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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 5:14:45 PM
From: J_F_Shepard1 Recommendation

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rdkflorida2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583519
 

It's a fact, not a belief.

Trump has done more for America in 47 months than Biden has done in 47 years.



Facts are easy to post....give us about 10....

Start with 200,000+ dead from COVID....

The economy in the tank, millions unemployed due to business shutdowns.

We are the most hated nation in the world....



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 5:34:49 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Top Republicans Panic as Dems Take ‘Astronomical’ Lead in Early Mailed Ballots, Says Report
IN THE DUST
Jamie Ross Reporter
Published Sep. 30, 2020 4:37AM ET



Reuters/Rachel Wisniewski

Top GOP officials have reportedly been sent into a blind panic after seeing numbers showing that Democratic voters in key states are returning mail-in ballots at much, much higher rates than Republican voters. According to The Washington Post, the Democratic lead in mail voting is so extreme that it’s led to urgent discussions among senior GOP officials. “It’s astronomical,” said one unnamed Republican strategist, who added that he was left “horrified” by the numbers. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has reportedly twice met with Trump to urge him to stop bashing mail balloting, and is said to have told others he’s worried that the president’s rhetoric could stop Republican voters—especially elderly ones—from sending in their ballots. Republican National Committee spokesman Mike Reed insisted there was no panic, saying Republicans “will come out in droves to vote in person” on Election Day.



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 5:36:34 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2
Wharf Rat

  Respond to of 1583519
 
“So far we’ve had no problem .” Herman Cain unavailable for comment

Evan Siegfried @evansiegfried



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 5:38:06 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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Doren
pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1583519
 
The World’s Brokest “Billionaire”
Why the revelation of Trump’s massive debt might matter.

by MONA CHAREN
SEPTEMBER 30, 2020 5:32 AM

Seated at the breakfast table, scanning the New York Times story on Trump’s taxes, I said to my husband, “We have a greater net worth than Donald Trump.” He knitted his brow.

I was thinking of a story that Samantha Bee found a while back. It was from the 2003 documentary Born Rich, in which Ivanka Trump shared this memory of the family’s financial troubles from the 1980s and 1990s:

I remember once my father and I were walking down Fifth Avenue and there was a homeless person sitting right outside of Trump Tower and I remember my father pointing to him and saying, ‘You know, that guy has $8 billion more than me,’ because he was in such extreme debt at that point, you know?

In 2020, despite the dazzling success of The Apprentice, in which NBC was able to portray the failing and flailing trust fund boy as a business genius and earned Trump the first real money of his life (apart from his inheritance), Trump again seems to be worth less than the homeless guy on the street, at least in financial terms.

The New York Times reporting suggests that Donald Trump owes something like $400 million to creditors. Much of that debt—personally guaranteed by Trump—is coming due in the next four years. Pause on the irony: Only by pretending to be a successful business tycoon on TV did Trump actually achieve business success—to the tune of $427 million (including licensing deals). Yet, even with a windfall like that, he managed to lose it, and is facing a serious financial crisis in the near future. And pause for a minute on this coincidence: $400 million (in today’s dollars) is almost exactly the amount he is said to have inherited from his father. Trump always characterized this as a “small loan of a million dollars.” Had he merely invested that fortune in a stock index fund, he would be worth upwards of $30 billion today.

Instead, he invested in a series of flamboyant flops: Trump steaks, Trump vodka, Trump airlines, the Trump Taj Mahal, Trump magazine, Trump the boardgame, Trump mortgage, Trump University, and on and on. Did he have successes? Sure, his books hawking his pretend business skills were best-sellers. The Miss Universe pageant in Moscow earned him a couple million. Some of his real estate investments continue to throw off income. But it’s significant that his most sound investments are in properties owned and managed by others.

With Trump calling the shots and making the executive decisions, the ventures that haven’t already gone belly up are hemorrhaging cash. Insert moral for the nation here.

But surely, the average Fox News watcher must be asking, a titan with his assets shouldn’t have any trouble paying off those loans, right? The Times stories haven’t shed light on his net worth. He may have properties he can sell. But it appears that most of his assets are golf courses and resorts that are being hammered by coronavirus. On net, Mar-a-Lago, Doral, Turnberry, the Trump International Hotel in D.C., and others have lost vastly more money than they have generated over the past decade—even before the virus struck. That’s why he has paid no income taxes in forever.

Now the question that arises after every Trump revelation: Will it matter? Will it affect Trump’s image at all? Hard to say. The Trump fan base is unlike anything I’ve seen in more than 30 years of observing American politics. But I venture to say that this is not like the Stormy Daniels payoff. With a few exceptions, the Christians who supported Trump weren’t misled into thinking he was a good or even a minimally decent man. They knew what he was and gave their assent. He delivered the judges and policies they liked, and no revelation about his character will alter the contours of that bargain.

