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Trump is a bad choice for Muslim living in USA and Hillary is a bad choice for Muslim all around the world. This lady loves wars and she supported wars in past.
Election 2016; people will avoid talking about in future.
Disagree with you, in an interview, Trump said, “I think Islam hates us.”, (Dog whistle, code words) in other words, he is saying all Muslims hate the US, he has also said he’ll use nuclear weapons against the ISIS, now imagine that, to kill one terrorist he will not hesitate to kill thousands of innocent Muslims and he even has a problem with the Quran.

If he becomes the President, it will be a wonderful day for the terrorist and the US haters, his outrageous sweeping statements will play right into the hands of those who hate us and will isolate us in the Muslim world and that of course will benefit his good friend, Putin.
 
Disagree with you, in an interview, Trump said, “I think Islam hates us.”, (Dog whistle, code words) in other words, he is saying all Muslims hate the US, he has also said he’ll use nuclear weapons against the ISIS, now imagine that, to kill one terrorist he will not hesitate to kill thousands of innocent Muslims and he even has a problem with the Quran.

If he becomes the President, it will be a wonderful day for the terrorist and the US haters, his outrageous sweeping statements will play right into the hands of those who hate us and will isolate us in the Muslim world and that of course will benefit his good friend, Putin.
so what's your point, nobody should criticize any aspect of Islam because it'll make the jihadis angry ? Trump is not PC but he's raised some valid points, spl from a national security perspective for the US.

"he has also said he’ll use nuclear weapons against the ISIS"
:rolleyes::rolleyes:

"kill thousands of innocent Muslims...."
:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

"If he becomes the President, it will be a wonderful day for the terrorist "
:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

"benefit his good friend, Putin."
nothing wrong with proposing a détente with Russia, the world will sleep a lot better if the 2 biggest nuclear powers can find common ground, get along, and aren't involved in a proxy war in the middle east.




crooked hillary clinton = more jihad, terror, chaos and proxy war in the middle east, Trump = common sense pragmatism, trade deals, don't support jihad.
 
Editorial
Hillary Clinton would make a sober, smart and pragmatic president.

Right

Hillary Warcrimes.jpg

Hillary Sadistic Meme.jpg

 

Campaign_2016_Trump-33931-1685.jpg

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. (Evan Vucci/Associated Press)​


By Peter Navarro and Wilbur Ross September 23
Peter Navarro is a business professor at UC-Irvine. Wilbur Ross is an international private equity investor. Both are senior policy advisers to the Trump campaign.

From 1947 to 2001, the U.S. gross domestic product grew at an annual, inflation-adjusted rate of 3.5 percent. Since 2002, average real GDP growth has plummeted to 1.9 percent annually. This fall from strong growth is the taproot of the nation’s current woes.

Despite a recent jump, real median household income remains below its 1999 peak. Some 43 million Americans suffer in poverty. The headline 4.9 percent unemployment rate sounds good — until you factor in missing and discouraged workers. Astonishingly — and disgracefully — nearly one in six men ages 18 to 34 are in jail or out of work.

Hillary Clinton’s economic plan would not improve this anemic growth or heal other economic ills. It would raise taxes, increase regulation, and impose further restrictions on fossil fuels that would significantly raise energy and electricity costs. Clinton would also perpetuate trade policies she helped craft that have led to chronic and debilitating trade deficits. All this points in the wrong direction.

Even Clinton’s centerpiece stimulus plan is growth-inhibiting. It would tax businesses to fund a highly leveraged national infrastructure bank. This approach would shift funds from the more efficient private sector to a less efficient government bureaucracy and introduce high-risk, subprime lending to the government.

Trump asks supporters if they understand what he says about NAFTA
Play Video1:06
At a rally in Toledo, Sept. 21, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump asked his supporters if they understood what he said after criticizing the North American Free Trade Agreement. (The Washington Post)
In sharp contrast, Donald Trump’s plan is growth-inducing. It would cut taxes, reduce regulations, remove restrictions on energy development and eliminate our debilitating trade deficit. As growth rapidly accelerated, Trumpnomics would generate millions of additional jobs and trillions of dollars in additional income and tax revenue.

