Are we seriously going to make Trump president?

Who's your favorite candidate of the 4?

  • Trump

    Votes: 5 20.0%
  • Carson

    Votes: 2 8.0%
  • Fiorina

    Votes: 1 4.0%
  • Rubio

    Votes: 1 4.0%
  • None of the above are my choice

    Votes: 16 64.0%

  • Total voters
    25

Avani

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Trump is saying things that resonate with the way many people feel.

They are tired of a politically correct universe. They are tired of watching the Federal government completely ignore things like immigration laws. They are tired of watching tax dollars get spent on failed programs that do nothing but benefit cronies (Solendra, Cash for Clunkers, Shovel Ready Jobs, etc).

Trump is pretty much coming in and saying: "**** your political correctness, America is for Americans, and let's start spending money to make America strong, again, by reinforcing manufacturing."

That's the essence of Trump's message. He plays the "alpha male" very well - he barks orders and gets things done. People may mock his words or argue against how he went about something, but his character and history is motivating capital assets, people, and information to accomplish a goal. People can respect that, and people gravitate toward that type of individual when they do not feel secure in their current arrangement.

I don't think Trump would be a bad President, honestly. I do, however, believe it would be a sign that America is treading down a dangerous path. There are things Trump is not saying that also concern me. Absent from many of his speeches are things like: "Constitution" and "Limited Government." Trump isn't the type of person who is going to symbolize a return to the American way of life. Trump symbolizes a return of American industrial might and interventionist policy. While I am not a staunch isolationist, I am also more Libertarian in my beliefs that action abroad should only rarely be taken by the Federal State.



At present, he is.

There are pretty much four serious candidates for the Office of the President, currently:

Donald Trump
Ben Carson
Carly Fiorina
Bernie Sanders

The robot that spoke at a Hillary fundraiser has deeper emotions than her - she just can't campaign. Unless she literally kills off every other candidate in existence, currently, she has no chance (though she would do it if she could get away with it). That, and she should be in jail.

If she is still alive when the U.S. breaks down in revolution, it is my goal to take her into custody and then deliver her to Serbia where they can figure out what to do with her. She was one of the linchpins in the plot to break up Yugoslavia and falsely implicate their nation in genocide. Twice.


Biden has talked about running... but that's just not the direction the winds are blowing.

It really comes down to Bernie Sanders versus whoever wins the nomination for the republicans. I have already promised my closest friends that, for the first time ever in my life, I will drink to the point of inebriation during the debate if it is between Trump and Sanders.



Polls are mostly name recognition, even when you get up to the final day to vote. Trump has fire - he has drummed up the Republicans. Will they actually vote for him?

If he's the Republican candidate.

The real issue is whether or not some other Republican candidate can drum up enough support -after- the primaries to carry through to the election. If you have someone who won the nomination from a much smaller primary voting block, but who doesn't motivate the average person who typically identifies as Republican in the general election - you've not actually picked the strongest candidate.



He doesn't have the support of the party establishment, really... but there is something of a revolt within the Republican/Conservative sections of the political spectrum that is rallying against the GOP. Most of the people who call themselves Republican have about had it with the party - which is part of Trump's popularity. He is running and gunning while proclaiming a message of 'hard ball' against Democrats and Republicans in the House and Senate, alike. Where the GOP establishment appears like a lap dog begging to drink the semen of Democrats/Obama - Trump is saying: "**** your couch!"

And that's what people want. They want people who are actually going to stand up and fight against what they see as the destruction of America - from the very concept of the Rule of Law to the economy to simple things like the right to not be told by the government what kind of router/modem they have to use.

Trump may only stand for part of that - but at least he is standing up and throwing punches back.

Like I said - I don't support his candidacy all that much. I think he is a Nationalist that talks way too much about what to use the power of government for as opposed to what the power of government should be limited to. I can understand the draw to him, though.

