The Trump Thread!!! - Part 2

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The whole "Two Corinthians" goof wouldn't be a big deal, personally, but the fact that he just can't admit to a mistake says so much about him.
 
Any halfwit knows that a 2 prior to Corinthians means Second Corinthians and not Two Corinthians.

I don't think Trump knows anything about the Bible, however... "Two Corinthians" is indeed a valid way to say 2 Corinthians. Its more common in the UK and academic lectures than in the states though I think.
 
I don't think Trump knows anything about the Bible, however... "Two Corinthians" is indeed a valid way to say 2 Corinthians. Its more common in the UK and academic lectures than in the states though I think.

Sure its valid. 2 can be said two, and I wouldnt be surprised if it is written that way in some acedemic papers and for academic cataloguing but Ive never heard any preacher pastor priest or teacher say Two Corinthians. Even my Oxford Annotated Study Bible (and every other bible and bible related book I own) writes it out as Second Corinthians.

But as I said its no a huge screwup or the problem. Its his inability to even admit the tiniest mistake. We all say the wrong words occassionally and have brain farts and thats all it ever needed to be, but he tried to blame it on some other guy and the way Mother Trump talks.
 
https://***********/CNN/status/690985593703174144

Good God.

The sad part is, when you consider the morons who are lapping his s*** up, you start to realize he probably isn't wrong.
 
Donald Trump of all people suddenly pretending to be all religious is one of the most hilarious and most transparent bits of political posturing I've ever seen.

How gullible do you have to be?


Romney browned his skin before speaking to a group of Latinos last time. Both campaigns don't think much of their target audiences.
 
If you go to Liberty University, you're not exactly the brightest person to begin with.
 
Romney browned his skin before speaking to a group of Latinos last time. Both campaigns don't think much of their target audiences.


He didn't go far enough in my opinion. If he went into full cholo mode, he'd be president right now.
 
Romney browned his skin before speaking to a group of Latinos last time. Both campaigns don't think much of their target audiences.

I guess he didn't want to go with the my granddad lived in Mexico with all his wives story
 
https://***********/CNN/status/690985593703174144

Good God.

The sad part is, when you consider the morons who are lapping his s*** up, you start to realize he probably isn't wrong.

From the very beginning I've never believed Trump was in this to win it. He wanted the attention and he got it but I don't think he wants to go through this campaign entirely. I think even he's shocked by where he is today but he can't quit. I really think he's been trying to sabotage his campaign for months but even with the outrageous things he says he can't shake his support lol. Trotting out the human vegetable Sarah Palin was just another way at trying to tell everyone "I'm not serious about this sh**" but no matter what his dullard supporters are going to stick by him. He truly is running the greatest reality TV troll campaign of all-time.
 
From the very beginning I've never believed Trump was in this to win it. He wanted the attention and he got it but I don't think he wants to go through this campaign entirely. I think even he's shocked by where he is today but he can't quit. I really think he's been trying to sabotage his campaign for months but even with the outrageous things he says he can't shake his support lol. Trotting out the human vegetable Sarah Palin was just another way at trying to tell everyone "I'm not serious about this sh**" but no matter what his dullard supporters are going to stick by him. He truly is running the greatest reality TV troll campaign of all-time.

I agree he wasn't in it to win it at first. But I believe that he had a Herman Cain moment. I.e. he now thinks - and rightly so, apparently - that he might actually be able to win.
 
Some of his famous guacamole could smooth over any misunderstandings.
 
Republicans 'Waving The Flag Of Surrender' To Trump

Late Thursday night, National Review, the storied conservative magazine founded by William F. Buckley, published an issue denouncing Donald Trump.

“Trump is a philosophically unmoored political opportunist who would trash the broad conservative ideological consensus within the GOP in favor of a free-floating populism with strong-man overtones,” the editors wrote. “Donald Trump is a menace to American conservatism who would take the work of generations and trample it underfoot in behalf of a populism as heedless and crude as the Donald himself.”

The Republican National Committee reacted swiftly — immediately revoking the permission it had given National Review to host a Republican presidential debate next month. “Tonight, a top official with the RNC called me to say that National Review was being disinvited,” the magazine’s publisher wrote online. “The reason: Our ‘Against Trump’ editorial.”

That soft flapping sound you hear is the Grand Old Party waving the flag of surrender to Trump. Party elites — what’s left of the now-derided “establishment” — are acquiescing to the once inconceivable: that a xenophobic and bigoted showman is now the face of the Republican Party and of American conservatism.

In recent days, influential Republicans including Bob Dole, Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, RNC Chairman Reince Priebus, Rupert Murdoch and, as my Post colleagues reported, Rudy Giuliani and Rep. Peter King (N.Y.) have made noises about being able to stomach Trump. Republican donors are trying to insinuate themselves in the billionaire’s orbit. Trump himself said Thursday: “I have received so many phone calls from people that you would call ‘establishment,’ from people — generally speaking, conservatives, Republicans — that want to come onto our team.”