Every nation’s GDP is driven by four components: consumption, government spending, investment and net exports (what we sell vs. what we buy). The United States’ structural economic problems are primarily focused on the investment and net exports growth drivers and associated “offshoring drag” and “trade deficit drag.”

For example, when Ford offshores new production facilities to Mexico, that both boosts the Mexican economy and reduces investment in this country, subtracting from future economic growth. That’s offshoring drag.

[Trump is right about violent crime: It’s on the rise in major cities]

U.S. factories are being “pushed” offshore because of the high corporate tax rate and burdensome regulatory environment. They are “pulled” offshore by unfair trade practices such as undervalued currencies and unequal tax treatment by the World Trade Organization.

Trump’s plan would realign corporate incentives so that it would be more profitable to invest in the United States. Cutting the high corporate tax rate, reducing unnecessary regulation and cracking down on trade cheating would make U.S. corporations competitive on domestic soil.

The Trump plan would also eliminate “trade deficit drag.” Net exports are currently running at a negative $500 billion annually, a direct subtraction from growth.

Trump rejects 'globalism' in economic speech
Play Video1:14
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said during a speech on the economy on Sept. 15 in New York that policies of "globalism" have resulted in job losses in the U.S. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)
Trump would eliminate the trade deficit not just by cracking down on currency manipulation, intellectual property theft and other mercantilist cheating. He would also negotiate new deals and renegotiate bad deals, such as NAFTA, according to the Trump trade doctrine: Any deal must increase growth, reduce the trade deficit and strengthen the manufacturing base.

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As a poster child of how not to negotiate, there is Clinton’s 2012 South Korea deal. As secretary of state, she promised us 70,000 new jobs. Instead, we have lost 75,000 jobs, and our Korean trade deficit has nearly doubled.

Beyond trade, America’s Gulliver economy is also being tied down by thousands of Lilliputian regulations. The Office of Management and Budget and the Heritage Foundation estimate a cost burden approaching $2 trillion annually. The Competitive Enterprise Institute calculates an annual “hidden tax” of “nearly $15,000 per U.S. household.” Despite these exorbitant costs, the Obama administration issued more than 3,300 final rules and regulations in 2015, about a thousand more than the prior year.

Trump promises a moratorium on all new regulations not compelled by Congress or public safety and an urgent agency-level regulatory review. He would also lift restrictions on U.S. energy production and streamline permitting for infrastructure projects. This would lower energy costs, reduce our imports and spur growth.

As our economy grows faster and millions of Americans go back to work, tax revenue would rise, safety net payments would fall and the Trump plan would travel along a fiscally responsible path that achieves revenue neutrality. We conservatively estimate a more than $2 trillion revenue boost from Trump’s trade, regulatory and energy reforms alone — a significant offset to the revenue reductions from his tax cuts.

Trump’s detractors insist that the United States’ days of rapid growth are over. Such defeatism defies the American spirit and ignores the bad tax, trade, regulatory and energy policies now shackling the U.S. economy. It’s time that a president set this nation’s economy free.
 
A glimpse of the future, imagine how worse it will be if the madman becomes the President. And that’s why I support Hillary, even with all her shortcomings, she is far better than the madman.



Anti-Muslim attacks up 78%

Rise in violence linked to Donald Trump's rhetoric

Hate crimes against American Muslims have soared to their highest levels since the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, according to data compiled by researchers, an increase apparently fueled by terrorist attacks in the United States and abroad and by divisive language on the campaign trail. The trend has alarmed hate crime scholars and law-enforcement officials, who have documented hundreds of attacks — including arsons at mosques, assaults, shootings and threats of violence — since the beginning of 2015. While the most current hate crime statistics from the FBI are not expected until November, new data from researchers at California State University found that hate crimes against American Muslims were up 78 percent over the course of 2015. Attacks on those perceived as Arab rose even more sharply. Police and media reports in recent months have indicated a continued flow of attacks, often against victims wearing traditional Muslim garb or seen as Middle Eastern.

