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THE MOST egregious crime, in the history of The United States of America

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    #16
    Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
    There was a crime, electing Trump the crook , as President.
    Will be interesting to watch Hilary go down . Time will tell who was the worse crook lol.

    Comment


      #17
      The fact that Hillary spent most of her time as a public servant I think it's pretty obvious who the bigger criminal is.

      Comment


        #18
        Parsley, you come on here being the champion against crimes and injustices committed by Muslim men who follow Sharia Law against their wives and daughters. yet not a word about Trump's behavior towards women.

        My thoughts are prosecute all men involved with crimes against women, and those who have gotten away with it shouldn't be able to buy their way out and become POTUS.


        So Parsley you obviously make exceptions to your rules, not sure who qualifies, but you have justified it with yourself.

        As for the rest of you posters coming to Trumps defence it's comical and entertaining, keep it coming.

        Comment


          #19
          http://www.macleans.ca/politics/washington/david-frum-interview-donald-trump/
          David Frum: Donald Trump is a threat to Western democracy

          The conservative commentator and author warns that ‘Trump-like events’ are proliferating around the world, not just in Washington

          Paul Wells

          January 12, 2018

          At the beginning of Donald Trump’s presidential candidacy, David Frum admits, he was “Trump-curious”—intrigued, and willing to believe the Manhattan real estate developer might shake up a staid Republican Party. That didn’t last. Now Frum, the veteran Canadian-born journalist and former speechwriter for former president George W. Bush, sees Trump and his enablers as a threat to American democracy, and as part of a widespread assault on democratic rules across the Western world. He spoke in Toronto with Maclean’s about his new book, Trumpocracy: The Corruption of the American Republic. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

          Q: One of the first things that I noticed about this book is that if you took Donald Trump out of it—if you took Donald Trump out of today’s United States—your book still describes a country that’s in a lot of trouble.

          A: It describes a Western world that’s in a lot of trouble. This is maybe something that, from a Canadian perspective, I bring to this project. I keep telling my American friends, “If you think of Donald Trump as only something that is happening inside the United States, you’re missing it.” Because there are Trump-like events happening across the Western world, in Warsaw Pact countries, in France, Germany, Austria, the Netherlands. As we speak, the second-largest party in the Dutch legislature—who’s more level-headed than the Dutch?—is Geert Wilders’s party, which is a very Trump-like party, and they’ve got 33 out of 150 seats.

          Q: Your book describes an impressive array of what you call “enablers”: a conservative entertainment complex, essentially Fox News, that propagandized for him; fellow candidates for president who appeased him; a Republican Party apparatus that submitted to him; a donor elite who funded him; a Congressional party that protected him; writers and intellectuals who invented excuses for him; and millions of rank-and-file Republicans who accepted him. What is it in Donald Trump that brought all of those people to heel? Or what is it in them that made them ready to be seduced?

          A: Different people had different motives. In some cases, it was just arrogance, the belief that they could use Donald Trump for their own ends rather than be used by him. For example, Trump didn’t have a polling operation until very late in his campaign. How did he know what to do? And the answer was that the Ted Cruz people leaked their polls to Trump because they were looking forward to eliminating all the other rivals, clearing the way for a Cruz-Trump fight that they were certain Cruz would win. Well, in the end, Cruz was the last man standing, it’s true. And Cruz lost. If he had known at the beginning what he knew at the end, he might have thought twice. The Congressional Republican Party thought they could make Trump their tool to impose their very unpopular agenda. Instead, they became his tool.

          I need to make it clear: I am a very conservative person. And there are a lot of things that Donald Trump’s government or administration is doing that I might agree with. The point is we have to defend the rules of the game. And one of the things that has empowered Donald Trump is that not enough people are serious enough about defending the rules of the game, maybe because they don’t understand how endangered those rules are.

          Q: Trump says the rules of the game are the problem, because the rules of the game—and we hear this from the governing party in Poland, for instance—elevate a certain kind of person and create a certain spoils system that not everyone benefits from. And that you have to smash the rules of the game so that ordinary people can get back into the game.

          A: Right. What has enabled these kinds of parties is precisely the failure of elites to deliver. I wrote a history of the 1970s a long time ago, and one of the stories I tell is: whatever happened to the man in the white lab coat? If you watch a movie from between the end of the Second World War and the mid-1970s, whenever anyone steps out in a white lab coat, they’re there to offer a solution. They’re there to tell you how the time machine is going to work, how the laser’s going to save the day. They’re going to give you James Bond’s array of tools. After about 1975, whenever the man in the white lab coat steps out, it’s to come up with some crazy idea that’s going to bring ruin on everybody. “Let’s clone dinosaurs!” And the last we see of him is disappearing down the gullet of the Tyrannosaurus rex.

