One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Posts for: youngwilliam
Page: <<prev 1 ... 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 next>>
Mar 23, 2018 13:17:39   #
Nickolai wrote:
Well regulated m*****a's were used to control the runaway s***es and to put down s***e r*******ns All young men kin the south were required to serve in those m*****a's periodically and furnish their own arms. The second we included in the bill or rights as a sop to the southern stares who wanted to be ruled by the Articles of Confederation. To get them to embrace a Constitution the second amendment was included in the bill of rights to satiate the southern s***e states


More of the prog revisionist history. You should write a book.
Go to
Mar 23, 2018 13:10:49   #
Nickolai wrote:
Your so called freedom is the number one heath problem in America


Your are sick in the head. Anti-American.
Go to
Mar 22, 2018 23:57:43   #
Hadenough wrote:
Fly boy, if you’re going to throw out facts and not act like the r****t you are and accuse everyone else of being. Why did you single out Mexicans. They’re many from Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, and China. How dare you call others ignorant!


Airfarceone is a raaasist.
Go to
Mar 22, 2018 23:56:23   #
Bad Bob wrote:
The white trash did.


Are you white trash boob.
Go to
Mar 22, 2018 21:49:13   #
Singularity wrote:
Re reading , I see this might be ambiguous.

My point is, its not that President Trump's issues are ignored or excused. Rather, that the processes of forgiveness and restorative redemption are powerful for the community, longed for and welcomed, sometimes precipitously by peacemakers....

Ideally forgiving hearts join hands with Justice and her scales to meet the miscreant already on the road to cleaning up his mess and making restitution.

We aren't living in an ideal world.

Thankfully (!?!), others of a more paranoid and suspicious,yet noble, nature number among us and stand (unrestrainable, as they kick ass!) at our edges, to kick the asses who take advantage of our forgiving natures too egregiously, should such a thing ever occur.
Re reading , I see this might be ambiguous. br br... (show quote)


Wow, that tweet you posted is some sick in the head s**t. If that's what you believe you're sick also.
Go to
Mar 22, 2018 20:47:19   #
Airforceone wrote:
Hey bad bob why not explain Obama gun control. You claim to be so GD bright what is it that Obama agenda is on gun control. Or are you just a r****t just like the rest of the Trump supporters.

Then when you get through with Obama gun control explain what Rick Scott Trump favoritism governor in Florida just signed.

So come on hot shot let’s hear you explain Obama you damm fool


Sorry, but your the raaasist.
Go to
Mar 22, 2018 12:17:44   #
Singularity wrote:
V**e for him, defend and excuse his choices of behaviors, obfuscate and deny his culpability, turn a blind eye to any peccadilloes...

As I am given to understand these things, the official watershed moment for demonstrating Christian support for sinful lifestyles is the cake test.

Any polls re the willingness to bake a cake for Mr. Trump?


I thought you people were against stereotypes.
Go to
Mar 22, 2018 10:37:10   #
Bad Bob wrote:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/0ffc3341-ddc3-393d-98df-1053a25b4950/white-evangelical-support-for.html
White evangelical support for Trump has increased amid Stormy Daniels reports.


Does it say amid, not because of?
Go to
Mar 21, 2018 09:59:59   #
Kevyn wrote:
These young people protesting for the sensible regulation of firearms mandated in our constitution really scare the hell out of you snowflakes don’t they.


Where in the Constitution are fire arms regulated? There is nothing sensible about these protests. Like it was said previously, this is a fun day for them.
And speaking of cell phones, are we to expect the 11 young people k**led every day from texting to be brought up at these protests?
BAN cell phones.
Go to
Mar 20, 2018 22:21:06   #
[quote=slatten49]The fictitious idea of a deep state is doing more to politicize the bureaucracy than any real deep state ever did.

By Paul R. Pillar, February 15, 2018

Note: this article is part of a symposium included in the March/April 2018 issue of the National Interest.

THE CONCEPT of a deep state neatly describes certain patterns of power in some foreign countries, but it has no purchase in American politics, where it serves only as a handy pejorative. A deep state materializes in various forms where democracy is at best weak. Algeria has le pouvoir, comprising senior military officers and some associated civilians who may have more ultimate say over national policy than does the elected president. Many Middle Eastern countries have a mukhabarat, which instills fears of unchecked power going beyond a formal mission of intelligence or internal security. In Russia the siloviki, including veterans of the KGB or other security components who have entered politics, have been riding high since one of their own, Vladimir Putin, acquired the top job. Such terms most often denote a loosely delineated collection of like-minded officials with ties centered in security services and exercising disproportionate power over the lives of the country’s citizens. The United States has nothing like it.

An attraction of the term “deep state” to those who misapply it to the United States is that the user of the term feels no need to adduce specific evidence that such a phenomenon exists and is actively exerting political influence. After all, the very concept of a deep state involves operating in the dark and out of sight. If there were evidence to see, then the deep state wouldn’t be very deep. The idea of a deep state, in other words, is pretty shallow.

