Archive for Ted Cruz

Trump Wants Apology From Hillary For Calling Him ISIS Biggest Recruiter; Hillary’s Response, Hell No!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 21, 2015 by sheriffali

CRH DONALD TRUMP BIGOT

 

[NYT] “Almost six months have passed since Donald Trump overtook Jeb Bush in polls of Republican voters. At the time, most pundits dismissed the Trump phenomenon as a blip, predicting that voters would soon return to more conventional candidates. Instead, however, his lead just kept widening. Even more striking, the triumvirate of trash-talk — Mr. Trump, Ben Carson, and Ted Cruz — now commands the support of roughly 60 percent of the primary electorate.

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But how can this be happening? After all, the antiestablishment candidates now dominating the field, aside from being deeply ignorant about policy, have a habit of making false claims, then refusing to acknowledge error. Why don’t Republican voters seem to care?

 

Well, part of the answer has to be that the party taught them not to care. Bluster and belligerence as substitutes for analysis, disdain for any kind of measured response, dismissal of inconvenient facts reported by the “liberal media” didn’t suddenly arrive on the Republican scene last summer.”

 

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Open New York Times Link For Full Article

 

http://nyti.ms/1Oie8AC

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CNN For The Sake Of Ratings Have And continue to Prostitute Their Entire News Organization To Bigots, Racists, Liars, Crooks And Haters, The Debased Republican 2016 Hopefuls!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 15, 2015 by sheriffali

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Watch CNN’s coverage of the fifth Republican presidential debate live from Las Vegas on Tuesday, December 15. Coverage begins at 6 p.m. ET.

 

Washington (CNN) Nine candidates will appear in prime-time Tuesday night for the final Republican presidential primary debate of 2015, a critical event that will help shape the contest heading into the Iowa caucuses.

 

Businessman Donald Trump, the front-runner for the nomination, will again be center stage flanked by retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson on his right and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz on his left, CNN announced Sunday. The six remaining participants in the prime-time contest will be Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, businesswoman Carly Fiorina, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul.

 

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GOP – Grand Old Party Bankrupt Of Shame: Running For President – Trump Bankruptcy Swindler; Carson Deranged; Kasich Lost Cause; Bush Loser; Rubio Hypocrite; Cruz Homophobic; Fiorina Pathological Liar; Paul Martian!

Posted in 2016 Presidency, GOP HOPEFULS, Hillary Clinton For POTUS with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on November 10, 2015 by sheriffali

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It is amazing to witness what has happened to the Party of Abraham Lincoln and Dwight Eisenhower.

After losing Congress in 2006 and the White House in 2008, John Boehner and Mitch McConnell embraced the extreme Right-Wingers in 2010 and recaptured the House of Representatives. Then in 2014, Democrats that do not vote in the Off-Year Election gave the Senate to McConnell.

Then, Congress being run by Boehner and McConnell joined with the extreme binge of the Republican Party and decided to become “The Do Nothing Congress”, obstructing everything and producing Internecine Bills that didn’t in any way whatsoever, helped the American people, not even the Republican Voters that are still suffering from the Stockholm Syndrome, that keeps voting against their own best interest.

Majority of the Bills passed in the House and some in the Senate were a complete and utter waste of time; there were in excess of 400 Bills and each and everyone had to do with taking away Women’s Rights. Republicans have gone after Women’s Rights in such a manner that one would think these people don’t have a mother, Wife, Daughter or Niece!

In addition Republicans have and continue to go after Social Security, Food Stamps, and any and all Government Assistance to help the less fortunate, but they remain hell-bent on giving more and more to the 1%.

The Affordable Care Act has caused the Uninsured Rate to drop as low as 9%, but Republicans even after making 62 Attempts to literally kill the ACA [Obamacare] that failed, they are still focused on defunding Health Care for those that need it most.

Since 2016, John Boehner never brought to the Floor any Bills for; Immigration Reform, Jobs Bill, Infrastructure, Education or anything productive.

So, ask yourself, why do we even have a Republican Party? Democrats are not perfect, but they do favor America’s 99%. Perhaps, just perhaps, the speed of which the Republicans are imploding, we may be fortunate and do create a Third Party that would eventually replace the GOP!

