Politics, Politics, Politics

Due to lack of time I looked only at your first and last articles: the first being TIME's article on what the Chinese actually stole, and the last being Those Interceptor Fake Cell Phone Towers.

First: there is no doubt that Chinese industrial espionage is a serious problem. I've read about it for nearly 20 years. Unfortunately it still doesn't explain why Huawei is AHEAD of others. Especially when the US doesn't even have any corporations that have made much progress on 5G - they're always throwing out names like Nokia which are not US and even these are quite far behind Huawei. If you steal lots of 4G tech, that doesn't magically become 5G just because you add 4G+4G+4G together.

This kind of mindset is what many white ******* come up with when the slight, bespectacled Asian nerd in class, who joined at the start of the year with stumbling English, winds up handing in one of the best papers and then everyone says that kid must have cheated because his English is poor. Fact is, almost any teacher can still give a paper a good grade even if the English is stumbling, just because of the quality of research and effort put in.

Last: this article isn't even about China. It only briefly speculates that these fake towers are Chinese in origin. Majority of this article speculates that it's actually the COPS. As they say, 'local, state and federal law enforcement have been abusing this technology for years'. The police are just using these fake towers to conduct broad searches that they couldn't do with traditional warrants.

You're making a big mistake when you post this article about 'Chinese cell phone towers stealing technology' when the article means something else. Again it reminds me of my slacker white students who abuse the internet and keyword searches, to grab articles and quotes that support their theses in term papers. These ******* don't actually read the articles they quote, so they don't realize that they've totally misunderstood the articles.
 
Due to lack of time I looked only at your first and last articles: the first being TIME's article on what the Chinese actually stole, and the last being Those Interceptor Fake Cell Phone Towers.

First: there is no doubt that Chinese industrial espionage is a serious problem. I've read about it for nearly 20 years. Unfortunately it still doesn't explain why Huawei is AHEAD of others. Especially when the US doesn't even have any corporations that have made much progress on 5G - they're always throwing out names like Nokia which are not US and even these are quite far behind Huawei. If you steal lots of 4G tech, that doesn't magically become 5G just because you add 4G+4G+4G together.

This kind of mindset is what many white ******* come up with when the slight, bespectacled Asian nerd in class, who joined at the start of the year with stumbling English, winds up handing in one of the best papers and then everyone says that kid must have cheated because his English is poor. Fact is, almost any teacher can still give a paper a good grade even if the English is stumbling, just because of the quality of research and effort put in.

Last: this article isn't even about China. It only briefly speculates that these fake towers are Chinese in origin. Majority of this article speculates that it's actually the COPS. As they say, 'local, state and federal law enforcement have been abusing this technology for years'. The police are just using these fake towers to conduct broad searches that they couldn't do with traditional warrants.

You're making a big mistake when you post this article about 'Chinese cell phone towers stealing technology' when the article means something else. Again it reminds me of my slacker white students who abuse the internet and keyword searches, to grab articles and quotes that support their theses in term papers. These ******* don't actually read the articles they quote, so they don't realize that they've totally misunderstood the articles.


as for the fake towers...….there was a big thing on Tv about it here awhile back...…..funny they have a lot of them in Alaska and remote regions in the upper Midwest...not far from our nuke sites....and in the southwest also...why not the corn and bible belts......when asked they just said they were supplying service to remote areas...….those are remote areas for a reason....

also how much time and money does a biz have to put on something to get it out the door...couple years?...where as the Chinese gov can lay on who knows how many to get the product out right away...manpower cheap there...and an unlimited supply....we just can not compete with that



I guess the main thing would be...….by buying their products you are supporting their military....which could come back and bite you
 
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LOL ... alt-President Trump says he's not in any rush with North Korea ... his professed "new love affair? dictator. It wasn't 3 days ago he was basking a real president, Obama, for not moving swiftly enough on N Korea.
So, what's the story TODAY from the forked tongue commander-n-chief, after tossing our ally, Japan, under the bus?
What a fucked up individual he is.
words_UnfuckingBelievable.jpg
 
Wonder if the left on here will demand this guys Tax returns... LOL I'm sure it will be justifiable ?

