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Young Donald Trump Was Too Big A Pussy To Fight Wars For America


But guess what, and SURPRISE, Trump is a draft-dodging pussy. Here are some facts from a 2011 Smoking Gun investigation:

"Selective Service records reveal that Trump, the fortunate son of a multimillionaire real estate baron, took repeated steps to avoid serving in Vietnam.

By the time his number (356) was drawn during the December 1, 1969 draft lottery, Trump had already received four student deferments and a medical deferment, according to military records on file with the National Archives and Records Administration. An extract of Trump’s Selective Classification record … was provided in response to a TSG records request.

In fact, the December 1969 draft lottery occurred about 18 months after Trump graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied business at the Wharton School. So, while claiming that he would “never forget” being at Wharton watching the draft numbers being drawn, … Trump seems to have misremembered, as candidates are fond of saying."
He had 'other priorities' as the Big Dick put it.
 
Republicans move to dump ‘fascist’ Donald Trump

any say the populist crazy talk is typical of the White House primaries, but Republican frontrunner Donald Trump’s increasingly incendiary remarks are leading some conservatives to brand him a “fascist” and party rivals to ramp up attacks against him.

Most spectacularly, the real estate tycoon recently said he would support registering Muslims in a database, and insisted — despite lacking any evidence — he saw Arabs in New Jersey cheer when the Twin Towers fell on 9/11.

His stance has become so belligerent that voices are asking, even inside his party, whether he is committed to democratic values.

Republican experts are warning that Trump could do lasting damage to the GOP, and that his nomination in the party primaries would essentially hand the presidency to Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton.

Several campaign teams in the primary race now appear to be coalescing around the need to oppose the celebrity billionaire’s candidacy.

Establishment conservatives even took the unfathomable step of using the F-word against a member of their own party.

“Trump is a fascist. And that’s not a term I use loosely or often. But he’s earned it,” Max Boot, a military historian and foreign policy advisor to Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio, posted on Twitter.

“Forced federal registration of US citizens, based on religious identity, is fascism. Period,” added John Noonan, a national security advisor to former Florida governor Jeb Bush.

In its Tuesday editorial the New York Times said the past week of the campaign had been “dominated by Donald Trump’s racist lies.”

The 'Dump Trump' Party is forming at an alarming rate. (Says El-JEB!)

Good luck convincing his reactionary supporters he's wrong for America.
 
NYPD’s Muslim cops hit back at Trump: We’re serving our city and our country — what have you done?

About 1,000 of New York City’s police officers are Muslim — and they’re not happy about Donald Trump and other Republican candidates who are fanning the flames of anti-Islam hysteria.

“To me it is very ignorant, and there is more need to educate these candidates about the religion,” Sgt. Muhammad Ashraf, a NYPD officer who emigrated from Pakistan when he was 20 years old, told NY1.

Trump has said he wouldn’t rule out the creation of a database to track all Muslims in the U.S., and he did not dismiss a reporter’s suggestion that Muslims might be required to carry special identification that noted their religion.

“Dear Mr. Trump: No need to register my family or any #MUSLIM family for that matter, as we are already registered and sworn service members of this great nation and city,” said Lt. Ashraf Kamal, of the NYPD.

Now that's a Helpful Policeman!
 
Donald Trump suffers his largest drop in polls after week of controversy

Donald Trump’s support among Republicans has dropped 12 points in less than a week, marking the presidential hopeful’s biggest decline since he started leading the field in July, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll.

Trump is still in the lead, with 31% of people surveyed naming him as their preferred candidate in a rolling poll over five days that ended on 27 November. However, that number was down from a peak of 43% on 22 November.

Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson has seen his poll numbers drift downward and now trails Trump by more than half, with just 15% of Republicans polled saying they would vote for him in the same 27 November poll. As recently as late October, Carson trailed Trump by only six points.

Following Carson, Florida Senator Marco Rubio and Texas Senator Ted Cruz are tied for third place, with more than 8% each.

Florida governor Jeb Bush trailed Rubio and Cruz with 7%.

IF El-JEB! can't do better that 7% as an establishment fav, maybe he should lose hope?
 
Here’s some of the biggest and boldest lies told during the 2016 race for president

It is campaign season, and facts are taking it on the chin.

Republican Donald Trump’s claim that Arab Americans cheered during the September 11, 2001 attacks is just the latest in a string of falsehoods from US presidential candidates.

Trump is not alone among the candidates in distorting the truth, according to fact-checkers.

