President Trump Thread...

skidadl

El Presidente'
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2004
Messages
11,888
I get that all politicians lie, but most don't do it with such vigor.

They make promises, but Trump built his entire platform on simple constructs that enflamed people and now he's backing completely away from it.

Obama ran saying he was going to do the healthcare thing and he followed through at least, no matter if you like Obamacare or not.

Trump was supposed to be anti-establishment and for Joe Six Pack and he's doing nothing of the kind thus far.
I get it but his campaign was like, "immigration? no problem, I will fix it...it will be fabulous." The economy? We are going to make it better than anything before...it will be YUUUUGE!" ~cheers from the idiots~

Who really believes that? Does he have magic powers or something?
 

boozeman

28 Years And Counting...
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
121,735
I get it but his campaign was like, "immigration? no problem, I will fix it...it will be fabulous." The economy? We are going to make it better than anything before...it will be YUUUUGE!" ~cheers from the idiots~

Who really believes that? Does he have magic powers or something?
There will probably be some confused people, that is for sure.

I thought he would keep em from takin mah jab?
 

dallen

Senior Tech
Joined
Jan 1, 2000
Messages
8,466
I get that all politicians lie, but most don't do it with such vigor.

They make promises, but Trump built his entire platform on simple constructs that enflamed people and now he's backing completely away from it.

Obama ran saying he was going to do the healthcare thing and he followed through at least, no matter if you like Obamacare or not.

Trump was supposed to be anti-establishment and for Joe Six Pack and he's doing nothing of the kind thus far.
As angry and scared as the left was when he won I don't think it will be anything like when his supporters realize he conned them. He portrayed himself as a last hope to desperate people before the election. Since then he has quickly backed off on a lot of his promises. People trusted him because he said he wasn't a politician, but he seems just as morally flexible as any one of them. You can't demonize Hillary for giving speeches to Goldman Sachs, promise to drain the swamp, and then appoint half their executive team to your cabinet. It is crazy. One of the few things he said that did appeal to me was his anti-corruption talk. Now he seems to be trying to cure the disease by killing the patient. I was as anti-Trump as anyone, but I do honestly hope he does a great job. So far he hasn't filled me with a lot of hope.
 

2233boys

Not So New Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
2,793
Well yeah, that's part of the deal. I can tell you that my rates for my family went from $597 to over 1800 this year. So I don't know how many of those 30,000,000 would have been insured going forward. I was part of the uninsured before a Obamacare as well.
That's because we have a shit healthcare system that isn't concerned about healthcare, but health profits.

The problem with the Affordable Care Act, like most things in our "democracy", corporate interests had a hand in developing the policy. If you get the business out of our government and the money they use to lobby and hijack our democracy, they country would be better off.
 

L.T. Fan

I'm Easy If You Are
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
21,689
As angry and scared as the left was when he won I don't think it will be anything like when his supporters realize he conned them. He portrayed himself as a last hope to desperate people before the election. Since then he has quickly backed off on a lot of his promises. People trusted him because he said he wasn't a politician, but he seems just as morally flexible as any one of them. You can't demonize Hillary for giving speeches to Goldman Sachs, promise to drain the swamp, and then appoint half their executive team to your cabinet. It is crazy. One of the few things he said that did appeal to me was his anti-corruption talk. Now he seems to be trying to cure the disease by killing the patient. I was as anti-Trump as anyone, but I do honestly hope he does a great job. So far he hasn't filled me with a lot of hope.
Patience grasshopper.
 

2233boys

Not So New Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
2,793
As angry and scared as the left was when he won I don't think it will be anything like when his supporters realize he conned them. He portrayed himself as a last hope to desperate people before the election. Since then he has quickly backed off on a lot of his promises. People trusted him because he said he wasn't a politician, but he seems just as morally flexible as any one of them. You can't demonize Hillary for giving speeches to Goldman Sachs, promise to drain the swamp, and then appoint half their executive team to your cabinet. It is crazy. One of the few things he said that did appeal to me was his anti-corruption talk. Now he seems to be trying to cure the disease by killing the patient. I was as anti-Trump as anyone, but I do honestly hope he does a great job. So far he hasn't filled me with a lot of hope.
He is a Con Man

He's backed off everything. It isn't a surprise.