Some scholars believe that the violent backlash against American Muslims is driven not only by the string of terrorist attacks in Europe and the United States that began early last year, but also by the political vitriol from candidates like Donald Trump, who has called for a ban on immigration by Muslims and a national registry of Muslims in the United States. "We're seeing these stereotypes and derogative statements become part of the political discourse," said Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at the San Bernardino campus. "The bottom line is we're talking about a significant increase in these types of hate crimes." He said the frequency of anti-Muslim violence appeared to have increased immediately after some of Trump's most incendiary comments.

The latest major episode of anti-Muslim violence came last weekend, when an arsonist on a motorcycle started a fire that engulfed the Islamic Center of Fort Pierce, Fla., where Omar Mateen — the gunman in the June massacre at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando — had sometimes prayed.

Police, who called the attack a tragedy for the community, arrested a man who had criticized Islam in social media postings. The arson, along with an earlier assault on a congregant outside the mosque and other episodes there, have left worshippers scared, said Mohammed Malik, 43, a businessman who has attended the mosque for nearly a decade. "There is a lot of negative rhetoric," he said. "The negative rhetoric is causing the hate, and in turn the hate is causing the violent acts." The new study from Levin's nonpartisan group, based on official police reports in 20 states, estimated that there were about 260 hate crimes against Muslims nationwide in 2015. That was the most since the record 481 documented hate crimes against Muslims in 2001, when the Sept. 11 attacks set off waves of crimes targeting Muslims and Middle Easterners, Levin said. The huge increase last year was also the biggest annual rise since 2001, he said. The rise came even as hate crimes against almost all other groups — including blacks, Hispanics, Jews, gays and whites — either declined or increased only slightly, his study found. One exception was hate crimes against transgender people, which rose about 40 percent. An advance copy of the study was provided to The New York Times.

The statistics almost certainly understate the extent of the problem, researchers say, because victims are often reluctant to report attacks for fear of inflaming community tensions, and because it is sometimes difficult for investigators to establish that religious, ethnic or racial hatred was a cause. In the killing last year of three Muslim students in Chapel Hill, N.C., for instance, authorities did not bring hate crime charges against a neighbor who is charged with murdering them, despite calls from Muslims who said there were religious overtones to the violence. Police said that a parking dispute, not bigotry, may have led to the killings.

Sometimes, the evidence is more clear-cut. "I hate ISLAM!" a former Marine named Ted Hakey Jr. wrote to a friend on Facebook after November's terrorist attacks in Paris. Hours later, in a drunken rampage, he fired a high-powered rifle four times into the mosque next door to his Connecticut home. Link


@Arsalan @anon45 @Anubis @Desertfalcon @F-22Raptor @gambit @LA se Karachi @Moonlight @Mugwop @saadee @Syed.Ali.Haider @Taygibay @XenoEnsi-14



Yep it's all Trumps fault. Everything is his fault. It's sad how desperate Hilary supporters are getting. The lows you will stoop to is amazing.

Attacks on Muslims in Europe are Trumps fault to?....yea...ah, do you actually genuinely believe that?



You think it might have something to do with Muslims beheading priests in churches as well as rugular people in the streets? While screaming Alllahhhh akbaaarrrrr!!! Maybe it might have something to do with gunning down cartoonists, maybe shooting at people in concerts? Perhaps it ls because Muslims have placed explosives at airports and concerts, subways and marathons. Maybe blowing up airliners over Egypt? Could be be truck raming pedestrians?


No it can't be anything of those things which cause anti Muslim sentiment, must be Trump :lol:




You are forgetting that she threatened to obliterate Iran and suggested going to war over cyber attacks, basically saying she would go to war with Russia and China.

But, according to the Hilary liberals, Trump is the "madman" :lol:
 
Remember to watch the debates! They will very likely define who will be next president of the United States of America!

The first one will be tomorrow! It will be from 6pm to 7:30 pm pt and will likely be the most watched debate in history.

