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To: locogringo who wrote (981655)11/14/2016 4:41:27 PM
From: Heywood40  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576160
 
Repetitive meme-posting creates the smell of FEAR.

Have you ever been on Facebook? It smells just like this board.

This place is just a bulletin board for repetitive meme-posting.

I could link to about half the messages here to show you, but because you're a repetitive meme-poster you've been in the trumpster so long you can't even smell yourself, can you?



To: locogringo who wrote (981655)11/14/2016 4:45:07 PM
From: Mongo2116  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576160
 
Mike Pence Just Went To Court To Hide His Emails From The Public

ByNatalie DickinsonPosted on November 14, 2016

Vice President-elect and notorious anti-LGBT religious extremist Mike Pence was once a very stalwart propnenent of email transparency, especially when it came to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s private email server.

“Literally Hillary Clinton had classified information on a private server that she said she didn’t have … that, to me, is the kind of double standard that the American people are weary of” said Pence in an interview with Face The Nation.

But the real double standard that the American people are truly weary of is the hypocritical double standard that Republicans hold everyone else to while behaving the same way themselves.

Mike Pence is now going to court to keep the contents of his personal emails away from public eyes as a Democratic labor lawyer demands to see some missives between Pence and a political ally over the state of Indiana’s participation in multi-state lawsuit over President Obama’s immigration reform.

Indianapolis attorney William Groth believes that the people have a right to know how many of their taxpayer dollars were spent on hiring an outside legal firm to fight against President Obama’s immigration reform efforts in 2014.

“I think joining the lawsuit without the attorney general and hiring that firm was a waste of taxpayer dollars and the people have the right to know how much of their money was spent” says Groth.

The Marion Superior Court decided to give the state government the right to withhold information as they saw fit, prompting an outcry over the dismantling of judicial checks and balances on government power.

“It comes down to this — the court is giving up its ability to check another branch of government, and that should worry people,” says Indiana University Professor Gerry Lanosga.

Groth is appealing the case, which will be reviewed on November 21st.

It just goes to show that once again, Republicans never practice what they preach. This is certainly a herald of what’s to come with the Trump-Pence administration; a government that hides its actions from the public and tear down what little checks and balances still remain in place.



To: locogringo who wrote (981655)11/14/2016 4:45:50 PM
From: Mongo2116  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576160
 
President-elect Donald J. Trump during a meeting with the House speaker, Paul D. Ryan, last week on Capitol Hill. Credit Al Drago/The New York Times
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald J. Trump appeared to soften some of his hardest-line campaign positions on immigration on Sunday, but he also restated his pledge to roll back abortion rights and used Twitter to lash out at his critics, leaving open the possibility that he would continue using social media in the Oval Office and radically change the way presidents speak to Americans.

In his first prime-time television interview since his upset victory on Tuesday, Mr. Trump repeated his promise to name a Supreme Court justice who opposed abortion rights and would help overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that recognized them, returning the issue to the states.

Asked where that would leave women seeking abortions, Mr. Trump, on the CBS program “60 Minutes,” said, “Well, they’ll perhaps have to go — they’ll have to go to another state.”

On immigration, he said the wall that he has been promising to build on the nation’s southern border might end up being a fence in places. But he said his priority was to deport two million to three million immigrants he characterized as dangerous or as having criminal records, a change from his original position that he would deport all of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the country. President Obama has deported more than two million undocumented immigrants during his time in office.

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Mr. Trump said that undocumented immigrants who are not criminals are “terrific people,” and that he would decide how to handle them after the border is secure. The House speaker, Paul D. Ryan, echoed the president-elect, saying on Sunday that there would be no deportation force, something Mr. Trump had promised to create early in his campaign.

“That’s not what we’re focused on,” Mr. Ryan said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Mr. Trump also said he considered the Supreme Court decision last year that validated same-sex marriages as settled, and that he was “fine with that.” He endorsed popular aspects of President Obama’s health insurance law, including a provision that requires coverage of people with pre-existing medical conditions and one that allows young people to remain on their parents’ plans until the age of 26.

But even as he appeared to inch toward the political center, Mr. Trump used a series of postings on Twitter to argue that The New York Times’s coverage of him has been “BAD” and “very poor and highly inaccurate.” He falsely stated that The Times had issued an apology to readers, an apparent reference to a letter to readers from The Times’s publisher, Arthur Sulzberger Jr., and its executive editor, Dean Baquet. The letter noted the unpredictable nature of the election and said The Times aimed to “rededicate” itself to “the fundamental mission of Times journalism.”

