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anon_vlad

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Apr 29, 2004
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Trump is right about creating wealth (not necessarily in the US)

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/fake-news-how-partying-macedonian-teen-earns-thousands-publishing-lies-n692451

Here is some real news: A Trump supporter went armed to a pizza parlour to investigage Hillary using it as an office for child sex.
http://www.theblaze.com/news/2016/12/04/armed-man-enters-dc-pizza-parlor-inspired-by-fake-news/

Just imagine, soon to be the most powerful man in the world who will soon have his little fingers on the button gets his briefings from random websites. Sleep well, Igna and Sol Tee. People like you voted for this fellow.
 

Passionné

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Shhhhhhh. This is not what Liberals want to hear,...

The Russians want T-Dumpster because as we have been seeing he will SWALLOW...anything Putin tells him to. By continuing interference Russia.Putin gets what it wants. Greater mistrust and polarization between parties leading to more conflict and less ability within the government on how to agree to react in the world. As someone said this morning...it's a Win Win for Russia.

Doc decides what is real news and posts it here for the lefties to swallow.

How are you any different. Oh yeah, if you take it from the Right it's okay.

T-Rump has no business at all making any judgments about what's going on in the world. He skips nearly all intelligence briefings so he's hasn't got any foundation for decisions except that noise of a few marbles bouncing off each other in his head. But give him credit for uniting a small part of the country...Republicans and Democrats in Congress looking at what he says and agreeing he acting like he's totally out to lunch...if not treasonous.

As for ignoring or failing to recognize facts...STN...I saw videos of T-Rump when he said these words: "Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing,” said Mr Trump, speaking at one of his golf resorts. “I think you’ll be rewarded mightily by our press.” This is T-rump inviting the Russians, a hostile government to interfere and break into the emails of a U.S. government official. It's a treasonous invitation.

http://www.baysidestarnews.com.au/news/donald-trump-putin-called-barack-obama-n-word/3068790/

Now maybe you can hide in a bunker and deny that.

Donald Trump 'accused of treason' after urging Russia to hack Hillary Clinton's emails

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...-to-hack-hillary-clintons-email-a7158976.html

Cheers
 

lgna69xxx

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Oct 3, 2008
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On another subject, when will all the libby sheep get it through their big thick heads that Trump supporters do not give a flying F**K about a few campaign promises that will not be addressed, the major ones will, we all undestood since he began that there would be plenty not fulfilled just like evey other candidate promisses and WE DONT CARE. What we care about is that there is a fresh voice in D.C. and the old hag thankfully did NOT get to take over the white house. :clap2: A new direction and a new beginning to hopefully make things better than the mess that he currently will inherit. So far he is doing a fantastic job, stop watching the Clinton News Channel and it's sister stations for 5 minutes and you might begin to see that.

Is Trump going to be the best President in American History, likely not but then again who knows but at least he wlll not be the worst, his predecessor has that distinct honor.

A Trump Mandate is upon us whether you like it or not so let's see what he and his team can do.

Forever Trump!

I hope this thread does not die out, it truly makes a good life even better
 

PSEfreak

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Feb 3, 2013
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Mtl, Qc
I have pretty much avoided writing in this thread since its pretty clear everyone is convinced their side is right and the other is completely wrong and attempting to talk sense to the opposite side is useless.

In my humble opinion I believe Trump will be a complete disaster (his favorite word) as President. His choice of appointments is shocking, Good Luck U.S.A, you got what you wanted. What I will give Trump credit for, and I honestly take my hat off to him for it, he convinced a huge number of middle class voters (and some poor) that he is the best person to look out for them. They bought it!! This is a billionaire man who lives in a Skyscrapper he build with his name on the front of it written in gold and who eats with silverware sitting on chairs that resemble thrones than anything most people would have in their homes. If it looks like a duck, sounds like a duck & walks like a duck, its not a goose!

