Trump is a Patriot

dandyrandy

Well-Known Member
I wouldn't call him patriotic in light of dodging service. I think he has a heart for the citizens of this country. I also think he truly wants to make jobs available. This country desperately needs jobs/employment/opportunity. Folks want work. They need money. If he can get economic engines stirred up in this country I see it as a win/win/win.
Less government entitlements supporting people.
People having discretionary income to spend.
Tax dollar revenue to the government.
Trump promised jobs. I have a great one. I want more like it for my countrymen.
He really likes Kanye. Well except to sing at his American inauguration. Why not native Americans? He's an imbicell. He's what all humans should not be. But genetics being what it is his kind will rise to the top. We will be third world. Nobody is getting an education anymore, except from ripoff universities. And the educated youngsters I worked with are mostly lost. Ivy league idiots. Bean counters. They are so far behind in production they will never catch up. $270 billion. They love Trump and whiskey. Or Bourbon. What's up with that? Btw tons of jobs around where I live. The problem is skillset. Most don't have any marketable skills. They have been building tons around lot's of areas. I know you have a good job but I think people should become educated.
 

Chunky Stool

Well-Known Member
another lie of the left. he's signed over all business interests to his sons. c'mon libbie, set up another lie to get knocked out of the park sore loser.
And we know this because he got on the news with a pile of fake documents. Do you remember that? It wasn't "fake news", Chump stood by a pile of fake documents in person.
Go back to Breitbart, fool. If you believe Chump is honest, you will believe anything.
Can I interest you in a talking snake?
 

Chunky Stool

Well-Known Member
He really likes Kanye. Well except to sing at his American inauguration. Why not native Americans? He's an imbicell. He's what all humans should not be. But genetics being what it is his kind will rise to the top. We will be third world. Nobody is getting an education anymore, except from ripoff universities. And the educated youngsters I worked with are mostly lost. Ivy league idiots. Bean counters. They are so far behind in production they will never catch up. $270 billion. They love Trump and whiskey. Or Bourbon. What's up with that? Btw tons of jobs around where I live. The problem is skillset. Most don't have any marketable skills. They have been building tons around lot's of areas. I know you have a good job but I think people should become educated.
But they are *really* good at video games.
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
And we know this because he got on the news with a pile of fake documents. Do you remember that? It wasn't "fake news", Chump stood by a pile of fake documents in person.
Go back to Breitbart, fool. If you believe Chump is honest, you will believe anything.
Can I interest you in a talking snake?
He didn't even bother to fake the documents cos his supporters are such CUCKS, it was blank fucking paper.

Literally sheets of A4 paper taken from reams of standard printer paper.

Look at the pics, they didn't even separate the pages before putting them in the binders, they're all perfectly identical.
 

b4ds33d

Well-Known Member
And we know this because he got on the news with a pile of fake documents. Do you remember that? It wasn't "fake news", Chump stood by a pile of fake documents in person.
Go back to Breitbart, fool. If you believe Chump is honest, you will believe anything.
Can I interest you in a talking snake?
i believe him over you, absolutely. happy inauguration day crybaby!
 

Chunky Stool

Well-Known Member
And here's your talking snake salesman:
http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/19/politics/trump-jeffress-pastor/?iid=ob_lockedrail_bottomlist
Sidenote: Religious zealots are going to be pissed when they finally realize that Chump only keeps promises that directly benefit him or his family.
----------------
(CNN)A pastor with a long history of inflammatory remarks about Muslims, Mormons, Catholics and gays is scheduled to preach at a private service for President-elect Trump and his family on Friday, shortly before Trump takes the oath of office.