In the letter, The Times posed a series of what it called inevitable questions, including, “Did Donald Trump’s sheer unconventionality lead us and other news outlets to underestimate his support among American voters?”

Mr. Trump also claimed that the newspaper had been losing thousands of subscribers over its campaign coverage. In a Twitter message in reply to Mr. Trump, The New York Times Company said it had seen a “surge” in new subscriptions since the election — four times the pre-election rate.

ELECTION 2016 By SHANE O’NEILL and ALAN RAPPEPORT 2:32
Donald Trump Changes Tone on Immigration
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Donald Trump Changes Tone on Immigration
Donald J. Trump began his presidential campaign with strong language on immigration policy, especially pertaining to Hispanics and Muslims. With less than three months until the election, his tone has softened. By SHANE O’NEILL and ALAN RAPPEPORT on Publish Date August 25, 2016. Photo by Damon Winter/The New York Times. Watch in Times Video »
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“We’re proud of our election coverage & we will continue to ‘hold power to account,’” the company said.

Mr. Trump, in another Twitter post, said The Times had falsely reported that he believed additional nations should acquire nuclear arms.

However, in an interview in March with The Times, Mr. Trump, asked about the North Korean threat to its neighbors, said he thought the United States’ allies might need their own nuclear deterrent.

“If Japan had that nuclear threat, I’m not sure that would be a bad thing for us,” he said. Later, he added, “The bottom line is, I think that frankly, as long as North Korea’s there, I think that Japan having a capability is something that maybe is going to happen whether we like it or not.”

His posts on Twitter were a striking public display from a man who, after winning the election, had worked to project an air of seriousness and self-discipline, first in a victory speech early Wednesday and then in an Oval Office meeting the next day with Mr. Obama, whom he called a “good man” for whom he had “great respect.”

But by Thursday evening, Mr. Trump was using Twitter to complain about demonstrations against his victory, saying they were being mounted by “professional protesters, incited by the media,” and branding them as “very unfair!”

PRIVACY POLICY
The social media sniping — unparalleled in the history of presidential communication — suggested that Mr. Trump plans to bring his confrontational style of speaking to Americans to the White House, working to undercut news outlets that do not comport with his views, silence his critics and elevate his own standing. On Sunday, he selected Stephen K. Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News, a site known for its nationalist, racially charged and conspiracy-laden coverage, to be his chief strategist and senior counselor.

It was only one indication of the extraordinary nature of the president-elect’s tactics and those of his inner circle.

In the “60 Minutes” interview, Mr. Trump suggested he would not hold to the longstanding post-Watergate tradition of presidents refraining from interfering in F.B.I. criminal matters, hinting that he would quiz the director, James B. Comey, about his handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private email server before deciding whether to dismiss him.

“I’m not sure,” Mr. Trump said when asked if he would seek Mr. Comey’s resignation. “I would have to see — he may have had very good reasons for doing what he did.”

Photo

Kellyanne Conway, a member of Mr. Trump’s transition leadership team, arrived on Sunday at Trump Tower in New York. Credit Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
In an interview on Friday with The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Trump did not rule out prosecuting Mrs. Clinton.

On Sunday, his campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, warned that Senator Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada and the minority leader, could face legal action for having said that Mr. Trump’s election had “emboldened the forces of hate and bigotry in America.”

Mr. Trump has said he is proud of how he has used social media to create his own version of events and communicate it to his followers. He suggested in the “60 Minutes” interview that he is reluctant to surrender that platform when he takes the oath of office in January.

“I’m not saying I love it, but it does get the word out,” Mr. Trump said of Twitter during the interview, adding that his millions of followers on various social media sites had given him “such power” that it helped him win the election.

“When you give me a bad story, or when you give me an inaccurate story,” Mr. Trump added, “I have a method of fighting back.” He said, however, that he would be “very restrained” in his Twitter posts should he continue to make them as president.

Mr. Trump is a highly public scorekeeper of his own accolades and accomplishments, and his elevation to the highest office in the land has not changed his instinct to crow about the smallest details. During the interview, Mr. Trump boasted that since his election, he had built up his social media following by tens of thousands of people. “I’m picking up now — I think I picked up yesterday 100,000 people,” Mr. Trump said.