“But I do think it’s fair to say Donald Trump is on the verge of melting down the fact-checking sites with what he is saying.”

Trump earlier this year said the US unemployment rate was as high as 42 percent. More recently, he tweeted a graphic showing that 81 percent of white homicide victims were killed by blacks. The website PolitiFact said the correct figure from Department of Justice statistics was 15 percent.

Asked by Fox News about the mistake, Trump said, “I didn’t tweet, I retweeted somebody that was supposedly an expert… am I gonna check every statistic?”

Yes Donald, that's why you have minions. :rolleyes:
 
What will it take to stop Donald Trump?

Striding on stage to the triumphant strains of Nessun Dorma , Donald Trump has a surprisingly humble confession to make for someone defying all the laws of political gravity.

“Unless we win, it doesn’t mean a damn thing,” the would-be Republican presidential nominee warns a campaign rally in South Carolina, despite finishing his fourth month in a row at the top of the polls .

“I want to pick my date for the election. I want it next Tuesday,” he confides to an 11,000-strong crowd typical of the grassroots support that needs to flourish well into March for him to win the Republican nomination, let alone November’s general election.

Such moments of self-doubt are fleeting, however, quickly replaced by the now familiar bombast of a billionaire whose status as a “winner” has become his defining policy platform.

“I like the way he speaks,” said Sandra Murray of Dubuque, Iowa. “He speaks the truth, he speaks what people need to hear. He may be a little bold but you can’t sugar-coat things anymore. This country is a huge mess and we need to get out of this and honestly he could be the man to do it.”

Other supporters have a simpler attraction.

“Oh, I wish I had big nuts like him,” said Dino Rossi of Newton, Massachusetts. “He’s not afraid of anybody or anything, that’s pretty cool.”
 
GOP Ohio governor destroys Trump in rant: ‘He’s not going to be the nominee and everyone needs to get over it’

An animated John Kasich (R-OH) lit into GOP front-runner Donald Trump Sunday morning, saying the billionaire businessman has offended practically everyone in the country before boldly asserting “he is not going to be the GOP nominee.”

Appearing on ABC’s This Week, the Ohio governor turned from talking about the battlegrounds in the Middle East to the fight for the GOP presidential nomination where he trails Trump by a hefty margin.

“It’s about having a leader who unifies the country,” Kasich began. “I mean Trump has criticized and insulted women, Hispanics, Muslims, and reporters … Martha, I know you’re offended by this. We need a leader who brings us together, not a leader that’s separating us, one group from another.”

Asked by Raddatz whether he would not support Trump if he were to get the GOP nomination, Kasich danced around the question, before stating it was a moot point.

“Well, he’s not going to be the nominee, Martha,” Kasich insisted. “Because at the end — look, he may have 20 percent of the vote but he’s got 80 percent of Republicans who don’t support him. And somebody has to call him out on his kind of divisive language!”

“I think he’s very divisive and I do not believe he will last, Martha. I know all the press keeps speculating what he’s gonna do. You all said he’s gonna fall, then he didn’t, now you’re all, you know, up in the air about ‘well, maybe he’s gonna make it,'” Kasich said while becoming very animated. “He’s not gonna make it, Martha. You know why? He’s not going to make it because someone who divides this country, here in the 21st century, who is calling names of women and Muslims and Hispanics, and mocking reporters, then saying ‘I didn’t do it,’ but then he did do it — it’s just not going to happen, Martha. And everyone needs to get over it and take a deep breath.”

Kasich said hopefully. :rolleyes:
 
Trump receives coveted Twisted Sister endorsement

He may not have gotten all of those black ministers everyone was talking about, but The Donald has earned the respect (if not the vote) of one influencer of society… Dee Snider. The Twisted Sister front man has allegedly answer the call (literally… on the phone) from Trump and given him the thumbs up to use his song, “We’re not gonna take it” during is campaign events. (Reporting from The Hill)

So, I guess he's going to pay for it?
 
Trump says he would charge CNN $5 million for next GOP debate appearance

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump suggested Monday that he would charge CNN $5 million for his next GOP debate appearance. Trump also said that he has been responsible for increasing the ratings of television networks during presidential debates.

"How about I tell CNN, who doesn't treat me properly ... I'm not gonna do the next debate, okay? I won't do the debate unless they pay me $5 million, all of which goes to wounded warriors or goes to vets,” Trump said at a rally in Georgia, according to NBC News.

"The problem is they'll say 'Trump is chicken.' One thing I'm not is chicken, okay?" he told his 5,500-strong audience.

OMG, I hope he's not just bullshitting us.
 
