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Guys, why is it racist to ask a simple question:
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I noticed neither of you shared a link showing that the FBI Investigation was over. Neither of you provided a story stating the FBI never started such an investigation......yet each of you started slinging —RACIST—??? I must say I was somewhat taken aback this morning when reading the BREAKING NEWS about Ilhan Omar giving campaign budget funds to her boyfriend that somehow I missed these recent 2020 news stories regarding Omar’s supposed marriage to her brother: January 26, 2020 FBI reviewing claims Ilhan Omar married her brother January 26, 2020 Second Report Emerges Confirming Feds Reviewing Claims That Ilhan Omar Married Brother January 27, 2020 FBI exploring evidence that Ilhan Omar may have married her brother: Report January 27, 2020 FBI Investigating Whether Ilhan Omar Married Her Brother January 27, 2020 FBI investigating whether Trump-hating congresswoman Ilhan Omar married her own brother to help him move to the US February 2, 2020 FBI Investigating Claims That Rep. Ilhan Omar Married Her Brother To Get Him To U.S. I’m willing to read any news story you can post where such an FBI Investigation isn’t taking place, but until then......keep your racist comments to yourself!!! Quote:
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lol @ beauregard parroting russian bots
anyway, enough with the yellow press, let's discuss trumpence's plans to cut medicare: https://twitter.com/DrRobDavidson/st...56090713161728 |
I've heard everyone was losing their shit last night over unofficial "instant result" reported data and needed to calm the fuck down until actually official results were tabulated and released.
Phones glued to our hands bit everyone in the ass with overreactions. So calm the fuck down, and check back in a day or two. |
Complete chaos: Results from Democratic Iowa caucuses delayed, candidates getting angry
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Now this is an honest question, one I hope gets mentioned during tonights State Of The Union! Quote:
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Cockroaches of the Trump economy
Paul Krugman February 4, 2020 A worker assembles cabinet doors at Riverside RV, builders of recreational vehicles, in Indiana in January.Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Author Headshot By Paul Krugman Opinion Columnist Today’s column is about zombie ideas, a term I didn’t invent but did, I think, do more than anyone else to popularize. As I explain, a zombie idea is one that should have been killed by evidence but just keeps shambling along, eating people’s brains; the two biggest zombies in U.S. politics are belief in the magical power of tax cuts and climate change denial. I’m pretty sure, however, that I did invent the term “cockroach ideas,” which are false ideas that you do manage to get rid of for a while, but keep coming back. And it occurred to me that the current state of the U.S. economy offers an occasion to think about cockroaches past. We are, of course, experiencing low unemployment. There’s no mystery about how we got here: Trump has engaged in deficit spending on an unprecedented scale for an economy with low unemployment. The 2019 deficit was about $300 billion more than the Congressional Budget Office projected in the summer of 2017, before the Trump tax cut. That’s a lot of fiscal stimulus, even if it was badly designed. In fact, it’s close to the increase in the deficit created by the Obama stimulus at its peak in 2010. The real surprise is how hot we seem to be able to run the economy without inflationary pressures. Even I would have expected to see some acceleration of inflation at 3.5 percent unemployment. But the people who should really be surprised, and asking themselves how they got it so wrong, are the many, many Very Serious People who insisted, after the financial crisis, that high unemployment was “structural.” That is, they rejected the notion that millions of Americans were jobless because of inadequate demand, a problem that could be solved by pumping up spending, say by investing in infrastructure. Instead, they declared that technology was eliminating jobs, and/or that Americans lacked the skills to be productive in the modern economy, and/or that Obamacare was destroying the incentives to work and discouraging the private sector from hiring. You aren’t hearing those arguments much these days, although Andrew Yang has somehow built a campaign around the theme that runaway productivity growth is destroying jobs even as actual productivity growth is the lowest it has been in generations. Why were claims of massive structural unemployment so popular six or seven years ago? Part of the answer, I suspect, is that these were also the years when conventional wisdom decided that the budget deficit, not mass unemployment, was our biggest problem — and it was inconvenient to accept the idea that fiscal austerity would keep unemployment high. So claiming that unemployment was structural was a way to avoid facing up to the costs of the deficit obsession. Beyond that, however, some people have always found the notion that unemployment is basically a demand problem, easily solved by increasing government spending and printing more money, disturbing. It feels to them that big problems must have big causes, and can’t have easy solutions. So every time we go through a period of high unemployment, claims that it’s structural pop up and get taken very seriously. It happened during the 1930s, when many people derided the idea that just spending more could restore full employment. Then, of course, came a major fiscal stimulus program, otherwise known as World War II, and suddenly all those unqualified Americans were fully and productively employed. Anyway, the important point is that high unemployment was never structural, and the fact that we allowed it to persist for so long was a great tragedy — one for which the peddlers of cockroach ideas bear some responsibility. Andrew Yang has nothing on Kurt Vonnegut, whose novel “Player Piano” depicted a society in which automation has destroyed work — right in the middle of the great postwar boom, a generation during which real wages and median family income doubled. Great novelist, bad economist. Just to be clear: technology can destroy some jobs, and deal body blows to regional economies. A fascinating podcast on the rise and fall of Glasgow shipbuilding. Feedback If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to friends. They can sign up here. If you want to share your thoughts on an item in this week’s newsletter or on the newsletter in general, please email me at krugman-newsletter@nytimes.com. |
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The New York Post? The Daily Wire? blackamericaweb??? Jesus, man, you're either stupid enough to believe these are real sources, or stupid enough to believe that we wouldn't notice. And we can call you racist when you seem to take way more interest in criticism of a Somalian-born Muslim, or an African-American, then you do in a white (or orange) politician. |
i live within a stone's throw of Iowa, so i can make fun of them if I want :P
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is pronounced Ioway!
