There’s been a lot of fear mongering about the cost of Bernie Sanders’s
health care plan. Time to set the record straight. Cenk Uygur, host of
the The Young Turks, breaks it down. Tell us what you think in the
comment section below.
"Single-payer national health insurance,
also known as “Medicare for all,” is a system in which a single public
or quasi-public agency organizes health care financing, but the delivery
of care remains largely in private hands. Under a single-payer system,
all residents of the U.S. would be covered for all medically necessary
services, including doctor, hospital, preventive, long-term care, mental
health, reproductive health care, dental, vision, prescription drug and
medical supply costs.
The program would be funded by the savings
obtained from replacing today’s inefficient, profit-oriented, multiple
insurance payers with a single streamlined, nonprofit, public payer, and
by modest new taxes based on ability to pay. Premiums would disappear;
95 percent of all households would save money. Patients would no longer
face financial barriers to care such as co-pays and deductibles, and
would regain free choice of doctor and hospital. Doctors would regain
autonomy over patient care.”
Happy Pi Day, where we
celebrate the world’s most famous number. The exact value of π=3.14159…
has fascinated people since ancient times, and mathematicians have
computed trillions of digits. But why do we care? Would it actually matter if somebody got the 11,137,423,895,285th digit wrong?
Probably not. The world would keep on turning (with a circumference
of 2πr). What matters about π isn’t so much the actual value as the idea, and the fact that π seems to crop up in lots of unexpected places.
Let’s start with the expected places. If a circle has radius r, then
the circumference is 2πr. So if a circle has radius of one foot, and you
walk around the circle in one-foot steps, then it will take you 2π =
6.28319… steps to go all the way around. Six steps isn’t nearly enough,
and after seven you will have overshot. And since the value of π is
irrational, no multiple of the circumference will be an even number of
steps. No matter how many times you take a one-foot step, you’ll never
come back exactly to your starting point. Calculating the area of a circle with wedges. Jim.belk
From the circumference of a circle we get the area. Cut a pizza into
an even number of slices, alternately colored yellow and blue. Lay all
the blue slices pointing up, and all the yellow slices pointing down.
Since each color accounts for half the circumference of the circle, the
result is approximately a strip of height r and width πr, or area πr2. The more slices we have, the better the approximation is, so the exact area must be exactly πr2.
Pi in other places
You don’t just get π in circular motion. You get π in any
oscillation. When a mass bobs on a spring, or a pendulum swings back
and forth, the position behaves just like one coordinate of a particle
going around a circle.
Simple harmonic motion is another view of circular motion.
If your maximum displacement is one meter and your maximum speed is
one meter/second, it’s just like going around a circle of radius one
meter at one meter/second, and your period of oscillation will be
exactly 2π seconds. The area of the space under the normal-distribution curve is the square root of pi. Autopilot, CC BY-SA
Pi also crops up in probability. The function
f(x)=e-x², where e=2.71828… is Euler’s number, describes the
most common probability distribution seen in the real world, governing
everything from SAT scores to locations of darts thrown at a target.
The
area under this curve is exactly the square root of π.
Another place we see π is in the calendar. A normal 365-day year is
just over 10,000,000π seconds. Does that have something to do with the
Earth going around the sun in a nearly circular orbit?
Actually, no.
It’s just coincidence, thanks to our arbitrarily dividing each day into
24 hours, each hour into 60 minutes, and each minute into 60 seconds.
What’s not coincidence is how the length of the day varies
with the seasons. If you plot the hours of daylight as a function of the
date, starting at next week’s equinox, you get the same sine curve that
describes the position of a pendulum or one coordinate of circular
motion.
Advanced appearances of π
More examples of π come up in calculus, especially in
infinite series like
1 – (1⁄3) + (1⁄5) – (1⁄7) + (1⁄9) + ⋯ = π/4
and
12 + (1⁄2)2 + (1⁄3)2 + (1⁄4)2 + (1⁄5)2 + ⋯ = π2/6
(The first comes from the Taylor series of the arctangent of 1, and the second from the Fourier series of a sawtooth function.)
Also from calculus comes Euler’s mysterious equation
eiπ + 1 = 0
relating the five most important numbers in mathematics: 0, 1, i, π, and e, where i is the (imaginary!) square root of -1. A graph of the exponential function y=e^x. Peter John Acklam, CC BY-SA
At first this looks like nonsense. How can you possibly take a number
like e to an imaginary power?! Stay with me. The rate of change of the
exponential function f(x)=ex is equal to the value of the
function itself. To the left of the figure, where the function is small,
it’s barely changing. To the right, where the function is big, it’s
changing rapidly. Likewise, the rate of change of any function of the
form f(x)=eax is proportional to eax. The relationship between an angle, its sine, cosine and a circle. 345Kai, CC BY-SA
We can then define f(x)= eix to be a complex
function whose rate of change is i times the function itself, and whose
value at 0 is 1. This turns out to be a combination of the trigonometric
functions that describe circular motion, namely cos(x) + i sin(x). Since going a distance π
takes you halfway around the unit circle, cos(π)=-1 and sin(π)=0, so eiπ=-1.
