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EzraS
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01 Aug 2018, 6:56 am

God brought us Donald Trump.





Think about it..... think about it.....





Either you got it or I pissed you off.



kraftiekortie
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01 Aug 2018, 10:03 am

Trump himself believes that....that's the scary part.



Drake
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01 Aug 2018, 10:12 am

Sweetleaf wrote:
Darmok wrote:
Student suspended for wearing pro-Trump 'build the wall' t-shirt wins $25,000 settlement and an apology from his principal

An Oregon high school student will be given a $25,000 settlement and a written apology from his principal after a judge found orders for the teen to remove a pro-Trump shirt he had worn to class were in breach of his first amendment rights.

Addison Barnes, 18, was a senior at Liberty High School in January, when he was suspended for refusing to cover up a t-shirt promoting Donald Trump's proposed border wall.

The teenager wore the shirt, which reads: 'The wall just got 10 feet taller', to a politics class on a day there would be discussion of immigration. I love how some right wingers think they are the only ones entitled to freedom of speech.

He was asked to cover the shirt by the school's assistant principal, after the dean of students reported some of his classmates felt 'intimidated and threatened', court documents show.

When he uncovered the shirt again, he was told he could cover it back up, change into a different shirt, or go home. The school counted his choice to go home as a suspension.

Shortly after, Barnes filed a lawsuit against the school – and won.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... ement.html


Oh that poor snowflake...but as I recall students assembling about gun violence in schools, did not get such a pass for their freedom of speech. But the accepted their school mandated punishments of detentions and what not with dignity.

The student is in the right. He showed up to a political debate wearing a T-shirt with his opinion on the topic at hand and got punished because it wasn't the "right" opinion. He didn't even get any money, that 25 grand is just paying off his legal bill. He wasn't doing anything to disrupt his class unlike the people who walked out for the gun protests.



EzraS
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01 Aug 2018, 11:26 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
Trump himself believes that....that's the scary part.


What other things has God brought?


Like to Egypt?



Get it now?



sly279
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01 Aug 2018, 1:08 pm

Sweetleaf wrote:
Darmok wrote:
Student suspended for wearing pro-Trump 'build the wall' t-shirt wins $25,000 settlement and an apology from his principal

An Oregon high school student will be given a $25,000 settlement and a written apology from his principal after a judge found orders for the teen to remove a pro-Trump shirt he had worn to class were in breach of his first amendment rights.

Addison Barnes, 18, was a senior at Liberty High School in January, when he was suspended for refusing to cover up a t-shirt promoting Donald Trump's proposed border wall.

The teenager wore the shirt, which reads: 'The wall just got 10 feet taller', to a politics class on a day there would be discussion of immigration. I love how some right wingers think they are the only ones entitled to freedom of speech.

He was asked to cover the shirt by the school's assistant principal, after the dean of students reported some of his classmates felt 'intimidated and threatened', court documents show.

When he uncovered the shirt again, he was told he could cover it back up, change into a different shirt, or go home. The school counted his choice to go home as a suspension.

Shortly after, Barnes filed a lawsuit against the school – and won.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... ement.html


Oh that poor snowflake...but as I recall students assembling about gun violence in schools, did not get such a pass for their freedom of speech. But the accepted their school mandated punishments of detentions and what not with dignity.


Where?
Most schools publicly supported it and sent teachers as event organizers and punished kids who didn’t want to go on the walk out. Mean 5/6 year olds were “walking out”(their teacher organized it” a lot of schools even used school buses to bus kids to locations, like in my city, yeah sure seems the walk out kids were punished. Now the pro gun kids who did a similar walk out later got punished as schools are liberal . I don’t remmebwr any kids getting in trouble for the walk out for lives crap other then the ones who refused to go and therefore were considered skipping class cause they stayed in the classroom with no teacher(cause teacher left to organize the walkout)



Drake
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01 Aug 2018, 1:17 pm

I always thought the protests that involved skipping class just looked like an excuse to skip class. It would have been more impactful if the students were doing it on their own time.



