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Ford to Build Electric Cars in Mexico, Boost Investment at Michigan Facility | WNEP.com
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The Jobs Report Is Overhyped. Here’s Why That’s A Problem.
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CNN sloppy reporting isn't helping ...
CNN corrects story on email to Trumps about Wikileaks - Dec. 8, 2017 Quote:
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It sounds less like sloppy reporting and more like a coordinated set of lies fed to CNN. It sounds like they followed their guidelines.
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Either way the "Fake News minus anything Trump lies about crowd" will just bang this drum over and over again. Take a look at last night when Trump gushed about the "Blacks for Trump" in the crowd and how "Blacks" had higher home ownership now that he is President. AP FACT CHECK: Trump off on black homeownership, trade - The Washington Post Quote:
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You know, we really shouldn't get all bent out of shape over people who choose to use 'alternative facts' in addressing anything about trump, since the man himself disregards the truth and has no problem using that to browbeat anyone else.
Or.. We really care about the truth and facts, and even if a Wapo writer has to step down, then in the name of standards the president should too. All things being equal, of course. |
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The Pentagon just announced that transgender people can enlist starting Jan. 1. That really needs some explanation. Did Trump change his mind or is the Pentagon ignoring him?
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More like the courts are saying its not legal: Transgender People Can Enlist in Military Jan. 1, Pentagon Says - Bloomberg |
The Trump-Russia Probe Is About to Get Uglier
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DOLA:
Fascinating, yet terrifying look into our current president Inside Trump's Hour-by-Hour Battle for Self-Preservation Quote:
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THE BEST DOCUMENTS.
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The tweet about Kirsten Gillibrand today is disgusting. Do his supporters actually like these tweets?
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let's go down the imagination path again and think about Obama saying this. Or let's imagine if a CEO of a major corporation said this in an interview. I mean, wow. The people who continue to simply pass this off as tolerable because he is "taking back America" have lost all my respect. |
Well, just my opinion, but I don't think America is great (or being made great) when we insinuate women are sluts and campaign for people like Roy Moore.
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Was the tweet wrong? "Someone once said that politics is the second-oldest profession. I'm beginning to think it bears resemblance to the first." |
Well, that would require evidence, which wasn't provided and probably won't be.
Unlike the evidence mounting that Trump and his colleagues/family whored themselves, and the country, out to Putin/Russia. |
Ed Gillespie sums up the problem the GOP has had for years. I'm not personally racist, but the only way to win is to motivate racists to go out and vote.
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dola
Rand Paul is full of shit. Quote:
But he'll vote for the tax cut package without hesitation. |
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It's weird because as President you have access to so much cool information and you spend 8 hours a day watching what they put on in hospital waiting rooms. |
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And all of those briefings require reading.
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Well he's the healthiest president ever, so he's never IN hospital waiting rooms.
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That's what drinking 12 diet cokes a day will do for you: Absolute health. |
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With Moore's loss tonight in Alabama, the Repubs in the Senate have to be looking hard at impeaching Trump prior to next year's mid-terms, right?
Exit-polling showed Trump with a less than 50% popularity...in Alabama. This has continued a trend of Trump-backed candidates performing poorly since last year's election. What will it be in Nevada or Arizona...or even Tennessee or Texas next year? Are they really willing to go into the election cycle with that albatross hanging around their necks? And Pence is sitting right there to enact everything they want and do it in some kind of presidential manner. Sure, there will be some blowback for impeaching Trump, and he'll probably try to burn everything to the ground on the way out, but, once it blows over, their base will probably still be there just in time to possibly salvage the Senate (fully expect the House to flip next year). Seems like the sooner it's done, the better; otherwise, they face the possibility of a Dem-controlled Senate and House with a president that just wants "wins" and doesn't care which side of the aisle they come from. |
Omarosa is getting fired.
