Author Topic: Typhoid Trump: the not-smart, corrupt, coward, loser, thread  (Read 4570151 times)

Offline jambutty

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60800 on: February 22, 2020, 05:12:31 pm »
Los Angeles Times
Twitter is suspending 70 pro-Bloomberg accounts, citing 'platform manipulation'
 By Suhauna Hussain and Jeff Bercovici, Los Angeles Times
13 hrs ago


Michael R. Bloomberg’s presidential campaign has been experimenting with novel tactics to cultivate an online following, or at least the appearance of one.

But one of these strategies — deploying a large number of Twitter accounts to push out identical messages — has backfired. On Friday, Twitter began suspending 70 accounts posting pro-Bloomberg content in a pattern that violates company rules.

“We have taken enforcement action on a group of accounts for violating our rules against platform manipulation and spam,” a Twitter spokesman said. Some of the suspensions will be permanent, while in other cases account owners will have to verify they have control of their accounts.

As part of a far-reaching social media strategy, the Bloomberg campaign has hired hundreds of temporary employees to pump out campaign messages through Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. These “deputy field organizers” receive $2,500 per month to promote the former New York mayor’s candidacy within their personal social circles, in addition to other, more conventional duties. They receive campaign-approved language that they can opt to post.

In posts reviewed by the Los Angeles Times, organizers often used identical text, images, links and hashtags. Many accounts used were created only in the past two months. Bloomberg officially entered the presidential race Nov. 24.

After the Times inquired about this pattern, Twitter determined it ran afoul of its “Platform Manipulation and Spam Policy.” Laid out in September 2019 in response to the activities of Russian-sponsored troll networks in the 2016 presidential election, the policy prohibits practices such as artificially boosting engagement on tweets and using deliberately misleading profile information.

By sponsoring hundreds of new accounts that post copy-pasted content, Twitter said the campaign violated its rules against “creating multiple accounts to post duplicative content,” “posting identical or substantially similar Tweets or hashtags from multiple accounts you operate” and “coordinating with or compensating others to engage in artificial engagement or amplification, even if the people involved use only one account.”

The suspensions may sweep up accounts belonging to unpaid Bloomberg supporters or campaign volunteers. While the Bloomberg’s campaign’s practice of paying Twitter users was a factor in the suspensions, a company spokesman said accounts behaving in substantially the same manner will receive the same treatment, regardless of who controls them.

The Bloomberg campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Facebook’s response to the Bloomberg campaign’s novel social strategy has also been evolving. The social network views the campaign’s activity as falling under its rules for branded content, not the rules against “coordinated inauthentic behavior” devised largely in response to Russian election meddling.

Facebook’s rules for branded content “require disclosure of paid partnerships anytime there has been an exchange of value between a creator or publisher and a business partner.” In 2018, the company began to require more detailed disclosure for political ads to discourage state-sponsored influence operations.

The software tool created for buying political ads on Facebook did not allow for branded content campaigns by influencers. Earlier this month, after the Bloomberg campaign bypassed the tool entirely to mount a large-scale paid influencer campaign, Facebook lifted that ban.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/elections-2020/twitter-is-suspending-70-pro-bloomberg-accounts-citing-platform-manipulation/ar-BB10gcrW?ocid=spartanntp



As Maher says, you have to play dirty to beat Trump because he, Stone et al are proudly the dirtiest.

Liberals have a bad habit of assassinating their own for chickenshit.
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Offline vagabond

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60801 on: February 22, 2020, 05:22:23 pm »
He's not playing dirty against Trump, he's playing dirty against better democrats that he has no hope of beating fairly so he has to throw his money around. What a chump.
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Offline jambutty

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60802 on: February 22, 2020, 06:22:25 pm »
He's not playing dirty against Trump, he's playing dirty against better democrats that he has no hope of beating fairly so he has to throw his money around. What a chump.

Eye of the beholder.
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Offline Something Worse

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60803 on: February 22, 2020, 06:25:44 pm »
He's not playing dirty against Trump, he's playing dirty against better democrats that he has no hope of beating fairly so he has to throw his money around. What a chump.

But when the Russians do it it's bad.

I think I'm mostly amazed at how much of a bumblefuck Bloomie has been. He's signed up for this thing to get smacked around by Warren, have all the skeletons in his closest aired, and get caught cheating. I'm struggling to think of something as pathetic as this exercise has been, across all spectrums.
Maybe the group, led by your leadership, will see these drafts as PR functions and brilliant use of humor

Hey Claus, fuck off.

