05.02.2019, 10:20 AM | #6621 |
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Too bad so few will see CNN’s report about TRUMP and the economy.
But it’s CNN, of course viewership will collapse when they hold to and spew the same old stuff: |
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05.02.2019, 11:18 AM | #6622 | |
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Quote:
https://youtu.be/BrK7X_XlGB8 |
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05.02.2019, 01:28 PM | #6623 |
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stephen moore just threw the towel lol
“i’m not pulling out...” hahahahaaaa |
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05.02.2019, 02:06 PM | #6624 |
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So, I’ve had a bit of observational time here of a couple of classic cases Their contributions are appreciated. It is becoming clear to me and a lot of others that this behavior is toxic and pathological. In the great majority of cases this has every indication of being a really bad case of parental care. The misogyny, racism, love of war and cruelty is just fucking pitiful.
Anyone raised properly doesn’t evince this crap. I think they’ve always been this way, since whatever abusive shit they faced at age 5 or whatever. They are increasingly forward in the presentation of these ideas because of Trimp and his pals rhetoric and the toxic mix of internet “porn” sites, not porn in the way a normal person thinks of it, but more like the reddit, 4chan, anti feminist sites that they and their ilk stew themselves in. And Fux News, for the oldster righties who aren’t able to find the icky sites. |
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05.02.2019, 03:54 PM | #6625 |
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05.02.2019, 04:33 PM | #6626 |
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Barr's "snitty" remark makes a lot more sense now!! (Although, it is bad enough that he made this remark about a letter that Mueller signed. Would Mueller sign just any old thing without reviewing the wording? We are talking about Mueller here.)
He basically tried to say that Mueller himself did not write the letter which outlines concerns over Barr's summary. But now it is obvious that in previous testimony to Congress, Barr said Mueller had no objections to the summary. Mueller sent the letter BEFORE that testimony!! Barr is a fucking liar. And not showing up today helps absolutely nobody on Team Trump.
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05.02.2019, 04:39 PM | #6627 |
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nancy pelosi’s press conference this morning was great btw.
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05.02.2019, 04:56 PM | #6628 | |
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Quote:
Make America Great Again!!
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05.02.2019, 05:08 PM | #6629 |
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ew
but how do you like “barr lied to congress”? god damn she was fantastic. all gentle and soft spoken and dropping bombs like that haaa haaaa haaa. |
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05.02.2019, 05:48 PM | #6630 |
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Let's be clear though....he did lie to Congress!! Right? That's what my rant above was about.
And then he has the gall to later suggest that the letter was not really written by Mueller. You can see why he did that, right?
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05.02.2019, 05:57 PM | #6631 |
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yes he did
and yes, reasonable people see it. no matter how many sociopathic lies and distractions the magas spew. we see it. |
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05.02.2019, 06:00 PM | #6632 |
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I think somewhere in this thread, during Barr confirmation, I'm on record for saying he seems like a good/intelligent guy, so why is he part of Team Trump? And right after that someone (maybe symbols) warned me.
Fuuuuuuck. When the top cop in the land is clearly a Trump Stooge, this is a big problem. He has to go.
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05.02.2019, 07:38 PM | #6633 |
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No one who works with Trump is a good person forreal.
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05.02.2019, 08:08 PM | #6634 | ||
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Quote:
i was almost surprised that a bush loyalist would work for the orange garbage but eh, republicans... Quote:
/s (not for you, just in case some dense doesn’t get it) |
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05.02.2019, 08:19 PM | #6635 |
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see, these fucking distractions. this here is the real damage:
The worst thing Barr did this week had nothing to do with the Mueller report Catherine Rampell The worst thing that Attorney General William P. Barr did this week arguably had nothing to do with possible contempt of Congress or the Mueller report. It had to do with health care. On Wednesday, amid the circus over alleged special counsel snittiness, the department that Barr oversees formally asked a federal appeals court to strike down the entire Affordable Care Act, jeopardizing access to health care for tens of millions of Americans. If the Trump administration prevails, everything in the law would be wiped out. And I do mean everything: the protections for people with preexisting conditions, Medicaid expansion, income-based individual-market subsidies, provisions allowing children to remain on their parents’ insurance until age 26, requirements that insurance cover minimum essential benefits such as prescriptions and preventive care, and so on. The