Personally, I am 100% in support of Carson. He would have to seriously **** up at this point to get me to question his candidacy. He may not be the most "alpha" among males, but he does have a record of success in leading medical teams. I'll take that. His advisers, so far, seem to be reading the climate well and that means that he seems to have picked solid advisers who have helped to keep him on track. I think he would pick a solid, honest cabinet that is going to have integrity. He and his cabinet will honestly approach problems with the goal of finding the best solution while considering that which falls within certain ideals - such as the Constitution. IE - a policy that may be advantageous but that causes damage to Constitutional limitations of power would likely be considered unacceptable barring extenuating circumstances.

That, and he's made a living where he has had to tell people that they are going to die. He's delivered bad news to people, and helped to counsel them through it. That experience is exactly what America needs. We've opted for politicians who keep telling us what we want to hear - that the tumor in our brains is going to give us super-powers one day, or whatever... People are starting to sour of it - being told that things are better than they actually are, where politicians blatantly lie to the point that even the average person is dumbfounded by the audacity. "Where is the recovery?"

Carson has told people they will die, and that it's time to make peace with it. Just like someone needs to tell this country exactly what the situation is.

You know...

Transparency.

What worries me about Trump is how he is basically promising to get 'pay back' and use the same corrupt systems to benefit a pissed off group of people more so than actually fix the corruption. His cabinet will be picked for being clever and aggressive delegates of authority who will turn the powers of the Presidency against those who have been deemed an enemy and toward accomplishing the stated objectives - with all kinds of manipulations of the laws and systems in the process.

It may get 'us' ahead in the short term... but it's a loss in the long term, in my opinion, as it will only breed further corruption of the government and further abuse of power - which is what has people so on edge at the moment to begin with.

I see the nomination coming down between Trump and Carson, with Carson picking up some serious steam as he comes out stronger on controversial issues. Except rather than simply blasting "I will build a wall!" - he will appeal to the reason behind why a border exists and what immigration controls are for - why they exist.

Which is what will end up undermining Trump's campaign in the long run. Trump is popular because he is delivering strong, unyielding positions that don't try to cater to a population that is never going to vote for a Republican, Conservative, etc. Once the other candidates figure out that they, too, can have strong ideas and win support (to be fair, Carson has long been willing to step out of line - what gained him popularity in the first place was his speech at a dinner with Obama where he mentioned Health Savings Accounts as opposed to Obamacare) - then those candidates will adopt just as unyielding of a tone with some rather staunch opinions to reflect his.

At that point, some of Trump's clout will begin to dry up, as many of the other candidates (such as Carson and Fiorina) are far more articulate and interesting people.

Further, voters can be pretty shallow. They will tend to vote for who looks most Presidential. While trump certainly looks like he could be behind a desk - he also looks like he could be a used car salesman. While that is better than Cristie, both Carson and Fiorina have him beaten out in terms of who looks Presidential.

At this point - support of the "establishment" is pretty much irrelevant. Trump's popularity pretty much firmly establishes that the "GOP establishment" is on its way out. If they somehow manage to muck with the primaries to get someone like Cristie or Bush in - the party pretty much goes into full on revolt and it wouldn't surprise me to see voters opt to recall some of their senators - literally firing them before their term is up.

Hmm.. ... though now I wonder about the story why Clinton were interested in Yugoslavia...

If he becomes the next president of the United states, I'll shoot myself with a gun O__O
Dramatic speech of the day. I hope that's a water gun you are holding just in case....
 
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Conspirator.

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is he serious about shooting himself???
Yes, he's very serious. No words in the current English dictionary can describe how serious he was. He was so serious with that comment, that he makes students writing a thesis for their PhD look like a bunch of clowns or comedians like Anh Do. All in all, he was as serious as I was in explaining how serious he was in this comment.
 

Aim64C

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He'll murder Trump(Too many politically correct white people),
Bernie Sanders doesn't even have much support among black people. He's popular among stupid communists in college who think they know something about economics. He doesn't really connect with the average person.

Fiorina(Not enough women),
She has plenty of support among people, in general. Her polling numbers have been steadily improving relative to other Republican candidates, and she could easily pull support.

Keep in mind that women make up 50% of the population and about 40% of the voting population (women don't necessarily vote as much as men). Although the brutal reality is that women tend to prefer male leadership to female leadership, all other elements being the same.