ASPartOfMe
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01 Aug 2018, 7:04 pm

There is a difference free speech-wise between walking out of class and wearing a political tee shirt.

STUDENTS’ RIGHTS: SPEECH, WALKOUTS, AND OTHER PROTESTS - ACLU

Quote:
Do I have First Amendment rights in school?
Yes. You do not lose your right to free speech just by walking into school. You have the right to speak out, hand out flyers and petitions, and wear expressive clothing in school — as long as you don’t disrupt the functioning of the school or violate the school’s content-neutral policies.

What counts as “disruptive” will vary by context, but a school disagreeing with your position or thinking your speech is controversial or in “bad taste” is not enough to qualify. Courts have upheld students’ rights to wear things like an anti-war armband, an armband opposing the right to get an abortion, and a shirt supporting the LGBT community. And “content-neutral policies” means rules that have nothing to do with the message you’re expressing, like dress codes. So, for example, a school can prohibit you from wearing hats — because that rule is not based on what the hats say — but it can’t prohibit you from wearing only pink pussycat hats or pro-NRA hats.

Can my school discipline me for participating in a walkout?
Yes. Because the law in most places requires students to go to school, schools can discipline you for missing class. But what they can’t do is discipline you more harshly because of the political nature of or the message behind your action.

The exact punishment you could face will vary by your state, school district, and school.

Some school districts ok'd the walkouts, arguably making those absences excused ones. Some school districts had in school events such as assemblies while other schools did punish students for participating in the walkouts. Some school districts did punish students who walked out. As far as I know, nobody has challenged school districts that allowed the walkouts for possibly breaking the law by allowing the walkouts.


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02 Aug 2018, 11:15 am

Pastor praises Trump as 'pro-black' at prison reform event

President Donald Trump was lauded by inner-city pastors, including one who said he may go down as the "most pro-black president" in recent history, during a White House roundtable on Wednesday that was focused on efforts to reform the prison system.

Trump told the group, which included pastors and bishops from across the country, that his administration has been making progress on efforts to make it easier for prisoners to re-enter society and find work.

"When we say hire American, we mean all Americans," Trump said.

Among those gathered was Darrell Scott, a black Ohio pastor who was an early supporter of Trump's campaign and has been working with the administration on urban and prison issues.

"This is probably the most pro-active administration regarding urban America and the faith-based community in my lifetime," Scott told the group, adding, "This is probably going be ... the most pro-black president that we've had in our lifetime."

He compared Trump to his predecessor, Barack Obama, the nation's first African-American president, and said: "This president actually wants to prove something to our community, our faith-based community and our ethnic community."

"The last president didn't feel like he had to," he added, saying of Obama: "He got a pass."


https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireSto ... s-56972301


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StickyVicky
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02 Aug 2018, 11:34 am

CBC reports: So-called 'Trump Anxiety Disorder' plaguing clients of mental health professionals

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What's been called "Trump Anxiety Disorder" has been on the rise in the months following the election, according to mental-health professionals from across the country who report unusually high levels of politics-related stress in their practices.


Just when I think the salt mine is running dry, Donald Trump hits another motherlode.



Darmok
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02 Aug 2018, 12:04 pm

StickyVicky wrote:
CBC reports: So-called 'Trump Anxiety Disorder' plaguing clients of mental health professionals
Quote:
What's been called "Trump Anxiety Disorder" has been on the rise in the months following the election, according to mental-health professionals from across the country who report unusually high levels of politics-related stress in their practices.

Just when I think the salt mine is running dry, Donald Trump hits another motherlode.

"Trump Anxiety Disorder" is the polite name for "Trump Derangement Syndrome." :D

In related news — Media bias? What media bias? Left-wing institutional racism? What left-wing institutional racism?

