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Trump is the Biggest Failure in History As His Disapproval Rating Skyrockets to 58%
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Mar 22, 2017 18:15:03   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
Progressive One wrote:
Well....you know they use lies to dismiss the fact that a lie is actually a lie....haha!!


You practically wrote the book on that one.

Reply
Mar 22, 2017 18:21:01   #
Progressive One
 
http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/137164/word-for-someone-who-injects-themselves-into-conversations

Reply
Mar 22, 2017 18:48:46   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
Progressive One wrote:
http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/137164/word-for-someone-who-injects-themselves-into-conversations


I found some for you also......

fabricator, fabulist, fibber, prevaricator, storyteller, exaggerator, mythomaniac; calumniator, defamer, libeler, libelist, slanderer; perjurer; distorter, falsifier; equivocator, palterer; gossip, gossiper, talebearer; charlatan, cheat, cheater, counterfeiter, cozener, deceiver, defrauder, dissembler, dissimulator, double-dealer, fraud, hustler, knave, mountebank, operator, pretender

Reply
 
 
Mar 22, 2017 18:57:26   #
Progressive One
 
Loki wrote:
I found some for you also......

fabricator, fabulist, fibber, prevaricator, storyteller, exaggerator, mythomaniac; calumniator, defamer, libeler, libelist, slanderer; perjurer; distorter, falsifier; equivocator, palterer; gossip, gossiper, talebearer; charlatan, cheat, cheater, counterfeiter, cozener, deceiver, defrauder, dissembler, dissimulator, double-dealer, fraud, hustler, knave, mountebank, operator, pretender


good for you Loki....now go take a pill and relax........

Reply
Mar 22, 2017 18:59:53   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
Progressive One wrote:
good for you Loki....now go take a pill and relax........


I'm already relaxed; I don't need pills. (I have your posts for comedic relief.)

Reply
Mar 22, 2017 19:06:37   #
Progressive One
 
Loki wrote:
I'm already relaxed; I don't need pills. (I have your posts for comedic relief.)


Okay.....well that explains why I don't need them either.........

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 02:00:47   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
Progressive One wrote:
Okay.....well that explains why I don't need them either.........


There now, you see? Even you think that your pathetic cries for attention are amusing.

Reply
 
 
Mar 23, 2017 02:54:39   #
Progressive One
 
trump's a mess........all failures...no travel ban....too cracka-ish/racist 37% rating,...if the repeal vote fails and the FBI puts the heat on as his people can't keep their mouths shut about them and Russia....i'm just going to enjoy the show..throw in a falling stock market you people will be a disaster in less than 6 months.....trump supporters have nothing to lose....so they don't care if everyone else does...the black unemployment rate is up........repeal AA and you can have 1950 again you hope.....so have all your rude snippy ass moments...i'm just going to relish the fact that dumbass racists elected one....and will be solely responsible....news flash...support for ObamaCare is going up...thanks to your keystone cops Congress.......

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 03:04:59   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
Progressive One wrote:
trump's a mess........all failures...no travel ban....too cracka-ish/racist 37% rating,...if the repeal vote fails and the FBI puts the heat on as his people can't keep their mouths shut about them and Russia....i'm just going to enjoy the show..throw in a falling stock market you people will be a disaster in less than 6 months.....trump supporters have nothing to lose....so they don't care if everyone else does...the black unemployment rate is up........repeal AA and you can have 1950 again you hope.....so have all your rude snippy ass moments...i'm just going to relish the fact that dumbass racists elected one....and will be solely responsible....news flash...support for ObamaCare is going up...thanks to your keystone cops Congress.......
trump's a mess........all failures...no travel ban... (show quote)


This reminds me of your rock-solid certainty about how foolish all of us redneck, hick, backwoods trailer trash would look when Hillary won the election.
Looks like the Ghetto Possum raaaaaciiiiiiiiists still haven't a clue about reality. Trump is fulfilling campaign promises in spite of Liberal Hobbit Dancer obstruction.
You mentioned the travel ban. Gorsuch is about to be confirmed. We will see how long it takes the SCOTUS to reverse the blatantly unconstitutional ruling of the Ninth Circuit Court. You DO realize that the Supreme Court has reversed a little over 80% of the Ninth's decisions that it has reviewed?
You do realize that the judge in Hawaii is an Obama appointee, and every judge on the Fourth Circuit who voted against the travel ban was also an Obama appointee?
When it comes to "rude, snippy-ass moments, Professor Pendejo, you are the champ. the poor, put upon possum who can't catch a break in spite of all of his imaginary accomplishments and constant cut and pastes of someone else's opinion.

