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Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan (Read 3567 times)
Bobby.
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #240 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 9:01pm
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:57pm:
And a rapist and convicted felon.




yes for signing 34 times that - wait for it -

legal expenses were legal expenses.
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Bobby.
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #241 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:32pm
 
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:18pm:
Bobby. wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 4:51pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 12th, 2025 at 9:02pm:
Bobby. wrote on Jan 12th, 2025 at 6:53pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 12th, 2025 at 3:28pm:
I suppose I should take that as an admission that you can't produce any evidence that I, "fib" all the time, hey, Bobby?  You're not even enough of a man to admit that your bullshitting, hey?  Oh, dearie, dearie, me.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes


Brian,
you tell so many fibs that you won't go to heaven.


I don't believe in your religious fantasies, Bobby.  Run along, we all know you failed to be a man.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes


Tell that to St Peter when you meet him.     Embarrassed


Oh, poor, poor, Bobby.  What a WOFTAM.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



Oh, Saint Peter, at the gates of heaven
Won't you let me in?
I never did no harm
I never did no wrong


Led Zeppelin In My Time Of Dying


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Bobby.
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #242 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:32pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:22pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 12th, 2025 at 3:28pm:
I suppose I should take that as an admission that you can't produce any evidence that I, "fib" all the time, hey, Bobby?  You're not even enough of a man to admit that your bullshitting, hey?  Oh, dearie, dearie, me.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes

Well, you have lied about your Doctor of Divinity.
You lie about other things, too.



Brian is an enigma.
He claims to have a Doctor of Divinity but I have yet to hear him
correct or discuss any religious text.   Undecided
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SadKangaroo
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #243 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:57pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:38pm:
Can you give an actual example of this happening?


How many do you want?

2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
  • What Trump Signed into Law: The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act significantly reduced the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21% and included tax cuts for individuals, though many of those were temporary and disproportionately benefited higher-income earners.
  • Claims to the General Public: Trump repeatedly said the tax cuts would be a "middle-class miracle," promising that the average American family would see significant tax relief and that the economy would grow so much that the cuts would "pay for themselves."
  • Claims to Wealthy Donors: At private fundraisers, Trump reportedly acknowledged that the tax cuts heavily favored corporations and the wealthy but justified them as essential for economic growth.
  • Reality: Nonpartisan analyses, including from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), showed that the benefits were skewed toward corporations and the wealthy, with limited trickle-down effects to the middle class. The law also added significantly to the national debt.


Health Care: Repealing and Replacing the ACA
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Despite multiple attempts, Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress failed to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The only major change was the elimination of the ACA’s individual mandate penalty as part of the 2017 tax law.
  • Claims to Conservatives and Republican Lawmakers: Trump promised to completely dismantle the ACA, including its Medicaid expansion, and replace it with a free-market-based system.
  • Claims to the General Public: Trump often said his plan would cover "everybody" with better care at lower costs, a promise that contradicted proposals that reduced Medicaid coverage and protections for pre-existing conditions.
  • Reality: The ACA remained largely intact, and no comprehensive replacement plan was ever presented.


Immigration: The Border Wall
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Trump used executive actions and reallocated military funding to construct or upgrade approximately 450 miles of border barriers. Congress did not fund the full cost of the wall, and much of the construction replaced existing fencing.
  • Claims to Rally Audiences: Trump claimed he would build a "big, beautiful wall" spanning the entire U.S.-Mexico border and that Mexico would pay for it.
  • Claims to Lawmakers: Trump softened his stance when negotiating with Congress, framing the wall as a national security necessity and seeking U.S. taxpayer funding to supplement his efforts.
  • Reality: The wall was never fully completed, and Mexico never paid for it. Legal challenges and funding disputes further limited its scope.


Criminal Justice Reform: First Step Act
  • What Trump Signed into Law: The First Step Act was a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill that reduced mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenses and aimed to reduce recidivism.
  • Claims to Progressives and Moderates: Trump highlighted the First Step Act as a major bipartisan achievement, emphasizing its focus on rehabilitation and fairness in sentencing.
  • Claims to Conservative Audiences: Trump downplayed the leniency aspects and emphasized the law's focus on public safety, stating that it was about helping deserving individuals while keeping dangerous criminals off the streets.
  • Reality: The law was largely viewed as a modest but meaningful step toward reform, though Trump’s rhetoric sometimes exaggerated its impact.


Trade Policies and Tariffs
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Trump imposed tariffs on imports from China and other countries, aiming to reduce trade deficits and protect U.S. industries. He also signed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which replaced NAFTA.
  • Claims to Farmers and Rural Communities: Trump claimed the tariffs were a temporary measure that would bring China to the negotiating table and benefit American agriculture in the long run.
  • Claims to Business Leaders: Trump reassured corporate leaders that the tariffs would lead to more favorable trade deals and that their industries would benefit from increased protections.
  • Reality: The trade war hurt U.S. farmers and manufacturers, prompting the administration to provide billions in subsidies to offset losses. While the USMCA updated some provisions of NAFTA, it was largely seen as an incremental change rather than a complete overhaul.
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SadKangaroo
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #244 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:58pm
 
SadKangaroo wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:57pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:38pm:
Can you give an actual example of this happening?