Twitter @sheriffali

America May Have Had An Overdose Of The Charlatan Donald Trump And It Looks Like The Beginning Of The End For The Bankruptcy Swindler, As The 2016 GOP Hopefuls Remain Sociopaths, Blaming President Obama And Hillary Clinton For George W Bush And Dick Cheney’s Recklessness And Criminality

Posted in Politics, Republican Second Debate with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 17, 2015 by sheriffali

[NYT] So it went, somewhat tediously and surreally, for many stretches of the debate on Wednesday night and especially for the first half-hour, during which Rand Paul took the precise measure of — and raised the correct question about — the egomaniacal front-runner.

 

“Do we want someone with that kind of character, that kind of careless language, to be negotiating with Putin?” Paul asked.

 

“I think really there’s a sophomoric quality that is entertaining about Mr. Trump, but I am worried,” he added, and I nodded so vigorously at the “worried” part that I’m going to need balm and a neck brace tomorrow.

 

Paul went on to single out Trump’s “visceral response to attack people on their appearance — short, tall, fat, ugly. My goodness, that happened in junior high. Are we not way above that?”

 

No, we aren’t. Or at least Trump isn’t. And “junior high” is too easy on him, too kind. Trump comes from, and belongs in, the sandbox, as he demonstrated the second that Paul paused and Trump fired back: “I never attacked him on his look, and believe me, there’s plenty of subject matter right there.”

 

How lovely. And how adult! And less than an hour later, Fiorina had to stand there and try not to squirm as she was asked to react to Trump’s recent comments about her in a Rolling Stone interview: “Look at that face. Would anyone vote for that?”

 

Fiorina held her head, including her face, high. “I think women all over this country heard very clearly what Mr. Trump said,” she stated tightly, and with more dignity than Trump or the situation deserved.

Trump rushed in: “I think she’s got a beautiful face and I think she’s a beautiful woman.” Watch out, Carly. Next comes an invitation for a private ride in his Trump-i-copter.

 

I mentioned my nodding, but my real injuries came from shaking my head, over and over, because I couldn’t quite believe the Trump-centric nature of it all. I’m still mystified that he’s done this well in the polls for this long.

 

I know that Americans have lost faith in institutions — understandably. I know that Americans are turned off by politics as usual — justly.

 

But have we sunk to a point where we’re prepared to reach for someone so careless with his insinuations, so merrily and irresponsibly ignorant, that he used some of his precious time on Wednesday night to fan irrational, repudiated fears about a link between vaccines and autism?

 

Are we buoyed by a bully who calls anyone who disagrees with him a “loser,” promises vaguely that his presidency will be “unbelievable” (his favorite adjective, and an unintentionally telling one), and presents little besides his tumescent ego and stagey rage?

 

The CNN anchor Jake Tapper, who was the debate’s moderator, pressed hard to get Trump to say, with even a scintilla of specificity, why he believes that he’d be more effective in dealing with Vladimir Putin than Obama has been.

 

And all that Trump could muster was: “I would get along with him.”

 

How? Why? Not a single detail. But Trump doesn’t do details. He just crows that he will know the most, be the best and win. He’s a broken record of grandiose, self-infatuated music.

 

The most satisfying, encouraging moments of the debate were those when other candidates tried to point that out directly or indirectly. Chris Christie did so several times. During his opening remarks, he asked the camera to move from him to the audience, saying that the election isn’t really about the candidates, who soak up the spotlight, but the people, who deal with the consequences.

 

 

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Open The Link To Read Full NYT Article By Frank Bruni

http://nyti.ms/1UWhBCJ

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Republican Opponents Of The Iran Deal Are The Same People That Still Advocate Invading Iraq Was A Good Thing. Meanwhile, General Colin Powell Fully Supports The Iran Agreement

Posted in Iran, Peace, Politics, War with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 10, 2015 by sheriffali

Republican Colin Powell, former National Security Adviser, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and former Secretary of State support the Iran Deal.  He revealed his support in fairly laudatory terms on Meet the Press.