I believe Obama will be fondly remembered for his tireless efforts to improve the lives of everyone, but was ultimately blocked at almost any decision he made. He really inherited a disaster, the US economy and the world's economies were at risk. 600,00 jobs per month were disappearing. Everyone, Republican & Democrate, economist and Investor was calling it a depression. Obama turned that around, his guidance, his decisions. How soon everyone forgets the hole we ALL were in. Compare the economic situation of January 2008 and November 2016 and try saying with a straight face that things are bad. Compare where Wall Street was May 2009 and November 2016. Yea, Obama was horrible. Nevertheless, It was Republican tactic from Day 1 to oppose him at every turn and for the most part successfully did. There are plenty of video clips that can be easily found of top Republicans readily admitting to this policy on Utube. Newt Gingrich & Mitch McConnell in particular. He never had the support that Donald will (House & senate at same time). Trump will have no such roadblocks. The potential for epic corruption is enormous and he would be a fool to not take advantage of it. All the Hillary email BS will look laughable in short order compared to whats about to come down on all of us. Just because we live across a imaginary line we call a border will not protect us or shield us from the repercussion of this choice for President that will most surely come. Trump should be thanking Obama for leaving him a pretty solid economy, no wars, no reccesion, a solid currency and relatively low unemployment. That's what Trump is inheriting and to say otherwise is simply dishonest.

I have no dog in this race, no skin in this game. I'm not a US citizen and would never want to be. I love my country and do not wish harm on anyone. I hope I'm wrong and will gladly eat crow, but it seems pretty clear where all this is headed.
 

lgna69xxx

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How much is 600,00?

You ae entitled to you opinion psefreak but no the economy for most in the country has not been good under oBama.

On another note it seems the recount in Wisconsin gave Trump another 131 votes, great job of wasting millions for 131 more votes that went the way you DID NOT want them to go Jill Stein and other libbys, once again you failed, great job wasting more money, morons :clap2:
the US economy and the world's economies were at risk. 600,00 jobs per month were disappearing. .
 

PSEfreak

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Feb 3, 2013
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How much is 600,00?

You ae entitled to you opinion psefreak but no the economy for most in the country has not been good under oBama.

On another note it seems the recount in Wisconsin gave Trump another 131 votes, great job of wasting millions for 131 more votes that went the way you DID NOT want them to go Jill Stein and other libbys, once again you failed, great job wasting more money, morons :clap2:

You are correct, that was an error. It seems the correct number is closer to 700,000, I just finished watching a video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8a_msdw9VQ
 

blkone

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Sep 24, 2009
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Is Trump going to be the best President in American History, likely not but then again who knows but at least he wlll not be the worst, his predecessor has that distinct honor.[/SIZE]

Obama worst? Only if you have no idea how politics work, I guess.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histo..._of_the_United_States#Notable_scholar_surveys

Obama is a middling President, not great but not bad. The worst in our lifetimes (I'm in my mid twenties) was W Bush. What a fucking idiot.
 

blkone

Member
Sep 24, 2009
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How much is 600,00?

You ae entitled to you opinion psefreak but no the economy for most in the country has not been good under oBama.:

Compared to the trashing of it under W Bush? Really? He spent more money than all U.S Presidents COMBINED and almost collapsed the U.S economy completely!

Obama fixed a lot of stuff after Bush and the proof is America is respected again, no one respected the U.S under Bush - that's when the world turned against 'fat/dumb America'.
 

jalimon

I am addicted member
Dec 28, 2015
6,251
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PSEfreak;[URL="tel:1022323" said:
1022323[/URL]]
I believe Obama will be fondly remembered for his tireless efforts to improve the lives of everyone, but was ultimately blocked at almost any decision he made. He really inherited a disaster, the US economy and the world's economies were at risk. 600,00 jobs per month were disappearing. Everyone, Republican & Democrate, economist and Investor was calling it a depression. Obama turned that around, his guidance, his decisions. How soon everyone forgets the hole we ALL were in. Compare the economic situation of January 2008 and November 2016 and try saying with a straight face that things are bad. Compare where Wall Street was May 2009 and November 2016. Yea, Obama was horrible. Nevertheless, It was Republican tactic from Day 1 to oppose him at every turn and for the most part successfully did. There are plenty of video clips that can be easily found of top Republicans readily admitting to this policy on Utube. Newt Gingrich & Mitch McConnell in particular. He never had the support that Donald will (House & senate at same time). Trump will have no such roadblocks. The potential for epic corruption is enormous and he would be a fool to not take advantage of it. All the Hillary email BS will look laughable in short order compared to whats about to come down on all of us. Just because we live across a imaginary line we call a border will not protect us or shield us from the repercussion of this choice for President that will most surely come. Trump should be thanking Obama for leaving him a pretty solid economy, no wars, no reccesion, a solid currency and relatively low unemployment. That's what Trump is inheriting and to say otherwise is simply dishonest.
.

i wish this forum had a "what a fucking great post!" button as the facebook "Like" ;)

cheers,
 

jalimon

I am addicted member
Dec 28, 2015
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Interessting meeting today with Trump and top silicon valley exec. These companies will be the barometer as to what Trump can expect from changes he wants to bring to the country.

