Anyone else feel like this has a decent chance of turning into a riot? The park where the spillover will be is literally next door to Bernie Sanders' campaign headquarters.
Oh that can't possibly be good...
Anyone else feel like this has a decent chance of turning into a riot? The park where the spillover will be is literally next door to Bernie Sanders' campaign headquarters.
Oh that can't possibly be good...
b-dubs are you voting for Trump in the primary?
Anyone else feel like this has a decent chance of turning into a riot? The park where the spillover will be is literally next door to Bernie Sanders' campaign headquarters.
Or for the money. Well, maybe if I had put down as much as a certain someone...
How did you read my mind. At least he's a joy to watch. I just want to slap Cruz.By fictional counter parts do you mean
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because if you do I agree
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The Working Families Party’s agenda—frankly redistributionist and devoted to social justice—targets a class of Democratic elected officials who, in the view of many liberals, seem to listen more to their moneyed donors than to the left-wing rank and file. Aggressive, tactical, and dedicated to winning, the WFP would like to force Democrats—and the country—to become more liberal by mobilizing the party base, changing the terms of the debate, and taking out centrist incumbents in primaries.
If there’s ever been a moment for this, it is now. Four years after Occupy Wall Street, with the socialist Bernie Sanders pushing Hillary Clinton leftward in the Democratic presidential primaries, liberal frustration with national politics has reached a boiling point. Enter the WFP: Since its founding nearly two decades ago, it’s become an influential fixture of Democratic politics in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. Now, the party is going national. By mid-2016, the WFP plans to be in 11 states, with more on the horizon. Last month, the WFP endorsed Sanders after an online vote of its national membership. They may not yet be a household name, but a few years from now, they aim to be a national force.
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Rubio below 10% is clearly the story here. If he can't get some momentum going by NH its going to be Trump - Cruz showdown.
Cruz is poised to win Iowa which would give him a launchpad.I'm starting to doubt there will be any showdown at all. Cruz is over 25 points back.
I wonder what would happen if Trump supporters trashed the Bernie headquarters.
Bernie fans would be so conflicted.
I can't be assed to register Republican.
They won't. The real enemy here is Hillary Clinton. Bernie and Trump are united on that front. Notice how Trump has been trashing the Clintons in the press but laying off of Sanders.
If there is, I want the news to play some of that goofy incidental music from It's Always Sunny while showing the chaos footage.Anyone else feel like this has a decent chance of turning into a riot? The park where the spillover will be is literally next door to Bernie Sanders' campaign headquarters.
Holy shit at Trump above 40%. I am at once both disgusted and amazed. Imagine if Trump wasn't such a xenophobic, racist asshole. I mean, he wouldn't be popular in the GOP primary, but just imagine...
I'm so excited for Iowa. I really need a new poll now. Cruz's rivals have started hitting him hard on ethanol and citizenship. I want to know how it affects his numbers!Cruz is poised to win Iowa which would give him a launchpad.
They won't. The real enemy here is Hillary Clinton. Bernie and Trump are united on that front. Notice how Trump has been trashing the Clintons in the press but laying off of Sanders.
Because he doesn't need to attack Sanders. You don't punch down. Well, I mean, logical, intelligent people don't. Trump kinda just flails around like a lunatic seeing who and what he can hit.
I think there's a difference between the Hillary Clinton you have fabricated in your mind and the real Hillary Clinton.Exactly and Hillary is an easy target. Just the other day she described herself as a "progressive" democrat give me a break. For as manufactured as she is, I'm surprised her team hasn't been able to manufacture a catchy slogan like "Make America Great Again."
Once hit hits 50% consistently he has the nomination.Holy shit at Trump above 40%. I am at once both disgusted and amazed. Imagine if Trump wasn't such a xenophobic, racist asshole. I mean, he wouldn't be popular in the GOP primary, but just imagine...
This pre-emptive diablosing doesn't make sense. World economy will always going to be rocky. First the Euro crisis, then greek bailout, then other euro countries defaulting, the dubai bailout, and now the chinese fears. US economy is rock solid by every single measure. What are you seeing that no one else is? The Fed is ending the QE program in the biggest sign that we are off the training wheels. Just yesterday ADP predicted that we will return to full employment by May 2016. How is that not the most positive sign that US economy is doing better than expected.