 

Here’s the summary:

 

It’s a pretty good deal… I know there are objections to it, but here’s why I think it’s a good deal,” the former Secretary of State said. He continued, “One of the great concerns that the opposition has that we are leaving open a ‘lane’ for the Iranians to go back to creating a nuclear weapon in 10-15 years are forgetting the reality that they have been on a superhighway for the last ten years to create a nuclear weapon or nuclear weapons program with no speed limit.”

 

And while Dick Cheney Tried to ignore the reality that under the Bush Administration Iran went from 0 Centrifuges to 5,000, Colin Powell was not ignoring reality.

 

 “In the last ten years they’ve gone from 136 centrifuges up to something like 19,000 centrifuges.” That is something Republicans never talk about. Powell pointed out, “This agreement will take them down to 5,000 cent all of this will be under IAEA supervision and I think this is a good outcome.”

 

“They had stockpiled something in the neighborhood of 12,000 kilograms of uranium. This deal will bring it down to 300 kilograms,” Powell said. “It’s a remarkable reduction. I’m amazed that they would do this but they have done it.” [Daily Kos]

 

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Jeb Bush – The Tortoise Is Chasing The Man With The Dead Animal’s Bleached Hair On His Head! Methinks Thou Doth Exclaim Too Much!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on August 19, 2015 by sheriffali

Jeb Bush is blaming Iraq’s chaos, ISIS and the total broken Middle-East that his Brother George W Bush caused, on President Obama and Hillary Clinton.

 

Right now Jeb is in trouble because of the man with the Dead Animal’s Bleached Hair On His Head. Jeb is chasing the “Hair” day and night and he is manufacturing untruths that are putting him in even worse of a situation because, people are not stupid as the Bush’s think they are.

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[NYT] “In politics, the smallest things often turn out to be the most telling ones, and so it is with the man who was supposed to be the Republican front-runner, who once inspired such rapture among party elders and whose entrance into the presidential race they yearned and clamored for.

 

They not only got their wish, they got it with punctuation: Jeb! That’s Jeb Bush’s logo, and the exclamation point is the tell. None of the other Republican presidential candidates has anything like it. None of the Democrats either. It’s a declaration of passion that only someone worried about a deficit of it would issue. Methinks thou doth exclaim too much.

 

Before Bush announced his candidacy, talk of his vulnerabilities focused largely on certain positions — his defense of Common Core educational standards, his advocacy for immigration reform — that were anathema to many voters in the Republican primaries. He was sure to catch flak.

 

But catching fire is his bigger problem. He can’t do it. In a bloated field of bellicose candidates, he’s a whisper, a blur, starved of momentum, bereft of urgency and apt to make news because he stumbles, not because he soars. Can he soar? Or even sprint?

 

“I’m the tortoise in the race,” he told a group of voters in Florida not long ago. “But I’m a joyful tortoise.”

 

And Donald Trump’s a demented peacock and I’m a crotchety hippo. Reverse anthropomorphism is a fun game, but if you’re playing it in the service of selling yourself, best not to summon a sluggish creature with a muted affect and an impenetrable shell.

 

Republicans should have seen this turtle coming. In some sense they did. Bush’s fans and backers praised him as a thoughtful “policy wonk” and conceded that he wasn’t any dynamo at the lectern or on the trail.

 

But they downgraded the importance of dynamism, maybe because they didn’t expect so much competition, including Trump. (It’s “the race between the tortoise and the bad hair,” cracked Jay Leno last week.) They couldn’t envision the way in which 16 rivals would rob Bush of clear distinction and definition.

 

Sure, he speaks Spanish and has a Mexican-born wife, but Marco Rubio also speaks Spanish and has two Cuban-born parents. Sure, he was twice elected governor of a state that’s not reliably red, but so were Scott Walker, Chris Christie and John Kasich.

 

He’s not the most eloquent or the most inspiring, so his backers began to pitch him as the most adult. But at that first debate, Kasich stole even that superlative from him.

 

What’s left? He’s raised the most money, some of which he’ll use for television ads much sooner than anyone had anticipated. He’ll try to buy the oomph that he can’t organically generate.

