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The nonsense thread - Enter at your own risk! Warning… 100% off topic and full of nonsense inside (Read 896,064 times)
Joey
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3750 - Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:08am
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<  -------------- GIMMEKEEF   ?!   .... !!!!!!  :









https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-kill-jamal-khashoggi-1539546596







" Why Kill Jamal Khashoggi? "


" The most charitable interpretation is that this was an abduction that went horribly wrong.  "



By Karen Elliott House







" The case of the vanished and apparently murdered Saudi activist and writer Jamal Khashoggi is a tale with a victim and villains, but no heroes.

Mr. Khashoggi, a longtime retainer of the Saudi royal family and more recently a critic of the regime, entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 2, seeking documents relevant to a divorce. The Turkish government claims to have proof that a Saudi hit squad murdered him inside the consulate, chopped his body to bits, and dispatched the remains in a black van to a private plane headed for Saudi Arabia. Portions of this plot remain unverified but there seems little doubt Mr. Khashoggi is dead.

The primary villain apparently is Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who runs every aspect of Saudi Arabia and without whose authorization nothing of consequence takes place. But this sordid episode isn’t best thought of as the clash between an autocratic ruler and a democratic hero. It is more of an internecine conflict.

Mr. Khashoggi, notwithstanding his credentials as a columnist for the Washington Post, spent most of his adult life working with and for the Al Saud family and its media properties. He also did stints for Saudi intelligence, headed for part of the time by Prince Turki al-Faisal, who later served as ambassador to the U.S. Mr. Khashoggi’s early claim to fame was interviewing Osama bin Laden in 1980s Afghanistan, where both were allied with the anti-Soviet mujahedeen. Mr. Khashoggi broke with bin Laden in the 1990s and after 9/11 became Riyadh’s favorite example of a reformed Islamic fundamentalist, often produced for visiting Westerners to outline his conversion. But under King Salman and the crown prince, Mr. Khashoggi became an outcast, accused of supporting the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood. He moved to the U.S. in July 2017.

While Crown Prince Mohammed has made significant social and economic reforms, he has never claimed to be a democrat. Recently he acknowledged jailing 1,500 people, famously including the 300 relatives, ministers and business barons who were confined inside the Riyadh Ritz-Carlton. None of that, however, prepared those of us who knew him for the murder of a citizen in what is supposed to be the security of his nation’s consulate.

Kidnapping critics and returning them to Saudi Arabia isn’t new for this regime, though previously such incidents got little publicity because no one died. Perhaps the crown prince thought he could again escape any consequences. After all, Russia’s Vladimir Putin has poisoned dissidents in London; China’s Xi Jinping runs an archipelago of re-education camps; and Turkey’s increasingly despotic Recep Tayyip Erdogan—who is leveling the charges at the Saudis—has jailed thousands with little or no international consequence. Perhaps the world will soon forget a political murder.

But there surely will be a lasting reputational price for the crown prince. With so much power over a largely pacific populace, why would he order or sanction what amounts to a mafia murder? Mr. Khashoggi wasn’t leading a civil rebellion against the regime. Nor was he a widely popular focus of dissent in the kingdom. He seemed to pose no serious threat to Crown Prince Mohammad’s rule.

That Mohammed bin Salman believes Mr. Khashoggi was a supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood, a transnational Islamist organization, and on the payroll of Qatar, a Saudi nemesis, seems more an excuse than a reason. Those who watch the crown prince closely say he is determined to pre-empt any hint of possible disruption before it can materialize. So Mr. Khashoggi’s decision to register in the U.S. a new political organization, Democracy for the Arab World Now, perhaps funded by Saudi regional rivals, might have triggered this action.

It seems clear that Mohammed bin Salman, accustomed to issuing orders on every aspect of Saudi life without question or contradiction, wanted to silence Mr. Khashoggi. When efforts to woo him back as an adviser failed, he was captured in Istanbul, where he hoped to marry his Turkish fiancée. The most charitable interpretation is that this was an abduction that went horribly wrong.

