Wake Up, America! Wake Up! PLEASE!!

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The Dems whine and cry - piss and moan - I laugh - who wins ??? ;}
Umm we do. Been kicking ass since tRump was elected. So much anger against him. Took back the House with a historic bunch of wins, won statewide seats in red states like Kentucky, Louisiana and Alabama.
tRump whines and cry everyday when he is asked a question he doesn't like or feels that he doesn't get credit in the middle of a pandemic.
We Democrats, are winning. Kicking the crap out Republicans.
 
Had to run, but want to come back to this.

You just spent a paragraph and multiple posts heralding a Klansman. A high ranking Klansman and Dixiecrat. Just because he was a Democrat.

I am not familiar with what it takes to be a Grand Dragon, but I am sure it has nothing to do with baking good brownies for the meetings.

And no that isn't a dog whistle, I like brownies and someone ate the last one. Damn quarantine
Dude, seriously, I didn't praise him. I compared his life arch with the party's arch. I have been the one writing about the racist past of my party. However, I live in the present and the scene is very different now.
I think you ate the brownies. Your memory is mush.
 
And there is this.

Did LBJ Say 'I'll Have Those N*****s Voting Democratic for ...
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/lbj-voting-democratic
Jul 27, 2016 · Did LBJ Say ‘I’ll Have Those N*****s Voting Democratic for 200 Years’? President Lyndon B. Johnson supposedly made a crude racist remark about his party's voter base.

At this point no one knows for sure, but many who knew LBJ have said sounds like what he would say. And this one says unproven.
SO wtf would you put this up like he said it, then in small print say it's not proven????
You're taking this over stating stuff to a Sean Hannity level.
 
The Myth of the Republican-Democrat 'Switch' | News/Talk ...
...
May 01, 2018 · The myth of the great Republican-Democrat "switch" summarily falters under the weight of actual historical analysis, and it becomes clear that prolonged electoral shifts combined with the phenomenal nationwide popularity of Republicans Richard Nixon in 1972 and Ronald Reagan in 1980 and 1984 were the real reason for the Republican strength in the south.
Read this a while ago. This switch is not the politicians, it's the voters. The millions of voters are the ones that switch parties from Democratic to Republican. Thus, taking their issues with them and sullying up the conservative brand.
 
Do we really need 400 bills passed at this point in history. What else can the Democrat be trying to over regulate and destroy? I wonder how many were under 1000 Pages? I wonder how many were under 25 pages? I wonder how many of any of the Democrats read them.
Everything in life is not simplified to a postage stamp. There are some things that are complex and takes time to read.
 
more fucking lies and diversion...….something the right excels at...…..trying to say impeachment was the reason trump wasn't on top of the virus.....it sure wasn't impeachment.....more just fucking ignorance

McConnell claims impeachment ‘diverted the attention’ of ...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/mcconnell...
Mar 31, 2020 · Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Tuesday that the impeachment of President Trump distracted the administration’s attention away from the coronavirus crisis, defending the ...

McConnell: Impeachment 'diverted' attention from ...
https://news.yahoo.com/mcconnell-impeachment...
Mar 31, 2020 · Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on Tuesday suggested that the January Senate impeachment trial of President Donald Trump distracted from crucial early efforts to respond to the emerging coronavirus pandemic. During an appearance on …
 
just more of his looking out for americans...or big biz...……..clean air something else he is doing away with while no one watching

Trump rolls back Obama fuel economy rule, increasing ...
https://www.theverge.com/2020/3/31/21201036/trump...
17 hours ago · When the Trump EPA unveiled its first official proposed version of the rule in 2018, it suggested freezing the planned year-over-year gains in fuel economy at …

Trump administration finalizes more lenient fuel economy ...
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump...
15 hours ago · Trump administration finalizes more lenient fuel economy rule, rolling back Obama-era policy Officials say reducing regulations on new cars will make them cheaper and safer.
 
just more ignorance being led by stupidity.....all the while people dying......waiting on orders from the pumpkin on where and when to send

Pentagon says it still hasn't sent ventilators because it ...
https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/31/politics/pentagon-ventilators/index.html
Mar 31, 2020 · Despite having committed to transferring 2,000 ventilators in military stocks to the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department …

Pentagon says it still hasn't sent ventilators because it ...
pentagon...
Mar 31, 2020 · Pentagon says it still hasn’t sent ventilators because it hasn’t been told where to send them ... He emphasized there are 1,000 ventilators fully ready to be shipped as soon as the Pentagon ...