 

Oomph is what that big speech last week — in which he blamed Hillary Clinton for the rise of the Islamic State — was largely about. He was flexing his audacity and independence, showing that his surname wouldn’t cow him from going after a Democratic rival on any matter, including Iraq. It took gall to edit his older brother out of the diatribe. It took guts to go with a diatribe in the first place.

 

Did it help? Polls suggest not. A CNN/ORC survey that was released on Tuesday showed that he doesn’t fare nearly as well as Trump when Republican voters are asked whom they trust most on the economy, on immigration and on battling Islamic extremists.

He runs afoul of the moment. Voters right now are more enamored of outsiders than usual, as the traction of not just Trump but also two other Republican candidates who have never held elective office — Ben Carson and Carly Fiorina — demonstrates.

 

Voters have had enough of protocol and pieties. Thus Trump thrives in a party that he constantly browbeats and shows no real loyalty toward, while Bernie Sanders flourishes among Democrats though he has repeatedly railed against them and doesn’t technically identify as one.

 

For some alienated voters, supporting either of these two insurgents is the same as raising a middle finger to establishment politicians and to politics as usual, and tactful, tasteful Bush can never be a middle finger. More like a pinkie.

 

he pinkie may prevail. In the Bush camp there’s a theory, or perhaps an anxiety-quelling fantasy, that the Trump mania and the related craziness will benefit Bush, who can methodically build support and incrementally lengthen his stride while the glare and heat are on others.

 

Trump burns out, the field eventually winnows, and Bush is saved by a superlative after all. He’s the most durable candidate.

 

It’s a plausible scenario. But it’s hardly a joyful one. And there’s only one way to punctuate it — with a question mark.”

 

Twitter @sheriffali

 

http://nyti.ms/1E2H3Eb

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Fox Freak Show Tonight, Where Bigots, Racists, Chicken Hawk Warmongers, Bankruptcy Shyster, Religious Fanatics, Homophobes, Liars And Crooks Gather Together To Beat-Up On The 50/50 White African American President That Saved America!

Posted in Politics with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on August 6, 2015 by sheriffali

Yes Sir, this performance tonight is to find out who can say the dumbest of things; tell the biggest lies; promulgate the most racism and be the extreme obnoxious person that may end up being the Republican Nominee, For President Of The United States.

They wouldn’t have any difficulty because Republicans and Fox News cater to the uninformed, ignorant, and uneducated and the brainwashed, that loyally and consistently vote against their own interest.

Tonight Performers are all educated, so they are not espousing stupidity because they are foolish people, no sir, they do this because of the audience, their loyal voters would be watching and they the Republican Voters, well, they are suffering from the Stockholm Syndrome.

Twitter @sheriffali

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Why aren’t more Republicans condemning Donald Trump? Because most of them share Trump’s views on Racism, Bigotry and Immigrants

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 3, 2015 by sheriffali

Over the past week, Donald Trump’s inflammatory remarks about Mexican immigrants have enraged the Hispanic community, cost him million-dollar business contracts and dominated media coverage of the 2016 presidential race.

But the overall reaction from much of the rest of the Republican field has ranged from tepid criticism to, in at least one case, strong words of support.

Trump has put the rest of the GOP in a difficult position with his assertions that Mexico was sending “rapists,” killers and drug dealers across the border into the United States. While most of the candidates would rather pretend Trump doesn’t exist, the remarks — and his refusal to disavow them — have made that impossible.

The celebrity TV host and businessman has succeeded in sucking much of the oxygen out of campaign coverage, and he swings harder each time he’s knocked back. On Wednesday night, CNN’s Don Lemon noted in an interview with Trump that a study cited by the candidate to bolster his argument actually referred to Central American immigrants who were raped while in Mexico, not in the United States.

Trump responded: “Well, somebody’s doing the raping, Don! I mean somebody’s doing it! Who’s doing the raping?”

[As Donald Trump surges in the polls, Democrats cheer]

Such rhetoric does little to help Republicans seeking to connect with Hispanic voters, a demographic they need to win a national general election. But the candidates are also cognizant that Trump is tapping into a bloc of conservative GOP primary voters who welcome his abrasive approach and share his attitude over illegal immigration; he has surged to second place in several polls nationally and in early-nominating states.