Finally, some people prefer to work with τ=2π=6.28… instead of π.
Since going a distance 2π takes you all the way around the circle, they
would write that eiτ = +1. If you find that confusing, take a few months to think about it. Then you can celebrate June 28 by baking two pies.
Rachel
Maddow explains the political science behind the classic strongman
political tactic of ginning up political violence in order for a
politician to present that violence as a problem that needs to be
solved.
For the first time since 1932, an American
Presidential campaign presents an opportunity for the public to overthrow the
aristocracy.
The historical significance of the 2016 U.S. Presidential contest isn’t yet
generally recognized.
Consider the evidence regarding this historical
significance, in the links that will be provided here, and from which the
argument here is constructed:
For the first time ever, a Republican campaign ad against Hillary Clinton is
entirely truthful about her and focuses on the most important issue facing
voters:
For the first time since 1932, an American Presidential campaign presents
an opportunity for the public to overthrow the aristocracy.
And, for the first time in U.S. history, a realistic possibility exists
that the voters’ choice between the two Parties’ Presidential nominees might
turn out to be between two enemies of the aristocracy:
Bernie Sanders versus
Donald Trump.
However, if it turns out instead to be between Trump v. Clinton, then what
will be the aristocratic backing of each?
On Clinton’s side will be Wall Street — and this includes the ‘shadow banks’ (the
non-“bank” sellers of what Bill Clinton and the Republicans caused to become
unregulated credit derivatives), from which Hillary Clinton is also
receiving donations, and from which the Clinton Foundation is supported and overseen — along with other Clinton funders).
Clearly, this is the first Presidential contest since 1932 in which the
interests of the aristocracy versus the interests of the public will be
presented to the voters, for them to decide which of the two sides they’re
actually on.
And, if the election turns out to be between Trump versus Sanders, then
this will be the first U.S. Presidential election ever in which both of the
major-Party nominees will have committed themselves to policies (Trump clearly
on foreign affairs, Sanders clearly on domestic affairs) that the aristocracy
vigorously oppose, and that present a severe threat to the aristocrats' continued rule of the country.
Phyllis Schlafly, ancient conservative demon spawn, has announced that she will be attending a Trump rally on Friday afternoon where she will throw her dried husk of bitter hatred behind Donald Trump for president.
That Schlafly is to endorse Trump is no real surprise, as the living fossil has a long history of being as hateful of a conservative as there ever was.
Highlights of Schlafly’s contributions to America include her Nixon-is-too-Liberal revolt in the 1960’s, her strong opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment, her belief that women should first and foremost be housewives, and her opposition to just about any progressive step forward during her lifetime.
Recent comments from Schlafly regarding Trump’s promise to deport millions of illegal immigrants gave early indication that she was supportive of the hateful candidate, but her support of Trump is the only logical conclusion for such a bitter and regressive woman.
Out of seemingly nowhere, the Pangu hacking team has released an
update to its jailbreak tool for devices running iOS 9.1. The tool,
which is available for both Mac and Windows, allows users to jailbreak
the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch. More interestingly, the same team is
promising to release a jailbreak for the 4th generation Apple TV next
week.
Unfortunately, few people will be able to take advantage of this
jailbreak that haven’t already. Why?
Apple stopped signing iOS 9.1 back
in late December, which means that anyone not currently running iOS 9.1
can no longer downgrade or upgrade to that particular version of iOS.
Since many of those who are not jailbroken have since upgraded to newer
versions of iOS, and those that are jailbroken are still running earlier
version of iOS, it limits the scope of potential users.
Pangu acknowledges that the kernel bug used for the 9.1 release was
patched by Apple in iOS 9.2. In other words, it had nothing to lose by
releasing the 1.3 update, and it gave the few users who might still be
running iOS 9.1 an opportunity to enjoy a jailbreak.
On its site, Pangu gave special thanks to Jung Hoon Lee, nicknamed
Lokihardt, a South Korean security expert who’s well-known in hacking
circles. Lee previously won a large bounty in the 2015 Pwn2Own hacking
competition. Pwn2Own is where contestants are challenged to exploit
mobile devices and software using new vulnerabilities.
You can download the Pangu 1.3 tool for iOS 9.1
from Pangu’s official website. The tool only works for iOS 9.1 on
64-bit iOS devices. Earlier iOS 9 versions can be jailbroken on 32-bit
devices using the same tool.
