For all I know she personally dismembered someone but it's in paragraph three.
Bahahaha! :D
For all I know she personally dismembered someone but it's in paragraph three.
honestly, it's hard for me to see how any reasonably objective observer could look at his first year and draw that conclusion. the tax bill alone is a money grab for the wealthiest americans.It seems that Trump and his alliance (white hats, patriots in the government) are taking back the country for the people.
What gives you that impression? "They" said he would be impeached a year ago.I'm starting to wonder if he'll be the first president in living memory to not make a full term.
Also where are you getting this from? She just experienced a fire in her home and didn't even tweet to tell people she was all good.Btw, Hillary is apparently quite happy atm.
If that fucking bastard wins, we all hang from nooses!
awesome cop out, man. anyway we are drifting...Depends on the content of the EOs.
^ I know. I'm being a bit trollish really and I apologise to Jess.
However, since D. Trump himself agrees the electoral collage is a disgrace, I guess I have to stand by what I say and suggest he's an illegitimate president, by his own estimation??
Democrats, going back to my husband and even before, but just in recent times going back to Bill and our candidates and then President Obama, have been losing the vote, including white women. We do not do well with white men and we don't do well with married white women," Clinton said.
She went on to say that white women face an "ongoing pressure to vote the way that your husband, your boss, your son, whoever, believes you should."
Much of the political commentary since the presidential election has focused on two groups of party switchers: those who voted for Barack Obama in 2012 and Donald Trump in 2016 and those who voted for Mitt Romney in 2012 and Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Trump voters who previously voted for Mr. Obama are the subject of intense fascination because they are viewed as providing critical insights into the racial and class dynamics that helped determine the outcome of the election. On the other side, many analysts see Romney voters who flipped to Mrs. Clinton as an illustration of how the Democratic Party now survives in significant part by appealing to more upscale voters.
Frustratingly, however, these perspectives play down the importance of a crucial group of disaffected voters: those who voted for Mr. Obama in 2012 but then failed to go to the polls in 2016. Because this group is disproportionately young and black, this erasure is racially tinged.
Our analysis shows that while 9 percent of Obama 2012 voters went for Mr. Trump in 2016, 7 percent — that’s more than four million missing voters — stayed home. Three percent voted for a third-party candidate.
A feminist who suggests women are not able to think for themselves