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Sunday, September 16, 2018

Trump is dead right times 10


Donald Trump taunts US media over Barack Obama error





American President Donald Trump, never allowing any opportunity to slip to punch his traducers, taunted the media on Saturday over their silence over a verbal slip by former President Barack Obama.

Google checks showed that President Trump was referencing an Obama slip that was made about 10 years ago.

On a campaign trip to Beaverton, Oregon, in May 2008, an obviously tired Barack Obama mistakenly told a crowd that over the course of the long campaign he had been to fifty-seven states in the U.S., with one left to go:

“… it is just wonderful to be back in Oregon, and over the last 15 months we’ve traveled to every corner of the United States. I’ve now been in fifty …. seven states? I think one left to go. One left to go. Alaska and Hawaii, I was not allowed to go to even though I really wanted to visit but my staff would not justify it.”

In reality America has 50 states and two districts in Washington DC and Puerto Rico.

Since the slip of tongue by Obama, Trump, usually the butt of attack by the media weighed in, saying if he had committed the same error, the media would have slain him.


Prime example: Recall "COVFEFE"? 

Trump is dead right! I remember it clear as day. 
 Even in this article, they're covering for Barry..."he was obviously tired"..."a slip of the tongue". Do you think they would cut Trump the same slack?

The bottom feeders would have had a field day...





Did ya hear the latest? 
Trump's been to 57 states...and still has one to go!!!! 

But alas...they're idol said it. So best to follow protocol and keep your mouth shut.





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Couldn't sleep for two nights over this



Heartbreaking video shows immigrant mother in tears over fears that ICE will arrest her, separate her children and then deport the family if they seek shelter during Hurricane Florence

  • Iris is a mother-of-three and undocumented immigrant living in a mandatory evacuation zone near Wilmington, North Carolina 
  • She was afraid to go to a public shelter believing that ICE would be there and arrest her, separate her children and then deport the family
  • Her daughter had told her she feared their home would be destroyed, but would rather face death at home than possible separation
  •  ICE had stated that it would not arrest people seeking shelter during Florence earlier in the week, but a number of immigrants do not trust that statement
  • Reports emerged earlier this year that ICE had been arresting known immigrants they had met during their relief efforts for Hurricane Harvey in 2017

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Another screw the border tear-jerker from the Daily Mail driven by this fuck.

Reality...


I guarantee you it's not far from the truth!


Footage has captured the agony of a young mother trying to decide how best to protect her children just before Hurricane Florence made landfall on Friday.

Iris lives in Wilmington, North Carolina with her three children, and was in tears on Thursday when asked by NBC News what she was planning to do when the storm hit.

Video 425

If she was in Mexico where she belongs it would be of no concern.
Illegals are as close to immigrants as Elizabeth Warren is to an Indian.



She and her family had been told to evacuate by officials, but she was unsure where to go given that she is an undocumented immigrant and her children were terrified that they would be separated by ICE if they checked into a shelter. 

'The little one asked me, "Mom, I am very afraid that our home is going to be destroyed, and I don't want to go to a shelter because I don't want to be separated from you,"' said Iris.

The girl later told her mother: 'I'd rather die first than be separated from you.'

What happened to that violin?











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Saturday, September 15, 2018

Democratic Socialist Salazar Wins, Overcoming Scrutiny Of Private Life






 In the last few months seems like Democratic voters desperate to regain control coupled with their loathing of Trump moved so far left they fell off the cliff. It's become the new standard. The farther left the candidate the better their chances. She had/has all the prerequisites required to get elected in NY. Two of the most outstanding? She's a Socialist and a lair. Her Socialist position is clearly evident. Read the highlighted below to pick up on the lying. She's really good at it.

Tell me, just how do you “inadvertently misrepresent” your own family’s history?



Julie Jacobson/AP


By Deepti Hajela

September 14, 2018 7:02 am


NEW YORK (AP) — Democratic socialist Julia Salazar overcame intense scrutiny of her personal life to win the Democratic primary for a state Senate seat in Brooklyn while voters throughout the state punished a group of incumbent Democratic legislators they perceived as too friendly to Republicans.

Salazar, a 27-year-old first-time candidate, handily defeated eight-term incumbent Sen. Martin Dilan in New York’s 18th District on Thursday night, joining the ranks of leftist insurgents nationwide who have knocked out mainstream Democrats.

There is no Republican candidate running in the district in the general election, virtually guaranteeing her the seat.

Her victory came on a night when primary voters also took their revenge on a splinter group of Democratic state senators who broke with the party to join a group that supported Republican control of the chamber.

Despite a political deal earlier this year to end the schism, six of the eight members of the now-defunct Independent Democratic Conference were ousted in party primaries Thursday — a sign that liberal voters in New York are unwilling to tolerate collusion with Republicans in the age of President Donald Trump.

Those insurgent victories were a consolation prize for candidates at the top of the left-wing’s ticket in the state’s primary.

