2020...

More nutter stimuli I see,
makes you drool every time eh.

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From Left to Right :

The Lying Perv...
The Lying Socialist...
The Lying Whore....
 
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...ical-firestorm-makes-country-great-diversity/
Michelle Obama Weighs In on Political Firestorm: ‘What Truly Makes Our Country Great Is Its Diversity’
Michelle-Obama-alma-mater-Whitney-M.-Young-Magnet-High-School-ap-640x480.jpg

AP Photo/Teresa Crawford
HANNAH BLEAU19 Jul 2019753
2:17
Michelle Obama took to Twitter Friday afternoon to weigh in on the political firestorm that erupted between President Trump and far-left members of the “Squad,” remarking on the strength of the country’s “diversity” and adding, “It’s not my America or your America. It’s our America.”

While Obama did not name names, she harkened back to the political drama between Trump and the “Squad” that dominated throughout the week.

“What truly makes our country great is its diversity,” Obama tweeted. “I’ve seen that beauty in so many ways over the years.”

“Whether we are born here or seek refuge here, there’s a place for us all,” she said, alluding to Trump’s call for members of the “Squad” – including Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), who came to the U.S. as a refugee – to “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came” and “come back to show us how it is done.”

“We must remember it’s not my America or your America. It’s our America,” she added:


Michelle Obama

✔@MichelleObama

https://twitter.com/MichelleObama/status/1152303775236919296

What truly makes our country great is its diversity. I’ve seen that beauty in so many ways over the years. Whether we are born here or seek refuge here, there’s a place for us all. We must remember it’s not my America or your America. It’s our America.


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Obama recently came under fire for claiming that Trump’s inauguration crowd was “not reflective of the country.”

“Then to sort of sit at that inauguration and to look around at a crowd that was not reflective of the country,” Obama told Gayle King at Essence Fest in New Orleans last week. “It was just such the opposite.

“During Barack’s inauguration, we made sure that the crowd looked like all of America. Having the Tuskegee airmen, having civil rights folks, having folks who had marched. You could look out at his crowd and you would see America. All of it,” she continued.

She added:

And I had to sit in that audience, one of a handful of people of color, and then listen to that speech, and all that I had sort of held on to for eight years, watching my husband get raked over the coals, feeling like we had to do everything perfectly, no scandal, no nothing. It was a lot emotionally.

Prior to introducing her husband, former President Barack Obama, at a political rally in Wisconsin in 2008, the former first lady infamously said, “For the first time in my adult life, I am proud of my country because it feels like hope is finally making a comeback”:


PoliticsBarack ObamaDonald TrumpGayle KingIlhan OmarMichelle Obama
 
Time to make up your mind TD. First you said I sound like Lion Eyes and now its Multi Sport. Maybe in a few months you'll say I sound like AFF. Pick one and stick to it.

Any chance of you can directing me to that post where I said any of that? Lol

Huff. Puff. Misdirect.
Just please stop blaming everyone else for the fact you can’t juggle multiple screen names.
 
Last edited:
You people?
Because you people are the only people who ever say that shit to me.
And, you never say it to my face.

Your use of the words “you people” is an interesting choice. Especially since the you people is other successful white 10%ers just like yourself.

But hey, no one ever likes being that guy whose peers are laughing at him. So I get why you play the worlds only hick living west of the 405.
 
Your use of the words “you people” is an interesting choice. Especially since the you people is other successful white 10%ers just like yourself.

But hey, no one ever likes being that guy whose peers are laughing at him. So I get why you play the worlds only hick living west of the 405.
I am not a hick, and I live considerably south of the 405.
You people should know that by now.
 
Im sorry if I hurt your feelings.

High school, Derby Academy, Vermont, Junior year. Mrs. Griffith (the former Miss Kenyon, who had come straight out of the University, became the Girls' Basketball Coach and within a year married the Boys' Basketball Coach), our English teacher, was attempting to correct the pronunciation of words like "cow". "Do you want people to think you are hicks?" "But we are" replied most of the class (and the rest laughed at the moment).
 
High school, Derby Academy, Vermont, Junior year. Mrs. Griffith (the former Miss Kenyon, who had come straight out of the University, became the Girls' Basketball Coach and within a year married the Boys' Basketball Coach), our English teacher, was attempting to correct the pronunciation of words like "cow". "Do you want people to think you are hicks?" "But we are" replied most of the class (and the rest laughed at the moment).
Tissue?
 
