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Donald Trump Didn’t Win the Popular Vote, Despite What Google Says
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Nov 17, 2016 12:56:31   #
Progressive One
 
Headsup wrote:
C'mon Progressive, give it a break. As snake like movements of the progressives have, and are, snakes in the grass, most likely, they, Hillary's campaign were able to get a couple of million votes from the illegal alien sect, which by the way, if you don't know, there are 12million ILLEGALS in this country; and they all want to stay, they will do anything including illegal voting to accomplish it. Ends justifies the end, the mantra of the progressives.


I'm just posting articles...there was nothing to get over because I was going to have to do my thing even if Daffy Duck would have gotten elected..I'm super kool on it all as always..........I'm just sitting back watching the show......I'm a non-issue...just a part of the peanut gallery like I told the righties they were the last 8 years........

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 12:58:42   #
Big Bass
 
Progressive One wrote:
Donald Trump Didn’t Win the Popular Vote, Despite What Google Says

http://nymag.com/selectall/2016/11/google-top-election-result-is-fake-news-about-trump.html

Final Vote Count 2016

All the ballots haven't been counted yet, but it looks like Hillary Clinton really did win the nationwide popular vote — if not the presidency — by a considerable margin
http://www.snopes.com/2016/11/13/who-won-the-popular-vote/


Don't forget the 3,000,000+ illegal votes garnered by hellary.

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 13:03:19   #
Progressive One
 
Big Bass wrote:
Don't forget the 3,000,000+ illegal votes garnered by hellary.


Is there a reputable national news source that verifies that? why have I only heard that in OPP? and I cover a lot of material daily..............

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 13:06:29   #
Progressive One
 
Wondering what a ‘cuck’ is? A guide to ‘alt-right’-speak

Followers of Trump’s chief strategist have their own ‘alpha’ slang

BY JESSICA ROY
Stephen K. Bannon’s fringe brand of conservatism is suddenly front and center, after he was named to be chief strategist in Donald Trump’s White House. As the chairman of Breitbart News, Bannon turned the website into, in his own words, the “go-to platform of the alt-right” — a far-right ideology that promotes what many consider to be white nationalism, racism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, transphobia and misogyny.
Like most groups, the alt-right has its own code words and slang. Here are some it uses, and other hallmarks to look out for:
Beta: Members of the alt-right are obsessed with masculinity, manhood, gender roles and the concept of “alpha” and “beta” males. Alpha males are leaders, like Trump; beta males are portrayed as weak and emasculated.
Crybaby, whiny: Anyone who disagrees with the alt-right or its preferred candidate, particularly protesters and people who complain that the alt-right is embracing racism and anti-Semitism.
Cuckservative, cuck: The term “cuckservative” originated in the alt-right. It’s a portmanteau of “conservative” and “cuckold” used to describe Republicans who are perceived to be emasculated or “selling out.” Frequently shortened to “cuck,” the term has come under scrutiny for racist implications.
Human biodiversity: Despite the fact that many say racism is at the heart of its platform, the alt-right is very sensitive about being called racist. It uses the term “human biodiversity” as a more scientific-sounding way of referring to issues of race.
Libtard: The alt-right revels in the rejection of “political correctness,” so embracing an outdated term for a person with an intellectual disability serves the purpose of insulting liberals.
Masculinist: A word meant to embody the opposite of feminist, celebrating “manliness” and the traditional “heroic” nature of men. To the alt-right, “masculinist” principles are ones that serve and advocate for men. Critics say they primarily reinforce antiquated gender roles.
Memes: The modern alt-right originated in places like 4chan and 8chan, which are hubs for meme creation. Meme creation is still a centerpiece of the movement. The alt-right is responsible for getting the Pepe the Frog meme classified as a hate symbol.
Multiculturalism (as a derogatory term): A major component of the alt-right platform is white supremacy and nationalism. “Multiculturalism” is used as a negative term for the blending of multiple cultures, as opposed to celebrating the supposed superiority of Western European culture. Often used as shorthand for policies that benefit immigrants and people of color.
Neoreactionaries: Also known as NRx and the “Dark Enlightenment.” A group of people who call for stripping away anything other than supposedly rational thought, as opposed to a “feelings first” mentality. They advocate for libertarianism, traditional gender roles and neofascism.
Political correctness: Anything that challenges alt-right people’s right to say whatever they want, whenever they want, in any way they want to say it. According to members of the alt-right, political correctness is responsible for most of what they consider society’s ills, including feminism, Islamic terrorism and overly liberal college campuses.
Snowflake: Short for “special snowflake,” a pejorative for an entitled person. Most people protesting Trump are “snowflakes,” according to the alt-right, as are anti-Trump celebrities and most liberals.
SJW: Short for “social justice warrior,” this insult is mostly reserved for young women who try to argue on behalf of liberal or feminist ideas.
White genocide: What many alt-right members feel is the natural conclusion of liberalism and pro-immigrant policies. The alt-right views just about anything that benefits nonwhite people, particularly ones who aren’t American citizens, as a risk to whiteness and a step on the road to the eradication of the white race. jessica.roy@latimes.com  


