What's new

Donald Trump says he could shoot someone on a busy street and not lose voters

Lord ZeN

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 24, 2014
Messages
2,483
Reaction score
15
Country
India
Location
Japan
50703048.jpg


Donald Trump has boasted that he could shoot someone in the middle of a crowded street, without it affecting his popularity.

The frontrunner in the race to be named the Republican candidate for the White House, Trump made the comments at a campaign rally in Iowa.

He faced an immediate backlash amid accusations of insensitivity, after a spate of killings in America


Donald Trump has boasted that he could shoot someone in the middle of a crowded street, without it affecting his popularity.

The frontrunner in the race to be named the Republican candidate for the White House, Trump made the comments at a campaign rally in Iowa.

He faced an immediate backlash amid accusations of insensitivity, after a spate of killings in America has pushed the debate about gun violence to the top of the political agenda.

But when asked to clarify his comments after the rally, he refused to comment.

"I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue [New York] and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters," he said. "It's, like, incredible."

He pointed directly at a camera recording the speech and imitated pulling a trigger as he made the comments.


The business mogul has received unwavering and growing support from crowds of loyal backers among the Republican grassroots in his bid to become the next US president.



Donald Trump: 'I could shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose any voters' | US news | The Guardian


Donald Trump says he could shoot someone on a busy street and not lose voters - Times of India
 
. . .
Believe it or not, he is right. He says this with full conviction and he knows it. All this guy needed to say is that he will ban Muslims from entering the US. He has garnered full sympathy from a certain section of the American population. Not all Americans are islamophobic, but many are. Trump has played this to his advantage. He has tapped into the existing hate. Nothing that he says or does will outrage this particular section of the population anymore. Trump is the messiah and savior of certain white Americans who believe it is time to undo Obama's 8 years of rule.

I predict that Trump will win the upcoming general elections. Some may argue that this is impossible, but Trump has already enough supporters and will get many more throughout his campaign. He will continue to tap into the hate and fuel more negativity. His message is resonating with many Americans. Particularly the extremist right wing elements. Many Americans are angry and feel humiliated under Obama. Anti-Islam feelings are at an alarming level. Many Americans don't want immigrants in their country.
 
Last edited:
. .
I don't have problem with him, but his followers. Have they gone mad?
 
. . . .
Sure he is going to make America great again, keep the Muslims out, build a wall and make Mexico pay for it. He means it.

I'm sure America will be loved all over the world.

He is going to run America like he runs his businesses. "forced to file for bankruptcy not once, not twice, four times."
 
.
:crazy: is this guy is normal? this is a serious question:what:
He's hooked on power like a crack addict, he was fine before he decided to run for President. Soo, not really, then again a normal person wouldn't be so eager to run for President of a Superpower.
 
.
Pffftt, he meant he could shoot someone with a BB gun. It tickles. Doesn't hurt at all. :p:
 
.
You non-Americans do at least have an idea that Trump was just joking/exaggerating his popularity, right ?

The funny part is that in most countries in the world, especially the ones stridently anti-US, the Trump equivalents would NOT be joking/exaggerating but rather a warning. :lol:
 
. .
Better learn leadership from (Central) Javanese..... :D

As non Javanese Indonesian, I am impress in Javanese leaders calmness and politeness when they act on TV, particularly from Central Java (Yogya) like Soeharto, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, and now Joko Widodo. Compare to aggressive Soekarno from East Java, very different.

Even Obama learn political manner from Javanese as well.........:toast_sign:

Look the thumps...

_63689753_obamathumb2getty.jpg


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Obama from Java
Edward L Fox

Barack-Obama-at-school-in-008.jpg

Barack Obama (circled) in a group photo during a graduation ceremony at the SDN Menteng 1 school he attended as a child in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photograph: AP

Like a lot of people in the autumn of 2012, I watched the TV debates between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. It was the last big performance in that interminable US presidential election campaign.

Every now and then, as Obama did verbal battle with his adversary, I noticed something I didn't expect to see. It was a gesture he made with his hand: for emphasis, he would point at Romney with his thumb. I wasn't the only one to have seen this. In a short piece on the BBC website, a reporter wrote:

"Featured in the three presidential debates were Romney, Obama, and Obama's thumb. At the debates, the president frequently jabbed his hand, with his thumb resting atop a loosely curled fist, to emphasise a point. The gesture – which might appear unnatural in normal communication – was probably coached into Obama to make him appear more forceful … And pointing the index finger is simply seen as rude and too aggressive."

But I'd seen this gesture before, and Obama hadn't learnt it from a debating coach. Whether consciously or not, he was revealing his boyhood in the Indonesian island of Java, where it is considered impolite to point with your index finger. Seeing Obama point with his thumb in the debates confirmed something I had suspected for some time. Whatever else he might be, Obama is America's first Javanese president.

Some time ago, I devoted a significant period of time and study to the traditions of Javanese kingship. I was writing a book called Obscure Kingdoms (1993) about traditions of kingship in non-western societies, and I spent a period of time in Indonesia. One of the book's chapters was about kingship in Java and, in the course of my research, I had become well-acquainted with a certain Javanese mannerism. I was struck to see that mannerism once again, uncannily echoed by Obama during the televised US presidential debates.

Unlike most political analysts, I see the imprint of Java in Obama far more than the imprint of Hawaii (where he was born and later went to high school); more than the imprint of Chicago (where he began his political career); and certainly more than Kenya (a highly popular notion that is particularly far-fetched). Indeed, it was in Java that Obama spent his childhood, had his primary education, and where his mother made her career. It was the country where his stepfather and his half-sister were born, and which he visited several times in his early adulthood. Obama still speaks some Indonesian.

Considerable time and energy has been spent speculating and theorising about Obama's Kenyan background. There is a ridiculous book called The Roots of Obama's Rage (2011) by Dinesh D'Souza. It's a piece of popular controversialism which suggests that the key to understanding Obama – as a man and as a president – lies in his Kenyan background. Obama's father, whom he barely knew, was a government economist in the early days of Kenyan independence. D'Souza argues that Obama inherited his father's Kenyan anticolonial mindset, and that this is what motivates Obama politically and informs how he sees the world.

Naturally, the idea caught on in the loony blogosphere, and as a result, there are now millions of people in America who hold the view that Obama's political approach is somehow "Kenyan", and that by the end of Obama's term of office, the US will be governed according to a pernicious form of Kenyan socialism.

It's true that Obama has written comparatively little about his time in Java in either of his books. His first autobiographical book, Dreams from My Father (1995), is principally about his search for Barack Obama Sr's Kenyan roots. In fact, he only went to Kenya to research this book. The search for his African roots was important to him in his journey of self-discovery and self-invention, a process that was completed in his adoption of African-American cultural and social identity, and his choice of the black neighbourhoods of Chicago as the place where he began his political career.

More you can see from this site :

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/feb/05/obama-from-java
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom