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Jan 9, 2018 08:00:46   #
Libs are nuts, if you want to talk about a narcissist let's talk about Obama for a few minutes, didn't see you folks talking about the 25th then and no president in my life time has been a bigger narcissist than president Obama.
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Jan 9, 2018 07:56:16   #
ArtzDarkroom wrote:
Blurry,
Perhaps with the changing public acceptance, the legislators from those states will feel emboldened to pass such legislation. I can't imagine them contradicting their e*****rate's demonstrated will. POTUS45's good will on the matter maybe all that is necessary for them to initiate the change. I do not recall his public opinion on the issue of pot. Time will tell.


Trump during his campaign said he would leave it alone, I think that this is Sessions restoring the rule of law, he did not direct prosecutors to go after these states, he simply told them to use their discretion in the application of the law. It is up to congress to fix this, simply turning your back on federal laws can lead to bad places, soon we will have segments of our society, individual states and communities deciding for themselves which laws apply and which don't, that is pretty much what we are seeing with both pot and immigration right now and it will only get worse if there is no course correction.
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Jan 9, 2018 07:51:58   #
Kmgw9v wrote:
Are you suggesting that Federal law should trump states rights?


Really? Do you somehow think that the 10th amendment still lives? When the federal government has bastardized the commerce clause to regulate all aspects of business and so many other things that effect our lives? This is the first and only time that I have seen liberals stand behind the tenth, in the past they have always applauded its destruction.

This should have been an issue a long time ago, I don't see the tenth amendment as the issue here since for 100 years we have accepted the federal government regulating pot and other street drugs, this is more of selective enforcement which does not end well. If there is a 10th amendment issue then let's see a lawsuit and have the courts weigh in. Personally I have always considered pot to be less of an evil than alchol, but that does not mean that it is good for people. It does effect ambition and learning, but hey, if they legalized it in my state I would probably smoke a joint from time to time, smoked a lot when I was a kid.
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Jan 9, 2018 00:50:04   #
Twardlow wrote:
MICHAEL A. COHEN

The greatest mystery in Washington: Why is anyone still loyal to Trump?

By Michael A. Cohen GLOBE COLUMNIST  JANUARY 05, 2018


Michael Wolff’s provocative new book about the Trump White House, “Fire and Fury,” is all anyone in politics is talking about right now. Yet, let’s be honest: Wolff’s story isn’t all that surprising.

Sure, Wolff writes at length about the president’s intellectual limitations, his monstrous ego, and his childlike need for constant validation. He writes of a White House consumed by chaos, mismanagement, and back stabbing. Yawn. We knew this already.

The one element of Wolff’s story that is still able to shock — and has since the day Trump took office — is why so many people continue to work for and defend a man who they don’t appear to believe has the requisite fitness and intelligence to be president.

While Trump’s feud with former top adviser Steve Bannon has received significant news coverage, it’s the overall caustic staff-view of Trump that is Wolff’s most illuminating tale.

The trail of insults from former and current staff speaks volumes. To Reince Priebus and Steve Mnuchin, Trump is an i***t. For H.R. McMaster, he’s a “hopeless i***t.” Gary Cohn compared the president’s intelligence to excrement. We already know about Rex Tillerson labeling the president a “moron,” a charge he’s refused to deny.

Kellyanne Conway is depicted in Wolff’s book as taking solace during the final days of the campaign that Trump would almost certainly lose. Trump’s former aide, Sam Nunberg, happily went on the record to tell Wolff about his ill-fated effort to explain the Constitution to Trump and getting “as far as the Fourth Amendment before his finger is pulling down on his lip and his eyes are rolling back in his head.”

Even Trump’s family can’t stand him. His wife Melania was in tears on E******n Night . . . because he won. Wolff describes his daughter Ivanka’s relationship with her father as “t***sactional” and recounts her making fun of Trump’s bizarre hairdo.

Those closest to Trump universally describe him as “like a child,” but also, according to Wolff, say “he’s a moron, an i***t.” And all of them question his intelligence and fitness

Trump apparently holds the same contempt for them.