Rubio(obvious),
Rubio was being passed around by the GOP establishment last election cycle, and he never really went anywhere or did anything. He's just kind of there, and his polling data supports that assessment. He's there... but... not really all that motivational.

He would still manage to draw the defacto: "well... I don't want the other option" votes.

and Bush(Even more obvious).
Bush would win against Sanders.

People don't want a Dynasty, but they also don't want a socialist. The only real problem would come in the fact that Bush would probably lose his mind and start trying to sound like Sanders.

The only ones that stand a chance are Cruz and Carson. Both are idiots, but Carson is the lesser of two.
Cruz and Carson are idiots?

Cruz is motivated by the concept of a Constitution and believes in constraints on government, though we're so far into a fascist society and structure that I'm not sure if anyone on the political scene truly could be considered an advocate for a Constrained Government even if they are, relatively, for the limitation of federal government authority. National Parks, for example, shouldn't exist. It is not Constitutional for the federal/national government to own land. The Presidential act that created them is unconstitutional and should have been challenged in the courts and struck down. Simple things like that, which have been around since pretty much everyone alive, today, was born are taken for granted and not seen as the corrosive abuse of power that they are.

Carson is not a politician to begin with, and a neurosurgeon. And he's not an affirmative-action hire. He may not come out of the gate with strong opinions on things because it is not a field he is yet familiar with - but as he has had time to research issues, he has refined his position to a more stable and solid footing. The fact that he shows signs of actually researching issues he is presented with (as opposed to simply saying whatever he thinks the people assembled want to hear, as if recording devices don't exist) is a huge bonus. To call him an idiot is simply ignorant. Even if you disagree with his stance upon things, the fact of the matter is that the man is very intelligent and aims to improve his understanding of situations, particularly before making a decision.

If the women can't vote Hillary, they'll vote Bernie.
Trump pulls more of the female vote than Bernie.

Women gravitate toward decisive people who exert an air of both authority and security. Bernie doesn't really do that. He isn't going to pull large numbers of women within the 'swing vote.'

The politically correct whites will vote Bernie.
No, they won't.

Interestingly enough, Bernie Sanders is still a believer in such a thing as the Rule of Law. He just believes the law should be socialism.

Bernie is out of league with the college professors spouting "white privilege" and he will end up being a victim of the pro-palestinian movement in America that has pretty much hijacked every left activist party (including the communists).

The Democrats couldn't be happier that there aren't any debates going on within their party. While the Republicans are in a state where the voters are at odds with the party establishment... the Democrats are having an identity crisis. They have Black Supremacists, Jihadists, National Socialists, Global Communists, and several other political microcosms embedded that are operationally exclusive of each other. The Worker's Party type agenda does not blend well with the Global Communists' goals, nor the Jihadi movement.

The poor looking for handouts will vote Bernie.
Most of them aren't registered to vote in the first place.

I really can't see Bernie losing unless he manages to besmirch himself from now to the big day. There just isn't a candidate that can stop the hype behind him.
There really isn't any hype behind him of any substance. He has garnered a bit of flare left over from the "occupy wallstreet" movement - but even that group has fragmented, considerably, since its inception. Anonymous and similar groups started as anti-over-reach groups rooted in something closer to Libertarian philosophy. It has since been fragmented amid different pro-communist agendas and those who wish to launch attacks against private business ownership, etc.

These groups have become entrenched and embattled against each other in both the real world and the digital one.

Bernie does well against Hillary because a ****ing robot does better than Hillary.

Carson wasn't all that attractive to me as a candidate as he came off too soft spoken and weak. When he stated he would not have gone to war after 9/11, he further confirmed my thoughts about him and confirmed in my mind that I wouldn't vote for him.

Was the war in Iraq ultimately seen as good? Of course not, but that doesn't change what caused it and it certainly doesn't take away from what needed to be done. The war was justified and if any president decided not to go to war after that, they would have become the most disliked president in history. If he has the audacity to say he wouldn't have gone to war in that situation, he is no candidate in my mind.
The President doesn't have the authority to declare war. It really isn't the President's decision whether or not we go to war. It is the President's job to execute the decisions made by Congress as the head of an Executive Office.

