Trump fancies himself a war-time president. He talks about the Coronavirus attacking us. He calls it an invisible enemy. He says we will be victorious. He literally says we're at war.
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Trump also likes to shift blame to governors. They should've planned better. They should've bought more. They should be figuring it out on their own. The federal govt is there to back them up, not interfere or do the work for them. They need to be more appreciative ...
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...of the federal response.
So, let me ask you a question... if another country invaded us, would letting each state handle the response be appropriate? What about each of them getting on the phone with military contractors and bidding against each other for weapons?
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Would the governor of a blue state that is being invaded need to go on the news to praise Trump and his task force in order for the military to be dispatched?
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Would the governor of a state that had a hundred people murdered by foreign forces in a retirement home be a "snake" for suggesting the federal government should have acted faster?
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Would the President's son in law take the podium to say that tanks and helicopters are for the federal government, not for states to use?
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Would they blame slow response on a previous administration? Would they have fired all the generals to save a few dollars, and simply say "we can hire them back when we need them?"
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Would we be counting the dead and calculating whether the cost to the economy justifies protecting innocent lives?
No. None of that would happen. Because the primary responsibility of the federal government is to protect its citizens from all enemies, foreign and domestic.
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2,403 Americans died at Pearl Harbor. Roosevelt said "Victory in spite of all terror. Victory however long and hard the road might be. For without victory, there is no survival."
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2,977 Americans died on 9/11. Bush said "The resolve of our great nation is being tested. But make no mistake, we will show the world that we will pass the test."
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6,000 Americans are dead from Covid-19. Trump's most noteworthy quote thus far was "I don't take responsibility at all."
When you use a loaded weapon to intimidate, you are the threat.
Liberty comes with responsibility.
Those who fail to recognize that, who abuse their freedom to frighten and demand to be recognized through force and fear rather than reason and persuasion...
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...are more responsible for advancing the suppression of liberty than any activist or politician.
A responsible gun owner who uses a weapon to protect others and save lives is to be celebrated for their bravery and instinct.
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Lives saved by those who recognize the gravity and responsibility attached to their freedom are the single greatest argument in defense of gun rights.
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There has now been a recession in the first term of every single Republican president for the past 111 years.
In the past 73 years, there have been 11 "official" recessions, including 49 recessionary quarters.
41 of those quarters occurred under Republican presidents.
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This year, the cumulative budget deficit since Trump took office is expected to surpass $5 trillion. Greater than any 4 year period in U.S. history.
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Almost half of the benefits of Trump's tax cuts and programs have gone to the wealthiest 5%, while the number of corporations paying $0 in taxes has doubled.
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It's a refrain I hear often & attempt to debunk regularly.
CNN's Kaitlyn Collins was assigned to the front row in yesterday's W. H. Press Briefing. She regularly embarrasses Trump. Usually by just asking him about things he's said.
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Trump did not want CNN in the front row. He tried to have Mrs. Collins moved to the back. She asks tough questions & likely had a few lined up about injecting bleach.
Due to the rules inside the WH Press Room, the WH doesn't control what press is present or where they sit.
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Both Collins and the reporter who was told by the WH to switch seats refused to do so.
At this point, based on multiple reports, the Secret Service was invoked to attempt to get Mrs. Collins to move to the back.
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The only thing more amazing than how often Larry Kudlow's predictions are dead wrong is that he keeps making them.
March 1993: Clinton's taxes will ruin the economy. (90's economic boom)
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February 2000: Things will pick up again. Not even Greenspan can stop this internet economy. (Internet bubble burst)
June 2002: War will elevate the stock market by 2000 points. (Down 1000 over next year)
December 2007: There's no recession coming. (There was)
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April 2008: Recessions are therapeutic. There's no credit crunch. It's very good. (It wasn't)
July 2008: The housing market is healthier than ever. (Nope. Collapsed within weeks)
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368 male Covid-19 patients were included in a nationwide study by the VA.
97 received Hydroxychloroquine.
113 received Hydroxychloroquine and Azithromycin.
158 received neither.
How many died?
Neither drug: 11.4%
Both drugs: 22%
Hydroxychloroquine only: 27%
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So the mortality rate among those taking the drugs that Trump has repeatedly recommended, and that Fox News and GOP pundits and Twitter idols have touted endlessly, is about double the mortality rate without them.
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At Trump's direction, U.S. government agencies have now purchased at least 30 million doses of a drug that doubles your chance of death. Using your tax dollars.
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I'm seeing a lot of casual jokes about people dying. You've seen them. The morbid one-liners, the R vs. D prediction commentaries and link shares, the strangers' obituaries as a political bullet point.
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It's so easy to share these. I don't doubt I've posted some frustrated comment or stupid joke that meets this exact criteria.
Usually, it's unnamed people in general, on the opposite side of the political spectrum, dying in these snapshots.
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Sometimes it's a real person we've never heard of, with a family, friends, and neighbors, and a sudden afterlife legacy of being the 'proof of concept' the "other side" passes around like a trophy.
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