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Trump must be doing something right.


Foreign diplomats are expressing alarm to U.S. government officials about what they say are inflammatory and insulting public statements by Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump, according to senior U.S. officials.


Officials from Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and Asia have complained in recent private conversations, mostly about the xenophobic nature of Trump's statements, said three U.S. officials, who all declined to be identified.


Senior leaders in several countries -- including Britain, Mexico, France, and Canada -- have already made public comments criticizing Trump's positions. German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel branded him a threat to peace and prosperity in an interview published on Sunday.


Lets take a look at the whiner countries.


Britain: Better known as Britainstan, fast becoming a Muslim country. (Sorry Beets but your country is all but castrated)


Mexico: Who dumps their unwanted into the U.S. and has lost control of their own country to drug cartels.


France: What is there to be said, it’s France.


Canada: The country who just elected the white mans version of Obama.


And finally Germany: Trump is a threat to peace and prosperity? That’s absurd. What’s a threat is their immigration crisis. Liberal asylum laws and generous benefits make Germany the EU’s biggest recipient of people seeking asylum many of which are arriving from the Middle East and Africa.


Why are they bitching? They see their gravy train which is know as the U.S. coming to an end.
 

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You consistently publish the most irrelevant, long winded shit of anybody in here. WHO GIVES A FLYING FUCK ABOUT TRUMP'S ANCESTORS??????? Like a critic said, he was born on third base and thinks he hit a home run. Why don't you try publishing things about how he is affecting the GOP?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...nald-trump-is-ruining-paul-ryans-speakership/


How Donald Trump is ruining Paul Ryan’s speakership

a
House Speaker Paul D. Ryan stepped in front of cameras Tuesday and delivered just the sort of high-minded, clear-eyed, aspirational message that has made him a Republican Party standard-bearer.


”This party does not prey on people’s prejudices; we appeal to their highest ideals,” he said. “We believe all people are created equal in the eyes of God and our government. This is fundamental, and if someone wants to be our nominee, they must understand this.”
Moments later, asked what if that nominee were in fact Donald Trump — who days before had balked at denouncing the Ku Klux Klan — he was forced to retreat from the moral high ground. ”I plan to support the nominee,” he said.
When he was drafted into the speaker’s chair four months ago, Ryan acknowledged the job would be difficult. But, thanks to Trump, it has become much worse than that. He has come to embody the party establishment’s existential conflict: deeply wary of Trump’s divisive antics but reluctant to reject him entirely.


“It’s not nearly as complicated for us as it is for him,” said Peter Wehner, a Ryan friend and senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center who was among the first conservative thinkers to renounce Trump. “His is a different role, and it’s a trickier role, and it requires a lot of prudence, frankly.”
Prudence, however, has gotten Ryan only so far politically. The expected complications of managing the House Republican majority have only been compounded by Trump’s unexpected endurance. Ryan’s attempts to sail above the presidential fray with an emphasis on big ideas and basic legislating have been undermined both by hard-line House conservatives and by an angry presidential front-runner who all but mocks the reverence for the party’s leading “ideas man.”


”Paul Ryan, I don’t know him well, but I’m sure I’m going to get along great with him,” Trump said Tuesday. “And if I don’t, he’s going to have to pay a big price, okay?”
House conservatives, meanwhile, are making it all but impossible for Ryan to strike a GOP consensus on spending, setting the stage for the same type of contentious year-end budget negotiations that bedeviled his predecessor, John A. Boehner.


Ryan has undoubtedly kept his sunny disposition. He has embraced his role as a leading GOP communicator on cable TV and talk radio, has proved to be a prodigious fundraiser, and continues to enjoy support across the House Republican conference.
“Speaker Ryan is the ultimate optimist, and the job has only energized him,” said Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong.
But well-laid plans for the year ahead are hanging by a thread. For weeks, Ryan has been locked in a standoff with hard-liners who want to back out of the bipartisan spending agreement Boehner struck last year. That deal includes $30 billion in new spending and was supposed to set up a drama-free budget process ahead of the election in November.


Ryan has urged his colleagues to honor the agreement, arguing it will show the GOP-controlled Congress can effectively govern while giving rank-and-file lawmakers the influence they desire over individual spending bills.
But that argument is falling flat with members who are mindful of the anti-establishment fervor stoked by Trump’s success and are balking at boosting spending.
Rep. Tom Marino (R-Pa.), one of the five congressional Republicans to have endorsed Trump, said conservatives are simply listening to voters. “Overwhelmingly in my district, people are tired of insiders,” he said.