Further, I agree with his position after I, myself, have done more research.

Bin Laden believed that the key to bringing about the return of the Caliphate was to drag Western powers into wars within the Middle East. The Caliphate has always been the goal of the Muslim Brotherhood, which Al Qaeda is an extension of (you can trace it all the way back to Hassan Al-Banna). After the Soviet Union collapsed, Bin Laden saw it as a sign that a similar pattern could be produced in the West by goading the western powers into wars in the Middle East.

Of course, he wasn't fully aware of Muslim Brotherhood activities in the U.S. and how deeply they had penetrated foreign policy advisory positions. The toppling of Saddam in Iraq marked the beginning of the West's campaign to put an end to dictatorships in the Middle East....

Dictatorships that were essentially put into place in order to suppress the Islamic impulse to return to a Caliphate....

It wouldn't surprise me to learn that Carson is well aware of -why- going to war was essentially doing precisely what Bin Laden would prefer and that it was not a sound move from a strategic standpoint. I do believe he has attempted to express that idea, although constrained to the time limits and context of the discussion.

I still think Rubio is the best candidate, but I'd be just fine with Fiorina. Rubio is not far behind Fiorina and, in my mind, he is showing signs of being strong, logical, sentimental, controlled and downright intelligent. He seems to represent the average man who comes from an immigrant heritage family (as a large portion of Americans do) while proving he's willing to stand up for what is right. There's more to why I think he's a good candidate, but I definitely think he'd represent us well.
The only real thing Rubio has going for him is his being a first generation American.

Otherwise, he just doesn't really have much to make him stand out above some of the other candidates. His views are relatively genetic and his personality is relatively generic in terms of politicians. He's just not all that inspiring.

I don't think he would be a -bad- candidate, necessarily - but I don't really see him as the pick of the litter.
 

Karna

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I bet if Kanye pull the race card, use his fans and market himself saying "Murica! We don't give a ****, man **** the politicians, yeah!" using his influence over the pop culture to get people with a delusional sense of patriotism to vote for him, he could actually become the president, there are enough mericans out there to at least give him a fair chance.
 

Aim64C

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[/SPOILER]

Hmm.. ... though now I wonder about the story why Clinton were interested in Yugoslavia...


I covered it a bit, here. Some of the sites I link to cover the interest in breaking up Yugoslavia to a greater extent.

The arms smuggling through Croatia began in 1992 as did the Pentagon's plan to move Al Qaeda operatives into Bosnia to train the Bosnian muslims how to be terrorists. In the mean time, the U.S. offered military support to Bosnia so long as their President maintained the position that Bosnia should secede from Yugoslavia.

Al Qaeda had been trained and supplied by the U.S. since around 1984, when it was still the Muslim Brotherhood (renamed because the Muslim Brotherhood was officially still wanted for war crimes in connection with the Nazis). Specifically - they were trained in propaganda wars. They instigated militant operations against the Afghani government in Kabul and prompted the Soviet response. During this time, they held themselves up as pro-democracy freedom fighters that Americans and Westerners would empathize with (particularly Americans).

This same media propaganda arm was used in Bosnia and Kosovo. It went so far as re-dressing and mutilating corpses in attempt to paint the Serbs as the aggressors in the entire affair.

After the Serbs finally had enough - they struck against regions being used by Al Qaeda as terrorist training camps. Of course - the media covered it as if it was a massacre of innocent people.

This was finally enough, coupled with the propaganda war, to support a military operation against Serbia - who was essentially blown the **** up for defending their own sovereign state. The same scenario repeated, basically, in Kosovo.

Agendas for breaking up Yugoslavia varied, but as one of the last dictatorships within the European sphere, there was considerable sentiment to change the style of government. There were also claims of plans to run pipelines through the region and some other thoughts that it was to try and secure U.N./NATO alignment to form a greater hedge against potential soviet influence (should it return).

