Dump Shithole
Moderator: Metal Sludge
- Supersonic
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Re: President Trump
Tourism has been increasing steadily since 2004. Go see:Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:Don't blame Trump's travel ban (which includes only terrorist-harboring countries) when the fact of the matter is that it was 9/11 that damaged America's tourist industry... An act perpetrated by the same group of radicals Trump is trying to block.
And you fools want to just open the floodgates...
http://www.tradingeconomics.com/united- ... t-arrivals
Pssst - Rev.....click on the MAX button if you're too dense to work that out for yourself.
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Re: President Trump
A group of radicals from..............................countries not on his ban list. Mainly from Saudi Arabia.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:Don't blame Trump's travel ban (which includes only terrorist-harboring countries) when the fact of the matter is that it was 9/11 that damaged America's tourist industry... An act perpetrated by the same group of radicals Trump is trying to block.
And you fools want to just open the floodgates...
One of the highest terrorist funded countries, Trump didn't ban and where he has many business dealings with, along with several other terrorist funding countries. I wonder why he didn't ban the countries where the majority of the terrorists that committed the most devastating terrorist act on American soil came from?
Hijackers by Airplane:
American Airlines Flight 11
Mohamed Atta - Egypt, tactical leader of 9/11 plot and pilot
Abdul Aziz al Omari - Saudi Arabia
Wail al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
Waleed al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
Satam al Suqami - Saudi Arabia
United Airlines Flight 175
Fayez Banihammad - United Arab Emirates
Ahmed al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Hamza al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Marwan al Shehhi - United Arab Emirates, pilot
Mohand al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
American Airlines Flight 77
Hani Hanjour - Saudi Arabia, pilot
Nawaf al Hazmi - Saudi Arabia
Salem al Hazmi - Saudi Arabia
Khalid al Mihdhar - Saudi Arabia
Majed Moqed - Saudi Arabia
United Airlines Flight 93
Saeed al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Ahmad al Haznawi - Saudi Arabia
Ziad Jarrah - Lebanon, pilot
Ahmed al Nami - Saudi Arabia
Hijackers by Nationality:
Egypt- Mohamed Atta
Lebanon- Ziad Jarrah
Saudi Arabia- Ahmed al Ghamdi
Hamza al Ghamdi
Saeed al Ghamdi
Hani Hanjour
Nawaf al Hazmi
Salem al Hazmi
Ahmad al Haznawi
Ahmed al Nami
Khalid al Mihdhar
Majed Moqed
Abdul Aziz al Omari
Mohand al Shehri
Wail al Shehri
Waleed al Shehri
Satam al Suqami
United Arab Emirates- Fayez Banihammad
Marwan al Shehhi
- DEATH ROW JOE
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Re: President Trump
If it will make your life worse, Trump supports it. That's the theme so far.Supersonic wrote:Not good
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/30/tech ... .html?_r=0
This will not be fabulous
- Rev. Johnny Tyler
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Re: President Trump
How many refugees are coming to us from Saudi Arabia? I forget!Insane Clown Potsie wrote:A group of radicals from..............................countries not on his ban list. Mainly from Saudi Arabia.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:Don't blame Trump's travel ban (which includes only terrorist-harboring countries) when the fact of the matter is that it was 9/11 that damaged America's tourist industry... An act perpetrated by the same group of radicals Trump is trying to block.
And you fools want to just open the floodgates...
One of the highest terrorist funded countries, Trump didn't ban and where he has many business dealings with, along with several other terrorist funding countries. I wonder why he didn't ban the countries where the majority of the terrorists that committed the most devastating terrorist act on American soil came from?
Hijackers by Airplane:
American Airlines Flight 11
Mohamed Atta - Egypt, tactical leader of 9/11 plot and pilot
Abdul Aziz al Omari - Saudi Arabia
Wail al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
Waleed al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
Satam al Suqami - Saudi Arabia
United Airlines Flight 175
Fayez Banihammad - United Arab Emirates
Ahmed al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Hamza al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Marwan al Shehhi - United Arab Emirates, pilot
Mohand al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
American Airlines Flight 77
Hani Hanjour - Saudi Arabia, pilot
Nawaf al Hazmi - Saudi Arabia
Salem al Hazmi - Saudi Arabia
Khalid al Mihdhar - Saudi Arabia
Majed Moqed - Saudi Arabia
United Airlines Flight 93
Saeed al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Ahmad al Haznawi - Saudi Arabia
Ziad Jarrah - Lebanon, pilot
Ahmed al Nami - Saudi Arabia
Hijackers by Nationality:
Egypt- Mohamed Atta
Lebanon- Ziad Jarrah
Saudi Arabia- Ahmed al Ghamdi
Hamza al Ghamdi
Saeed al Ghamdi
Hani Hanjour
Nawaf al Hazmi
Salem al Hazmi
Ahmad al Haznawi
Ahmed al Nami
Khalid al Mihdhar
Majed Moqed
Abdul Aziz al Omari
Mohand al Shehri
Wail al Shehri
Waleed al Shehri
Satam al Suqami
United Arab Emirates- Fayez Banihammad
Marwan al Shehhi
Also, never mind which countries are NOT on the list. Ask yourself where the list of banned countries originated.
