Lord Protector Posted September 10, 2015 Posted September 10, 2015 (edited) Sheldon Adelson Is Ready to Buy the Presidency He just hasn’t decided which Republican candidate to back. Care to make a pitch? In the 2016 presidential race, Adelson insists he will not repeat the mistake he made in 2012 of backing a spoiler. “I think he feels guilty,” says one person who has discussed the matter with him. “I think he knows how much he fucked up.” http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2015/09/sheldon-adelson-is-ready-to-buy-the-presidency.html Edited September 10, 2015 by slow
maximus Posted September 11, 2015 Posted September 11, 2015 ^јеша(тм) buying the presidency, mamu mu jebem јешинску(тм) - more trumpe, deportuj cionisticku stoku pronto
ObiW Posted September 11, 2015 Posted September 11, 2015 (edited) Sledece srede je druga debata republikanskih kandidata na CNNu. Moja kristalna kugla veli da ce to izgledati otprilike ovako (NSFW) Edited September 11, 2015 by ObiW
Ravanelli Posted September 11, 2015 Posted September 11, 2015 (edited) Move over Koch brothers, here come the Wilks After making billions in the oil and gas business, Farris Wilks became a pastor of the Assembly of Yahweh church. He hates gays, the IRS and Planned Parenthood. Now he and his brother Dan are the biggest donors so far to the 2016 presidential campaign Edited September 11, 2015 by Ravanelli
Weenie Pooh Posted September 11, 2015 Posted September 11, 2015 Gradić sa dva semafora i deset crkava
theanswer Posted September 11, 2015 Posted September 11, 2015 (edited) Inace novi pollovi prikazuju da je Klintonka na manje od 10 posto prednosti nationaly ali posto smo to dokazali da ne znaci nista frapantan je prilicno podatak da Sanders u Kvinipek polu koje je dosta opsirno ima procenat prednosti u Ajovi. To je prvi poll u Ajovi gde vodi. Isto istrazivanje pre dva meseca je imalo mislim plus dvadeset pet za Hilari. Medju dem glasacima Bajden ima 91, Sanders 84 favorable a Klintonka samo 64 sto je blago receno katastrofa, u stvari zaboravih dal je favorable u pitanju ili honesty i trustworthy al ne menja stvari mnogo Edited September 11, 2015 by theanswer
akibono Posted September 12, 2015 Posted September 12, 2015 (edited) Trump u trci za glasove južnjaka At 69, he can still carry on like the teen who was yanked out of prep school and delivered to Col. Dobias, the take-no-shit instructor at the military academy. After I met Ivanka and praised her to her father, he said, "Yeah, she's really something, and what a beauty, that one. If I weren't happily married and, ya know, her father . . . "Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/trump-seriously-20150909#ixzz3lW3l4pwT Nije mu prvi put da priča o tome kako bi kresno ćeru... But as Rolling Stone’s Paul Solotaroff points out, this isn’t even the first time Donald Trump has made that joke. Here he is in 2006, on The View: Trump was asked how he would feel if Ivanka posed for Playboy. “It would be really disappointing — not really — but it would depend on what’s inside the magazine. I don’t think Ivanka would do that, although she does have a very nice figure. I’ve said if Ivanka weren’t my daughter, perhaps I’d be dating her.” Earlier in 2003 on The Howard Stern Show, Donald Trump was also bragging about his daughter’s hot body: “You know who’s one of the great beauties of the world, according to everybody? And I helped create her. Ivanka. My daughter, Ivanka. She’s 6 feet tall, she’s got the best body. She made a lot money as a model—a tremendous amount.” Edited September 12, 2015 by akibono
Њујоркер Posted September 12, 2015 Author Posted September 12, 2015 Ko je sledeci? "Mr. Perry, he's gone. Good luck. He was very nasty to me," Trump told Iowa voters after touting his tough-talking style in an interview.