Cheers,
 

Passionné

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May 14, 2016
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That's what Trump is inheriting and to say otherwise is simply dishonest.

Honesty is dead from the Right in this thread. T-Rump supporters have taken to the T-Rump-Hitlerian tactic that the biggest lie should be spoken with no limits like it is fact. The examples go on and on because all moral and ethical basis is wiped out. Say anything then change it back and forth as often as you like and they will swallow it down every time. Use people any way you want.

For example T-Rump was speaking about Paul Ryan yesterday. He did nothing but scorn and ridicule and belittle Ryan during the election. Yesterday he touted Ryan's "genius", but added if he runs against me in the future I'll go back to slandering him again. T-Rump is already one of the most cold blooded two-faced liars in history. That's how his pals play with everything.

There is only one ethic at work with Trump...agree with him or you're an enemy, not a citizen with a relevant opinion.

How soon everyone forgets the hole we ALL were in. Compare the economic situation of January 2008 and November 2016 and try saying with a straight face that things are bad. Compare where Wall Street was May 2009 and November 2016. Yea, Obama was horrible. Nevertheless, It was Republican tactic from Day 1 to oppose him at every turn and for the most part successfully did.

I like everyone went through seeing the value of stocks and 401ks drop 30% to 40% through 2008. People everywhere were scared. Obama's decisions stabilized the situation and brought back gains despite every kind of Republican road block they could use.

In my humble opinion I believe Trump will be a complete disaster (his favorite word) as President. His choice of appointments is shocking, Good Luck U.S.A, you got what you wanted. What I will give Trump credit for, and I honestly take my hat off to him for it, he convinced a huge number of middle class voters (and some poor) that he is the best person to look out for them. They bought it!!

Until Comey reopened the email case T-Dumpster was sinking into oblivion. Afterward enough people in the right states decided Hillary had too much serious baggage to vote for her. That was the turning point. Only 35% to 40% of Americans see T-Rump in a positive way.

The one thing 95% of people and member of this board agreed on was there were two bad choices for President. So there's little credit for Dumpster when people chose for the lesser evil... and that was for Hillary in the popular vote.
 

Steely Dan

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I have pretty much avoided writing in this thread since its pretty clear everyone is convinced their side is right and the other is completely wrong and attempting to talk sense to the opposite side is useless.

Hear! Hear! :clap2: That pretty well sums up the state of political discourse these days...
 

Doc Holliday

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Sep 27, 2003
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Trump in the White House—and Russia’s Neighbors Back in the USSR?

Even a pro-Putin strongman like Lukashenko in Belarus is starting to be afraid, very afraid, of Moscow’s ambitions.

by Anna Nemtsova


MOSCOW—As the Putin-Trump bond appears to grow stronger by the day, the idea that Washington will simply cede to Moscow its desired “sphere of influence” is sinking in on the collective consciousness of Russia’s neighboring states. What used to be called “the near abroad” is quickly becoming “the fear abroad.”

What is Russian President Vladimir Putin’s real plan for the former component pieces of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics—the USSR—that crumbled in 1991 a quarter of a century ago?

That is one huge puzzle, and while several leaders of former Soviet republics welcome access to Russia’s market, they are not ready to surrender their political power to a resurgent Russian empire.

The first to show a fit of nerves in public is Putin’s closest ally, Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko, who is now threatening to jail anyone who insults Belarusian identity or calls for a merger of Belarus into the Russian state.

Lukashenko, who is known in the West as “Europe’s Last Dictator” and at home as “Batka” (Father), is warning former Soviet republics: “One should be cautious with Russia.”

If U.S. intelligence is right and Vladimir Putin was actually personally involved in a hacking campaign that helped Donald Trump win the American presidency, that must have happened for a reason. Does Putin think such a bold and risky move would give him free rein for his ambitions?

But that bigger picture is blurry.

If he really does get the green light from Trump, Putin could be planning to take more control of the Commonwealth of Independent States, to which many former Soviet republics belong. Or he could move Russian borders to wherever people speak Russian, to create the so-called Russky Mir (Russian World).