The Wall Street Journal editorial page had long criticized Trump’s candidacy, publishing an editorial in July arguing that the conservative media who applaud Trump “are hurting the cause.” The editors opined: “If Donald Trump becomes the voice of conservatives, conservatism will implode along with him.”

A week ago, the Journal reversed course. “Mr. Trump is a better politician than we ever imagined, and he is becoming a better candidate,” the editorialists wrote, speculating that “he might possibly be able to appeal to a larger set of voters than he has so far.”

I had been confident that Republican primary voters would reject Trump. I still think they would, if given the chance. But they haven’t been given a clear alternative. Because of Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Chris Christie, John Kasich and the others selfishly refusing to unite behind any one of them, the anti-Trump vote has been scattered.

Instead, they’ve let the GOP primary battle turn into a fight between Trump and Ted Cruz, and the party’s old guard has decided Trump is marginally better because he’s more malleable. That may be so; though both men are opportunists, Trump has reinvented himself utterly in this campaign and could attempt another transformation.

But how do you un-ring all these bells? Trump has in word and deed built his candidacy by antagonizing Latinos and Muslims, immigrants and women, Jews and African Americans, Asian Americans and the disabled. And if he walked away from his vows to deport 11 million illegal immigrants and to block Muslims from coming into the United States, he’d abandon the source of his power: the rage of angry, less-educated white men.

My colleague Michael Gerson, the former George W. Bush speechwriter, wrote that “the nomination of Trump would reduce Republican politics — at the presidential level — to an enterprise of squalid prejudice. And many Republicans could not follow, precisely because they are Republicans. By seizing the GOP, Trump would break it to pieces.”

But how many Republicans could not follow? Partisanship is now more important than any other factor in predicting Americans’ votes, which means there is little possibility of a Goldwater-style landslide against Trump. Republicans could nominate a ham sandwich and still get 45 percent of the vote.

Heck, Trump could even win — particularly if Democrats nominate a socialist to oppose him — but the only thing more likely to devastate the Republican Party and the conservative movement than a Trump wipeout in November would be a Trump victory. Either way, he’d cement the Republican Party’s long-term demographic problems and bind conservatism to bigotry and nativism.


This is why I wonder about the self-deception of those GOP elites now cozying up to Trump.

The Hill newspaper last week interviewed major donor Robert Bazyk, who decamped to Trump from Bush. The big spender objects to Trump’s positions on refugees and Muslims, and his “insults and name-calling.” And yet he is funding the man.

If, in future years, Republicans and conservatives are called to explain how Trump happened, they might recall this: Good people could have stopped him, but they didn’t.

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/milbank-trump_us_56a4685ae4b0404eb8f1e9ba
 
The GOP establishment is kidding themselves if they really think they can ride the tiger and not end up in its belly. Trump will steam roll them if anything else. He hasn't gotten this powerful by taking orders .
 
So, after Palin tried to blame her son's domestic violence on PTSD from combat in Iraq, there are now a lot of questions emerging about whether he even saw combat at all.
 
The madman, the absolute madman. You can't make this stuff up.
 
He's not gonna take some much as a scratch from that kinda outburst from his spokesperson either. The insanity continues!!!
 
With the likely exception of Taarna, this Trump staffer would be percieved as "scary delusional" by most of us here.

http://www.rawstory.com/2016/01/top...-president-obama-is-a-half-breed-and-so-am-i/

Christ, it's like Trump and his crew are using Voldemort's playbook.

She must have been the victim of racism when she was young and now she hates herself for having mixed parents. Or she is just an idiot. Either way a person that thinks like her has no business being anywhere near the government.
 
Michael Moore gets air time. Whoopi, Rosie and Joy are on the View. So all those people get more Air time than Palin does.

That's funny. Yes, Michael Moore gets "air time" for pointing out economic, gun control, etc. issues. Just because someone doesn't agree with you politically and has views drastically different than yours, doesn't mean they are nuts. I don't think Michael Moore is in Sarah's league. Air Time??? None of the people you pointed out were seriously considered for the highest and second highest office in the US (and if you are on the ticket for VP, you are being considered as president). Please, don't even try to compare the level of exposure or the possibility to put someone in a political office that means something.

I'm a lousy democrat, but the republican party HAS put Palin on the ballot as one of their standard bearers and MAY do the same with Trump. Those people are in a different league when it comes to being charlatans.

My mother is a staunch republican who I consider to be a "true" conservative and I respect that. She believes in civil liberties, supports gay rights, believes in the right to bear arms (with background checks), women's rights, etc. In my opinion, the "conservative" movement has been hijacked by a bunch of religious bigots (Pat Robertson and his ilk).

Barry Goldwater Sr. supported gay rights long before it was fashionable. While I would disagree with him on a plethora of issues, Sarah Palin and Donald Trump don't deserve to wash his dirty socks and have less integrity in their entire body than he had in his fingernail.
 
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