JackLuis
Literotica Guru
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- Sep 21, 2008
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A new poll out today shows Trump losing his first place standing in Iowa to retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson and apparently the billionaire mogul isn’t taking too kindly to the news.
“Too much Monsanto in the corn creates issues in the brain,” read one tweet Trump sent out to his nearly five million Twitter followers today:
An Illinois woman became an Internet celebrity after she read a book during a campaign speech by Donald Trump.
Johari Osayi Idusuyi, a student at Lincoln Land Community College in Springfield, said she brought a copy of “Citizen,” an award-winning book on everyday racism by Claudia Rankine, to a rally near her home, reported WICS-TV.
“I’m genuinely not interested in him as a person, but if you have the chance to see a presidential candidate, why not?” Idusuyi said.
She and some friends ended up with a spot directly behind the Republican candidate after seeing an open seat and being invited into the VIP section by a campaign staffer.
“I think we were chosen for obvious reasons,” Idusuyi told Jezebel. “We are minorities and there weren’t a lot of minorities there. He also instructed us to sit in the middle, so we kind of already knew what this was.”
From a Republican strategist upset about the state of the primary race:
"We’re potentially careening down this road of nominating somebody who frankly isn’t fit to be president in terms of the basic ability and temperament to do the job. It’s not just that it could be somebody Hillary could destroy electorally, but what if Hillary hits a banana peel and this person becomes president?"
So there you have it: The only thing worse than electing Hillary Clinton president is the possibility of not electing Hillary Clinton president.
A few hours later, as if to prove this guy's point, Donald Trump staged a 95-minute meltdown (video above) apparently brought on by the ungodly strain of making four campaign appearances in four days:
Republican frontrunner Donald Trump helped fan the flames of anti-Muslim sentiment in the wake of last week’s deadly terrorist attacks in Paris.
Trump renewed his call Monday morning to shut down mosques or at least place them under surveillance.
“You’re going to have to watch and study the mosques, because a lot of talk is going on at the mosques,” Trump said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” less than a month after telling Fox Business that “absolutely” shut down U.S. mosques to defeat Islamic State militants.
“From what I heard in the old days, meaning a while ago, we had great surveillance going on in and around mosques in New York City, and I understand our mayor totally cut that out, he totally cut it out,” Trump added, apparently referring to New York’s controversial racial and religious profiling investigation — which was discontinued after it resulted in zero arrests or leads.
Gloria Steinem is critical of Donald Trump, but offered the GOP presidential candidate some dubious praise, saying, “He had the intelligence to put a baseball cap over his weave, which makes him look a little better.”
“He said Heidi Klum was no longer a '10,’ ” Steinem said, referring to remarks Trump made to The New York Times in August. “Why did nobody bother to say he hasn’t ever been a ‘1? ' ” the political and feminist activist tells Yahoo News’s Katie Couric in a preview clip from an upcoming interview.
Steinem doesn’t hold back while slamming the 69-year-old real estate mogul.
“He was born on third base and thinks he hit a home run. He had a very rich father,” she says.

On Monday, as Ted Cruz announced a bill banning Muslim Syrian refugees from the United States and Donald Trump talked about shutting down American mosques, Trump’s new national spokeswoman took things one step further.
“Islam preys on the weak and uses political correctness as cover,” she wrote on Facebook. “Two things that Americans won’t be concerned with when @realDonaldTrump is in the White House.”
If Trump is to maintain both his dominance on the airwaves and the support of hard-core tea partyers, it will be with the help of Katrina Pierson, who speaks the language of the party’s grass-roots activists with more fluency and even less regard for the normal bounds of political discourse than her new boss.
Prominent Muslim Americans have reacted with anger and dismay to the incendiary remarks of Donald Trump, the leading Republican candidate in the 2016 presidential race who called for a database of all Muslims in the country to be set up, in order to track their movements.
Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton on Friday condemned Donald Trump’s comments that Muslims in America should be registered in a data base.
Trump, leading the polls for the Republican nomination, has issued several controversial remarks about Muslims and Syrian refugees in the wake of last week’s attacks in Paris claimed by the Islamic State extremist group.
Clinton took issue with his Thursday night remarks, which appeared to draw comparisons with Nazi Germany.
“This is shocking rhetoric. It should be denounced by all seeking to lead this country,” Clinton wrote on Twitter.
Fellow Republican candidate Jeb Bush, who has been denounced for suggesting Christian refugees should be prioritized over Muslims, joined Clinton in criticizing Trump for his remarks, saying Americans do not have to abandon their values to be resolute in fighting extremism.
“You talk about internment, you talk about closing mosques, you talk about registering people, and that’s just wrong,” Bush told CNBC on Friday.
“That’s not strength, that’s weakness.”
Republican presidential candidate and bombastic billionaire Donald Trump this week refused to rule out placing U.S. Muslims in a database and requiring them to carry special identification.
Sergeant Tayyib Rashid, a veteran of the Marine Corps, took exception to those comments and challenged Trump, posting a picture of his military ID on Twitter with the words, “I’m an American Muslim and I already carry a special ID badge. Where’s yours?”
Rashid posted the tweet after Trump said he would require that Muslims in the United States would be tracked, according to the Daily Mail.
Two Republican presidential rivals, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and Ohio Governor John Kasich, criticized Trump’s Muslim database proposal.
“That’s just wrong,” Bush said on CNBC on Friday.
“It’s manipulating people’s angst and their fears,” he said. “That’s not strength. That’s weakness.”
Kasich, whose Super PAC is launching a $2.5 million series of attacks against Trump, said the proposal proved the real estate mogul was not worthy of the White House.
“The idea that someone would have to register with the federal government because of their religion strikes against all that we have believed in our nation’s history,” Kasich said in a statement. “It is yet another example of trying to divide people, one against the other. Donald Trump is unable to unite and lead our country.”
Trump's new face
Trump is a sucker for pretty women, if they stroke his ... ego, yeah let's go with that.
Third-graders write better sentences than those.I am all for some sort of Libtard tracking system. Lets start with the followers of Larry, Moe and Curly, or commonly call the democratic presidential candidates.
Third-graders write better sentences than those.