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Welp, I guess we are Xenophobic-less for a while
4/12/2018 11:51 AM
Too many filthy liberals in this thread! Let's hear from a conservative for a change. Here's Max Boot on Trump's unique leadership style.

What on earth is Trump saying?

There are few better examples of the terminal confusion gripping the Trump administration than the competing headlines published by The Post and the New York Times last Wednesday. The Post: “Trump instructs military to begin planning for withdrawal from Syria.” The Times: “Trump Drops Push for Immediate Withdrawal of Troops From Syria.”

Both headline writers were trying in good faith to decipher the undecipherable — the intentions of our mercurial president, which can change as rapidly as the weather in Rapid City, S.D. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad may have believed that President Trump was really pulling out and thus felt free to apparently use chemical weapons against the city of Douma this past Saturday. But after years spent criticizing President Barack Obama for sacrificing surprise in military strikes, Trump announced that U.S. missiles — “nice and new and ‘smart!’?” — would soon be striking Syria.

If “Animal Assad,” as the president likes to call him, can’t figure out Trump, he is hardly alone. It is not just that Trump changes his mind often, although he does. It is also that when he speaks his mind, it is often impossible to figure out what he’s saying. Here is Trump speaking last week: “Nobody’s been tougher on Russia than I have. .?.?. And with that being said, I think I could have a very good relationship with President Putin. .?.?. Getting along with Russia is a good thing. .?.?. So I think I could have a very good relationship with Russia and with President Putin. And if I did, that would be a great thing. And there’s also a possibility that that won’t happen. Who knows? Okay?” Who knows, indeed.

Trump’s ramblings about Vladi­mir Putin were positively pellucid in their clarity compared with his March 29 comments on the U.S.-South Korea trade deal: “So we’ve redone it, and that’s going to level the playing field on steel and cars and trucks coming into this country. And I may hold it up till after a deal is made with North Korea. Does everybody understand that? You know why, right? You know why? Because it’s a very strong card.”

I have asked numerous Korea experts what this is supposed to mean, and no one has any idea. Why would Trump want to hold up a trade deal with South Korea to gain leverage over North Korea? Maybe he is planning to make such massive concessions to Kim Jong Un that he will need to bludgeon Seoul into acquiescing. Or maybe he was simply confusing North and South Korea — a mistake he has made before. Who can keep all those Koreas straight?

Most presidents enter office knowing relatively little about foreign policy and learn a lot on the job. Trump knew less than any of his predecessors and has learned less than any of them. The perpetual fog that clouds his thinking has not lifted an inch; if anything, it is becoming ever more impenetrable.

This is what happens when you are functionally illiterate: Trump can read in theory but chooses not to, and therefore he is incapable of sustained learning. As The Post reported, “He rarely if ever reads the President’s Daily Brief, a document that lays out the most pressing information collected by U.S. intelligence agencies from hot spots around the world.”

Instead of relying on the written word, Trump relies on the nitwits who opine on the Fox News channel. I’ve previously suggested that Fox News is Trump’s RT, but that’s not quite right: Putin is too smart to believe what his own propagandists say. Not Trump: If “Fox & Friends” tells him that a “caravan” of Central American refugees is about to invade the United States, Trump will faithfully echo their hysteria. He even seeks out Sean Hannity and Lou Dobbs off air for their fortune-cookie insights.

Trump is proud of his lack of “book learnin’.?” During the 2016 campaign, he bragged, as The Post noted, “that he does not need to read extensively because he reaches the right decisions ‘with very little knowledge other than the knowledge I [already] had, plus the words “common sense.”?’?” In practice, Trump’s policies defy any kind of sense, common or otherwise.

He is trying to negotiate a nuclear deal with North Korea — but at the same time he is threatening to tear up the one with Iran. He has threatened a trade war against China — but at the same time he needs China’s help to coerce North Korea into making a deal. He is intent on withdrawing from the Iran nuclear accord because he is so worried about Iran — but at the same time he is handing Syria over to Iran on a silver platter. Or at least he was before the latest apparent chemical attack. Now he’s preparing to bomb Syria as a prelude to either greater engagement or disengagement. With the “very stable genius” in charge, who knows what’s going to happen next?