What’s the old saying? If Democrats didn’t have double-standards, they wouldn’t have any standards at all, right?
Well, while some people might scoff at that idea, this story pretty much proves just how deep the left’s hypocrisy goes.

Take Rep. Elijah Cummings for instance. He’s been one of the loudest critics of President Trump, routinely calling for the President’s tax returns. But now that he’s been accused of violating tax law, he doesn’t think he needs to produce any of his own.

Rep. Elijah Cummings denied that corporate donations to his wife’s charity posed a conflict of interest with his House Oversight Committee chairmanship and denounced an IRS complaint filed against the organization as “a fabricated distraction” on Wednesday.
The National Legal and Policy Center, a government watchdog group, filed an IRS complaint against Cummings’ wife Maya Rockeymoore’s nonprofit organization on Monday, the Washington Examiner first reported.

The complaint asked the IRS to investigate the overlap between Rockeymoore’s nonprofit Center for Global Policy Solutions and her for-profit consulting firm Global Policy Solutions LLC to determine whether the arrangement was used for “illegal private benefit.”

Rockeymoore’s nonprofit group and LLC have mutual clients, donors, and projects and were located at the same address and share a phone number. The National Legal and Policy Center’s IRS complaint claims that they “appear to operate almost as a single entity, allowing for an illegal private benefit for Maya Rockeymoore Cummings and her husband.”

Cummings, 68, a Maryland Democrat, is chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Rockeymoore, 48, is the chairwoman of the Maryland Democratic Party and briefly ran in the state’s gubernatorial race last year. The couple married in 2008.

Rockeymoore’s nonprofit group received over $6.2 million in grants between 2013 and 2016 from special interest groups and corporations. Several of the nonprofit group’s financial backers — which included Google, J.P. Morgan, and Prudential — have business interests before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Cummings has served as Democratic chairman of the committee since January and previously served as ranking member.

The largest contributor to the nonprofit organization was the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which gave a total of $5.5 million to Rockeymoore’s consulting firm and $5.2 million to her nonprofit group. The foundation ceased supporting Rockeymoore’s groups in 2017. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation was established by Johnson & Johnson founder Robert Wood Johnson but is not officially affiliated with the pharmaceutical company. The foundation owns 13 million shares of Johnson & Johnson stock worth over $1.7 billion, making it one of the company’s largest shareholders.

In recent months, Cummings has been a vocal opponent of Johnson & Johnson, targeting the company as part of the House Oversight Committee’s investigation of ******* price inflation. Rockeymoore told the Washington Post on Tuesday that she had no relationship with Johnson & Johnson and denied that there was any connection between Cummings’ investigation of the company and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ending its funding to her group.

Common Cause Maryland, a government watchdog group, told the Washington Post that the IRS complaint raised valid legal and ethical questions, and Rockeymoore and Cummings should work to address these issues.

The watchdog group’s Executive Director Joanne Antoine told the Post that Rockeymoore “should take steps to disclose possible conflicts with the Johnson Foundation and to disclose the financial records from the nonprofit in question.”

 
There you have it - primarily what’s wrong with our government - not just on the left - just as likely for something like that on the right - money permeates our government with influence peddling :|
 
There you have it - primarily what’s wrong with our government

never more prominent than under Genghis Conn...…….





overwhelming
The Economist

AS A candidate, Donald Trump promised to “drain the swamp” and make government work for ordinary Americans. As a president, he presides over a staggeringly fetid administration. His former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, even wears clothes made from swamp creatures. Among the luxury goods on display during his trial on 32 counts of financial fraud and money-laundering was a python coat for which he paid $18,500, nearly twice what he paid for an ostrich waistcoat, but a mere fraction of what he spent on clothes, rugs, and garden landscaping—all funded by lobbying for foreign governments.