Or maybe Putin needs Trump’s help to reconstruct the entire old USSR?

After Trump’s victory, President Putin was in a great mood, and even joked to kids at a recent event linked to the study of geography: “Russia’s borders don’t end anywhere,” he said, chortling.
But in Belarus, they’re not laughing.

Last week Belarusian authorities arrested three local journalists, correspondents for the Russian online publication Regnum, Yuri Pavlovets, Dmitry Alimkin, and Sergey Shiptenko, for inciting national hatred and calling Belarus “a mad pseudo-state.”

“Separatist calls are now strictly punished, our authorities promote values of our identity to make a point: We are an independent nation,” Irina Khalip, an independent journalist and analyst, told The Daily Beast. “Lukashenko is terrified by the annexation threat. He does not want to become some regional governor.”

If a few years ago anti-Lukashenko activists got in trouble for using the Belarusian language and national symbols, now banners promoting traditional values can be seen all over the country. One of them, for instance, depicts an office manager type who says that his favorite word is “pospekh” or “success”—in Belarusian.

Some symbols are suddenly irritating to the state authorities, especially the Ribbon of St. George, the major Russian military symbol.

On a recent afternoon a bus passenger spotted the ribbon on the driver’s rearview mirror in Brest, a town on the Belarusian-Polish border. The angry passenger reported it to the local authorities, who officially forbade drivers of public transportation to use the ribbon, which was very popular among pro-Russian rebels in Donbas and in Crimea, after the annexation.

In Moscow, certainly, grand dreams are growing grander by the moment. The chair of the public Movement of Development, Yuri Krupnov, says he hopes that Putin’s plan is much bigger than just the reconstruction of the USSR. “The plan is to unite the entire Eurasian continent,” said Krupnov. “But our economy is too weak right now, so it is unclear what economic revolution the president is planning for all these countries in this coming year. It should be something grand enough to mark the 100th anniversary of the October Revolution.”

But the optimism unleashed by Trump’s victory in the United States must also contend with Putin’s not-so-impressive record during 16 years in power trying to extend Russia’s spheres of influence.

“All of Putin’s previous unions failed, including the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the Commonwealth of Independent States,” independent political analyst Dmitry Oreshkin told The Daily Beast. “China did not agree to help Putin revive the SCO, so today Putin is looking at Japan, looking for other allies in Asia. The circle of Putin’s wandering around the world is growing smaller.”

Certainly the first thing Russia wants from Trump is to get rid of economic sanctions imposed after Putin annexed Crimea and started supporting a separatist war in eastern Ukraine. Then he can start rethinking grand designs for the near abroad.

“All the geopolitical models created by Putin’s minion Vladislav Surkov have failed, including Novorossia and Russky Mir,” said Krupnov.

“To move forward, to create a bigger Eurasia, we need to find some artificial way to boost our economy and make Russia attractive for the countries it is going to lead,” Krupnov told The Daily Beast.

Which way would that be?

Clearly, that part of the plan is still a secret.

Trump is extremely dangerous

Doc says: "I hope i'm wrong, but Donald Trump may just prove to be the most dangerous person on the planet today, after Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un. Will it be too late before the majority of Americans realize this?"
 

Sol Tee Nutz

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Apr 29, 2012
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Look behind you.
Trump is pure evil look what he is doing to the stock markets

LONDON — Global equity funds received US$21 billion in the past week – their ninth-biggest inflow ever – as investors embraced the ‘Trump trade’, while money flowed out of bonds for seventh week in a row, Bank of America Merrill Lynch said on Friday.

The BAML figures, which track flows through Wednesday, showed overall equity inflows of US$63 billion since Donald Trump’s U.S. presidential election win on Nov. 8, partially reversing the US$151 billion outflows seen from January to October.

The bulk of the latest gains came from an US$18.5 billion rush into U.S. stocks, but European and emerging equity funds also saw inflows of US$700 million and US$1 billion respectively, the data showed.


This next link is very true.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-07/denzel-washington-slams-mainstream-media-peddling-bullshit

And people just eat it up.
 

Doc Holliday

Female body inspector
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GOP on brink of new Cold War over whether to work with Russia

by Stephen Collinson

WASHINGTON---The party of Reagan is fast lurching into a mini-Cold War with itself -- this time over working with Russia rather than against it.