“Your victories tonight have shown that the blue wave is real and it’s not only coming for Republicans but for the Democrats who act like them,” said Cynthia Nixon, who lost her bid to unseat Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Dilan, 67, was not among the renegade Senate Democrats, but he represented a district that has gone through major changes, with longtime residents being pushed out by rising rents and an influx of mostly white, wealthier newcomers.

Salazar built a grassroots campaign to unseat him on the grounds that he hadn’t done enough to help the poor or stop gentrification.

“This is a victory for workers,” Salazar said to her supporters at a party on Thursday night, according to The New York Times. “This is a victory for all of you, who every day have knocked on doors and have had meaningful conversations with our neighbors about these issues.”

On social media, she tweeted, “Tonight’s victory is not about me. Tonight’s victory is about New Yorkers coming together and choosing to fight against rising rents and homelessness in our communities. Together, we will build a better New York.”

Salazar’s campaign began attracting wide attention after fellow democratic socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez scored a surprise win in June’s congressional primary over U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley in New York.

But in recent weeks, the race became a soap opera as reporters dug into her background.

Salazar faced criticism for saying she was an immigrant from Colombia who struggled financially growing up when she was actually born in Florida and had hundreds of thousands of dollars in a trust fund. She was scrutinized, too, over a political and religious conversion during her years at Columbia University, where she transformed from an anti-abortion Christian Republican to a hard-left Jewish Democrat.

One group revoked its endorsement after learning Salazar hadn’t graduated from Columbia, as she said on its survey.

(I'm getting whiffs of Barry) 

Salazar said she “inadvertently misrepresented” her family’s history and chalked up some biographical discrepancies to mistakes by her staff.

(Like Hillary 'misspoke'  about dodging bullets fired by the Bosnian sniper)

Then, reporters revealed that in 2011, when she was in college, Salazar was accused of attempted bank fraud by the estranged wife of a famous neighbor in Florida, former New York Mets player Keith Hernandez.

Salazar was arrested but not prosecuted. She later filed a lawsuit accusing Hernandez’s wife, Kai Hernandez, of trying to frame her because she erroneously believed she was having an affair with her husband. Kai Hernandez settled the lawsuit for $20,000.

WOW...this Marxist really has some credentials!

Two days before the election, a conservative news site, The Daily Caller, told the Salazar campaign it was about to publish a story identifying her as a woman who had anonymously accused a spokesman of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of sexual assault.

Saying she didn’t want to be “outed” against her will, Salazar tweeted about it, saying the Netanyahu aide, David Keyes, had bullied her into an unwanted sex act.

Keyes called it a false allegation “made by someone who has proven to be repeatedly dishonest about her own life,” but after additional women came forward with accusations, including a Wall Street Journal reporter, he took a leave of absence. At least four female Israeli lawmakers called upon Netanyahu to suspend Keyes.

Dilan was first elected in 2002 and was a member of the state Senate Democratic Conference’s leadership. He spent 10 years in New York’s City Council before being elected to the Senate.

Thursday’s primary was a difficult one for the former IDC members, all eight of whom faced primary challenges, even after Cuomo brokered a deal earlier this year to reunify Senate Democrats.

The schism was little noticed outside Albany until Trump’s election galvanized liberals.
Among those losing their races was Bronx Sen. Jeff Klein, the former IDC leader and current No. 2 in the state Senate. Klein lost to Alessandra Biaggi, an attorney who has worked for Cuomo’s and Hillary Clinton’s campaigns.

“New York voters rejected weak, corporate Democrats for bold progressives with strong, economic-populist messages who will fight for working families,” said Stephanie Taylor, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, a group that supports and endorses candidates.

The Democratic leader in the state Senate, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, who supported the former IDC candidates, said voters had “made it clear that this is a new day and politics, as usual, are no longer acceptable.”

But voters also decided to support another breakaway Democrat, Brooklyn Sen. Simcha Felder. Felder was not an IDC member but also voted with the Republicans, letting them remain in control even though Democrats outnumbered them in the Senate by one seat.

Felder beat challenger Blake Morris in the Democratic primary.





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Friday, September 14, 2018

We want justice








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Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Kavanaugh protestor getting paid after disrupting the hearing



Can't vouch for the veracity of this story 100% but she is wearing the same dress as when she was thrown out of the hearing. It wouldn't be the first time the left paid for 'protestors'.

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At the Senate nominating hearing, this woman screamed about stopping Kavanaugh from being approved 





After she was removed from the hearing room, she approached the "paymaster"






Here, she collects her protest 'pay'.........






Who pays the paymaster? The suspect list is l-o-n-g.

Don't expect the likes of CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC or MSNBC to investigate this. Fox and One America News might cover it, but that's about it. Everyone else will be kept in the dark like mushrooms planted in compost.

Probably got extra to cover her court cost. 










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