The prosecution alleged that Mr Manafort lowballed his income by $16.5m so as to pay less tax, and fraudulently obtained $20m worth of bank loans (none of Mr Manafort’s 31 foreign bank accounts were apparently willing or able to supply the necessary credit). The government’s lawyers also provided evidence that Mr Manafort dangled a job in the White House in front of a banker from whom he hoped to borrow. In response, Mr Manafort’s lawyers sought to remind jurors that he was a Republican, perhaps hoping that tribal loyalty would sway some of them to agree with the president that government prosecutors were engaged in a “total witch hunt”.

Mr Manafort’s case is the most outlandish, but it is no outlier in Trumpland. The president’s former fixer, Michael Cohen, is under investigation for fraud. Neither man served in the White House, but plenty of other people followed around by money scandals have. Two cabinet officials—Scott Pruitt and Tom Price—have been ****** out amid ethics scandals (Mr Price spent over $1m of taxpayer money on private and military flights; Mr Pruitt’s alleged violations were too numerous to list). Other administration officials have similar concerns nipping at their heels. Democrats hope to convince voters that congressional Republicans bear some responsibility—and should pay the price in November—for the administration’s ethics deficit. That may prove harder than they would like.



Called to ordure
If so, it will not be for a lack of targets. On August 13th, the Campaign Legal Centre (CLC), a non-partisan ethical watchdog, filed an extensive complaint against Wilbur Ross, the commerce secretary, urging the Commerce Department’s inspector general to investigate him. The complaint alleges that Mr Ross helped make policy decisions that could have affected stock and other interests that he did not fully disclose that he owned. Mr Ross, via his personal lawyer, denied wrongdoing.

The Office of Government Ethics, an independent agency, has already accused Mr Ross of contravening his ethics agreement by taking short positions on holdings he promised to divest, and of “omissions and inaccurate statements”. John Thune, a Republican senator from South Dakota, joined Democrats in urging an investigation of Mr Ross’s finances. In July Mr Ross admitted to “inadvertent errors in completing the divestitures required by my ethics agreement”, and promised to sell his equities and put the proceeds into Treasury bonds. Mr Ross has previously faced allegations of concealing an investment in a Russian shipping firm with ties to Vladimir Poroshenko’s *******-in-law. Forbes, which is to billionaires as Sports Illustrated is to swimsuits, has accused Mr Ross of inflating his wealth and reports that “many of those who worked directly with him claim that Ross wrongly siphoned or outright stole a few million here and a few million there”, an accusation Mr Ross also denies.
Five days before the CLC filed its complaint against Mr Ross, Chris Collins, a congressman from upstate New York and the first sitting member of Congress to back Mr Trump in 2016, was arrested. Federal prosecutors allege that he tipped off his ******* that a biotech firm, on whose board he served and in which he was one of the largest shareholders, had a disappointing ******* trial. His *******, who was also charged, allegedly sold his shares and then tipped off four other people. Both Mr Collinses plead not guilty to the charges. Mr Collins has suspended his re-election campaign and is trying to remove his name from the ballot.

Many smaller scandals that would ordinarily draw more attention have become so much background noise. Earlier this year Brenda Fitzgerald resigned from running the Centres for Disease Control, America’s federal public-health agency, after she was discovered trading tobacco stocks. Ben Carson, the secretary of housing and urban development, spent $31,000 of taxpayers’ money on a dining-room set for his office. He accepted responsibility, but also explained: “I left it to my wife, you know, help choose something...I dismissed myself from this issue.”



Ryan Zinke, the interior secretary, has charged taxpayers for his private-jet travel, and failed to disclose that he owned shares in a gun firm in Montana and then met executives and lobbyists from that firm. A spokesman said that the value of shares was below the threshold required for disclosure, and that anyway the meeting was a social call. The desire to avoid other passengers while flying has been a recurring theme: last year Steve Mnuchin, the treasury secretary, took eight trips by military aircraft, costing taxpayers almost $1m.