No commercials allowed, and the companies are probably looking on and crying for it. :cry:

http://www.uspresidentialelectionnews.com/2016-debate-schedule/2016-presidential-debate-schedule/

Here is a resource to see any and all presidential debates since the 1960's! Even sorted by specific issues, you can see how America has evolved (or not!) on the topics.
https://www.watchthedebates.org/
 
I was a Democrat all my life. I came to Washington to serve President John Kennedy and Attorney General Robert Kennedy. When the president was murdered and his brother struck off on his own, I joined his Senate campaign and staff as his legislative assistant and speechwriter, until his presidential campaign ended with his own assassination. I ran on a (losing) Democratic ticket in the New York state elections of 1970. When I was working to enact my own program of police reform in the 1980s and 1990s, then-Governor Bill Clinton was chairman of my National Committee for the Police Corps.

This year, I will vote to elect Donald Trump as president of the United States.

So profound a change, and a decent respect for old friendships, requires me to deliver a public accounting for this decision.

Here it is. John and Robert Kennedy devoted their greatest commitments and energies to the prevention of war and the preservation of peace. To them that was not an abstract formula but the necessary foundation of human life. But today’s Democrats have become the Party of War: a home for arms merchants, mercenaries, academic war planners, lobbyists for every foreign intervention, promoters of color revolutions, failed generals, exploiters of the natural resources of corrupt governments. We have American military bases in 80 countries, and there are now American military personnel on the ground in about 130 countries, a remarkable achievement since there are only 192 recognized countries. Generals and admirals announce our national policies. Theater commanders are our principal ambassadors. Our first answer to trouble or opposition of any kind seems always to be a military movement or action.

Nor has the Democratic Party candidate for president this year, Hillary Clinton, sought peace. Instead she has pushed America into successive invasions, successive efforts at “regime change.” She has sought to prevent Americans from seeking friendship or cooperation with President Vladimir Putin of Russia by characterizing him as “another Hitler.” She proclaims herself ready to invade Syria immediately after taking the oath of office. Her shadow War Cabinet brims with the architects of war and disaster for the past decades, the neocons who led us to our present pass, in Iraq, in Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Yemen, in Ukraine, unrepentant of all past errors, ready to resume it all with fresh trillions and fresh blood. And the Democrats she leads seem intent on worsening relations with Russia, for example by sending American warships into the Black Sea, or by introducing nuclear weapons ever closer to Russia itself.

In fact, in all the years of the so-called War on Terror, only one potential American president has had the intelligence, the vision, the sheer sanity to see that America cannot fight the entire world at once; who sees that America’s natural and necessary allies in this fight must include the advanced and civilized nations that are most exposed and experienced in their own terror wars, and have the requisite military power and willingness to use it. Only one American candidate has pointed out how senseless it is to seek confrontation with Russia and China, at the same time that we are trying to suppress the very jihadist movements that they also are attacking.

That candidate is Donald Trump. Throughout this campaign, he has said that as president, he would quickly sit down with President Putin and seek relaxation of tensions between our nations, and possible collaboration in the fight against terrorists. On this ground alone, he marks himself as greatly superior to all his competitors, earlier in the primaries and now in the general election.


Read the rest here: http://www.politico.com/magazine/st...ratic-party-speechwriter-214270#ixzz4LMGdQoNA
 
Bernie Sanders Gives Millennials 4 Big Reasons Why They Should Vote For Hillary Clinton

By Jason Easley on Sun, Sep 25th, 2016

Sen. Bernie Sanders made the choice for millennial voters by listing four important reasons why younger Americans should support Hillary Clinton.



Transcript via Face The Nation:


DICKERSON: Welcome back to the FACE THE NATION. We’re here with former presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders.

Senator, I want to start with millennial voters. They represent now about 30 percent of the voting-age population. That’s about the size of baby boomers. That was a group you were very strong with. Hillary Clinton is having trouble with that group of voters. Why is that do you think?

SEN. BERNIE SANDERS (I), VERMONT: Well, I’m not sure, but I think the antidote is that she has got to make it clear to not only the millennials but every American the difference that she has, not just on personality issues, which is what the media focuses on, but the real issues impacting the middle class and working families of this country.

When you talk about the economy, Donald Trump wants to give hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks to the wealthiest people in this country. Clinton understands that at a time of massive income and wealth inequality, the people on top are going to have to start paying their fair share of taxes.