Now what? While the crown prince can ignore Saudi domestic opinion, he must care about his international image, especially among foreign investors, whose money he needs to realize his Vision 2030 economic reforms. Businessmen who had embraced him—such as Richard Branson, Uber’s Dara Khosrowshahi and Viacom ’s Bob Bakish—are stepping back. Many others won’t dare show up at this month’s investor conference the crown prince is hosting in Riyadh. The mass incarcerations at the Ritz-Carlton a year ago had dimmed the crown prince’s image. This blackens it.

While the crown prince doesn’t care about media or even congressional criticism, he must care about any U.S. action that significantly alters the fundamental U.S.-Saudi relationship—which has never been based on shared moral values but rather on mutual security. In a dangerous neighborhood, Saudi Arabia depends on American security guarantees; likewise, any radical evolution in Saudi Arabia would threaten all U.S. interests in the region. Most important, President Trump and Crown Prince Mohammed share a deep distrust of Iran, so that the U.S.-Saudi security relationship seems likely to hold for now.


But Congress may block weapons sales in support of the crown prince’s still-unsuccessful war in Yemen, where more than 6,000 civilians have died. Sen. Lindsey Graham has warned of a “bipartisan tsunami” in Congress if the Saudis are proved guilty of Mr. Khashoggi’s murder. Congress might even go beyond Yemen and block all weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, despite Mr. Trump’s opposition.

The more lasting effect likely will be a diminution of trust, leaving the U.S.-Saudi relationship resembling a loveless marriage in which neither side can afford to file for divorce.  "

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« Last Edit: Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:11am by Joey »  

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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3751 - Oct 17th, 2018 at 11:18am
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Joey wrote on Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:08am:
<  -------------- GIMMEKEEF   ?!   .... !!!!!!  :









https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-kill-jamal-khashoggi-1539546596







" Why Kill Jamal Khashoggi? "


" The most charitable interpretation is that this was an abduction that went horribly wrong.  "



By Karen Elliott House







" The case of the vanished and apparently murdered Saudi activist and writer Jamal Khashoggi is a tale with a victim and villains, but no heroes.

Mr. Khashoggi, a longtime retainer of the Saudi royal family and more recently a critic of the regime, entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 2, seeking documents relevant to a divorce. The Turkish government claims to have proof that a Saudi hit squad murdered him inside the consulate, chopped his body to bits, and dispatched the remains in a black van to a private plane headed for Saudi Arabia. Portions of this plot remain unverified but there seems little doubt Mr. Khashoggi is dead.

The primary villain apparently is Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who runs every aspect of Saudi Arabia and without whose authorization nothing of consequence takes place. But this sordid episode isn’t best thought of as the clash between an autocratic ruler and a democratic hero. It is more of an internecine conflict.

Mr. Khashoggi, notwithstanding his credentials as a columnist for the Washington Post, spent most of his adult life working with and for the Al Saud family and its media properties. He also did stints for Saudi intelligence, headed for part of the time by Prince Turki al-Faisal, who later served as ambassador to the U.S. Mr. Khashoggi’s early claim to fame was interviewing Osama bin Laden in 1980s Afghanistan, where both were allied with the anti-Soviet mujahedeen. Mr. Khashoggi broke with bin Laden in the 1990s and after 9/11 became Riyadh’s favorite example of a reformed Islamic fundamentalist, often produced for visiting Westerners to outline his conversion. But under King Salman and the crown prince, Mr. Khashoggi became an outcast, accused of supporting the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood. He moved to the U.S. in July 2017.

While Crown Prince Mohammed has made significant social and economic reforms, he has never claimed to be a democrat. Recently he acknowledged jailing 1,500 people, famously including the 300 relatives, ministers and business barons who were confined inside the Riyadh Ritz-Carlton. None of that, however, prepared those of us who knew him for the murder of a citizen in what is supposed to be the security of his nation’s consulate.

