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Last time the Immigrants went on a Nationwide STRIKE
It set in motion Immigration reform which is YET to be completed

2006 United States immigration reform protests - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The top issue is immigration.

Coming into a country is a privilege, not a right. Never has been a right. It is not just about US, but about ANY country. It does not matter if there is a passport or visa system or not. If there is an internationally recognized border system then it is a privilege to cross any border into any country.

Below the issue of immigration is the issue and problem of the legality of access. It means if a country and its people deems it necessary to permit some and deny others access, then how is that permit executed and how to enforce said permission. No matter how flawed the US immigration process, it is still a privilege to come into the US and this is where it is convenient to make ignorant comments about the US just to insult US.

So far, no one has the courage to answer the simple issue/question: Why is it wrong for the US to have legal and illegal immigration status?
 
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So far the best GOP debate.

4th Republican GOP Debate Nov. 10th 2015
 
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Why some conservatives say Trump talk is fascist

By MJ Lee, CNN Politics Reporter
November 25, 2015

(CNN)Conservative warnings about Donald Trump have grown increasingly somber. At first he was just an entertainer; then he became a worrisome distraction, and soon, there was fear that he would permanently scar the reputation of the Republican Party.

But it was after Trump started calling for stronger surveillance of Muslim-Americans in the aftermath of the Paris terrorist attacks that a handful of conservatives ventured to call Trump's rhetoric something much more dangerous: fascism.

Since launching his campaign this summer, the billionaire real estate magnate has regularly deployed inflammatory rhetoric about immigrants -- particularly regarding Latinos -- and repeatedly raised the alarm about foreigners entering the country. That has escalated following the series of shooting rampages and explosions in Paris this month allegedly perpetrated by ISIS and amid a nationaldebate over accepting Syrian refugees.

Most striking has been Trump's aim at Muslims in the United States. He's been widely denounced for claiming that people in New Jersey — a state with "large Arab populations," he said — cheered after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. That, coupled with his seeming endorsement of a national registry to track Muslims in the country, has sparked a new level of condemnation from conservatives already on edge about Trump's endurance.

"Trump is a fascist. And that's not a term I use loosely or often. But he's earned it," tweeted Max Boot, a conservative fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who is advising Marco Rubio.

"Forced federal registration of US citizens, based on religious identity, is fascism. Period. Nothing else to call it," Jeb Bush national security adviser John Noonan wrote on Twitter.

Conservative Iowa radio host Steve Deace, who has endorsed Ted Cruz, also used the "F" word last week: "If Obama proposed the same religion registry as Trump every conservative in the country would call it what it is -- creeping fascism."

Even one GOP presidential hopeful -- albeit a little-known candidate barely registering in the polls -- has used this language. In an interview with Newsmax TV on Friday, former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore said Trump's immigration policies, including the idea of creating a "deportation force" to remove undocumented immigrants from the country, amounted to "fascist talk."

Opinion: A Donald Trump presidency? Yikes

The fresh accusations of fascist behavior are extraordinarily charged -- the term is often equated with Nazism. The use of such a loaded word marks one more step in the evolution of the establishment's view of Trump, from a political clown to something much more malevolent and dangerous.

Donald Trump vs. the Republican establishment

And it also reflects an increasingly visible and acute level of frustration and disbelief about Trump within the GOP, as Republicans view Trump's candidacy as an explosive mixture of economic populism with strongman personality politics. While it's unclear whether Trump is motivated by any coherent political philosophy, it's hard to recall another recent presidential candidate who has campaigned so openly on solving problems by sheer personal will.

Jindal: Trump is a madman who must be stopped

The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment. Boot and Deace couldn't be reached for comment, and a Bush spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on behalf of Noonan.

Academics who study fascism say that while Trump seems to have an authoritarian sensibility, his behavior doesn't meet the dictionary definition of fascism. The term describes an overtly anti-democratic movement that suppresses all opposition as a way to fulfill political goals, and a fascist leader is a dictator that wishes to exercise complete control, even by condoning violence.

Scholars of fascists like Benito Mussolini in Italy and Adolf Hitler in Germany (none of Trump's conservative critics have compared him to either man) say, however, that Trump does display some of the key characteristics of a fascist. His comments about a national registry for Muslim-Americans, together with his propensity to stir up anti-immigrant and xenophobic sentiments among his supporters, amount to a perception of hostility toward ethnic and religious minority groups.

Obama on Trump's immigration plan: 'That's not who we are as Americans'

"The most recent comment he said about creating a national registry of all Muslims -- that's very dangerous," said Steve Ross, a professor of history and scholar of fascism at the University of Southern California.