Even members who don’t back Trump say it is impossible to ignore the sense that the voters want to shake up Washington, even if it means discarding Ryan’s plans. “If we dismiss the national sentiment out there, we do it at great peril,” said Rep. Bill Flores (R-Texas), who has not endorsed a presidential candidate.
The reprise of the spending fight has forced Ryan to spend weeks trying to keep his conference united on tactics, while his quest to animate Republican voters through policy has been all but overwhelmed by the Trump spectacle. He increasingly finds himself being asked to respond to whatever controversy Trump has stoked that day or week.
“No politician wants to have to be in the position where they have to denounce the comments of a member of their own party,” said Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.). “It’s a terrible position to be in, and with Donald Trump — how many times will you have to do this?”


Addressing reporters Thursday, Ryan said he had laughed off Trump’s “pay a big price” threat and played down his own ability to shape the presidential race. In declining further comment on Trump, he emphasized, as he has previously, his special role as chairman of the Republican National Convention.
”As speaker of the House, what can I do about it, what can I control?” he said. “I can help put substance in this campaign. The way we see our role in this campaign, through our agenda project, is to add a keel and a rudder to this ship of the Republican Party, and give it direction.”


Ryan appointed five task forces last month to develop detailed policy agendas on such issues as national security, health care and federal regulations. But on numerous ideas close to Ryan’s heart — free trade, immigration reform, tax reform, entitlement cuts — Trump holds conflicting, if not opposing views.
Asked what use his agenda will be if Trump is the nominee, Ryan said, “Look, we’re going to speak out for who we are and what we believe; we’re going to run on our beliefs, we’re going to run on our ideas. I’ll just leave it at that.”


Ryan counts himself as a proud “movement conservative,” but that does not describe the bulk of the Trump base. “Trump has Democrats supporting him, and people who are not even anywhere in the same camp about spending,” said Rep. Pat Tiberi (R-Ohio), a close Ryan ally.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee highlighted the chasm between Trump’s angry populism and Ryan’s happy-warrior conservatism when it circulated a mock obituary for Ryan’s “Year of Ideas” on Friday.
“It met its untimely and early end at the hands of a Republican electorate that is simply not interested in policy and good governance,” it read.
Wehner said if Trump progresses toward the nomination, he may have no choice but to make amends with Ryan.

“There are going to have to be some people who are going to have to deal with him that are responsible and sane human beings, and Ryan is one of them,” he said. “Trump has zero ideas, he has no governing philosophy, he has no governing agenda, he’s got nothing. And presumably he’s at some point going to figure out that he needs something, and Paul Ryan is probably the best person in the Republican Party to fill that void.”



We cannot let the failing REPUBLICAN ESTABLISHMENT, who could not stop Obama (twice), ruin the MOVEMENT with millions of $'s in false ads!




Lindsey Graham is all over T.V., much like failed 47% candidate Mitt Romney. These nasty, angry, jealous failures have ZERO credibility!


 

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Cc8cmzzW0AAXrzE.jpg
 

New member
Joined
Nov 10, 2010
Messages
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You consistently publish the most irrelevant, long winded shit of anybody in here. WHO GIVES A FLYING FUCK ABOUT TRUMP'S ANCESTORS??????? Like a critic said, he was born on third base and thinks he hit a home run. Why don't you try publishing things about how he is affecting the GOP?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...nald-trump-is-ruining-paul-ryans-speakership/


How Donald Trump is ruining Paul Ryan’s speakership

a
House Speaker Paul D. Ryan stepped in front of cameras Tuesday and delivered just the sort of high-minded, clear-eyed, aspirational message that has made him a Republican Party standard-bearer.


”This party does not prey on people’s prejudices; we appeal to their highest ideals,” he said. “We believe all people are created equal in the eyes of God and our government. This is fundamental, and if someone wants to be our nominee, they must understand this.”
Moments later, asked what if that nominee were in fact Donald Trump — who days before had balked at denouncing the Ku Klux Klan — he was forced to retreat from the moral high ground. ”I plan to support the nominee,” he said.
When he was drafted into the speaker’s chair four months ago, Ryan acknowledged the job would be difficult. But, thanks to Trump, it has become much worse than that. He has come to embody the party establishment’s existential conflict: deeply wary of Trump’s divisive antics but reluctant to reject him entirely.