Trump prides himself on unpredictability, but, as the attack in Syria showed, there is a price to be paid for leaving allies and enemies alike guessing about your intentions.

4/12/2018 1:11 PM
Here is a Breitbart article today.

http://www.breitbart.com/jerusalem/2018/04/12/european-jews-facing-anti-semitism-levels-unseen-since-second-world-war/

Went down to the comments to see what all the right-wingers were saying - probably pro-Jew right? Right?

Then why did every Jewish group push for Europe to open its borders to mass Muslim migration? Revenge on Europe as they all move to Israel?

Because Jews hate the white race and want it overrun and destroyed. Since white prosperity causes economic booms which allow people to pay off Jewish bankers, white people must be replaced.

Just ask Alan Greenspan



Oh they control everything, the tech companies, the Hollywood, the media and almost all aspects of American and the western lives...and they pretend that they are so innocent and that they have nothing to do with all this and unfortunately that a lot of the stupid whiteys still buying their cunning BS!


I was a philosemite before I met many jews and learned just how much affection they have for white conservative christians.

I even tried to ignore this and was still their cheerleader as I heard them express nothing but poisonous disdain for my own people.

Finally the conservative jewish betrayal of Trump when he was the last bulwark for whites against our imminent replacement in our own country... that was just too much even for me.

I think most evangelical types simply live away from many jews or do not know them personally. That’s the only way to maintain the fantasy of some warm and fuzzy “judeo-christian” alliance.

And when you realize what their holy talmud says about Jesus? A bastard of a whore and a roman soldier, a sorcerer and idolator, god wanted him dead and the jews obliged!

Go look it up. This stuff isn’t a secret or a conspiracy theory, they just don’t repeat it in public when they want your money and protection.



Same here. I used to be a big philo semite. Not any more. Judaism is organized crime masquerading as a religion. Always have been.


Glad you see you guys are waking up!



So you think Hitler was right? Cmon! I do!


It's true Zionist Jews were collaborating with the National socialists to deport Jews to mandate Palestine in the 1930s.

See Havaara Treaty of 1933.



Jews are seeking revenge on Europe for how they were treated in WWII. They do this by promoting the Moslem invasion, which will lead to the destruction of Christian Europe. Jews in Europe are expected to move to Israel.

I could go on and on.


If you want, you can interpret this as republicans being antisemitic. I wouldn't. Guess what, Boris: ANTISEMITISM IS ON BOTH SIDES. There are extremists on both sides. Fairly equally.

4/12/2018 1:41 PM
Trump calls comey a slime ball.....thats a new term for trump.....
trump wanted comey to prove that the pee tape did not exist for melania.....if it never happened how do you prove that the tape does not exist.
4/13/2018 8:38 AM
stormy daniels pseudonym initials - pp
4/13/2018 10:36 AM
Posted by dino27 on 4/11/2018 8:42:00 PM (view original):
GASSY KILLING ANIMAL
trump has such a self deprecating wit.

on the chemical weapons in Syria something is fishy.
why would syria/russia use such weapons after trump gave them such a gigantic christmas present by announcing us departure.
then, why would russia want to bring on such heat for nothing.....assad has won..the war is almost over.
but the rebels know all is almost lost..revenge would be to bring the wrath of the world down on syria and russia and iran...they are the only ones to benefit from the attack.......follow the gas.......was it chlorine or sarin....
england is not yet sold on who did it...trump is very stupidly jumping the gun.
there could be serious consequences for a big mistake.
Mattis does not in any way whatsover look enthused about an attack...quite the opposite.

this is heating up...follow what england says.....they are civilized and look for proof.
nothing should be done on conjecture or assumption.

forest dump.
nuke gingrich.
findings show that the chem used was mostly chlorine......there is no unanimity as to who made the attack.
thats why the response has fizzled.....britain will not attack without high confidence that it was syria/russia.......
trump may have jumped the gun......may have used opportunity for talk tough/no intention to act.
wag a dog chasing its tail.
4/13/2018 10:52 AM
roy cohn - dan ackroyd - michael cohen - david cone.
4/13/2018 10:55 AM
i wish these guys were around today for their take on trump.