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 08:01:16   #
eagleye13 Loc: Fl
 
Progressive One wrote:
trump's a mess........all failures...no travel ban....too cracka-ish/racist 37% rating,...if the repeal vote fails and the FBI puts the heat on as his people can't keep their mouths shut about them and Russia....i'm just going to enjoy the show..throw in a falling stock market you people will be a disaster in less than 6 months.....trump supporters have nothing to lose....so they don't care if everyone else does...the black unemployment rate is up........repeal AA and you can have 1950 again you hope.....so have all your rude snippy ass moments...i'm just going to relish the fact that dumbass racists elected one....and will be solely responsible....news flash...support for ObamaCare is going up...thanks to your keystone cops Congress.......
trump's a mess........all failures...no travel ban... (show quote)


Beware of all those that defend George Soros; the raider of currencies.
This is what PO posted in Defense of George Soros:
http://www.accredited-times.com/2016/07/22/in-defense-of-george-soros/


Prog; You have no problem with this?
I have a big problem with these elitists.
“This system to be controlled in a feudalistic fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences.” - Insider, Professor Carroll Quigley – ‘Tragedy and Hope’,( p. 324)

Still waiting for Lefties to denounce their comrade, George Soros.
To defend their positions, it would be good to explain why they align with the likes of Bilderberger, billionaire, George Soros. Or if they don't.
10 Things You Didn't Know About George Soros
https://youtu.be/tfBHYxEojZk
George Soros: Evil Zionist Puppet Master Exposed
https://youtu.be/1eRFTHD2CTg
The Devil On Earth (George Soros)
https://youtu.be/_dLWv6ONtd8

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 12:54:12   #
Progressive One
 
Brown slams health bill as ‘a disgrace’
Defending his fiscal legacy, governor cites a report that the GOP plan would cost state $6 billion in 3 years.
By John Myers
WASHINGTON — The oratory that made Gov. Jerry Brown a rising political star in his youth returned on Wednesday as he joined Democrats on Capitol Hill in rebuking President Trump and congressional Republicans for efforts to dismantle the nation’s sweeping, 7-year-old healthcare law.
Brown’s fury, though, had some extra fuel: A new analysis by his advisors showed that the GOP effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act would blow a $6-billion hole in California’s budget in just three years, a significant threat to the governor’s legacy as the architect of the state’s newfound fiscal stability.
It was enough to get Brown hot under his tie-less shirt collar on Wednesday morning as he stood at a lectern on the U.S. Capitol’s east steps, as a late addition to a healthcare rally led by former Vice President Joe Biden and other top Democrats.
“Mr. Trump,” he said, “come down from Trump Tower, walk among the people and see the damage that this latest exercise in raw political power will wreck on the women, the men and the children of this country.”
Brown’s administration has warned for weeks that California stands to lose a lot under any downsizing or repeal of Obamacare. The most significant cut would be to funds covering healthcare for 4 million people that the law brought into Medi-Cal, the state’s version of the federal Medicaid program for the poor.
“This raises lots of questions about how we would finance the Medi-Cal program going forward,” Mari Cantwell, director of California’s Medicaid efforts, said in a conference call with reporters.
The state analysis, unveiled about an hour before the governor spoke at the rally Wednesday, estimates the $6-billion hit to be just the beginning of California’s potential problems after a repeal of President Obama’s signature law. By 2027, California’s healthcare program for the poor would lose $24.3 billion in annual federal assistance. While most of those dollars are currently paid to state government, almost $6 billion would come from payments made to counties and health providers.
For the state, the single biggest hit would come from how the GOP legislation downsizes its existing healthcare subsidies. Those who were covered under the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of Medicaid would have to prove their income eligibility every six months.
Failure to provide the documents would mean no coverage — and no subsidy.
“That process, in many cases, has been an administrative barrier [for the poor],” said Jennifer Kent, director of the California Department of Health Care Services.
The state would receive smaller subsidies if the same Californians later become eligible again for Medi-Cal due to their income.
That process alone accounts for some 53% of the dollars California would lose under the Republican proposal, according to the analysis. State officials called it a fundamental rethinking of the Medicaid law enacted in 1965.
“This is devastating,” Brown said in an interview after his Capitol speech. “It’s a disgrace, and it’s an insult to democracy itself.”
The address also marked a shift in the tone and temperament exhibited by the governor on his visit to the nation’s capital. For the better part of two days, Brown offered optimism for some level of cooperation between the state and national Republican leaders.
His rhetoric changed at Wednesday’s rally.
“This is a dangerous bill,” Brown said, emphasizing each word with his right hand in a downward pointing motion. “It’s written by people who don’t know what the hell they’re talking about!”
But the analysis released at home in Sacramento could resonate far beyond the loudspeakers from which Brown’s voice boomed across the Capitol grounds.
While the implications of any downsized national healthcare law will hit hardest after Brown leaves office due to term limits in January 2019, a greater need to begin considering fiscal and policy options available to the state could soon develop.
State lawmakers, though, said there are downsides to revealing those options too soon.
“If we start having that policy conversation, the feds will say, ‘Oh yeah, California is OK with [the new healthcare plan]…. They can absorb it,” said state Sen. Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina), chairman of the Senate Health Committee.
The governor didn’t offer any proposals to fill a gap in healthcare funding in his initial budget proposal unveiled in January. At the time, there were only campaign promises from GOP leaders to repeal Obamacare.
State healthcare officials made clear to reporters Wednesday that if California has to cut its Medi-Cal program due to a lack of funds, the options for cutting costs are bad ones: even lower payments made to providers who take Medi-Cal patients, fewer health procedures that are covered or fewer people covered at all. If state lawmakers don’t find those choices palatable, the state would need to find more revenue or cut any number of services unrelated to healthcare. That could jeopardize a hallmark of Brown’s governing legacy: fiscal stability and prudence.
Although California’s state budget owes much of its recent stability to a steady economy and a voter-approved tax increase on the wealthy, Brown campaigned for another stint as governor by promising to leave the state’s finances on a long glide path of stability.
“The challenge is to solve today’s problems without making those of tomorrow even worse,” he said in his State of the State address in 2016.
The size of the potential state budget hole caused by a Republican rollback of government healthcare spending would leave Brown and legislative leaders with an arithmetic problem. The state’s cash reserves, for example, will total $7.9 billion by next summer — less than two years of healthcare liabilities that the GOP bill would expose.
“We’ll react, whatever it is,” Brown told reporters on Wednesday. “Whatever comes up, we’ll have to deal with it.”
john.myers@latimes.com
Twitter: @johnmyers
Times staff writer Melanie Mason contributed to this report.

