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Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Hillary Clinton Screaming Obscenities and Throwing Objects in Election Night Meltdown




On a tip from Ed Kilbane



As the tables turned, and Trump's MSM concocted arduous path to 270 became hers, and the walls crumbling around her, she descended into a fit of rage. Now we know why Podesta had to take the stage.

What was that about temperament?



Bitter, vindictive, irate, sorrow, contemplating what could have been...God, I love it so.



The mystery of Hillary Clinton, milk-carton missing on election night, appears solved.

A Tuesday of catharsis for Donald Trump voters turned into an evening of rage for Hillary Clinton. The Democratic presidential nominee, anticipating the postelection reaction of many of her supporters, began shouting profanities, banging tables, and turning objects not nailed down into projectiles.

“Sources have told The American Spectator that on Tuesday night, after Hillary realized she had lost, she went into a rage,” R. Emmett Tyrrell reports. “Secret Service officers told at least one source that she began yelling, screaming obscenities, and pounding furniture. She picked up objects and threw them at attendants and staff. She was in an uncontrollable rage.”

The appearance of campaign chairman John Podesta at Manhattan’s Javitz Center, and the dematerialization of his heretofore ubiquitous charge, perplexed in the first hours of Wednesday.

“They’re still counting votes, and every vote should count,” Podesta declared to a sad and stunned hall. “Several states are too close to call, so we’re not going to have anything more to say tonight.”

As Podesta recalcitrantly refused to recognize reality early Wednesday morning, Hillary Clinton called Donald Trump to offer congratulations. The juxtaposition of the campaign chairman publicly vowing to fight around the time the candidate privately conceded the election left observers scratching their heads.

Tyrrell’s reporting indicates that Mrs. Clinton’s mental state made it impossible for her to address her supporters on election night as custom requests. So, instead, Podesta gave a rah-rah speech on a boo-hoo night to cover for the absence of the first woman president, her fireworks, and her victory speech shout-outs to the mothers of the Black Lives Matter martyrs.

“She is not done yet,” Podesta claimed. Tyrrell’s reporting indicates that, indeed, Clinton remained far from done.

“Her aides could not allow her to come out in public,” he writes. “It would take her hours to calm down. So Podesta went out and gave his aimless speech. I wish we could report on Bill’s whereabouts but we cannot.”

Bill appeared the following day at Hillary’s belated concession speech wearing a purple tie but, thankfully, no purple marks about his face, suggesting experience dictated avoidance the previous evening.

“People say they’re amazed Bill’s marriage survived,” Tyrrell noted to Breitbart. “I’m amazed Bill survived his marriage.”

Tyrrell’s reporting remains a thorn in the side of the Clintons more than two decades after the American Spectator published its Troopergate stories detailing Bill Clinton’s escapades as told by his Arkansas security detail, stories that first referenced Paula Jones and pushed the president on the road to impeachment. Nearly 19 years after Hillary Clinton imagined a “vast, right-wing conspiracy” out to get her husband, the cabal’s charter member again relies on the accounts of the Clintons’ long-suffering security to unmask the public faces worn by the power couple now out of power.

“In the ’90s, we published several pieces that documented her throwing lamps and books,” Tyrrell tells Breitbart. “This happened pretty often. She has such a foul mouth that the Arkansas state troopers learned a thing or two from her. She has a foul mouth and a good throwing arm.”






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Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Canada to build a wall and ask US to pay for it!



On a tip from Ed Kilbane



The flood of Trump-fearing American liberals sneaking across the border into Canada has intensified beginning early this morning. Trump’s victory is prompting an exodus among left-leaning Americans who fear they'll soon be required to hunt, pray, pay taxes, and live according to the Constitution.

Canadian border residents say it's not uncommon to see dozens of sociology professors, liberal arts majors, global-warming activists, and "green" energy proponents crossing their fields at night.



"I went out to milk the cows the other day, and there was a Hollywood producer huddled in the barn," said southern Manitoba farmer Red Greenfield, whose acreage borders North Dakota. "He was cold, exhausted and hungry, and begged me for a latte and some free-range chicken. 

In an effort to stop the illegal aliens, Greenfield erected higher fences, but the liberals scaled them. He then installed loudspeakers that blared Rush Limbaugh across the fields, but they just stuck their fingers in their ears and kept coming. Officials are particularly concerned about smugglers who meet liberals just south of the border, pack them into electric cars, and drive them across the border, where they are simply left to fend for themselves after the battery dies.




"A lot of these people are not prepared for our rugged conditions," an Alberta border patrolman said. "I found one carload without a single bottle of Perrier water, or any gemelli with shrimp and arugula. All they had was a little Napa Valley cabernet and some kale chips. 

When liberals are caught, they're sent back across the border, often wailing that they fear persecution from Trump high-hairers.

Rumors are circulating about plans being made to build re-education camps where liberals will be forced to drink domestic beer, study the Constitution, and find jobs that actually contribute to the economy.