Apple TV 4 jailbreak in the works
Having an iOS 9.1 jailbreak is nice, but the news of an Apple TV 4
jailbreak is much more interesting. On its official Twitter account,
Pangu noted that it will release an Apple TV 4 jailbreak for 9.o.x next
week.
The jailbreak will only include SSH access, so there won’t likely be
any user-friendly GUI based features at the outset. Yet, this is still
very good news, and will open the floodgates for new Apple TV
modifications and enhancements. Remember, the third-generation Apple TV
was never jailbroken, so there’s a lot of pent up demand for a new Apple
TV jailbreak.
Please be aware that jailbreaking come with inherent risks. By
jailbreaking, you’re using a tool created by a team outside of Apple
that exploits security flaws.
That said, I personally choose to accept that risk and I still
jailbreak, although not as often on my daily driver. What about you? For
more details on the current state of jailbreaking, be sure to read our latest State of Jailbreak post.
Casual seafood chain Joe's
Crab Shack is on the receiving end of some extremely bad publicity this
week, and it's well-deserved: A couple who visited a Minneapolis-area
location recently were shocked and disgusted to find a photo of a
lynching displayed on one of the restaurant's tables, reports CBS Minnesota.
Tyrone Williams and Chauntyll Allen sat down at a Joe's in Roseville,
Minn. when they discovered the decorative tabletop had a picture
embedded in it "that depicted two black men being lynched by a white
mob, with the caption next to one of the victims that read, 'All I said
was that I didn’t like the gumbo.'"
According to CBS, the couple did
some brief research while still at the restaurant and found that the
photo depicted a real-life lynching that occurred back in 1896. They
spoke to the restaurant's manager, who apologized but also said that it
was likely other restaurants had similar tables.
In
a press release issued yesterday by the Minneapolis arm of the NAACP,
chapter president Nekima Levy-Pounds said, "This disturbing incident
that occurred at Joe's Crab Shack, demonstrates that racism is still
alive and well in this country. It is sickening to know that someone
would make a mockery of black men being savagely lynched and then use
that imagery for decorative purposes in a restaurant. We demand
accountability of Joe's Crab Shack for allowing racist material to
appear in its restaurants. This is completely unacceptable."
The
group is asking for a public apology from the Joe's Crab Shack
corporate office, and also asking for the "immediate removal of any and
all lynching or otherwise racially-offensive imagery from its
restaurants," as well as "a donation to a local community-based
organization that serves African American youths and teenagers."
Clearly someone on the Joe's design team needs to be fired for this one.
One of the New York City buildings bearing Donald Trump’s name. (Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters)
Keith Olbermann is a news and sports commentator and reporter.
Okay, Donnie, you win.
I’m moving out.
Not
moving out of the country — not yet anyway. I’m merely moving out of
one of New York’s many buildings slathered in equal portions with
gratuitous gold and the name “Trump.” Nine largely happy years with an
excellent staff and an excellent reputation (until recently, anyway) —
but I’m out of here.
I’m getting out because of the degree to
which the very name “Trump” has degraded the public discourse and the
nation itself. I can’t hear, or see, or say that name any longer without
spitting.
Frankly, I’m running out of Trump spit.
And,
yes, I’m fully aware that I’m blaming a guy with the historically
unique fashion combination of a cheap baseball cap and Oompa Loompa
makeup for coarsening politics even though, out of the two of us, I’m
the one who has promulgated a “Worst Persons in the World” list for most
of the past decade. That’s how vulgar this has all become. It’s worse
even than Worst Persons.
This
is the campaign of a PG-rated cartoon character running for president,
interrupting a string of insults the rest of us abandoned in the seventh
grade only long enough to resume a concurrent string of half-crazed
boasts: We’re gonna start winning again! We’re gonna build an
eleventy-billion-foot-high wall! We’re not gonna pay a lot for this
muffler!
All this coarseness is largely masking the truth that
the Trump campaign is entirely about coarseness. Take away the
unmappable comb-over and the unstoppable mouth and the Freudian-rich
debates about genitalia, and there is no Trump campaign. Donald Trump’s
few forays into actual issues suggest he is startlingly unaware of how
the presidency or even ordinary governance works.
Of course that doesn’t preclude his election. A December study
carried out with the University of Massachusetts at Amherst showed that
Trump’s strongest support comes from Republicans with “authoritarian
inclinations.” They don’t want policy, nuance or speeches. They want a
folding metal chair smashed over the bad guy’s head, like in the kind of
televised wrestling show in which Trump used to appear.