Dont give in to fear mongering by the republicans about the stock market and China. That shit means diddly squat to hiring, GDP and growth. However, whatever the next big bubble is going to be, it will not be as adverse as the economic collapse of 2008. It will be of the same magnitude and S&L crisis during Reagan or dot com crisis during Clinton/Bush years. Meaning, not big enough to derail an election, party or presidency.
Does it matter in VA or FL among the the people that will decide the election?
If Rubio is the nominee, it matters.
If Cruz or Trump is? How is that going to change the puerto rican's vote in the I4 corridor in Florida? The DC suburbs in VA? Iowa? Nevada?
I remember reading a story chris hayes did about undecided voters in 2004. The more Bush failed in foreign policy the more it helped him because voters thought kerry couldn't fix it. I just don't see any reason people are demanding GOP leadership. Look at 2012. The economy was horrible and unemployment high, Obama was supposed to lose based on that. He didn't.
And we're not looking at a 2008 type downturn. Plus the effects of any recession (which I'm still not sold on) would likely be delayed until at or after the election, limiting the effects on the race.
Cruz is poised to win Iowa which would give him a launchpad.
Exactly and Hillary is an easy target. Just the other day she described herself as a "progressive" democrat give me a break. For as manufactured as she is, I'm surprised her team hasn't been able to manufacture a catchy slogan like "Make America Great Again."
Reuters
Trump 41
Cruz 15
Carson 11
Jeb 8
Rubio 8
Christie 3
Rand 3
So Ecotic, how bad do you think it's going to be? And how should we take steps to protect ourselves financially? The Chinese are buying up prime urban real estate in the United States; is that a good investment?
Holy shit at Trump above 40%. I am at once both disgusted and amazed. Imagine if Trump wasn't such a xenophobic, racist asshole. I mean, he wouldn't be popular in the GOP primary, but just imagine...
Has anyone seen any other candidate's Q4 fundraising results beyond Clinton, Sanders, Carson, and Cruz? I'm dying to see Jeb!s and Rubio's totals.
7pm. People were lining up at 4am this morning.What time does the Vermont rally start? I might watch it if I'm home.
Cruz is poised to win Iowa which would give him a launchpad.
I keep hearing this over and over again and continue to doubt this will actually be the case. Cruz doesn't appeal at all to any moderate republicans.
Rick Scott all but endorses Trump, and wrote a flattering op-ed about him.
I just had a scary thought. What if Trump choses Scott as his running mate?
I started school living in public housing, and I have been blessed to do well in business over my lifetime. But I also benefited from a government at that time that wasnt slowly taxing and regulating the life out of the American dream.
He's saying outside of Iowa. He doesn't need it for the next few primaries though. South Carolina is just as evangelical. If he wins 2 of three or three of 4 early primaries, this could really end.What on earth makes you think you need moderates to win Iowa? Look at the past winners.
I still can't get over how facts mean nothing now. The opening episode truthiness segment of the Colbert report was truly I think the greatest encapsulation of today's politics.
Conservative ideology often requires a factless void to make it all work. If facts permeate that bubble, then the whole thing falls in on itself.
Already being put to effective use:Greenberg gave Jeb! 10 million!!! Momentum!!!!!
so does that make it hard to have conservative friends?
In yet another victory for Democrats, the federal court hearing a lawsuit challenging the state's congressional lines just ruled that elections this year must go forward under a new map proposed by a court-appointed expert, one that all but guarantees that GOP Rep. Randy Forbes' 4th District will turn solidly blue. Republicans had asked the court to delay implementation pending an appeal to the Supreme Court, but the judges declined to do so, saying that the defendants had "not made a strong showing that they are likely to succeed on the merits" when their appeal is heard.
“A lot of people say, you know, your brother also has a lot of popularity: Like Bill Clinton has with Democrats, your brother has it with Republicans,” Fox & Friends' Brian Kilmeade told Jeb Bush on Tuesday, as the former governor nodded in agreement. “If he could tell your story as well as you can, if not better, is that something you are considering?”