Offline Macphisto80

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60804 on: February 23, 2020, 02:26:07 am »
That's where we are. Trump has polarized everything. It's what he does. Either you are with him or you're against him. So people pick sides. Those who support Trump stand by every stupid thing he says and does. They are blind. Unfortunately people who are against Trump often fall in the same trap. They oppose everything he says. If he changes his mind, so do they. Trump is a dreadful and dangerous person and it's vital that people think for themselves and don't accept the pro/anti Trump mindset as the only option.
Yep. I said a while ago on here that I agreed with him that he was the subject of a witch hunt against him. A few thought I might have been taking the piss, but I wasn't. Trump has enemies in government, not because he's a dickhead, but because he's pulling apart their best laid plans. They themselves are c*nts in their own right.

Offline rodderzzz

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60805 on: February 23, 2020, 03:39:28 am »
But when the Russians do it it's bad.

I think I'm mostly amazed at how much of a bumblefuck Bloomie has been. He's signed up for this thing to get smacked around by Warren, have all the skeletons in his closest aired, and get caught cheating. I'm struggling to think of something as pathetic as this exercise has been, across all spectrums.

Interesting that he's been destroyed for it and Trump made a huge success of it whenever republican candidates tried to smash him

Offline Something Worse

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60806 on: February 23, 2020, 03:41:18 am »
Interesting that he's been destroyed for it and Trump made a huge success of it whenever republican candidates tried to smash him

Different audiences is the politest way of putting it
Maybe the group, led by your leadership, will see these drafts as PR functions and brilliant use of humor

Hey Claus, fuck off.

Offline Gnurglan

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60807 on: February 23, 2020, 03:47:49 pm »
Interesting that he's been destroyed for it and Trump made a huge success of it whenever republican candidates tried to smash him

I think it also depends on how you sell your message. Trump has a talent for being a bully. People don't mind if he's on their side. Those people laugh at Crooked Hillary, Sleepy Joe, Pocahontas etc. For them he's funny and all the shit he has in his closet just makes him human.

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Offline Gerry Attrick

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60808 on: February 24, 2020, 10:00:00 am »
This Suchin Tendulkar sounds like a great cricketer. I'll have to check him out.

Offline jambutty

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60809 on: February 24, 2020, 10:07:10 am »
Washington Examiner
Clarence Thomas wife among conservative activists leading Trump efforts to compile ‘deep state’ hit list
 Caitlin Yilek
7 hrs ago


The wife of conservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is spearheading an effort to remove officials suspected of undermining President Trump.

A network of conservative activists led by Ginni Thomas is helping compile detailed memos of disloyal government officials they want fired, according to more than a dozen sources who spoke with Axios.

Trump’s distrust of people inside the White House and the federal government has intensified since his impeachment and acquittal, and he thinks his government is filled with “snakes” he wants fired and replaced.

The memos sent to Trump included former District of Columbia U.S. Attorney Jessie Liu, whose nomination for a top Treasury role was withdrawn. A source with knowledge of the document said Liu’s alleged misdeeds included signing the sentencing filing asking for jail time for Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn, not charging former deputy director of the FBI Andrew McCabe, and not acting on criminal referrals of some of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh's accusers.

The memos, compiled over the last 18 months, also included suggestions of pro-Trump people to replace the current officials. Thomas recommended former Secret Service agent Dan Bongino for a Homeland Security or counterterrorism adviser role, Sheriff David Clarke for a top Homeland Security role, and Republican California Rep. Devin Nunes's aide Derek Harvey for the National Security Council.

The presidential personnel office determined that some of the potential candidates passed along were not suitable for the jobs.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/clarence-thomas-wife-among-conservative-activists-leading-trump-efforts-to-compile-deep-state-hit-list/ar-BB10j3Gm


This cow of a wife of the least qualified, first Uncle Tom black man ever elected to the Supreme Court.  A disgrace to the memory of the great Thurgood Marshall.
« Last Edit: February 24, 2020, 10:09:01 am by jambutty »
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Offline KillieRed

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60810 on: February 24, 2020, 11:23:20 am »

Join the party or be thrown out of your job...this all sounds so familiar.

A lot of people have been commended for resigning or retiring from the their jobs in protest since the start of the Trump regime. The trouble is that history tells us, and actual experience shows us, that these people will just be replaced by less-qualified, but extremely loyal zealots to the cause. Trump may not have an ideology but he is very keen on grifting as much money as possible and keeping his fat ass out of jail. I loathe him, but i`d be more worried about what happens after he eats one too many burgers now that a blueprint to autocracy has been produced.
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Offline Fiasco

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60811 on: February 24, 2020, 02:40:51 pm »
This Suchin Tendulkar sounds like a great cricketer. I'll have to check him out.

He's nearly as good as Virat Ko-Lee, the South Korean lad.