The interview, which also featured Mr. Trump’s wife, Melania, and adult children, showed a side of the president-elect that he did not display during the campaign — a man awed and somewhat intimidated by the significance of the office to which he had just laid claim.

“I’ve done a lot of big things; I’ve never done anything like this,” Mr. Trump said. “It is — it is so big, it is so — it’s so enormous, it’s so amazing.”

Mr. Trump said he had been inaccurately portrayed as “a little bit of a wild man” during the campaign, and he promised that he would be able to tamp down some of his more heated speech as president. But he suggested that he would still use such tactics to galvanize his supporters, just as he did during his bid for the White House.

“Sometimes you need a certain rhetoric to get people motivated,” he said. “I don’t want to be just a little nice monotone character.”

__________________



To: locogringo who wrote (981655)11/14/2016 4:46:47 PM
From: Mongo2116  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576160
 
welcome to TRUMPmerica

Amid Outrage Over Stephen Bannon,
F.B.I. Reports Surge in Hate Crimes
By MICHAEL D. SHEAR, ALAN RAPPEPORT, ERIC LICHTBLAU and MAGGIE HABERMANUPDATED 4:14 PM

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RIGHT NOW President Obama is giving his first news conference since Election Day. Watch live >>

President-elect Donald J. Trump’s picks for top behind-the-scenes advisers are roiling Washington. Now there are statistics to back the rising concerns.

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Stephen K. Bannon at a Donald J. Trump rally in New Hampshire last month. Credit Stephen Crowley/The New York Times
Hate crimes surge, led by attacks on Muslims.

The F.B.I. reported Monday that attacks against American Muslims rose last year, driving an increase of about 7 percent in hate crimes against all victims.

The data, the most comprehensive look at threat crimes nationwide, expanded on previous findings by researchers and outside monitors, who have noted an alarming rise in some types of hate crimes tied to the intense vitriol of the presidential campaign and the aftermath of terror attacks at home and abroad since 2015.

A wave of racially charged assaults, graffiti attacks and other episodes has swept the country since Election Day, prompting Mr. Trump to call for a halt to it during a “60 Minutes” interview broadcast on Sunday night.

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In its report Monday, the F.B.I. cataloged a total of 5,818 hate crimes in 2015 — a rise of nearly 340 over the year before — including assaults, bombings, threats and property destruction against minorities, women, gays and others.

Attacks against Muslim Americans saw the biggest surge: 257 reports of assaults, attacks on mosques and other types hate crimes against Muslims last year, a jump of about 67 percent over the year before. It was the highest total since 2001, when the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks saw more than 480 attacks.

Attacks against transgender people also sharply increased, the data showed.

Law enforcement officials acknowledge that the statistics give an incomplete picture because many local agencies still have a spotty record of reporting hate crimes, 26 years after Congress directed the Justice Department to begin collecting the data.

“We need to do a better job of tracking and reporting hate crime to fully understand what is happening in our communities and how to stop it,” James B. Comey Jr., the F.B.I. director, said Monday.

Photo

Senator Bernie Sanders addressed an overflow crowd in Colorado Springs while campaigning for Hillary Clinton three days before Election Day. Credit Stacie Scott/The Gazette, via Associated Press
Trump and Putin speak, officially.

They were accused by detractors of being bosom buddies, in cahoots over underhanded efforts to rig the American election — accusations candidate Trump denied. Now, President-elect Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia have spoken.

The Kremlin released a readout Monday of the first call between Mr. Putin and the president-elect since he won the election, saying the men expressed mutual optimism about improving the dire state of relations between the two countries.

According to the Kremlin, Mr. Putin said he hoped to work with Mr. Trump in an atmosphere of mutual respect without interfering in each other’s internal affairs. They also talked about fighting international terrorism and settling the crisis in Syria.

The Trump transition team reported that “President-elect Trump noted to President Putin that he is very much looking forward to having a strong and enduring relationship with Russia and the people of Russia.”

While Mr. Trump said he hoped to have a constructive relationship with Russia, he insisted during one of his debates with Hillary Clinton that he was “no puppet” of Mr. Putin.

Bernie Sanders speaks out.

Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who mobilized a movement but not enough votes to win the Democratic presidential nomination, is stepping forward as an alternative to the party’s leadership and a stalwart against racial politics.

