hypocrisy grows even where the sun don't shine


None of these "gotchas" worked in 2016, his blue collar base simply weren't moved by these memes. Trump openly talked about doing business with China, buying their steel, renting and selling them space in his buildings, taking loans from them, etc....chetak wrote:meanwhile. back at the trump ranch.......
hypocrisy grows even where the sun don't shine![]()
perceptions have changed in 2019anmol wrote:None of these "gotchas" worked in 2016, his blue collar base simply weren't moved by these memes. Trump openly talked about doing business with China, buying their steel, renting and selling them space in his buildings, taking loans from them, etc....chetak wrote:meanwhile. back at the trump ranch.......
hypocrisy grows even where the sun don't shine![]()
He was able to convince them that he did these things as any "smart" businessman would have done.
Only positions have consolidated. Trump is consolidating the white vote in the rest of the US. If 1-2% more whites show up to the polls, it’s game over for the urban naxal party.chetak wrote:perceptions have changed in 2019anmol wrote:
None of these "gotchas" worked in 2016, his blue collar base simply weren't moved by these memes. Trump openly talked about doing business with China, buying their steel, renting and selling them space in his buildings, taking loans from them, etc....
He was able to convince them that he did these things as any "smart" businessman would have done.
Kati wrote:
Wht don'e they import monkeys from India? We can export all the opposition parties ... desi commies, DMK, so one and so forth....
Bart S wrote:Kati wrote:
Wht don'e they import monkeys from India? We can export all the opposition parties ... desi commies, DMK, so one and so forth....
Why insult monkeys?
AFAIK, I think India stopped the export of its Rhesus monkeys to the US decades ago. They were being misused, abused and unnecessarily sacrificed in the name of research. The US can use its own monkeys in the Democratic party. Desi commies, DMK and Islamists are still more loved than American Democrats.Bart S wrote:Kati wrote:
Wht don'e they import monkeys from India? We can export all the opposition parties ... desi commies, DMK, so one and so forth....
Why insult monkeys?
they can get real pakis at 1/10 of the price..real humans for experiments...closely connected genes due to inbreeding too..they can study the closed system very wellKati wrote:Wht don'e they import monkeys from India? We can export all the opposition parties ... desi commies, DMK, so one and so forth....
Grimrepear is coming out of woodwork. China is slowly being put in the front page. JK events need to be looked at in the context of what he says his government power converged towards handling China. If they have to put pressure from eastern front. Indian actions become critical in the western front but I'm not sure India is up for it.vijayk wrote:
Amanat’s comments were made in a Tweet directed at Minnesota representative Ilhan Omar. She wrote, “Ilhan Omar thank you for being an idealistic force full of grace in the midst of such blatant racism, bigotry & hypocrisy peddled by this administration.”
She continued, “I hope America realizes that Islamophobia has been institutionalized & ignored for far too long. We are with you. Keep fighting.”
Amanat has been an outspoken critic of President Trump in the past. Last October, she wished the entire nation could sue Donald Trump for “emotional and psychological abuse.”
Washington Times reporter Doug Ernst also uncovered a number of old tweets from Amanat that she has since deleted. She wrote, “Mexicans, Jews, Muslims, women, native Americans, the environment, science, and KIDS. #StuffTheRepublicansHate #ProbablyMissingThings.”
In another tweet, she wrote responded to the Kumail Nanjiani, a current member of Marvel’s The Eternals. Nanjiana wrote, “You know what? I’ve changed my mind. Diversity is stupid. From now on every person in everything should be brown.” Amanat added her own thoughts to that tweet writing, “That’s the future once we start inter-breeding. Brown will rule. Muhahahaha.”
She also wrote, “One day, we will all be brown. (And NO that does not mean I plan to spread shariah law).”
Amanat has also made sure to inject politics into Marvel Comics. She specifically described how Kamala Khan aka Ms. Marvel would react to meeting President Donald Trump.