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USA Today sinking to Donald's level:
USA Today Calls Trump Unfit To Clean Obama's Toilets In Scathing Editorial |
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I think impeachment is still a pipe dream, but you are going to see anyone who could possibly be within 10 points of a Democrat next year doing anything they possibly can to distance themselves at this point. The other interesting thing is what it means for close votes from now until then. This will surely embolden anyone who was thinking that voting with Trump on controversial high profile matters right now just might not be worth it for their long term career. Probably shouldn’t get too giddy about this, as ultimately there were mitigating factors other than trump in the Alabama race the kind we will probably never see again. But I think the Dems can be very encouraged with the minority turnout and the underlying approval numbers for Trump are definitely going to start to give R’s a lot of sleepless nights. |
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![]() Look at this real hard. Montana and North Dakota are not what you'd call "Democratic-friendly" states in election years, and 2018 is going to be a midterm where Democrats are playing defense. Indiana has a Democratic Senator, but Donnelly scraped 50.04% of the popular vote in a Presidential election year. What's he going to do in an off year? West Virginia's got a Democratic senator in Manchin, but even as a conservative Democrat he's still going to be at risk of his constituents saying "why should we vote for a lookalike Democrat when we can have an actual Republican?" Wisconsin and Michigan are historically Democratic territory, but they went for Trump and Wisconsin has been trending redder in the last ten years, so, again - ain't saying the Democrats can't hang onto those seats, but even with Trump's unpopularity, there are still headwinds. Florida, Pennsylvania and Ohio are flip opportunities also. Looking at the other direction: Arizona? Eehh. Maybe. The American Southwest keeps getting talked about in "demographics are destiny" terms, and New Mexico seems to have settled in as a blue state. Sinema might be able to win against an unknown challenger. Not sure she'd beat Flake if he weren't retiring. Wyoming, Utah, Mississippi, Nebraska, Tennessee, Texas? lolno. Nevada's got possibilities. So, I mean, last night was monumental, but two takeaways: 1) the math is still very much against the Senate flipping unless the scandal to end all scandals embroils the Republican Party and irrevocably taints the brand. Sexual harassment ain't gonna cut it. Too many Republican voters are willing to dismiss women as opportunistic liars who are only in it for the fame, talk show circuit, and to destroy powerful men with lies and why didn't they speak up 40 years ago when they were teenagers hmm. You're not even going to be able to hang Moore around the necks of the party at large after Alabama elected Jones. To take the Senate, Democrats need to run the table on defense, including holding onto seats in four overtly hostile states and in three or four purplish states in a midterm, when Democratic turnout is unpredictable. THEN they need to win two seats from the 8 currently-Republican seats as well. One ain't going to cut it, because Pence still breaks ties. Their opportunities are pretty much Arizona and Nevada on that front (again, barring a massive scandal with a clear smoking gun). I'm just not seeing a realistic path to those last couple seats. Granted, I didn't expect Jones to beat Moore, either, but that's not exactly a replicable set of circumstances, either. The Jones win is a massive result for Democrats, but I think it's super temporary. In two years, Alabama going to nominate a Republican who isn't the dumpster fire Roy Moore is, and that seat will once again be a Republican seat. And it's not the sort of win they can leverage into greater gains unless it fires up the turnout machine. 2020 might be a more realistic goal for flipping the Senate; aside from the aforementioned Alabama, most of the (remarkably few) seats Democrats have to defend are in historically 'safe' territory. There aren't any obvious flip targets for the Republican seats, but there are some possibilities; Maine, Iowa and North Carolina are all winnable if Democrats drive their base to the polls to vote against Trump; Georgia keeps getting talked about in the same "demographics are destiny" breathless whispers that have followed Arizona and Texas around, but I don't think it's ready yet; and Kentucky could be in play if Bannon somehow engineers a primary coup against McConnell. I mean, maybe I'm wrong. Maybe there's a much bigger wave coming in 2018 than I think there is. I'm even skeptical that the House is going to flip, considering that Democrats stayed home in a census year, allowing Republicans to capture state legislatures just as it was time to redraw the boundaries. I wouldn't complain if Republicans lost control of either chamber, but I do think expectations should be tempered even after last night's result. |
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Gotta be a Kelly move. How long until Trump is done with him? She wasn't just fired, she was allegedly physically removed. |
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I see the words "tantrum" and "Kicking and screaming" show up in articles. I wonder if there is video. |
Supposedly she tried to get to Trump in the residence and had to be physically restrained by the Secret Service.
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Assuming these are questions a Fed judge is supposed to know, I would withdraw my nomination after being humiliated like this.
Trump Judicial Nominee Can't Answer Basic Questions About The Law In Disastrous Hearing | HuffPost Quote:
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And this guy was rated qualified by the ABA.
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Dear Lord, the tax bill is 1000 pages!
I'm sure the GOP will vote against such a long and complicated bill. GOP process arguments are never sincere. |
Daubert and a motion in limine are things any courtroom lawyer ought to know unreservedly. It'd be the equivalent of asking a candidate for football GM to explain the offsides rule and what a salary cap is.
Abstention is more arcane, but a federal judge candidate ought to be at least conversant. |
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The Senate is a pipe dream. If the 48-37 generic ballot (per 538) holds in November, they'll take the House despite the gerrymandering |
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Wouldn't want those scientists talking about evidence. |
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Wonder who made the list, given that Trump can't even spell those words |
If you were a betting man/woman, what are the odds that Trump and Co. fire Mueller over the holidays.
Edit: I ask because I read this earlier:
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Nevada hinges entirely on who the Republican nominee is. Heller committed political suicide by voting for Obamacare repeal, so he's vulnerable to Tarkanian. If he somehow fends Tarkanian off, and is the Republican nominee, Democrats pick up the seat. If he gets primaried by Tarkanian, like I think he will be, the seat stays comfortably Republican.
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Reid can do some amazing work in NV and his machine is still active.
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Is there a website called whatcrazyshittrumpdidtoday dot com? Cause if not that needs to happen.
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Not the same domain name, but this is what you're looking for: Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) | Twitter |
Looks likely that Trump will get a major win with the Tax bill (and history books). The extra bonus is the gutting of individual mandate (and, I assume, the ultimate collapse of Obamacare in its current state).
GOP tax plan: Key details of the final bill, explained - Dec. 15, 2017 Quote:
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It's funny how passing anything has now become a win. This bill is opposed by almost 60% of the public.
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It's a Pyrrhic win. |
I hear if we give businesses more money, they raise wages and pass it down to the workers and NOT the shareholders. The only thing standing in the way of businesses investing in their own operations is that pesky tax rate!
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