administration’s rationale was laid out in a policy brief supporting a lawsuit challenging Obamacare by 20 red states. Their logic: When Congress, as part of President Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, set the penalty for not carrying health insurance to zero, that effectively made it no longer really a “tax,” and therefore made it unconstitutional. Somehow, that rendered the rest of the law unconstitutional, as well — including lots of provisions having nothing to do with the mandate. This reasoning has been rejected even by conservative legal scholars otherwise opposed to the law. But legal merits (and demerits) aside — which are likely to be ultimately adjudicated by the Supreme Court — it’s also not clear what political upside Republicans could possibly see in mounting yet another overt attack on Obamacare. The GOP’s November congressional losses were largely motivated by voter rage over the party’s attacks on Obamacare, after all. Trump has, of course, more recently proclaimed the GOP the “party of health care,” and he and other party leaders continue repeating the obvious fiction that they’re cooking up “something terrific” to replace the ACA. Yet Trump’s party has never been able to come up with (let alone pass) a viable replacement plan, even when it had unified control of government. There are more productive things Trump and lawmakers could do to improve the health-care system that don’t involve dismantling the ACA. Obamacare, after all, did a lot to expand coverage and not nearly enough to improve affordability. In fact, if Republicans are looking for more fruitful areas for improvement, they might contemplate a survey focused on employer-sponsored insurance plans that was released Thursday by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Los Angeles Times. About half of the U.S. population has employer-based coverage, including 60 percent of nonelderly adults. While most say they are generally satisfied with these health plans, many nonetheless struggle with the financial burden they impose — particularly the high-deductible plans that cover 4 in 10 people with employer-sponsored insurance. Deductibles in employer-sponsored insurance have been rising since long before the ACA. They have nearly quadrupled over the past 12 years and now average $1,350 for a single-person plan. But separate survey data show that only half of nonelderly, one-person households report having at least $2,000 in savings available. It’s no wonder, then, that many with “good” health coverage still report trouble paying for care. In fact, half of adults with job-based coverage say they or someone in their household has skipped or delayed getting medical care or filling prescription drugs in the past 12 months because of the cost. Figuring out how to reduce out-of-pocket costs — including deductibles so high that they’re tantamount to not having insurance at all — turns out to be much more challenging than simply burning down the entire system. After all, requiring employers to spend more on health insurance might just end up hitting workers in the form of lower wages. Even so, there are promising paths forward. For instance, the latest version of a plan known as the Medicare for America Act — introduced Wednesday by Reps. Rosa L. DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) — would create an expansive public insurance option to compete with the employer-sponsored system. The public option would cap premiums and out-of-pocket costs and have no deductibles. The bill would allow employer-sponsored plans to continue, as long as they covered a minimum average share of enrollees’ health expenses. Other options might include refundable tax credits to offset out-of-pocket spending, as have been proposed by Democrats before. Trump administration officials may not like these alternatives. Fine. But if they’re going to persist in trying to blow up the current system — through administrative sabotage, funding cuts and bogus court challenges — the onus remains on them to propose better ways to rebuild it. |
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05.03.2019, 06:42 AM | #6636 | ||||
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Quote:
"The attorney general of the United States of America was not telling the truth to the Congress. That's a crime," Pelosi said So the Speaker Of The House is accusing the Attorney General of a crime......on what evidence? Where did the Real Attorney General lie......what false statement did he make? What is the crime he committed? Vomit Pelosi is just spewing FALSE STATEMENTS and as Speaker Of The House, we are forced to endure them. Please notice how Vomit Pelosi DIDN’T PROVIDE ANY EVIDENTIARY FACTS to base her foolish false claims on. All Vomit Pelosi did was provide a foolish soundbite. Sadly, so many dogs are returning to lick up foolish vomit. Why have I been using the word FOOLISH? The Justice Departments response to Vomit Pelosi: "Speaker Pelosi's baseless attack on the attorney general is reckless, irresponsible, and false." Of course, Vomit Pelosi has retreated to her San Francisco castle offering NOTHING OF SUBSTANCE......yet the foolish dogs still lick up the vomit?? Quote:
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05.03.2019, 06:45 AM | #6637 |
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allcaps TRUTHINESS hi
trump’s 10,000 lies set a record the other day you’re amazing! |
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05.03.2019, 03:01 PM | #6638 |
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GOP hitting Pelosi for calling Barr a liar. "It's beneath her office....."
But his lie is in black and white!! Compare what he said to congress about Meuller's feelings on the summary in April to Mueller's letter in March. This isn't just a slip of the tongue. His trying to minimize the "snitty" letter speaks volumes.