So far only long-shot former New York Gov. George Pataki — desperate for some attention himself — has taken a proactive approach, sending a letter to the rest of the GOP field on Wednesday asking them to join him in denouncing Trump and his comments.

“As Donald Trump doubles down, I’m asking you to join me in standing up,” Pataki wrote.

Other GOP candidates have only commented when asked to respond to Trump’s remarks. And Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who is angling for the same voters as Trump, came to Trump’s defense.

[Ted Cruz: Donald Trump is ‘terrific,’ shouldn’t apologize for comments]

Cruz is not alone: a number of other prominent conservatives, including National Review editor Rich Lowry, Iowa Rep. Steve King and American Conservative Union chairman Matt Schlapp, have mounted at least limited defenses of Trump’s overall immigration message.

Twitter @sheriffali

http://wapo.st/1f6r9xv

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Conservatives Are Gearing Up For Fight Of Their Lives After Gay Marriage Ruling

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on June 30, 2015 by sheriffali

NEW YORK (AP) — Now that same-sex marriage is legal nationwide, religious conservatives are focusing on preserving their right to object. Their concerns are for the thousands of faith-based charities, colleges and hospitals that want to hire, fire, serve and set policy according to their religious beliefs, notably that gay relationships are morally wrong.

 

The Republican Party’s 2016 presidential candidates are already campaigning on the issue. And Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is urging President Barack Obama and the nation’s governors “to join me in reassuring millions of Americans that the government will not force them to participate in activities that violate their deeply held religious beliefs.”

 

The religious liberty fight isn’t about what happens inside the sanctuary. First Amendment protections for worship and clergy are clear. Potential conflicts could arise, however, over religious organizations with some business in the public arena. That category ranges from small religious associations that rent reception halls to the public, to the nation’s massive network of faith-based social service agencies that receive millions of dollars in government grants. Some groups, such as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, also want protections for individual business owners who consider it immoral to provide benefits for the same-sex spouse of an employee or cater gay weddings.

 

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy raised the issue in the majority opinion Friday granting gays the right to marry. He said First Amendment protections are in place for religious objectors, who “may continue to advocate with utmost, sincere conviction that, by divine precepts, same-sex marriage should not be condoned.”

 

But in his dissent, Chief Justice John Roberts predicted a clash ahead between religious freedom and same-sex marriage. He specifically noted the dilemma for religious colleges that provide married student housing, and adoption agencies that won’t place children with gay couples.

 

“There is little doubt that these and similar questions will soon be before this court,” Roberts wrote.

 

Conservative religious groups have for years been on watch for potential clashes over religious liberty and gay rights, and have been lobbying for religious exemptions in statehouses and Congress. But conservative anxieties intensified over an exchange during April’s oral arguments in the gay marriage case between Justice Samuel Alito and Solicitor General Donald Verrilli.

 

Alito noted the high court’s 1983 decision to revoke the tax-exemption of Bob Jones University in South Carolina because it barred interracial dating. Alito asked if the government would take such action against religiously affiliated schools that oppose same-sex marriage. Verrilli said, “It is certainly going to be an issue. I don’t deny that.”

 

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After Buying The Republican Congress, The Kochs Are About To Kill The RNC

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on June 11, 2015 by sheriffali

In a twist of delicious irony, the GOP’s marriage with the Koch brothers has come back to haunt them. The Republican National Committee is in full panic mode as they finally realize that they can no longer control the monster they’ve created. New revelations from high-ranking RNC officials points to an “all out war” with the Koch’s political organization over voter data as more and more Republicans turn to the Koch’s i360 platform for managing voter contacts. The RNC is now resisting efforts by the Kochs to get control over their master voter file.

 

One can only laugh as the RNC’s chief of Staff, Kate Walsh, says that “I think it’s very dangerous and wrong to allow a group of very strong, well-financed individuals who have no accountability to anyone to have control over who gets access to the data when, why and how.” The RNC is in danger of being pushed out of their own organization and ceding control over the entire Republican Party machine to the Kochs, whose ideology of free-market fascism is focused only on increasing their own profits.

 

Twitter @sheriffali

http://www.occupydemocrats.com/after-buying-the-republican-congress-the-kochs-are-about-to-kill-the-rnc-2/

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