Offline Garrus

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60812 on: February 24, 2020, 03:33:19 pm »
This Suchin Tendulkar sounds like a great cricketer. I'll have to check him out.

He's nearly as good as Virat Ko-Lee, the South Korean lad.

Modi - Trump circle jerk  :puke2

Good thing he didn't try to praise VVS Laxman by saying his full name.
« Last Edit: February 24, 2020, 03:39:01 pm by Garrus »

Offline Garrus

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60813 on: February 24, 2020, 04:00:51 pm »
He's nearly as good as Virat Ko-Lee, the South Korean lad.
Listening to it for the first time, he literally goes Soo Chin Tendulkar and Virat Koo Lee  :D

Offline Garrus

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60814 on: February 24, 2020, 04:04:31 pm »
Fucking hell, this is even better:

https://twitter.com/MacaesBruno/status/1231903926313611265

Butchered  :lmao

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60815 on: February 24, 2020, 05:39:30 pm »
Modi - Trump circle jerk  :puke2

Good thing he didn't try to praise VVS Laxman by saying his full name.

I would love for Trump to visit Sri Lanka and pronounce Chaminda Vaas.

Offline jambutty

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60816 on: February 24, 2020, 05:41:17 pm »
Intelligencer
President Trump Has Never Been More Dangerous Than He Is Now
 Eric Levitz
1 hr ago

A little over two weeks ago, multiple Republican senators publicly reprimanded their own party’s president for asking a foreign country to investigate one of their domestic political rivals. One of these lawmakers — former GOP standard-bearer Mitt Romney — voted to remove Donald Trump from office, on the grounds that “corrupting an election to keep oneself in office is perhaps the most abusive and destructive violation of one’s oath of office that I can imagine.” Never before in American history had a senator voted to evict a co-partisan from the White House.

Trump then threw a party to celebrate his “full exoneration.”

The Atlantic’s Adam Serwer deftly summarizes the White House’s ensuing actions:

After calling the accusation that Trump collaborated with foreign powers in an effort to swing American elections a “hoax,” [Attorney General William] Barr set up an official channel for the president’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, to funnel foreign dirt on Trump’s rivals to the Justice Department. After falsely claiming that Joe Biden had demanded the ouster of a Ukrainian prosecutor to protect his son, Trump has engaged in the exact act he accused Biden of engaging in, by attempting to shield his henchman Roger Stone from legal consequences for breaking the law on his behalf, leading to the resignation of the prosecutors working on the case. Barr also has handpicked advisers “reviewing” the case against Michael Flynn, the former Trump national security adviser who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with Russia officials during the transition. The day of Trump’s acquittal, the Justice Department announced that Barr would have to approve any investigations into the 2020 presidential candidates, giving him the authority to shut down criminal investigations of the president’s associates or approve inquiries into his rivals. Speaking to reporters, Trump claimed the “absolute right” to determine who is and who is not prosecuted by the Justice Department …

Trump has also engaged in a purge of officials who testified truthfully—some of them only somewhat truthfully—in the impeachment hearings. Trump fired his ambassador to the European Union, Gordon Sondland, who confirmed that Trump had conditioned aid to Ukraine on procuring an announcement that Biden’s son Hunter was under investigation by Ukrainian authorities. He removed not only Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman but also his twin brother, Yevgeny Vindman, from the White House staff after Vindman’s truthful testimony that the president sought to coerce Ukraine into falsely implicating the Bidens. Trump mocked Alexander Vindman on Twitter after his ouster by putting his rank in scare quotes, a marked contrast to his effusive praise for war criminals. Similarly, the former U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, Jessie Liu, had her nomination for a top position in the Treasury Department withdrawn after Trump publicly attacked prosecutors in her office for their handling of the Stone case.

In the 48 hours since Serwer’s piece was published, the list of Trump’s publicly known, post-impeachment assaults on the rule of law has grown longer.

On Wednesday, Trump announced that he would be replacing acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, with his current U.S. ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell — a man with an unimpeachable record of rationalizing Trump’s misconduct, but scant experience in intelligence gathering or analysis. The president then named Kash Patel, a former adviser to Republican congressman Devin Nunes — and chief author of the wildly mendacious “Nunes memo,” which challenged the “legitimacy and legality” of the FBI’s investigation into Donald Trump’s campaign — as Grenell’s new senior adviser. The appointment of underqualified administration toadies to such powerful offices would be alarming in and of itself. But on Friday, the Washington Post revealed that Grenell’s ascension was even more ominous than it first appeared:

A senior U.S. intelligence official told lawmakers last week that Russia wants to see President Trump reelected, viewing his administration as more favorable to the Kremlin’s interests, according to people who were briefed on the comments.