“It’s not nearly as complicated for us as it is for him,” said Peter Wehner, a Ryan friend and senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center who was among the first conservative thinkers to renounce Trump. “His is a different role, and it’s a trickier role, and it requires a lot of prudence, frankly.”
Prudence, however, has gotten Ryan only so far politically. The expected complications of managing the House Republican majority have only been compounded by Trump’s unexpected endurance. Ryan’s attempts to sail above the presidential fray with an emphasis on big ideas and basic legislating have been undermined both by hard-line House conservatives and by an angry presidential front-runner who all but mocks the reverence for the party’s leading “ideas man.”


”Paul Ryan, I don’t know him well, but I’m sure I’m going to get along great with him,” Trump said Tuesday. “And if I don’t, he’s going to have to pay a big price, okay?”
House conservatives, meanwhile, are making it all but impossible for Ryan to strike a GOP consensus on spending, setting the stage for the same type of contentious year-end budget negotiations that bedeviled his predecessor, John A. Boehner.


Ryan has undoubtedly kept his sunny disposition. He has embraced his role as a leading GOP communicator on cable TV and talk radio, has proved to be a prodigious fundraiser, and continues to enjoy support across the House Republican conference.
“Speaker Ryan is the ultimate optimist, and the job has only energized him,” said Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong.
But well-laid plans for the year ahead are hanging by a thread. For weeks, Ryan has been locked in a standoff with hard-liners who want to back out of the bipartisan spending agreement Boehner struck last year. That deal includes $30 billion in new spending and was supposed to set up a drama-free budget process ahead of the election in November.


Ryan has urged his colleagues to honor the agreement, arguing it will show the GOP-controlled Congress can effectively govern while giving rank-and-file lawmakers the influence they desire over individual spending bills.
But that argument is falling flat with members who are mindful of the anti-establishment fervor stoked by Trump’s success and are balking at boosting spending.
Rep. Tom Marino (R-Pa.), one of the five congressional Republicans to have endorsed Trump, said conservatives are simply listening to voters. “Overwhelmingly in my district, people are tired of insiders,” he said.


Even members who don’t back Trump say it is impossible to ignore the sense that the voters want to shake up Washington, even if it means discarding Ryan’s plans. “If we dismiss the national sentiment out there, we do it at great peril,” said Rep. Bill Flores (R-Texas), who has not endorsed a presidential candidate.
The reprise of the spending fight has forced Ryan to spend weeks trying to keep his conference united on tactics, while his quest to animate Republican voters through policy has been all but overwhelmed by the Trump spectacle. He increasingly finds himself being asked to respond to whatever controversy Trump has stoked that day or week.
“No politician wants to have to be in the position where they have to denounce the comments of a member of their own party,” said Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.). “It’s a terrible position to be in, and with Donald Trump — how many times will you have to do this?”


Addressing reporters Thursday, Ryan said he had laughed off Trump’s “pay a big price” threat and played down his own ability to shape the presidential race. In declining further comment on Trump, he emphasized, as he has previously, his special role as chairman of the Republican National Convention.
”As speaker of the House, what can I do about it, what can I control?” he said. “I can help put substance in this campaign. The way we see our role in this campaign, through our agenda project, is to add a keel and a rudder to this ship of the Republican Party, and give it direction.”


Ryan appointed five task forces last month to develop detailed policy agendas on such issues as national security, health care and federal regulations. But on numerous ideas close to Ryan’s heart — free trade, immigration reform, tax reform, entitlement cuts — Trump holds conflicting, if not opposing views.
Asked what use his agenda will be if Trump is the nominee, Ryan said, “Look, we’re going to speak out for who we are and what we believe; we’re going to run on our beliefs, we’re going to run on our ideas. I’ll just leave it at that.”


Ryan counts himself as a proud “movement conservative,” but that does not describe the bulk of the Trump base. “Trump has Democrats supporting him, and people who are not even anywhere in the same camp about spending,” said Rep. Pat Tiberi (R-Ohio), a close Ryan ally.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee highlighted the chasm between Trump’s angry populism and Ryan’s happy-warrior conservatism when it circulated a mock obituary for Ryan’s “Year of Ideas” on Friday.
“It met its untimely and early end at the hands of a Republican electorate that is simply not interested in policy and good governance,” it read.
Wehner said if Trump progresses toward the nomination, he may have no choice but to make amends with Ryan.

