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enthusiast
Picture of stickman428
posted Hide Post
It is possible to like both Trump and Cruz. I'd gladly vote for either. Yes, I like Cruz a hell of a lot but I cannot ignore the energy, excitement and enthusiasm Donald J Trump is bringing to the Republican Party.

Our party needed someone to take the paddles and shock some life back into it....Trump has done that and then some.

People want a fighter. People want someone willing to drag political correctness out of it's protected status and curb stomp it's ugly face. People want to see an America that is strong and projects strength. People want to see change. Real change. Right now we have two front running candidates who I believe will bring REAL change so I'm not mad, I'm thrilled.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The price of liberty and even of common humanity is eternal vigilance
 
Posts: 21261 | Location: San Dimas CA, The Old Dominion or the Tar Heel State.  | Registered: April 16, 2007Report This Post
Edge seeking
Sharp blade!
posted Hide Post
quote:
It was around this time that it was also revealed Trump would receive agent protection from the Secret Service after a sudden increase in death threats."



The SS agents need vetting like never before.
 
Posts: 7776 | Location: Over the hills and far away | Registered: January 20, 2009Report This Post
Member
Picture of stormwalker
posted Hide Post
Trump's tax returns are a non-issue for me! USA,USA,USA...

 
Posts: 553 | Location: Florida | Registered: December 24, 2011Report This Post
Just having a good time
Picture of ragman
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by parabellum:


We need a winner, and it ain't gonna be Ted Cruz. He could be the most perfect conservative candidate to have ever lived, but if he can't win, he's no good to us.


I am a very strong Cruz supporter but this sums it up for me.



" I didn't fail the test,I just found 100 ways to do it wrong." - Benjamin Franklin
 
Posts: 1505 | Location: N. C. | Registered: November 22, 2006Report This Post
wishing we
were congress
posted Hide Post
Anyone who isn't worried about Trump has blinders on. Of course he is scary.

But he is getting support (and probably my vote on 1 Mar) because the Dems and Reps put us in a box. Finally, finally, somebody (Trump) came out swinging like McCain should have done in 2008. Like Romney should have done in 2012.

There isn't any real magic here. The Rush Limbaugh story posted earlier resonated with me.

There is no compromise with the radical left which dominates the Democrats. They have destroyed our country and this is political / cultural war. No compromises. No taking prisoners.

Republican establishment has been all about bipartisan compromise. Even with control of the House and Senate they let Obama play out his agenda. Rubio and Bush are all for making 12 million illegals into voters.

Can you imagine the coming flood of illegals once the world sees the US will give citizenship to anyone who walks across the border?

Republicans were afraid to push all the chips into the center of the table and kill obamacare. They would take dozens of show votes but never tell Obama the funds were cut and it ends. It would have risked shutting govt down.

Reps have been afraid to offend "voters" who will never ever vote for them as long as Dems promise them a free ride.

and this from Democrats:

http://www.nationalreview.com/...out-trumps-dominance

Alexandria native Janet Brandenstein worries that Trump’s support could grow — or even increase — in a national race against Clinton.

“Actually, I think people are crazy enough right now that [Trump voters] could go against us, too,” she says. “I think it’s a very dangerous thing to wish for something that you think might be disastrous for the other party,” says A. K. Minnick, also from Alexandria.

“I know a lot of Democrats are thinking [Trump] will be an easy target. I don’t necessarily think so.”

***********************
I don't just want "disaster" for Dems, I want to politically destroy the Dems. The Dem party is weaker now than I can ever remember.
 
Posts: 19759 | Registered: July 21, 2002Report This Post
Member
Picture of Loganspawn
posted Hide Post
"Anyone who isn't worried about Trump has blinders on. Of course he is scary."

Not scary at all, and no blinders. Just kick ass and take names without PC bullshit.

Walking on eggshells sure hasn't helped the Republican brand.


------------------------------
Knowing is half the battle!

"When governments fear the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny. The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government."

Thomas Jefferson
 
Posts: 6696 | Location: FederalWay WA. Ocupied territory | Registered: April 23, 2009Report This Post
Now in Florida
Picture of ChicagoSigMan
posted Hide Post
I worry about Trump because I know he is not a conservative and I question whether he is even a Republican. Some of the policies he has discussed are truly insane. Still, if he is the nominee I will vote for him. I think he loves the country and I think he will leave at worst a mess that can be cleaned up. There's also always the chance for an upside surprise.