How many do you want?


Environmental Policy: Rollbacks of Obama-Era Regulations
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Trump rolled back numerous environmental protections, including weakening the Clean Power Plan, loosening methane emission standards, and withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement.
  • Claims to Fossil Fuel Industries: Trump presented himself as a champion of coal, oil, and gas, promising to end what he called the "war on coal" and regulatory overreach.
  • Claims to Broader Audiences: Trump often downplayed the environmental impact of his policies, framing them as necessary for economic growth and energy independence.
  • Reality: The rollbacks were criticized by environmentalists and did little to revive the coal industry, which continued to decline due to market forces.


It's simply what he does.

It's just, and this is his still, nobody cares because they know he's a lying sack of s
hit
.

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Frank
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #245 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 5:24pm
 
SadKangaroo wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:58pm:
SadKangaroo wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:57pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:38pm:
Can you give an actual example of this happening?


How many do you want?


Environmental Policy: Rollbacks of Obama-Era Regulations
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Trump rolled back numerous environmental protections, including weakening the Clean Power Plan, loosening methane emission standards, and withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement.
  • Claims to Fossil Fuel Industries: Trump presented himself as a champion of coal, oil, and gas, promising to end what he called the "war on coal" and regulatory overreach.
  • Claims to Broader Audiences: Trump often downplayed the environmental impact of his policies, framing them as necessary for economic growth and energy independence.
  • Reality: The rollbacks were criticized by environmentalists and did little to revive the coal industry, which continued to decline due to market forces.


It's simply what he does.

It's just, and this is his still, nobody cares because they know he's a lying sack of s
hit
.


Silly bollocks.


The United States has been an annual net total energy exporter since 2019.
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Dnarever
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #246 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 5:27pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 9:01pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:57pm:
And a rapist and convicted felon.




yes for signing 34 times that - wait for it -

legal expenses were legal expenses.


Yes Trump paid Hush money to a porn star weeks before the 2016 election through his lawyer who went to prison for 3 years for being party to Trump's illegal election coverup.


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Frank
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #247 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 5:50pm
 
SadKangaroo wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 12:57pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:38pm:
Can you give an actual example of this happening?


How many do you want?

2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
  • What Trump Signed into Law: The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act significantly reduced the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21% and included tax cuts for individuals, though many of those were temporary and disproportionately benefited higher-income earners.
  • Claims to the General Public: Trump repeatedly said the tax cuts would be a "middle-class miracle," promising that the average American family would see significant tax relief and that the economy would grow so much that the cuts would "pay for themselves."
  • Claims to Wealthy Donors: At private fundraisers, Trump reportedly acknowledged that the tax cuts heavily favored corporations and the wealthy but justified them as essential for economic growth.
  • Reality: Nonpartisan analyses, including from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), showed that the benefits were skewed toward corporations and the wealthy, with limited trickle-down effects to the middle class. The law also added significantly to the national debt.


Health Care: Repealing and Replacing the ACA
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Despite multiple attempts, Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress failed to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The only major change was the elimination of the ACA’s individual mandate penalty as part of the 2017 tax law.
  • Claims to Conservatives and Republican Lawmakers: Trump promised to completely dismantle the ACA, including its Medicaid expansion, and replace it with a free-market-based system.
  • Claims to the General Public: Trump often said his plan would cover "everybody" with better care at lower costs, a promise that contradicted proposals that reduced Medicaid coverage and protections for pre-existing conditions.
  • Reality: The ACA remained largely intact, and no comprehensive replacement plan was ever presented.


Immigration: The Border Wall
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Trump used executive actions and reallocated military funding to construct or upgrade approximately 450 miles of border barriers. Congress did not fund the full cost of the wall, and much of the construction replaced existing fencing.
  • Claims to Rally Audiences: Trump claimed he would build a "big, beautiful wall" spanning the entire U.S.-Mexico border and that Mexico would pay for it.
  • Claims to Lawmakers: Trump softened his stance when negotiating with Congress, framing the wall as a national security necessity and seeking U.S. taxpayer funding to supplement his efforts.
  • Reality: The wall was never fully completed, and Mexico never paid for it. Legal challenges and funding disputes further limited its scope.


Criminal Justice Reform: First Step Act
  • What Trump Signed into Law: The First Step Act was a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill that reduced mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenses and aimed to reduce recidivism.
  • Claims to Progressives and Moderates: Trump highlighted the First Step Act as a major bipartisan achievement, emphasizing its focus on rehabilitation and fairness in sentencing.
  • Claims to Conservative Audiences: Trump downplayed the leniency aspects and emphasized the law's focus on public safety, stating that it was about helping deserving individuals while keeping dangerous criminals off the streets.
  • Reality: The law was largely viewed as a modest but meaningful step toward reform, though Trump’s rhetoric sometimes exaggerated its impact.