After learning of that analysis, which was provided to House lawmakers in a classified hearing, Trump grew angry at his acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, in the Oval Office, seeing Maguire and his staff as disloyal for speaking to Congress about Russia’s perceived preference. The intelligence official’s analysis and Trump’s furious response ­ruined Maguire’s chances of becoming the permanent intelligence chief, according to people familiar with the matter who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter.

Maguire allowed a deputy to accurately brief Congress on Russia’s views of the 2020 election. For this offense, he was fired and replaced with a Trump loyalist. And if the administration gets its way, every other civil servant who privileges their official duties over the president’s personal interests will soon suffer the same fate.

As Axios reports:

Johnny McEntee called in White House liaisons from cabinet agencies for an introductory meeting Thursday, in which he asked them to identify political appointees across the U.S. government who are believed to be anti-Trump, three sources familiar with the meeting tell Axios.

Behind the scenes: McEntee, a 29-year-old former body man to Trump who was fired in 2018 by then-Chief of Staff John Kelly but recently rehired — and promoted to head the presidential personnel office — foreshadowed sweeping personnel changes across government.

• But McEntee suggested the most dramatic changes may have to wait until after the November election.

• Trump has empowered McEntee — whom he considers an absolute loyalist — to purge the “bad people” and “Deep State.”

• McEntee told staff that those identified as anti-Trump will no longer get promotions by shifting them around agencies.

To review: At the beginning of this month, multiple Republican members of Congress publicly affirmed that their own party’s president had abused the powers of his office. The president proceeded to escalate his war on the rule of law to unprecedented heights by purging his administration of officials who had dared to respect Congress’ subpoena power, intervening in ongoing Justice Department cases to aid his personal allies, undermining congressional oversight of Russian election interference, and asserting an “absolute right” to sic federal law enforcement on anyone he chooses.

And through it all, congressional opposition oscillated between tepid and nonexistent — while the American people’s esteem for their president steadily rose.

In the weeks after the Senate acquitted Trump in his impeachment trial (amid bipartisan support for his removal), the president’s approval rating in Gallup’s poll hit an all-time high of 49 percent — 10 points above where it was in October of last year.

It is true that few other pollsters have found Trump gaining quite this much ground. But almost all have shown the same trend. The RealClearPolitics (RCP) polling average puts Trump’s approval at 46 percent — the highest it’s been since February 2017. FiveThirtyEight’s aggregation of polls is less favorable to the president, but still has him at 44.2 percent approval, well above his average over the course of his presidency.

Some observers have suggested that Trump’s gains may be illusory. In the wake of high-profile news events that encourage one partisan camp, and discourage the other, polls can be thrown off by “nonresponse bias.” Which is to say, Trump’s acquittal may have made Republican voters more eager to talk to pollsters about politics, and Democratic ones more quick to hang up on them, thereby skewing the surveys’ samples in a pro-GOP direction.

But we’re a couple weeks past Trump’s acquittal now. And his rise in the polls has been slow, steady, and correlated with the American public’s ever-rosier assessments of the economy and their own material fortunes. Recent surveys have shown consumer confidence hitting post-recession highs, Americans’ expressing “record-high optimism” about their own personal finances (59 percent say they are better off now than last year, while 74 percent expect to be better off next year than they are now), and 55 percent of Americans approving of Trump’s stewardship of the economy.

No matter how one slices the data, Trump’s approval rating is now higher than Barack Obama’s was in November of 2011. It is true that Trump’s disapproval rating has been persistently higher than Obama’s ever was, and thus, that his ceiling of support is almost certainly lower than his predecessor’s. But it is also true that Trump enjoys a larger structural advantage in the Electoral College than Obama did. If the president wins 3 percent fewer votes than his Democratic opponent in November, he will have an excellent shot of remaining in office (especially if Quinnipiac’s latest survey of Wisconsin is remotely accurate).

Taken together, Trump’s escalating authoritarianism and rising popularity make the present moment the most harrowing of his presidency thus far. With the anticlimactic end of the Mueller investigation, Trump learned that federal law enforcement cannot (or will not) hold him accountable for abuses of power. With his Senate acquittal, he secured confirmation that Congress won’t either. Now, the small but electorally decisive fragment of the American electorate that isn’t tightly wedded to either party is signaling to Trump that it won’t necessarily penalize his lawlessness either.