Ross, who proposes the label "right-wing bully" for Trump, said he can certainly understand why the question has come up. "You're talking about an American government that would move towards the persecution of citizens and people living within its own country," he said. "That is why people are saying, 'Gee, if you follow this through, it's fascism.' "

Opinion: Donald Trump's horrifying words about Muslims

"Fascism sometimes becomes an attribute to describe someone that is intolerant or totalitarian or even racist," said Federico Finchelstein, an expert on fascism at the New School who said Trump is better described a populist. "When dealing with an important part of the nation such as Hispanics, I think he definitely fits those categories."

When a reporter asked Trump last week how a national database of Muslims would be different from the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany, Trump responded: "You tell me."

Opinion: Donald Trump's bizarre statements

Historians say they see other characteristics of fascism in Trump in addition to his propensity for racial and ethnic stereotyping. Among them: nativist undertones, attempts to control the media; and even condoning violence against his critics.

At a Trump campaign rally in Birmingham, Alabama, a black protester was physically attacked by a handful of Trump fans in the crowd. Video captured by CNN shows the man being shoved to the ground, punched and at one point even kicked. The next day, Trump drew fierce backlash when he said that perhaps "he should have been roughed up."

The sentiment was then echoed by Trump's senior counsel Michael Cohen. "Every now and then an agitator deserves it," Cohen said on CNN's "New Day" Tuesday morning.

Ross said the incident illustrates behavior that is only steps removed from fascism.

Opinion: Donald Trump, media manipulator in chief

"We had the same thing happening in Germany in the 1920s with people being roughed up by the Brownshirts and they deserved it because they were Jews and Marxists and radicals and dissidents and gypsies — that was what Hitler was saying," Ross said. "I'm not saying Trump is Hitler, but the logic of condoning violence against those who oppose you -- you can imagine, a man who would condone it as a candidate -- what would he do as an official president?"

Trump's interactions with the media — in particular, his attempts to shut out reporters critical of his campaign —have also shown authoritarian tendencies.

Donald Trump bars Univision reporters because of lawsuit

The businessman regularly lashes out at reporters who give unfavorable coverage, and his campaign has denied credentials to journalists as retribution. Trump has more than once boycotted appearing on Fox News, in protest of what he has deemed unfair treatment.

"What they expect from the media is praise. This is another element in this character and in other leaders of this type, which is that they are extremely messianic and narcissistic," said Finchelstein. "Whatever they see, they see as a personal attack against them."

History professor Robert Paxton of Columbia University, who has studied the rise and spread of fascism, said he would not call Trump a fascist. But Paxton also said he can understand why some people might be inclined to point out similarities between Trump and fascist leaders.

"He's good at making astonishing speeches that make people sit up and take notice. So there's some of that manipulation of public emotions that is visible with Trump," Paxton said. "Hitler and Mussolini -- no one had ever seen public rallies like the meetings they'd have. People were absolutely mesmerized."
 
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The Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is seen in the video mocking disabled New York times reporter. I can’t believe he is a Republican front-runner, this man is absolutely disgusting.

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GOP wrestles with prospect of Trump-led ticket

Democrats smell opportunity as Republicans in House and Senate races consider the once-unthinkable prospect of the billionaire businessman as party nominee.

By Ben Schreckinger and Kevin Robillard 12/03/15

MANASSAS, Va. — Among signs waved by Latino, labor and Black Lives Matter protesters outside of Donald Trump’s rally here Wednesday night was one targeting a local congresswoman: “Trump & Comstock: Respect Women,” read a placard hoisted by an organizer for NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia.

The Trump phenomenon is increasingly spilling over from the Republican presidential primary it has already upended and into House and Senate races, where Democrats smell opportunity and Republicans are beginning to ponder the once-unthinkable prospect of a 2016 GOP ticket led by the billionaire businessman as nominee.

On Wednesday, a memo surfaced from the National Republican Senatorial Committee that envisioned Trump as the party nominee and advised its candidates to embrace some of Trump’s themes and traits while denouncing some of his “wacky” and politically radioactive comments. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, meanwhile, is stepping up its efforts to tie Republican House candidates to the current front-runner for their party’s nomination. That includes instructing the committee’s opposition researchers to look for comments made by Republican candidates about immigrants, women and other groups that say that Trump’s rhetoric and can be used to paint them with the same brush, according to a DCCC official.