John, young people are very concerned, appropriately so, about the crisis regarding climate change. Clinton has a pretty strong program which says we have got to transform our energy system away from fossil fuel to energy efficiency and sustainable energies, like wind and solar. You know what Donald Trump’s position is on climate change? He thinks it’s a hoax. And that is really frightening for the future of this planet.

One more really important issue that I think has got to be talked about a whole lot, Clinton has said that she will appoint Supreme Court justices, nominate Supreme Court justices who will overturn this disastrous Citizens United Supreme Court decision which allows people like Sheldon Adelson last week to put $45 million into the political process to buy elections. Billionaires should not be buying elections. Clinton wants to stop that. Trump will appoint more conservatives to the Supreme Court.

In terms of the issue of bigotry, and the younger people are more than any generation I think, John, in American history, are sick and tired of discrimination and racism. On that issue, I think the points of view of Clinton and Trump are pretty clear. Trump is running his campaign, the cornerstone of his campaign is bigotry, is dividing us up. That is certainly very different from what Clinton believes.

So I think if she focuses on the issues, she will do just — really well with the American people and certainly with younger people.

Sanders gave four important reasons why millennials should support Hillary Clinton, the economy, the environment, Citizens United, and her stance against discrimination and racism. I would add Clinton’s free college tuition plan, and her plan to deal with student loan debt as two other very large reasons. Plus, Clinton’s plan on healthcare would make it easier and cheaper to get coverage, while Trump intends to throw Americans under age 25 off of their parents’ health insurance.

There is no contest on the issues for younger voters, and once they see their options side by side on the debate stage, the choice should be an easy one for millennial voters. Sen. Sanders has been true to his word, and his doing his part to help get Clinton elected, but it will be up to the candidate herself to close the deal.





Tonight's presidential debate: start time, schedule, and streaming

By Colin Lecher 9/26/2016

Tonight's presidential debate face-off between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton is expected to be not only one of the most-watched debates in history, but a major television event in its own right. The event will, of course, be a major presence on traditional TV — but if you're a cord-cutter, you'll still have plenty of ways to tune in this time around.

The debate kicks off at 9PM EST tonight at Hofstra University, and will run for a commercial-free 90 minutes. Here's a rundown of where to watch.

Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube
Several web services cut deals this year with traditional broadcasters to bring the debate online, so you have a range of options in how you want to tune in.

Facebook will be broadcasting ABC News' coverage of the event through Facebook Live, and you can expect to see other organizations making their coverage available there as well.


Twitter has similarly partnered with Bloomberg TV for full coverage of the debates, and will make the stream available at debates.twitter.com.

One more option: YouTube, which will provide live-streaming coverage from multiple news organizations. That list includes NBC News, PBS, Fox News, The Washington Post,Bloomberg, and Telemundo, according to the service.

(Not quite a live stream, but Snapchat has also promised to follow along with a Live Story.)


Other streaming options
If, for some reason, you'd prefer another service, you won't have too hard of a time finding a way to watch. Several news organizations have promised to carry live streams of the debate on their websites. Those sites include The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Politico, BuzzFeed, CNN, and The Huffington Post.

TV options
Should you choose the traditional TV route, the debate is streaming on all major TV news networks, including NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox, Fox News, MSNBC, Univision, C-SPAN, and CNN.

Virtual reality
If you want a more (possibly over-) immersive experience for this debate, NBC has also teamed up with Altspace VR to launch a virtual reality stream of the debate. Link
 
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Some are predicting 100 million viewers tonight. Current record is 80 million in 1980 with Reagan vs Carter.
 
Bernie Sanders
crazy Bernie is a spent force, during the primaries he was drawing big crowds, not as big as Trump but still in their thousands, 10K+ on occasion.

stumping for crooked hillary he gets a hundred odd now, nobody likes a sellout.

Some are predicting 100 million viewers tonight. Current record is 80 million in 1980 with Reagan vs Carter.
and tens of millions more globally. :pop:

the total global viewership numbers, including re-runs within 24 hours of the live broadcast to account for people who are inconvenienced by time-zones or other factors and therefore unable to watch it live will probably be a billion lol

the next two will probably be more interesting
 
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