For much of the past five months, indisputable evidence of Trump’s illicit efforts to coerce a foreign power into aiding his reelection campaign have dominated the headlines. That Trump is willing to abuse the powers of his office to persecute his political rivals has been publicly affirmed by a wide variety of his own administration’s officials, and his own party’s members of Congress. And yet, his odds for reelection have steadily risen, all the same. For America’s (largely) socially atomized and civically disengaged swing voters, Trump’s authoritarian power grabs and the criticism they inspire ostensibly register as little more than unusually heated partisan squabbles. Not entirely without reason, many have come to see cable news’ serial dramas as tales told by idiots, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing terribly relevant to their own lives. They may have gathered that Trump is a bit of crook, but then, aren’t all politicians? And anyhow, why should they care more about sketchy schemes in Ukraine than all the “Help Wanted” signs out on Main Street — or Trump’s firing of Colonel Vindman more than the recent hiring of a friend or relative who’d been suffering from long-term unemployment?

Meanwhile, Trump’s post-impeachment polling bounce has cowed his congressional opposition into more accommodative posture. And, thanks to the onset of primary season, the president’s most engaged and ardent critics in civil society have been consumed with our own internal disagreements. These developments have further expanded Trump’s latitude for lawlessness. He has been taking full advantage.

Where all this leaves the (increasingly aptly named) “resistance” is debatable. But one thing seems clear: The quicker Democrats can resolve their primary, the sooner they can redirect media attention toward Trump’s lawlessness, and their own focus toward the task of ensuring the president pays a belated price for that lawlessness come November.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/president-trump-has-never-been-more-dangerous-than-he-is-now/ar-BB10jWm5?ocid=spartandhp
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Online TepidT2O

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60817 on: February 24, 2020, 11:00:18 pm »
I was reading that Trump scrapped the pandemic response team from the national security council.


I’m sure that will work out fine....
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60818 on: February 24, 2020, 11:03:46 pm »
I was reading that Trump scrapped the pandemic response team from the national security council.


I’m sure that will work out fine....

If new cases of the virus decrease and it more or less becomes contained, just wait for him to tweet or go out and say "See, I told everyone it would blow over when the weather warmed up!"  ;D

Offline ericthered10

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60819 on: February 24, 2020, 11:39:52 pm »
If new cases of the virus decrease and it more or less becomes contained, just wait for him to tweet or go out and say "See, I told everyone it would blow over when the weather warmed up!"  ;D
It's global warming protecting us!

Offline mallin9

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60820 on: February 24, 2020, 11:43:03 pm »
We almost made it through the four years without anything ....earth shaking....happening during Agent Orange's tenure.  Now the devil is at the door and trump is tweeting EVERYTHING IS MOTHERFCKING FINE and HOW BOUT THAT STOCK MARKET?

(Which is kinda funny on a day the market dropped like a stone, but you know, I've been told by many people that up is actually down and down is now up)

We're going to be caught with our pants aggressively down (and not lend a hand to the rest of world) so that Donald John can go on pretending all is well, because re-election is WAY more important than some fucking plebes with a cough.
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60821 on: February 25, 2020, 01:25:31 am »
Trump's probably cursing his luck that the virus didn't come in November and scare responsible Democrat voters into staying home.  His own lot are so thick they'd go to the polling stations even if they were vomiting their guts up.
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Offline ShakaHislop

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60822 on: February 25, 2020, 02:27:12 am »
Trump's 'wealth test' begins for US immigrants

Quote
A controversial new policy that denies legal residency to migrants who have received government assistance has come into effect in the US.

The policy, termed the "public charge rule" by proponents and a "wealth test" by critics, was cleared by the Supreme Court last week.

It means that many legal immigrants who previously had qualified for residency no longer would, studies show.

Republicans and President Donald Trump argue the rule protects US taxpayers.

The policy, which was first announced in August but delayed until now by federal courts, adds restrictions to the "public charge" rule that immigration agents consult when considering individual cases for green cards, which grant permanent US residency.

The vaguely-defined public charge rule has been in place for over 100 years, and says that migrants who are likely to require extensive government welfare should not be admitted.

But under the new rules, some recipients of "non-cash" benefits including particular types of healthcare assistance, food aid and housing subsidies can also be turned down - on the basis that they are "a public charge".

The update also raises the salary required for a family of four from $32,000 (£25,000) per year to $60,000 (£46,000).

The policy applies to anyone who received government welfare for 12 months at any point in the past 36 months.

The rule does not apply to refugees, asylum-seekers, or victims of crimes who are aiding US investigators.

It also exempts certain benefits from consideration by immigration agents - including emergency medical assistance, school lunch subsidies, disaster relief and government healthcare (Medicaid) for those under 21 years old.

Nonetheless, almost two-thirds of migrants who qualified for legal US residency between 2012 to 2016, would not have done if these rules had been in place then, according to a study by the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute.

The new policy will not apply to anyone who had applied for residency prior to 24 February.