1. lenny bruce
2. john lennon
3. mlk
4. reagan
5. truman
6. the 3 stooges
7. gore vidal
8. thomas jefferson
9. winston churchill
10. abraham lincoln
11. freud
4/13/2018 11:03 AM
Dino, when will the seeding for the Trump wresting tournament come out?
4/13/2018 11:14 AM
thanks , Tangplay.....definitely starting the tournament this weekend.
4/13/2018 12:14 PM
Posted by crazystengel on 4/11/2018 12:04:00 AM (view original):
A very satisfying editorial!

The Law Is Coming, Mr. Trump

Why don’t we take a step back and contemplate what Americans, and the world, are witnessing?

Early Monday morning, F.B.I. agents raided the New York office, home and hotel room of the personal lawyer for the president of the United States. They seized evidence of possible federal crimes — including bank fraud, wire fraud and campaign finance violations related to payoffs made to women, including a porn actress, who say they had affairs with the president before he took office and were paid off and intimidated into silence.

That evening the president surrounded himself with the top American military officials and launched unbidden into a tirade against the top American law enforcement officials — officials of his own government — accusing them of “an attack on our country.”

Oh, also: The Times reported Monday evening that investigators were examining a $150,000 donation to the president’s personal foundation from a Ukrainian steel magnate, given during the American presidential campaign in exchange for a 20-minute video appearance.

Meanwhile, the president’s former campaign chairman is under indictment, and his former national security adviser has pleaded guilty to lying to investigators. His son-in-law and other associates are also under investigation.

Mr. Trump has spent his career in the company of developers and celebrities, and also of grifters, cons, sharks, goons and crooks. He cuts corners, he lies, he cheats, he brags about it, and for the most part, he’s gotten away with it, protected by threats of litigation, hush money and his own bravado. Those methods may be proving to have their limits when they are applied from the Oval Office. Though Republican leaders in Congress still keep a cowardly silence, Mr. Trump now has real reason to be afraid. A raid on a lawyer’s office doesn’t happen every day; it means that multiple government officials, and a federal judge, had reason to believe they’d find evidence of a crime there and that they didn’t trust the lawyer not to destroy that evidence.

On Monday, when he appeared with his national security team, Mr. Trump, whose motto could be, “The buck stops anywhere but here,” angrily blamed everyone he could think of for the “unfairness” of an investigation that has already consumed the first year of his presidency, yet is only now starting to heat up. He said Attorney General Jeff Sessions made “a very terrible mistake” by recusing himself from overseeing the investigation — the implication being that a more loyal attorney general would have obstructed justice and blocked the investigation. He complained about the “horrible things” that Hillary Clinton did “and all of the crimes that were committed.” He called the A-team of investigators from the office of the special counsel, Robert Mueller, “the most biased group of people.” As for Mr. Mueller himself, “we’ll see what happens,” Mr. Trump said. “Many people have said, ‘You should fire him.’”

In fact, the raids on the premises used by Mr. Trump’s lawyer, Michael Cohen, were conducted by the public corruption unit of the federal attorney’s office in Manhattan, and at the request not of the special counsel’s team, but under a search warrant that investigators in New York obtained following a referral by Mr. Mueller, who first consulted with the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein. To sum up, a Republican-appointed former F.B.I. director consulted with a Republican-appointed deputy attorney general, who then authorized a referral to an F.B.I. field office not known for its anti-Trump bias. Deep state, indeed.