Kidnapping critics and returning them to Saudi Arabia isn’t new for this regime, though previously such incidents got little publicity because no one died. Perhaps the crown prince thought he could again escape any consequences. After all, Russia’s Vladimir Putin has poisoned dissidents in London; China’s Xi Jinping runs an archipelago of re-education camps; and Turkey’s increasingly despotic Recep Tayyip Erdogan—who is leveling the charges at the Saudis—has jailed thousands with little or no international consequence. Perhaps the world will soon forget a political murder.

But there surely will be a lasting reputational price for the crown prince. With so much power over a largely pacific populace, why would he order or sanction what amounts to a mafia murder? Mr. Khashoggi wasn’t leading a civil rebellion against the regime. Nor was he a widely popular focus of dissent in the kingdom. He seemed to pose no serious threat to Crown Prince Mohammad’s rule.

That Mohammed bin Salman believes Mr. Khashoggi was a supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood, a transnational Islamist organization, and on the payroll of Qatar, a Saudi nemesis, seems more an excuse than a reason. Those who watch the crown prince closely say he is determined to pre-empt any hint of possible disruption before it can materialize. So Mr. Khashoggi’s decision to register in the U.S. a new political organization, Democracy for the Arab World Now, perhaps funded by Saudi regional rivals, might have triggered this action.

It seems clear that Mohammed bin Salman, accustomed to issuing orders on every aspect of Saudi life without question or contradiction, wanted to silence Mr. Khashoggi. When efforts to woo him back as an adviser failed, he was captured in Istanbul, where he hoped to marry his Turkish fiancée. The most charitable interpretation is that this was an abduction that went horribly wrong.

Now what? While the crown prince can ignore Saudi domestic opinion, he must care about his international image, especially among foreign investors, whose money he needs to realize his Vision 2030 economic reforms. Businessmen who had embraced him—such as Richard Branson, Uber’s Dara Khosrowshahi and Viacom ’s Bob Bakish—are stepping back. Many others won’t dare show up at this month’s investor conference the crown prince is hosting in Riyadh. The mass incarcerations at the Ritz-Carlton a year ago had dimmed the crown prince’s image. This blackens it.

While the crown prince doesn’t care about media or even congressional criticism, he must care about any U.S. action that significantly alters the fundamental U.S.-Saudi relationship—which has never been based on shared moral values but rather on mutual security. In a dangerous neighborhood, Saudi Arabia depends on American security guarantees; likewise, any radical evolution in Saudi Arabia would threaten all U.S. interests in the region. Most important, President Trump and Crown Prince Mohammed share a deep distrust of Iran, so that the U.S.-Saudi security relationship seems likely to hold for now.


But Congress may block weapons sales in support of the crown prince’s still-unsuccessful war in Yemen, where more than 6,000 civilians have died. Sen. Lindsey Graham has warned of a “bipartisan tsunami” in Congress if the Saudis are proved guilty of Mr. Khashoggi’s murder. Congress might even go beyond Yemen and block all weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, despite Mr. Trump’s opposition.

The more lasting effect likely will be a diminution of trust, leaving the U.S.-Saudi relationship resembling a loveless marriage in which neither side can afford to file for divorce.  "



It's time to oust these rich assholes and their corrupt regime. But with billions at stake.....nothing will happen.
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3752 - Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:05pm
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...
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« Last Edit: Oct 18th, 2018 at 3:26pm by Joey »  

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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3753 - Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:12pm
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<  ----------- Some Guy  ?! .... !!!!!! :









https://www.omaha.com/opinion/mitch-mcconnell-i-m-proud-of-the-senate-s-vote/art...







" Mitch McConnell: I'm proud of the Senate's vote on Kavanaugh . "







" Oct. 6, 2018, was a proud day for the U.S. Senate. We fulfilled one of our most critical constitutional duties and confirmed Brett M. Kavanaugh, a stunning legal mind and an exemplary federal judge, as the newest associate justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.