Your pal, Obama!
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-114 ... 029enr.pdf
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Re: President Trump
Rev is a big Obama backer when it fits his retarded agenda.
Drunk Mazeraturd wrote: ...but hes going to run and hes going to win.
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Re: President Trump
Now, let's get this right - in that pointy fucking head of yours, if countries actually attack us, and kill thousands of our people on American soil, we should "never mind" as long as they don't send refugees?Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:How many refugees are coming to us from Saudi Arabia? I forget!
Also, never mind which countries are NOT on the list.
You're an absolute fucking idiot, Rev. I genuinely don't think you're capable of as fully formed, coherent opinion.
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Re: President Trump
Trump has stuffed his Cabinet with tyrants, zealots and imbeciles
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/fe ... er-w473144
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/fe ... er-w473144
SatanOscillateMyMetallicSonatas
Dogma: I am God.
Dogma: I am God.
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Re: President Trump
Who else can he get to work for him? Competent people realize it's the end of your career to work for such a failing administration.grishnak boss wrote:Trump has stuffed his Cabinet with tyrants, zealots and imbeciles
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/fe ... er-w473144
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Re: President Trump
DEATH ROW JOE wrote:Who else can he get to work for him? Competent people realize it's the end of your career to work for such a failing administration.grishnak boss wrote:Trump has stuffed his Cabinet with tyrants, zealots and imbeciles
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/fe ... er-w473144
SatanOscillateMyMetallicSonatas
Dogma: I am God.
Dogma: I am God.
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Re: President Trump
So would that be Putin hiding in the shadows instructing Trump there? And as for God and country, I still don't get why so many professing Christians voted for him other than the fact that they mistakenly thought he was one of them. Would fiery judgment really have come to this country if Trump hadn't been elected? Would ISIS or some NWO conspiracy really have taken over? I highly doubt it.Turner Coates wrote:
LAglamrocker wrote: Trixter is awesome but everyone has seen After The Rain video correct? That’s one of first things I’m going thank God for
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Re: President Trump
Make America Embarrassed Again (and sad)!
- Insane Clown Potsie
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Re: President Trump
Ah yes, when all else fails throw out the ever faithful 'Obama supporter' accusation.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:How many refugees are coming to us from Saudi Arabia? I forget!Insane Clown Potsie wrote:A group of radicals from..............................countries not on his ban list. Mainly from Saudi Arabia.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:Don't blame Trump's travel ban (which includes only terrorist-harboring countries) when the fact of the matter is that it was 9/11 that damaged America's tourist industry... An act perpetrated by the same group of radicals Trump is trying to block.
And you fools want to just open the floodgates...
One of the highest terrorist funded countries, Trump didn't ban and where he has many business dealings with, along with several other terrorist funding countries. I wonder why he didn't ban the countries where the majority of the terrorists that committed the most devastating terrorist act on American soil came from?
Hijackers by Airplane:
American Airlines Flight 11
Mohamed Atta - Egypt, tactical leader of 9/11 plot and pilot
Abdul Aziz al Omari - Saudi Arabia
Wail al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
Waleed al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
Satam al Suqami - Saudi Arabia
United Airlines Flight 175
Fayez Banihammad - United Arab Emirates
Ahmed al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Hamza al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Marwan al Shehhi - United Arab Emirates, pilot
Mohand al Shehri - Saudi Arabia
American Airlines Flight 77
Hani Hanjour - Saudi Arabia, pilot
Nawaf al Hazmi - Saudi Arabia
Salem al Hazmi - Saudi Arabia
Khalid al Mihdhar - Saudi Arabia
Majed Moqed - Saudi Arabia
United Airlines Flight 93
Saeed al Ghamdi - Saudi Arabia
Ahmad al Haznawi - Saudi Arabia
Ziad Jarrah - Lebanon, pilot
Ahmed al Nami - Saudi Arabia
Hijackers by Nationality:
Egypt- Mohamed Atta
Lebanon- Ziad Jarrah
Saudi Arabia- Ahmed al Ghamdi
Hamza al Ghamdi
Saeed al Ghamdi
Hani Hanjour
Nawaf al Hazmi
Salem al Hazmi
Ahmad al Haznawi
Ahmed al Nami
Khalid al Mihdhar
Majed Moqed
Abdul Aziz al Omari
Mohand al Shehri
Wail al Shehri
Waleed al Shehri
Satam al Suqami
United Arab Emirates- Fayez Banihammad
Marwan al Shehhi
Also, never mind which countries are NOT on the list. Ask yourself where the list of banned countries originated.