President-elect Donald Trump's affinity for Russian President Vladimir Putin and his denials that the Kremlin hacked the 2016 election are unleashing a feud in the GOP, which sees its hawkish history on Moscow and triumph over the Soviet Union as one of its defining achievements.

The turmoil is threatening to detract from one of the most crucial moments of Trump's early presidency -- the confirmation process for his nominee for Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who has a personal friendship with Putin and opposed US sanctions on Russia imposed after the Kremlin's annexation of Crimea.

The idea that Russia may not pay a price for the startling allegation of seeking to undermine American democracy with a series of cyber breaches is infuriating some senior Republicans, and putting even those less hostile to Trump in a tough political spot.

"I can't imagine I would vote for anybody that believes that we should not sanction Russia, given the fact that they did in fact interfere in our election," South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham told CNN's Wolf Blitzer on the "Situation Room" on Wednesday.

The Washington showdown over how to combat Russian interference in the election is also testing the uneasy truce that has prevailed between the White House and the Trump operation since November.

And it is a sign of the unusual intra-party dilemmas beginning to unfold in Washington rooted in the next president's unorthodox approach to policy and wielding power.

With the intrigue deepening by the hour over what intelligence agencies, the White House and top figures on Capitol Hill now agree was a Russian effort to intervene in the election, Trump weighed in with a reminder that he is not on board with this consensus.

"If Russia, or some other entity, was hacking, why did the White House wait so long to act? Why did they only complain after Hillary lost?" Trump told his 17 million Twitter followers on Thursday.

Trump's comment that the administration waited until after Democrat Hillary Clinton was defeated in the election is not accurate. The alleged hacking was a topic in the presidential campaign as early as July and surfaced in the debates. In October, US covert agencies issued a statement alleging Russia itself was behind the hacks of the American political system.

But in a Fox News Sunday interview over the weekend, the President-elect suggested that there was no proof Russia had hacked the election, saying the Russian snooping in Democratic Party servers and emails of Clinton campaign staffers could have been done by China or even someone sitting in New Jersey.

Trump's stand means that an incoming president is directly at odds with his own intelligence agencies and the assessment of the entire Washington establishment.

Following Trump's tweet Thursday, there was one sign that his camp recognized the loneliness of his position.

A transition source said the President-elect was "concerned" about the Intelligence Community's findings that Russia hacked the election.

But the source also said Trump and his team are concerned the issue is being used to delegitimize his victory. Trump aides have consistently accused the Democrats and critics of Trump in the CIA of drumming up the hacking issue to undermine his victory in November.

Unless there is an evolution in the nascent administration's position on Russia, especially over sanctions, there could be trouble for Tillerson.

Only a few Republican senators would need to defect for his nomination to be in jeopardy, assuming most Democrats in the chamber -- where the GOP has a 52-48 majority -- vote against him.

The salience of the sanction issue for Republicans shows there's a depth of resistance to a reorientation in US policy toward Russia that goes beyond the hacking issue.

Graham made that point clear in his skepticism about Tillerson.

"If (someone doesn't) believe sanctions are appropriate, given what Putin has been doing all over the world, including in our backyard, then I don't think they have the judgment to be secretary of state," Graham said.

"Because if you don't go after Russia, you're inviting the other bad actors on the planet to come after you."

GOP heavy hitters, including Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and Arizona Sen. John McCain, have also raised concerns about the relationship Tillerson forged with Putin and his top aides while heading ExxonMobil.

The possibility that Trump could consider lifting US sanctions on Russian entities and officials imposed to punish the annexation of Crimea gained credibility after a former campaign surrogate showed up in Moscow this week to brief US business people.

"Trump can look at sanctions. They've been in place long enough," Jack Kingston said during an interview with NPR in the Russian capital."Has the desired result been reached? He doesn't have to abide by the Obama foreign policy. That gives him a fresh start."

The former Georgia congressman told NPR he did not have any meetings with Russian officials.

Another Trump adviser, Walid Phares, told Middle Eastern diplomats on Wednesday that the President-elect's bid to improve relations with Russia would help boost administration priorities in the region, including ending the war in Syria.

The possibility that such an approach could align Washington alongside Moscow and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is blamed for much of the slaughter in the war, is likely to alarm the same Republican critics who worry about Trump's emerging Russia policy.

Still, it is far from clear exactly how Trump's Russia policy will unfold. While foreign policy observers have deduced he will try to forge a working relationship with Putin -- of whom he spoke admiringly on the campaign trail -- Trump's exact conditions for a rapprochement are unknown.