Mr. Trump also railed against the authorities who, he said, “broke into” Mr. Cohen’s office. “Attorney-client privilege is dead!” the president tweeted early Tuesday morning, during what was presumably his executive time. He was wrong. The privilege is one of the most sacrosanct in the American legal system, but it does not protect communications in furtherance of a crime. Anyway, one might ask, if this is all a big witch hunt and Mr. Trump has nothing illegal or untoward to hide, why does he care about the privilege in the first place?
The answer, of course, is that he has a lot to hide.

This wasn’t even the first early-morning raid of a close Trump associate. That distinction goes to Paul Manafort, Mr. Trump’s former campaign chairman and Russian oligarch-whisperer, who now faces a slate of federal charges long enough to land him in prison for the rest of his life. And what of Mr. Cohen? He’s already been cut loose by his law firm, and when the charges start rolling in, he’ll likely get the same treatment from Mr. Trump.

Among the grotesqueries that faded into the background of Mr. Trump’s carnival of misgovernment during the past 24 hours was that Monday’s meeting was ostensibly called to discuss a matter of global significance: a reported chemical weapons attack on Syrian civilians. Mr. Trump instead made it about him, with his narcissistic and self-pitying claim that the investigation represented an attack on the country “in a true sense.”

No, Mr. Trump — a true attack on America is what happened on, say, Sept. 11, 2001. Remember that one? Thousands of people lost their lives. Your response was to point out that the fall of the twin towers meant your building was now the tallest in downtown Manhattan. Of course, that also wasn’t true.


THAT'S a whole lotta stuff there. Care to break it down? I got your source. At least you sourced it.

There's a lot of misinformation there and I don't thinks it's fair to pile one lie on top another in an effort to make it seem like you have a case or an argument. I wish you would care to take it on one at a time. I take particular exception to the $150,000 dollar donation reference.

I understand it's only an opinion piece and therefore it's not news. Care to debate?
4/13/2018 12:30 PM
Post-ABC poll: Majority of Americans support Mueller’s probe of Russia, Trump campaign



I suppose it should be surprising that 1 in 4 Americans don't support an investigation that's already produced indictments and guilty pleas, but I guess that's the hardcore Fox News crowd there.

Nice to see the investigation into shady business deals and hush money also has widespread support. If Ken Starr nailed Clinton on consensual sex, I don't see why Mueller should ignore crimes and transgressions unrelated to Russian meddling.
4/13/2018 12:33 PM
just for info....max boot is considered one of the finest living british historians...particularly of world war 2.
4/13/2018 12:33 PM
Posted by wylie715 on 4/11/2018 12:36:00 AM (view original):
Posted by DougOut on 4/10/2018 7:56:00 PM (view original):
What is white privilege?
says yet another white guy
WOW!

I thought you didn't read my posts because I was perms-blocked. ONE of us is lying.

AND understand, I don't mind. I wish you would get over your years old offense, whatever you thought it might be, and rejoin the larger conversation.

I'll still post Wylie cartoon pics because they are cute and snappy.

But here is your first opportunity. SAYS YET ANOTHER WHITE GUY is not a response. You're a white guy to. So that's weird.

One white guy says to another white guy you're a white guy too. IT says nothing.

WHAT IS WHITE PRIVILEGE?
4/13/2018 12:37 PM
Posted by crazystengel on 4/13/2018 12:34:00 PM (view original):
Post-ABC poll: Majority of Americans support Mueller’s probe of Russia, Trump campaign



I suppose it should be surprising that 1 in 4 Americans don't support an investigation that's already produced indictments and guilty pleas, but I guess that's the hardcore Fox News crowd there.

Nice to see the investigation into shady business deals and hush money also has widespread support. If Ken Starr nailed Clinton on consensual sex, I don't see why Mueller should ignore crimes and transgressions unrelated to Russian meddling.
PLEASE CROP YOUR POST!

This is totally unreadable.

Thank You in the future.
4/13/2018 12:38 PM
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