Build the wall fanatics will not be swayed either—even though they didn’t collect on their side of the deal. Their attachment to Trump has hardened since 2016 into something like worship, and they will accept it if he tells them the Times story is fake news.

Trump has made exactly this accusation, while also claiming that the Times obtained their information illegally. As Sarah Isgur pointed out, it’s logically impossible for the White House spin to be true. It can’t be both fake and a legal violation. If it’s a made up story, then no one broke any laws. It’s only a legal violation if these are indeed his tax returns—and it would be the leaker, not the New York Times, that would be potentially liable.

People whose driving motive is fear and loathing of the left will not stumble over this news either, even if they have to convince themselves that Joe Biden is secretly taking orders from Raul Castro.

But there are other voters for whom the image of Trump as successful was key to his appeal. A 2019 survey found that 54 percent of Americans believed Donald Trump had been a business success. Other polls conducted between 2016 and 2018 found that many Americans were unaware that Trump was not self-made. Belief in his up-by-the-bootstraps myth accounted for a 5 point boost in his popularity according to one study.

Beyond admiration for what they mistakenly thought was business acumen, many were taken with the idea that because Trump was so rich, he was incorruptible. “He has so much money but he’s waking up every morning to campaign. He deeply cares about America,” John Friedlander of Washington, D.C. explained to the BBC in 2016. A voter from Pennsylvania said, “I believe Trump will be a good president because he knows how to make deals, deals that will make America prosperous again.” Many agreed with Trump’s own claim that he was so rich he couldn’t be bought. In her focus groups with women who voted for Trump in 2016, Sarah Longwell often hears that his image as a mega-successful businessman was a key reason they pulled the lever for him (second only to disliking Hillary Clinton).

Now what? If Trump were to be reelected, he would face a reckoning on a mountain of debt. Not only is he not too rich to be bought, he may well be too poor to turn anyone away. Doubtless, there would be sovereign wealth funds from places like Qatar and oligarchs from precincts like Russia and China who would be ready, in exchange for favorable U.S. policies, to help Trump retire that debt. Because Trump has been so dishonest and so opaque about his business dealings, the American people might never know what was exchanged. Trump speaks to Putin frequently, and permits no notes.

No person with even a fraction of Trump’s indebtedness would be granted a security clearance in the U.S. government. Mark Zaid, a lawyer who represents many in the national security field, recounts that one client was denied a clearance due to excess student loan debt.

There are voters out there who voted for Trump once but are not now and never were part of the Trump cult. Because they gave their support provisionally, they have no emotional investment in proving that they were right and the Trump critics were wrong. How many are there? We are about to find out. Even a small percentage could make all the difference.

thebulwark.com



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 5:39:28 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583519
 
Biden Won the Debate. America Lost.
Who would want the Trump of last night for a neighbor, coworker, or friend—let alone a president?

by RICHARD NORTH PATTERSON
SEPTEMBER 30, 2020 10:57 AM

One aftermath of Donald Trump’s frightening and aberrant debate performance was that his nakedly unshackled sociopathy virtually obliterated conventional political analysis. Still, this was more than a nauseating gut-punch to human decency—it was a pivotal marker in what is, surely, the most crucial presidential campaign in living memory. So, before we go on to the larger implications for American democracy, a verdict on the implications for the election.

Biden won.

He won the night by dispelling Trump’s thuggish assertions of senility.

He won by requiring Trump to give America an unhinged 90 minutes of indecent self-exposure.

He won by filling what space he could with a conventional, often crisp, recitation of his central message.

He won by espousing that formerly unquestioned sine qua non of democracy that contestants accept the will of the electorate.

He won by speaking directly to Americans through the camera about their core concerns.

He won by saying of Trump’s callous response to over 200,000 dead from COVID-19: “It is what it is because you are who you are.”

He won because Trump is, indeed, inescapably who he is. He won because Trump’s repulsive persona inevitably alienated the voters he most needs—wavering Republicans and the increasingly shrinking number of undecided voters. He won because Trump invited white supremacists to “stand by”; encouraged his supporters to intimidate in-person voters; and virtually promised that he will attempt to reverse the results of a democratic election.

Most of all, Biden won because no person whose judgment isn’t warped by hate and fear could watch Trump and see a normal person they would want for a neighbor, coworker, or friend—let alone as a president to whom they would entrust with the future of their family or their country.

Those commentators who treated this event as a debacle shared by two candidates and the moderator badly missed the point. Jack Kennedy and Ronald Reagan could not have controlled an opponent who lives outside the boundaries of sane human conduct. Nor could Walter Cronkite have moderated a debate in which one of the contestants cannot see any other human being beyond the only one he cares about. Those things, too, sent a message to the audience.

So, yes, Biden won. Trump’s greatest hope is that an undifferentiated disgust with the spectacle he provoked causes more undecided voters to refrain from voting then will vote for Biden. That is a corrosive attack on the bonds of civility and decency which are the glue of our democratic compact.