maximus Posted September 12, 2015 Posted September 12, 2015 (edited) nixon vs wooden cunt who's the bigger crook? kod desnokrilaca situacija je sledeca kad je centralni goperski komitet pravio planove za utrku ukapirali su da je booshova popularnost veoma niska - goperski glasaci bi pre glasali za pok. hitlera nego za jos 1 boosha dosli su na genijalnu ideju da u trku ubace nekih 18 mamojeba od kojih samo el jebito kanadski antiestablishment mamojeb cruz i mozda harley davidson mamojeb walker zaista trce da pobede dok su svi ostali tzv. splitteri ili spoileri ciji je zadatak da tu I tamo dobiju poneki % naivnih goperskih antiboosh/antiestablishment glasaca da bi boosh na kraju imao najvise glasova jer su se antiboosh glasovi podelili izmedju ostalih 15 laznih trkaca medjutim, kad je centralni komitet pravio planove niko nije racunao na ludog trumpa I sada je doslo do panike kao I kod democrat partije kad su ukapirali da HRC ne bi mogla da bude izabrana ni za шинтера Edited September 12, 2015 by maximus
maximus Posted September 13, 2015 Posted September 13, 2015 kod democrat partije situacija je pretty much catastrophic - the front runner wooden cunt can't seem to energize any white voters but a few old feminazi douchebags; niggaz&spicks - tradicionalni dem glasaci + nezavisni, nisu previse odusevljeni klintonizmom misim baba prodaje ali glasaci ne kupuju = zasto 1 corrupt douchebag da predstavlja 1 democrat partiju?!?
Њујоркер Posted September 14, 2015 Author Posted September 14, 2015 Ovo sto maximus prica: Clinton's Support Drops by a Third as Trump, Carson Surge in GOP Race Damaged by increased doubt about her honesty and empathy, Hillary Clinton has lost a third of her support for the Democratic presidential nomination in the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll, while non-politicians Donald Trump and Ben Carson have surged on the GOP side, commanding more than half the vote between them in a crowded field. The results are remarkable, particularly in the Republican contest: Even as Trump’s lead for his party’s nomination has grown, six in 10 Americans see him as unqualified to serve as president and as many say he lacks the personality and temperament to succeed in the job. His rating for empathy is far worse than Clinton’s; for honesty and trustworthiness, slightly worse. See PDF with full results, charts and tables here. That said, Trump –- and to some extent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on the Democratic side – has capitalized on an anti-establishment streak in political sentiment. Trump also has better ratings among Republicans than from the public at large, and he continues to draw particular support from those who favor his controversial positions on immigration. All told, among registered voters, 33 percent of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents now favor Trump for the nomination, with 20 percent for Carson –- up 9 percentage points and 14 percentage points, respectively, since July. Jeb Bush has crumpled to 8 percent, down from a field-leading 21 percent in March and his first single-digit result in ABC/Post polls this cycle. Among others, Scott Walker’s tumbled to 2 percent, down 11 points since midsummer. In the Democratic contest, Clinton's drop is dramatic, yet not enough to threaten her clear lead. She's supported by 42 percent of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents who are registered to vote, down from 63 percent in July, while Sanders has gained 10 points, to 24 percent, and Joe Biden's up by 9 points, to 21 percent. If Biden doesn't run, most of his support moves to Clinton, boosting her to 56 percent – exactly double Sanders' support in this case. Even if still in a strong position, Clinton's trajectory leaves no question that she has trouble. Just 39 percent now see her as honest and trustworthy, matching her career low; that has dropped by 14 points since last summer. At 46 percent, her rating for empathy –- understanding the problems of average Americans -– is at a career low (albeit by a single point). Her support in the primary has tanked in particular among women, previously a mainstay of her candidacy, from 71 percent in July to 42 percent now. The e-mail imbroglio is part of it. Fifty-five percent of Americans in this poll, produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, disapprove of Clinton's handling of questions about the matter, 54 percent think she's tried to cover it up and 51 percent think she broke