The pastor, the Rev. Robert Jeffress, is a Southern Baptist who vigorously campaigned for Trump during the final months of the presidential election and is a member of his evangelical advisory board. "I love this guy!" Trump has said of Jeffress. Before the campaign, Trump, a Presbyterian, had no apparent connection to the pastor, who leads First Baptist Church in Dallas.
Friday morning's worship service, scheduled to be held at St. John's Episcopal Church across the street from the White House, will continue a modern Inauguration Day ritual. With the exception of Richard Nixon in 1973, every president since Franklin Roosevelt has attended spiritual services on Inauguration Day, many at St. John's. The event is separate from both the inauguration itself and an interfaith service to be held Saturday at Washington National Cathedral, where an imam is among those who will offer prayers.
Usually the Inauguration Day service draws little notice, much less controversy. But offering Jeffress such a prominent pulpit is likely to irk religious minorities, particularly Muslims, many of whom were already angered by the President-elect's stoking of suspicions about Islam during the campaign.
Jeffress leads a 12,000-member megachurch in Dallas and is a frequent guest on Fox News. But to many Americans, he may be best known for his frequent condemnations of Mormonism as a "cult" during the 2012 presidential campaign. He urged Christians not to vote for Mitt Romney, a Mormon, during the Republican primary. He later supported Romney over President Barack Obama.
Jeffress has also called Islam and Mormonism heresies "from the pit of hell," suggested that the Catholic church was led astray by Satan, accused Obama of "paving the way" for the Antichrist and spread false statistics about the prevalence of HIV among gays, who he said live a "miserable" and "filthy" lifestyle.
In recent years, Jeffress has frequently denounced Islam, calling it an "evil religion" that "promotes pedophilia" because the Prophet Muhammed married a 9-year-old girl. (Many modern Muslim scholars disagree about her age.) The pastor has also said that Mormons, Muslims and Hindus "worship a false god."
The Rev. Luis León, rector of St. John's Episcopal, told CNN about the plan for Jeffress to deliver the sermon when CNN inquired about the event. Leon has been involved in logistical planning of the event but not the choice of speakers. A second source involved in the service confirmed to CNN on Thursday that Jeffress is scheduled to take part.
About 300 people will attend the private event, León said, including Trump's family and Vice President-elect Mike Pence and his family. Trump's inauguration organizers chose Jeffress to preach, said León.
Jeffress declined to comment on his role in the inauguration, saying his contract with Fox News precludes him from speaking with CNN. But on Thursday night he tweeted that he is: "Honored to deliver sermon 'When God Chooses a Leader' for Trump/Pence private family service at St. John's Church" before the inauguration.
On Fox New on Thursday night, Jeffress said his sermon will center on Nehemiah, a Trump-like figure from the Hebrew Bible, the pastor said, who helped rebuild Jerusalem in the 5th century BC, in part by mounting a defensive wall around the city.
"I'm going to use Nehemiah's story as an example of why God blesses leaders," Jeffress said, "and I want it to be a tremendous encouragement to our great new president and vice president."
An official affiliated with Trump inauguration planning, speaking on background, defended Jeffress against critics who call him divisive:
"Pastor Jeffress is a unifying figure representing a diverse spectrum of Americans. Any attempt to vilify this religious leader is deeply disappointing and misplaced."
The Council on American-Islamic relations disagreed.
"Unfortunately, the choice of Rev. Jeffress is symptomatic of the incoming Trump administration's inclusion of notorious Islamophobes in the transition team, in the picks for cabinet nominees and, beginning Friday, in the White House," said CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper.
Ross Murray, director of programs for GLAAD, said he is also concerned about the inclusion of Jeffress in Friday's service.
"The inauguration and the people invited to pray at the inauguration speak to the values and the agenda of the incoming president. Jeffress' anti-LGBTQ message is now going to be tied to this administration and its policies."
Ironically, St. John's is known for its tolerance toward homosexuality and other faiths. In November, León joined other Episcopalians in urging Trump to denounce a rash of hate crimes across the US, many apparently related to the election.
Even though the service will be private, Jeffress is an unusual choice to preach on Inauguration Day, an occasion when incoming presidents often try to unite the country's diverse religious and social strands. In 2013, the Rev. Louie Giglio, an evangelical pastor, withdrew from Obama's inauguration ceremony after an outcry about a sermon on homosexuality he had preached in the 1990s.
According to Leon, other participants in Friday's service at St. John's are a mix of old-guard evangelicals and Trump loyalists. They include: Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr., Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, televangelist James Robison and Pastor Mark Burns, who has admitted to falsifying aspects of his biography, such as nonexistent stints in the Army Reserve and a college degree he did not earn.
Later on Friday, at the inauguration itself, five Christians and one rabbi will offer public prayers and readings. While two of the pastors are prosperity preachers -- a first for a presidential inauguration -- none have disparaged gays or other religions like Jeffress.
Jeffress' beliefs about other faiths -- that they are heresies and will not result in salvation -- are shared by many evangelicals. But the stridency of his condemnations sometimes confound fellow conservatives.
"His sound bites are often incendiary, but his convictions — including the exclusivity of the gospel and the belief that homosexual behaviors are sinful — are clearly within the mainstream of American evangelicalism," R. Albert Mohler, a leading Southern Baptist, said in 2013, after former NFL quarterback Tim Tebow backed out of an event at Jeffress' church.
But Jeffress' denunciations of gays and Muslims often stretch beyond the realms of sin and salvation.
He has called homosexuality "degrading," and linked it to pedophilia, alcoholism, depression and suicide, while insisting that his remarks are rooted in concern for gays -- a way of showing them the true path to salvation.
In a 2008 sermon, he urged his congregation to demonstrate compassion toward gays, even as he condemned their "filthy behavior."
Likewise, Jeffress has said that Islam incites violence and is "inspired by Satan himself," while also arguing that "it is our love for Muslims that demands we speak the truth about Islam."
On occasion, Jeffress has taken aim at evangelicals themselves.
"I am getting sick and tired of these namby-pamby, pantywaisted, weak-kneed Christians who say they're going to stay home (on Election Day) in November out of moral principle," Jeffress said last year.
On January 3, Jeffress tweeted that he had met with the incoming president in Trump Tower, and predicted he will be "the most faith-friendly president in our nation's history."
 