With Hillary, there are no uncertainties. She hates the 2nd Amendment, isn't so keen on the first either. She will create a far-left SCOTUS majority that will last for decades. She will preserve Obamacare and move it towards single payer. She will craft immigration policies that will severely damage the GOP's future, kill the economy and change the character of the country forever. She is a liar to her core and hopelessly corrupt.

She must not be allowed to wield power in the White House. After 8 years of Obama, we need a chance to restore America to its founding principles. 4 or 8 years of Hillary will send the country off a cliff. It will be impossible to recover.
 
Posts: 6084 | Location: FL | Registered: March 09, 2009Report This Post
wishing we
were congress
posted Hide Post
quote:
Walking on eggshells sure hasn't helped the Republican brand.


That is my point.

The Republicans made it necessary for us to support Trump.

The Dems and Reps created an environment of frustration and anger that enabled a Trump campaign. I am fully on board, but I am hoping Trump does what he says now.
 
Posts: 19759 | Registered: July 21, 2002Report This Post
Member
posted Hide Post
I have followed this string since the day Para posted it and read each and every post, even the ones I totally disagreed with. Donald Trump is most certainly striking a chord regarding what many mainstream Americans seem to want in a leader with his statements about where America should go and what we are coming from. If he is attracting that many folks with his views of what America should be then perhaps the Republican Party should take a good listen and get in line with what the general public desires, not just what a few of the elitists think is what we should have. Listening to John Sununu demean Trump on Fox just about makes me puke. We need a winner no matter which one it is to beat HRC or BS. Times change and if the Republican Party will not keep up with the times they will disappear like the dinosaurs. Trump nor any of the more conservative candidates are perfect, but I will vote for whomever gets the nomination versus whatever the Dems decide to run because that person will certainly be the death of America as we know it, if it isn't already too late to resuscitate it.
 
Posts: 3004 | Location: See der Rabbits, Iowa | Registered: June 12, 2007Report This Post
I believe in the
principle of
Due Process
Picture of JALLEN
posted Hide Post
Trump is scary, bold, "fools rush in..." and all that.

It is worrying that he has more ex-wives than the other 16 contenders combined. If he ends up the nominee, better hope those two are stable. Not all are. No October "surprises!"

The nominee will be whoever demonstrates he has support of the most in the party and, as so often seen in real life, it is better to make an imperfect plan work, make it work, give it everything we've got, than to sit around hoping for a perfect plan guaranteed to work.




Luckily, I have enough willpower to control the driving ambition that rages within me.

When you had the votes, we did things your way. Now, we have the votes and you will be doing things our way. This lesson in political reality from Lyndon B. Johnson

"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." - Justice Janice Rogers Brown
 
Posts: 48369 | Location: Texas hill country | Registered: July 04, 2005Report This Post
Alienator
Picture of SIG4EVA
posted Hide Post
Cheer up, Republican leaders!
OK, it’s true, your grand old party, which not long ago stood for family values and dime-store flag pins, is now on the verge of being taken over by a man who once likened his risqué sex life to a tour in Vietnam. And yes, perhaps the 168 members of the Republican National Committee are about to find out how janitors get treated at the Trump Taj Mahal.
But if Trump does become your nominee — and even I’m now persuaded, after months of being wrong, that it’s pretty likely — it doesn’t mean you’re destined for another Goldwater-type defeat in November.
On the contrary, Trump would likely face Hillary Clinton, who would be an underwhelming candidate even if she weren’t swimming against a powerful historical current in seeking a third term for her party. And if Michael Bloomberg jumps in as an independent next month (because, you know, two New Yorkers and one billionaire aren’t enough), Clinton’s path only gets harder.
No, the real question isn’t whether Republicans really have a chance to win with Trump, because they do. The question is what kind of president he would be. My guess is that President Trump wouldn’t actually be the reactionary, often venomous leader we’ve seen rallying the faithful these last few months.
He might well turn out to be something worse.
Let’s first dispense with the idea that Trump, should he continue his long march to the nomination unimpeded, will bring about the end times for politics as we’ve known it. I doubt that.