If you listened to him he changed his position almost daily.
He lied constantly.
He had no real grasp on policy or an idea of how things worked.
 

L.T. Fan

I'm Easy If You Are
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
21,689
He is a Con Man

He's backed off everything. It isn't a surprise.

If you listened to him he changed his position almost daily.
He lied constantly.
He had no real grasp on policy or an idea of how things worked.
Sounds like the makings of a great politician. :lol
 

townsend

Banned
Joined
Apr 11, 2013
Messages
5,377
Sounds like the makings of a great politician. :lol
Well if those are the makings of a great politician he's the best, he's done more corrupt and deceptive and indefensible shit in a couple months than Hillary has done in 30 years.

But I'm pretty sure a video of Trump fellating Putin and cleaning up the jissom with a copy of the constitution wouldn't discourage your support of Trump.
 

L.T. Fan

I'm Easy If You Are
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
21,689
Well if those are the makings of a great politician he's the best, he's done more corrupt and deceptive and indefensible shit in a couple months than Hillary has done in 30 years.

But I'm pretty sure a video of Trump fellating Putin and cleaning up the jissom with a copy of the constitution wouldn't discourage your support of Trump.
That's pretty general are you willing to show some specifics rather than becoming another slander monger like we all have been hearing. The second sentence is a good example of slander mongering. Pictures or GTOF as they say. :art
 

townsend

Banned
Joined
Apr 11, 2013
Messages
5,377
A secret U.S. military investigation in 2010 determined that Michael T. Flynn, the retired Army general tapped to serve as national security adviser in the Trump White House, “inappropriately shared” classified information with foreign military officers in Afghanistan, newly released documents show.

Although Flynn lacked authorization to share the classified material, he was not disciplined or reprimanded after the investigation concluded that he did not act “knowingly” and that “there was no actual or potential damage to national security as a result,” according to Army records obtained by The Washington Post under the Freedom of Information Act.

[Read the military investigation into Michael Flynn in 2010]

Flynn has previously acknowledged that he was investigated while serving as the U.S. military intelligence chief in Afghanistan for sharing secrets with British and Australian allies there. But he has dismissed the case as insignificant and has given few details.

The Army documents provide the first official account of the case, but they are limited in scope because the investigation itself remains classified. Former U.S. officials familiar with the matter said that Flynn was accused of telling allies about the activities of other agencies in Afghanistan, including the CIA.

Trump's Transition: Who is Michael Flynn? Play Video1:58


President-elect Donald Trump named retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn his national security adviser on Nov. 18, but Flynn has a history of making incendiary and Islamophobic statements that have drawn criticism from his military peers. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)
The Army files call into question Flynn’s prior assertion that he had permission to share the sensitive information.

During the presidential race, Flynn campaigned vigorously for Republican nominee Donald Trump and drew attention for his scalding attacks against Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton for mishandling classified material. Clinton was investigated by the FBI for allowing classified information to be transmitted on her private email server when she ran the State Department. No charges were filed against the former secretary of state, but the issue dogged her for more than a year.

At the Republican National Convention in July, Flynn called on Clinton to drop out of the race for putting “our nation’s security at extremely high risk with her careless use of a private email server.” He egged on the partisan crowd in chants of “lock her up,” adding: “If I, a guy who knows this business, if I did a tenth, a tenth of what she did, I would be in jail today.”


Flynn did not respond to requests for comment.

The office of the Army’s Judge Advocate General released a four-page summary of the investigation into Flynn in response to The Post’s Freedom of Information Act request for records of any misconduct allegations involving the retired three-star general.

The U.S. military opened the investigation into Flynn in 2010 after receiving a complaint from an unnamed Navy intelligence specialist, according to the documents. The intelligence officer charged that Flynn violated rules by “inappropriately” sharing secrets with “various foreign military officers and/or officials in Afghanistan.”

The documents do not reveal the nature of the information. But former U.S. officials familiar with the case said it centered on slides and other materials containing classified information about CIA operations in Afghanistan.