And then there are all the Trump family hangers-on who have found jobs in the federal bureaucracy. Eric Trump’s former wedding planner runs the New York branch of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. On August 7th ProPublica, an investigative-journalism non-profit, reported that three members of Mar-a-Lago, the president’s swish country club in Palm Beach, exercise undue influence within the Department of Veterans Affairs—despite the fact that none of them has ever served in the government or the armed forces.

All this is before taking into consideration any conflicts of interest on the part of Mr Trump himself. Democrats have dusted off the phrase “culture of corruption”, which they used to great effect in the 2006 mid-terms. Then, George W. Bush’s administration was tottering after it turned out that the federal government’s response to Hurricane Katrina was being led by an Arabian-horse enthusiast appointed by Mr Bush. The 2006 election also coincided with a money scandal involving Jack Abramoff, a Republican lobbyist, which has many echoes of Mr Manafort’s escapades. Democrats hope to connect the current administration’s ethical woes to a broader tale of Republicans blithely backstroking around the swamp that Mr Trump was supposed to drain.

Yet it is unlikely that voters in, say, Arkansas will care enough about the ethical failings of a congressman from upstate New York whom they have never heard of, or of the cabinet secretary of a department with obscure responsibilities, to vote against a Republican candidate whom otherwise they would have supported. Asked whether the Trump administration’s scandals have come up in North Dakota’s hotly contested Senate race, Jim Fuglie, a former state Democratic Party official-turned-pundit, says that voters are more worried about tariffs. North Dakota’s Senate race, he argues, “turns on the price of soyabeans …If it’s $6, [Heidi] Heitkamp [the Democratic incumbent] wins.” Laura Belin, author of “******* Heartland”, a blog about Iowa politics, says she doesn’t think “the public at large is really tuned into” the administration’s ethics scandals. Those are mainly fodder for “the activist class”.



Mr Trump’s administration may be so scandal-ridden that each ethical peccadillo just seems like more of the same. Stephen Bannon, his ousted adviser, famously said that the way to win is to “flood the zone with *******”, thereby overwhelming anyone’s ability to focus on one thing for more than a single news cycle. “Maybe we’re just like the rest of the country,” says Mr Fuglie. “We’re shaking our heads, and saying, ‘Oh, jeez—there he goes again’.”

https://www.economist.com/united-st...als-in-trumpland-is-overwhelming?fsrc=rss|ust
 
There you have it - primarily what’s wrong with our government - not just on the left - just as likely for something like that on the right - money permeates our government with influence peddling :|

Yep, been saying that for a while, Pisses me off that we can't get a third Party in, but it boggles my mind how more people aren't pissed about it also. Too many people are complacent with what is going on in our capital.
 
and yet you constantly support the right...….so confusing...….

You think that only because you don't pay attention - I support conservative economics but I also support most Democrat Social issues, not the left wing SJW *******, but the actual social programs that help people, your know, before the Democrats became corrupt, wicked and spiteful. But social issues are very seldom discussed on here. Lately it's been nothing but Trump bashing, even if the policies are good for America, like some form of boarder control. The left will attack no mater what the right does and visa-versa. (not to mention the social issues are less important to me than the economic ones)

I've always said BOTH parties need to go, Both parties have been bought, but sheep like yourself can only repeat what you have been fed by your Gods in Washington which makes it impossible to think for yourself. You would rather chase that carrot than try to make a change. The left is all about convenience and taking the "easy road". It is easier for you to simply condemn and call names than to actually educate yourself on Economics and Business and what is really going on in the work *******. It's convenience to simply Tax the rich more to not give to the poor than it is to make the government spend more wisely and hold them accountable.

The Far left is a huge problem and has ruined the Democratic party. Democrats are jumping on that band wagon unfortunately, and because of that, yes I lean more to the right. The stuff the left has been doing over the past 4 years is just disgusting. The left has pushed many Democrats away and there are many seeking a 3rd party. It's time. Only blind followers like yourself can't see it. Reminds me of Tyrion in GOT. It took an entire City to burn before he could see he helped replace one Tyrant for another. All under the guise of "breaking the wheel" and "liberation".

