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Trump Dump / War Train vol 2

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Democrats aren't very comfortable attacking the wives of presidents or candidates, that's a GOP thing.

It's pretty obvious when you look at the lack of attacks on Nancy, Barbara, and Laura compared to the crap that Michelle and Hillary were put through while first lady.

Just another area where the supposed "old fashion values" of the right seem to be ignored.

Oh, Dems aren't comfortable attacking Trump's wife for copying a few lines of a speech? Coulda fooled me.

What did Hillary go through?

For that matter, what did Michelle Obama go through. All I remember was her being called out on her "proud to be an American" (for the first time in her adult life) comment.
 
I read the title as " Malaria Trump " and immediately said to myself wtf.
 
Meh, I don't see a thread on the possible first Husband's lies either, but I guess that would be too much for one thread.

Jennifer-Anistons-Reaction-To-The-Friends-Theme-Song-In-Were-The-Millers.gif
 
lol republicans are so sad. every time a legit criticism comes up, they either outright lie or make up facts, or they just jump straight to screaming "BUT BOTH SIDES" or "YEA BUT HILLARY IS A CUNT."

fuckin intellectual giants these ones are.
 
lol republicans are so sad. every time a legit criticism comes up, they either outright lie or make up facts, or they just jump straight to screaming "BUT BOTH SIDES" or "YEA BUT HILLARY IS A CUNT."

fuckin intellectual giants these ones are.

Only intellectual giants think an immigrant with English as her second language bypassed standard protocol and fired professional speech writers only to end up plagiarizing the speech in the end. We're talking Da Vinci-level geniuses.
 
Only intellectual giants think an immigrant with English as her second language bypassed standard protocol and fired professional speech writers only to end up plagiarizing the speech in the end. We're talking Da Vinci-level geniuses.
Don'tsnitch snitchin'
 
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics...ion-of-the-new-gop-orthodoxy-on-crime/491735/



Steve Teles ranks among America’s leading academic experts on the application of conservative ideas to problems of governance. He chronicled the rise of the conservative legal movement in a 2010 book. This spring, he and co-author David Dagan have released a new study: Prison Break: Why Conservatives Turned Against Mass Incarceration.

Not a conservative himself, Teles writes as a sympathetic outsider, always looking for ways to bridge ideological gaps in the service of better policy. With the Cato Institute’s W. Brink Lindsey, Teles has long co-chaired and co-hosted a monthly seminar that steps outside the usual perimeters to bring together not only conservatives and liberals—but also libertarians and socialists—for discussions that are simultaneously unusually frank and unusually practical. I’ve been an occasional participant myself, so I have to disclose that I’ve received four or five free meals from Teles’s funders. Until they start serving better wine, however, I consider my intellectual independence uncorrupted.

I interviewed Teles by email in late June.

David Frum: Let’s start with the thesis embedded in your subtitle. Is it indeed true that conservatives have turned against mass incarceration? I can think of a few who haven’t.

Steve Teles: It is certainly true that there are a few conservatives who are still holding out against the reform spirit in the GOP, most notably Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas. And in general, Republican legislators who have been in office a long time and have a record of supporting measures like mandatory minimums are going to be less eager to reverse field than those with a fresh record. There are also states where the GOP leadership is still pretty hostile to reform, like Virginia—in purple states the temptation is very strong to cling to the old criminal-justice orthodoxy. But the list of people who have, at least minimally, signed on, is much more impressive. Readers can consult the list of the signatories to the “Right on Crime” statement of principles. You’ll see a lot of names of prominent Republicans, including many—like Jeb Bush, Newt Gingrich, Asa Hutchison, and Ed Meese—who were important figures in building our system of mass incarceration in the first place. And the most important evidence is the list of bright red states like Texas, South Carolina, Mississippi, and Georgia that have passed major reforms over the last few years. I think it’s fair to say that reform is much closer to being GOP orthodoxy now—especially in the states—than the old tough on crime stance is.