government regulations by using a private server for work-related e-mail during her time as secretary of state. That said, Clinton may have hit a landing pad on the issue: Disapproval of her handling of the situation is no worse now than it was in May, and fewer than half, 44 percent, call it a legitimate issue in the presidential election, actually down a scant 4 points. Clinton, in any case, benefits from another attribute: Fifty-six percent of Americans say she has the personality and temperament it takes to serve effectively as president. As noted, that's far better than it is for Trump. The public by 63-33 percent says he lacks the personality and temperament to serve effectively -– and, by an even broader 67-29 percent, that he doesn’t understand their problems. Just 35 percent see him as honest and trustworthy. Yet, as covered in an analysis released Sunday, Clinton and Trump are essentially even among registered voters in a hypothetical matchup for the general election, 46-43 percent. Two reasons are apparent: One is that Clinton's support –- including her ratings on personal attributes –- are considerably better among groups that are less apt to be registered to vote, such as young adults and racial and ethnic minorities. The other is that vote preferences at this stage of the campaign are driven more by partisanship, by Trump's positions on immigration and by his outsider status than by other factors. Anti-politicsAnti-establishment sentiment is palpable, yet not monolithic. On one hand, 72 percent of Americans say they think most people in politics cannot be trusted; 48 percent feel that way strongly. And 64 percent call the political system "basically dysfunctional"; again most of them (46 percent overall) feel strongly about it. At the same time, more would like to see the next president be someone with political experience than someone from outside the political establishment, by 56-40 percent. And, by a wide margin, more would rather see the next president "fix the current political system" than "tear it down and start over," 76-21 percent. Discontent, then, only goes so far –- and it does have a strong partisan flavor. Among Democrats and Democratic leaning-independents, 69 percent prefer experience to outsider status. Among leaned Republicans, by contrast, that drops to 36 percent; 60 percent instead prefer an outsider. Regardless, these views have impacts. In the Democratic contest, Sanders' support rises to 34 percent among people looking for a political outsider; he's numerically ahead of Clinton's 28 percent in this group. Among those more focused on experience, by contrast, Clinton's support swells to 47 percent, while Sanders' falls to 20 percent. There's a similar effect in the GOP race. Among those looking for an outsider, Trump's support surges to 41 percent, Carson's to 25 percent; the two alone command two-thirds of this group. Among those who see experience as more important, Trump has 23 percent support, Carson, 13 percent. GOP groupsAmong groups, education continues to be one of the most striking differences in support for Trump; he's backed by 40 percent of leaned Republicans who lack a college degree vs. 19 percent of those who are college graduates. Less-educated voters are less likely to turn out, making this potentially a serious limitation for him. Trump has some troubles on personal attributes even within his party. Among registered leaned Republicans, 35 percent see him as unqualified to be president, 44 percent think he doesn't have the kind of personality and temperament it takes to serve effectively and 47 percent say he doesn't understand their problems. None reaches a majority, but, for in-party ratings, these are potential concerns for Trump. Carson, for his part, has 25 percent support from college-educated leaned Republicans -– putting him numerically ahead of Trump in this group. And he does better with strong conservatives than with moderate leaned Republicans, while Trump's support is less tied to ideology. Walker, meanwhile, has lost support especially among strong conservatives. Dem groupsIn the Democratic contest, Clinton and Sanders run essentially evenly among whites, 31 vs. 33 percent; Clinton's lead relies on nonwhites, among whom she has 57 percent support, to Sanders' 13 percent. It's the only major demographic group in which Clinton still maintains a clear majority. Clinton's support from nonwhites has dropped, by 14 points, from 71 percent in July. But her support from whites