You'll note the pattern is very similar to what was uncovered at Benghazi - where we were running arms through Libya to support Syrian rebels. While Hillary was chairing the State Department.

It's no coincidence. Hillary is the one who has the connection to Zbigniew Brzezinski, not her husband.

After I came across this information, I did post a response at the end of this thread:

Curiously, that apology post was deleted by a moderator (I can only assume). The thread wasn't locked. The thread wasn't deleted. The post making the apology was deleted in order to make it look like no post ever happened.

A brief look at the pages of the individuals involved is really all that is necessary to formulate some suspicions on what happened, there, and I'll go ahead and risk a public comment about it.

Kind of reminds me of this:

[video=youtube;zf2wbRWb9xI]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zf2wbRWb9xI[/video]

No particular reason or relation, honestly, other than the idea of moderators being people.
 

Avani

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No particular reason or relation, honestly, other than the idea of moderators being people.

Well usually posts get deleted when they are too inflammatory or breaking some other rules. Too inflammatory- since it's not a political/Religion/XYZ controversy forum even if such topics are allowed to an extent. However I am not sure why an apology was deleted. There were some spam posts generated over comments about the post, right after it so it might have been tagged along when they were removed.
 
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Aim64C

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Well usually posts get deleted when they are too inflammatory or breaking some other rules. Too inflammatory- since it's not a political forum even if such topics are allowed to an extent. However I am not sure why an apology was deleted. There were some spam posts generated over comments about the post, right after it so it might have been tagged along when they were removed.
I never saw much of any activity on it - I posted it, went off to do some stuff, and came back to see that it went 'poof.'

Usually, entire threads are deleted or just locked. But if you locked a thread with an apology in the form of a quote - a user would still receive a quote notification indicating that the response was made to their post. If you were someone who, for whatever reason, wanted to insulate another forum user from such a post.... you can't simply lock the thread. Of course, why the thread would be left open after the offending post was deleted is a bit of a mystery... perhaps the fear that something would still be said about it and said member would review the thread to find it locked?

Of course, why attribute to conspiracy what could simply be a moderator who deleted a series of posts and figured I'd be smart enough to get the message and not post again? (or just forgot to lock the thread afterward - human errors)?

Perhaps it looks more suspicious from my side of the fence than if I'd seen some of the follow-up.

In either case - I'm really voicing things that shouldn't be voiced in public. But... I've got a bit of a "whatever will be" attitude at the moment. May a Ninja drop from the ceiling and gut me stem to stern, if that be the result.
 

Avani

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I never saw much of any activity on it - I posted it, went off to do some stuff, and came back to see that it went 'poof.'

Usually, entire threads are deleted or just locked. But if you locked a thread with an apology in the form of a quote - a user would still receive a quote notification indicating that the response was made to their post. If you were someone who, for whatever reason, wanted to insulate another forum user from such a post.... you can't simply lock the thread. Of course, why the thread would be left open after the offending post was deleted is a bit of a mystery... perhaps the fear that something would still be said about it and said member would review the thread to find it locked?

Of course, why attribute to conspiracy what could simply be a moderator who deleted a series of posts and figured I'd be smart enough to get the message and not post again? (or just forgot to lock the thread afterward - human errors)?

Perhaps it looks more suspicious from my side of the fence than if I'd seen some of the follow-up.

In either case - I'm really voicing things that shouldn't be voiced in public. But... I've got a bit of a "whatever will be" attitude at the moment. May a Ninja drop from the ceiling and gut me stem to stern, if that be the result.
You look for a controversy and conspiracy everywhere. "Fear" of anyone saying "something" won't keep a thread open if a section mod felt it needed a closer. Unless that someone is a senior mod or admin. Mostly admins since ultimately mods are their responsibility.

Not all the thread get closed even if we remove some posts -depends upon the posts and thread topic. People get quoted in deleted posts/threads all the time. If anyone cared we would ask the admins to remove the plug in itself. Also, no one responded to your post. They were arguing over your debating skill and whether they exist or not. :p

If you didn't understand why a post was deleted you can ask the reason to a section mod. Even if they didn't delete it themselves they can guide you whom to ask or you can make a thread in Q&A private section. Section mod and admins can check it out and reply.