I'm sure you will follow this with a bunch of name calling and rants. Since you are unwilling to listen and unable understand other points of view your just not worth replying to anymore, so back to my ignore list you go.
 
You think that only because you don't pay attention
pretty hard to miss your devotion to the right

I support conservative economics
guess you haven't been paying Attn to what your fellow conservative are doing to the deficit

but I also support most Democrat Social issues
like health care?

your know, before the Democrats became corrupt
you might want to look up and see who is the most corrupt....all the way back to the "hammer" and Gingrich...or just look and see who has how many in jail....there is a reason the right tries to deny people the right to vote

Lately it's been nothing but Trump bashing
nothing wrong with that can not think of anyone who deserves it more...can you name one campaign promise he filled....one good thing he has done for America?

like some form of boarder control.
they have given him answers for that..even some on the right agreed...but he had to have his way

not to mention the social issues are less important to me than the economic ones)
had the country and the economy been handled right to begin with....there would be very little issue with social programs.....but Reagan came out with trickle down....and his one world!....killed the middle class...and the only thing the lower class has now IS THE social programs

but sheep like yourself can only repeat what you have been fed by your Gods in Washington
that's the pot calling the kettle black....you are so brainwashed you can not have a conversation without bashing the left...….which is pretty much what the country has come to...

You would rather chase that carrot than try to make a change
here we go again....you up on that pedestal preaching this and that...….and yet in the next line or two you will be supporting the right and anti-left....you seem happy with the status quo...


The left is all about convenience and taking the "easy road

wrong....we just feel that those that are down on their luck deserve better that what the country is giving them.....checked the numbers on that lately......we have the biggest division among the classes that any other "civilized" country......the UN a couple years ago condemned this country for how it treats it's poor

It's convenience to simply Tax the rich
who has benefitted from all the tax breaks in the past 30 years......under Bush the number of millionaires tripled...there is a reason for that....and yes the corps getting the breaks......breaking unions and paying the Ceo's contributed to it...with the help of the gov.

The Far left is a huge problem and has ruined the Democratic party
and what did Reagan and Bush do to the right?....and Adolph Shitler is taking it even further

Democrats are jumping on that band wagon unfortunately, and because of that,

it just seems that the left is going crazy with all their antics......but if you look most of what they are fighting for WE ONCE HAD....the rest is very little in the new department

The left has pushed many Democrats away and there are many seeking a 3rd party
again there goes your twisted facts again.....sold on the right and everything is the problem of the left....you are to brainwashed to even look at the facts...just go by Fox news and what you are told...…..how many republicans have left their party?


for someone so open minded...and knowledgeable and open to new perspectives and is not biased...….I really doubt there is a page on here where you don't bash the left...…..and that includes this one.....and yet be pretty hard pressed to find something you fault with the right......so there is an old saying that would apply to you...….you speak with forked tongue!
 
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never more prominent than under Genghis Conn...…….





overwhelming
The Economist

AS A candidate, Donald Trump promised to “drain the swamp” and make government work for ordinary Americans. As a president, he presides over a staggeringly fetid administration. His former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, even wears clothes made from swamp creatures. Among the luxury goods on display during his trial on 32 counts of financial fraud and money-laundering was a python coat for which he paid $18,500, nearly twice what he paid for an ostrich waistcoat, but a mere fraction of what he spent on clothes, rugs, and garden landscaping—all funded by lobbying for foreign governments.

The prosecution alleged that Mr Manafort lowballed his income by $16.5m so as to pay less tax, and fraudulently obtained $20m worth of bank loans (none of Mr Manafort’s 31 foreign bank accounts were apparently willing or able to supply the necessary credit). The government’s lawyers also provided evidence that Mr Manafort dangled a job in the White House in front of a banker from whom he hoped to borrow. In response, Mr Manafort’s lawyers sought to remind jurors that he was a Republican, perhaps hoping that tribal loyalty would sway some of them to agree with the president that government prosecutors were engaged in a “total witch hunt”.