“There are going to have to be some people who are going to have to deal with him that are responsible and sane human beings, and Ryan is one of them,” he said. “Trump has zero ideas, he has no governing philosophy, he has no governing agenda, he’s got nothing. And presumably he’s at some point going to figure out that he needs something, and Paul Ryan is probably the best person in the Republican Party to fill that void.”



norway-bullfinch_2418994k.jpg



Northern Bullfinch on top of a tree, Norway
 

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Trump must be doing something right.


Foreign diplomats are expressing alarm to U.S. government officials about what they say are inflammatory and insulting public statements by Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump, according to senior U.S. officials.


Officials from Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and Asia have complained in recent private conversations, mostly about the xenophobic nature of Trump's statements, said three U.S. officials, who all declined to be identified.


Senior leaders in several countries -- including Britain, Mexico, France, and Canada -- have already made public comments criticizing Trump's positions. German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel branded him a threat to peace and prosperity in an interview published on Sunday.


Lets take a look at the whiner countries.


Britain: Better known as Britainstan, fast becoming a Muslim country. (Sorry Beets but your country is all but castrated)


Mexico: Who dumps their unwanted into the U.S. and has lost control of their own country to drug cartels.


France: What is there to be said, it’s France.


Canada: The country who just elected the white mans version of Obama.


And finally Germany: Trump is a threat to peace and prosperity? That’s absurd. What’s a threat is their immigration crisis. Liberal asylum laws and generous benefits make Germany the EU’s biggest recipient of people seeking asylum many of which are arriving from the Middle East and Africa.


Why are they bitching? They see their gravy train which is know as the U.S. coming to an end.


 

Life's a bitch, then you die!
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Messages
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My wife and I visited your country 9 years ago, her brother and his family live in Ipswich. I have to say that I enjoyed ever minute on holiday, as you Brits call it.


Ate a lot of fish and chips, toured London and even participated in a pub crawl one night.


We were on the bridge at Big Ben crossing the Thames headed to the EYE when we came upon a middle eastern man who had to be 7 feet tall walking with 2 small children. Trolling behind was a little women if full burka. He would stop, she would stop. He would resume walking, she would resume walking. He paid no attention to her what so ever.


Now I’m not an emotional man. For the most part I don’t give a shit about other people but I actually felt sorry for that women. I’ll never forget it.
 

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"It made him a fortune offering round-the-clock women, liquor and food"

Why didn't either of my grandfathers think of that!Instead they worked themselves to death, a kosher butcher and a paper hangerwith forearms like Popeye.
 

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"Britain: Better known as Britainstan, fast becoming a Muslim country. (Sorry Beets but your country is all but castrated)"

Dave007 doing what he does best. Crushing the hopes of other posters.:homer:















Scott, get back to work dammit
!
 

Life's a bitch, then you die!
Joined
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"Britain: Better known as Britainstan, fast becoming a Muslim country. (Sorry Beets but your country is all but castrated)"

Dave007 doing what he does best. Crushing the hopes of other posters.:homer:















Scott, get back to work dammit
!
As long as there are people like Herbert Khaury in the world Beets will be fine. :homer:
 

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31F7343200000578-3480899-image-a-10_1457379208755.jpg

+5



HE'S GOT MY VOTE: NASCAR's Mark Martin backs the Republican frontrunner at a rally in Concord and says: 'Hey guys! Donald Trump has my vote.'

31F732AF00000578-3480899-image-a-11_1457379217553.jpg

+5



WARM WELCOME: 'Let's bring those greatly needed jobs back to this country. And build that wall! Make America great again!' Martin said

31F7272400000578-3480899-image-a-9_1457378443363.jpg

+5



GENTLEMEN, START MAKING AMERICA GREAT AGAIN: Trump's latest endorser is Mark Martin, the legendary NASCAR driver who placed 2nd a record five times in the Sprint Cup series


31F726C800000578-3480899-image-a-10_1457378568080.jpg

+5



BACKING TRUMP: Martin, pictured above in a 2013 photo is known for being the best NASCAR driver to never win a championship


.
 

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[h=2]Trump plans to convert Democrats to sweep to general election victory - and he's already got them worried that he could win [/h]
31F1CA3800000578-0-image-m-30_1457373820920.jpg
Working class white voters have been trending more and more Republican in the last few cycles, but Trump could grab even more away from the Democrats in states like Pennsylvania and Ohio.
 

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[h=2]Republican primary won't be over 'til MAY - at the earliest - says top party official [/h]
31F55D0900000578-0-image-m-7_1457360387000.jpg
The Republican primary race will go on for at least two more months, a top GOP official said today. 'We basically guarantee right now that we won't have a nominee until May,' Sean Spicer said.
 

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