“The first thing she would say is that he’s doing such irreparable damage to young Americans, and minorities everywhere. Words and images are really powerful, and these young kids are actually having a perception of themselves that’s not true, and that’s so dangerous. And then she’d probably remind him that his grandfather was an immigrant, I believe, and if he’d had the same type of vitriolic sentiment thrown at him, Trump would not have had the opportunities he’s had, or the success that he’s had. And then she’d probably fly off with the Avengers and save the world from actual bad guys, and prove him wrong about who Muslims really are.”
"The policy change explains that we will not consider children who live abroad with their parents to be residing in the United States even if their parents are U.S. government employees or U.S. service members stationed outside of the United States, and as a result, these children will no longer be considered to have acquired citizenship automatically," USCIS spokesperson Meredith Parker told Task & Purpose on Wednesday, when asked how the policy changes how the government views children of U.S. service members.
"For them to obtain a Certificate of Citizenship, their U.S. citizen parent must apply for citizenship on their behalf," she added. The process under INA 322 must be completed before the child's 18th birthday.
In plain English: Children who are adopted by U.S. service members abroad, and children who are born to service members while overseas who are not yet citizens (such as service members who are green card holders) will not receive automatic citizenship by merely living with their parents who are out of the U.S on orders.
Low self-esteem due to Pakistani origin parents and victim complex of The whole world is against Pakistanis because they are Muslim, perhaps.Early life
Amanat was born into a Pakistani family. She lived with her parents, who were Pakistani immigrants, in a predominantly white New Jersey suburb. Throughout her childhood, Amanat had trouble fitting in and struggled with self-identity. This was because she often saw women who were blonde and white idolized in society while Muslims were often demonized. As a result, she wished to become a pretty white girl. It wasn't until later in her life that Amanat realized that the ideal person is a one who is good at heart.[4]
...Kumail Ali Nanjiani (born February 21, 1978)[1][2] is a Pakistani-American stand-up comedian, actor, podcast host, and writer.
Grinnel is an expensive liberal arts and sciences four-year college in Iowa. This guy's parents are RAPE class, perhaps.He grew up in a religious Shia Muslim family.[5] The Scottish radio presenter Shereen Nanjiani is his second cousin.[6][7][8]
During his childhood, Nanjiani lived in Karachi and attended St. Michael's Convent School for his O Levels, and graduated Karachi Grammar School to complete his A Levels. At 18, he moved to the United States and attended Grinnell College in Iowa, from which he graduated in 2001
Pence accused China of "meddling in America's democracy," in a wide-ranging speech. He also slammed China's militarization of contested areas in the South and East China Sea, its practice of "debt diplomacy" in developing countries, and efforts to convince other nations to sever ties with Taiwan.
Perhaps so and maybe he was influenced by EJ donors. Many EJs have a soft corner for the Chinese as their intention was to proselytize them lock-stock-and-barrel going back to the late 19th century. Little do they know the Chinni has no place for religion as devotion to China comes first and foremost. The Chinni will indulge the EJs to take financial advantage and then push their own agenda. Go talk to some hardcore EJs and you'll find that at some Xtian based colleges in the US, they will suggest that there is no room for the American flag on the premises. They want to harvest as many souls from around the world as they can - knowing pushing US patriotism may be a turn off.darshan wrote:Even though ASU EE graduation pics look very brown, I don’t believe that Crow would have gone to that length for Hindu Indian students.
The U.S. national-security system was created in the aftermath of World War II. President Franklin Roosevelt, who called himself a “juggler … perfectly willing to mislead and tell untruths it if helps win the war,” led that massive effort with a handful of aides and by the seat of his pants. But that ad-hoc style worried many in Washington—and most of Congress, the military brass, and the rest of government agreed it was no way to govern in a postwar world. So, Congress created the National Security Council in 1947, bringing everyone into one room for discussions, and a few years later, the White House established the position of national security adviser to coordinate the conversations.