Democrats and civil rights activists have condemned the change, pointing out that recipients of government aid tend to be people from vulnerable populations such as women, children, and the elderly.

The National Immigration Law Centre, a think-tank, attacked it as a "morally repugnant and legally dubious regulation".

The group said that nearly millions of non-citizens in the US are receiving the newly-disqualifying public services.

Democrats warn that as of Monday, when the public charge law took effect, it will be more likely that low-income immigrants will face deportation.

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham praised the new rule after the Supreme Court on Friday lifted injunctions that kept it from taking effect.

"This final rule will protect hardworking American taxpayers, safeguard welfare programmes for truly needy Americans, reduce the Federal deficit, and re-establish the fundamental legal principle that newcomers to our society should be financially self-reliant and not dependent on the largess of United States taxpayers," she said.

Acting Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Ken Cuccinelli, who pushed through the rule change during his time with US Citizenship and Immigration Services, said it was intended by Mr Trump "to make self-sufficiency matter again in a meaningful way".

"It's just plain old logic - what country wants to bring welfare problems into its society? We don't want to do that," he told Fox News.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-51618084

Offline Giono

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60823 on: February 25, 2020, 02:55:30 am »
Trump's probably cursing his luck that the virus didn't come in November and scare responsible Democrat voters into staying home.  His own lot are so thick they'd go to the polling stations even if they were vomiting their guts up.

They don't believe in it. God will protect them. They are on a holy mission after all.
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60824 on: February 25, 2020, 10:41:35 am »
Soo-Shin!

I hope one day this twat gets smashed on the head with a cricket ball.
"If you want the world to love you don't discuss Middle Eastern politics" Saul Bellow.

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60825 on: February 25, 2020, 03:00:42 pm »
Soo-Shin!

I hope one day this twat gets smashed on the head with a cricket ball.

An explosive outbreak of delhi belly amongst the family would be fun.
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60826 on: February 26, 2020, 12:42:25 am »
I once toured 3M's Innovation Center where you viewed dozens of inventions they've come up with over the decades. I held a film of plastic that was thinner than a strand of hair, but that you couldn't pierce with a hammer and nail.

It wasn't as thin as Orange Skin though... ::)
Quote
President Donald Trump on Tuesday demanded that two sitting U.S. Supreme Court justices recuse themselves from all Trump-related matters, insisting without evidence that they have treated him unfairly....
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/donald-trump-accuses-supreme-court-justices-bias-direct/story?id=69202950&cid=clicksource_4380645_2_heads_hero_live_headlines_hed
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Offline IgorBobbins

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60827 on: February 26, 2020, 02:51:26 pm »
An explosive outbreak of delhi belly amongst the family would be fun.
His diet seems to consist of McNastys and Coke, so not sure if he can get Delhi Belly from that unfortunately  :(

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60828 on: February 26, 2020, 04:10:46 pm »
Mexico worried by US ruling over boy's border killing

The Mexican government says it regrets a ruling by the US Supreme Court that bars the family of a Mexican boy who was killed in 2010 from suing the US border patrol agent who shot him.

The boy, Sergio Hernández, was shot dead on Mexican soil by US border patrol agent Jesús Mesa, who was on the US side of the border.

The court ruled that the parents could not use US courts to sue Mr Mesa.

The Mexican government says it is concerned it could set a precedent.

The incident happened on the border between El Paso, Texas, and Juárez, Mexico. Agent Mesa was on a bicycle patrol on the US side of the border and was reportedly alerted to the presence of people smugglers.

Sergio Hernández, 15, was with a group of youths in the dry bed of the Rio Grande when Agent Mesa approached.

The international border runs through the middle of the concrete culvert built to contain the river but is unmarked.

His family said Sergio was playing with his friends, who were daring each other to run up the incline and touch the fence on the US side.

Agent Mesa detained one of the boys for illegally crossing the border, but Sergio Hernández and another boy ran and hid behind a pillar on the Mexican side.

He was shot twice by Agent Mesa as the boy peaked out from behind the pillar. An investigation by US authorities ruled that the agent had acted in self defence but found no evidence that Sergio Hernández had thrown any stones.

The Mexican authorities charged Agent Mesa with murder but the US authorities refused to extradite him so Sergio Hernández's family tried to sue Agent Mesa in the US for violating the US constitution by using excessive force.

Lower courts dismissed the case and it went to the US Supreme Court. In a five to four decision divided along conservative-liberal lines, the Supreme Court decided to uphold the lower court's decision.

The conservative justices argued that "a cross-border shooting is by definition an international incident" and called for a diplomatic, not a legal solution, arguing that allowing the case would have had "foreign relations and national security implications".