Canadian citizens have complained that the illegal immigrants are creating an organic-broccoli shortage, are buying up all the Barbara Streisand CD's, and are overloading the internet while downloading jazzercise apps to their cell phones.

"I really feel sorry for American liberals, but the Canadian economy just can't support them," an Ottawa resident said. "After all, how many art-history majors does one country need?"








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Obama races to protect his achievements from Trump





The word "achievement" and Obama have no commonality. In particular, the Iran nuke deal  is more akin with the Apocalypse than an achievement.

If it remains the status quo (hope not) I can hear it now when they test fire their first Nuke.

"It's Trump's fault."

BTW...If you remember after Bush left office he said nothing and faded from the limelight. Don't expect the same from the narcissist.

The article below is from NBC. It would have to be to put Barry and achievement in the same sentence.
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They look about as comfortable together as Hillary and Julian Assange.


From the Iran nuclear deal to the Paris climate change agreement to Obamacare, President, and his team plan to spend the next two months aggressively defending and implementing these policies, despite President-Elect campaign promises to end them once he takes office. 

"To unravel a deal that is working and keeping Iran from getting a nuclear weapon would be hard to explain," President Obama said on Monday, in his first press conference since Trump's election victory.

"It becomes more difficult to undo something that is working," Obama added.


The Obama administration argues that the election results should not prevent the sitting president from governing in his final weeks in office. And this approach could help Obama further entrench these policies and complicate Trump's plans to unwind them. 

Obama, as he visits Greece, Germany and Peru this week and meets with a number of world leaders on his final foreign trip as president, is expected to encourage the international community to continue implementation of both the Paris and Iran agreements. 

"We obviously believe in the importance of the Iran deal, which had significantly rolled back Iran's nuclear program and averts yet another conflict in the Middle East. We believe in the importance of the Paris agreement, which encompasses almost every country in the world and offers an opportunity to fight climate change. So these are issues where our views are well known. We will run through the tape with the implementation of those policies," Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser for Obama told reporters in a press call. 

Obamacare enrollment started on Nov. 1 and will end on Jan. 31, about 11 days after Obama leaves office. The president's team wants to get 13.8 million people to enroll or re-enroll over the next few months. 

"We're all in," said Marjorie Connolly, a spokesman at the Department of Health and Human Services, referring to Affordable Care Act enrollment.

More than 1.5 million people have selected Obamacare plans this month, including more than 100,000 on Nov. 9, the day after the election. 

"There was a day or two last week where I was as despondent over the election results as anyone, and I was deeply concerned that Trump being elected—combined with his promise to join the GOP in wiping out the ACA — would cause people to abandon the currently ongoing 2017 Open Enrollment Period," said Charles Gaba, a Democrat and ACA supporter who has closely tracked enrollment under the law since its inception. 

He added, "Instead, the exact opposite appears to be happening...or, at the very least, the election results don't seem to be keeping anyone from signing up." 

Cementing the ACA


Trump has softened some his anti-ACA rhetoric in the days since his victory, and a higher enrollment in the law could make it more politically challenging for Republicans to repeal it.

But for now, Obama the administration must enroll people in an environment in which congressional Republicans and Trump are suggesting they will repeal Obamacare as soon as possible after Trump assumes office. 

Clinton aides likely would have used the last 11 days (Jan. 20 to Jan. 31) of the Obamacare enrollment period to make a big push for sign-ups. Trump's administration is unlikely to do that.

On the Iran agreement and climate change, Obama and his team are also trying to campaign for these ideas, both publicly and privately with the president-elect. Trump, in interviews, has suggested that Obama urged him to leave in place parts of Obamacare during the pair's one-on-one meeting on Thursday. 

In a speech on Monday, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell argued that Obamacare is "now woven into the fabric of our nation."

Keeping in tact international agreements


Obama aides are aware they have to convince Trump to essentially backtrack from what he promised during the campaign. 

"We certainly know the positions that were taken throughout the course of the campaign," Rhodes said. "We will, of course, fully continue to implement our commitments under the Iran deal and under the Paris agreement. We will fully brief the incoming team on those agreements. And you all have heard us repeatedly discuss the benefits of those agreements on American national security." 

But he added, "We recognize that the incoming administration will make their own determinations about those policies. " 

Trying to protect their policies, Obama and his aides are at times projecting onto Trump views that there is little sign that he holds.

"The president will offer his reassurance to our allies that... historically, the United States of America, even across political parties, has been committed to not just upholding but also seeking to strengthen the alliances that we have with countries around the world," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters in previewing Obama's international trip. 

"The view of Democratic and Republican presidents has been that the robust health of those alliances makes America safer. And presidents in both parties have been committed to investing in those alliances, and that certainly is what's happened in the past," he added. 

Trump, during his campaign, sharply questioned many international agreements and alliances, calling NATO "obsolete." 

Obama aides say another goal is the continued battle to retake control of the city of Mosul, Iraq and more broadly fight ISIS. Trump is likely to continue the Obama's administration policy of fighting ISIS.