According to Wolff, he derided Priebus for being “weak” and “short.” He calls Kushner “a suck-up,” Conway a “crybaby,” and said Spicer was “stupid and looks terrible.”

All of this raises a very basic question: what is wrong with these people?

Why do they work for this man?

I suppose if you’re a white nationalist like Stephen Miller, toiling for Trump is a means to an end.

But how does one explain an administration full of individuals who believe that the president they serve is an i***t and unfit for the job, and yet still wake up every morning, go to work, and not only defend him but strive to further his political agenda? It’s not as if multimillionaires like Tillerson or Mnuchin need the work. There’s always a place on cable news for a talking head like Kellyanne Conway.

Surely some rationalize what they do by telling themselves they’re protecting the country from Trump. But of course that’s a lie. They’re enabling Trump and allowing him to stay in a job for which he is manifestly unsuited.

This is a president who takes to Twitter to threaten North Korea with a nuclear attack; who has barely lifted a finger as half of Puerto Rico lacks power; who has regularly and f**grantly undermined the rule of law, and almost certainly obstructed justice. From what, exactly, is America being protected?

There’s no doubt that working in White House is a cool gig and the pinnacle of a political career, but to what end? Surely, no job, no matter the perks, can be worth enabling and normalizing a president — with all of the awesome responsibilities that come with the office — who you think is a danger not just to the country, but also to the world.

They could quit. They could speak out. They could implore the vice president and other Cabinet secretaries to invoke the 25th Amendment. They could stop lying on Trump’s behalf and stop assisting his effort to shred political norms and undermine the nation’s democratic institutions. They could do something, anything, to warn the country. Instead, most of them will get up Monday morning and do what they’ve been doing for the past year: enable a president who they believe is an i***t. Why they choose to do it is perhaps the greatest mystery in Washington today.

Michael A. Cohen’s column appears regularly in the Globe.

http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2018/01/05/the-greatest-mystery-washington-why-anyone-still-loyal-trump/mio4tjmKVifqkfs2xlKpcI/story.html?et_rid=524187610&s_campaign=weekinopinion:newsletter
MICHAEL A. COHEN br br b The greatest mystery in... (show quote)


Tom, you're old, retired, you only have so much time left, are you really going to waste it obsessing over Trump? Get a camera, or some other hobby/activity and start enjoying life.
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Jan 9, 2018 00:41:30   #
ArtzDarkroom wrote:
With the popular opinion changing on use of pot, more states v**ers are allowing its use, either medically or recreationally, but Sessions has rescinded Obama's refusal to cross states that allow it. Today, I read somewhere that this change in policy has a negative impact on banks dealing with that industry.

Should POTUS45 tell Sessions to "Sic'em" or back off?


Yes, it will be a problem for the banks and for the businesses involved in that industry, but think for a moment Art, do you want the Executive branch legislating? Sessions is correct, Obama and Holder were wrong, this is a problem that can only be resolved legislatively through congress, anything else deteriorates the rule of law in this country and is left to the whim of the next president. Same with DACA and immigration, look at the mess created when congress and the Executive turn their backs on the laws of this country and refuse to do their damn jobs.

POTUS should tell congress to do its damn job.
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Jan 8, 2018 21:13:03   #
Twardlow wrote:
That’s the question, isn’t it?


Science says that they can feel pain at 28 weeks, so when they are ripped apart in the womb how is that not murder?
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Jan 8, 2018 21:11:50   #
dirtpusher wrote:
Lol you forget I'm in this InfaStrcture business. I have keept close eye those bills over the years. But lie if yuh must. Your almost as good as orange man.


As much as you post here, you aren't in any infrastructure business, days gone by my friend, now you are in the doobie smoking trolling business, nuff said.
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Jan 8, 2018 20:00:05   #
dirtpusher wrote:
Lol the first InfaStrcture bill went through. Where did that money go. Just an orange head crook like rest them.