Mr Manafort’s case is the most outlandish, but it is no outlier in Trumpland. The president’s former fixer, Michael Cohen, is under investigation for fraud. Neither man served in the White House, but plenty of other people followed around by money scandals have. Two cabinet officials—Scott Pruitt and Tom Price—have been ****** out amid ethics scandals (Mr Price spent over $1m of taxpayer money on private and military flights; Mr Pruitt’s alleged violations were too numerous to list). Other administration officials have similar concerns nipping at their heels. Democrats hope to convince voters that congressional Republicans bear some responsibility—and should pay the price in November—for the administration’s ethics deficit. That may prove harder than they would like.



Called to ordure
If so, it will not be for a lack of targets. On August 13th, the Campaign Legal Centre (CLC), a non-partisan ethical watchdog, filed an extensive complaint against Wilbur Ross, the commerce secretary, urging the Commerce Department’s inspector general to investigate him. The complaint alleges that Mr Ross helped make policy decisions that could have affected stock and other interests that he did not fully disclose that he owned. Mr Ross, via his personal lawyer, denied wrongdoing.

The Office of Government Ethics, an independent agency, has already accused Mr Ross of contravening his ethics agreement by taking short positions on holdings he promised to divest, and of “omissions and inaccurate statements”. John Thune, a Republican senator from South Dakota, joined Democrats in urging an investigation of Mr Ross’s finances. In July Mr Ross admitted to “inadvertent errors in completing the divestitures required by my ethics agreement”, and promised to sell his equities and put the proceeds into Treasury bonds. Mr Ross has previously faced allegations of concealing an investment in a Russian shipping firm with ties to Vladimir Poroshenko’s *******-in-law. Forbes, which is to billionaires as Sports Illustrated is to swimsuits, has accused Mr Ross of inflating his wealth and reports that “many of those who worked directly with him claim that Ross wrongly siphoned or outright stole a few million here and a few million there”, an accusation Mr Ross also denies.
Five days before the CLC filed its complaint against Mr Ross, Chris Collins, a congressman from upstate New York and the first sitting member of Congress to back Mr Trump in 2016, was arrested. Federal prosecutors allege that he tipped off his ******* that a biotech firm, on whose board he served and in which he was one of the largest shareholders, had a disappointing ******* trial. His *******, who was also charged, allegedly sold his shares and then tipped off four other people. Both Mr Collinses plead not guilty to the charges. Mr Collins has suspended his re-election campaign and is trying to remove his name from the ballot.

Many smaller scandals that would ordinarily draw more attention have become so much background noise. Earlier this year Brenda Fitzgerald resigned from running the Centres for Disease Control, America’s federal public-health agency, after she was discovered trading tobacco stocks. Ben Carson, the secretary of housing and urban development, spent $31,000 of taxpayers’ money on a dining-room set for his office. He accepted responsibility, but also explained: “I left it to my wife, you know, help choose something...I dismissed myself from this issue.”



Ryan Zinke, the interior secretary, has charged taxpayers for his private-jet travel, and failed to disclose that he owned shares in a gun firm in Montana and then met executives and lobbyists from that firm. A spokesman said that the value of shares was below the threshold required for disclosure, and that anyway the meeting was a social call. The desire to avoid other passengers while flying has been a recurring theme: last year Steve Mnuchin, the treasury secretary, took eight trips by military aircraft, costing taxpayers almost $1m.

And then there are all the Trump family hangers-on who have found jobs in the federal bureaucracy. Eric Trump’s former wedding planner runs the New York branch of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. On August 7th ProPublica, an investigative-journalism non-profit, reported that three members of Mar-a-Lago, the president’s swish country club in Palm Beach, exercise undue influence within the Department of Veterans Affairs—despite the fact that none of them has ever served in the government or the armed forces.

All this is before taking into consideration any conflicts of interest on the part of Mr Trump himself. Democrats have dusted off the phrase “culture of corruption”, which they used to great effect in the 2006 mid-terms. Then, George W. Bush’s administration was tottering after it turned out that the federal government’s response to Hurricane Katrina was being led by an Arabian-horse enthusiast appointed by Mr Bush. The 2006 election also coincided with a money scandal involving Jack Abramoff, a Republican lobbyist, which has many echoes of Mr Manafort’s escapades. Democrats hope to connect the current administration’s ethical woes to a broader tale of Republicans blithely backstroking around the swamp that Mr Trump was supposed to drain.