And
it isn’t as though the American electorate hasn’t always had a soft
spot for exactly the worst possible person for the presidency. Two
months before the 1864 vote, some Republicans were so thoroughly convinced
that Abraham Lincoln would lose in a landslide that they proposed to
hold a second Republican convention and nominate somebody to run in his
place. The Democrat they feared, George B. McClellan, was not only
probably the worst general in the history of the country, but also his campaign platform
was predicated on stopping the Civil War, giving the South whatever it
wanted, running the greatest president in history out of town and
repudiating the Emancipation Proclamation. Even after the North’s
victory at Atlanta turned the tide of the war and thus the election,
McClellan — anti-Union, anti-Lincoln, anti-victory and pro-slavery —
still got 45 percent of the all-Northern vote.
There
could still be enough idiots to elect Trump this November. Hell, I was
stupid enough to move into one of his buildings. But here in those
buildings, even as I pack, is the silver lining hidden amid the golden
Donald trumpery.
One day Trump appeared in person and, with what
I only later realized was the same kind of sincere concern and respect
that Eddie Haskell used to pay “Beaver” Cleaver’s mother, asked me how I
liked the place and to let him know personally if anything ever went
wrong. About 15 months ago, when the elevators failed and many of the
heating-unit motors died and the water shut off, I wrote him. He sent an
adjutant over to bluster mightily about the urgency of improvements and
who was to blame for the elevators and how there would be consequences,
and within weeks Trump’s minions were obediently and diligently
installing — a new revolving door at the back of the lobby.
That
three-week project stretched past three months, smothered the lobby in
stench and grime, required the repeated removal and reinstallation of a
couple of railings, and for a time created a window frosting problem
even when it wasn’t cold out.
So at least there’s this comfort. If there is a President Trump and he decides to build this ludicrous wall to prevent the immigration from Mexico that isn’t happening, and he uses that same contractor, it’ll take them about a thousand years to finish it.
Fifteen of the 16 negative stories on the Bernie Sanders campaign that the Washington Post ran over a 16-hour period.
In what has to be some kind of record, the Washington Post
ran 16 negative stories on Bernie Sanders in 16 hours, between roughly
10:20 PM EST Sunday, March 6, to 3:54 PM EST Monday, March 7—a window
that includes the crucial Democratic debate in Flint, Michigan, and the
next morning’s spin:
All of these posts paint his candidacy in a negative light, mainly by
advancing the narrative that he’s a clueless white man incapable of
winning over people of color or speaking to women. Even the one article
about Sanders beating Trump implies this is somehow a surprise—despite
the fact that Sanders consistently out-polls Hillary Clinton against the New York businessman.
While the headlines don’t necessarily reflect all the nuances of the text, as I’ve noted before, only 40 percent of the public reads past the headlines, so how a story is labeled is just as important, if not more so, than the substance of the story itself.
The Washington Post was sold in 2013 to libertarian Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, who is worth approximately $49.8 billion.
Despite being ideologically opposed to the Democratic Party (at least
in principle), Bezos has enjoyed friendly ties with both the Obama
administration and the CIA. As Michael Oman-Reagan notes, Amazon was awarded a $16.5 million contract with the State Department the last year Clinton ran it. Amazon also has over $600 million
in contracts with the Central Intelligence Agency, an organization
Sanders said he wanted to abolish in 1974, and still says he “had a lot of problems with.” FAIR has previously criticized the Washington Post for failing to disclose, when reporting on tech giant Uber, that Bezos also owns more than $1 billion in Uber stock.
The Washington Post’s editorial stance has been staunchlyanti-Sanders, though the paper contends that its editorial board is entirely independent of both Bezos and the paper’s news reporting.
With come-from-behind victory, Bernie Sanders has won the Michigan primary. (Photo: Gage Skidmore/flickr/cc)
A potentially 'huuuuge' victory.
Though expectations were met as Hillary Clinton claimed a win by
large margin in the Mississippi primary, the big story of Tuesday's two
Democratic primaries is that Bernie Sanders has achieved an "upset of almost unheard of proportions" by claiming victory in the bellwether state of Michigan.
"The corporate media counted us out. The
pollsters said we were way behind. The Clinton super PACs spent millions
against us across the country. We were hit with a dishonest attack in
the debate.
But we won, again… and if we continue to stand together, we
can win this nomination." —Sen. Bernie Sanders Just after 11:30 PM ET, NBC News
declared it was "projecting" the win for Sanders as returns showed him
leading Clinton by more than 26,000 votes with more than 94% of
precincts reporting. Michigan has 147 delegates, which will be divided
proportionally between the two candidates.
"I want to thank the people of Michigan," Sanders declared in a brief
television interview just after 11 PM. "Tonight, I think the people of
Michigan stood up to the pundits. They stood up to the Establishment.
They stood up to the pollsters. And they said they want an economy that
works for all of us, and not just the people on top."
In a campaign email shortly after, Sanders declared the victory in Michigan as significant:
The results are in and we were just declared the winner
in a very important state for our campaign: Michigan. That’s a major,
game-changing victory for our campaign.