Any chance of you can directing me to that post where I said any of that? Lol

Huff. Puff. Misdirect.
Just please stop blaming everyone else for the fact you can’t juggle multiple screen names.
Just to be perfectly clear. You are saying you never claimed Lion Eyes and myself of being the same poster?
 
https://www.thedailybeast.com/author/gideon-resnick
https://www.thedailybeast.com/author/gideon-resnick
190721-resnick-obama-biden-hero_demtys


Former Vice President Joe Biden has used Barack Obama’s beloved status among Democratic voters to insulate him from criticism from the massive field of candidates jockeying to be the next president.

But in recent weeks, the Democratic frontrunner has had that legacy used against him, with his competitors pointing the to shortcomings of the last Democratic administration as evidence that Biden’s not up to the task of leading the next one.


“Barack Obama, personally, is incredibly popular among Democratic primary voters,” Karthik Ganapathy, a progressive consultant now running his own firm, told The Daily Beast. “And also at the same time, there’s a growing recognition that income and wealth inequality got worse under his eight years, the climate crisis got worse during his eight years, deportations went up during his time in office, and so on.”

The idea that the Obama legacy would be anything other than a massive positive for Biden as he navigates the 2020 Democratic party has been treated as indisputable within Democratic circles. And for good reason. A CNN poll taken in early 2018 found that he had a 97 percent favorable rating among Democrats.

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For a while, fellow Democrats running for the White House seemed content to simply avoid challenging the former VP as he repeatedly referenced his time in the Obama administration when touting his work on health care and beating back attacks over his record on race relations.


But that hesitancy has softened in recent weeks. On issues stemming from immigration to health care and foreign policy, the 2020 candidates have been increasingly critical in their public assessments of the Obama administration. And they’ve used opportunities from the debate stage to candidate forums to try and turn Biden’s ties to the former president from an overwhelming asset into something more complicated.

Senator Bernie Sanders’ (I-VT) campaign has used Obama’s own words to challenge Biden’s notion that Obamacare simply needs to be built upon. Senator Kamala Harris (D-CA) challenged Biden over the Obama administration's deportation policies. Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) backed off support for the Obama administration’s 2015 Iran nuclear deal as originally written. And Governor Jay Inslee (D-WA) has attacked Biden for a naivete about dealing with Republicans—in what has been interpreted as an implicit rebuke of Obama’s own failure to fully grasp GOP recalcitrance.

The subtle targeting of Biden has come as Democratic activists and progressives have continued to grapple with the Obama legacy as well. In particular, the Trump administration's family separation policy and inhumane conditions in detention facilities has sparked a broader conversation among Democratic voters about whether the Obama administration’s own deportation policies laid the groundwork for the current controversies.

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At least two times in the last month, protesters have faced down Biden to demand an apology for the three million deportations that occurred during the Obama administration. Activists with Movimiento Cosecha, an immigrants rights organization, held a protest at Biden’s Philadelphia campaign headquarters over a week ago and subsequently confronted him at a New Hampshire campaign stop. Through their “Dignity 2020” plan, they called on Biden and his other competitors in the field to pledge to end detention and deportation, immediately legalize the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the United States and reunite families separated during the current and past administration.

“We wanted the general public to understand that just defeating Trump in 2020 is only part of the solution,” Carlos Rojas Rodriguez, an organizer with the group, told The Daily Beast. “And there’s a lot of people that think that if Trump was no longer in the White House that the immigration crisis would go away and that’s just not true.”

Rodriguez, who is now a citizen but lived undocumented for 10 years, said they’re closely tracking how other candidates have been responding to questions about Obama’s immigration record and are tentatively planning to have a presence in Detroit leading up to the next Democratic presidential debate.

Already, they’ve seen some candidates take a harder look at the legacy.


During the first Democratic debate in Miami in late June, Sen. Harrismade a point of voicing dissent with President Obama’s use of the Secure Communities program, which allowed for local authorities to share fingerprints of those in jail with federal authorities. Obama ended the practice in 2014 but Trump restored it in 2017.

“On this issue, I disagreed with my president, because the policy was to allow deportation of people who by ICE's own definition were non-criminals,” Harris said, though the degree to which she did is somewhat questionable.

More recently, Julián Castro who served as the secretary of housing and urban development under Obama, said that he believed the administration had been too harsh when it came to immigration, a shift from prior stances. “I have learned the lessons of the past. It seems like Vice President Biden hasn’t,” he was quoted as saying at the League of United Latin American Citizens convention last week.
 
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