Michael Flynn leads chants of 'lock her up' at Republican Convention Play Video2:06
Retired Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn called for Hillary Clinton to drop out of the presidential race during the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. (Republican National Convention)
“It was a general intelligence briefing that included stuff that shouldn’t have been on those slides,” said a former senior U.S. intelligence official, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the subject. The disclosures revealed “stuff the intelligence community was doing that had a much higher level of classification.”

The agency has had an extensive presence in the Afghanistan since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Beyond gathering intelligence on al-Qaeda and the Taliban, the CIA has also assembled its own paramilitary networks in the country, paying warlords for cooperation and funding armed groups known as Counterterrorism Pursuit Teams.

A second former U.S. official said Flynn failed to secure permission to reveal those secrets. “This was a question of whether or not information was put through proper channels before it was shared,” the second official said.

The episode marked the second time in a year that Flynn had drawn official complaints for his handling of classified material.

Former U.S. officials said that Flynn had disclosed sensitive information to Pakistan in late 2009 or early 2010 about secret U.S. intelligence capabilities being used to monitor the Haqqani network, an insurgent group accused of repeated attacks on U.S. forces in Afghanistan.


Flynn exposed the capabilities during meetings with Pakistani officials in Islamabad. The former U.S. intelligence official said a CIA officer who accompanied Flynn reported the disclosures to CIA headquarters, which then relayed the complaint to the Defense Department. Flynn was verbally reprimanded by the Pentagon’s top intelligence official at the time, James R. Clapper Jr.

Clapper subsequently became director of national intelligence and endorsed Flynn to become his successor as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency. In 2014, however, Clapper forced Flynn out of that job over concerns with his temperament and management.

The newly disclosed Army documents state that the 2010 investigation was ordered by the head of U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the Middle East and Afghanistan. Although the records do not say exactly when the case was opened, the commander at the time would have been Marine Gen. James Mattis.

Mattis took charge at Central Command’s headquarters in Tampa, Fla., in August 2010. One month later, Flynn was ordered back to Washington from Afghanistan. He was assigned to a temporary job at the Pentagon as the special assistant to the Army’s chief of intelligence while the investigation unfolded, records show.

Mattis was nominated this month by Trump to serve as secretary of defense. In that role, Mattis will work closely with Flynn; the retired generals are expected to be the most influential voices on national security in the Trump administration.

The Army documents that summarize the investigation into Flynn do not specify which countries he was accused of improperly sharing secrets with. In an interview with The Post in August, Flynn said he was scrutinized for giving classified information to British and Australian officials serving in Afghanistan alongside U.S. forces.

In that interview, Flynn defended his actions and said he did nothing wrong. “That was substantiated because I actually did it. But I did it with the right permissions when you dig into that investigation. I’m proud of that one. Accuse me of sharing intelligence in combat with our closest allies, please.”


The Army documents, however, state explicitly that the Central Command investigation determined that Flynn did not have permission to share the particular secrets he divulged. The Defense Department’s inspector general, which conducted an independent review of the investigation, came to the same conclusion, the documents show.

It is routine for the U.S. military to share intelligence in Afghanistan with NATO allies such as Britain, as well as other members of the broader international coalition fighting the Taliban and al-Qaeda, including Australia. But there are established mechanisms and guidelines that must be followed.

Flynn was highly regarded within the Army for the key role he played in shaping U.S. counterterrorism strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan. Pentagon officials had intended to promote Flynn in 2010 to the rank of lieutenant general and to make him assistant director of national intelligence, a job that would place him in charge of improving ties with foreign intelligence agencies.

The Central Command investigation delayed his career advancement for a full year. He received his promotion and new assignment in September 2011.

After being forced to retire from the military in 2014, Flynn became a vocal opponent of the Obama administration’s policies regarding Iran and al-Qaeda. At the same time, he gained a reputation for floating conspiracy theories on Twitter.

Some Democratic lawmakers have criticized his selection as Trump’s national security adviser. The position is not subject to Senate confirmation.
 

Cowboysrock55

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
52,456
Suck it up': Lawmaker wants to cut funding for schools coddling students over Trump
Published November 16, 2016
FoxNews.com
Facebook

Twitter

livefyre

Email

NOW PLAYING
Lawmaker wants to cut funding for schools with safe spaces
An Iowa lawmaker is looking to slash funding for public colleges spending money on grief counseling and other kid-glove treatment for students upset over last week’s presidential election results -- telling snowflakes everywhere: “Suck it up, buttercup.”


