Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NayNay's Copy Paste thread about Trump, now with Scathing Memes!

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NayNay's Copy Paste thread about Trump, now with Scathing Memes!

    On Wednesday September 16, 2015 at 4:23 p.m. EST, I tweeted that we had just reached "Peak Trump". I believe that was the moment "The Donald" reached his maximum appeal to the American public. I could have added something along the lines of, "and our long national nightmare shall soon be over"; although you only get 140 characters.
    When it does end, we can only hope it will not have a lasting effect on the political and social discourse of our great country. Not only have we hit "Peak Trump", here are the five reasons I believe that "The Donald" will be done by December. Hopefully, we can then return to a more rational (if still not optimal) political process.

    The Act Is Getting Old
    Much like the Real Housewives of Wherever, and every single person in the Kardashian orbit, eventually the viewing public gets tired of the same thing. We all accept that Mr. Trump is a showman and he is treating our presidential race like his version of The Truman Show, but his storyline is not evolving. It is the same bigoted, blustery, simplistic, non-apologetic, vague routine. Sorry Donald, but the act is old, ticket sales are down and viewers are fleeing. By December, we will be ready for both the season and series finales.

    He Simply Has No Policies
    We are past the point in the campaign cycle when you can get away with platitudes and negative antics. People want serious answers to the serious challenges we face as a nation. They may be attracted to the destination, "Make America Great Again", but now the electorate needs to know the path. In the first few months of the presidential election cycle, catchy soundbites and name recognition drove ratings, oops, I mean polls. In a field of sixteen nominees, these things are even more important. The public (and critically the caucus goers of Iowa and the primary voters of New Hampshire), will start to demand answers. They will not accept, "I will replace Obamacare with something terrific." Compounding the issue is the fact that many of the positions Mr. Trump has taken in the past are antithetical to Republican primary voters. How will conservatives react to ads with Trump saying he identifies as a Democrat, he is pro-choice and Trump praising Hillary Clinton? By December the polls in the early voting states will reflect this need for actionable and clearly conservative policies.

    Campaigns Are Won On The Ground
    To sustain momentum in a long campaign you need a team, you need infrastructure and you need process. Campaigns are not won on momentum and force of personality. President Obama may have been the best orator and had a powerful message of hope and change in 2008, but he also had one of the most technologically adept and most experienced campaign teams ever assembled. Very few people of any substance have joined Donald's team. Without a campaign infrastructure gathering names and holding events; without neighbourhood and precinct captains; and without constant and targeted messaging on issues, a modern campaign can not sustain. By December the infrastructure of the real candidates will have knocked on neighbors doors and driven home the messaging and those boots on the ground will start to show up in the polls.

    He Doesn't Actually Have The Money
    The thing about the guy who says he has lots of money... he usually doesn't. First let's start with the $10 billion net worth Donald throws around. An actual analysis by Bloomberg Financial puts the number at $2.9 billion, still a lot obviously. But then there is the Debt. Trump is levered and all of his assets are encumbered (collateral for the loans he used to build/buy them). His disclosure to the Federal Election Commission lists $300 million in cash, securities and aircraft. We have all seen the aircraft, and they are expensive, leaving little actual cash on hand. A campaign needs cash to pay real staff, cash to build infrastructure, cash to run ads. Donald is clearly very wealthy, but he is not nearly as rich as he portrays. He simply doesn't have the money to sustain this charade for much longer. By December the bill will be getting too big and he will look for ways to pull the plug (maybe then realizing how much irreparable damage he has done to his brand, which he values at $3 billion).

    He Won't React Well When He Is Not The Leader
    Right now Trump is the center of attention, and he loves it. But when the above factors conspire to undermine his position in the polls, how will he react? Do you think he will show up to a debate when he is not center stage? Or, will he take his marbles and go home? When it becomes clear in December that he has a limited chance of winning Iowa and New Hampshire, will he want to subject himself to coming in second, third or even fourth? Absolutely not. He will probably say something like, "America is not ready to be great again" or "there will be too many entrenched interests against Trump". The sad thing is that he will actually believe what he says.
    So, at some point during December it will all come together. Donald will be dropping in the polls as his act grows tiresome, his lack of policies start to hurt and as other candidates' machines start to matter. At that point, he will see how much cash he has spent and decide he doesn't want to play this game anymore as he is no longer winning. If only December could come sooner.