That, of course, is the ultimate tragedy of this debate. Biden won, but our country lost something precious—the hope of an exchange of ideas which leads to a peaceful transition of power. We have now internalized the pathology of a man who will overturn an election if he can. It is no longer alarmist to say that America’s president threatens us with fascism, for he is telling us that he does. The history of authoritarianism is replete with demagogues who have claimed, as Trump did, that a democratic election is “going to be a fraud like you’ve never seen.”

What America has never seen is a president bent on plunging us into such poisonous dysfunction. We should pray that our country not only rejects him, but survives him.

thebulwark.com



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 5:48:02 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Mike Baker

This morning, authorities in Portland arrested Proud Boys member Alan Swinney. He faces a dozen charges, including assault, unlawful use of weapon, and menacing.





To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 6:02:57 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Trump again takes credit for deploying the National Guard in Minneapolis. That was a decision of Minnesota's Democratic governor, who served 24 years in the Guard; he did it before Trump weighed in.


Fact check: Minnesota governor, not Trump, called out the National Guard
Campaigning as the candidate of "law and order," President Donald Trump keeps claiming that he is the one who got the National Guard deployed to deal with rioting in Minnesota.

cnn.com




To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 6:05:25 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583519
 


Trump claims insulin is ‘cheap .. like water.’ But it still costs just as much

On insulin, President Trump said, "I'm getting it for so cheap, [it's] like water it's so cheap." But it still retails for roughly $300 per vial.


statnews.com




To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 6:32:56 PM
From: Brumar894 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80
Wharf Rat

  Respond to of 1583519
 
It's false that Biden does not have "any" law enforcement support. Here is a...Fox News article:



More than 175 current, former law enforcement officials endorse Joe Biden, slam Trump as 'lawless'...

EXCLUSIVE: More than 175 current and former law enforcement officers and officials endorsed Joe Biden for president on Friday, while slamming President Trump as a "lawless" president, Fox News has...


foxnews.com



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 6:39:27 PM
From: Brumar894 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80
Wharf Rat

  Respond to of 1583519
 
NEW: Mics will be cut off for those who violate the rules at subsequent presidential debates, among other changes that will be imposed moving forward, per @CBSNews.

— Brian Tyler Cohen (@briantylercohen) September 30, 2020



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 6:52:26 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Source says Trump family fears Parscale will cooperate with federal investigators looking at Trump campaign spending. My latest:



“The Family Is Worried Brad Will Start Talking”: Trumpworld Panics Over Debate Fiasco as Campaign...


vanityfair.com



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 7:05:55 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 
In Video, Founder Of Proud Boys Praises Violence, Particularly Strangulation


Screengrab / @riotwomennn / Twitter

JakeThomas

Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes has said: “We will kill you. That’s the Proud Boys in a nutshell. We will kill you."Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes has continuously advocated for violence by his far-right group and supporters of President Trump in general, routinely calling for them to physically harm and outright kill those who oppose them.

What follows is a collection of statements McInnes has made on-air.

“We will kill you. That’s the Proud Boys in a nutshell. We will kill you.”

“Beating the sh*t out of these people. I think it’s our job to do, and the cops to turn a blind eye.”

“If you’re wearing a MAGA hat…and some guy with a slightly punk demeanor comes up to you and says, ‘Hey are you…pro-Trump?’ Choke him.”

“You can’t call for violence on a specific person, but can you say, they’re throwing bricks, we should throw bricks. Can you call for violence generally? Cause I am.”

“Fighting solves everything. We need more violence from the Trump people, Trump supporters. Choke a motherf*****. Choke a bitch. … Get your fingers around the windpipe.”

“I want violence. I want punching in the face. I’m disappointed in Trump supporters for not punching enough.”

“Get a f****** gun.” “Get ready to blow someone’s f****** head off.”
.........
https://mavenroundtable.io/theintellectualist/news/in-video-founder-of-proud-boys-praises-violence-particularly-strangulation-m9tTpaVb5k-GZk5gTWuqDg



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 7:14:23 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Oliver Darcy

Rush Limbaugh on Trump's debate performance: "He had a strategy, and the strategy didn’t work. But he had a strategy. And he undermined his own strategy."



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 7:17:26 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Bill Kristol

I looked today at the clip of Trump’s interruption of Biden as Biden began to speak about Beau. Trump wasn’t simply trying to get the topic back to Hunter. Trump can’t stand hearing about Beau. Beau’s service is a kind of rebuke to the whole Trump family. Trump can’t stand it.



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 7:28:52 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 



To: Bill who wrote (1265175)9/30/2020 7:32:21 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2
sylvester80

  Respond to of 1583519
 
Demosthenes

Another example from last night is half of Trump’s guests at the “debate” refused to wear masks; even after the Cleveland Clinic reminded them.

Unless the rules have penalties and are enforced, arrogant lawless people ignore them. This illustrates the rot in our country.