KIRK IRWIN Getty Images for SiriusXM
AS CHAIRMAN of Breitbart News, Stephen K. Bannon turned the website into, in his own words, the “go-to platform of the alt-right” — a far-right ideology

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 13:19:48   #
Progressive One
 
Transition turmoil is denied

Trump team offers assurances but little clarity on progress.

BY NOAH BIERMAN AND LISA MASCARO
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump and his top aides pushed back aggressively Wednesday at accounts of a rocky transition, with Trump attacking the New York Times and his staff making efforts to assure the public that accounts of internal turmoil had been greatly exaggerated.
Despite the focus on public relations, there was little indication the team had progressed toward assembling an administration, and questions remained unanswered about the level of influence that Trump’s family would exert in the new White House.
Rooms set aside for Trump staffers at the Pentagon , for example, remained vacant Wednesday, an indication that Trump’s team had yet to begin the complicated process of getting up to speed on the details of taking over the military and other sectors of government. The State Department had also heard nothing from Trump’s emissaries, even as Trump’s staff released an extensive roster of foreign leaders who had spoken with Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence.
Democrats, still absorbing last week’s electoral rebuke, took further steps toward defining how they would operate as an opposition party, voting in a leadership team in the Senate with a few new names, including Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, aimed at broadening their appeal to white working-class voters who defected from the party for Trump. But they were also still reeling from internal party divides; across the Capitol, House Democrats postponed their leadership elections until after Thanksgiving.
Visitors including New England Patriots owner Bob Kraft, Silicon Valley financier Peter Thiel, Trump’s relatives, former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and a few members of Congress streamed in and out of Trump Tower in New York, giving little indication of whether they were coming to give advice, apply for administration roles or simply offer congratulations.
Trump’s campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, whose role in the new administration remains undefined, was one of two top aides to speak with reporters in hopes of changing perceptions.
“You don’t form a federal government overnight, and these are very serious issues, very serious appointments, very serious considerations,” she said.
Conway said reports of firings and disorganization were false.
Yet she offered little clarity about who would be taking roles in the administration, including Trump’s son-in-law, 35-year-old real-estate investor Jared Kushner. She said she did not know whether Kushner would be getting security clearance to attend top-secret briefings, but left open the possibility when asked whether it would be appropriate.
“It’s appropriate for whoever’s going to get the presidential daily briefing to have a security clearance,” she said. “It’s not just appropriate, [but] necessary.”
Kushner has drawn attention on many fronts, including multiple reports that he orchestrated the ouster of several transition figures with connections to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who as his state’s attorney general successfully prosecuted Kushner’s father on tax evasion and other charges more than a decade ago.
Kushner, who lacks government experience, could also face questions about conflicts of interest because Trump has said that his children will run his business empire while he serves in the White House.
Jason Miller, Trump’s campaign communications director, tried to answer another set of criticisms, promising that Pence, who abruptly took over the transition team leadership from Christie on Friday, had begun “making good on President-elect Trump’s promise that we’re not going to have any lobbyists involved with the transition efforts.”
“When we talk about draining the swamp, this is one of the first steps,” Miller said. The team did not name any lobbyists who had been dropped from the group.
Despite the lack of apparent progress, Trump received a vote of confidence from an unlikely source: Vice President Joe Biden, who met with Pence at the U.S. Naval Observatory, the vice president’s official residence, where they dined with their wives.
“No administration is ready on Day One. We weren’t ready on Day One. I’ve never met one that’s ever been ready on Day One,” Biden said. “But I’m confident on Day One everything will be in good hands and they’ll be able to handle everything.”
Pence will huddle with House Republicans on Thursday and meet with Democratic leaders as well.
Trump took out his frustrations over media accounts on the New York Times, writing angrily on Twitter on Wednesday about the paper’s coverage of his transition.
“The failing @nytimes story is so totally wrong on transition,” he wrote in one of several tweets criticizing the paper this week. “It is going so smoothly. Also, I have spoken to many foreign leaders.”
The paper did not report that Trump had failed to speak with foreign leaders. Rather, it said that prominent allies were “scrambling to figure out how and when to contact Mr. Trump” and had been, at times, “patched through to him in his luxury office tower with little warning.”
Even some Republicans acknowledged that they had concerns about the transition. Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the second-ranking leader of the Senate, said he had received no direct information from the transition team about its work, even as the Senate will be in charge of confirming Trump’s Cabinet picks, according to the Texas Tribune.
“Obviously, this is my impression that the Trump team was not completely prepared for the transition,” he said. “And after the election, they’ve had to scramble quite a bit.”
Democrats, just as surprised by the election result, were doing their best to plot their own path. Sen. Charles E. Schumer of New York was elected minority leader, replacing retiring Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada. The move, along with the approval of Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois and Sen. Patty Murray of Washington in the spots behind him, was expected.
But Schumer broadened the Democratic leadership tent with the intent of improving the party’s standing with its progressive wing and its working-class base, two groups whose frustration with the party and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton contributed to Trump’s victory.
Joining the leadership team were Sanders, who challenged Clinton for the presidential nomination, conservative Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin. Populist Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts also kept a top spot in the group that will help steer the party.
“There’s a debate going on about whether we should be the party of the diverse Obama coalition” — referring to the minority voters, women and independents who helped put President Obama in office — “or the blue-collar American in the heartland,” Schumer said.
“We need to be the party that speaks to and works on behalf of all Americans and a bigger, bolder, sharper-edged economic message that talks about people in the middle class,” he added.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California will take over as ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, a key role as Trump moves to nominate a justice to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by the February death of Antonin Scalia. noah.bierman
@ latimes.com   lisa.mascaro@latimes.com   Times staff writer W.J.
Hennigan contributed to this report.