  • #2
    The real truth is that liberals are scared shitless that no on trusts Hillary, who was supposed to just swoop in and take this race. Furthermore, the back up, Bernie Sanders is completely unelectable in this country.
    Originally posted by racrguy
    What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
    Originally posted by racrguy
    Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

    Comment


    • #3
      McCarthy Technically Accurate: Hillary’s Poll Numbers Reach Historic Low

      Clinton’s approval rating has dramatically dropped since her time at the State Department and Clinton now faces record low poll numbers




      House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy came under fire recently for comments the California Congressman made about Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers after the start of the House’s Benghazi panel.

      He may have been forced to walk back those comments for needlessly politicizing a very serious investigation, but for those keeping score he may have been technically accurate.

      The exact effect the Benghazi issue has had on Hillary isn’t fully clear, however, it is evident that Clinton’s approval rating has dramatically dropped since her time at the State Department- the number of Americans who view the former Secretary of State in a favorable light has plummeted and Clinton now faces record low poll numbers.

      She is even underwater with female voters, with nearly 50% having a negative opinion of her.

      ““Everybody thought Hillary Clinton was unbeatable, right?” McCarthy said on Fox News. “But we put together a Benghazi special committee, a select committee. What are her numbers today? Her numbers are dropping. Why? Because she’s untrustable. But no one would have known any of that had happened had we not fought.”

      A recent Fox News poll illustrates Clinton’s problems.

      “Hillary Clinton’s personal favorable ratings hit a low mark in the latest Fox News national poll…

      Some 38 percent of voters view Clinton favorably, down from 45 percent in May. The downward shift comes from the fact that half of women now rate her negatively. Positive views among Democrats are also down since May (-11 points).”

      Fox News Poll

      Opinion Of Hillary Clinton

      Now/ May Record High

      Low 2015 August 2012

      Favorable 38% 45% 63%

      Unfavorable 56% 49% 31%

      September 20-22, 2015

      Registered Voters ± 3% Pts.



      Fox News Poll

      Opinion Of Hillary Clinton

      May Record High

      Now 2015 August 2012

      Favorable 71% 82% 88%

      Unfavorable 23% 12% 9%

      September 20-22, 2015

      Democratic Registered Voters ±5% Pts.

      The Fox poll shows Clinton at a historic low.

      “Overall, a record high 56 percent of voters now have an unfavorable opinion of Clinton….”

      Clinton has been on a national roller coaster ride with her approval ratings ever since she first appeared as the feisty wife to then Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton.

      “She was actively involved in policy and the health care reform effort for her husband. And she came under fire in 1992 for stridently defending her own career, saying on 60 Minutes in 1992 that she wouldn’t be “some little woman standing by my husband like Tammy Wynette.”

      “I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was fulfill my profession, which I entered before my husband was in public life,” she said at another point. Hillary Clinton’s 1992 campaign comments made her one of the most divisive women in the country as first lady.”

      >>>Since then, Clinton dealt with her husband’s impeachment and the Monica Lewinsky scandal, among scores of others while in the White House. She ran for Senate from New York after leaving 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. in 2000, she ran for President in 2008, subsequently becoming Secretary of State after losing to Obama.

      After once enjoying sky-high poll numbers as Secretary of State, scandals like Benghazi, revelations from WikiLeaks, and now multiple investigations into the legality of her email system have ravaged Clinton-she’s gone from favorably viewed and trusted as one of America’s most popular politicians to freefall, viewed skeptically and in an extremely untrustworthy light.

      It’s not just Fox News polls that show Hillary in distress. According to Gallup, Clinton’s favorable raring is at a near record low of 41%, with over half of voters seeing her in a negative light.

      “ Dogged by continued scrutiny of her email practices as secretary of state, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s favorability with the American public has sunk to one of its lowest levels in Gallup’s 23-year trend. Currently, 41% of U.S. adults say they have a favorable opinion of the Democratic front-runner, while 51% hold an unfavorable view.

      Clinton’s deflated favorable rating reflects the challenging political environment she has faced recently. Her use of a private server and email account as secretary of state remains an ongoing controversy and has prompted congressional and FBI investigations.”

      Hillary Clinton Favorability Ratings, 1992-2015

      Gallup also analyzed Clinton’s downward spiral since first bursting on the American political scene in 1992.

