Visit Counter

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

Who really got impeached?





Now I’m not saying Biden has a chance in hell. He has a habit of losing presidential elections. As you know he came in 4th in Iowa. But I think the Dems attempting to impeach Trump 'impeached' Biden. One thing is certain. The Dems inadvertently shifted the spotlight to the Biden’s during their impeachment scam. By any measure, Hunter Biden is a scumbag. His life is a train wreck and now all of America knows it. And who greased the skids for Hunter and shot a video proving he actually did what Trump was accused of? Lets just say Joe Biden has proven not to be “Your Uncle Joe”. 

The last few weeks have been a total disaster for the Dems. I suspect a lot of Independents watching the Dems despicable antics at the SOTU last night are now voting for Trump. And the frosting on the cake? Literally, a guy who sucks you know what, is the leading candidate in the Democratic party.



 Can things fall into place any better for Trump?





Share/Bookmark

As I stated many times...A world class bitch




As she ripped up the speech she didn't know this was the last time she would be sitting in that chair. 



Of course there's a MAGA solution for everything. Even for dogs like her.








Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Tonight at the SOTU












Share/Bookmark

Iowa caucus debacle blamed on new hire







Share/Bookmark

Who won? Iowa caucus disaster





Went about as well as the launch of the ObamaCare website.

Surely Trump will get the blame...Iowa Collusion.




The only clear winner.







Howard Kurtz


You had one job.


The Iowa caucuses essentially collapsed in confusion when state party officials were unable to report any results.






It was a colossal failure on Monday night that will only fuel the criticism of the state’s first-in-the-nation role, with rules so complicated that journalists had trouble explaining them and the Democratic apparatus couldn’t even count the votes.




That didn’t stop the presidential candidates from spinning the non-results.


Pete Buttigieg, who seemed poised for a good night based on reports on those who showed up to caucus for him, declared that “by all indications, we are going on to New Hampshire victorious. “Because tonight, an improbable hope became an undeniable reality.”


Well, maybe. His words would have had more resonance if we knew how many votes he got.


Bernie Sanders said he has a “good feeling” and his campaign also says he got the most delegates. Elizabeth Warren called the outcome “too close to call.” Joe Biden, who said he would “walk out of here with our share of delegates,” had his campaign send a letter of complaint about the reporting difficulties.


And the Trump campaign did not miss an opportunity to crow that “Democrats are stewing in a caucus mess of their own creation with the sloppiest train wreck in history.”




It was a long and frustrating night that could provide the final nail in the coffin for critics who say the Iowa caucuses are a crazy-quilt contraption that favors those who have three hours to show up on a wintry night and debate with their neighbors. Even if everything had gone smoothly, Iowa Democrats planned to release three sets of results that would inevitably muddy the waters.


And the eventual announcement will leave only a few hours of media coverage before the television networks are wall to wall with President Trump’s State of the Union tonight.


The quadrennial debate over how much this small, predominantly white, most rural state really matters evaporates once we have winners and losers--or at least those upon whom the media confer that status. Never mind that few delegates are at stake, it’s all about the perception of who has, as George H.W. Bush put it after winning Iowa, the Big Mo. (He of course lost to Ronald Reagan.)


Momentum turns in part on the media’s expectations game, which jacked up the notion that Sanders, who is undoubtedly surging, was favored to win the caucuses. The expectations exercise also led the pundits and pols not to expect a Joe Biden victory, but to insist on a strong showing lest he be deemed on the verge of collapse.


By the same token, Warren’s recent slippage in the polls set her up for what the prognosticators would dub a better-than-expected finish.


Never mind that Dick Gephardt, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum and others won Iowa and later faltered. Or that Trump finished second in Iowa and then clobbered his competition.


What matters to the media and to Democrats is that Jimmy Carter won Iowa (though he finished behind “uncommitted”), and Barack Obama won Iowa, and both wound up in the White House.


I do admire how seriously voters in Iowa (as well as New Hampshire) take their responsibility to question the candidates and study the issues. Yet we in the press still treat the opening kickoff as if it’s the first half of the Super Bowl (which, if that were the indicator, the Kansas City Chiefs would have been lucky to get a tie).


But at least we knew who won the game when time had expired.




Share/Bookmark