The stakes are always high when the Senate considers a Supreme Court nomination. But the shameful spectacle that unfolded in recent weeks raised the stakes higher still. By the end, senators were not merely deciding whether to confirm an impressive nominee; we were also deciding what kind of institution the Senate is and what kind of politics we would enable.

Senate Democrats and far-left special interests made their goal perfectly clear from the beginning. The same night the nomination was announced, as protesters who had made up their minds beforehand filled in the blanks on their signs, Democrats attacked then-Judge Kavanaugh in absurd and irresponsible terms. He would “pave the path to tyranny.” His supporters were “complicit in the evil.” And these are just the quotations from sitting senators.

Sadly, this wasn’t surprising. Shameless distortions have greeted every one of the Supreme Court nominees of Republican presidents since the left took down Robert Bork in 1987. But the far left faced a problem: The scare tactics weren’t working anymore.

Kavanaugh was one of the most qualified Supreme Court nominees in history. He built a 12-year record as a respected appellate judge who painstakingly considered both sides of a case. Senators reviewed more than 300 of his opinions, along with the highest number of pages of documents ever produced for a Supreme Court nomination. And we heard high praise from peers across the political spectrum.

Members of the so-called resistance were running out of options. That’s when they reached a shameful new low. Senate Democrats mishandled a confidential letter and helped ignite a nationwide feeding frenzy. A parade of uncorroborated allegations and outlandish rumors poured forth. Kavanaugh and his family were dragged through the mud.

Sexual assault is abhorrent. Victims deserve to be heard. These are not partisan positions, and little could be more cynical than pretending otherwise. But that is exactly how the far left sought to divide our nation. Factual questions and a lack of corroborating evidence were brushed aside in the rush to destroy a man’s good name as some kind of political catharsis.

Far-left activists drove one member and his wife out of a restaurant. They blocked another senator’s car door. They hurled death threats at Senate staff members and vandalized offices. Members were harassed on their own front steps, chased through airports and accosted in Senate hallways. Protesters even screamed down from the galleries as senators were voting.

Senators had to make a choice. Would we let this partisan fever overwhelm the basic principles of fairness that have sustained our country for centuries? Would we declare that uncorroborated and vigorously denied allegations of nearly 40-year-old events are enough to dynamite a citizen’s career and reputation? Would we signal that naked intimidation could shape the Senate?

Nobody described the stakes better than my distinguished colleague from Maine, Republican Sen. Susan Collins. Her remarks from Oct. 5 will echo through Senate history: “We must always remember that it is when passions are most inflamed that fairness is most in jeopardy.”

The Senate listened. We took a stand. We stood up to the media and the mob. We voted to set the right precedent and reaffirm American justice. We voted to shrug off the intimidation tactics and honor our body’s history of reasoned deliberation. We voted to slam shut this dark and disgraceful chapter and turn toward a brighter tomorrow.

We voted to confirm Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, whose commitment to the Constitution and the rule of law is exactly what the American people deserve on their Supreme Court. The courts guard Americans’ freedoms. The Senate guards the courts. If our nation wants judges who are thoughtful, independent and unintimidated, we need senators who display the same qualities. I could not be prouder that my colleagues rose to the occasion. "
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« Last Edit: Oct 18th, 2018 at 8:46am by Joey »  

...&&&&D.J. Jazzy Joe and the Fresh Prince of Boca Raton !™&& *** " VICTORY !!!! " ***...
 
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3754 - Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:15pm
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...
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« Last Edit: Oct 18th, 2018 at 8:28am by Joey »  

...&&&&D.J. Jazzy Joe and the Fresh Prince of Boca Raton !™&& *** " VICTORY !!!! " ***...
 
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3755 - Oct 18th, 2018 at 9:00am
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Joey wrote on Oct 17th, 2018 at 9:15pm:
...