Since Donald Trump’s upset victory last Tuesday, colleges across the country have brought in therapy dogs, canceled exams and held “cry-ins” on campus.

But Republican state Rep. Bobby Kaufmann says he will introduce a “suck it up, buttercup” bill in January when the Iowa State Legislature resumes, in a bid to fight back against campus coddling.

The bill would hit taxpayer-funded state universities with a budget cut for double the amount they spend on such election-related activities. Kaufmann emphasized that existing therapy and mental health services are not being targeted.

“I saw schools with rising, skyrocketing tuition costs where they are also finding money and expenditures for things such as cry rooms. I heard reports of rooms where you can play with Play-Doh, where you can color on books and talk about your feelings, and I was hearing reports of some schools that were bringing in ponies to be able get students through the election,” he told "Fox & Friends" on Wednesday.

After receiving hundreds of emails of support from across the country, Kaufmann also has set up a website where supporters can "Adopt a Trump protester" and get a "suck it up, buttercup" hat for $17.76. He says he hopes other states pursue similar legislation.


"I believe I'm the first," he told FoxNews.com, when asked if other lawmakers were following his example. "I wanted to fire a political warning shot."

The kind of creative counseling that concerns him extends well beyond Iowa campuses. Kaufmann isn't the only one worried about the post-election feel-gooderies either.

The University of Michigan law school canceled a “Post-Election Self-Care with Food and Play” event this week after inevitable Internet ridicule. The event offered students the chance to work out their Trump anxiety with “stress-busting self-care activities” including coloring, blowing bubbles, sculpting with Play-Doh and “positive card making.”

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CANCELS PLAN TO HELP STUDENTS 'COPE' WITH TRUMP

But Kaufmann says that’s a waste of money, and can actually hurt students as it doesn't prepare them for the real world.

“And in life, when your car breaks down, your kids get sick or you have to take a second job to pay your mortgage, you don’t get to go to a cry zone, you don’t get to pet a pony, you have to deal with it,” he said.

However, at least one state university has pushed back against the bill, saying it’s important for students to be able to express themselves about election results

“I think universities are the perfect place to have these types of conversations,” Scott Ketelsen, director of university relations at the University of Northern Iowa, told the Des Moines Register. “It’s where people learn. It’s where they share ideas. I don’t consider it coddling.”

The bill also establishes new criminal penalties for protesters who shut down highways. Kaufmann cited a recent anti-Trump protest that shut down a highway in Iowa City.

“I encourage protest, I encourage dissent. But you don’t have a constitutional right to block the constitutional rights of others,” he told "Fox & Friends."

Some lawmakers in other states have taken the opposite approach. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called on Monday for more disruption in the city, which has seen some of the highest-profile protests since Trump was elected.

“We have to recognize that all over this country, the more disruption that’s caused peacefully … the more it will change the trajectory of things,” he said in a radio interview on Monday.

FoxNews.com's Adam Shaw contributed to this report.
 

L.T. Fan

I'm Easy If You Are
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
21,689
Suck it up': Lawmaker wants to cut funding for schools coddling students over Trump
Published November 16, 2016
FoxNews.com
Facebook

Twitter

livefyre

Email

NOW PLAYING
Lawmaker wants to cut funding for schools with safe spaces
An Iowa lawmaker is looking to slash funding for public colleges spending money on grief counseling and other kid-glove treatment for students upset over last week’s presidential election results -- telling snowflakes everywhere: “Suck it up, buttercup.”


Since Donald Trump’s upset victory last Tuesday, colleges across the country have brought in therapy dogs, canceled exams and held “cry-ins” on campus.

But Republican state Rep. Bobby Kaufmann says he will introduce a “suck it up, buttercup” bill in January when the Iowa State Legislature resumes, in a bid to fight back against campus coddling.

The bill would hit taxpayer-funded state universities with a budget cut for double the amount they spend on such election-related activities. Kaufmann emphasized that existing therapy and mental health services are not being targeted.