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05.04.2019, 05:57 PM | #6639 |
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more Sanders history
‘Anyone Ever Seen Cocaine?’ What We Found in the Archives of Bernie Sanders’s Long-Lost TV Show. What a forgotten trove of videotapes reveals about the man who rewrote America’s political script. https://www.politico.com/magazine/st...eo-2020-226761 Whatever good it did for Bernie Sanders at the time, “Bernie Speaks with the Community” is now 1,667 minutes of material for opposition researchers, health care insurance companies and Trump’s reelection campaign to pick through. Here’s a short, and surely incomplete, list of the things Sanders said on his TV show that his opponents could cut into a 30-second ad: The Nicaraguan Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega “happens not to be a communist.” Nora Astorga, the Nicaraguan ambassador to the United Nations who had recently visited Sanders, might have gotten cancer because of the “tremendous grief and suffering that’s going on in her own country” caused by the war. The Soviet Union’s economy is being “devastated” by military spending. And perhaps, as he proposed to a classroom of small children, Burlington should develop an exchange program with communist and socialist countries around the world. “I would like to see families—your mothers and dads and yourselves maybe—go to the Soviet Union and learn about that country, and people from there come to here,” he says. “If you actually had kids here who were from Nicaragua or from the Soviet Union, and they could tell you what's going on in their own country, boy, you could learn a whole lot. And then if kids from Vermont or Burlington were in those countries, they could tell those people what was going on in their hometown.” |
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05.04.2019, 06:32 PM | #6640 |
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sure sure. but let’s not get lost with distractions
(encore) The worst thing Barr did this week had nothing to do with the Mueller report Catherine Rampell The worst thing that Attorney General William P. Barr did this week arguably had nothing to do with possible contempt of Congress or the Mueller report. It had to do with health care. On Wednesday, amid the circus over alleged special counsel snittiness, the department that Barr oversees formally asked a federal appeals court to strike down the entire Affordable Care Act, jeopardizing access to health care for tens of millions of Americans. If the Trump administration prevails, everything in the law would be wiped out. And I do mean everything: the protections for people with preexisting conditions, Medicaid expansion, income-based individual-market subsidies, provisions allowing children to remain on their parents’ insurance until age 26, requirements that insurance cover minimum essential benefits such as prescriptions and preventive care, and so on. The administration’s rationale was laid out in a policy brief supporting a lawsuit challenging Obamacare by 20 red states. Their logic: When Congress, as part of President Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, set the penalty for not carrying health insurance to zero, that effectively made it no longer really a “tax,” and therefore made it unconstitutional. Somehow, that rendered the rest of the law unconstitutional, as well — including lots of provisions having nothing to do with the mandate. This reasoning has been rejected even by conservative legal scholars otherwise opposed to the law. But legal merits (and demerits) aside — which are likely to be ultimately adjudicated by the Supreme Court — it’s also not clear what political upside Republicans could possibly see in mounting yet another overt attack on Obamacare. The GOP’s November congressional losses were largely motivated by voter rage over the party’s attacks on Obamacare, after all. Trump has, of course, more recently proclaimed the GOP the “party of health care,” and he and other party leaders continue repeating the obvious fiction that they’re cooking up “something terrific” to replace the ACA. Yet Trump’s party has never been able to come up with (let alone pass) a viable replacement plan, even when it had unified control of government. There are more productive things Trump and lawmakers could do to improve the health-care system that don’t involve dismantling the ACA. Obamacare, after all, did a lot to expand coverage and not nearly enough to improve affordability. In fact, if Republicans are looking for more fruitful areas for improvement, they might contemplate a survey focused on employer-sponsored insurance plans that was released Thursday by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Los Angeles Times. About half of the U.S. population has employer-based coverage, including 60 percent of nonelderly adults. While most say they are generally satisfied with these health plans, many nonetheless struggle with the financial burden they impose — particularly the high-deductible plans that cover 4 in 10 people with employer-sponsored insurance. Deductibles in employer-sponsored insurance have been rising since long before the ACA. They have nearly quadrupled over the past 12 years and now average $1,350 for a single-person plan. But separate survey data show that only half of nonelderly, one-person households report having at least $2,000 in savings available. It’s no wonder, then, that many with “good” health coverage still report trouble paying for care. In fact, half of adults with job-based coverage say they or someone in their household has skipped or delayed getting medical care or filling prescription drugs in the past 12 months because of the cost. Figuring out how to reduce out-of-pocket costs — including deductibles so high that they’re tantamount to not having insurance at all — turns out to be much more challenging than simply burning down the entire system. After all, requiring employers to spend more on health insurance might just end up hitting workers in the form of lower wages. Even so, there are promising paths forward. For instance, the latest version of a plan known as the Medicare for America Act — introduced Wednesday by Reps. Rosa L. DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) — would create an expansive public insurance option to compete with the employer-sponsored system. The public option would cap premiums and out-of-pocket costs and have no deductibles. The bill would allow employer-sponsored plans to continue, as long as they covered a minimum average share of enrollees’ health expenses. Other options might include refundable tax credits to offset out-of-pocket spending, as have been proposed by Democrats before. Trump administration officials may not like these alternatives. Fine. But if they’re going to persist in trying to blow up the current system — through administrative sabotage, funding cuts and bogus court challenges — the onus remains on them to propose better ways to rebuild it. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |