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Reality bites: Trump's wake-up call
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Jan 18, 2017 10:16:55   #
plainlogic
 
Alicia wrote:
***************************************
The interviewers caught Trump right on. I recall Michael Moore, during an interview, when he told the story about when both he and Trump were to join a reporter and Trump came across to Moore as being scared that certain topics might be brought up. Moore agreed to veer away from those topics only to discover later that he had been conned. As the article stated, at least twice Trump changed characters during that interview. Trump is a phony and I hope that you who voted for him will finally realized that you've been conned. He can change his color like a chameleon when it's to his benefit and to gain what he wants.

I was not fooled when, during one of the debates, he asked Mrs. Clinton if she minded him referring to her as Senator. She said nothing having been aware that Senator was the manner in which a present or past senator is always referred to.

I caught on immediately because I did spend some time in carnival (and earned a great reputation) and pulled the con about feeling so sorry that the "player" (mark) hadn't won when I knew that s/he could not win unless I set up the game for that purpose. Only once did someone catch on. That was when one of my "players" kept playing and, when his brother tried to convince him to stop playing because the game wasn't winnable, he said, "I really like listening to her patter." Both brothers happened to be dealers in Atlantic City. Carnival in NY is not like the ones out west where, for each win, the customer trades up for the next larger prize. My game had only large prizes. Now that I no longer work in that field I will warn you all to stay away from games with only big prizes. You can't win unless one of those big teddy bears gets too dusty. That in itself is a con because the agent's joint cannot give the impression that prizes sit around long enough to get dusty.
*************************************** br The int... (show quote)


Sounds like you've been conned by the progressives, they made you a shill. I believe you never looked outside the box the progressives have made, they've had decades of the workings of manipulations, maneuvering, like the carnival gamesters that maneuver their mark. Sometimes they never know until something wakes them, It then becomes a buyers remorse.

Reply
Jan 18, 2017 11:02:18   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Mike Allen Jim VandeHei 2 hrs ago

Robin Groulx / Axios

NEW YORK — On Twitter and in public, Donald Trump remains an uncompromising mix of bluster and bombast. Behind the scenes, he's confronting, and in some cases succumbing (slightly) to, the hard truths of governing and leading a world that hangs on his every word.

When we went to interview him in his office in Trump Tower on Tuesday, 72 hours before he takes office, we expected the emphatic showman who was on display through the campaign, and as recently as last week's press conference.

Instead we found the incoming president unusually subdued: lowering expectations, acknowledging some of the messy realities of governing, and walking back some of the more provocative statements he had made only days before. A top adviser told us the sober tone reflects a bumpy few days inside Trump Tower — and the realization that he's days away from truly running the nation.

Consider:

Trump said health care is his most urgent domestic topic, telling us he spoke with President Obama again on Monday about the topic. He back-tracked a bit from his promise of insurance for everybody, saying he wanted to find a mechanism — Medicaid block grants, perhaps — to help the poorest get insurance. "You know there are many people talking about many forms of health care where people with no money aren't covered. We can't have that," he said.
On Friday, he told The Wall Street Journal that border-adjustment, a vital part of the House Republicans' corporate tax-reform plan, was "too complicated." Now, it's suddenly back on the table. "It's certainly something that's going to be discussed," he said. "I would say, over the next month-and-a-half, two months, we'll be having more concrete discussions. Right now, we're really focused on health care more than anything else."
Trump earlier this week unsettled allies overseas by calling NATO obsolete and seeming to put Germany's Angela Merkel and Russia's Vladimir Putin on par as possible US allies. Trump told us ALL WORLD LEADERS are on par, with a fresh chance to prove themselves. "So, I give everybody an even start; that right now, as far as I'm concerned, everybody's got an even start," he said.
Trump's advisers tell us privately that many parts of the operation remain messy — in large part, they say, because New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie left them with virtually no preparation for a transition. Advisers told us horror stories of struggles to fill key roles — including getting handed files of candidates, most of whom were Democrats. This is only adding to the confusion and slowed policy-making discussions.

Trump seemed, dare we say, humbled by recent intelligence briefings on global threats. Dick Cheney's friends used to tell us he was a decidedly darker, changed man once he started reading the daily intel reports after 9/11. Trump seemed moved by what he's now seeing.

"I've had a lot of briefings that are very … I don't want to say 'scary,' because I'll solve the problems," he said. "But … we have some big enemies out there in this country and we have some very big enemies — very big and, in some cases, strong enemies."