The concept originally gained traction on the hard left, usually as an adjunct to ideas about a warmaking military establishment or a privacy-violating intelligence and internal-security establishment. But the attraction of the concept, as a label to be applied to wh**ever might be opposing or frustrating one’s policy or political aspirations, transcends any left-versus-right lines. When I, as a serving intelligence officer, gave an invited talk in 2004 (by happenstance during George W. Bush’s ree******n campaign) to a private outside audience about Middle Eastern affairs that unavoidably touched on the bad turn the Iraq War had taken, a leaked and garbled version got to the late conservative commentator Robert Novak, who made a column out of it. Novak wrote that it was “shocking” that the CIA was waging “war” with the White House, and that this reminded him of how “history is filled with intelligence bureaus turning against their own governments.”

Today, Donald Trump deplores the “Deep State Justice Department” for not doing enough against “Crooked Hillary Clinton” or against James Comey, the FBI director he fired. Lest we fail to realize just how far the deep-state conspiracy supposedly extends, Trump’s son Eric has advised us via tweet that the conspiracy may include not only Clinton and former president Barack Obama but also comedian Ellen DeGeneres. Clearly we are witnessing not some devilishly planned agenda of an entrenched bureaucracy, but instead the flailing of Trumpites against any purveyor of inconvenient t***hs, or those they fear may yet purvey such t***hs.

Unlike systems dominated by siloviki or a pouvoir, the United States has, at least so far, a deeply engrained liberal democratic—in the classical, not partisan, sense—political culture. For the permanent bureaucracy, a corollary of this culture is an ethical commitment to apolitical performance of duties and deference to the policymaking role of leaders whom the American people elected. If there were to be any straying from that ethic—which is as well entrenched as any occupationally related culture—then the agencies involved and the individuals within them would become far more vulnerable than they are now. There would be a case for giving each new political leadership the ability to fire the whole bunch. Employees of the security agencies have no incentive to move things in that direction.

The presumption that the bureaucracies concerned have a collective political intent, which is part of the notion of a deep state, runs up against two problems. One is that political preferences are not worn on sleeves in these places. Notwithstanding some well-publicized emails between romantic partners within the FBI, such preferences generally are not discussed in the course of work, because there is no good reason to discuss them. If there were some community of political intent within those bureaucracies, it would be hard for the people who supposedly are part of such a community to discover it.

The second problem is that, to the extent one can glean political preferences indirectly—through things that do not violate the Hatch Act, such as bumper stickers on cars in agency parking lots—one would see that people who work in these agencies, like other Americans, exhibit a diversity of preferences. Likewise, the supposed political leanings that those making “deep state” accusations contend exist in the bureaucracies have been all over the political map. One group of accusers may say that the FBI is filled with Neanderthal heirs of J. Edgar Hoover; a later group says that it is filled with Clinton-coddling lefties. They can’t both be right, and in fact both

3out of 4 can't be wrong.

http://truedaily.news/2018/03/20/heres-how-many-americans-believe-in-the-deep-state/
Go to
Mar 20, 2018 22:10:28   #
Hadenough wrote:
You’re 100% correct, thank God he was only in for 8 yrs. Now we have a real President with a pair, not a community activist with a hidden agenda to destroy our Great country.
President Trump has brought back respect for our country. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🙏


Go to
Mar 20, 2018 21:40:34   #
Kevyn wrote:
Donald Trump has taken to attacking every one of our institutions who hold him accountable for his lies and criminality.
It is long past time for respected Americans to take off the gloves and publicly state that the emperor has no clothes. In a good start Robert Reich pointed out Trumps failure in leadership and the risk it poses. This weekend John Brennon followed suit tweeting to Trump “When the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude, and political corruption becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced demagogue in the dustbin of history. You may scapegoat Andy McCabe, but you will not destroy America . . . America will triumph over you.” It is time for more Americans on both sides of the isle to stand up to this boorish perverted criminal buffoon. We deserve better.
Donald Trump has taken to attacking every one of o... (show quote)


Poor kevy, always gets everything backwards. Up is down, good is bad, but she does look good in a pink dress.
Go to
Mar 19, 2018 21:49:22   #
Singularity wrote:
Take the edge off, dude!

Have we met?


No edge here, and I'm not a dude.
Go to
Mar 19, 2018 20:14:23   #
Singularity wrote:
Damn cat knocked the lighter off the table and swiped it under the couch where I couldn't get to it.

Housekeeper just fished it out for me. Once she heads upstsirs, Ima fire up this pipe and elevate my mood.

Better?


Just make sure its the good s**t, you need it.
Go to
Mar 19, 2018 17:41:10   #
slatten49 wrote:
Sing, I was not aware of any medical condition known as 'minions.' I was referring more to followers or lackeys similar to those seen in the cartoon movie Minions. You can be assured that I meant no disrespect to such a medical condition as you briefly describe, and I apologize if I was unintentionally offensive.


Don't worry about her, she's been off her meds for to long.
Go to
Page: <<prev 1 ... 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 next>>
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.