          I mentioned I’m a conservative person. I’m going to say something very conservative. Elites are inevitable in politics. That is how politics is going to work. Because most people will not put in the effort, most people don’t have the knowledge. It is an elite game, always. The question is, are your elites responsible, patriotic, public-spirited? Do they think about the interests of others, not just themselves? And the story of Western politics since, I would say, the beginning of the century, maybe a little earlier, is that as elites become more separated, more selfish, as they leave behind their populations and don’t think about them, they become discredited. And the people look for alternatives. But the alternative is worse. Those rules of the game protect us all. And they are more precious than almost any political outcome.

          Q: Do you think he’s going to serve out his term?

          A: I think that’s the way you have to bet, barring some kind of health event. Obviously, he won’t be impeached or removed so long as the Republicans hold even one House of Congress. And even should they lose both in November of 2018, launching an impeachment—as the Republicans discovered with Bill Clinton—is very dangerous to the impeaching party. Unless you have a highly credible set of extremely damning facts, you turn a constitutional crisis into a political crisis. You rally potential supporters of the impeached president to him. You make his base bigger. So I imagine that he is likely to serve out the full term.

          Q: So the thesis whereby the Republicans decide he’s a liability—he dips below a certain level in the polls and they decide that he’s a stone and not something lifting them up—you don’t buy that?

          A: Donald Trump is the least unpopular thing about today’s Republican Party. I mean, the idea that a Mitch McConnell or a Paul Ryan could say, “Let’s toss Trump overboard and return to our program of plutocratic politics, health care removal, massive income tax cuts for the affluent, deregulation of finance”—if they cut loose from Donald Trump, it’s like, you know, storm in channel, continent cut off. If they cut loose from him, they are much likelier to sink.

          Q: Your defence of Obamacare—or at least your constant Cassandra-like warnings to the Republican Party that trying to take Obamacare back would never work and would be self-destructive—that’s well-known. Your suspicion of the current state of the American immigration system probably makes you fewer friends in Canada. A Canadian asking a Canadian would say: What’s your problem with immigration?

          A: Well, let’s start with the health care. Because I actually see these as very related issues. One of the great drivers of the alienation that has made Donald Trump possible is that the growth in the American economy has been weak. In the decade from 2005 to 2015, there was not one year when the United States hit three per cent growth. And to the extent there’s been growth, virtually all of it—and, in many years, literally all of it—has been collected by the top 10 per cent of the population. Obviously, if we knew how to make growth faster, we would. We don’t. And it’s very difficult to make growth more broadly shared. Because it’s not just the United States that has this problem.

          So, one of the reasons I’ve been interested in health care is that here is something you can do, that governments know how to do, that could lift one of the largest burdens of worry from the shoulders of tens of millions of people for whom the rest of the economy isn’t working. A lot of the things that are in Obamacare that Republicans don’t like were deliberately put there to force Republicans to negotiate. Republicans wouldn’t negotiate, so we got Obamacare with all of the fur on it. Once it’s there, of course, it’s very hard to take health care benefits away from people, as the Republicans discovered.

          Immigration is driven by the same concern, which is how do you build a middle-class society? The argument is very strong that immigration in the United States, because it is so concentrated at the bottom of the labour market, because so much of it is illegal, depresses wages and working conditions. Economists will say that’s not true. They have models that show that even the lowest-skilled immigration drives up wages. But when you look at those models, how do you get this? And they say, “Well, what we do is we compare the effect of this group of immigrants on that group of natives and we see what happens.” And I say, “Well, what if a native leaves the job market altogether? What happens then?” “Oh, we stop counting him.” “Oh, okay. How many people is that?” “Oh, that’s a 10th of American men between 25 and 54.” Labour force participation for that group was 98 per cent when you and I were young. It’s 88 per cent now. They vanish from the economists’ models.

          Now, they’re not driven out entirely by immigration. It’s drugs and disability and other things. But America’s immigration system has created a society in which labour is very, very disposable.

          Comment


            #20
            By Forage

            My thoughts are prosecute all men involved with crimes against women, and those who have gotten away with it shouldn't be able to buy their way out and become POTUS.

            Not sure I'd want you writing, interpreting, and enforcing any statute forage. Be careful wishing for the word 'all'.

            Comment


              #21
              It continues to amaze me that people can have their "own opinion" formed for them, by the media outlets they chose to absorb from.
              Aggie doesn't know Trump from Jack, but it doesn't matter, he's had his mind made up for him. And he's also had his mind made up for him regarding Hillary's criminality. The MSM isn't interested, so neither is Aggie, even when facts are revealed in how she handled government documents. How did they get on Weiner's laptop again?
              It's like a kid, running around in circles, with his fingers in his ears, chanting nah nah nah nah nah nah!
              Why are leftist so afraid to listen to another point of view, is it because they're so insecure in their own position?

