going as they are. Sad.

Let's Make America Great Again.
 

jalimon

I am addicted member
Dec 28, 2015
6,268
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Hard to disagree with you............

Agree with you guys. It's also funny to think the supposed party of the people has brought to the white house the highest number of billionaires in history. I heard all of them are in big time favor in justice and equality for all ;)

Give this bunch a few years and you will see a level of corruption which will make anything else pale in comparison. As we all saw, it has already started big times.

Cheers,
 

cloudsurf

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May 10, 2003
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Does anyone think that Trump has a hidden bank account in Switzerland ?
Did he get some pocket change as a thank you for the 110B dollar arms deal ?
 

Doc Holliday

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Sep 27, 2003
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Does anyone think that Trump has a hidden bank account in Switzerland ?
Did he get some pocket change as a thank you for the 110B dollar arms deal ?

Throughout his entire life, it's all been about money when it came to Donald J. Trump. His life has always revolved around money. Going on 71 years of age, he will never change and his kids and friends are as worse as he is when it comes to being money-hungry.

His policies are all about making his businesses & those around him wealthier. Whether it's the proposed tax cuts or health care bill which was passed in the House, it's all about enriching themselves and fucking the middle and lower classes, basically his voters.

Donald J. Trump, a life-long billionaire Democrat, has always been known as a mega con artist around the NYC business & real estate world. He switched parties a few years ago in order to find an easier way to win a presidential nomination. It worked. And then he did everything he could to get elected and promised the moon to his so-called supporters. And now that he's President, he's doing everything he can to fuck them all!! All for the sake of money, money, money!!
 

rumpleforeskiin

It's a whole new ballgame
Jan 20, 2007
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Where I belong.
You people need to be reminded, it was the working class that voted Trump into power not the 1% wealthy who were the ones voting for HRC.
Actually, the 1% did vote for Trump. It was the next layer down who voted for Hillary. It has been said that the miracle of the Republican party is that they continually to get millions of people to vote against their own best interests.

The media is all over Trump, his wife and daughter let their hair down in Saudi, his wife would not hold his hand coming off a plane, what the fuck is that for news.
You gotta watch a little less Fox, Sol. What the media is all over is not that they let their heads be uncovered, but that they did so after Drumpf made a huge stink about Michelle Obama doing the same a little while back.


HRC was so corrupt that by the time she would have been done the US would have been worse off than now. Not a fan of Trump but hate HRC more, sad that these were the only two choices. Just my opinion but Obama sucked big time.
Ah, the misogynist in you comes out Hillary is a terrible politician, but she's probably less corrupt than 90% of the politicians operating in the US and Canada today. The email "scandal" was as phony as they come as was the Benghazi "scandal."
 

cloudsurf

Well-Known Member
May 10, 2003
4,946
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Forget about HRC....she is a loser who has sold her soul more than once.
Who will be the first female President ?
Pocahontas? Ivanka ? Chelsea ? or maybe Caroline ?
 

Carmine Falcone

Well-Known Member
Feb 11, 2017
704
970
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None of them. Hillary's loss, among other factors, tells me women still have a lot of work to do to be considered equals. Misogyny isn't just a man problem. Last year, I had someone say to me that they can never vote for a woman because women are too emotional. That sentiment came from a woman, a highly stupid woman to be sure but the point still stands. The US views itself as an paragon of democracy yet we bypassed a highly flawed but intelligent and preeminently qualified woman for a no-nothing with no discernable redeeming values. Meanwhile, countries that we'd thumb our noses at like Pakistan and Phillipines have had female leaders. :usa2:
 

Doc Holliday

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Pro-Trumpcare Republicans Owned Millions in Health Care Stock

Forty lawmakers who voted for AHCA had more than $23 million in investments and made more than $2 million in profit. And some of the most heavily invested cast key votes.

by Justin Glawe

Forty Republican representatives who voted for the American Health Care Act held shares in health care companies valued at $23 million and earned more than $2 million off those investments, a review of the most-recent financial records found.

The investments may be worth as much as $39 million and grossed as much as $6 million in profits, according to the disclosure reports that require members of Congress to report investments and income within a price range.