“I saw schools with rising, skyrocketing tuition costs where they are also finding money and expenditures for things such as cry rooms. I heard reports of rooms where you can play with Play-Doh, where you can color on books and talk about your feelings, and I was hearing reports of some schools that were bringing in ponies to be able get students through the election,” he told "Fox & Friends" on Wednesday.

After receiving hundreds of emails of support from across the country, Kaufmann also has set up a website where supporters can "Adopt a Trump protester" and get a "suck it up, buttercup" hat for $17.76. He says he hopes other states pursue similar legislation.


"I believe I'm the first," he told FoxNews.com, when asked if other lawmakers were following his example. "I wanted to fire a political warning shot."

The kind of creative counseling that concerns him extends well beyond Iowa campuses. Kaufmann isn't the only one worried about the post-election feel-gooderies either.

The University of Michigan law school canceled a “Post-Election Self-Care with Food and Play” event this week after inevitable Internet ridicule. The event offered students the chance to work out their Trump anxiety with “stress-busting self-care activities” including coloring, blowing bubbles, sculpting with Play-Doh and “positive card making.”

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CANCELS PLAN TO HELP STUDENTS 'COPE' WITH TRUMP

But Kaufmann says that’s a waste of money, and can actually hurt students as it doesn't prepare them for the real world.

“And in life, when your car breaks down, your kids get sick or you have to take a second job to pay your mortgage, you don’t get to go to a cry zone, you don’t get to pet a pony, you have to deal with it,” he said.

However, at least one state university has pushed back against the bill, saying it’s important for students to be able to express themselves about election results

“I think universities are the perfect place to have these types of conversations,” Scott Ketelsen, director of university relations at the University of Northern Iowa, told the Des Moines Register. “It’s where people learn. It’s where they share ideas. I don’t consider it coddling.”

The bill also establishes new criminal penalties for protesters who shut down highways. Kaufmann cited a recent anti-Trump protest that shut down a highway in Iowa City.

“I encourage protest, I encourage dissent. But you don’t have a constitutional right to block the constitutional rights of others,” he told "Fox & Friends."

Some lawmakers in other states have taken the opposite approach. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called on Monday for more disruption in the city, which has seen some of the highest-profile protests since Trump was elected.

“We have to recognize that all over this country, the more disruption that’s caused peacefully … the more it will change the trajectory of things,” he said in a radio interview on Monday.

FoxNews.com's Adam Shaw contributed to this report.
Can't believe I'm reading this stuff. No wonder some of the youth act like they are royalty.
 

townsend

Banned
Joined
Apr 11, 2013
Messages
5,377
Can't believe I'm reading this stuff. No wonder some of the youth act like they are royalty.
Do you actually know a young person that "acts like royalty" or is your perception of reality based on how Fox News wants you to see the world?

Millennials are the largest, and most diverse age demographic in the country. The average age of the entire fucking military is 29-30 years old. I guess they're all just all spoiled royalty.
 

L.T. Fan

I'm Easy If You Are
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
21,689
Do you actually know a young person that "acts like royalty" or is your perception of reality based on how Fox News wants you to see the world?

Millennials are the largest, and most diverse age demographic in the country. The average age of the entire fucking military is 29-30 years old. I guess they're all just all spoiled royalty.
This isn't about military personnel and yes I know plenty of young people. My grandsons are in this age group and I have been exposed to many of their acquaintences. Why respond with irrelevant information?
 

jsmith6919

Honored Member - RIP
Joined
Aug 26, 2013
Messages
28,407
On a sunny day at the end of January, 2017, an old man approached the White House and walked up to a US Marine and asked to see President Hillary Clinton.

The Marine said "Hillary Clinton does not reside here."

The following day the same old man asked the Marine to see President Hillary Clinton.

The Marine said "She is not the President, and does not reside here."

The next day the same thing happened. The Marine, obviously frustrated, said "Do you not understand me?"

The old man said he did indeed, he just liked hearing the answer.

The US Marine then popped to attention and said "See you tomorrow sir!".
 

Cotton

One-armed Knife Sharpener
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
119,701
On a sunny day at the end of January, 2017, an old man approached the White House and walked up to a US Marine and asked to see President Hillary Clinton.

The Marine said "Hillary Clinton does not reside here."

The following day the same old man asked the Marine to see President Hillary Clinton.