Trump will never be an orthodox candidate (nor would any sane person look at the results thus far and conclude he should be), but he’s shrewd enough to understand that general election campaigns aren’t the same thing as raucous primaries and that only a handful of people really know how to wage them. By convention time, you can bet he’ll have added a coterie of trusted hands to his campaign, and you’ll see pictures of him with Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan on the Capitol steps, projecting the grim sobriety of an Amish deacon.
Trump can play the game as well as anyone. He has no reason to overturn the board.
But what if he were actually inaugurated? Does he really have a governing philosophy, and what can we extract from it?
As Trump’s rivals never tire of pointing out (usually just before they flame out and quit the race), the full list of issues on which he’s radically changed course over the years is long. Thoughtful politicians evolve, of course, and we should applaud them for it, but this is less like an evolution than a brain transplant conducted by aliens.
Here’s a sampling. Trump supported single-payer health care; now he wants government out of the business altogether. He called for a steep tax on the wealthy; now he would cut so many taxes, you just wouldn’t believe. He was pro-choice and pro-gun-regulation; now he’s neither. He was an independent leaning toward Democrats; now he’s a Republican leaning toward Know-Nothings.
I wouldn’t be at all surprised to learn that Trump used to be a huge proponent of losing but has since come to embrace winning in all its myriad forms.
But it’s not right to say that Trump has no discernible ideology. That’s true only in the binary context of our politics, where we tend to see all governing constructs through the prism of left versus right.
INTERACTIVE: Where the candidates stand on the issues >>>
Trump has an ideology, and it’s all about ratings. The one constant, through his careers as a celebrity developer and then a reality TV star and now as a politician, is that he measures his own success by sheer affirmation.
Trump is, above all else, a supremely gifted entertainer, and like all entertainers, he must have your adoration, or at least your attention. He goes where the crowd is, and he finds it hard to respect anyone who doesn’t.
This is why he can’t get through a single debate without reciting his poll numbers and mocking his opponents for theirs. Polls, Nielsen numbers, “most wealthy” lists, building names — external validation, in whatever form, is his life’s urgent work.
And it’s why I suspect that, for all his nativist and anti-government rhetoric, Trump is no more of a right-wing culture crusader than I am an astronaut. He is, as I’ve written before, an emotional extremist, a reckless provocateur who wants to make you feel pride or love or revulsion — whatever it is, as long as you feel something visceral.
President Trump could just as easily end up a liberal president as a conservative one, an interventionist or a peacemaker, depending on where the applause was leading him. He could just as easily fill Justice Scalia’s seat on the court with Judge Judy as with Ken Starr, if that would please the masses.

You might take solace in the idea that Trump isn’t at heart a doctrinaire, anti-government nationalist. You might intuit in that a certain kind of pragmatism. You shouldn’t.
The system, after all, is built to repel extreme doctrines. You can’t just walk into Washington and enact some militant, right-wing agenda, or a left-wing socialist one. The voters won’t follow an ideological zealot too far down that path before reversing course. (And no, before you start with me, Obama’s health care plan isn’t close to socialism — just ask Bernie Sanders.)
But a president who is a vehicle for the mob of the moment, no matter which direction it’s coming from, is something else entirely. A president who wakes up every morning asking if his latest speech beat “The Big Bang Theory,” or if it made him more popular than his adversaries in the overnight tracking poll, poses a different kind of peril. A president like that will say anything — ­do anything — to feel the love.
All presidents are asked, at moments they can’t foresee, to act as a bulwark against what John Adams called the “tyranny of the majority.” (Had he lived in the social media age, Adams might have worried more about the tyranny of the loud.) Where George W. Bush sought to protect Muslim Americans from an outpouring of anger, Trump has already indulged it. Where Barack Obama moved cautiously to ease the racial tensions simmering in America’s cities, Trump might consciously inflame them.
What worries me about Trump isn’t that he’s not capable of making wise decisions, but rather that his core ideology prevents him from telling his audience anything that isn’t immediately and emotionally satisfying. Which is pretty much the definition of a demagogue.
All is not yet lost, Republicans. Trump could still turn out to be your savior.
But just remember: If so, he’ll be your responsibility, too.