He offered a reminder many critics hope he never forgets: "You also realize that you've got to get it right because a mistake would be very, very costly in so many different ways."

Worth noting: Trump said he likes his briefings short, ideally one-page if it's in writing. "I like bullets or I like as little as possible. I don't need, you know, 200-page reports on something that can be handled on a page. That I can tell you."

All this said, Trump was very much the Trump you know when it came to critics, the media, and self-reflection:

In the opening moment, asked why he hasn't been able to deliver on his promise to heal divisions in the U.S., Trump reiterated his promise "to be a president for all Americans," only to launch, unprovoked, into his fourth-consecutive day of attacks on Rep. John Lewis, the civil-rights icon. Think about that for a minute: He's less than 72 hours from taking office and he was still stewing about a member of the Democratic minority in the House.
Trump told us his confrontational style is misunderstood. "You know, I'm not really a divisive figure," he said, before pinning the blame for bad press and bad blood almost entirely on the media: "In the history of politics, there's nobody that has been treated worse by the press than I have."
Asked to name a decision he got wrong or a regret from the campaign, he didn't.

Funny moment: When asked about books on his desk, he showed us "Adams v Jefferson" by John Ferling. We asked if we should read it. "I wouldn't," he said.
Mike Allen Jim VandeHei 2 hrs ago br br Robin Gr... (show quote)


He's beginning to understand that he isn't the executive producer of THIS reality show, and can't write the scripts making him the star all the time. Sharing the world stage with other powerful and important people is going to be a hard adjustment for him, if he's even able to pull it off. He admires Putin because, in a police State, Putin controls EVERY bit of media coverage - and anti Putin rhetoric is not allowed on pain of death in a Siberian prison. Putin is a Russian hero, because Putin IS the executive producer of the Russian reality show AND writes the scripts. Trump laments that America does not allow him such power - yet.

Reply
Jan 18, 2017 14:58:08   #
reconreb Loc: America / Inglis Fla.
 
slatten49 wrote:
Mike Allen Jim VandeHei 2 hrs ago

Robin Groulx / Axios

NEW YORK — On Twitter and in public, Donald Trump remains an uncompromising mix of bluster and bombast. Behind the scenes, he's confronting, and in some cases succumbing (slightly) to, the hard truths of governing and leading a world that hangs on his every word.

When we went to interview him in his office in Trump Tower on Tuesday, 72 hours before he takes office, we expected the emphatic showman who was on display through the campaign, and as recently as last week's press conference.

Instead we found the incoming president unusually subdued: lowering expectations, acknowledging some of the messy realities of governing, and walking back some of the more provocative statements he had made only days before. A top adviser told us the sober tone reflects a bumpy few days inside Trump Tower — and the realization that he's days away from truly running the nation.

Consider:

Trump said health care is his most urgent domestic topic, telling us he spoke with President Obama again on Monday about the topic. He back-tracked a bit from his promise of insurance for everybody, saying he wanted to find a mechanism — Medicaid block grants, perhaps — to help the poorest get insurance. "You know there are many people talking about many forms of health care where people with no money aren't covered. We can't have that," he said.
On Friday, he told The Wall Street Journal that border-adjustment, a vital part of the House Republicans' corporate tax-reform plan, was "too complicated." Now, it's suddenly back on the table. "It's certainly something that's going to be discussed," he said. "I would say, over the next month-and-a-half, two months, we'll be having more concrete discussions. Right now, we're really focused on health care more than anything else."
Trump earlier this week unsettled allies overseas by calling NATO obsolete and seeming to put Germany's Angela Merkel and Russia's Vladimir Putin on par as possible US allies. Trump told us ALL WORLD LEADERS are on par, with a fresh chance to prove themselves. "So, I give everybody an even start; that right now, as far as I'm concerned, everybody's got an even start," he said.
Trump's advisers tell us privately that many parts of the operation remain messy — in large part, they say, because New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie left them with virtually no preparation for a transition. Advisers told us horror stories of struggles to fill key roles — including getting handed files of candidates, most of whom were Democrats. This is only adding to the confusion and slowed policy-making discussions.

Trump seemed, dare we say, humbled by recent intelligence briefings on global threats. Dick Cheney's friends used to tell us he was a decidedly darker, changed man once he started reading the daily intel reports after 9/11. Trump seemed moved by what he's now seeing.

"I've had a lot of briefings that are very … I don't want to say 'scary,' because I'll solve the problems," he said. "But … we have some big enemies out there in this country and we have some very big enemies — very big and, in some cases, strong enemies."