There are many intangibles bound up in whether the two presidents actually make a personal connection, as they have not previously interacted. It's also possible that the new US leader may not take kindly to the Russian leader should he attempt to manipulate him -- or that their relationship could sour over time, an experience common to Trump's predecessors President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama.

And it remains unclear if Tillerson's relationships will remain as cordial when he is pursing America's interests with Russia rather than ExxonMobil's.

They are questions that will feature prominently in his confirmation hearings.

While there is angst among some Republicans over Russia policy, there are others willing to offer Trump the benefit of the doubt.

Former Obama Defense Secretary and Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel told CNN on Thursday that he was "encouraged" that there would be an effort to ease US-Russian tensions in the new administration.

"I am encouraged by that," Hagel said, "but that doesn't discount or at all put aside the big differences we have with Russia," in particular in Syria and Ukraine.

But he added: "We have got to find some platforms of stability to start working together if we can. Can they find enough common ground? We will see."

Trump's intentions toward Russia will become clearer once he has a full foreign policy team in place.

In the meantime, the controversy over the Russian intelligence operation is straining the fragile detente between Obama's White House and the Trump transition effort.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest took exception on Thursday to Trump's attitude, recalling that the President-elect's campaign team had described his call on Russia to hack Clinton's email server over the summer as a joke.

"I don't think anybody at the White House thinks it's funny that an adversary of the United States engaged in malicious cyber activity to destabilize our democracy," Earnest said on Thursday.

And Earnest, presumably reflected increasing impatience with Trump among senior officials in the White House, also rebuked him for his refusal to accept that Russia was behind election meddling.

"It might be time to not attack the intelligence community but to actually be supportive of a thorough, transparent, rigorous, nonpolitical investigation into what exactly happened," he said.

GOP tension

Doc says: "Last year, someone asked me why i was supporting Donald Trump in the GOP primaries. My response was 'because he can and may destroy the GOP.' It very well still may happen."
 

cloudsurf

Well-Known Member
May 10, 2003
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The Trump factor`s influence on stock markets is like a tsunami.
At first the water flows out into the ocean and fools many. Then it comes rushing back in...... to flood and kill thousands.
First the Trump market goes up and then it goes crashing down....wait for the great market crash of 2017.
China gets mad enough at Trump then all it has to do is pull its US debt and place it in gold. The US$ will buckle and markets will crash.
 

Doc Holliday

Female body inspector
Sep 27, 2003
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First the Trump market goes up and then it goes crashing down....wait for the great market crash of 2017.
China gets mad enough at Trump then all it has to do is pull its US debt and place it in gold. The US$ will buckle and markets will crash.

This scenario very well could happen. China is the last country that the US should want to piss off. The Chinese have the power to literally kill the US economy if it choses to. But in the process it would also extremely negatively affect the rest of the global markets.

We are about to go through various trying times. Donald Trump's impulsiveness and lack of interest in intelligence matters may prove to be extremely dangerous to the country and the entire western world. His love for Russia and especially Vladimir Putin is absolutely mind-boggling....and un-American. His party has to push him to release his taxes in order to bring forward any sense of transparency. What is the real reason why he's protecting Russia? Would his taxes show us the real reasons? Donald Trump is the most dangerous western leader in modern times. Keep your eyes on him, my American friends. Only YOU have the power to keep him in check.
 

Doc Holliday

Female body inspector
Sep 27, 2003
19,928
1,395
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Canada

Rodrigo Duterte: I Killed Three Men


Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte said Friday that he personally killed three men while he was the mayor of Davao, despite his spokesman’s claim that he hadn’t. “I killed about three of them. ... I don’t know how many bullets from my gun went inside their bodies. It happened and I cannot lie about it,” Duterte said. The declaration comes just two days after he said, more generally, that he would ride on a motorcycle and “patrol the streets, looking for trouble ... looking for a confrontation so I could kill.” On Friday, though, his spokesman Martin Andanar said to not take Duterte literally. “That is the style of the president, ever since he was a mayor he would talk that way,” Andanar said. Nearly 6,000 people are believed to have been killed since Duterte took office as part of his crackdown on drug dealers and addicts.

Trump admirer claims he murdered three men

Doc says: "This guy is a fucking nut! He hates Pres. Obama and Obama hates him back. Duerte recently spoke with Donald Trump & the two appeared to have hit it off."
 
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