Trade Policies and Tariffs
  • What Trump Signed into Law: Trump imposed tariffs on imports from China and other countries, aiming to reduce trade deficits and protect U.S. industries. He also signed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which replaced NAFTA.
  • Claims to Farmers and Rural Communities: Trump claimed the tariffs were a temporary measure that would bring China to the negotiating table and benefit American agriculture in the long run.
  • Claims to Business Leaders: Trump reassured corporate leaders that the tariffs would lead to more favorable trade deals and that their industries would benefit from increased protections.
  • Reality: The trade war hurt U.S. farmers and manufacturers, prompting the administration to provide billions in subsidies to offset losses. While the USMCA updated some provisions of NAFTA, it was largely seen as an incremental change rather than a complete overhaul.



Counterrevolution Blueprint
How to eliminate left-wing racialism from the federal government


The second election of Donald Trump, along with Republican victories in both houses of Congress, sets the stage in the United States for a confrontation between democracy, which depends on representative institutions to form a government, and the rule of unelected elites, which relies on claims of expertise to control the state.

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Frank
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #248 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 5:50pm
 
Already, internal opposition to Trump is organizing within the federal agencies. CNN reports that Pentagon officials are discussing disobeying official policy. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has declared that he would refuse if Trump asked for his resignation. Some would like to see a reprise of the orchestrated counteractions against Trump, from the Russia collusion hoax to the Hunter Biden laptop censorship to the political prosecutions that led to his arrest and felony convictions.

The coming political confrontation is unusual because the specific antagonist is hard to identify. Trump is not contending against Joe Biden or Kamala Harris, or even the Democratic minority in Congress. Instead, the president-elect’s post-electoral opposition comes from inside the executive branch itself, in defiance of Article II of the Constitution, which opens with the unqualified statement: “The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.”

In recent years, phrases like “the deep state” have arisen in American political discourse to describe this phenomenon, in which administrators, bureaucrats, and unelected officials seem to wield a kind of power that we still lack appropriate language to describe. Part of the motivation is self-interest—bureaucrats want to protect their positions—but another is ideological: the federal government is steeped in left-wing race and gender ideology, and its adherents see Trump as an existential threat.

By rights, he should be. The incoming president has, under the Constitution, every right to bend the administration to his vision, which is contrary to the tenets of left-wing racialism. But those ideologies, which the Biden administration has entrenched through its “whole-of-government” diversity agenda, have long ruled the agencies that control the details of federal policymaking. Hence, the conflict: the president, who has formal authority, versus the ideological bureaucracy, which has real power.

At the end of his first term, Trump attempted to correct this problem through actions such as an executive order banning critical race theory in the federal government. The second Trump administration must go further and dedicate itself to a process that Vice President–elect J. D. Vance has described as “dewokeification.” This is the most urgent policy problem facing the administration, because without representative institutions and a restoration of constitutional authority, it is not possible to govern America.

The Trump administration has a unique opportunity to take decisive action on Day One, through executive orders that can serve as the opening salvo in a counterrevolution. The basic premise: the U.S. should strip left-wing racialism from the federal government and recommit the country to the principle of color-blind equality. Through an aggressive campaign, Trump and his cabinet can put an end to forms of discrimination disguised under the name of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) and make government work again.

The process of ideological capture has taken decades. But the counterrevolution can, and must, quickly retake those institutions in the name of the people and reorient them toward the enduring principles of liberty and equality. Bureaucrats abusing the public trust to advance their own ideologies should be put on notice: they will be shut down, their departments abolished, and their employment terminated. The administration will work to rid America of this ideological corruption before it further rots our institutions, demoralizes our citizens, and renders the government totally incompetent.

The counterrevolution begins now.


The rest is here:
https://www.city-journal.org/article/counterrevolution-blueprint
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Dnarever
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #249 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:06pm
 
Funny how people will discuss the stupidest things?
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Frank
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #250 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:09pm
 
Dnarever wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:06pm:
Funny how people will discuss the stupidest things?

No, they are not talking about you fowl duckwit.

Go waddle and shitt.
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greggerypeccary
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #251 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 7:04pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 5:50pm:
At the end of his first term, Trump ...


... had achieved nothing.

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Dnarever
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #252 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 7:20pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:09pm:
Dnarever wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:06pm:
Funny how people will discuss the stupidest things?

No, they are not talking about you fowl duckwit.

Go waddle and shitt.


So typical Frank content.  He must be proud of himself.
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Dnarever
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #253 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 7:22pm
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 7:04pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 5:50pm:
At the end of his first term, Trump ...


... had achieved nothing.



Did you know that At the end of Trump's first term more people were coming over the border than there are at the end of Bidens term?
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Frank
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Re: Donald Trump has again expressed interest Greenlan
Reply #254 - Jan 15th, 2025 at 7:24pm
 
Dnarever wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 7:20pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:09pm:
Dnarever wrote on Jan 15th, 2025 at 6:06pm:
Funny how people will discuss the stupidest things?

No, they are not talking about you fowl duckwit.

Go waddle and shitt.


So typical Frank content.  He must be proud of himself.

You only had a moronic, irrelevant quip in response to #248.
You must be extra proud of yourself, waddling fowl.

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