Pentagon has not yet sent 2,000 ventilators due to lack of ...
https://thehill.com/policy/defense/490484-pentagon...
10 hours ago · The Pentagon has not shipped out any of the 2,000 ventilators it offered to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) earlier this month because HHS has not yet provided a shipping location,
 
only decent gesture this administration has made...…….since 300 of them died 2 days ago drinking something they thought would cure them

U.S. might rethink Iran sanctions in light of coronavirus ...
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-iran-usa-idUSKBN21I33F
Mar 31, 2020 · WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo held out the possibility on Tuesday that the United States may consider easing sanctions on Iran

US could rethink Iran sanctions in light of coronavirus ...
...
9 hours ago · US could rethink Iran sanctions in light of coronavirus pandemic: Pompeo US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivers remarks on the current state of the coronavirus disease during a news conference at the State Department in Washington, US, March 17, 2020.
 
got to help his Russian plant...….he knows this virus could cost him his job


FACT CHECK: Is Russia Really Sending Medical Supplies To ...
russia-really...
"Russia sent us a very, very large planeload of things, medical equipment, which was very nice." Is that so? The short answer: Yes — but it hasn't happened yet. The long answer: According to a senior administration official at the White House, Russia is expected to deliver a planeload of supplies and personal protection equipment on Wednesday.

From Russia With Love? Putin’s Medical Supplies Gift To ...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/isabeltogoh/2020/03/26/from-russia-with-love-putins...
5 days ago · The package, dubbed “From Russia With Love,” was rushed to Italy on Sunday and according to Reuters, consisting of ventilators, disinfectants, masks, protective equipment
 
Why the new effort to blame coronavirus fumbles on the impeachment trial falls so far short

As far as political rhetoric goes, it doesn’t get much tidier. What if the still growing coronavirus epidemic could be blamed not on President Trump and missteps by the federal government but, instead, on Democrats? What if Americans could be convinced that thousands of them are dying because Democrats were focused earlier this year on kicking Trump out of the White House and not through any fault of the White House itself?

“All she did was focus on impeachment,” Trump said, referring to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). “She didn’t focus on anything having to do with pandemics, she didn’t focus on — she focused on impeachment and she lost. And she looked like a fool.”

The message soon propagated outward. Speaking to conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said that the trial following Trump’s impeachment was a distraction from the public health emergency.

“It came up while we were tied down on the impeachment trial
,” McConnell said. “And I think it diverted the attention of the government, because everything every day was all about impeachment.”

The Republican Party’s rapid response director, Steve Guest, subsequently sent out an email criticizing Democrats and impeachment for drawing attention away from the virus.

Identifying Jan. 15 as “[t]he day the CDC reports the coronavirus arrived in America,” the email criticizes Pelosi’s actions the same day.

“What were D.C. Democrats up to?” it reads. “After delaying sending over the articles of impeachment to the Senate for a month, Pelosi was all smiles, gleefully handing out pens while signing her sham articles of impeachment.”

Again, it’s easy to see why this particular line of argument is appealing. It’s similarly easy to see where it comes up short.

The virus emerged in China late last year. On Dec. 31 — after Trump had been impeached by the House — Chinese officials acknowledged that they’d detected a new virus that was making people ill in Wuhan. Within weeks, infections from the new virus were reported around the world, including in the United States.

While Guest points to Jan. 15 as the date of the virus’s arrival in the United States, that wasn’t immediately known. That date marks the arrival of the first known infected patient, a fact that didn’t become known publicly until five days later. In other words, it’s not as though Pelosi was signing the articles of impeachment knowing that the virus had appeared here.