Dissenting Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg said that "Mesa's allegedly unwarranted deployment of deadly force occurred on United States soil" and that it did not make sense to dismiss the action because the bullet had landed on Mexican soil.

Mexico said it was worried the ruling would set a precedent for other incidents in which its nationals had been killed. The government expressed "deep concerns about the effects this decision will have on other similar cases, in which Mexican citizens have died from gunshots fired by US agents towards the Mexican side".

A lawyer for the family of Sergio Hernández warned the ruling would "promote a Wild West attitude on our border".

"To be left with no remedy... given such a violent and unprovoked shooting, weakens the constitutional foundation of America's house," Robert Hilliard said.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-51643636

Offline vagabond

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60829 on: February 26, 2020, 05:34:58 pm »
Meanwhile, Indian fascists empowered by the visit of Trump are conducting pogroms in Delhi. Muslim neighbourhoods, mosques, business being burnt to the ground and the police standing by doing nothing. Kashmiris are still without freedoms, mega-camps still being built to throw the undocumented muslims into. This isn't a rogue element. This isn't a freak event. This is the fucking government enacting their muslim-raping revenge-fantasies in real time.

What a hellhole that country is right now for muslims. I'm sure we'll get fascist sympathizers in here on the double to defend the government. Fuck you too. You would have stood around rationalizing the behaviour of the nazis as well.
« Last Edit: February 26, 2020, 05:46:07 pm by vagabond »
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Offline soxfan

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60830 on: February 26, 2020, 05:43:33 pm »
I feel quite safe from the coronavirus here in the States. After all, our soldiers have had the airports shut down since the 1700s, according to The Stable Genius. :)
Quote
“The Continental Army suffered a bitter winter of Valley Forge,” he continued, “found glory across the waters of the Delaware and seized victory from Cornwallis of Yorktown. Our army manned the [unclear]. It rammed the ramparts. It took over the airports. It did everything it had to do. And at Fort McHenry*, under the rockets’ red glare, it had nothing but victory. And when dawn came, their star-spangled banner waved defiant.”
*wrong war, Donnie, that was 1812  ;)
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60831 on: February 27, 2020, 12:16:41 am »
I'm certainly reassured by this briefing on the coronavirus. It's certainly not at all like an 8 year old trying to explain the nature of respiratory infections and contamination a few hours after you gave him a three minute explanation while he was playing Fortnite.

Plus Mike 'pray HIV away' Pence is now in charge of this, so that's doubly reassuring.
"We have to change from doubters to believers"

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Offline Giono

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60832 on: February 27, 2020, 01:18:10 am »
What? Jared ain't in charge?
"I am a great believer in luck and the harder I work the more of it I have." Stephen Leacock

Offline soxfan

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60833 on: February 27, 2020, 02:57:56 am »
Quote
President Donald Trump on Wednesday placed Vice President Mike Pence in charge of the US government response to the novel coronavirus
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Offline KillieRed

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60834 on: February 27, 2020, 08:41:29 am »

America voted Evil Homer Simpson as their president (sorta). They have nothing to worry about except a short run on the stock market  ::)
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60835 on: February 27, 2020, 09:03:51 am »
Quote
President Donald Trump on Wednesday placed Vice President Mike Pence in charge of the US government response to the novel coronavirus


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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60836 on: February 27, 2020, 09:20:02 am »
Reuters
Trump campaign says it is suing New York Times over Russia opinion piece
 By Steve Holland
4 hrs ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's re-election campaign said on Wednesday it was filing a libel suit accusing the New York Times of intentionally publishing a false opinion article that suggested Russia and the campaign had an overarching deal in the 2016 U.S. election.

In an escalation of the Republican president's long-running battle with the news media, campaign officials said the lawsuit was being filed in state court in New York.

Asked about the suit at a White House news conference later on Wednesday, Trump said the New York Times had "got a lot wrong over the last number of years."

Trump said he would let the lawsuit "work its way through the courts. And there'll be more coming." He did not elaborate.

Separately, Trump assailed two other news organizations that he frequently criticizes, the cable TV news channels CNN and MSNBC, accusing them of presenting the danger from the coronavirus in as bad a light as possible and upsetting financial markets.

A campaign statement said the aim of the suit against the Times, among the most prominent American news organizations, was to hold the newspaper "accountable for intentionally publishing false statements against President Trump's campaign."

The lawsuit relates to a March 27, 2019, opinion article written by Max Frankel, who served as executive editor of the New York Times from 1986 to 1994.

A draft copy of the suit, attached to a campaign news release, accused the newspaper of "extreme bias against and animosity toward the campaign," and cited what it called the Times' "exuberance to improperly influence the presidential election in November 2020."