LINK


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Psalm 118:24 "This is the day which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it"
 
Posts: 7226 | Location: NC | Registered: March 16, 2012Report This Post
Festina Lente
Picture of feersum dreadnaught
posted Hide Post
How to Spot a Narcissist (Trump Persuasion Series)

Donald Trump is the most famous narcissist in the world. That fact probably seems obvious to you, given Trump’s continuous self-promotion. Mental health experts agree with your assessment. Trump hits most of the checkboxes for the diagnosis.

The biggest tell for narcissism is a belief that you are better than other people. For example, if Trump believed he could run for President – with almost no political experience – and dominate the Republican party in only a few short months, that would be an example of…

Okay, wait. That one doesn’t work. Apparently his self-image was spot-on in that one specific case. It was the rest of us who got that one wrong.

But still, Trump obviously has an inflated self-image. For example, there was the time he thought he could transition from being a real estate developer to being a best-selling author of a book about negotiating, but then…shit. Okay, that example doesn’t work.

Okay, how about this example: Remember when Trump thought he could transition from developing real estate and being a best selling author to becoming a reality TV star and then…okay, forget that one. That sort of worked out for Trump.

Um…okay, I have one. Remember all of the Trump real estate and casino businesses that failed? I think there were a handful of big failures. That’s a terrible track record when you consider Trump’s hundreds of successful projects that…shit. Okay, that example doesn’t work when you put it in context.

But the ego on that guy. For example, Trump thinks models are attracted to him. Models! Ha ha! And they are, but my point is that I forget what my point is. Something about his ego? Yes, that’s it.

Anyway, Trump thinks he is smarter than most people just because he has a high IQ and went to great schools. Usually that does mean you are smarter than 98% of the public, but in this case it was probably just luck, because obviously all of us are smarter than Trump. I mean, look at his haircut!

Narcissists also seek attention from others. That is Trump all over! Compare his attention-seeking ways to other people who license their brands for a living. Those other people like to stay quiet or maybe say their brand is not so good. That is what good mental health looks like. But narcissist Trump actually promotes his brand every chance he gets, which is gross. Sure, it makes him a lot of money, but capitalism is about more than that. For example, something about the Fed.

Anyway, unlike Trump, the other candidates for President of the United States do not seek attention. Okay, technically they are seeking it as hard as they can, and failing. But to me, that seems exactly the same as not trying.

Narcissism is more than having an over-inflated ego and a need for attention. Narcissists also lack empathy. That’s Trump all over. He has no empathy whatsoever. Sure, he says he loves wounded veterans, underemployed Americans, and even the undereducated. But you know all of that is lies.

How do you know? Simple! You know because you are far smarter than normal people. You might be an unrecognized genius, given your modesty. Maybe you’re not the test-taking kind of genius, but you are definitely a beacon of common sense. For example, you know for sure which candidate would be the best president while idiots like me can only guess. In fact, you are so smart that you can peer into Trump’s soul from a distance and see his lack of empathy. Impressive! And, I might add that you are an ace at diagnosing mental conditions despite your total lack of training in the field. You, my friend, are indeed better than other people because you see Trump for the over-inflated, uncaring buffoon that he is. And unlike Trump, you do not seek attention. So don’t leave a comment below to showcase your brilliance.

Narcissism is definitely a thing. But we also need a name for the mental condition in which you believe you are so smart you can diagnose narcissism from a distance.

I won’t call you a narcissist unless you state your opinion in a public comment forum and insult other voters and commenters as if you have no empathy. So don’t do that.

http://blog.dilbert.com/post/1...mp-persuasion-series



NRA Life Member - "Fear God and Dreadnaught"
 
Posts: 8295 | Location: in the red zone of the blue state, CT | Registered: October 15, 2008Report This Post
NRA Benefactor
Life Member
posted Hide Post
I now want Trump to win so we can have Season 1: The White House Apprentice. I want him to bring back Bill Rancic and Omarosa Manigault to duke it out for the Senior Advisor position after he fires Valerie Jarrett. Then there's all the Cabinet positions, Supreme Court, and Department heads...I'm pretty sure we can squeeze in 16 Seasons of "The White House Apprentice".
 