 
Health care debacle results from Republicans believing their own myths

Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans created a political debacle for themselves by believing a set of scare stories about Obamacare that came back to haunt them. It is an object lesson in how false realities ultimately pop like soap bubbles when pricked by plain old truth.

There are five fatal fibs the GOP sold to supporters and to themselves:

Obamacare is socialistic, government-run health care. Actually, the ideas that led to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) were developed in conservative think tanks in the 1990s as an alternative to a government run, Canada-like, single-payer scheme. The testing ground for these ideas was Massachusetts under Republican Gov. Mitt Romney. It was a middle-of-the-road idea that kept the private insurance industry at the heart of health care, something many Democrats, such as Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, considered a terrible compromise.

--The American people hate Obamacare. While it is true that quite a few Americans came to detest Obamacare, what they did not like was the Republican-created myth that Obamacare is onerous, oppressive and expensive. The very name Obamacare was a GOP marketing tool to make it less attractive to conservative voters. In reality, most people -- especially all those in employer-run plans -- were not affected much one way or another by the ACA. Many others had no idea what it really was. In interviews, some voters famously said they hated Obamacare but loved the ACA.

--Obamacare will be repealed and replaced. Republican made this promise for seven years and Trump made the same pledge throughout his campaign. When it came down to it, though, they discovered there was vast disagreement within their party about how to do it. The priority of the so-called "Freedom Caucus" in the House GOP was to eliminate entitlements and toss the whole health care mess to the states. Meanwhile, Republicans from swing districts recognized that they would put themselves in political peril if they began taking away health care from older people with limited means and serious medical conditions or from pregnant women or from the working poor or from young people on their parents' plans -- all the people who were beneficiaries of the ACA.

--The House GOP health care plan is what Trump promised on the campaign trail. Trump seems to have sold this big fib to himself. Even after the harsh details of House Speaker Paul Ryan's health care bill became clear, Trump continued to say it was a "beautiful plan" that would give everyone access to health care and end the "nightmare" of Obamacare. Talking nonsense might get you to the White House, but it doesn't guarantee you can pass legislation once you get there. Off the record, some Republican members of Congress who met with Trump said they were shocked by how ignorant he was of the bill's provisions.

--Republicans speak for the American people when it comes to health care. Unlike Trump, the public grasped the details of the Republican scheme. In one poll, just 17 percent of voters favored it. That is pretty hard evidence that Republican politicians need to abandon their self-created myths about the ACA.

Here is the truth. Obamacare is far from perfect. Middle income people in rural states have been hit especially hard by the changes that have come about in the health care market since the ACA was passed, but the Republican plan did nothing to help them while it took away care from millions of poor people and threatened to cause a stark erosion in the quality of coverage for many of the older working class whites who are the heart of the Trump constituency.

Unless you are an anti-government, free market absolutist or just a rich guy who hates paying taxes, Obamacare does not need to be repealed or replaced. It needs to be fixed. Republicans, working with Democrats (what a crazy idea that is!), should repair it, improve it, call it by whatever name they want, but stop pretending that most Americans have not already decided that health care is too vital not to be a right guaranteed to everyone.

Of course, that is not what will happen. Instead, insurance companies will continue to exploit the weaknesses of the ACA, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price will do everything possible to undermine the system as it is and Trump will be playing golf at Mar-a-Lago until, to use the president's own term, the country's health care system "explodes."

"Nobody knew that health care could be so complicated," Trump said in a revelatory moment a month ago. It gets even more complicated when self-delusion runs so deep in a president and a political party.

Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner David Horsey is a political commentator for the Los Angeles Times. Go to latimes.com/news/politics/topoftheticket/ to see more of his work.


Continue Readi

 
Trump seeks to sell public on his coronavirus response

President Trump is aggressively seeking to sell the public on his administration's response to the coronavirus pandemic, a push slammed by critics for presenting a rosier picture than reality.