Frum: Final question: The likelihood is that Donald Trump will lose, possibly very badly. The Republican Party and the conservative world will be plunged into intellectual and moral ferment, even crisis. How scalable are the lessons you offer in Prison Break? To what extent do they offer a guide to Republicans and conservatives who seek change? And what are the real-world limits you expect for them, given that the one thing that will remain true post-Trump is the revelation of the weak hold of the ideology of anti-statism on the Republican rank and file?

Teles: This is a very complicated question. And as a political scientist, the thing that strikes me is how under-determined the response to a very big Trump loss will be. If it’s very large, then it sends a signal beyond the personality of Trump, which is that you just can’t put together a winning presidential coalition on the basis of LePen-Americane. But if it is close, then it could be read the opposite way, which is that if you could just put a less obnoxious face on his coalition then it’s possible for the Republicans to succeed as a purely white-nationalist party. I have to think that if it really is a blow-out, then the authority of the Republicans who embraced Trump has to be weakened, that the NeverTrump people will have a strong claim to have warned their co-partisans that they were joining a sinking ship. But I think that one way to predict what is going on is that you’re going to have real factional conflict in the Republican Party in a way that you haven’t had in a couple of generations. The identity of the party is up for grabs in a way that it has not been in some time.

If it’s true that there’s going to be real factional conflict in the party, then one thing that suggests is that the power of party leaders is going to weaken, especially in Congress. As my friend Lee Drutman has argued, based on conditional party government theory in political science, if the Republicans are split factionally, the only way to govern Congress will be for party leaders to give up power over the agenda, and allow members to make coalitions they want—even with Democrats. That creates the opportunity for more strange-bedfellows coalitions, institutionally—party leaders won’t be in as strong a position to control the agenda. But simultaneously, the authority for party members to shift positions is going to be weakened, because they can’t just point to a consensus group of cue-makers as justification for changing position. So we may be going into a more anarchic sort of future, with shifting coalitions but also a lot of blame-avoidance dynamics among Republicans who are worried that whatever they do, they’re going to get punished and can’t hide behind the party power-brokers any more.

I do worry that if the Republicans go in a more white-nationalist direction—if that’s the interpretation they put on this election, that they can’t ignore the Trump voters and that those voters want statism, but statism used to serve them—then it’s harder to build coalitions of the kind discussed in the book that combine anti-statism of both parties. That makes cutting Pentagon spending, rethinking surveillance, and further criminal-justice reform harder. But it creates opportunities for other kinds of strange bedfellows coalitions, in particular on trade.

My bottom line is that it might be that the dynamics that created the process of criminal-justice reform on the right are Humpty Dumpty, and he can’t be put back together again.
 
Seriously, this is beyond words.
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/07/20/magazine/how-donald-trump-picked-his-running-mate.html

"Are you ready to become the most powerful Vice President in history?"

When Kasich’s adviser asked how this would be the case, Donald Jr. explained that his father’s vice president would be in charge of domestic and foreign policy.

Then what, the adviser asked, would Trump be in charge of?

“Making America great again” was the casual reply...."

It's so goddamn bizarre that this man is being taken seriously.
 
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Holy fuck, does every time Clinton or trump even take a dump someone has to make a thread on it? It's like the hw subforum in here.
 
How corporations select presidents:
"So, you ready to give us a speech?"
 
Holy fuck, does every time Clinton or trump even take a dump someone has to make a thread on it? It's like the hw subforum in here.
This is the forum where we come to discuss politics.
If you don't like a thread topic, nobody's forcing you to say anything, son.
 
Holy fuck, does every time Clinton or trump even take a dump someone has to make a thread on it? It's like the hw subforum in here.

Well, reporters write stories when celebrities wear a fancy dress. Not sure about dumps though tbh.
 
If true, it basically confirms what a lot of us think. Trump wants all of the glory and none of the work.
 
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