He offered a reminder many critics hope he never forgets: "You also realize that you've got to get it right because a mistake would be very, very costly in so many different ways."

Worth noting: Trump said he likes his briefings short, ideally one-page if it's in writing. "I like bullets or I like as little as possible. I don't need, you know, 200-page reports on something that can be handled on a page. That I can tell you."

All this said, Trump was very much the Trump you know when it came to critics, the media, and self-reflection:

In the opening moment, asked why he hasn't been able to deliver on his promise to heal divisions in the U.S., Trump reiterated his promise "to be a president for all Americans," only to launch, unprovoked, into his fourth-consecutive day of attacks on Rep. John Lewis, the civil-rights icon. Think about that for a minute: He's less than 72 hours from taking office and he was still stewing about a member of the Democratic minority in the House.
Trump told us his confrontational style is misunderstood. "You know, I'm not really a divisive figure," he said, before pinning the blame for bad press and bad blood almost entirely on the media: "In the history of politics, there's nobody that has been treated worse by the press than I have."
Asked to name a decision he got wrong or a regret from the campaign, he didn't.

Funny moment: When asked about books on his desk, he showed us "Adams v Jefferson" by John Ferling. We asked if we should read it. "I wouldn't," he said.
Mike Allen Jim VandeHei 2 hrs ago br br Robin Gr... (show quote)


Until Trump takes over he must be careful and is ,, he knows he must keep a lid on his true intentions before being sworn in .. All these lefty reporters have not figured out Trump yet .. He has already out foxed the entire establishment and MSM ..Bank on it !!!!!!!!!!!!

Reply
 
 
Jan 18, 2017 15:11:08   #
reconreb Loc: America / Inglis Fla.
 
PeterS wrote:
Sounds like Trump is still squinting and doesn't have his eyes wide open.


You idiots have misjudged your strength's , and again you misjudge what is happening to your radical lefty agenda , it will be dismantled and the we will see your eyes opened in shock ,, the election was not the only thing lost . As the left display's their hatred for America it will strangle itself slowly ,, get a good grip pete You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



Reply
Jan 18, 2017 15:14:16   #
reconreb Loc: America / Inglis Fla.
 
Alicia wrote:
***************************************
The interviewers caught Trump right on. I recall Michael Moore, during an interview, when he told the story about when both he and Trump were to join a reporter and Trump came across to Moore as being scared that certain topics might be brought up. Moore agreed to veer away from those topics only to discover later that he had been conned. As the article stated, at least twice Trump changed characters during that interview. Trump is a phony and I hope that you who voted for him will finally realized that you've been conned. He can change his color like a chameleon when it's to his benefit and to gain what he wants.

I was not fooled when, during one of the debates, he asked Mrs. Clinton if she minded him referring to her as Senator. She said nothing having been aware that Senator was the manner in which a present or past senator is always referred to.

I caught on immediately because I did spend some time in carnival (and earned a great reputation) and pulled the con about feeling so sorry that the "player" (mark) hadn't won when I knew that s/he could not win unless I set up the game for that purpose. Only once did someone catch on. That was when one of my "players" kept playing and, when his brother tried to convince him to stop playing because the game wasn't winnable, he said, "I really like listening to her patter." Both brothers happened to be dealers in Atlantic City. Carnival in NY is not like the ones out west where, for each win, the customer trades up for the next larger prize. My game had only large prizes. Now that I no longer work in that field I will warn you all to stay away from games with only big prizes. You can't win unless one of those big teddy bears gets too dusty. That in itself is a con because the agent's joint cannot give the impression that prizes sit around long enough to get dusty.
*************************************** br The int... (show quote)


Well if Michael Moore say's it , it has to be true ,, Fking idiot !!!



Reply
Jan 18, 2017 15:25:54   #
kenjay Loc: Arkansas
 
PeterS wrote:
Sounds like Trump is still squinting and doesn't have his eyes wide open.

Sounds like you are still on your knees with your mouth wide open faggot.

Reply
Jan 18, 2017 15:30:40   #
kenjay Loc: Arkansas
 
Alicia wrote:
***************************************
The interviewers caught Trump right on. I recall Michael Moore, during an interview, when he told the story about when both he and Trump were to join a reporter and Trump came across to Moore as being scared that certain topics might be brought up. Moore agreed to veer away from those topics only to discover later that he had been conned. As the article stated, at least twice Trump changed characters during that interview. Trump is a phony and I hope that you who voted for him will finally realized that you've been conned. He can change his color like a chameleon when it's to his benefit and to gain what he wants.