The corporate media
counted us out. The pollsters said we were way behind. The Clinton super
PACs spent millions against us across the country. We were hit with a
dishonest attack in the debate. But we won, again… and if we continue to
stand together, we can win this nomination.
Appearing on MSNBC as it was becoming clear that Sanders was
on the verge of victory, Nina Turner, former State Senator of Ohio and a
campaign surrogate, said the win proves Bernie has a winning agenda
that Democratic voters are responding to and ready to support. "It
really does show that his honesty and his consistency is really taken
hold in the state of Michigan," Turner said.
"He was about twenty percent down last week and in July about fifty
points, so he is really closing the lead," she continued. "And the more
people hear his message—his righteous indignation for the working class
and poor in this nation—and the way that he fought over bad trade deals
that took away manufacturing jobs both in Michigan and in Ohio, people
are really starting to hear his message."
Asked about the implications of the Michigan win and moving forward,
Turner said the campaign's eyes are now on other midwestern states such
as her own, but also larger states like California and New York later in
the primary calendar. "The more that people see he has been
consistent—that he doesn't change his message based on polling, that he
doesn't change his message depending on what audience he's talking to—he
has been a champion of the everyday people and it is starting to
resonate."
Ahead of the official call, Sanders delivered a brief statement to television cameras just before 11:00 PM ET.
"We believe our strongest areas are yet to happen," said Sanders
during "We're going to do very, very well on the West Coast and other
parts of this country. What the American people are saying is that they
are tired of a corrupt campaign finance system and super PAC's funded by
Wall Street and the billionaire class. They are tired of a rigged
economy in which people in Michigan, people in Illinois, people in Ohio
are working longer hours for lower wages; are worried to death about the
future of their kids, and yet all new income and wealth is going to the
top one percent. And the people of America are tired of a broken
criminal justice system in which we have more people in jail--largely
African American, Latino, and Native American--than any other major
country on Earth.
"When we started this campaign," Sanders continued, "we were sixty or
seventy points down in the polls. And yet what we have seen—in poll
after poll; state after state—what we have done is create the kind of
momentum that we need to win. So once again, this has been a fantastic
night. In Michigan we are so grateful for all the support we have gotten
and we look forward to going to Illinois, Ohio, Missouri, and the other
upcoming states that we will be competing in next week."
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License
In an industry that constantly lusts toward the future, the Internet
Archive has once again helped retain tech’s past by announcing that it
has saved more than 500 Apple II programs.
The San Francisco-based non-profit has been doing yeoman’s work for
years now, maintaining everything from historical copies of webpages to
archiving sound and video to digitizing out-of-copyright books. The
program to preserve the catalogue of Apple II programs is yet another
example of this work, and one that provides an important record of the
dawn of the personal computing age.
The actual work of finding and uploading the programs is being done
by a person (or possibly an anonymous collective) who goes under the
name “4am.”
According to a post on the Internet Archive blog, the 4am collection now has passed the 500 program milestone.
In fact, the 4am page now says it has 631 Apple II programs. These are
part of a larger collection of Apple II programs that stands at 3,897 at
the Internet Archive.
But the 4am set is focused on the rarest and hardest to find Apple II programs. As such, users can now experience games like Muppetville, Spy Hunter and Battlezone.
So get ready to relive your childhood or teenage years and watch
hours of your adult life disappear into a black hole of nostalgic
ecstasy.
Megyn Kelly showed why Donald Trump has been so afraid of facing her by completely owning him at the Fox News Republican debate.
Video:
Before the clips rolled, Megyn Kelly said, “Mr. Trump, one of the
things that voters love about you is that they believe you tell it like
it is, but time and time again in this campaign, you have told voters
one thing then reversed yourself in weeks or even sometimes days.”
Kelly used three sets of clips of Trump giving differing statements
on troops staying in Afghanistan, George W. Bush lying about Iraq, and
whether the US should accept Syrian refugees.
Trump described his flip-flopping as being flexible. It is easy to
see why Trump has been avoiding Megyn Kelly. She has owned Donald Trump
during this debate. As bad as the video proof of his flip-flops was,
Kelly’s later destruction of Trump on the Trump University case was
worse. Megyn Kelly did what Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and John Kasich can’t
do. She ate Donald Trump for lunch.
Kelly seems to have Trump’s number, and thanks to her position as the
future of Fox News, she can go after the Republican front runner in a
way that other members of the corporate media are terrified to attempt.
Donald Trump is having a bad night, and Megyn Kelly is a big reason why.
A new poll shows Bernie Sanders is massively more electable than Hillary
Clinton in a general election. It keeps getting better for Bernie in
these national head-to-heads. Cenk Uygur, host of the The Young Turks,
breaks it down. Tell us what you think in the comment section below.
"Either
Democratic presidential candidate could handily defeat Republican
frontrunner Donald Trump in the general election, according to a new
CNN/ORC poll.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton leads
Trump 52 percent to 44 percent among registered voters and Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) leads Trump 55 percent to 43 percent, according to the
poll.
These estimates line up with other polling data -- HuffPost
Pollster's average has shown Clinton and Sanders polling higher than
Trump, although prinmary poll matchups aren't predictive of what will
happen once the general election campaigns start.
But if Sens.
Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) or Ted Cruz (R-Texas) were nominated instead of
Trump, Clinton might face more of an uphill battle, according to the
poll -- Rubio tops Clinton at 50 percent to 47 percent and Cruz slightly
leads 49 percent to 48 percent.
Sanders, meanwhile, holds a
steady lead over all top three Republican candidates in the poll -- 57
percent to 40 percent against Cruz, 55 percent to 43 percent against
Trump, and 53 percent to 45 percent against Rubio.”
Chris Christie has officially endorsed Donald Trump for president. A hot
mic recently caught a short exchange between the two at a rally. Cenk
Uygur and Ana Kasparian, hosts of the The Young Turks, break it down.
"Donald
Trump told Chris Christie to "go home" after the New Jersey governor
introduced the billionaire at a campaign rally in Arkansas on Saturday.
“Get on the plane and go home,” Trump is heard saying to Christie.
Christie
arrived at the rally with Trump via the real estate mogul’s plane. The
two exited the plane in front of a crowd and then Christie introduced
Trump.
After the short introduction, the two shook hands while
Trump leaned in to say something unintelligible. Then, Trump can be
heard telling Christie to get on the plane.
“The implosion over Donald Trump’s candidacy that Republicans had
hoped to avoid arrived so virulently this weekend that many party
leaders vowed never to back the billionaire and openly questioned
whether the GOP could come together this election year,” the Washington Post reports.
“At a moment when Republicans had hoped to begin taking on Hillary
Clinton — who is seemingly on her way to wrapping up the Democratic
nomination — the GOP has instead become consumed by a crisis over its
identity and core values that is almost certain to last through the July
party convention, if not the rest of the year.”
Chris Cillizza: Trump is remarkably dangerous to the Republican party
I'm cool with you removing me from your friends list if you don't
like this post. You can even disown me if you like. But Donald Trump
isn't a good person, nor would he be a good president. I can understand a
difference in politics. I can understand if you don't like a government
run by Democrats.
I can understand if you don't like certain
ideologies, like Socialism. But I can't understand why you would support
someone as hateful, sexist, racist and ignorant as Donald Trump.
How do you support him so blindly? Ask yourself, are you a racist,
sexist, hateful and ignorant person as well? I hear his supporters
saying they like him because he tells the truth, because he's so rich he
can say whatever he feels like with no apologies. Just because Trump
is saying these things doesn't suddenly make them right. It's not okay
to discriminate against an entire religion based on a small percentage
of its followers who have become terrorists by twisting the words of the
religion to fit their crazy ideals. It's not okay to marginalize an
entire race of people, saying things like all the Mexicans are lazy,
that they are all stealing our jobs and bringing drugs into our country.
White people also have bad apples. So does every race of people.
We're all human. Some humans are really bad people. Some are really
good. And it doesn't matter what color they are, it makes no difference
whatsoever. Trump says he is just telling the truth. But whose truth?
There are lazy people in every race and there are dangerous violent
people in every race and every religion. Kicking all Muslims out of the
country is not the answer, nor is it the acceptable behavior of a person
in an extremely powerful position, like the President of the United
States.
The Japanese Internment camps were wrong, Segregation was wrong,
Slavery was wrong. We fought wars among ourselves to rise above racism
and hatred. In WWII more than 60 million people died worldwide. Why?
Because of twisted people who were whipping up the population into a
frenzy and making ridiculous statements, killing innocent people simply
because of their race or religion. The United States lost more than
400,000 lives fighting in that war, against the same ideas that Trump is
pushing. The idea that certain religions are more dangerous than others
and the idea that people should be judged based on the color of their
skin rather than the content of their character.
"They always say it's so important to make your
voice heard, to get out and vote. But I'm not sure if it's ever been
more important than now."
We're still healing from the damage inflicted by the Civil War, WWI,
WWII, Vietnam, Iraq and the War on Terror. And it isn't just ISIS or
Al-Qaeda. It's our own people in this country killing their fellow
countrymen over differences of opinion, like whether or not you believe
abortion is okay or what kind of political ideology you support. And
then there are just the plainly insane people who finally snap and go on
shooting rampages for no discernible reason at all. They just went mad.