Trump is seeking re-election on Nov. 3.

In a statement, a New York Times spokesperson said: "The Trump Campaign has turned to the courts to try to punish an opinion writer for having an opinion they find unacceptable. Fortunately, the law protects the right of Americans to express their judgments and conclusions, especially about events of public importance. We look forward to vindicating that right in this case."

The newspaper's spokesperson said it had not been served with the suit and learned about it through media reports.

Trump's criticism of what he calls liberal bias in the U.S. news media plays well with his conservative political base and generates applause at his political rallies, where his supporters often jeer journalists. Trump regularly refers to various news media outlets as "fake news" and has called elements of the U.S. news media "the enemy of the American people."

The New York Times was involved in a landmark 1964 Supreme Court ruling that has served as a safeguard for media reporting on public figures. In the case New York Times v. Sullivan, the court decided that the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment protection for freedom of the press allows even statements that are false to be published as long as the publication was not done with "actual malice."

The suit, according to the draft copy released by the campaign, accused the newspaper of a "malicious motive" and "reckless disregard for the truth."

Benjamin Zipursky, a professor at Fordham University School of Law, said the lawsuit was unlikely to succeed because U.S. defamation law does not allow liability for a sincerely held belief about a public figure, like Trump. He said judges would be skeptical of the claims and inclined to dismiss them.

"They're going to be very concerned with the First Amendment implications of allowing a case like this to move forward," he said.

SANDERS ASSAILS LAWSUIT

Senator Bernie Sanders, the front-runner in the race for the Democratic nomination to face Trump in the November election, denounced the lawsuit.

"Trump has called the press the 'enemy of the people,' and now - taking a page from his dictator friends around the world - is trying to dismantle the right to a free press in the First Amendment by suing the New York Times for publishing an opinion column about his dangerous relationship with Russia," Sanders said.

Former Special Counsel Robert Mueller documented Moscow's campaign of hacking and social media propaganda to boost Trump's 2016 candidacy and harm his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.

Mueller's report documented numerous contacts between people associated with Trump's campaign and Russians. Mueller found insufficient evidence to show a criminal conspiracy between Trump's team and Russia but did not exonerate Trump of obstruction of justice related to the investigation.

In the opinion piece, Frankel stated, "Collusion - or a lack of it - turns out to have been the rhetorical trap that ensnared President Trump's pursuers."

Frankel added, "There was no need for detailed electoral collusion between the Trump campaign and Vladimir Putin's oligarchy because they had an overarching deal: the quid of help in the campaign against Hillary Clinton for the quo of a new pro-Russian foreign policy, starting with relief from the Obama administration's burdensome economic sanctions. The Trumpites knew about the quid and held out the prospect of the quo."

Quid pro quo is a Latin term meaning a favor in exchange for a favor.

Trump in January 2018 criticized U.S. defamation laws as "a sham and a disgrace" following publication of a book by author Michael Wolff called "Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House," which among other things questioned the president's mental health.

Conservative Justice Clarence Thomas last year urged his Supreme Court colleagues to consider overturning the New York Times v. Sullivan precedent.
   :lmao

In a statement on the suit, Jenna Ellis, senior legal adviser to Trump's campaign, said, "The statements were and are 100 percent false and defamatory. The complaint alleges The Times was aware of the falsity at the time it published them, but did so for the intentional purpose of hurting the campaign, while misleading its own readers in the process."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-campaign-says-it-is-suing-new-york-times-over-russia-opinion-piece/ar-BB10qKPw?ocid=spartandhp
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Offline Jiminy Cricket

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60837 on: February 27, 2020, 10:52:18 am »
The lawsuit will be dropped when the election is over. This is all about signalling to Trump's base, and he cannot afford to go through the discovery process (which likely would reveal evidence which would only prove the case made against Trump in the article).
would rather have a wank wearing a barb wire glove
If you're chasing thrills, try a bit of auto-asphyxiation with a poppers-soaked orange in your gob.

Offline fowlermagic

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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60838 on: February 27, 2020, 04:23:49 pm »
Will be interesting to see what happens to the Dow Jones when this virus hits the States and the economic falloff continues from the issues with the supply from China. Its pretty much back to where it was when Trump was elected so surely will damage his campaign a little. 
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Re: Ill Douche - Fungal Dick
« Reply #60839 on: February 27, 2020, 04:28:54 pm »
Will be interesting to see what happens to the Dow Jones when this virus hits the States and the economic falloff continues from the issues with the supply from China. Its pretty much back to where it was when Trump was elected so surely will damage his campaign a little.

He'll have to change some of his slogans a bit.

Re-Make America Great Again? More Promises To Be Made, More Promises To Be Kept?