CNN goes there on Trump’s campaign: ‘Adolph Hitler, when he first rose to power, was elected’

Trump drives CNN to the full Godwin!

CNN political commentator Sally Kohn on Wednesday said that “fascism” was most appropriate word to describe Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s vision for American.

“We might be at the point that I might weep on national television,” Kohn explained CNN host Ashleigh Banfield. “This is not funny anymore.”

“When you have a candidate that continues to say the same sort of demagogic things he’s saying and his support is maintained, and when you see a Black Lives Matter protester beaten during one of his rallies — and he said maybe he deserved to be roughed up — when a homeless immigrant is beaten by Trump supporters and Trump doesn’t condemn that but says, in fact, ‘Well, my people are passionate,’ there’s a word for this.”

“It’s fascism,” Kohn pointed out. “And people need to remember in this country, Adolph Hitler, when he first rose to power, was elected by 36 percent of the German voters.”

“A lot of really weird Brown Shirt similarities,” Banfield agreed. “Identity cards, it’s okay to spy on your neighbors, the disabled are already being mocked.”
 
Has anybody reported Donald Trump yet?

He says it's up to us to make sure that people's questionable behavior gets reported.

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box...eport-neighbor-police-cops-suspicious-muslims
“The real greatest resource is all of you, because you have all those eyes and you see what’s happening,” he told listeners in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

“People move into a house a block down the road, you know who’s going in,” Trump continued. "You can see and you report them to the local police.
“You’re pretty smart, right?” he asked his audience. "We know if there’s something going on, report them. Most likely you’ll be wrong, but that’s OK.

“That’s the best way. Everybody’s their own cop in a way. You’ve got to do it.
 
This guy is so fantastically twaterific.

http://www.nytimes.com/politics/fir...s-for-banning-muslims-from-entering-u-s/?_r=0


Donald J. Trump called on Monday for the United States to bar all Muslims from entering the country until the nation’s leaders can “figure out what is going on,” an extraordinary escalation of his harsh rhetoric aimed at members of the Islamic faith in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, Calif.

“Without looking at the various polling data, it is obvious to anybody the hatred is beyond comprehension. Where this hatred comes from and why we will have to determine,” said Mr. Trump, the leading Republican candidate for his party’s 2016 presidential nomination.
 
Soon he'll be arrested in some podunk municipality for incitement.
 
Just heard this tidbit.

Trump, in a formal statement from his campaign, urged a “total and complete shutdown” of all federal processes allowing followers of Islam into the country until elected leaders can “figure out what is going on.” Asked by The Hill whether that would include American Muslims currently abroad, Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks replied over email: “Mr. Trump says, ‘everyone.’ ”
The call, which he made hours after the release of a poll showing Trump being overtaken by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-*Texas) in early-voting Iowa, drew swift and forceful condemnation from the White House and virtually every presidential candidate in both parties.

Describing Trump’s proposal as “unhinged,” “fascist” and “downright dangerous,” Trump’s rivals sought to characterize it as further evidence the bombastic real estate mogul is unfit to lead the country.

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box...ump-calls-for-shutdown-of-muslims-entering-us
 

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump on Tuesday defended his call to ban Muslims from entering the United States, calling it a temporary measure in a time of war.

Trump likened his proposal to those implemented by former U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt against people of Japanese, Germans and Italian descent during World War Two.

“What I’m doing is no different than FDR,” Trump said on ABC’s “Good Morning America” program in one of a round of heated television interviews where he defended his plan in the wake of last week’s California shooting spree by two Muslims who authorities said were radicalized.

The backlash against GOP presidential candidate and front runner Donald Trump continued Tuesday with Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan condemning recent comments by Trump saying he’s bar Muslims from traveling to the United States.

“This is not conservatism,” Ryan said, according to CNN. “Some of our best and biggest allies in this struggle and fight against radical Islam terror are Muslims.”

Ryan said he normally avoid commenting on what is being said in the presidential election, but made exception to Trump’s comments.
 
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How does Trump do it? Understanding the psychology of a demagogue’s rally

The thing that is hard to appreciate about Donald Trump before you personally enter a room with him – in this case, the hangar deck of a wartime aircraft carrier – is that his first weapon is humor. Long before he fires up his loyal supporters, before he hits them with outrageous comments that send shockwaves around the world, he makes them laugh.

He looks like the man he is: a real estate developer with dodgy hair. But don’t underestimate the guy – he has the intuition and timing of a stand-up comedian.

Except he's not very funny, more creepy!:eek:
 
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