Yet it is unlikely that voters in, say, Arkansas will care enough about the ethical failings of a congressman from upstate New York whom they have never heard of, or of the cabinet secretary of a department with obscure responsibilities, to vote against a Republican candidate whom otherwise they would have supported. Asked whether the Trump administration’s scandals have come up in North Dakota’s hotly contested Senate race, Jim Fuglie, a former state Democratic Party official-turned-pundit, says that voters are more worried about tariffs. North Dakota’s Senate race, he argues, “turns on the price of soyabeans …If it’s $6, [Heidi] Heitkamp [the Democratic incumbent] wins.” Laura Belin, author of “******* Heartland”, a blog about Iowa politics, says she doesn’t think “the public at large is really tuned into” the administration’s ethics scandals. Those are mainly fodder for “the activist class”.



Mr Trump’s administration may be so scandal-ridden that each ethical peccadillo just seems like more of the same. Stephen Bannon, his ousted adviser, famously said that the way to win is to “flood the zone with *******”, thereby overwhelming anyone’s ability to focus on one thing for more than a single news cycle. “Maybe we’re just like the rest of the country,” says Mr Fuglie. “We’re shaking our heads, and saying, ‘Oh, jeez—there he goes again’.”

https://www.economist.com/united-st...als-in-trumpland-is-overwhelming?fsrc=rss|ust

This much I'll say, trying to stop corruption in the Trump cabinet is like whac-a-mole. I've stopped following the news. What is newsworthy, is when you investigate a Trump crony only to find that this guy has led a genuinely clean, straight life with no tricks.
 
This much I'll say, trying to stop corruption in the Trump cabinet is like whac-a-mole. I've stopped following the news. What is newsworthy, is when you investigate a Trump crony only to find that this guy has led a genuinely clean, straight life with no tricks.

that would be news worthy...but don't think there is such a thing...….and it goes all the way to the senate and congress....how many receive outside funds for?????/...and how many got Russian money for re-election!
 
The Far left is a huge problem

it's funny because all we want is:

1. Medicare for all Americans
2. College education for all Americans so we don't need to hire H1B's or immigrants for high skilled jobs
3. $6000 income tax credits for everyone making under $100k!

you just want the opposite of what we want which would be..

1. More Americans getting sick and screwed by Big Pharma.
2. More uneducated Americans who can't compete in the workplace and soon to be replaced by H1B's.
3. More taxes on lower income Americans..


Yep we know your game plan..

WOOHOO more tax cuts for the rich!!
More Americans without medicare for all..
More big pharma charging sky high for prescriptions!!!!!
Farmers crushed by Tariffs!
No abortion exceptions for women getting raped so their boyfriends/ husbands get ****** to be cucks and raise the rapists baby!

There's only 5 1/2 more years of Trump left to go!

Fucking BEAUTIFUL! MAGA!

/end sarcasm
 
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it's funny because all we want is:

1. Medicare for all Americans
2. College education for all Americans so we don't need to hire H1B's or immigrants for high skilled jobs
3. $6000 income tax credits for everyone making under $100k!

you just want the opposite of what we want which would be..

1. More Americans getting sick and screwed by Big Pharma.
2. More uneducated Americans who can't compete in the workplace and soon to be replaced by H1B's.
3. More taxes on lower income Americans..


Yep we know your game plan..

WOOHOO more tax cuts for the rich!!
More Americans without medicare for all..
More big pharma charging sky high for prescriptions!!!!!
Farmers crushed by Tariffs!
No abortion exceptions for women getting raped so their boyfriends/ husbands get ****** to be cucks and raise the rapists baby!

There's only 5 1/2 more years of Trump left to go!

Fucking BEAUTIFUL! MAGA!