Keep drinking the Kool Aid Willis
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3756 - Oct 18th, 2018 at 10:44am
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I don't know Joey. My sources tell me that early voting lines are going around the block, crowded parking lots, long waits up to 3 hours. And it's only early voting sniff.
It's over...
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3757 - Oct 18th, 2018 at 12:33pm
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Some Guy wrote on Oct 18th, 2018 at 10:44am:
I don't know Joey. My sources tell me that early voting lines are going around the block, crowded parking lots, long waits up to 3 hours. And it's only early voting sniff.
It's over...




<  ------------- Some Guy   ?!   .... !!!!!!   :






https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix-traffic/2018/10/17/phoenix-ar...





" Traffic triple threat: 2 games, Trump visit mean potential tie-ups. "






" Phoenix-area motorists should expect heavy traffic during the latter part of Thursday in three heavily traveled areas, courtesy of two big games and one big deal.

On Thursday night, the Arizona Cardinals will host the Denver Broncos in Glendale; Arizona State University's Sun Devil football team will host the Stanford Cardinal in Tempe; and President Donald Trump will arrive at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Thursday night in advance of a Mesa rally on Friday.

The Cardinals kick off a little after 5 p.m.

ASU is scheduled to start at 6 p.m.

The President ( ' INCREDIBLE  "   Precious  "  LEADER ! ' ) himself is scheduled to arrive at 9:30 p.m., with Air Force One touching down at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix.

Former President George W. Bush also was scheduled to arrive in Phoenix earlier Thursday, for a private reception at 5:30 p.m. It was not immediately clear how his visit would impact traffic.

The games likely will bring heavy freeway and street traffic near the stadiums, while the president's arrival could briefly disrupt traffic on streets around the airport and nearby freeway exit ramps, as police clear the way for his motorcade.

"We need folks to build in plenty of time to travel," said Bart Graves, an Arizona Department of Public Safety spokesman. "The off-ramps will be backed up ... we want to encourage people to exit earlier than they usually do and take the surface streets."

DPS troopers patrol the freeways around the Valley, and some of them could see heavy traffic, including Interstate 10 through Phoenix, Loop 101 in the West Valley and Tempe, and Loop 202 in Phoenix and Tempe.

The two games are expected to contribute to normal midweek rush-hour conditions in the late afternoon, especially on freeways, said Doug Nintzel, an Arizona Department of Transportation spokesman.

ADOT is recommending that football fans plan on getting to the games earlier than usual.

"Westbound I-10 is expected to turn into a slow-and-go situation with Cardinals fans and commuters heading towards Glendale," Nintzel said in an email to The Arizona Republic. "If you can get an early start, using Loop 101 across the north Valley and west of I-17 might be a better bet than I-10."





...



...
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« Last Edit: Oct 18th, 2018 at 4:10pm by Joey »  

...&&&&D.J. Jazzy Joe and the Fresh Prince of Boca Raton !™&& *** " VICTORY !!!! " ***...
 
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3758 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 8:24am
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Joey wrote on Oct 18th, 2018 at 12:33pm:
Some Guy wrote on Oct 18th, 2018 at 10:44am:
I don't know Joey. My sources tell me that early voting lines are going around the block, crowded parking lots, long waits up to 3 hours. And it's only early voting sniff.
It's over...




<  ------------- Some Guy   ?!   .... !!!!!!   :






https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix-traffic/2018/10/17/phoenix-ar...





" Traffic triple threat: 2 games, Trump visit mean potential tie-ups. "






" Phoenix-area motorists should expect heavy traffic during the latter part of Thursday in three heavily traveled areas, courtesy of two big games and one big deal.

On Thursday night, the Arizona Cardinals will host the Denver Broncos in Glendale; Arizona State University's Sun Devil football team will host the Stanford Cardinal in Tempe; and President Donald Trump will arrive at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Thursday night in advance of a Mesa rally on Friday.

The Cardinals kick off a little after 5 p.m.

ASU is scheduled to start at 6 p.m.