Reply
 
 
Mar 23, 2017 13:13:19   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Who cares what Browns opinion is?
Progressive One wrote:
Brown slams health bill as ‘a disgrace’
Defending his fiscal legacy, governor cites a report that the GOP plan would cost state $6 billion in 3 years.
By John Myers
WASHINGTON — The oratory that made Gov. Jerry Brown a rising political star in his youth returned on Wednesday as he joined Democrats on Capitol Hill in rebuking President Trump and congressional Republicans for efforts to dismantle the nation’s sweeping, 7-year-old healthcare law.
Brown’s fury, though, had some extra fuel: A new analysis by his advisors showed that the GOP effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act would blow a $6-billion hole in California’s budget in just three years, a significant threat to the governor’s legacy as the architect of the state’s newfound fiscal stability.
It was enough to get Brown hot under his tie-less shirt collar on Wednesday morning as he stood at a lectern on the U.S. Capitol’s east steps, as a late addition to a healthcare rally led by former Vice President Joe Biden and other top Democrats.
“Mr. Trump,” he said, “come down from Trump Tower, walk among the people and see the damage that this latest exercise in raw political power will wreck on the women, the men and the children of this country.”
Brown’s administration has warned for weeks that California stands to lose a lot under any downsizing or repeal of Obamacare. The most significant cut would be to funds covering healthcare for 4 million people that the law brought into Medi-Cal, the state’s version of the federal Medicaid program for the poor.
“This raises lots of questions about how we would finance the Medi-Cal program going forward,” Mari Cantwell, director of California’s Medicaid efforts, said in a conference call with reporters.
The state analysis, unveiled about an hour before the governor spoke at the rally Wednesday, estimates the $6-billion hit to be just the beginning of California’s potential problems after a repeal of President Obama’s signature law. By 2027, California’s healthcare program for the poor would lose $24.3 billion in annual federal assistance. While most of those dollars are currently paid to state government, almost $6 billion would come from payments made to counties and health providers.
For the state, the single biggest hit would come from how the GOP legislation downsizes its existing healthcare subsidies. Those who were covered under the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of Medicaid would have to prove their income eligibility every six months.
Failure to provide the documents would mean no coverage — and no subsidy.
“That process, in many cases, has been an administrative barrier [for the poor],” said Jennifer Kent, director of the California Department of Health Care Services.
The state would receive smaller subsidies if the same Californians later become eligible again for Medi-Cal due to their income.
That process alone accounts for some 53% of the dollars California would lose under the Republican proposal, according to the analysis. State officials called it a fundamental rethinking of the Medicaid law enacted in 1965.
“This is devastating,” Brown said in an interview after his Capitol speech. “It’s a disgrace, and it’s an insult to democracy itself.”
The address also marked a shift in the tone and temperament exhibited by the governor on his visit to the nation’s capital. For the better part of two days, Brown offered optimism for some level of cooperation between the state and national Republican leaders.
His rhetoric changed at Wednesday’s rally.
“This is a dangerous bill,” Brown said, emphasizing each word with his right hand in a downward pointing motion. “It’s written by people who don’t know what the hell they’re talking about!”
But the analysis released at home in Sacramento could resonate far beyond the loudspeakers from which Brown’s voice boomed across the Capitol grounds.
While the implications of any downsized national healthcare law will hit hardest after Brown leaves office due to term limits in January 2019, a greater need to begin considering fiscal and policy options available to the state could soon develop.
State lawmakers, though, said there are downsides to revealing those options too soon.