Several Republicans with key roles in passing the bill held more than $500,000 in medical stock.

The majority of the companies in which lawmakers own stock represent the giants of the pharmaceutical and medical-device industries. Republicans owned between $1.3 million and $4.9 million worth of stock in Abbott Labs, Johnson and Johnson, and 3M, three of the country’s largest medical-device manufacturers. They also owned between $2.7 million and $5.5 million in pharmaceutical giants Merck, Pfizer, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer, and Shire.

The AHCA would benefit these companies by eliminating billions of dollars in taxes and fees on pharmaceutical and medical-device manufacturers—a provision of the bill that doesn’t reflect a violation of ethics rules because it will have a broad effect across health care industries, according to ethics experts.

The remaining 174 representatives who voted for the AHCA did not own any health care stock, The Daily Beast’s review found. The most recent data is from 2015. Disclosure reports for 2016 were due last week and are not yet fully available.

“As an objective matter, it seems like an awful lot of money in one industry that has a lot of regulation and that these members are directly dealing with legislation on,” said Larry Noble, a former Federal Elections Commission lawyer who now works for the Campaign Legal Center.

The tens of millions in investments are far from illegal, said Richard Painter, the lead ethics lawyer in George W. Bush’s White House, but raise conflict of interest concerns.

“Knowing that health care is so sensitive, and that one of the core issues in the debate is how much money is going to the companies and how much is going to patient care, I think this shows lack of sensitivity by members of Congress to be going and investing heavily into these companies,” Painter told The Daily Beast. “I think they’re arrogant and they don’t understand that the public is sick and tired of this problem.”

Among the influential members with significant investments is Rep. Thomas MacArthur of New Jersey, who held between $834,000 and $2.3 million in health care investments in 2015. MacArthur made between $142,000 and $472,000 in capital gains and dividends on those investments, according to his disclosure forms.

MacArthur authored an amendment to the AHCA that allows insurance companies to deny coverage to some people with pre-existing conditions. The amendment won over critical support from the right-wing Freedom Caucus, allowing the bill to narrowly pass the House. MacArthur ranks seventh among the 40 AHCA supporters who owned health care stock.

Rep. Chris Collins of New York holds the most investments, with $6.5 million in stock in two medical-device companies, ZeptoMetrix and Audubon Machinery Corporation. Collins serves as a director at ZeptoMetrix and is one of the founders of Audubon Machinery Corporation. (The Office of Government Ethics is investigating Collins’ investments in an Australian pharmaceutical company.) The New York congressman was responsible for an amendment in the AHCA that requires states to pay more into Medicaid at the expense of counties, saving rural areas like his native Buffalo millions.

Collins’ amendment flipped at least one “no” vote to a “yes” when Rep. Claudia Tenney of New York announced her support in March.

Another influential Republican with significant investments is Rep. Fred Upton of Michigan, who holds between $400,000 and $700,000 in health care stock. Upton wrote an amendment providing up to $8 billion for states to fund “high-risk pools” for patients with pre-existing conditions. Upton’s amendment eased fears that MacArthur’s amendment would make it impossible for such patients to buy insurance. The $8 billion Upton proposed won’t be nearly enough to pay for all the necessary care, industry analysts say, but it was enough to push the AHCA over the finish line.

Besides MacArthur, Collins, and Upton, the other lawmakers with at least $500,000 in health care stock are: Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas (at least $6 million); Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen of New Jersey (at least $2.2 million); Rep. James Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin (at least $2.1 million); Rep. Keith Rothfus of Pennsylvania (at least $1.2 million); Rep. Kenny Marchant of Texas (at least $922,000); Rep. James Renacci of Pennsylvania (at least $663,000); and Rep. Rod Blum of Iowa (at least $531,000).

Eighteen pro-AHCA representatives held at least $10,000 in health care investments in 2015; the remaining 12 held at least a single dollar’s worth of investments.
Staff of several of the representatives did not reply to questions for this story. Camille Gallo, spokesperson for Rep. MacArthur, provided the following statement:

“Congressman MacArthur has divested from all holdings in companies that are affected by his committee appointments. This is not required, nor was he asked to do so. Anyone who is alleging that Tom entered public service to make money is embarrassing themselves and needs to find a new witch to hunt.”