“Even when House Republicans do not mimic his hateful rhetoric directly, the DCCC advises campaigns to draw comparisons to House Republican incumbents and Donald Trump because they are part of the same party, with shared principles,” the official said.

The move to Trumpify GOP candidates is already underway. In September, a state representative and prominent Democratic Latino surrogate in Colorado authored an op-ed about an incumbent Republican congressman titled, “Mike Coffman paved the way for anti-Immigrant Donald Trump.” In it, State Rep. Joe Salazar charges that “Coffman is alarmingly similar to Trump.”

Keisy Chavez, 44, the NARAL organizer carrying the sign tying Trump to Republican Rep. Barbara Comstock, whose district lies across the street from the Prince William County Fairgrounds where the businessman held his rally on Wednesday night, said she was inspired by the idea of linking Trump’s newfound pro-life leanings and Comstock’s support for requiring transvaginal ultrasounds for women seeking abortions.

She also compared Comstock’s rhetoric on immigration to Trump’s. “They just make comments without taking any precautions,” said Chavez, whose family is from Peru. “She compared us to FedEx packages.”

Last year, speaking about illegal immigration and border security, Comstock said, “FedEx can track packages coming in here all of the time. We can track people who are coming into the country and we can do that right.”

The Trump and Comstock campaigns did not respond to requests for comment.

The Trump effect stands to leave an even bigger imprint on the Senate landscape, where many of the most competitive races next year will take place in presidential battleground states.

“The NRSC memo on Donald Trump shows just how big a problem he’s created for Senate Republicans trying to keep their majority — they know Trump could ruin their already slim chances at reelection, but now they are being told they should strive to be more like him,” DSCC Communications Director Sadie Weiner said. “But embrace him or not, vulnerable Senate Republicans belong to the party of Trump, and no memo can change the fact that his offensive statements and dangerous policies have become the Republican standard. At the end of the day, Republican Senate candidates will be left to answer for Trump whether they like it or not.”

In the spring and summer, when many believed Trump was a passing craze, numerous Republican candidates spoke favorably of the billionaire — quotes Democrats will be eager to resurrect in television advertising and messaging, regardless of whether he wins the nomination or flames out.

New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte held a private, one-on-one meeting with Trump in April. A few months later, Trump said he would consider Ayotte as a vice-presidential pick, calling her “tremendous.” Ohio Sen. Rob Portman also said he talked to Trump about trade issues, an area where “we tend to agree a lot.” Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson has compared himself to Trump, and said Trump reminded him of “what’s appealing about my candidacy here in Wisconsin.” Trump endorsed Rep. Ron DeSantis, who’s running for the GOP Senate nod in Florida, when he first ran for Congress and donated to his campaign two years later. A spokesman for Rep. David Jolly, another Florida GOP Senate prospect, said the congressman was “honored” when Trump copied a health care policy proposal from Jolly.

Democrats have already begun adjusting their rhetoric with Trump in mind. After Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk released an ad attacking Democratic Rep. Tammy Duckworth for supporting allowing Syrian refugees into the United States, a Duckworth spokesman fired back with a statement linking the moderate Republican to the polarizing businessman.

“Like Donald Trump, he’s appealing to base xenophobia, sowing fear of refugees in the midst of one of the largest humanitarian crises of our time,” Duckworth spokesman Matt McGrath said. “His ad is false, and he knows it, but worse yet, it appeals exclusively to fear and the lowest common denominator. He should be ashamed. Illinois deserves better.”

The NRSC memo, written by Ward Baker, the committee's executive director, seeks to identify the traits GOP Senate candidates should emulate — and the aspects of Trump’s political persona that could imperil their campaigns.


“Trump has risen because voters see him as authentic, independent, direct, firm, — and believe he can’t be bought. These are the same character traits our candidates should be advancing in 2016,” Baker writes. “That’s Trump lesson #1.”

At the same time, Baker warns: “We need not be tied to him so closely that we have to engage in permanent cleanup or distancing maneuvers” the next time Trump insults women or immigrants.”


Following the key portion of Baker’s advice — embracing Trump’s stance as honest-speaking outsider — will be easier for some candidates than others. Johnson, a millionaire businessman who self-funded his 2010 run, could adopt much of Trump’s posture. But Portman, who has raised more than $11 million for his Senate bid and has been in Washington since 1993, may have trouble recasting himself as an outsider.

One Republican candidate on the 2016 ballot has already positioned himself as an anti-Trump. Arizona Sen. John McCain, facing a challenge from Democratic Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, has been in multiple scraps with Trump over immigration, McCain’s war service and other matters. McCain has also been frank about the potential risk with Trump as the party nominee.