Your pal, Obama!
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-114 ... 029enr.pdf
The terrorists who pulled off 9/11 weren't refugees. They were allowed into the country with visas. Saudi's are being allowed into America daily, but you're fine with it even though they have produced more terrorists attacking America than any other country on the precious ban list.
The future terrorists are already here dumb ass, they aren't sneaking in with the women and children who are being held up 120 days while Trump's government decides whether they've earned the right to come here because of our fucking up that entire region starting back in 1990.
Trump's just got all his little easily led followers Chicken Littling around afraid of refugees, while most of the numbskulls can't even tell the difference between a Syrian Christian and Syrian Muslim. Meanwhile innocent people are dying thanks to American led airstrikes.
You're far more likely to die in a terrorist attack in America perpetuated by a white 'Christian' male doing his duty for America than you are a Syrian refugee.
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Re: President Trump
Lol @ Donald Dubious and his "R party" horseshit. The motherfucker was a "Dem" longer than a republican and was officially unaffiliated as recently as 2011. Not to mention that him and his little numbnut circus are as RINO as it gets. What a fucking clownshoe.
Drunk Mazeraturd wrote: ...but hes going to run and hes going to win.
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Re: President Trump
Seems a Brazilian model took the Trump operation mode to a whole new level....grishnak boss wrote:
grab them by the pussy!!!
http://9gag.com/tv/p/a8dNGa/brazilian-m ... 00-penises
But this is ok because it is done for the "art". Right? Trump only talked about it.
Constantine wrote:ur a fkn degenerate,
Metal Sludge wrote:It is after all, only a message board...relax!
Trist805 wrote:Chip, You owned me and I will admit defeat. I love big black cocks. Hope you are happy.
- cantstopthemusic
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Re: President Trump
Because?That-guy wrote:If I were from another country and were considering visiting the US, I certainly wouldn't do it right now.
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Re: President Trump
The Trump presidency is in a hole
And that is bad for America—and the world
https://www.economist.com/news/leaders/ ... dency-hole
DONALD TRUMP won the White House on the promise that government is easy. Unlike his Democratic opponent, whose career had been devoted to politics, Mr Trump stood as a businessman who could Get Things Done. Enough voters decided that boasting, mocking, lying and grabbing women were secondary. Some Trump fans even saw them as the credentials of an authentic, swamp-draining saviour.
After 70 days in office, however, Mr Trump is stuck in the sand. A health-care bill promised as one of his “first acts” suffered a humiliating collapse in the—Republican-controlled—Congress. His repeated attempts to draft curbs on travel to America from some Muslim countries are being blocked by the courts. And suspicions that his campaign collaborated with Russia have cost him his national security adviser and look likely to dog his administration. Voters are not impressed. No other president so early in his first term has suffered such low approval ratings.
It is tempting to feel relief that the Trump presidency is a mess. For those who doubt much of his agenda and worry about his lack of respect for institutions, perhaps the best hope is that he accomplishes little. That logic is beguiling, but wrong. After years of gridlock, Washington has work to do. The forthcoming summit with Xi Jinping, China’s president, shows how America is still the indispensable nation. A weak president can be dangerous—picture a trade war, a crisis in the Baltics or conflict on the Korean peninsula
The business of government
Mr Trump is hardly the first tycoon to discover that business and politics work by different rules. If you fall out over a property deal, you can always find another sucker. In politics you cannot walk away so easily. Even if Mr Trump now despises the Republican factions that dared defy him over health care, Congress is the only place he can go to pass legislation.
