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@marcus Please try to keep it about the topic and not about any other user personally.
but all the Trump haters overlook it because they are literally whacking off to hate every day. They are addicted to their daily masturbatory hate.
What you consider as hate is disdain for his childish and stupid behavior.
@Patrick. It's your prerogative to support Trump or any other schmuck. What you consider as hate is disdain for his childish and stupid behavior. and his policies ( or which we differ a lot)
Patrick says@marcus What primarily drives support for Trump is the relentless hate for Trump in the press regardless of what he does.
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I fixed it Patrick.
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So how do you like 105 and 109 now ?
Tim Aurora saysWhat you consider as hate is disdain for his childish and stupid behavior. and his policies ( or which we differ a lot)
not about the other users personally.
Okay, deal. You're not talking about me here, and I'm not talking about you when I say Trump cultists above. Or am I ?
sometimes it's more ego and desire to be right than it is grounded in reality
The Trump haters do indeed seem to get a weird almost sexual pleasure out of hating him. (No use of "you" or "your" there, not talking about you. Trying to be general.)
It's kinda basic psychology, but all the Trump haters overlook it because they are literally whacking off to hate every day. They are addicted to their daily masturbatory hate. And this is a huge benefit to Trump, who looks much better with this kind of nutty opposition than he would otherwise.
he really is a terrible and dangerous President
Maybe what liberals really do hate is the "fuck you" aspect Trump supporters repeatedly admitted to having when electing a President becasue going to do a lot (even some really bad stuff - such as with the environment)
we had to choose between a sociopath and a reality show playboy
“So, supposing when we hit the body with a tremendous, whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light, and I think you said that hasn’t been checked, but you’re going to test it. And then I said supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way. And I think you said you’re going to test that too. Sounds interesting. And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute, one minute. And is there a way we can do something like that by injection inside or almost a cleaning? Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs, so it’d be interesting to check that, so that you’re going to have to use medical doctors with, but it sounds interesting to me. So, we’ll see, but the whole concept of the light, the way it kills it in one minute. That’s pretty powerful.”
NYC Poison Control Sees Uptick In Calls After Trump's Disinfectant Comments - NPR
No, Don't Inject Disinfectant: Outcry Over Trump's Musing - U.S. News & World Report
Trump's disinfectants for coronavirus remarks show the danger in his disdain for experts - NBC News
Trump wonders if injecting bleach kills coronavirus, but Cristina Cuomo bathes in it - Los Angeles Times
Injections of Bleach? Beams of Light? Trump Is Self-Destructing Before Our Eyes - New York Times
Let's talk about specific Trump policies. Which of his policies are you opposed to?
But a reality show playboy with a plan for America to escape dependency on China and to stem the flood of illegals.
There is a difference between reporting facts that make Trump uncomfortable, or reporting the opinions of Trump critics, and calling him stupid, uninformed, vain, petty, irresponsible, and self-obsessed. By crossing that line, the Times is erasing the distinction between reporting and advocacy.
Maybe that's for the best. There is nothing wrong with advocacy or opinion journalism (I do it all the time!), as long as it is intellectually honest and explicitly identified as such. The subtler forms of bias that were apparent in news coverage by the Times long before Trump was elected—manifested in decisions about which facts to include or omit, which sources to quote, and which angles to emphasize—are more insidious and therefore more misleading.
Readers may be better served by a newspaper that is open about its prejudices and does not pretend that it aspires to anything like objectivity, which was always an impossible standard to meet, or even balance. But if that is the route the Times chooses, it must abandon the notion that what it does is fundamentally different from what Fox News does, and its "reporters" can hardly object when Trump publicly describes them as political opponents.
Gary Lenius died March 22 when his wife, Wanda, said she served him a mixture of soda and the chemical, typically used to clean fish tanks, after hearing President Trump tout it as a potential cure for the deadly global pandemic, the Washington Free Beacon reported Tuesday.
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For each lie, distortion, and omission, there should be:
1. an archived quote with a screenshot or transcript in the case of NPR
2. proof of the lie, distortion, or omission with references others can check
3. an explanation of how the lies, distortions, and omission further the globalist agenda of impoverishing US citizens by outsourcing their jobs and insourcing illegals
It would require dedicated people working full time, because the mainstream media produces lies, distortions, and omissions at such a great rate. So funding is an issue, but perhaps could be covered by advertising, donations, and subscriptions.