That system evolved over seven decades, but its overarching aim remained consistent: providing a coherent policymaking process for a nuclear-armed superpower, that could replace seat-of-the-pants improvisation. Such policy integration did not ensure perfect order in Washington, much less that the choices it made were always right, as a review of the minutes of National Security Council meetings about Vietnam, Iraq, and other crises make clear. But such regular order, a predictable rhythm and rigor to how the government made decisions, brought some sanity to Washington—and stability to the world.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archi ... wn/597505/President Trump, who lacks any prior experience with government or national security, struggled from the start to find a workable rhythm in this system. Still, leaders in foreign capitals took heart that—despite his ham-handed tweets and incendiary statements—the president was forced to sit in meetings and deal with the questions from his more experienced appointees and Cabinet secretaries. The departure of Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis and others aides, though, has left Trump less constrained: He has begun relying on a shadow National Security Council that includes senators, a retired general, and a television anchor, and his public and private suggestions that the national security adviser no longer speaks for the president have undermined any remaining sense of order.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/ar ... ca/596638/The world changes as we live in it; we’re all part of a pattern that we can glimpse only dimly. Historians in a thousand years will know for sure whether the American empire in this moment was nearing its own late antiquity. Perhaps by then Muncie and South Bend will loom as large in the historical imagination as the monasteries of Cluny and St. Gall do today. The ancient university towns of Palo Alto and New Haven may lie in different countries. In the meantime, we would do well to recognize and, where possible, nurture the “astounding new beginnings” already under way.
Phew! And imagine if that had not been done! US would have been even more full of desi commies.g.sarkar wrote:If I remember correctly, this ban was done by Shri Morarji Desai.
Gautam
Donald Trump has become irritated at an emerging impression his hawkish national security advisers are marching him closer to war with Iran despite his isolationist tendencies, according to people familiar with the matter.
Instead, Trump is signaling his intent to speak with the Iranians as tensions rise in the Persian Gulf, and his national security team has taken steps they hope could facilitate a new diplomatic opening.
As tensions with Iran have escalated over the past week, National Security Council officials close to Bolton were initially dismissive of the need to draw up deescalation options, including during a meeting late last week with State and Pentagon officials.
But in a follow-up session on Wednesday with the same group, those NSC officials were singing a different tune, according to an administration official. Instead, the officials asked the Pentagon to draw up additional deterrence and deescalation options for the President to review, according to an administration official.
Trump denied on Wednesday there was any "infighting" over his Middle East policy. But he reiterated his desire to open talks with Iran, a wish he's been advocating heavily in meetings over the past week.
"Different opinions are expressed and I make a decisive and final decision - it is a very simple process. All sides, views, and policies are covered," he tweeted. "I'm sure that Iran will want to talk soon."
Anti Pak, against talks with Taliban. State department under pompeo is the one pushing for talks with Taliban with Lindsey Graham trying to make Pakis once again the darling of unkil.Gyan wrote:Bolton has been fired. Is it plus or minus for India? Was he pro Pakistan or Taliban or Anti Terrorism?
g.sarkar wrote:If I remember correctly, this ban was done by Shri Morarji Desai.
Gautam
Until 1973, Indian trappers, capturng wild monkeys from forests, farms and villages where the highly adaptable rhesus lives;. shipped some 30,000 a year to this country. Then the quota’ was cut to 20,000. Through 1975 and 1976 the quota was squeezed to 12,000.
Being an experienced person ( I would not say older), I remember clearly this ban enacted by Shri Morarji. If I remember correctly, he came to know that these monkeys were being tortured in order to get cosmetics and medicines approved for the US market and he put a stop to it. That was that. There were some appeals made by the research organizations but he was adamant.Vayutuvan wrote:g.sarkar wrote:If I remember correctly, this ban was done by Shri Morarji Desai.
GautamNo, it was the doing of Indira Gandhi. I am almost certain.
Complete ban was imposed in 1978 during Morarji Desai's govt. Buth cutting down started much before. Here is something from NYT
Export Ban on Monkeys Poses Threat to Research By Boyce Rensberger Jan. 23, 1978Until 1973, Indian trappers, capturng wild monkeys from forests, farms and villages where the highly adaptable rhesus lives;. shipped some 30,000 a year to this country. Then the quota’ was cut to 20,000. Through 1975 and 1976 the quota was squeezed to 12,000.