The nature of political power is different, too. As owner and CEO of his business, Mr Trump had absolute control. The constitution sets out to block would-be autocrats. Where Mr Trump has acted appropriately—as with his nomination of a principled, conservative jurist to fill a Supreme Court vacancy—he deserves to prevail. But when the courts question the legality of his travel order they are only doing their job. Likewise, the Republican failure to muster a majority over health-care reflects not just divisions between the party’s moderates and hardliners, but also the defects of a bill that, by the end, would have led to worse protection, or none, for tens of millions of Americans without saving taxpayers much money.
Far from taking Washington by storm, America’s CEO is out of his depth. The art of political compromise is new to him. He blurs his own interests and the interests of the nation. The scrutiny of office grates. He chafes under the limitations of being the most powerful man in the world. You have only to follow his incontinent stream of tweets to grasp Mr Trump’s paranoia and vanity: the press lies about him; the election result fraudulently omitted millions of votes for him; the intelligence services are disloyal; his predecessor tapped his phones. It’s neither pretty nor presidential.
That the main victim of these slurs has so far been the tweeter-in-chief himself is testament to the strength of American democracy. But institutions can erode, and the country is wretchedly divided (see article). Unless Mr Trump changes course, the harm risks spreading. The next test will be the budget. If the Republican Party cannot pass a stop-gap measure, the government will start to shut down on April 29th. Recent jitters in the markets are a sign that investors are counting on Mr Trump and his party to pass legislation.
More than anything, they are looking for tax reform and an infrastructure plan. There is vast scope to make fiscal policy more efficient and fairer. American firms face high tax rates and have a disincentive to repatriate profits. Personal taxes are a labyrinth of privileges and loopholes, most of which benefit the well-off. Likewise, the country’s cramped airports and potholed highways are a drain on productivity. Sure enough, Mr Trump has let it be known that he now wants to tackle tax. And, in a bid to win support from Democrats, he may deal with infrastructure at the same time.
Yet the politics of tax reform are as treacherous as the politics of health care, and not only because they will generate ferocious lobbying. Most Republican plans are shockingly regressive, despite Mr Trump’s blue-collar base. To win even a modest reform, Mr Trump and his team will have to show a mastery of detail and coalition-building that has so far eluded them. If Mr Trump’s popularity falls further, the job of winning over fractious Republicans will only become harder.
Were he frustrated in Congress, the president would surely fall back on areas where he has a free hand. He has already made full-throated use of executive orders and promises to harness the bureaucracy to force through his agenda. In theory he could deregulate parts of the economy, such as finance, where the hand of government is sometimes too heavy. Yet his executive orders so far have been crudely theatrical—as with this week’s repeal of Barack Obama’s environmental rules, which will not lead to the renaissance of mining jobs that he has disingenuously promised coal country. It is the same with trade. Mr Trump could work through the World Trade Organisation to open markets. More probably, the economic nationalists on his team will have the upper hand. If so, America will take a bilateral approach, trade protection will grow and foreign policy will become more confrontational
The character question
The Americans who voted for Mr Trump either overlooked his bombast, or they saw in him a tycoon with the self-belief to transform Washington. Although this presidency is still young, that already seems an error of judgment. His policies, from health-care reform to immigration, have been poor—they do not even pass the narrow test that they benefit Trump voters. Most worrying for America and the world is how fast the businessman in the Oval Office is proving unfit for the job.
And that is bad for America—and the world
https://www.economist.com/news/leaders/ ... dency-hole
DONALD TRUMP won the White House on the promise that government is easy. Unlike his Democratic opponent, whose career had been devoted to politics, Mr Trump stood as a businessman who could Get Things Done. Enough voters decided that boasting, mocking, lying and grabbing women were secondary. Some Trump fans even saw them as the credentials of an authentic, swamp-draining saviour.
After 70 days in office, however, Mr Trump is stuck in the sand. A health-care bill promised as one of his “first acts” suffered a humiliating collapse in the—Republican-controlled—Congress. His repeated attempts to draft curbs on travel to America from some Muslim countries are being blocked by the courts. And suspicions that his campaign collaborated with Russia have cost him his national security adviser and look likely to dog his administration. Voters are not impressed. No other president so early in his first term has suffered such low approval ratings.
It is tempting to feel relief that the Trump presidency is a mess. For those who doubt much of his agenda and worry about his lack of respect for institutions, perhaps the best hope is that he accomplishes little. That logic is beguiling, but wrong. After years of gridlock, Washington has work to do. The forthcoming summit with Xi Jinping, China’s president, shows how America is still the indispensable nation. A weak president can be dangerous—picture a trade war, a crisis in the Baltics or conflict on the Korean peninsula
The business of government
Mr Trump is hardly the first tycoon to discover that business and politics work by different rules. If you fall out over a property deal, you can always find another sucker. In politics you cannot walk away so easily. Even if Mr Trump now despises the Republican factions that dared defy him over health care, Congress is the only place he can go to pass legislation.