So I've been posting in this thread using nothing but verbatim quotes from Trump and Carson and I'm waiting to see how long it'll take for someone to realize it.
"They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people." is low hanging fruit so I'm saving that for later.
For Egypts brutally repressive president, General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, the spectacle was a triumph, symbolizing not only his militaristic power at home, but also his victory over an American president who had tried to punish him before surrendering to the cold realities of geopolitics.
Just two years earlier, Sisi had seized power in a military coup, toppling Mohamed Morsi, the democratically elected successor to Hosni Mubarak, himself a strongman of 30 years pushed out in early 2011 by mass protests in Cairos Tahrir Square. In the summer of 2013, Sisi followed his coup with a brutal crackdown that would have done Saddam Hussein proud. His security forces arrested thousands of people, including much of his political opposition, and in one bloody day that summer, they gunned down some 1,000 pro-Morsi protesters (or more) who were staging peaceful sit-ins. The massacre was shocking even by the standards of Egypts long-dismal human rights record.
Obama was appalled. We cant return to business as usual, he declared after the slaughter. We have to be very careful about being seen as aiding and abetting actions that we think run contrary to our values and ideals.
Several weeks later, Obama halted the planned delivery of U.S. military hardware to Cairo, including attack helicopters, Harpoon missiles and several F-16 fighter jets, as well as $260 million in cash transfers. He also cast doubt on the future of Americas $1.3 billion in annual military aid to Egypta subsidy on which Cairo depends heavily, and much more than the United States sends to any country in the world aside from Israel.
But a fierce internal debate soon broke out over whether and how to sanction Egypt further, a fight that many officials told me was one of the most agonizing of the Obama administrations seven years, as the presidents most powerful advisers spent months engaged in what one called trench warfare against each other. It was an excruciating test of how to balance American values with its cold-blooded security interests in an age of terrorism. Some of Obamas top White House aides, including his deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes, and the celebrated human rights champion Samantha Power, now U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, urged the president to link further military aid to clear progress by Sisi on human rights and democracy. But Secretary of State John Kerry, then-Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Hagels successor, Ash Carter, argued for restoring the aid. Trying to punish Sisi would have little effect on his behavior, they said, while alienating a bulwark against Islamic radicalism in an imploding Middle East. Egypt was one of the most significant policy divides between the White House and the State Department and the Department of Defense, says Matthew Spence, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Middle East policy.
For months, Obama tried to split the difference. In meetings and phone calls with the Egyptian ruler, by now paranoid and resentful about Americas intentions, Obama and Kerry urged Sisi to respect human rights, while also seeking his help in countering the the metastisizing Islamic State in nearby Syria and Iraq. Sisi did little of either.
In the end, Obama folded. This past March, he called Sisi once again, this time to explain that he would release the cash transfers and delayed hardwareincluding the F-16sand end the administrations threats to block the larger $1.3 billion annual aid package.
We caved, says a former senior administration official who participated in the debates.
In a long conversation recently, Rhodes, the speechwriter turned national security aide who has been with Obama from the beginning of his presidency, didnt mince words when it came to the years-long internal battle over Egypt. Were in that sweet spot where everyone is pissed off at us, Rhodes told me.
And not just about Egypt. The persistent problem of how to deal with American-allied strongmen has long tripped up a president who prefers pragmatic solutions to moral purity but has been unable to find much of either in the Middle East. While every U.S. president struggles to balance values like democracy and human rights with national security, Obama has struggled more than most because of the vast gap between his inspirational rhetoric and the compromises he has made with thuggish world leaders, especiallybut by no means exclusivelyin a Middle East where authoritarian heads of state from Riyadh to Cairo have cracked down with renewed vigor after the unsettling protests of the Arab Spring.
The rhetoric got way ahead of the policymaking, says Michael Posner, who served as Obamas top State Department official for human rights and democracy in his first term. It raised expectations that everything was going to change.
Hes never quite melded his rhetoric with his policies, says Dennis Ross, who served as Obamas top Middle East aide in his first term. Adds Robert Ford, who was Obamas ambassador to Syria before resigning in frustration over the presidents policy there: It seems like we are swinging back to the idea that we must make a choice between supporting dictators or being safe.