I was not fooled when, during one of the debates, he asked Mrs. Clinton if she minded him referring to her as Senator. She said nothing having been aware that Senator was the manner in which a present or past senator is always referred to.

I caught on immediately because I did spend some time in carnival (and earned a great reputation) and pulled the con about feeling so sorry that the "player" (mark) hadn't won when I knew that s/he could not win unless I set up the game for that purpose. Only once did someone catch on. That was when one of my "players" kept playing and, when his brother tried to convince him to stop playing because the game wasn't winnable, he said, "I really like listening to her patter." Both brothers happened to be dealers in Atlantic City. Carnival in NY is not like the ones out west where, for each win, the customer trades up for the next larger prize. My game had only large prizes. Now that I no longer work in that field I will warn you all to stay away from games with only big prizes. You can't win unless one of those big teddy bears gets too dusty. That in itself is a con because the agent's joint cannot give the impression that prizes sit around long enough to get dusty.
*************************************** br The int... (show quote)

Still a carney hey little girl running the anti-Trump game.

Reply
 
 
Jan 18, 2017 18:02:50   #
son of witless
 
Pennylynn wrote:
Haters will hate! I am not sure why they hate him so much... because he does not owe anyone in DC? He is rich? Certainly we have had less prepared and qualified presidents (as reported in the news), many that fell outside of the 14 rule. Our new president has never been a senator, a law clerk, or a Community Organizer... but, he does have other qualifications that many that preceded him did not have. He is honest, almost to a fault. He is blunt and he wants the USA to be successful. I do not know if he will fall on his face, I think it is doubtful as he has surrounded himself with experts to help him along his way. But, I also think that he will not be able to pass gas while in the toilet without being criticized.
Haters will hate! I am not sure why they hate him... (show quote)


In two days we will have our first Pro American President in 8 years. Music please Mystro - Hit the road Barak and doncha come back no more, no more, no more, no more.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jnc4TQTKOgw

Reply
Jan 18, 2017 18:13:09   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
slatten49 wrote:
Mike Allen Jim VandeHei 2 hrs ago

Robin Groulx / Axios

NEW YORK — On Twitter and in public, Donald Trump remains an uncompromising mix of bluster and bombast. Behind the scenes, he's confronting, and in some cases succumbing (slightly) to, the hard truths of governing and leading a world that hangs on his every word.

When we went to interview him in his office in Trump Tower on Tuesday, 72 hours before he takes office, we expected the emphatic showman who was on display through the campaign, and as recently as last week's press conference.

Instead we found the incoming president unusually subdued: lowering expectations, acknowledging some of the messy realities of governing, and walking back some of the more provocative statements he had made only days before. A top adviser told us the sober tone reflects a bumpy few days inside Trump Tower — and the realization that he's days away from truly running the nation.

Consider:

Trump said health care is his most urgent domestic topic, telling us he spoke with President Obama again on Monday about the topic. He back-tracked a bit from his promise of insurance for everybody, saying he wanted to find a mechanism — Medicaid block grants, perhaps — to help the poorest get insurance. "You know there are many people talking about many forms of health care where people with no money aren't covered. We can't have that," he said.
On Friday, he told The Wall Street Journal that border-adjustment, a vital part of the House Republicans' corporate tax-reform plan, was "too complicated." Now, it's suddenly back on the table. "It's certainly something that's going to be discussed," he said. "I would say, over the next month-and-a-half, two months, we'll be having more concrete discussions. Right now, we're really focused on health care more than anything else."
Trump earlier this week unsettled allies overseas by calling NATO obsolete and seeming to put Germany's Angela Merkel and Russia's Vladimir Putin on par as possible US allies. Trump told us ALL WORLD LEADERS are on par, with a fresh chance to prove themselves. "So, I give everybody an even start; that right now, as far as I'm concerned, everybody's got an even start," he said.
Trump's advisers tell us privately that many parts of the operation remain messy — in large part, they say, because New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie left them with virtually no preparation for a transition. Advisers told us horror stories of struggles to fill key roles — including getting handed files of candidates, most of whom were Democrats. This is only adding to the confusion and slowed policy-making discussions.

Trump seemed, dare we say, humbled by recent intelligence briefings on global threats. Dick Cheney's friends used to tell us he was a decidedly darker, changed man once he started reading the daily intel reports after 9/11. Trump seemed moved by what he's now seeing.