The nature of political power is different, too. As owner and CEO of his business, Mr Trump had absolute control. The constitution sets out to block would-be autocrats. Where Mr Trump has acted appropriately—as with his nomination of a principled, conservative jurist to fill a Supreme Court vacancy—he deserves to prevail. But when the courts question the legality of his travel order they are only doing their job. Likewise, the Republican failure to muster a majority over health-care reflects not just divisions between the party’s moderates and hardliners, but also the defects of a bill that, by the end, would have led to worse protection, or none, for tens of millions of Americans without saving taxpayers much money.
Far from taking Washington by storm, America’s CEO is out of his depth. The art of political compromise is new to him. He blurs his own interests and the interests of the nation. The scrutiny of office grates. He chafes under the limitations of being the most powerful man in the world. You have only to follow his incontinent stream of tweets to grasp Mr Trump’s paranoia and vanity: the press lies about him; the election result fraudulently omitted millions of votes for him; the intelligence services are disloyal; his predecessor tapped his phones. It’s neither pretty nor presidential.
That the main victim of these slurs has so far been the tweeter-in-chief himself is testament to the strength of American democracy. But institutions can erode, and the country is wretchedly divided (see article). Unless Mr Trump changes course, the harm risks spreading. The next test will be the budget. If the Republican Party cannot pass a stop-gap measure, the government will start to shut down on April 29th. Recent jitters in the markets are a sign that investors are counting on Mr Trump and his party to pass legislation.
More than anything, they are looking for tax reform and an infrastructure plan. There is vast scope to make fiscal policy more efficient and fairer. American firms face high tax rates and have a disincentive to repatriate profits. Personal taxes are a labyrinth of privileges and loopholes, most of which benefit the well-off. Likewise, the country’s cramped airports and potholed highways are a drain on productivity. Sure enough, Mr Trump has let it be known that he now wants to tackle tax. And, in a bid to win support from Democrats, he may deal with infrastructure at the same time.
Yet the politics of tax reform are as treacherous as the politics of health care, and not only because they will generate ferocious lobbying. Most Republican plans are shockingly regressive, despite Mr Trump’s blue-collar base. To win even a modest reform, Mr Trump and his team will have to show a mastery of detail and coalition-building that has so far eluded them. If Mr Trump’s popularity falls further, the job of winning over fractious Republicans will only become harder.
Were he frustrated in Congress, the president would surely fall back on areas where he has a free hand. He has already made full-throated use of executive orders and promises to harness the bureaucracy to force through his agenda. In theory he could deregulate parts of the economy, such as finance, where the hand of government is sometimes too heavy. Yet his executive orders so far have been crudely theatrical—as with this week’s repeal of Barack Obama’s environmental rules, which will not lead to the renaissance of mining jobs that he has disingenuously promised coal country. It is the same with trade. Mr Trump could work through the World Trade Organisation to open markets. More probably, the economic nationalists on his team will have the upper hand. If so, America will take a bilateral approach, trade protection will grow and foreign policy will become more confrontational
The character question
The Americans who voted for Mr Trump either overlooked his bombast, or they saw in him a tycoon with the self-belief to transform Washington. Although this presidency is still young, that already seems an error of judgment. His policies, from health-care reform to immigration, have been poor—they do not even pass the narrow test that they benefit Trump voters. Most worrying for America and the world is how fast the businessman in the Oval Office is proving unfit for the job.
- Rev. Johnny Tyler
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Re: President Trump
Your problem is that you are a Henny Penny, anti-Trumper and that automatically makes you stupid and wrong. Your blind hatred for the man overcomes your need for facts.Hollywood's Burning wrote:Now, let's get this right - in that pointy fucking head of yours, if countries actually attack us, and kill thousands of our people on American soil, we should "never mind" as long as they don't send refugees?Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:How many refugees are coming to us from Saudi Arabia? I forget!
Also, never mind which countries are NOT on the list.
You're an absolute fucking idiot, Rev. I genuinely don't think you're capable of as fully formed, coherent opinion.
There's no hope for you, but if you care to learn about the "ban" instead of making shit up, here you go...
https://www.google.com/amp/amp.national ... t-hysteria
Re: President Trump
Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.cantstopthemusic wrote:Because?That-guy wrote:If I were from another country and were considering visiting the US, I certainly wouldn't do it right now.