      “Clinton’s sub-40% favorable ratings in 1992 were mostly a product of the public’s lack of familiarity with her, rather than any kind of broad unpopularity. By contrast, her current 41% favorable rating is arguably her worst, given her nearly universal name recognition. Her present rating is about as low as it was in March 2001, during her first few months in office as a U.S. senator from New York. Perhaps more importantly, it was also after controversial pardons that her husband, President Bill Clinton, granted at the end of his presidency, and after the Clintons took furnishings and other gifts that were White House property when they left.

      More generally, since Clinton emerged as a public figure in 1992, her favorability peaked at 67% in December 1998 after President Clinton was impeached, and waned in the years thereafter — bottoming out at 44% after the Clintons left the White House. Her favorability improved somewhat during her time in the Senate, reaching as high as 58% in 2007, just after she announced her first bid for the presidency.

      As secretary of state in Barack Obama’s administration, her favorability rating never fell below 60%. But upon leaving her cabinet post and returning to the political fray, Clinton saw her marks begin a downward slide, hastened by reports about her private email server earlier this year. In particular, her favorable ratings have come full circle among independents and Republicans, ultimately falling this year to the unflattering levels she received during her first presidential campaign.”

      Gallup also says that Clinton’s numbers may continue to flounder, possibly causing Democrats to look more seriously at Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, or even bring Vice President Joe Biden into the race.

      “As Clinton continues to field inquiries from the media and government into her email use as secretary of state, her favorable rating among national adults has fallen to near-record lows. But she remains generally liked among Democrats themselves, so it is still an open question as to whether media reports of her email situation will have an effect on her ability to obtain the Democratic presidential nomination.

      Nonetheless, if Clinton’s national image problem persists, this may cause concern for Democratic voters looking to back a nominee who can win the general election. At the moment, Sanders appears to be alone among Clinton’s current cadre of opposing contestants in showing signs of an increased positive position in Democrats’ minds, and he remains unknown to almost half of Democrats nationwide. This development may seem inviting for other potential candidates, such as Vice President Joe Biden.”
      Last edited by mustang_revival; 10-02-2015, 12:55 PM.
      WRX

      Comment


      • #4
        tl;dr

        Comment


        • #5
          In light of all the Hillary buzz and the Clinton 2016 infomercials in the form of miniseries and movies to be produced by “Inconvenient Truth” producer Courtney Sexton, it’s worth a look at what we’re actually dealing with.

          Is Hillary an unstoppable political force and inevitable first female president or scandal-ridden wannabe with a ton of baggage? Here are a few reasons to lean toward the latter.

          1. Hillary’s involvement in scandals started early.

          As a 27-year-old staffer, she was fired from the Watergate committee for fraud and unethical behavior.

          Her former boss, Jerry Zeifman, finally spoke out in 2008:

          “Because she was a liar,” Zeifman said in an interview last week. “She was an unethical, dishonest lawyer. She conspired to violate the Constitution, the rules of the House, the rules of the committee and the rules of confidentiality.”

          So maybe the lying isn’t so much a new thing.

          2. Seriously, she’s really into coverups.

          Then, in 1993 the Clintons took the White House, and seven White House travel office employees were fired for “mismanagement.” The White House spokeswoman at the time, Dee Dee Myers, suggested that the employees were under FBI investigation. Some said it was all a show, because they wanted to get friends of the Clintons in office. Who knows.

          From a June 2000 article in the Los Angeles Times:

          There is “substantial evidence” that First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton lied under oath in denying that she played a role in the 1993 White House travel office firings, independent counsel Robert W. Ray reported Thursday.

          The problem – again – was the cover up. They acted like they knew nothing, the truth never came out, and Hillary walked away.

          3. She lied about being shot at by a Bosnian sniper.

          Remember this badass report from Sharyl Attkisson? Worth revisiting.

          4. She really isn’t that good for women.

          Turns out that being a women in a high profile role isn’t enough to make you a role model for women. Hillary is novel as the first woman to have a real shot at the Presidency, and that earns her points with a lot of the feminists who seem to overlook some of her most glaring issues.

          As Camille Paglia wrote during the 2008 campaign:

          If they are to be truly equal, women must fight their own fights and not rely on a borrowed spotlight.

          Hillary has tried to have it both ways: to batten on her husband’s nostalgic popularity while simultaneously claiming to be a victim of sexism.

          Well, which is it? Are men convenient sugar daddies or condescending oppressors?