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 13:30:15   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
Progressive One wrote:
Transition turmoil is denied

Trump team offers assurances but little clarity on progress.

BY NOAH BIERMAN AND LISA MASCARO
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump and his top aides pushed back aggressively Wednesday at accounts of a rocky transition, with Trump attacking the New York Times and his staff making efforts to assure the public that accounts of internal turmoil had been greatly exaggerated.
Despite the focus on public relations, there was little indication the team had progressed toward assembling an administration, and questions remained unanswered about the level of influence that Trump’s family would exert in the new White House.
Rooms set aside for Trump staffers at the Pentagon , for example, remained vacant Wednesday, an indication that Trump’s team had yet to begin the complicated process of getting up to speed on the details of taking over the military and other sectors of government. The State Department had also heard nothing from Trump’s emissaries, even as Trump’s staff released an extensive roster of foreign leaders who had spoken with Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence.
Democrats, still absorbing last week’s electoral rebuke, took further steps toward defining how they would operate as an opposition party, voting in a leadership team in the Senate with a few new names, including Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, aimed at broadening their appeal to white working-class voters who defected from the party for Trump. But they were also still reeling from internal party divides; across the Capitol, House Democrats postponed their leadership elections until after Thanksgiving.
Visitors including New England Patriots owner Bob Kraft, Silicon Valley financier Peter Thiel, Trump’s relatives, former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and a few members of Congress streamed in and out of Trump Tower in New York, giving little indication of whether they were coming to give advice, apply for administration roles or simply offer congratulations.
Trump’s campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, whose role in the new administration remains undefined, was one of two top aides to speak with reporters in hopes of changing perceptions.
“You don’t form a federal government overnight, and these are very serious issues, very serious appointments, very serious considerations,” she said.
Conway said reports of firings and disorganization were false.
Yet she offered little clarity about who would be taking roles in the administration, including Trump’s son-in-law, 35-year-old real-estate investor Jared Kushner. She said she did not know whether Kushner would be getting security clearance to attend top-secret briefings, but left open the possibility when asked whether it would be appropriate.
“It’s appropriate for whoever’s going to get the presidential daily briefing to have a security clearance,” she said. “It’s not just appropriate, [but] necessary.”
Kushner has drawn attention on many fronts, including multiple reports that he orchestrated the ouster of several transition figures with connections to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who as his state’s attorney general successfully prosecuted Kushner’s father on tax evasion and other charges more than a decade ago.
Kushner, who lacks government experience, could also face questions about conflicts of interest because Trump has said that his children will run his business empire while he serves in the White House.
Jason Miller, Trump’s campaign communications director, tried to answer another set of criticisms, promising that Pence, who abruptly took over the transition team leadership from Christie on Friday, had begun “making good on President-elect Trump’s promise that we’re not going to have any lobbyists involved with the transition efforts.”
“When we talk about draining the swamp, this is one of the first steps,” Miller said. The team did not name any lobbyists who had been dropped from the group.
Despite the lack of apparent progress, Trump received a vote of confidence from an unlikely source: Vice President Joe Biden, who met with Pence at the U.S. Naval Observatory, the vice president’s official residence, where they dined with their wives.
“No administration is ready on Day One. We weren’t ready on Day One. I’ve never met one that’s ever been ready on Day One,” Biden said. “But I’m confident on Day One everything will be in good hands and they’ll be able to handle everything.”
Pence will huddle with House Republicans on Thursday and meet with Democratic leaders as well.
Trump took out his frustrations over media accounts on the New York Times, writing angrily on Twitter on Wednesday about the paper’s coverage of his transition.
“The failing @nytimes story is so totally wrong on transition,” he wrote in one of several tweets criticizing the paper this week. “It is going so smoothly. Also, I have spoken to many foreign leaders.”
The paper did not report that Trump had failed to speak with foreign leaders. Rather, it said that prominent allies were “scrambling to figure out how and when to contact Mr. Trump” and had been, at times, “patched through to him in his luxury office tower with little warning.”
Even some Republicans acknowledged that they had concerns about the transition. Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the second-ranking leader of the Senate, said he had received no direct information from the transition team about its work, even as the Senate will be in charge of confirming Trump’s Cabinet picks, according to the Texas Tribune.
“Obviously, this is my impression that the Trump team was not completely prepared for the transition,” he said. “And after the election, they’ve had to scramble quite a bit.”
Democrats, just as surprised by the election result, were doing their best to plot their own path. Sen. Charles E. Schumer of New York was elected minority leader, replacing retiring Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada. The move, along with the approval of Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois and Sen. Patty Murray of Washington in the spots behind him, was expected.
But Schumer broadened the Democratic leadership tent with the intent of improving the party’s standing with its progressive wing and its working-class base, two groups whose frustration with the party and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton contributed to Trump’s victory.
Joining the leadership team were Sanders, who challenged Clinton for the presidential nomination, conservative Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin. Populist Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts also kept a top spot in the group that will help steer the party.
“There’s a debate going on about whether we should be the party of the diverse Obama coalition” — referring to the minority voters, women and independents who helped put President Obama in office — “or the blue-collar American in the heartland,” Schumer said.
“We need to be the party that speaks to and works on behalf of all Americans and a bigger, bolder, sharper-edged economic message that talks about people in the middle class,” he added.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California will take over as ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, a key role as Trump moves to nominate a justice to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by the February death of Antonin Scalia. noah.bierman
@ latimes.com   lisa.mascaro@latimes.com   Times staff writer W.J.
Hennigan contributed to this report.
Transition turmoil is denied br br Trump tea... (show quote)