- cantstopthemusic
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Re: President Trump
I'd hate for you to "waist" your time, whiny crybaby.That-guy wrote:Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.cantstopthemusic wrote:Because?That-guy wrote:If I were from another country and were considering visiting the US, I certainly wouldn't do it right now.
Re: President Trump
Sorry, I committed a conservative crime by using the wrong spelling of a word. By the way, when you guys figure out which "they're/there/their" to use, let me know.cantstopthemusic wrote:I'd hate for you to "waist" your time, whiny crybaby.That-guy wrote:Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.cantstopthemusic wrote:
Because?
- cantstopthemusic
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Re: President Trump
Typical liberal spin.That-guy wrote:Sorry, I committed a conservative crime by using the wrong spelling of a word. By the way, when you guys figure out which "they're/there/their" to use, let me know.cantstopthemusic wrote:I'd hate for you to "waist" your time, whiny crybaby.That-guy wrote: Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.
Last edited by cantstopthemusic on Mon Apr 03, 2017 3:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Rev. Johnny Tyler
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Re: President Trump
So if you were from Paris, where they are suffering terror attacks perpetrated by Islamic nutbags, you wouldn't want to visit a country that is trying to weed out the Islamic nutbags?That-guy wrote:Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.cantstopthemusic wrote:Because?That-guy wrote:If I were from another country and were considering visiting the US, I certainly wouldn't do it right now.
You'd rather visit a country that is being torn apart by said nutbags, huh?
...Or just stay home and enjoy the terrorist acts perpetrated by your own nutbags?
Re: President Trump
iberal? Fuck off trying to correct someone else's spelling.cantstopthemusic wrote:Typical iberal spin.That-guy wrote:Sorry, I committed a conservative crime by using the wrong spelling of a word. By the way, when you guys figure out which "they're/there/their" to use, let me know.cantstopthemusic wrote:
I'd hate for you to "waist" your time, whiny crybaby.
Re: President Trump
Visit other countries? I rarely leave the house.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:So if you were from Paris, where they are suffering terror attacks perpetrated by Islamic nutbags, you wouldn't want to visit a country that is trying to weed out the Islamic nutbags?That-guy wrote:Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.cantstopthemusic wrote:
Because?
You'd rather visit a country that is being torn apart by said nutbags, huh?
...Or just stay home and enjoy the terrorist acts perpetrated by your own nutbags?
I think you guys need to read the words I actually wrote rather than try to spin it into something political. My point, again, was that if I were considering coming here I would probably hesitate due to this travel ban. It's making things difficult for foreign visitors.
I can't believe I actually have to explain this.
- Rev. Johnny Tyler
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Re: President Trump
But it is NOT making things difficult for anyone that isn't from a country on the list. That leaves 189 countries.That-guy wrote:Visit other countries? I rarely leave the house.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:So if you were from Paris, where they are suffering terror attacks perpetrated by Islamic nutbags, you wouldn't want to visit a country that is trying to weed out the Islamic nutbags?That-guy wrote: Seriously? This needs to be explained to you? I'm not waisting my time explaining the obvious.
You'd rather visit a country that is being torn apart by said nutbags, huh?
...Or just stay home and enjoy the terrorist acts perpetrated by your own nutbags?
I think you guys need to read the words I actually wrote rather than try to spin it into something political. My point, again, was that if I were considering coming here I would probably hesitate due to this travel ban. It's making things difficult for foreign visitors.
I can't believe I actually have to explain this.
Also, even if you ARE from a listed country you can still come to America if you are legal and legit and not a refugee. Got a green card? Come on in! Are you a translator? Come on in! You've already been put through the filter.
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Re: President Trump
Your comments might have stung a little, had they not come from the biggest liar on the board.Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:Your problem is that you are a Henny Penny, anti-Trumper and that automatically makes you stupid and wrong. Your blind hatred for the man overcomes your need for facts.Hollywood's Burning wrote:Now, let's get this right - in that pointy fucking head of yours, if countries actually attack us, and kill thousands of our people on American soil, we should "never mind" as long as they don't send refugees?Rev. Johnny Tyler wrote:How many refugees are coming to us from Saudi Arabia? I forget!
Also, never mind which countries are NOT on the list.
You're an absolute fucking idiot, Rev. I genuinely don't think you're capable of as fully formed, coherent opinion.
There's no hope for you, but if you care to learn about the "ban" instead of making shit up, here you go...
https://www.google.com/amp/amp.national ... t-hysteria