has fallen farther, by 25 points, in the same time. As noted, too, Clinton's support among women has cratered by 29 points since July. Among men she's lost 9 points in the same period, from 52 to 43 percent. Her gender gap has evaporated. ModelsFifty-seven percent of all Americans say they oppose Trump's positions on immigration issues. Among leaned Republicans who are registered to vote, however, that shifts; 59 percent in this group back Trump on immigration. That's key to his support. Statistical models indicate agreement with Trump's anti-immigration views is the strongest independent predictor of supporting him for the nomination. Next strongest is preference for a political outsider –- making these two areas that Trump may be expected to emphasize in the GOP debate this week, and beyond. Among leaned Democrats, meanwhile, support for Clinton is most strongly predicted by the sense that she's honest and trustworthy, as well as being nonwhite. She, therefore, may focus in the campaign ahead on seeking to restore her honesty rating –- and on building up her presumed firewall in the South, outside the confines of Iowa and New Hampshire, where racial and ethnic minorities are comparatively few and far between. MethodologyThis ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by landline and cellular telephone Sept. 7-10, 2015, in English and Spanish, among a random national sample of 1,003 adults, including 821 registered voters. Results have a margin of sampling error of 3.5 points for the full sample and 4.0 for registered voters, including the design effect. Partisan divisions are 33-22-35 percent, Democrats-Republicans-independents, among all adults, and 34-25-33 percent among registered voters. The survey was produced for ABC News by Langer Research Associates of New York, N.Y., with sampling, data collection and tabulation by Abt-SRBI of New York, N.Y. See details on the survey’s methodology here.
Eraserhead Posted September 15, 2015 Posted September 15, 2015 Bernie Trump: Billionaire real estate developer Donald Trump says it’s “disgraceful” how much money CEOs of big companies are making, but there's not much you can do about it. Calling into CBS' "Face the Nation" Sunday, Trump was told by host John Dickerson that CEO pay is now 350 times the average worker. “It does bug me," Trump said. "It’s very hard if you have a free enterprise system to do anything about that. You know, the boards of companies are supposed to do it, but I know companies very well and the CEO puts in all of his friends.” He cited Macy’s, which cut ties with him after his controversial comments about immigrants from Mexico, saying, “They put in their friends as the head of the company and they get whatever they want.” “You see these guys making these enormous amounts of money, and it’s a total and complete joke,” Trump said. He also reiterated his charge that hedge fund managers are getting away with murder. They're all supporting, and therefore controlling, GOP rival Jeb Bush and and Democrat Hillary Clinton, Trump said. “They pay very little tax, and that’s going to end when I come out with my plan in about three weeks, could be sooner than that…We’re going to be reducing taxes for the middle class. But for the hedge fund guys, they’re going to be paying up,” Trump said.
hazard Posted September 15, 2015 Posted September 15, 2015 Pa Tramp nije CEO koji se popeo uz menadzersku merdevinu, nije po toj liniji clan upravnih odbora, niti je u finansijama. On je self-made man, samo svoj gazda, i obrce pare u drugim oblastima. Boli njega djoka za CEO-e i hedz fond menadzere.
Eraserhead Posted September 15, 2015 Posted September 15, 2015 Pa Tramp nije CEO koji se popeo uz menadzersku merdevinu, nije po toj liniji clan upravnih odbora, niti je u finansijama. On je self-made man, samo svoj gazda, i obrce pare u drugim oblastima. Boli njega djoka za CEO-e i hedz fond menadzere. Ma jasno. Nego je taj populizam zanimljiv, posebno sto je u pricu ubacio CEOa Macy'sa koji je izbacio njegov brend zbog komentara o Meksikancima. Plus mu komentar nije tacan jer u proseku oko 60% kompenzacije CEOa danas dolazi kroz "pay for preformance", pre 6-7 godina je taj procenat bio daleko manji (35%). Covek vodi svoje male ratove.
hazard Posted September 15, 2015 Posted September 15, 2015 Pa to je jasno. Mislim da je za njega sve neka licna vendeta, veca ili manja. Od kupovine kafe i dorucka do kandidature za predsednika.
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