The President ( ' INCREDIBLE  "   Precious  "  LEADER ! ' ) himself is scheduled to arrive at 9:30 p.m., with Air Force One touching down at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix.

Former President George W. Bush also was scheduled to arrive in Phoenix earlier Thursday, for a private reception at 5:30 p.m. It was not immediately clear how his visit would impact traffic.

The games likely will bring heavy freeway and street traffic near the stadiums, while the president's arrival could briefly disrupt traffic on streets around the airport and nearby freeway exit ramps, as police clear the way for his motorcade.

"We need folks to build in plenty of time to travel," said Bart Graves, an Arizona Department of Public Safety spokesman. "The off-ramps will be backed up ... we want to encourage people to exit earlier than they usually do and take the surface streets."

DPS troopers patrol the freeways around the Valley, and some of them could see heavy traffic, including Interstate 10 through Phoenix, Loop 101 in the West Valley and Tempe, and Loop 202 in Phoenix and Tempe.

The two games are expected to contribute to normal midweek rush-hour conditions in the late afternoon, especially on freeways, said Doug Nintzel, an Arizona Department of Transportation spokesman.

ADOT is recommending that football fans plan on getting to the games earlier than usual.

"Westbound I-10 is expected to turn into a slow-and-go situation with Cardinals fans and commuters heading towards Glendale," Nintzel said in an email to The Arizona Republic. "If you can get an early start, using Loop 101 across the north Valley and west of I-17 might be a better bet than I-10."





...



...


Good news is most of the Cardinal fans were home by half time!
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3759 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 8:58am
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'Democrats Produce Mobs, Republicans Produce Jobs'




...
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“What rap did that was impressive was to show there are so many tone-deaf people out there,” he says. “All they need is a drum beat and somebody yelling over it and they’re happy. There’s an enormous market for people who can’t tell one note from another.” - Keef
 
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Reply #3760 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 9:03am
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Russian President Vladimir Putin gloated Thursday about what he sees as the end of the United States’ world dominance due to growing “mistakes.”

Putin also claimed America holds “some responsibility” for the disappearance of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi because the Saudi journalist was living in the U.S., he said his in annual foreign policy speech, according to the Financial Times. He did not elaborate. Khashoggi has not been seen since he entered the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2. Turkish officials say he was murdered and dismembered by orders of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

“In this regard, the U.S. has a certain responsibility. If someone knows what happens and there was a murder, I hope some evidence is provided. And dependent on that, we will make some decisions,” Putin added in his remarks in the Black Sea resort of Sochi. He said there was currently no reason to “harm our relations with Saudi Arabia.”

As for the U.S., he said that “empires often think they can make some little mistakes ... because they’re so powerful. But when the number of these mistakes keeps growing, it reaches a level they cannot sustain.”

He added: “A country can get the sense from impunity that you can do anything. This is the result of the monopoly from a unipolar world ... . Luckily this monopoly is disappearing. It’s almost done.”
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3761 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 9:05am
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Did we get a drinking with Xi this week?
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Reply #3762 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 9:09am
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...
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« Last Edit: Oct 19th, 2018 at 9:10am by Some Guy »  
 
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3763 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 9:37am
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Oh, I just can't wait for eight more years of incompetence !!






...
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“What rap did that was impressive was to show there are so many tone-deaf people out there,” he says. “All they need is a drum beat and somebody yelling over it and they’re happy. There’s an enormous market for people who can’t tell one note from another.” - Keef
 
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3764 - Oct 19th, 2018 at 10:06am
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Edith Grove wrote on Oct 19th, 2018 at 9:37am:
Oh, I just can't wait for eight more years of incompetence !!






...


You're killing new member registration man.
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Reply #3765 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 2:53pm
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“What rap did that was impressive was to show there are so many tone-deaf people out there,” he says. “All they need is a drum beat and somebody yelling over it and they’re happy. There’s an enormous market for people who can’t tell one note from another.” - Keef
 
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3766 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 6:10pm
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15 months before the 2016 election, on the Exile fan forum,
I guaranteed that Trump would be the next president...