/end sarcasm

Completely inaccurate - what makes you say that is what "we want"? Not to mention you are confusing the Far left with Democratic policies. They aren't the same thing.

1. Don't mind free health care, just don't agree with forsing people to buy insurance for crappy coverage. All that does is put money into the insurance companies pocket. ACA isn't healthcare- its a tax and it hits the lower income families the most. Call it what is it. Big Pharma is a huge problem and needs to be dealt with - but even Democrats won't touch them. Ever wonder why medication only treat symptoms instead of curing the problem? It's called dependency.

2. Higher education is available, just don't think tax payers should pay your way so you sit on your liberal arts degree. I would be more apt to agree to free tech-school/2-year degree than full blown collage. Perhaps we should give the DACA money to legal citizens since you are worried about immigrants taking higher education jobs. I found that to be an odd statement from someone on the left.

3. Will never agree to raising taxes on the poor. I would make the cut off at 50K, not 100K. But don't agree with raising taxes on the rice either. What gives the government the right to charge them more? Tax the rich enough and they will want something in return since they are paying for everyone else. I think taxes are fine where they are at now. What needs to be looked at is wasteful spending.
 
Completely inaccurate - what makes you say that is what "we want"? Not to mention you are confusing the Far left with Democratic policies. They aren't the same thing.

1. Don't mind free health care, just don't agree with forsing people to buy insurance for crappy coverage. All that does is put money into the insurance companies pocket. ACA isn't healthcare- its a tax and it hits the lower income families the most. Call it what is it. Big Pharma is a huge problem and needs to be dealt with - but even Democrats won't touch them. Ever wonder why medication only treat symptoms instead of curing the problem? It's called dependency.

2. Higher education is available, just don't think tax payers should pay your way so you sit on your liberal arts degree. I would be more apt to agree to free tech-school/2-year degree than full blown collage. Perhaps we should give the DACA money to legal citizens since you are worried about immigrants taking higher education jobs. I found that to be an odd statement from someone on the left.

3. Will never agree to raising taxes on the poor. I would make the cut off at 50K, not 100K. But don't agree with raising taxes on the rice either. What gives the government the right to charge them more? Tax the rich enough and they will want something in return since they are paying for everyone else. I think taxes are fine where they are at now. What needs to be looked at is wasteful spending.

When it comes to crap like this I just DGAF.

I am going to always believe in FREE medicaid for all Americans, Free college education for all Americans and LOW taxes for all former middle class Americans who have in effect become the WORKING POOR.

I'm not really stressing either way because I know that there is nothing I can do to change things so why worry about it. It's not like there is anything I can do to change it so why sweat it, it's what my dumb-fucking fellow Americans want.

Keep telling yourself Trump or the GOP or the democrats are your savior. The only savior is the far left who have actual ideas to solve our problems, not boogeymen south of the border.
 
Yep, been saying that for a while, Pisses me off that we can't get a third Party in, but it boggles my mind how more people aren't pissed about it also. Too many people are complacent with what is going on in our capital.
When it comes to crap like this I just DGAF.

I am going to always believe in FREE medicaid for all Americans, Free college education for all Americans and LOW taxes for all former middle class Americans who have in effect become the WORKING POOR.

I'm not really stressing either way because I know that there is nothing I can do to change things so why worry about it. It's not like there is anything I can do to change it so why sweat it, it's what my dumb-fucking fellow Americans want.

Keep telling yourself Trump or the GOP or the democrats are your savior. The only savior is the far left who have actual ideas to solve our problems, not boogeymen south of the border.

Yeah but NOTHING in life is FREE - so starting out you have a problem - someone has to pay.
 
Yeah but NOTHING in life is FREE - so starting out you have a problem - someone has to pay.

you mean like what the gov is going to do on the backs of the middle class and those even lower to pay for those tax cuts the wealthy just got?

guess those on the top should be allowed all that at the expense of others because that is....the republican way


have you considered a head transplant?....replacing the one on top with the one on the bottom?......the one on top is just not working out for you
 
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