GATTACA!
It's about to get gross
- Messages
- 15,104
- Reaction score
- 12,943
Tyranny
You're right, it's too bad we don't have some sort of system where the other branches of government could keep each other in balance......
Tyranny
You're right, it's too bad we don't have some sort of system where the other branches of government could keep each other in balance......
He has an audiographic memory (like a photographic memory for hearing and speaking). He can't help it. But yeah, it totally comes off that way.I picture Cruz practicing his predetermined answers that don't answer the ? for hours every day. Very robotic to me. First time I've really watched any of em. They could make this 40 mins, if they removed all the repeating from ev1.
Hopefully Kasich gains some traction but I doubt it. One thing we know for sure...he can balance a budget lol
This is part of the enigma of Donald Trump when trying to attack him politically. He's simultaneously a right-wing extremist and a New York liberal. When you've had every possible position on every possible issue, of course people are going to agree with you.Jim Webb: I won't vote for Hillary Clinton, but I may for Donald Trump - POLITICO
For the people who have heard the liberals pretend that the republican party has moved too far.... Jim Webb was a senator from Virginia and a Democrat.
Jim Webb: I won't vote for Hillary Clinton, but I may for Donald Trump - POLITICO
For the people who have heard the liberals pretend that the republican party has moved too far.... Jim Webb was a senator from Virginia and a Democrat.
I'm confused by your comment.
Jim Webb used to consider himself a Republican but claimed in the very first debate that the party left him when they moved too far right. He ran as a Democrat in name only because his principals fall in line with where Rs used to be but centrist-Ds are now (for the most part).
I would argue that the left has a created an environment where a centrist D can't even support the nominee.
Rubio got jokes
watJim Webb: I won't vote for Hillary Clinton, but I may for Donald Trump - POLITICO
For the people who have heard the liberals pretend that the republican party has moved too far.... Jim Webb was a senator from Virginia and a Democrat.
One needn’t believe that there’s ever been any quid pro quo to see that this matters.
“Any suggestions that Hillary Clinton was driven by anything but what’s in America’s best interest would be false. Period,” a campaign spokesman told The Guardian. Oh, come on. Clinton may well have thought that intervening on behalf of UBS was good for the U.S. There are reports that the Swiss helped our government in various ways in exchange for shielding the bank from a worst-case scenario.
But this campaign flak cannot possibly know––or expect us to take on faith––that Clinton was not at all influenced by knowledge that acting to benefit the bank could mean seven figures for her family and more for their foundation, whereas advocating against the bank would more than likely eliminate the chance of either. Any normal person would be influenced, if only in spite of themselves, unless they resolved from the beginning that having made a decision in government that directly affected a corporation, they’d never take money from it later even if it offered.
It is a discredit to Bill and Hillary Clinton that they behave as if they believe otherwise.
Why are they indulged in doing so?
Democrats are hurtling toward a farce. The coalition that insists on the corrupting effect of Citizens United and the unlimited campaign contributions it permits is poised to nominate a couple that has seen riches flow from big banks to their personal accounts.
Other places you won't find those words include MGoBlog, a Donald Trump rally, Koon's Twitter feed, and Hillary Clinton's state.gov e-mail server.I will say this. If nothing else, this threads got people dusting off the dictionary/thesaurus. Pretty sure you won't find these in any recruits thread. lol
Donald Trump pulls out of CPAC - POLITICO
Coward. Not a lot of knuckle-draggers at CPAC so it would be hard for Trump to work the crowd into a frenzy. He needs a room full of sycophants foaming at the mouth or he's out.
Sent from my Galaxy Note4 using Tapatalk.
Headline on the Huffington Post this morning:
"Cock Fight"
Someone needs to get a raise.
Lol at the Temple gentleman in that politico article. F Trump, yea I'll vote for him.
That's rich. Peggy Noonan and the Wall Street Journal editorialists are the most insulated bunch of establishment know-nothings in the country. They're the mouthpiece of the Chamber of Commerce and undermine conservatism at every opportunity.Here's a snippet from Peggy Noonan's editorial in today's WSJ:
![]()
That's rich. Peggy Noonan and the Wall Street Journal editorialists are the most insulated bunch of establishment know-nothings in the country. They're the mouthpiece of the Chamber of Commerce and undermine conservatism at every opportunity.
Here's a snippet from Peggy Noonan's editorial in today's WSJ:
![]()
ON SEPTEMBER 22nd 18m Americans huddled around their televisions to find out the fate of Leroy Jethro Gibbs, the silver-haired, stoic lead of “NCIS”. Although you would never know it from the newspapers, “NCIS” (which stands for Naval Criminal Investigative Service), is America’s most-watched television drama. Combining the elements of a police procedural with an extra splash of ooh-rah patriotism, the show appeals to America’s heartland but repels big-city liberals. With a median viewer age of 61, it’s the least hip show on television.
Shows like “NCIS” and “The Big Bang Theory” (the most-watched show overall) illustrate a growing divergence in the television-viewing habits of coastal urbanites and the rest of the country. Both shows are produced by CBS, have huge followings—averaging over 20m viewers each—but receive very little attention from the media. In contrast, critically-acclaimed shows like “Game of Thrones” and “Mad Men” each averaged just 9.3m, and 3.7m viewers, according to Nielsen, a television-ratings agency. Since "Mad Men"’s launch in 2007, The New York Times has written 2,480 articles referencing the show, but just 231 mentioning “NCIS”, despite the latter sharing its name with two popular spin-offs (NCIS: Los Angeles and NCIS: New Orleans) and a federal agency. There appears to be minimal overlap in what shows are watched by most people compared to the cultural elite [see chart below].
Don’t vote for [Trump] because he tells it like it is, he’s a bulls*** artist. Don’t vote for him because he’s tough, he’s a baby with even smaller fingers. Don’t vote for him because he’s a builder, he’s more of a s***ty lifestyle brand.