          And for all of the fanfare, all of the opportunities her husband has handed her, what has she really done with her power? The truth is that, well, not much.

          5. She hasn’t actually done much with her power.

          Her husband was elected to the presidency in 1992. Hillary, by all accounts, was incredibly influential in his administration. That much we know. Since then, she’s been a senator from the state of New York. And then under Obama, she served as Secretary of State. What are her legacies?

          Let’s start with her tenure as First Lady of the United States. The most memorable moments from her eight years as First Lady boil down to Monica Lewinsky, Whitewater, and the defeat of Hillarycare. In 1994, her flagship effort to pass sweeping health care reform was a failure – we had to wait until Barack Obama for that destruction.

          Then she had nine years in the U.S. Senate as the first woman elected from New York. She followed Sen. Chuck Schumer’s lead on getting funding to rebuild after 9/11, and then supported Bush’s military action in Afghanistan. She befriended Newt Gingrich to try to revive universal health care. She was re-elected easily in 2006, but by 2007 she was running for president and held the Democrat line. She served half of her second term before stepping down to accept her new position as Barack Obama’s Secretary of State.

          As Secretary of State she was undoubtedly hard working and competent, but is that enough to make her a remarkable Secretary of State? She visited 112 countries. There were no major gaffes or screw-ups (which in and of itself is a win for a Clinton). Her Russia Reset Button fell flat, and they still hate us. She gave a beautiful speech the night Osama bin Laden was killed. Overall, it was an unremarkable run that boils down to one horrible night in Libya, where she failed to answer the 3 a.m. phone call.

          6. Benghazi.

          On Sept. 11, 2012, Ambassador Chris Stevens and 3 other Americans were murdered by Islamic militants in Benghazi, Libya. Originally the attack was blamed on outrage due to an anti-Muslim YouTube video, and then-UN Ambassador Susan Rice made the rounds to all the Sunday shows to denounce the hate speech. For weeks, Hillary adamantly supported the ridiculous notion that these were “spontaneous demonstrations,” despite overwhelming evidence that she knew from the beginning that this was simply false.

          More questions went unanswered. There were heated hearings, investigations, accusations, and cover-ups. The investigation still has not found out why requests for help were denied or who was responsible.

          [Follow Rare’s coverage of the ongoing Benghazi scandal here]

          One thing, however, is clear. As CEO of the State Department, Hillary Clinton is ultimately responsible. Frustrated with the line of questioning during the hearing, Hillary exploded. The clip below shows how she feels about figuring out how the murders actually happened.

          The truth is that Hillary has a long, checkered career, full of scandals and lies. Right now, she’s all the Democrats have to succeed Barack Obama, but she may very well not be the unstoppable political machine that they make her out to be.

          For the sake of America, let’s hope that she isn’t.
          WRX

          Comment


          • #6
            -Post entitled "The Truth About Trump"
            -4 of 5 of the points are opinions with an additional dubious point

            Cmon Rodney, you can do better.
            Originally posted by lincolnboy
            After watching Games of Thrones, makes me glad i was not born in those years.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by DOHCTR View Post
              -Post entitled "The Truth About Trump"
              -4 of 5 of the points are opinions with an additional dubious point

              Cmon Rodney, you can do better.
              Opinions are truths in this day and age.

              Comment


              • #8
                Let me make a post about the truth and then fill it with a bunch of nonsensical opinion!
                Originally posted by racrguy
                What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
                Originally posted by racrguy
                Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                  Opinions are truths in this day and age.
                  Deep man, real deep.
                  Originally posted by lincolnboy
                  After watching Games of Thrones, makes me glad i was not born in those years.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    HRC will be president.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by jw33 View Post
                      HRC will be president.
                      c'mon man

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by DOHCTR View Post
                        -Post entitled "The Truth About Trump"
                        -4 of 5 of the points are opinions with an additional dubious point

                        Cmon Rodney, you can do better.
                        surely you dont think i sit around researching these things do you? I copy and paste, sometimes bold a few lines, and maybe even capslock a few words. otherwise it is all written and assembled by someone with way more time than me. I bring it over here to get the opinions of people i actually know.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          haha
                          WRX

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by DOHCTR View Post
                            Deep man, real deep.
                            As deep as Trumps pockets.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                              As deep as Trumps pockets.
                              *not as deep as he would have you to believe

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X