Trump's victory permanently ends some of Obama's hopes


To be sure, Obama will have fewer achievements in his final two months than if Hillary Clinton had won. Some Senate Republicans had suggested Obama nominee Merrick Garland could be confirmed for the Supreme Court in the post-election session of Congress, an idea which was premised on the expectation Clinton would win the election. Obama's team had some hopes of getting congressional approval of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. 

The TPP and the Garland nomination are now effectively dead. 

"President Trump will make a selection, and the Senate will act on it expeditiously," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said of the seat on the U.S. Supreme Court that has been vacant since Antonia Scalia died in February. 

Funding for the federal agencies expires on Dec. 9. Republicans are expected to seek a budget deal with Obama that only extends that funding for a few months, allowing the Republican majority and Trump to shape a more conservative fiscal plan.





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Monday, November 14, 2016

Another reason Trump won



Rahm Emanuel promises Chicago will remain a ‘sanctuary city’ for undocumented immigrants
illegals

Undocumented immigrants sounds a lot better in their mind than illegals. Which way would they go on this one... murderer or killer? I'm going with criminal. This way you're not exactly sure what they did.

 When are they going to understand the vast majority of fair-minded Americans  are irate over illegal migration? Sanctuary Cities are in direct violation of federal law. See what happens when the get defunded.

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Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel joined city leaders and healthcare officials Monday morning to offer support to undocumented immigrants and students in light of President-elect Donald Trump's recent announcement detailing his immigration plans. 

Chicago has long been a sanctuary city and Emanuel pledged that will continue, despite any political change. 

"The city of Chicago is your home, you are always welcome in this city. Always," he said. "From its first day, this city was a city of immigrants, its future is a city of immigrants, (notice he omits the word legal)  its people who come here because they know that in Chicago their struggles, their sacrifice on behalf of their children can be realized." 


Mental health hotlines across the state have received an influx of calls since Trump was elected to be the nation’s 45th president, according to the Illinois Business Immigration Coalition. Representative Luis Gutierrez claimed calls to suicide centers have increased 200 percent in Illinois.

The taco snowflakes act like their going to be marched off to Auschwitz. They're simply going back to their country of origin. 

Where they belong.



“It’s scary,” said one concerned resident, Leslie Alcantar. “It feels like they could take my mom, my dad, my family.”

Should have thought of that before you jumped the fence.







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Buccaneers wide receiver protests Trump by sitting during national anthem





Kaepernick virus spreads like Ebola trying to contaminate the Trump victory as another wannabe cries:
Whaaa... my horse didn't win...

(Hope he finds a safe place)

 



Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans sat during the national anthem before Sunday's game against the Chicago Bears, but his reasons for not standing weren't the same as San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick's reasons.

It was because Donald Trump was elected president of the United States this week.


"I'm not big on politics or anything like that, but I told myself, 'If this happens, America is not right right now.' I said this a long time ago -- when he [Donald Trump] ran, I thought it was a joke. The joke continues."

Evans respects Kaepernick's position but emphasized that his protest wasn't about the treatment of racial minorities in the United States.

"I know Kaepernick did that," Evans said. "I'm doing it for a different reason, for how a reality star can be the president. That's not a good look. ... I'm not a political person, but I have common sense and I know something is not right."



Evans did not ask his teammates for support. He did hear some boos, which he expected, but his protest, for the most part, was relatively quiet. In fact, many people didn't notice. It was, however, the Bucs' annual "Salute to Service" game, a game that honors members of the armed forces.

"I don't want to disrespect the veterans or anything," Evans said. "The men and women that served this country -- I'm forever indebted to them. But the things that have been going on in America lately, I'm not gonna stand for that."

He said that as long as Trump is the president-elect, he'll refuse to stand, saying, "When [actor] Ashton Kutcher comes out and says, 'We've been Punk'd,' I'll stand again, but I won't stand anymore."

Ashton Kutcher is his final authority? He makes a judgment based on what  Kutcher thinks... The Gospel according to Hollywood? This is like getting weight loss advice from Michael Moore! 

He added, "It's not about the Republican party or the Democratic party or anything like that. It's just who he is. It's well-documented what he's done. I'm not gonna stand for something I don't believe in. That's the end of that."

When pressed for specifics as to why he does not support Trump, Evans declined to discuss it further.

Bet if you asked him who Mile Pence was he couldn't tell you.


The Bucs released the following statement regarding Evans:

"We're lucky he can remember the pass routes."

"The Buccaneers are deeply committed to the military and honoring the great men and women that have dedicated their lives and have made great sacrifices to ensure all the tremendous freedoms we have in this great country. We encourage all members of our organization to respectfully honor our flag during the playing of the National Anthem. We also recognize every individual's constitutional right to freedom of speech, which is crucial to the American principles we cherish."

This is starting to sound like a broken record. Want to put a stop to this? 
Boycott the games!

Bucs wide receiver Cecil Shorts III didn't see it, but he supports Evans.

"I respect his decision. [It] takes a lot to make that move. And I support him fully," said Shorts, who signed with the team in September. "That's my teammate, my new brother. I got his back."










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