Justin-case

Well-Known Member
another lie of the left. he's signed over all business interests to his sons. c'mon libbie, set up another lie to get knocked out of the park sore loser.

This isn't a partisan issue, the ethics committee disagrees with you and mango Mussolini, idiot


blind trust
noun
NORTH AMERICAN
  1. a financial arrangement in which a person in public office gives the administration of private business interests to an independent trust in order to prevent conflict of interest. Under the trust, the owner does not know how the assets are managed.
con·flict of in·ter·est
noun
  1. a situation in which the concerns or aims of two different parties are incompatible.
    "the conflict of interest between elected officials and corporate lobbyists"
    • a situation in which a person is in a position to derive personal benefit from actions or decisions made in their official capacity.
      "Watson quit his job after questions about a possible conflict of interest"


Donald Trump Will Violate the Constitution on Day One
The Nation. - 1 day ago

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.thenation.com/article/donald-trump-will-violate-the-constitution-on-day-one/&ved=0ahUKEwj0mYWe8tDRAhUG9WMKHVg2A1kQqOcBCB0wAQ&usg=AFQjCNEH5sv7euc2-WEzB1nNl7phHUKdKg&sig2=tk2li_TvRw23dWmIMb5wwg
 

londonfog

Well-Known Member
Who would put a kid through college these days? My kids will graduate high school with with trade licenses and have whole life policies signed over to them. If they want to go major in art history or whatever that's on them.
WTF hell yes.
My daughter is about to leave Emory with her Doctor of Physical Therapy degree. She has jobs offers already with her grad date still being in May and still awaiting to take her state licensure exam. Her lowest offer thus far is 76,000 a year. Her highest thus far is 81,200.
That is just from hospital recruiting. She has yet to start sending in her resume on her own.
I will have the funds to send my children to college. If they decide to do something else that is on them, but Daddy and Mommy does have the college money to send them. Thankfully they all have dreams of graduating college.
My middle excited to be going this year. Sounds like you are limiting your childs options.
 
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