Posts: 21838 | Registered: May 25, 2009Report This Post
Rule #1: Use enough gun
Picture of Bigboreshooter
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by SIG4EVA:
Cheer up, Republican leaders!
OK, it’s true, your grand old party, which not long ago stood for family values and dime-store flag pins, is now on the verge of being taken over by a man who once likened his risqué sex life to a tour in Vietnam. And yes, perhaps the 168 members of the Republican National Committee are about to find out how janitors get treated at the Trump Taj Mahal.
But if Trump does become your nominee — and even I’m now persuaded, after months of being wrong, that it’s pretty likely — it doesn’t mean you’re destined for another Goldwater-type defeat in November.
On the contrary, Trump would likely face Hillary Clinton, who would be an underwhelming candidate even if she weren’t swimming against a powerful historical current in seeking a third term for her party. And if Michael Bloomberg jumps in as an independent next month (because, you know, two New Yorkers and one billionaire aren’t enough), Clinton’s path only gets harder.
No, the real question isn’t whether Republicans really have a chance to win with Trump, because they do. The question is what kind of president he would be. My guess is that President Trump wouldn’t actually be the reactionary, often venomous leader we’ve seen rallying the faithful these last few months.
He might well turn out to be something worse.
Let’s first dispense with the idea that Trump, should he continue his long march to the nomination unimpeded, will bring about the end times for politics as we’ve known it. I doubt that.

Trump will never be an orthodox candidate (nor would any sane person look at the results thus far and conclude he should be), but he’s shrewd enough to understand that general election campaigns aren’t the same thing as raucous primaries and that only a handful of people really know how to wage them. By convention time, you can bet he’ll have added a coterie of trusted hands to his campaign, and you’ll see pictures of him with Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan on the Capitol steps, projecting the grim sobriety of an Amish deacon.
Trump can play the game as well as anyone. He has no reason to overturn the board.
But what if he were actually inaugurated? Does he really have a governing philosophy, and what can we extract from it?
As Trump’s rivals never tire of pointing out (usually just before they flame out and quit the race), the full list of issues on which he’s radically changed course over the years is long. Thoughtful politicians evolve, of course, and we should applaud them for it, but this is less like an evolution than a brain transplant conducted by aliens.
Here’s a sampling. Trump supported single-payer health care; now he wants government out of the business altogether. He called for a steep tax on the wealthy; now he would cut so many taxes, you just wouldn’t believe. He was pro-choice and pro-gun-regulation; now he’s neither. He was an independent leaning toward Democrats; now he’s a Republican leaning toward Know-Nothings.
I wouldn’t be at all surprised to learn that Trump used to be a huge proponent of losing but has since come to embrace winning in all its myriad forms.
But it’s not right to say that Trump has no discernible ideology. That’s true only in the binary context of our politics, where we tend to see all governing constructs through the prism of left versus right.
INTERACTIVE: Where the candidates stand on the issues >>>
Trump has an ideology, and it’s all about ratings. The one constant, through his careers as a celebrity developer and then a reality TV star and now as a politician, is that he measures his own success by sheer affirmation.
Trump is, above all else, a supremely gifted entertainer, and like all entertainers, he must have your adoration, or at least your attention. He goes where the crowd is, and he finds it hard to respect anyone who doesn’t.
This is why he can’t get through a single debate without reciting his poll numbers and mocking his opponents for theirs. Polls, Nielsen numbers, “most wealthy” lists, building names — external validation, in whatever form, is his life’s urgent work.
And it’s why I suspect that, for all his nativist and anti-government rhetoric, Trump is no more of a right-wing culture crusader than I am an astronaut. He is, as I’ve written before, an emotional extremist, a reckless provocateur who wants to make you feel pride or love or revulsion — whatever it is, as long as you feel something visceral.
President Trump could just as easily end up a liberal president as a conservative one, an interventionist or a peacemaker, depending on where the applause was leading him. He could just as easily fill Justice Scalia’s seat on the court with Judge Judy as with Ken Starr, if that would please the masses.