              Here's the latest rabble babble coming from Democrats. They think they have to go further to the left to win! They've moved so far left JFK wouldn't even recognize his party anymore, they've moved miles to the left of W.J. Clinton with Obama election, and yet , they think they have to move further left yet! lol

              http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/as-democrats-look-to-rebuild-progressives-want-to-go-bolder/article/2631239 http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/as-democrats-look-to-rebuild-progressives-want-to-go-bolder/article/2631239

              Just a couple more notes,
              Black voter/support for Trump had doubled one year after the President was elected.(sure you can say it was low, but it is increasing!)
              Black voters are 85% in favor of Trumps position of halting illegal immigration and increasing border security.(which is different than Democrats)
              There are now more Latinos in Chicago than Blacks.

              Comment


                #22
                Forage I have the perfect solution for this biologic divide between men/woman. Send all us males to the sunny south pacific where we will have it warm and wet being that's all we want, and put all women north of the 49th where they can be as frigid as they please, then let god figure it out when you meet.

                Comment


                  #23
                  DM you must have got your education at Trump U. L.O.L. The Cintons are slimy but Trump is more dangerous.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Originally posted by foragefarmer View Post
                    Parsley, you come on here being the champion against crimes and injustices committed by Muslim men who follow Sharia Law against their wives and daughters. yet not a word about Trump's behavior towards women.

                    My thoughts are prosecute all men involved with crimes against women, and those who have gotten away with it shouldn't be able to buy their way out and become POTUS.


                    So Parsley you obviously make exceptions to your rules, not sure who qualifies, but you have justified it with yourself.

                    As for the rest of you posters coming to Trumps defence it's comical and entertaining, keep it coming.
                    Forage
                    1.Trump is subject to the Rule of Law, as are you. If Trump commits a crime against a woman, she can lay charges. If he is found guilty, he is subject to the court's judgement and sentence.

                    2. A Muslim man in a Muslim country is subject to Sharia Law, which legislates Islamic doctrine. I am worth half a man, says Islam.

                    "Qur'an (4:11) (on inheritance) "The male shall have the equal of the portion of two females"

                    The Quran is the doctrine; sharia law legislates the inheritance settlement according to the doctrine. If you have difficulty understanding the value of 50%, I recommend you ask your wife, or sister, or mother.


                    When you chuckle at:

                    "Qur'an (2:228) “Men have a status above women", as a bit of humorous religious verse, I can relate to the humour, but make sure you condemn it as dangerous law.

                    It means both.

                    There is a distinct difference between the two. One can be a pie in the sky belief. But only Islam legislates belief, forage. pars.
                    Last edited by parsley; Jan 23, 2018, 16:56.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Chuckchuck,
                      Although I vigorously disagree with your ideas about how the country should be governed, your quirky notions about socialistm, I do view you as a patriotic Canadian.

                      "The question is, are your elites responsible, patriotic, public-spirited?" was the question. And I do view farmers as elites. My god we work like dogs but we have a good life and we live well and we boss ourselves.

                      And I view Trump as a true 💯 % patriot.


                      But I view Trudeau as a weasling traitor who would sell anything to anyone for cash. Pars.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Originally posted by parsley View Post
                        But I view Trudeau as a weasling traitor who would sell anything to anyone for cash. Pars.
                        Never rule out the possibility that he's just dumber than dirt. When simple stupidity will explain a given situation it isn't necessary to look further.

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                          DM you must have got your education at Trump U. L.O.L. The Cintons are slimy but Trump is more dangerous.
                          You are so wrong and blinded by your ideology.

                          The crap that is coming out in the last few days about how the FBI and Dept of Justice tried to rig the election by not laying charges against Hillary during the campaign and then having a plan in place in case Trump won to try and get him impeached with a made up Russia story is going to make Watergate look tame.

                          Funny how the Clintons and FBI can erase so many texts and emails or just “lose” them and lose only texts that prove the real collusion that took place.

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Funny ..... like Trump or not , there is a lot of truth in this speech ...... a lot . And hopefully the truth put the Clintons in a cell block ..... in Haiti 🇭🇹, the country they robbed blind .



                            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2qIXXafxCQ

                            Comment


                              #29
                              For those of you (which are the goodly majorities sharing each and every perspective)...just what is society to do when the judges; and "FBI type institutions"; and elected representatives are all seen as tainted; biased and not impartial.

                              Society and democracy is obviously left with no respect for the law; but only firmly held beliefs that are not open to debate and actual facts and the decisions of courts and judges that are held in contempt by too many.


                              Divided societies which have little in common across lines drawn as permanent red zones.


                              Don't you see what is inevitable?????

                              Comment

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