Everyone laughed

9 months ago, on Shidoobee, I guaranteed who would defeat Trump in 2020

I know he said he's not ready, I know he said he's not running,
but none of that matters. I can smell what he's cooking...

(pic today from the set of Hobbs and Shaw)


...
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3767 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 8:44pm
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<  ---------------- Some Guy   ?!   ...... !!!!!   :








https://www.wpsdlocal6.com/2018/10/23/chinese-president-xi-jinping-opens-worlds-...





" Chinese President Xi Jinping opens world’s longest sea-crossing bridge . "







" (CNN) — Chinese President Xi Jinping officially opened the world’s longest sea-crossing bridge Tuesday at a ceremony in the southern city of Zhuhai.

The $20 billion megaproject further connects mainland China with the semi-autonomous territories of Hong Kong and Macau, with a 55-kilometer (34-mile) road bridge that has been in the works for almost nine years.

It’s a key element of China’s plan for a Greater Bay Area covering 56,500 square kilometers (21,800 square miles) of southern China, and encompassing 11 cities, including Hong Kong and Macau, that are home to a combined 68 million people.

“I declare the Hong Kong — Macau — Zhuhai bridge officially open,” Xi said in a seconds-long speech before a giant display showing the bridge.

The announcement was greeted with applause from the hundreds of guests in attendance, including the leaders of Hong Kong and Macau, Carrie Lam and Fernando Chui, and Guangdong Party Secretary Li Xi.

The bridge will open to the public for the first time on Wednesday.


Proponents of the bridge say it will significantly cut journey times between the cities, enabling commuters and tourists to easily move around the region.

“With the bridge, the traveling time between Hong Kong and the Western Pearl River Delta region will be shortened significantly, thereby bringing the Western Pearl River Delta region within three hours’ drive from Hong Kong,” the city’s transport secretary, Frank Chan, said Friday.

Despite the focus on drive time however, private car owners in Hong Kong will not be able to cross the bridge without a special permit. Most drivers will have to park at the Hong Kong port, switching to a shuttle bus or special hire cars once they are through immigration. Shuttle buses cost $8 to $10 for a single trip depending on the time of day.

Critics however point to limited demand in Hong Kong for the project, and competition from improved rail links and the Shenzhen-Zhongshan bridge, which once completed around 2024 is expected to cut traffic on the Zhuhai link by over 25% within 20 years.

For critics of the Chinese government, the bridge is seen as a tool to drag Hong Kong — which boasts a semi-democratic legislature and independent judiciary — closer into Beijing’s grip.

“You can’t see the existing transport connections — in a literal way. But this bridge is very visible … you can see it from the plane when you fly in to Hong Kong, and it’s breathtaking,” lawmaker Claudia Mo told CNN earlier in the year.

“It links Hong Kong to China almost like an umbilical cord. You see it, and you know you’re linked up to the motherland.”

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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3768 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 8:49pm
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3769 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 8:53pm
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3770 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 8:56pm
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3771 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 9:03pm
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3772 - Oct 22nd, 2018 at 9:07pm
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3773 - Oct 23rd, 2018 at 9:56am
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What kind of bullshit is this?
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Re: Politics thread (ssc!!) - Enter at your own risk! Warning… Probable bullcrap inside
Reply #3774 - Oct 23rd, 2018 at 11:10am
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Rev 20 Redlights wrote on Oct 22nd, 2018 at 6:10pm:
15 months before the 2016 election, on the Exile fan forum,
I guaranteed that Trump would be the next president...

Everyone laughed

9 months ago, on Shidoobee, I guaranteed who would defeat Trump in 2020

I know he said he's not ready, I know he said he's not running,
but none of that matters. I can smell what he's cooking...

(pic today from the set of Hobbs and Shaw)


...


Why not? Fuck it.
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