“Of course, I worry,” McCain said Wednesday morning at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast. “All of us have to worry about the viability of the top of the ticket.”

Theodoric Meyer contributed to this report.




 
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Protests disrupt Trump at ritzy Manhattan fundraiser

By BEN SCHRECKINGER 12/11/15

NEW YORK — Multiple waves of protest disrupted Donald Trump’s speech at a private fundraiser for Pennsylvania Republicans at the upscale Plaza Hotel on Friday, as fallout from the businessman’s call to suspend the entrance of Muslims into the United States spreads.
While hundreds of protesters and curious tourists mingled outside the hotel, several burst into the closed room upstairs where hundreds of Pennsylvania Republicans had paid $1,000-$2,500 a plate for at a state party fundraiser featuring Trump.
After a scuffle in the room, which interrupted Trump’s speech and upended some furnishings, security pushed the protesters, who carried a banner reading, “Islamophobia + Arabophobia are violence,” down a staircase to the ground floor.
There, protesters and police continued their scuffle. One protester fell to the floor twice and as the group was pushed out of the building along with at least two reporters who were caught in the fray.

Back upstairs Jordan Wouk, a New York Democrat, along with his wife and two other protesters who had obtained tickets to the event, stood up and started a separate disturbance by reciting a revised version of German pastor Martin Niemoller’s famous poem about the rise of the Nazi Party, which in one common version begins, “First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out — Because I was not a socialist.” The protesters recited the first few lines of their version, which began “First they came for the Muslims,” before being ejected by security.
As they were being removed, Wouk heard a third protest begin as two women at the event broke out in song.
Inside the room, where few members of Pennsylvania’s Republican donor class count themselves Trump supporters, the sporadic protests worked to the businessman’s advantage. “The protesters actually united the crowd,” said a Republican operative who declined to provide his name. “Because when you have an outside force come in, it gives you something to rally around.”




 
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It’s Cruz, not Trump, who looks more like favorite to win GOP nomination

By Chris Cillizza December 13 2015

The Iowa caucuses are seven weeks away. Donald Trump is still the Republican front-runner. Sen. Marco Rubio is, for now, the establishment’s best (only?) hope. And Sen. Ted Cruz is the guy who looks best positioned to win.

Yes, you heard that right.

Cruz (R-Tex.), as of today, has the most direct route to the Republican presidential nomination — assuming that the past history of GOP nomination fights works as a broad predictor of where the 2016 race is headed.

Let me elaborate.

1. Cruz is positioned as the most conservative candidate in the race. Although Trump gets all the attention for his over-the-top statements, Cruz has staked out a position on the far right on virtually every major hot-button issue, including immigration, Obamacare, national security and the fight against the Islamic State militant group. And, tonally, Cruz comes across as aggressively and unapologetically conservative — a less controversial and more electable version of real estate magnate Trump.

"Republican presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) says he does not agree with fellow candidate Donald Trump's idea to ban Muslims from entering U.S., but says he is uninterested in criticizing the frontrunner. (Reuters)"

A Washington Post-ABC News November poll showed that Cruz’s numbers are in the stratosphere among voters who identify themselves as “very” conservative; 69 percent had a favorable opinion of him while just 21 percent regarded him in an unfavorable light.

In a Republican primary — particularly one in which the GOP electorate is mad at everyone (including those in their own party) for an alleged lack of commitment to conservative principles — being the guy all the way on the ideological right is a very, very good thing.

2. Cruz has raised the second-most money in the Republican race. Bet you didn’t know that! Yes, former Florida governor Jeb Bush is by far and away the fundraising leader in the race. Not only did we know that would be the case, but we also now know that it has done him, roughly, zero good. Cruz’s money, on the other hand, is — or at least was — unexpected.

Cruz’s $65 million raised is all the more impressive because, unlike Bush, who raised the vast majority of his money with the support of his Right to Rise super PAC, Cruz has a relatively even balance between the funds raised for his campaign committee ($26.5 million) and those collected by a universe of supportive super PACs ($38 million). Having so much money in his campaign account means that Cruz will get more bang for his buck, because candidates get the lowest unit rate on TV ad buying while super PACs have to pay full freight for their airtime.

Cruz’s money is also what separates him from other candidates who secured the mantle of “most conservative candidate in the primary.” Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee and former senator from Pennsylvania Rick Santorum won the Iowa caucuses during past campaigns — more on Cruz and Iowa below — but they were unable to capitalize on that win or sustain their support because they had so little money.