No, you are confused as usual, the only infrastructure bill that was passed and the money disappeared was Obama's. Trump has not yet gotten around to infrastructure, I am sure that he will do a much better job than did President Hoodwink.
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Jan 8, 2018 19:54:01   #
dirtpusher wrote:
Lol just another sucker. Yeah he promised alot of stuff. Not done any it. Pushed a trillion InfaStrcture where did that money go. Now he promising it all again. Guess his first trillion wasn't enough. Go gettem Kool aid fella. There more coming across border now than under bammer. Yup he a miracle man.


LOL... The dems are going to have to explain a lot when those projects don't go through.
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Jan 8, 2018 19:47:23   #
Bazbo wrote:
I will go with your reading comprehension, as I did not mention Trump and I don't think anyone else misunderstood me.


Possibly, maybe I jumped the shark.
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Jan 8, 2018 19:44:01   #
I have several Canon Mount Lenses that are collecting Dust, I am not so interested in selling these lenses as much as I would be interested in trading for someone else's lens that is just collecting dust on a shelf.... These are all ef lenses for full frame, I am listing the lens and the current retail price from B&H

Sigma 12-24mm f/4.5-5.6 DG HSM II $949
Tokina AT-X 16-28mm f/2.8 Pro FX $549
Canon 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro $599
Canon 180mm f/3.5L USM Macro $1399
Tamron SP 24-70mm f/2.8 DI VC USD $899

Obviously I am not interested in any low end gear I am willing to trade a combination of lenses for maybe a really special prime or a new generation Canon or Sigma zoom. Or if you have a really long telephoto that is just getting to be too heavy (600mm) I might be convinced to throw in my 500mm f/4L a couple of lenses and some cash.
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Jan 8, 2018 19:24:04   #
Bazbo wrote:
Before you start screeching "bulls**t", maybe you should get your facts straight first:
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/446783/yes-california-independence-campaign-has-russian-backing-deserves-defeat

Now I am done with the juvenile trash talk based on pure ignorance, as I have just demonstrated. Come back when you think you can have an adult conversation.


Sorry, I did not understand that the Russian connection you were talking about was in direct correlation to Calexit, I assumed you were still talking about Trump. Maybe I lack reading comprehension, or maybe your writing is unclear.... I'll let you decide.
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Jan 8, 2018 19:16:07   #
thom w wrote:
I'm not particularly successful, but I like who I am. What does that have to do with Trump? You've admitted to not being a fan yourself.


It just pisses me off that you people are as nuts as you are, Trump's first year has been more successful than Obama's entire presidency, let's just see where he goes from here, maybe you people should wait until he actually destroys the economy, or damages our trade relations, no you won't, now you are talking about the 25th amendment. He has a petulant personality which like you I don't particularly care for but he is taking this country in the right direction. Economy is stronger under Trump than it was under Obama or would have been under Clinton, for years the people of this country have been promised a fix on immigration and Trump is fixing it, lastly he is forcing congress to address laws instead of just having his DOJ ignore them, DACA, and marijuana are two examples of a lawless executive rewriting laws by bypassing congress. If the congress wants to reclassify marijuana, then it needs to get off of its ass and do so, the same with DACA but DACA will come at a price for the dems and that should come as a surprise to no one, at least twice before amnesty was granted to i******s with the promise of fixing immigration and nothing ever came of it, Trump would be an i***t to cave on DACA and any such concession would come at a great political cost to him.
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Jan 8, 2018 19:07:17   #
Wrangler wrote:
When does each one become a human being?


Why would you even want to have a conversation about a******n with a progressive? A baby has no human rights in their minds until sometime after leaving the birth canal.
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Jan 8, 2018 18:17:41   #
thom w wrote:
Don't they usually start out by asking who the president is? I'm sure he'll get that right. When they get to the tougher questions, such as, what is the date today, I'm not so sure he'll do as well.


Says Thom, the successful union lackey. What have you done with your life that makes you feel so comfortable sitting in judgement over Trump?
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