The Marine said "She is not the President, and does not reside here."

The next day the same thing happened. The Marine, obviously frustrated, said "Do you not understand me?"

The old man said he did indeed, he just liked hearing the answer.

The US Marine then popped to attention and said "See you tomorrow sir!".
:lol

:towel
 

Jiggyfly

Banned
Joined
Apr 8, 2013
Messages
9,220
Suck it up': Lawmaker wants to cut funding for schools coddling students over Trump
Published November 16, 2016
FoxNews.com
Facebook

Twitter

livefyre

Email

NOW PLAYING
Lawmaker wants to cut funding for schools with safe spaces
An Iowa lawmaker is looking to slash funding for public colleges spending money on grief counseling and other kid-glove treatment for students upset over last week’s presidential election results -- telling snowflakes everywhere: “Suck it up, buttercup.”


Since Donald Trump’s upset victory last Tuesday, colleges across the country have brought in therapy dogs, canceled exams and held “cry-ins” on campus.

But Republican state Rep. Bobby Kaufmann says he will introduce a “suck it up, buttercup” bill in January when the Iowa State Legislature resumes, in a bid to fight back against campus coddling.

The bill would hit taxpayer-funded state universities with a budget cut for double the amount they spend on such election-related activities. Kaufmann emphasized that existing therapy and mental health services are not being targeted.

“I saw schools with rising, skyrocketing tuition costs where they are also finding money and expenditures for things such as cry rooms. I heard reports of rooms where you can play with Play-Doh, where you can color on books and talk about your feelings, and I was hearing reports of some schools that were bringing in ponies to be able get students through the election,” he told "Fox & Friends" on Wednesday.

After receiving hundreds of emails of support from across the country, Kaufmann also has set up a website where supporters can "Adopt a Trump protester" and get a "suck it up, buttercup" hat for $17.76. He says he hopes other states pursue similar legislation.


"I believe I'm the first," he told FoxNews.com, when asked if other lawmakers were following his example. "I wanted to fire a political warning shot."

The kind of creative counseling that concerns him extends well beyond Iowa campuses. Kaufmann isn't the only one worried about the post-election feel-gooderies either.

The University of Michigan law school canceled a “Post-Election Self-Care with Food and Play” event this week after inevitable Internet ridicule. The event offered students the chance to work out their Trump anxiety with “stress-busting self-care activities” including coloring, blowing bubbles, sculpting with Play-Doh and “positive card making.”

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CANCELS PLAN TO HELP STUDENTS 'COPE' WITH TRUMP

But Kaufmann says that’s a waste of money, and can actually hurt students as it doesn't prepare them for the real world.

“And in life, when your car breaks down, your kids get sick or you have to take a second job to pay your mortgage, you don’t get to go to a cry zone, you don’t get to pet a pony, you have to deal with it,” he said.

However, at least one state university has pushed back against the bill, saying it’s important for students to be able to express themselves about election results

“I think universities are the perfect place to have these types of conversations,” Scott Ketelsen, director of university relations at the University of Northern Iowa, told the Des Moines Register. “It’s where people learn. It’s where they share ideas. I don’t consider it coddling.”

The bill also establishes new criminal penalties for protesters who shut down highways. Kaufmann cited a recent anti-Trump protest that shut down a highway in Iowa City.

“I encourage protest, I encourage dissent. But you don’t have a constitutional right to block the constitutional rights of others,” he told "Fox & Friends."

Some lawmakers in other states have taken the opposite approach. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called on Monday for more disruption in the city, which has seen some of the highest-profile protests since Trump was elected.

“We have to recognize that all over this country, the more disruption that’s caused peacefully … the more it will change the trajectory of things,” he said in a radio interview on Monday.

FoxNews.com's Adam Shaw contributed to this report.
Grandstanding at its finest.

Does anybody really think there are a significant number of college students using these resources?

But hey anything to get a some righteous indignation going.

How much money is he wasting bring this bill up?
 

NoDak

Hotlinking' sonofabitch
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
22,913
Well if those are the makings of a great politician he's the best, he's done more corrupt and deceptive and indefensible shit in a couple months than Hillary has done in 30 years.
:rofl

Can always count on threads like this for a good laugh.
 
Top Bottom