At the White House's daily press briefings, Trump has taken credit for doing a "hell of a job" and fashioned himself as a wartime president against a backdrop of steadily escalating coronavirus cases and deaths.

He's said he always knew the outbreak was a pandemic after downplaying the danger in January and February, while voicing optimism about progress in testing and finding a vaccine.

He's criticized state governors who have complained about shortages in critical medical supplies and repeatedly battled with the media. On Sunday, he denied saying things he'd said days earlier, adding fuel to a debate in the media about whether to show the press briefings in real time.

"As @realDonaldTrump continues to prattle on at his nightly rally about what a terrific job he's doing, America clears 100,000 diagnosed COVID-19 cases-tops in the world and rapidly climbing," CNN pundit and former Obama strategist David Axelrod wrote in a Sunday tweet. "Why are we wasting so much time on tedious, shameless self-promotion?"

Polls show a majority of the public approves of the job Trump is doing, which likely bolsters the White House's confidence in the briefings.
Trump has also sought to play questions about whether the media would broadcast the briefings to his advantage by setting up the press as rooting for his and the country's failure.

Trump in recent days described his administration's performance as "fantastic," "incredible" and "great" amid criticism that the administration was late to recognize the threat and to urge Americans to practice social distancing.

To be sure, the president has taken steps that have earned him commendation, including the decision to declare a national emergency over the virus on March 13 and, more recently, to extend social distancing guidelines until the end of April based on advice from public health officials.

"I think, beginning March 13, he has come to grips with the crisis," said Yanzhong Huang, a global health fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

But even after March 13, Trump flirted with reopening much of the country by Easter before being convinced the virus's spread might actually be peaking around that holiday on April 12.

Huang said Trump's decision to restrict travel from China in late January, which the president often cites as an example of swift action against the virus, would have been more effective if it had been paired with more aggressive steps to screen travelers and enforce quarantines.

Some of the president's key actions to combat the virus have also amounted to reversals from previously held stances, further undermining his effort to project a sense of control over the pandemic.

Trump last week invoked the Defense Production Act to compel General Motors to make ventilators one day after he questioned state requests for tens of thousands of the breathing machines.

Trump on Sunday predicted the deaths from the virus would peak in two weeks and repeatedly referred to models that showed up to 2.2 million Americans could die of the virus without any mitigation efforts, saying the figure influenced his decision to extend social distancing guidelines.

He also then took credit for actions that he said would prevent the country from reaching such a gruesome milestone.

"If we can hold that down, as we're saying, to 100,000 - it's a horrible number maybe even less, but to 100,000... we all, together, have done a very good job," Trump told reporters in the Rose Garden.

Yet Trump as recently as last week compared the coronavirus to the common flu or automobile accidents. He predicted in February that the number of confirmed cases in the U.S. would be close to zero "within a couple days."

"The most cynical thing @POTUS did yesterday was move the goal posts on his performance. He now says millions would have died if not for his heroic effort. That's to cover for hundreds of thousands dying. Just remember his inaction got us here and he said that magic would solve it," Joe Lockhart, a former White House spokesman under President Clinton, wrote in a tweet.

 
fuck.......my self imposed.....which is what I thought most were doing...…..would be up in about another week.....get this mass phone call last night.….nothing to be open except food stores....no one allowed on streets except for food or DR.....this until apr 30....that will mean 6 weeks I will have been here

I have until noon today.....and will have to make a large parts store run before the curfew…..hopefully they are open for last mint customers...…..thought I was doing my part on the 2 week thing...now another 4 weeks...……..fuck!....I get some parts I can make it.....but need a few things
 
fuck.......my self imposed.....which is what I thought most were doing...…..would be up in about another week.....get this mass phone call last night.….nothing to be open except food stores....no one allowed on streets except for food or DR.....this until apr 30....that will mean 6 weeks I will have been here

I have until noon today.....and will have to make a large parts store run before the curfew…..hopefully they are open for last mint customers...…..thought I was doing my part on the 2 week thing...now another 4 weeks...……..fuck!....I get some parts I can make it.....but need a few things
It may even extend further pal.
 
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