The kind of leadership Trump is displaying is irresponsible and
dangerous. His virulent ideas are seeping into the brains of his
supporters. Supporters who think it's okay to say things like "light the
mother fucker on fire" while a protester is being dragged out of one of
his rallies. Maybe the protester was wrong to be where he was at the
time, but no matter what he did, there was no reason to set him on fire.
In fact, there is NEVER a reason to set anyone on fire. Unless it's
because they are dead and they wish to be cremated.
Trump's supporters are angry, and anger is infectious. I can tell you
as a non-supporter of Trump I am just as angry. We need the kind of
leader that seeks to bring us together, not tear us apart. Why do we
have to fight against helping each other, against common sense, against a
united Nation? The American Dream is a nightmare and we are feeding it,
making it worse every day. Trump is a bully, a loud mouth, ignorant,
sexist, racist, disgusting example of how horrible humans can
potentially be.
He is the crazy person at your dinner table who won't stop running
his mouth. The only reason he is allowed to carry on with his ugly
hateful rhetoric is because you have too much respect for Grandma to get
into a fist fight in her home. He's the guy you have to endure until he
leaves, all the while hating every minute that you have to occupy the
same space.
Lucky for us, this isn't Grandma's house, so feel free to
punch him in the mouth in the form of getting out and making your vote
count.
They always say it's so important to make your voice heard, to get
out and vote. But I'm not sure if it's ever been more important than
now. Differences of political ideals are one thing, I can agree to
disagree on many matters across a wide array of topics, but racism isn't
one of them, neither is hate, neither is the belittling of women or the
judgment of others based on their appearance or their disability, or
their sexual preference.
By supporting Trump do you think things will go back to the way they
were? Back when gay people had to hide in fear, back when people of any
other color than white had to worry about getting lynched, back when it
was okay to openly hate? Do you think empowered women will suddenly quit
their jobs and go back to the kitchen ? Because electing Trump won't
make any of that come true.
We're past that as a nation, or at least I
thought we were.
"I can agree to disagree on many matters across a
wide array of topics, but racism isn't one of them, neither is hate,
neither is the belittling of women..."
If you're not a racist, bigoted, misogynistic jerk, then voting for
Trump simply because you don't like Democrats is wrong. If you are one
of his supporters and you're just a racist and you don't care who knows
it then vote for him, but know that the good people of America will not
stand for it and he will never win a fair election. And please consider
pursuing an education and work on your empathy toward your fellow human
beings. Whatever led you to believe that racism is okay can be unlearned
if you open your mind. I'm sorry that you were raised to believe that
you deserve better treatment than the rest of the people on the planet
that have different views than yours, worship different gods than you
and have skin that isn't white.
To all the people, of all the races and religions that Donald Trump
stands against, to all the women that don't meet his standards of
beauty, to all the good Muslims, and Christians, Mormons and Catholics
and Jewish, Italians, Irish and Asians, to the African-Americans and
Native Americans, to anyone who has ever been persecuted, belittled,
made to feel inferior or bullied based on ignorance like the kind that
Trump is spewing, please, I implore you to get out and vote against him.
Don't let the progress of this great nation be halted. We've come too
far.
In this country we FIGHT and DIE for freedom, for Truth and Justice.
We fight for what's right. And what Trump is doing and saying isn't
right. Some have attributed the following statement to Abraham Lincoln*:
"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and
cause me to tremble for safety of my country; corporations have been
enthroned, an era of corruption in High Places will follow, and the
Money Power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working
upon the prejudices of the People, until the wealth is aggregated in a
few hands, and the Republic destroyed."
And he couldn't be more right. Trump IS the one percent, he IS
working on your prejudices, and he WILL destroy the Republic if he is
elected, make no doubt about it.
If you don't believe me, just look at the level of crazy coming out of his own mouth:
"[I am] calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering
the United States until our country's representatives can figure out
what is going on" -- Donald Trump. That's religious discrimination.
"An 'extremely credible source' has called my office and told me that
Barack Obama's birth certificate is a fraud" -- Donald Trump. That's an
outright lie.
"Ariana Huffington is unattractive, both inside and out. I fully
understand why her former husband left her for a man - he made a good
decision." -- Donald Trump. This is sexism, and just plain rude.
"You know, it really doesn't matter what the media write as long as
you've got a young, and beautiful, piece of ass." - Donald Trump. This
is misogyny at its finest.
"I will build a great wall -- and nobody builds walls better than me,
believe me - and I'll build them very inexpensively. I will build a
great, great wall on our southern border, and I will make Mexico pay for
that wall. Mark my words." - Donald Trump. The words of an arrogant
hate monger.
"When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending the best. They're
not sending you, they're sending people that have lots of problems and
they're bringing those problems with us. They're bringing drugs. They're
bringing crime. They're rapists... And some, I assume, are good
people." - Donald Trump. Racist.