"I've had a lot of briefings that are very … I don't want to say 'scary,' because I'll solve the problems," he said. "But … we have some big enemies out there in this country and we have some very big enemies — very big and, in some cases, strong enemies."

He offered a reminder many critics hope he never forgets: "You also realize that you've got to get it right because a mistake would be very, very costly in so many different ways."

Worth noting: Trump said he likes his briefings short, ideally one-page if it's in writing. "I like bullets or I like as little as possible. I don't need, you know, 200-page reports on something that can be handled on a page. That I can tell you."

All this said, Trump was very much the Trump you know when it came to critics, the media, and self-reflection:

In the opening moment, asked why he hasn't been able to deliver on his promise to heal divisions in the U.S., Trump reiterated his promise "to be a president for all Americans," only to launch, unprovoked, into his fourth-consecutive day of attacks on Rep. John Lewis, the civil-rights icon. Think about that for a minute: He's less than 72 hours from taking office and he was still stewing about a member of the Democratic minority in the House.
Trump told us his confrontational style is misunderstood. "You know, I'm not really a divisive figure," he said, before pinning the blame for bad press and bad blood almost entirely on the media: "In the history of politics, there's nobody that has been treated worse by the press than I have."
Asked to name a decision he got wrong or a regret from the campaign, he didn't.

Funny moment: When asked about books on his desk, he showed us "Adams v Jefferson" by John Ferling. We asked if we should read it. "I wouldn't," he said.
Mike Allen Jim VandeHei 2 hrs ago br br Robin Gr... (show quote)


Reality of what is really coming, along with anxiety and fear of violent protests along with assassination attempts would have anyone, riled up and subdued as well...

He's transition alright and at this moment it is a heck of a lonely moment...

Like getting married, those fears of everything surface...It's good he IS having this, if not, I'd be more concerned..

Reply
Jan 18, 2017 20:00:08   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
lindajoy wrote:
Reality of what is really coming, along with anxiety and fear of violent protests along with assassination attempts would have anyone, riled up and subdued as well...

He's transition alright and at this moment it is a heck of a lonely moment...

Like getting married, those fears of everything surface...It's good he IS having this, if not, I'd be more concerned..


Good and valid points, L-J.

Reply
Jan 18, 2017 21:01:19   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
slatten49 wrote:
Good and valid points, L-J.


Thank You, slatt... A good article that allows us to see a glimmer of what the next person going in is really feeling...

They should do this with each new President....We see the end result after all...

How they aged, how they developed through their time in and what their legacy will ultimately be... We do not, however, get to the person going in...

Reply
 
 
Jan 19, 2017 03:21:47   #
PeterS
 
Pennylynn wrote:
Haters will hate! I am not sure why they hate him so much... because he does not owe anyone in DC? He is rich? Certainly we have had less prepared and qualified presidents (as reported in the news), many that fell outside of the 14 rule. Our new president has never been a senator, a law clerk, or a Community Organizer... but, he does have other qualifications that many that preceded him did not have. He is honest, almost to a fault. He is blunt and he wants the USA to be successful. I do not know if he will fall on his face, I think it is doubtful as he has surrounded himself with experts to help him along his way. But, I also think that he will not be able to pass gas while in the toilet without being criticized.
Haters will hate! I am not sure why they hate him... (show quote)


Haters hate? Coming from someone who calls our former first lady Killery I find that more than a bit ironic. And just who is this guy you are talking about? At first I thought it was Trump but you said he was "honest" to a fault. Donald has many faults but honesty sure as hell isn't one of them. In fact, he has been describes as a pathological liar who tells lies simply for the sake of telling them. And I'm glad he wants the good ole USofA to be successful but just what kind of success does he want it to be? You see, there in lies the problem because success to a conservative isn't necessarily success to a liberal...

Yes, haters hate. We've learned that all too well over the past 8 years....

Reply
Jan 19, 2017 03:24:24   #
PeterS
 
reconreb wrote:
You idiots have misjudged your strength's , and again you misjudge what is happening to your radical lefty agenda , it will be dismantled and the we will see your eyes opened in shock ,, the election was not the only thing lost . As the left display's their hatred for America it will strangle itself slowly ,, get a good grip pete You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Well I see you teach your children well.

Reply
Jan 19, 2017 06:47:38   #
1angrywoman
 
Being blunt and being honest are not the same thing.

Reply
Jan 19, 2017 06:59:58   #
reconreb Loc: America / Inglis Fla.
 
PeterS wrote:
Well I see you teach your children well.


Its called Reality Pete ,, try it ..

Reply
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