You might take solace in the idea that Trump isn’t at heart a doctrinaire, anti-government nationalist. You might intuit in that a certain kind of pragmatism. You shouldn’t.
The system, after all, is built to repel extreme doctrines. You can’t just walk into Washington and enact some militant, right-wing agenda, or a left-wing socialist one. The voters won’t follow an ideological zealot too far down that path before reversing course. (And no, before you start with me, Obama’s health care plan isn’t close to socialism — just ask Bernie Sanders.)
But a president who is a vehicle for the mob of the moment, no matter which direction it’s coming from, is something else entirely. A president who wakes up every morning asking if his latest speech beat “The Big Bang Theory,” or if it made him more popular than his adversaries in the overnight tracking poll, poses a different kind of peril. A president like that will say anything — ­do anything — to feel the love.
All presidents are asked, at moments they can’t foresee, to act as a bulwark against what John Adams called the “tyranny of the majority.” (Had he lived in the social media age, Adams might have worried more about the tyranny of the loud.) Where George W. Bush sought to protect Muslim Americans from an outpouring of anger, Trump has already indulged it. Where Barack Obama moved cautiously to ease the racial tensions simmering in America’s cities, Trump might consciously inflame them.
What worries me about Trump isn’t that he’s not capable of making wise decisions, but rather that his core ideology prevents him from telling his audience anything that isn’t immediately and emotionally satisfying. Which is pretty much the definition of a demagogue.
All is not yet lost, Republicans. Trump could still turn out to be your savior.
But just remember: If so, he’ll be your responsibility, too.

LINK





When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own house, his possessions are undisturbed. Luke 11:21


"Every nation in every region now has a decision to make.
Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." -- George W. Bush

 
Posts: 14826 | Location: Birmingham, Alabama | Registered: February 25, 2009Report This Post
Ethics, antics,
and ballistics
Picture of Dtech
posted Hide Post
Aside from something Earth-shattering happening or being revealed between now and the couple of weeks remaining for Florida early voting to begin, after long discussion and much deliberation, my wife and I are buying non-refundable tickets on the Trump train and enjoying the ride. We will be doing our part to give him our 99 winner take all delegates here in Florida! Cool


-Dtech
__________________________

"I've got a life to live, people to love, and a God to serve!" - sigmonkey

"Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value." - Albert Einstein

"A man can never have too much red wine, too many books, or too much ammunition" ― Rudyard Kipling
 
Posts: 4417 | Location: Central Florida | Registered: April 03, 2006Report This Post
Get my pies
outta the oven!

Picture of PASig
posted Hide Post
This NYT assclown is cracking jokes on Twitter about a Trump assassination. Let's hope he gets paid a visit by the Secret Service real soon.
Roll Eyes

https://twitter.com/DouthatNYT...s/702616688051818497

ETA:

That assclown just deleted his tweet.
Roll Eyes


 
Posts: 35338 | Location: Pennsylvania | Registered: November 12, 2007Report This Post
safe & sound
Picture of a1abdj
posted Hide Post
People threatening Trump should take note. He has several people around him that have plenty of experience dealing with liberal nut jobs. You may flap your lips about hurting somebody, but these guys won't say a thing. They'll just wrap you up.

Exhibit 1:



________________________



www.zykansafe.com
 
Posts: 15979 | Location: St. Charles, MO, USA | Registered: September 22, 2003Report This Post
Victim of Life's
Circumstances
Picture of doublesharp
posted Hide Post
Political Science Professor: Odds Of President Trump Range BETWEEN 97% AND 99%

http://dailycaller.com/2016/02...e-between-97-and-99/

A political science professor who claims his statistical model has correctly predicted the results of every election in the last 104 years has forecast that the odds of Donald Trump becoming America’s next president currently range from 97 percent to 99 percent.

The professor is Helmut Norpoth of Stony Brook University, reports The Statesman, the campus newspaper at the public bastion on New York’s Long Island.

Specifically, Norpoth predicts that Trump has a 97 percent chance of beating Hillary Clinton and a 99 percent chance of beating Bernie Sanders.

The predictions assume Trump will actually become the 2016 presidential nominee of the Republican Party...


________________________
God spelled backwards is dog
 
Posts: 4890 | Location: Sunnyside of Louisville | Registered: July 04, 2007Report This Post
In the yahd, not too
fah from the cah
Picture of ryan81986
posted Hide Post
I'm excited for Tuesday.




 
Posts: 6471 | Location: Just outside of Boston | Registered: March 28, 2007Report This Post
Bald Headed Squirrel Hunter
Picture of Angus the Kid
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by ryan81986:
I'm excited for Tuesday.


The general election starts Wednesday morning.



"Meet the new boss, same as the old boss"
 
Posts: 6168 | Location: In the tent, in Houston, in Texas | Registered: October 23, 2002Report This Post
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