Gallo did not say whether MacArthur has consulted ethics officials regarding his significant health care investments and large role in the AHCA, something both Noble and Painter say should occur for all members of Congress who are doing more than simply voting on legislation.

A spokesperson for McCaul said that the congressman “has zero participation or knowledge of the transactions” made as part of his millions of dollars in health care investments, which are held mostly in family trusts controlled by McCaul’s wife, who is the daughter of the billionaire head of Clear Channel Communications.

“He is legally precluded from having any involvement or knowledge of the specific investment decisions made with regard to securities listed as his wife’s separate property which are disclosed in his annual personal financial disclosure,” spokesperson Lizzie Litzow said of McCaul.

Spokespersons for Renacci and Upton said their investments are similarly controlled as part of family trusts or managed portfolios. A spokesperson for Sensenbrenner said his investments are “irrelevant to his vote to repeal and replace Obamacare, a disastrous law that he has opposed since it was signed into law—long before specific details of its replacement were released.” A spokesperson for Rothfus said his vote on the AHCA and other bills are “wholly compliant with the requirements of House ethics rules.”

Michael Kracker, a spokesperson for Collins, blamed “partisan attacks” for scrutiny of his investments.

“Congressman Collins has followed all Congressional ethical guidelines related to his personal finances during his time in the House and will continue to do so,” Kracker said in a statement.
Spokespersons for Frelinghuysen, Blum, and Marchant did not respond to requests for comment.

Members of Congress aren’t expressly prohibited from owning stocks in individual companies, Painter said, unlike employees of federal agencies and members of the executive branch. As a White House ethics lawyer, Painter said he routinely advised aides and other employees of the executive branch to either completely divest from investments in individual companies or shift their assets to diversified mutual funds in order to comply with ethics rules.

“I don’t understand why members of Congress don’t do that,” Painter said. “The bottom line is that these folks are supposed to be in Congress to represent their constituents, not maximize their wealth. It’s fine if you want to be a stock picker, but go be a stock picker, not a member of Congress.”

Pro-Trumpcare Republican crooks owned millions in health care stock

Doc says: "Seriously, is there a more crooked & dishonest party than the Republican party?? The Republican party: THE true ennemy of the American people.
 

westwoody

nice gent
Jul 29, 2016
616
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Winterpeg
Love the vid of Pence speaking at the Notre Dame grad.

The girl with the rainbow on her cap was great, walking out was good too.
Pence and Trump are enemies of knowledge, science and democracy.
 

Doc Holliday

Hopelessly horny
Sep 27, 2003
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Pence and Trump are enemies of knowledge, science and democracy.

You're correct in regards to Trump, but i think with Pence it's more a hypocrisy thing, which is fluent with politicians who cater to the evangelicals and other christian groups.

As for Trump, i wonder if he's been like this (clueless) thoughout his life and that he bluffed everyone throughout his lifetime. The guy is obviously a dumbass and keeps shooting himself in the foot. But i wonder if his problems or appeareance aren't caused by his advanced age more than anything. Of course, sleeping only 3 hours a day doesn't help. I saw a chart the other day where it compared hours of sleep with how many drinks a person has had. If i go according to that chart and its accuracy, Trump is always drunk.

Many including myself predicted he'd be a disaster as President. He had zero government experience, zero legislative experience and zero public service of any kind. He's a real estate developper mostly. But most of us expected him to surround himself with experienced and trusted people. The people he surrounded himself at the WH were for the most part equally inexperienced or corrupt (e.g. Mike Flynn). This is why his Presidency has so far been a disaster and why even I am surprised by how incompetent it's been!
 

rumpleforeskiin

It's a whole new ballgame
Jan 20, 2007
6,561
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Where I belong.
Love the vid of Pence speaking at the Notre Dame grad.
Even more than that, I loved the TWO videos of Melania Trump brushing off The Donald's attempts to hold her hand.
 
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