And now we are spamming the thread. Please send a PM/VM if you have any more questions.
 
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Cruz and Carson don't believe in climate change, despite being the two most intelligent people on the Republican side. That should tell you something right away, and that's that they represent special interests. Cruz looked like a televangelist during the debate, staring so ****ing awkwardly into the camera. He is by far the most fake candidate in the race, with Fiorina coming in a close second. Carson on the other hand could have bodied Trump with that vaccine question, but he decided to go the un-scientific route and agree with Trump that vaccines needed to be more spread out with no evidence to back it up.

Fiorina outright lied to audience about that video. There is no video that currently exists of what she was explaining. On the contrary, it was after a miscarriage. And that brings me to another point. It says a lot when Republicans are still clamoring about that damn planned parenthood video which was biasedly edited by a Pro-life group. Furthermore, they keep spouting off shit that just isn't true. Abortions can't be federally funded. End of. Fiorina is a liar. Like Im glad she made it clear during the debate

Now when it comes to Trump. He's a wild card, but the fact that he hasn't came out with any plans for anything besides building a wall and making Mexico pay for it (a good majority of illegal immigrants don't even come from Mexico) should say a lot. On top of that, he's an anti-vaxxer.

Rubio, Kasich, and at time, Paul, can come off as sensible, so if I was a republican, that's who I'd support.

Basically, the Republican Party is playing off of the fear, stupidity, and racism of their voterbase, which aligns well with the GOP's history. So yeah, support any one of those dumb**** and disengenious candidates who continually ignore science.

oh yeah, and anyone who supports a flat tax is an idiot. I'm glad Trump isn't THAT stupid. Like I feel dumber every time I listen to Carson explain what Socialism is.
 
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Floydical

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The President doesn't have the authority to declare war. It really isn't the President's decision whether or not we go to war. It is the President's job to execute the decisions made by Congress as the head of an Executive Office.

Further, I agree with his position after I, myself, have done more research.

Bin Laden believed that the key to bringing about the return of the Caliphate was to drag Western powers into wars within the Middle East. The Caliphate has always been the goal of the Muslim Brotherhood, which Al Qaeda is an extension of (you can trace it all the way back to Hassan Al-Banna). After the Soviet Union collapsed, Bin Laden saw it as a sign that a similar pattern could be produced in the West by goading the western powers into wars in the Middle East.

Of course, he wasn't fully aware of Muslim Brotherhood activities in the U.S. and how deeply they had penetrated foreign policy advisory positions. The toppling of Saddam in Iraq marked the beginning of the West's campaign to put an end to dictatorships in the Middle East....

Dictatorships that were essentially put into place in order to suppress the Islamic impulse to return to a Caliphate....

It wouldn't surprise me to learn that Carson is well aware of -why- going to war was essentially doing precisely what Bin Laden would prefer and that it was not a sound move from a strategic standpoint. I do believe he has attempted to express that idea, although constrained to the time limits and context of the discussion.



The only real thing Rubio has going for him is his being a first generation American.

Otherwise, he just doesn't really have much to make him stand out above some of the other candidates. His views are relatively genetic and his personality is relatively generic in terms of politicians. He's just not all that inspiring.

I don't think he would be a -bad- candidate, necessarily - but I don't really see him as the pick of the litter.
But that's just it, you had to use hindsight and logic to determine it was potentially the wrong decision after the fact. Any presidential candidate must consider the Nation's emotions at the time of the tragedy. No one can deny that the vast majority of the nation felt a need for revenge, and it was the right vengeance to seek.

So no I totally disagree. No matter how much logic you use and say the war was not worth it, it was. 99% of decisions should be made with logic and reasoning, but there are rare, 1% situations that should be handled with emotions. Seeking revenge after 9/11 was one of those instances, and a candidate saying he would not have given in to those emotions is either a liar or is not strong enough to take action in such a situation.
 
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