“If we start having that policy conversation, the feds will say, ‘Oh yeah, California is OK with [the new healthcare plan]…. They can absorb it,” said state Sen. Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina), chairman of the Senate Health Committee.
The governor didn’t offer any proposals to fill a gap in healthcare funding in his initial budget proposal unveiled in January. At the time, there were only campaign promises from GOP leaders to repeal Obamacare.
State healthcare officials made clear to reporters Wednesday that if California has to cut its Medi-Cal program due to a lack of funds, the options for cutting costs are bad ones: even lower payments made to providers who take Medi-Cal patients, fewer health procedures that are covered or fewer people covered at all. If state lawmakers don’t find those choices palatable, the state would need to find more revenue or cut any number of services unrelated to healthcare. That could jeopardize a hallmark of Brown’s governing legacy: fiscal stability and prudence.
Although California’s state budget owes much of its recent stability to a steady economy and a voter-approved tax increase on the wealthy, Brown campaigned for another stint as governor by promising to leave the state’s finances on a long glide path of stability.
“The challenge is to solve today’s problems without making those of tomorrow even worse,” he said in his State of the State address in 2016.
The size of the potential state budget hole caused by a Republican rollback of government healthcare spending would leave Brown and legislative leaders with an arithmetic problem. The state’s cash reserves, for example, will total $7.9 billion by next summer — less than two years of healthcare liabilities that the GOP bill would expose.
“We’ll react, whatever it is,” Brown told reporters on Wednesday. “Whatever comes up, we’ll have to deal with it.”
john.myers@latimes.com
Twitter: @johnmyers
Times staff writer Melanie Mason contributed to this report.
Brown slams health bill as ‘a disgrace’ br Defendi... (show quote)

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 13:24:55   #
Progressive One
 
JFlorio wrote:
Who cares what Browns opinion is?


A new analysis by his advisors showed that the GOP effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act would blow a $6-billion hole in California’s budget in just three years, a significant threat to the governor’s legacy as the architect of the state’s newfound fiscal stability.

I live here....we don't give a fk what you people in states that would serve as parking lots here think either........

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 13:40:18   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Then talk to yourself you miserable human being.
Progressive One wrote:
A new analysis by his advisors showed that the GOP effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act would blow a $6-billion hole in California’s budget in just three years, a significant threat to the governor’s legacy as the architect of the state’s newfound fiscal stability.

I live here....we don't give a fk what you people in states that would serve as parking lots here think either........

Reply
Mar 23, 2017 13:44:04   #
eagleye13 Loc: Fl
 
Progressive One wrote:
A new analysis by his advisors showed that the GOP effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act would blow a $6-billion hole in California’s budget in just three years, a significant threat to the governor’s legacy as the architect of the state’s newfound fiscal stability.

I live here....we don't give a fk what you people in states that would serve as parking lots here think either........


" live here....we don't give a fk what you people in states that would serve as parking lots here think either....." - Programmed One

Speaking of parking lots; have you been on the 405 lately?
Been out there increasing the "traffic jams"?

I put this info together for others; ones that can think rationally.
To see the hypocrisy of "Progressives".
"You can tell that this is the wakeup call to action many needed.....you can see the new level of mobilization, awareness and consciousness. the freeways have been blocked with thousands out here in LA.....Trump has his work cut out for him and his racist supporters in the sticks got him there.....will not be of any help to him…" - "Progressive?" One

So at least PO is out in the open.
A black butt hole.

Reply
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