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Sunday, August 18, 2019

Joe Biden confuses Burlington, Iowa, with Burlington, Vt., in latest gaffe




God forbid he becomes president. I could see it now. 

"Hey, Joe, you didn't mix up the nuclear launch codes with your ATM PIN number again...did you?"



Gaffe-prone Democratic 2020 frontrunner Joe Biden reportedly added another factual blunder to his list Friday.

During a campaign fundraiser in his home state of Delaware, the former vice president was referencing a speech he had made to a group of 275 people, in which he accused President Trump of "fueling a literal carnage” in the country through his rhetoric.

But Biden mistakenly recalled the location of the speech as Burlington, Vt., instead of Burlington, Iowa, according to The Washington Examiner. Whether Biden had Democratic rival Bernie Sanders -- a former mayor of Burlington, Vt. -- on his mind was not immediately known.

The mistake was the latest in a series of gaffes the 76-year-old Biden has made that have caused concern among some Democrats that's he's too old and prompted President Trump to say he isn’t “playing with a full deck.”

Last week in Iowa, Biden said “poor kids” are just as smart as “white kids,” and last weekend he mistakenly said he met with survivors of the February 2018 Parkland, Fla., school shooting while vice president -- even though he had left office more than a year before the attack.

He has also confused former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher for Theresa May twice since May.

Biden’s press secretary told CNN the focus on Biden's blunders is a “press narrative, not a voter narrative."

Some Biden allies have suggested limiting his appearances due to the mistakes, the Examiner reported.






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Friday, August 16, 2019

56 Percent of Americans Blame Trump Rhetoric for Mass Shootings







The poll was taken after gun massacres in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio occurred within hours of each other, as well as a mass shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in California a week earlier. Fox’s survey respondents were asked “How much do you think each of the following is to blame for mass shootings in the United States over the last few years?”

Thirty-four percent said they blamed “Sentiments expressed by President Trump” for gun massacres “a great deal,” while 22 percent said they blamed Trump’s rhetoric “some” for mass shootings.

Among Democrats, 87 percent blamed Trump to some degree, along with 50 percent of independent voters, but even among Republicans, more than one in five laid some of the blame for mass shootings at Trump’s feet.

Well, what did you expect when the gullible believe everything the MSM says about Trump? Hell... it's Trump fault Epstein's dead too!



These are some of the mass shooting which took place during Barry's occupation of the WH with photos of the more notable. I bet if the media really applied themselves they could pin all these shootings on Trump too. Two presidents, two sets of mass shootings, one gets all the blame, one skates. 


And the media is here to make sure that happens.






2016: 71 killed, 83 wounded
Burlington, Wash., Sep. 23
Baton Rouge, La., Jul. 17
Dallas, Texas, Jul. 7
Orlando, Fla., Jun. 12
Hesston, Kan., Feb. 25
Kalamazoo County, Miss., Feb. 20
2015: 46 killed, 43 wounded
San Bernardino, Calif., Dec. 2
Colorado Springs, Colo., Nov. 27
Colorado Springs, Colo., Oct. 31
Roseburg, Ore., Oct. 1
Chattanooga, Tenn., Jul. 16
Charleston, S.C., Jun. 17
Menasha, Wis., Jun. 11
2014: 17 killed, 28 wounded
Marysville, Wash., Oct. 24
Santa Barbara, Calif., May. 23
Fort Hood, Texas, Apr. 3
Alturas, Calif., Feb. 20
2013: 31 killed, 13 wounded
Washington, D.C., Sep. 16
Hialeah, Fla., Jul. 26
Santa Monica, Calif., Jun. 7
Federal Way, Wash., Apr. 21
Herkimer County, N.Y., Mar. 13
2012: 67 killed, 68 wounded
Newtown, Conn., Dec. 14
Minneapolis, Minn., Sep. 27
Oak Creek, Wis., Aug. 5
Aurora, Colo., Jul. 20
Seattle, Wash., May. 20
Oakland, Calif., Apr. 2
Norcross, Ga., Feb. 22
2011: 18 killed, 21 wounded
Seal Beach, Calif., Oct. 14
Carson City, Nev., Sep. 6
Tucson, Ariz., Jan. 8
2010: 8 killed, 2 wounded
Manchester, Conn., Aug. 3
2009: 38 killed, 37 wounded
Parkland, Wash., Nov. 29
Fort Hood, Texas, Nov. 5
Binghamton, N.Y., Apr. 3
Carthage, N.C., Mar. 29
2008: 16 killed, 24 wounded
Henderson, Ky., Jun. 25
DeKalb, Ill., Feb. 14
Kirkwood, Mo., Feb. 7






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