Cruz is the best-case scenario for those who want to see a movement conservative nominated: He’s of the conservative movement but has the fundraising ability of an establishment Republican.

3. Cruz is the Iowa front-runner. Recent history makes clear that you need to win one of the first three states — Iowa, New Hampshire or South Carolina — to have a realistic chance of being the party’s nominee. (Remember how well former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani’s “wait until Florida” strategy worked in 2008? Thought so.)


Cruz is emerging rapidly as the favorite in Iowa’s caucuses. Three polls released in the past five days put Cruz at the front of the pack in Iowa — including the influential (and almost always right) Des Moines Register survey, which had the senator from Texas 10 points clear of Trump.

Winning Iowa would give Cruz momentum going into New Hampshire — where he currently sits at third — and into South Carolina, a state, like Iowa, whose Republican primary electorate is quite socially conservative.

4. The calendar beyond the Big 3 favors Cruz. Winning one of the first three states is almost certainly the way a candidate makes it to March. But assuming Cruz can win Iowa (at least), the calendar starts to look very favorable to him beyond February. On March 1, what’s being referred to as the “SEC primary” takes place; Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Tennessee and Texas will vote on that first Tuesday in March.

It’s difficult to handicap how those states might play out because of how much the first three states in the past have influenced who stays in the race and what their poll numbers look like. Still, Cruz’s profile as the one true constitutional conservative in the race, coupled with his Southern roots and his fundraising, should make for an attractive package for voters going to the polls that day.

The next big primary day is two weeks later, on March 15, when Florida, Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio vote. There are less obvious wins in those states for Cruz, but he would almost certainly run well in North Carolina and Missouri under any circumstance and might do well in the other three states depending on who else was left in the contest.

Yes, Cruz has weaknesses — most notably that he has shown little ability to appeal beyond his conservative base and that he is far less likable than, say, Rubio, if it comes down to a one-on-one fight between the two. Rubio of Florida is also trying to make an issue of Cruz’s immigration stance — insisting that Cruz has less of a hard line on the issue than he lets on.

But Trump (being Trump) and Rubio (what early state does he win?) also have problems. And Cruz’s strengths are considerable, particularly when you consider how these races typically play out.

Cruz has begun his ascent up the early state and national polls at just about the right time. (The race will go into deep freeze from around next week through the beginning of 2016.) His campaign is perfectly positioned to make him the last man standing. Believe it.
 
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Poll: Clinton beating Trump, Cruz but not Rubio

By Jeremy Diamond, CNN
December 14, 2015

Washington (CNN)Donald Trump and Ted Cruz havesolidified their positions atop the Republican presidential pack, but their success doesn't bode well for the Republican Party's chances of reclaiming the White House, according to a new poll.

Trump, who's topped GOP national surveys since July, takes a beating against Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, with the former secretary of state claiming 50% to Trump's 40%, according an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released Monday.

READ: National poll: Trump leads; Cruz rises as Carson falls

Cruz is also behind Clinton in a general election match-up -- albeit by a slimmer margin -- as Cruz falling 3 points short of Clinton's 48% support in the poll.

Cruz, a freshman senator from Texas, has inched closer to threatening Trump's front-runner status in the latest NBC/Wall Street Journal poll on the GOP race, taking 22% to Trump's 27%.

Clinton, who continues to lead the Democratic field by 20 points according to the poll, does not fare as well in the general election when matched up against Cruz's colleague in the Senate, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

Rubio, who now sits in third place in the GOP horse race with 15%, would defeat Clinton 48% to 45%, according to the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll.

READ: First on CNN: Rubio hones pitch to "traditional voters"

Rubio performs strongly among independents against Clinton -- 44% to 37% -- and narrows the Democrat's advantage with Hispanics, clinching 36% of that demographic to Clinton's 59%.

And while Ben Carson's stock may be plummeting in the race for the Republican nomination -- he's slipped from once threatening Trump's lead position to a fourth place finish in the latest polls -- the retired neurosurgeon remains competitive with the likely Democratic nominee.

Carson faces a dead heat when matched with Clinton in a hypothetical general election, taking 47% to Clinton's 46%, according to the poll.

The results are based on a survey of 1,000 adults with a margin of error of +/- 3.36 percentage points.





 
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Washington (CNN)Donald Trump and Ted Cruz havesolidified their positions atop the Republican presidential pack, but their success doesn't bode well for the Republican Party's chances of reclaiming the White House, according to a new poll.

Still too early in the process to pay attention to such polls.
 
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12/15/2015 CNN Republican Presidential Debate for 2016 (FULL VIDEO)
 
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