This creature was just hired by the New York Times Editorial Board:

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03 Aug 2018, 8:45 pm

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03 Aug 2018, 9:51 pm

Internal Documents Show How Trump Administration Misled Public on Poverty

https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/08/02/in ... n-poverty/

Quote:
ter a U.N. agency issued a report in May on the state of poverty in the United States, concluding that 40 million Americans are poor and more than 5 million live in “Third World conditions,” the Trump administration ridiculed the findings.

In an unusually harsh statement the following month, the administration labeled the report “inaccurate, inflammatory and irresponsible,” and included its own data in a rebuttal.

But according to internal State Department emails and a document obtained by Foreign Policy and Coda Story, a nonprofit crisis reporting website, the economic officials consulted on a draft of the rebuttal questioned the accuracy of the data the administration was citing.

Their comments, typed into the margins of the draft or included in emails, were either watered down or ignored altogether. As a result, the statement the administration issued in June included misleading data and painted an overly optimistic picture of the American economy.

Next to a line in the draft which reads: “The U.S. is entering a new era of economic growth and prosperity,” an official from the White House Council of Economic Advisers remarked that the economic growth had long predated Trump and said the trajectory might not last.

“Already 8-9 years long … which started under Obama and we inherited and then expanded. But it will end prob in 1 – 2 years. So I’d not get into this,” the official wrote.

Again, the final version of the statement, put out by the U.S. Mission to Geneva on June 22, ignored the suggestion and used the original language.

In some cases, comments by the officials did prompt a change in the text.

“Wages haven’t really picked up, other than for supervisors,” one official from the Council of Economic Advisers wrote in response to a line in the draft about salaries going up. The line was deleted from the final statement. “This triggers the left—best to leave it off,” the official wrote.

The Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights report included a harsh condemnation of the Trump administration’s economic policies, saying in part that tax cuts and reductions in social spending had exacerbated inequality in the country. Though it cited the United States’ own Census Bureau for the data on poverty, the report triggered broad anger across the administration.

The United States has been sharply critical of the U.N. Human Rights Council for years, accusing it of having a chronic bias against Israel. The poverty report seemed to heighten tensions dramatically.

As officials drafted their response, Mari Stull, a senior Trump administration appointee in the State Department’s International Organization Bureau, solicited input from economists at the Census Bureau and the Council of Economic Advisers.

It gave some of the officials just a few hours to comment on the draft.

At one point, the draft asserts that “people experiencing a housing crisis in a community have fair and equal access and are connected to available housing and related assistance based on their strengths and needs.”

In the margin, an official from the Council of Economic Advisers wrote: “Massive waiting lists for vouchers—not sure this is our strong suit,” an apparent reference to the U.S. government’s program to help low-income families obtain housing.

The draft also also noted the $18 billion had been allocated to Puerto Rico after devastating hurricanes in 2017. In response, an official from the Council of Economic Advisers wrote: “Pretty sure that’s peanuts compared to what the mainland got so you may want to rethink this.”

Officials at the Council of Economic Advisers did not respond to FP’s specific questions about the drafting of the statement. But White House Deputy Press Secretary Lindsay Walters said the council was “in complete agreement with the economic assessment in the United States’ rebuttal to the U.N.’s Report on Poverty.”

The State Department’s response appeared to ignore the statistics of the U.S. Census Bureau, relying instead on research compiled earlier this year by the conservative Heritage Foundation, which argued that only 250,000 people are living in extreme poverty.

At least one economist at the Census Bureau challenged the data.

“What is your source for stating material hardship is down by 77 percent since 1980?” wrote Trudi Renwick in an email. It’s unclear from the documents whether she received a response. But the draft was modified slightly to say in the final version that based on “some measures of consumption” poverty was down 77 percent since 1980.

The final statement cited the Heritage Foundation report, saying that most families living in deep poverty “have air conditioning, a cell phone, a computer, and a DVD player or similar device. Few have been evicted from their home or even had their utilities disconnected for non-payment. Hunger is rare.”

The U.S rebuttal to the U.N. report also claims that unemployment is at its lowest point in almost 50 years. However according to a June 1 statement by Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta and data from the Bureau of Labor statistics, unemployment is at its lowest point in only 18 years.