"Our great African-American President hasn't exactly had a positive
impact on the thugs who are so happily and openly destroying Baltimore."
-- Donald Trump. Racist.
"If I were running 'The View', I'd fire Rosie O'Donnell. I mean, I'd
look at her right in that fat, ugly face of hers, I'd say 'Rosie, you're
fired." -- Donald Trump. The words of an asshole.
"The beauty of me is that I'm very rich." - Donald Trump. So Vain.
"It's freezing and snowing in New York - we need global warming!" - Donald Trump. Ignorant.
"My fingers are long and beautiful, as, it has been well documented,
are various other parts of my body." - Donald Trump. Gross.
"I think the only difference between me and the other candidates is
that I'm more honest and my women are beautiful." - Donald Trump.
Sexist. As if women are possessions rather than people. And also a lie. A
lie about how honest he is.
How can you support this man?
*I am aware of the fact that snopes.com claims the Lincoln Capitalism Prophecy
quote is false. It's a quote that has been going around for more than a
hundred years. The quote has also been attributed to a letter that
Lincoln supposedly wrote to Col. William F. Elkins in 1864. Scholars
have cited The Lincoln Encyclopedia: The Spoken and Written Words of A. Lincoln Arranged for Ready Reference
by Archer H. Shaw. Snopes still claims the letter referred to in this
encyclopedia is a fraud, forged by Emanuel Hertz in his book Abraham Lincoln: A New Portrait.
So in the interest of full disclosure, these may or may not have been
Lincoln's words. Whether they were written by Hertz or Lincoln, they
were still written and they still pertain to the point I was trying to
make. Income inequality is a serious issue in this country, and Donald
Trump is working on the prejudices of the people.
Rev. Al Sharpton says he may be
booking a one-way ticket out of the United States if businessman Donald
Trump becomes president. Sharpton says he is open to supporting “anyone”
with the exception of Trump, claiming that the business mogul would
probably deport him anyway. Sharpton told attendees at the Center for
American Progress Action Fund on Thursday that he is already reserving
his “ticket to get out of here.”
The Washington Examiner reports that Reverend Al Sharpton
had mostly positive feedback for Republican candidates like Marco Rubio
until he got to the discussion of GOP candidate Donald Trump. Once “The
Donald” was mentioned the conversation turned to Al Sharpton’s
admittance that he would likely “get out of here” if Trump is elected to
president. Sharpton notes that he would leave on his own accord before
Trump has the chance to deport him.
“If Donald Trump is the nominee, I’m open to support
anyone [else], while I’m also reserving my ticket to get out of here if
he wins, only because he’d probably have me deported anyway.”
Therefore, it seems that Al Sharpton is open to supporting Ted Cruz
or Marco Rubio, but is refusing to show even remote support for Trump.
Though Sharpton claims that Trump would likely deport him if made
president, he did not explain the statement any further. However, both
Trump and Sharpton have publicly shared differing opinions on political
issues in the past. While Sharpton spends his time at national protests
condemning police brutality, Trump has been vocal about other
controversial topics such as immigration and foreign policy.
This isn’t the first time that Al Sharpton has painted an
unflattering picture of Donald Trump to his followers. Prior to
revealing his plans to potentially leave the U.S. if Donald Trump is
made president, Sharpton likened Trump to Don King. Sharpton says that
the best way he can describe Donald Trump is to say that he is “the
white Don King.” In fact, Sharpton says that King and Trump are the only
ones to that have left him completely speechless and unable to talk.
Sharpton remembers
a time that he allegedly flew on Donald Trump’s private helicopter with
Don King and described how the pair each talked relentlessly on the
flight, over-talking one another with neither ceasing despite not
listening to a word the other was saying.
“I think what he has said has been biased and bigoted,
but I don’t know if Donald Trump is really a bigoted guy. The best way I
can describe Donald Trump to friends is to say if Don King had been
born white he’d be Donald Trump. Both of them are great self-promoters
and great at just continuing to talk even if you’re not talking back at
them.”
You can listen to Al Sharpton’s full interview below.
While Sharpton has voiced concerns over Trump becoming president, he
has not revealed what presidential candidate he will be endorsing for
the 2016 election. Though he is “open to support anyone” in the GOP, his
endorsement will likely go to someone from within his own Democratic
party. However, he says he has not decided which of the candidates,
Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders, he will endorse as he is in the
“midst of a process.”
“I have not decided who I will support for president. I
think we are in the midst of a process, and that process has to be
detailed policy and that process has to include collective gathering.”
Does Al Sharpton’s statement that he is “open to support” any other
candidate, Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz included, except for Donald Trump?
What about Sharpton’s comparison of Donald Trump to Don King?