All right! You've succeeded in boring me. Have fun!



Reply
Nov 17, 2016 13:48:41   #
Mr Bombastic
 
BigMike wrote:
All right! You've succeeded in boring me. Have fun!


We should start calling him the copy and paste king. That's all I've seen him do, unless he's cussing at, or insulting someone.

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 13:51:22   #
Big Bass
 
Mr Bombastic wrote:
We should start calling him the copy and paste king. That's all I've seen him do, unless he's cussing at, or insulting someone.



I'm surprised he hasn't claimed all these screeds as his own words.

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:10:47   #
Progressive One
 
wah wah wah...........over some fking articles not even directed at anyone...miserable asses...........hilarious

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:15:21   #
Mr Bombastic
 
Progressive One wrote:
wah wah wah...........over some fking articles not even directed at anyone...miserable asses...........hilarious


When are you going to get rid of that avatar? She lost. She's a loser, just like you. The people have spoken, and they have decided that you are no longer relevant. Get used to it.

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:18:14   #
Progressive One
 
Mr Bombastic wrote:
When are you going to get rid of that avatar? She lost. She's a loser, just like you. The people have spoken, and they have decided that you are no longer relevant. Get used to it.


Don't want to be relevant...here anyway......you won so why does that bother YOU?

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:19:21   #
Mr Bombastic
 
Progressive One wrote:
Don't want to be relevant...here anyway......you won so why does that bother YOU?


It doesn't bother me at all. You don't bother me at all. I'm happy. GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO PRESIDENT TRUMP!!!

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:32:50   #
Progressive One
 
Mr Bombastic wrote:
It doesn't bother me at all. You don't bother me at all. I'm happy. GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO PRESIDENT TRUMP!!!


Good...you got your President......I hope he does his supporters some good............

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:36:27   #
VladimirPee
 
Are there any reputable news sources left?


Progressive One wrote:
Is there a reputable national news source that verifies that? why have I only heard that in OPP? and I cover a lot of material daily..............

Reply
Nov 17, 2016 14:37:24   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Hey it worked for his degrees.
Mr Bombastic wrote:
We should start calling him the copy and paste king. That's all I've seen him do, unless he's cussing at, or insulting someone.

Reply
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