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Oh choc-E-choc, young juvenile, why are you so angry?
Your Somalian-born Muslim evidently misused campaign funds for her boyfriend. While reading news reports about that, I saw recent stories from last week concerning her possible marriage to her brother. I shared each of those stories for the PURPOSE of others such as yourself to READ THEM!!! You call me stupid for believing them, but I’ve stated no such thing! I asked a simple question: Quote:
Of course, in typical choc-E-choc style, you ignore the question. You provide zero links to news reports that she didn’t marry her brother or that she is no longer being investigated by the FBI. Possibly you are saying that all those websites colluded to release the same —FALSE— stories all within a few days of each other last week??? I’m assuming they colluded because what are the odds each would randomly do so individually? Quote:
I understand why Symbol’s referred to those websites as yellow press, that’s why I said I was somewhat taken aback......not because I believed the story, because the numerous reports within a few days of each other. Quote:
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Democrats hate Trump more than they love America
Speaker Of The House rips up the speech ![]() Bitter Pelosi ripped up our last surviving Tuskegee Airmen who is 100. Pelosi Vomit ripped up the survival of a child born at 21 weeks Speaker of the Vomit ripped up the mourning families of Rocky Jones and Kayla Mueller Sick Nancy ripped up a Service Members reunion with his family This is her sad legacy!!! ![]() Trump has highest approval rating of his Presidency Trump gave a historic state of the union speech Trump will be acquitted tomorrow!!! Meanwhile in Iowa......DEMS can’t count a simple caucus result. |
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bunch of Iowegians |
the presidential medal of freedom given to a racist piece of shit while a 100 year old tuskegee airman is sitting right next says it all
also a pity that savage clone erased his posts here |
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Earlier in the evening, President Trump pinned stars on Charles McGee in the Oval Office, bestowing upon him the prestigious position of Brigadier General. ![]() Isn’t the Medal Of Freedom a civilian award? ![]() |
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well, just to let you know, I'm all of 58 years old and not reactionary in any way! |
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good decoration for his soon to come grave:p |
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Fair play to Mitt Romney for standing against the tide of shit
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84 Days from the first public impeachment hearing (November 13) and today’s conclusion at a cost of $100 million dollars.
Roughly two years and $34 million for the Mueller Report How much time and money will the DEMS waste on the next sham? |
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Obama played golf too! ![]() |
Yes, and the website says that. But nowhere near as much. And Trump is on record as criticising Obama for how much golf he played.
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bytoe is on record for dead neurons |
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I never understood why Citizen Trump criticized President Obama for playing golf. Possibly because unemployment was high, the economy was stagnant and Obamacare was over budget and a complete trainwreck? If Barack Obama was a billionaire who owned country clubs and golf courses around the world, perhaps he would have played as much golf as Donald? As I recall, the Obama’s loved vacationing in Hawaii and Martha’s Vineyard (believe they went ever year he held office) and it’s a President’s right to do so! |
impeachment is part of the political options at our behest. Is that a lot of money spent for no change? Sure. Could it have been spent in worse ways? you betcha. Is there more money than that being spent in worse ways? you're god damn right there is.
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Impeachment was a complete waste of time and the dem establishment are inept and need to resign. Nancy Pelosi ripping up his speech while also voting for his obscene military budget lol. Useless.
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Trump will emerge at noon to see his shadow, forecast one more year of fascism
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Secret Service has paid rates as high as $650 a night for rooms at Trump’s properties
Since Trump took office, he has visited his own properties on 342 days, always accompanied by Secret Service agents. Trump’s company has charged the Secret Service $650 per night for rooms at Mar-a-Lago, and $17,000 a month for a cottage in Bedminster. Taxpayers foot the bill. ![]() https://www.washingtonpost.com/graph...vice-spending/ |
Vindman out in the day of long knives. Look for em to come after Mittbot soon. Yeah, alienate some Mormons, too, Donnie!
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![]() #What a man, what a man, what a man, What a mighty good man# |
What Terrence Malick film is that?
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roger stone is getting his sentence reduced by tweet
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They Are Dropping Like Flies ![]() |
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