Taking to his campaign Twitter handle on Monday, he decried the Democrats’ loss of white, working-class voters to President-elect Trump.

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Bernie Sanders ? @BernieSanders
I come from the white working class, and I am deeply humiliated that the Democratic Party cannot talk to the people where I came from.
10:55 AM - 14 Nov 2016
7,476 7,476 Retweets 25,379 25,379 likes
He added, “The Democratic Party has to stand with working people, feel their pain and take on the billionaire class, Wall Street and drug companies.

But he also said that the new role of Stephen K. Bannon in the Trump White House as senior counselor and chief strategist should make the country “very nervous.” The country has battled “discrimination and racism and sexism and homophobia” for hundreds of years, he said in an interview on ABC’s “The View” program on Monday, and the country could not afford to move backward.

“We’re going to tell Mr. Bannon and any other advisers that we’re not going to be turning on each other,” Mr. Sanders said. “We’re going to be standing together.”

In concert, liberal activists staged a sit-in in the office of Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the incoming Democratic minority leader, to demand a leadership position in the next Senate for Mr. Sanders.

Indignation is seen over Bannon appointment.

Civil rights groups, Democrats and some Republicans on Monday denounced President-elect Trump’s decision to appoint Mr. Bannon to the top White House position, warning that he represents nationalist and racist views that should be rejected by the incoming president.

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File under: Oh, to be a fly on the wall, Trump and Xi.

Mr. Trump has spoken with President Xi Jinping of China, the presidential transition team announced on Monday, and the world likely thought, “Interesting.”

According to the announcement, in a call that took place on Monday Beijing time, Mr. Xi congratulated Mr. Trump for “winning a historic election,” and the president-elect thanked the Chinese leader for his well wishes.

“During the call, the leaders established a clear sense of mutual respect for one another, and President-elect Trump stated that he believes the two leaders will have one of the strongest relationships for both countries moving forward,” the statement said.

No mention of whether Mr. Trump’s repeated campaign threats against Chinese trade practices came up, nor his statement that climate change was a hoax perpetuated by the Chinese, nor his get-tough promises on economic relations moving forward.

Photo

President-elect Donald J. Trump has chosen Reince Preibus, the chairman of the Republican National Committee and a campaign adviser, as the White House chief of staff. Credit Damon Winter/The New York Times
Reince Priebus defends Bannon pick.

Reince Priebus, who was chosen on Sunday to become Mr. Trump’s White House chief of staff, defended the selection of Stephen K. Bannon to serve as chief strategist on Monday and pushed back against suggestions that Mr. Bannon is racist and anti-Semitic.

“That’s not the Steve Bannon that I know,” Mr. Priebus said on MSNBC, calling him a force for good on the campaign. “I’ve only seen a generous, hospitable, wise person to work with.”

Civil rights groups such as the Anti-Defamation League and the Council on American-Islamic Relations condemned the selection of Mr. Bannon, pointing to the divisive views promoted by Breitbart News, the nationalist website that he runs.

Mr. Priebus said that he agreed that Mr. Trump still had more to do to bring the country together and that it would be healthy for him to deliver a unifying speech to tone down some of the things he said in the heat of the campaign battle.

“He wants to make you proud of your country and serve you,” Mr. Priebus said.

Fringe broadcast host says Trump offered thanks.

Alex Jones, an online broadcast host who has accused the government of grand-scale conspiracies, says that President-elect Trump personally called him to thank him for his support during the campaign.

Mr. Jones made the revelation on a brief clip on his website.

“He said, ‘Listen Alex, I just talked to the kings and the queens of the world,’” Mr. Jones recalled, saying that Mr. Trump added, “I want to thank you, your audience.”

He said the incoming president promised to come on his program again in the next few weeks. He celebrated that Mr. Trump had triumphed over “hoaxes” such as Obamacare.

Mr. Jones was an early booster of Mr. Trump, who appeared on his program during the end of the primaries. Mr. Jones has charged, among other things, that the Sandy Hook school shooting in Connecticut in December 2012 was a hoax.

Look, more followers!

Mr. Trump is a highly public scorekeeper of his own accolades and accomplishments and his elevation to the highest office in the land has not changed his instinct to crow about the smallest details. During his interview with “60 Minutes” broadcast on Sunday night, Mr. Trump bragged that since his election, he had gained tens of thousands of new followers on his social media accounts.

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