In another email, Mari Stull, the senior State Department advisor, described the U.N. report as “propaganda.” She ridiculed the finding that the United States has the highest child poverty rates among the mostly high-income countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

“Based upon my own experience, my sons are destitute poor and living off the welfare state of Mom—so guess they contributed to the ‘youth poverty’ crisis in America,” she wrote.

A source familiar with the exchange said many people who received Stull’s email within the State Department were “outraged” and “sickened” by the remark.

Stull also suggested in an email that the U.N. report contributed to the Trump administration’s decision to withdraw from the Human Rights Council in June. “Biased, politically charged propaganda like this is def part of our justification for US withdrawal from HRC,” she wrote.

Officials said at the time that the withdrawal had to do with what the U.S. perceives as the council’s bias against Israel.

Stull was a food lobbyist and wine blogger before the Trump administration appointed her to a senior leadership post at the State Department’s Bureau of International Organization Affairs, which oversees U.S. diplomatic relations with the United Nations.

In June, Foreign Policy reported that Stull has been quietly vetting the social media pages of career diplomats and American employees of international institutions to test their loyalty to the Trump administration.

She dismissed FP’s reporting as “factually inaccurate” and sexist in an interview with the website Heavy.com. The State Department did not respond to multiple requests by Foreign Policy for an interview or comment from Stull.

Keith Harper, the former U.S. ambassador to the Human Rights Council, explained that while it was not unusual for the United States to disagree with the findings of a council report, it would usually respond “soberly and dispassionately.”

“[W]e would say that we support the work, we appreciate the analysis, here are a few ways that we disagree with the analysis … this does none of that,” he said.

“[This] is the kind of tone that I would expect from China or North Korea or Egypt or Bahrain,” he said.


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auntblabby
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03 Aug 2018, 10:03 pm

to the trumpioids, the people without money just don't count. for anything. not even as humans. much less citizens.



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04 Aug 2018, 12:43 pm

It feels good to get off the Democrat's plantation. And there's six and a half more years to go.

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04 Aug 2018, 12:51 pm

Darmok wrote:
It feels good to get off the Democrat's plantation. And there's six and a half more years to go.

Image


Further background in this area:

George Bush got as high as 41%. (Gallup, June 2002 - Bush may have even got higher than 41% at some point as well)

So, yeah, Trump's approval ratings among minorities is still pathetically low - even compared to previous Republican administrations.

That also said, Bush's approval rating was typically much higher than Trump's as well - so Trumpsters being trigger happy for any ratings bump that is still lower than Bush's (the prior Republican administration) is always amusing. What would have been a nightmarish sign of decline for Bush is a best day scenario in Trump's world. :lol:

https://news.gallup.com/poll/116500/presidential-approval-ratings-george-bush.aspx



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04 Aug 2018, 6:15 pm

Anyone who votes against him is clearly a racist.

John James, Black and Republican, Thinks He Can Crack the ‘Blue Wall’ in Michigan

Mr. James, 37, is a West Point graduate who spent eight years in the Army. He is the president of his family-run business. And he wants to become a senator.

Nowhere on anyone’s handicapping lists of tossup Senate races will you find Michigan. And nowhere on the roster of A-list Republican challengers would you have found John James.

Until last week. With two tweets and his caps lock on, President Trump endorsed Mr. James in the Michigan Republican primary — “SPECTACULAR!” — giving the underdog campaign a jolt just before voters head to the polls on Tuesday.

Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump
@JohnJamesMI, who is running in the Republican Primary in the great state of Michigan, is SPECTACULAR! Vote on August 7th. Rarely have I seen a candidate with such great potential. West Point graduate, successful businessman and a African American leader...

Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump
John is strong on crime and borders, loves our Military, our Vets and our Second Amendment. He will be a star. He has my full and total Endorsement!

Now Mr. James hopes he will get the chance to pull off in the general election what he has done in the primary: turn a lopsided race into a very close contest.


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/03/us/p ... higan.html


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