I'm taking any under on 'how long it takes for the amateur pussy shots she texted to trump to end up on the internet once trump gets sworn in'.
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I'm taking any under on 'how long it takes for the amateur pussy shots she texted to trump to end up on the internet once trump gets sworn in'.
two finger shout out to the ghost of del, smiling fondly at 'the bush twins'.
amazed nobody has called for a rule 34 on mrs trump yet
National Debt? No problem! we'll just print more money!
Yeah, because it worked out FANTASTICALLY when Obama decided to add an extra 500 horsepower engine to the printing machines...
http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/09/politi...debt-strategy/
(CNN)Donald Trump declared Monday the U.S. never has to default on debt "because you print the money," while trying to clarify his strategy for managing the national debt.
Trump insisted that he never said the U.S. should default or attempt to renegotiate with creditors, as had been reported.
"People said I want to go and buy debt and default on debt, and I mean, these people are crazy. This is the United States government," Trump told CNN's Chris Cuomo on "New Day." "First of all, you never have to default because you print the money, I hate to tell you, OK?"
The presumptive Republican presidential nominee explained he would center his approach on debt buybacks if and when interest rates go up.
"I said if we can buy back government debt at a discount, in other words, if interest rates go up and we can buy bonds back at a discount -- if we are liquid enough as a country, we should do that," Trump said. "In other words, we can buy back debt at a discount."
He also repeated his claim that he is "the king of debt."
"I understand debt better than probably anybody. I know how to deal with debt very well. I love debt -- but you know, debt is tricky and it's dangerous, and you have to be careful and you have to know what you're doing," Trump said.
Split with establishment
As Trump's high-profile back-and-forth with House Speaker Paul Ryan last week highlighted, a wide ideological gap exists between Trump and "establishment" Republican types over debt and entitlement reform.
Ryan won his post as House speaker in part by outlining an orthodox conservative policy agenda centered on these issues. And in an interview with CNBC in March -- long before Trump became the GOP's presumptive nominee -- Ryan defended his support for entitlement reform.
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"I believe that if we do not prevent Medicare from going bankrupt, it will go bankrupt," he said. "And that will be bad for everybody. We have to tackle our debt crisis. We have to tackle the drivers of our debt. And I think, I hope, that whoever our standard bearer's going to be will acknowledge that."
Trump, for his part, vowed during a Republican presidential debate on CBS in February that he would "not touch" entitlements, saying, "I will do everything within my power not to touch Social Security, to leave it the way it is."
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Grover Norquist, a Republican who leads the anti-tax group Americans for Tax Reform, defended Trump's debt-reduction comments on CNN on Monday, though he warned conservatives must preserve their traditional commitment to spending cuts and reform.
Asked specifically about Trump's remark that the U.S. will never default on its debt because it can always print more money, Norquist said: "Well, that's just stating a fact. It's what the United States government has been doing for quite a number of years is printing more money."
"Is it a good thing to do? No. Is it where you want to be? No. Is it what governments do over time? He's quite correct, that's what they tend to do," he said. "(But) when somebody says this is the way governments have behaved, that's not necessarily an argument that that's what they ought to do -- what we should do is reduce spending as well as create growth."
'Make a deal'
Trump had kicked up a firestorm in economic and political circles when, in an interview last Friday on CNBC, the presumptive Republican nominee seemed to suggest that rather than pay its outstanding national debt in full, the country could renegotiate.
Asked if the U.S. needs to pay its debt in full or if it could negotiate a partial repayment, Trump said: "I would borrow, knowing that if the economy crashed, you could make a deal."
Fox anchor challenges Trump on deficit plans
Fox anchor challenges Trump on deficit plans 01:37
READ: Fault lines: GOP civil war deepens
Such a renegotiation risks creating financial turmoil because U.S. Treasuries are considered the safest assets on the planet and a major benchmark for valuing other securities. Risking their safety through a renegotiation like the kind Trump seemed to propose could cause borrowing rates everywhere to skyrocket and create chaos in global markets.
During his CNBC interview, Trump had also said that interest rates should be kept low -- contradicting his remarks on CNN Monday -- because a rate jump could trigger a catastrophic increase the cost of borrowing.
"We're paying a very low interest rate," he said. "What happens if that interest rate goes up 2, 3, 4 points? We don't have a country."
And Trump signaled that he would be inclined to replace current Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen, who has defended the Fed's low rate policy, saying that while "people I know have a high regard for her," "she's not a Republican."
Buyback
And the real estate mogul on Monday also cited his experience buying up mortgages at discount during the 2008 financial crash, while noting that managing the national debt would be a very different task.
"In business (debt buyback) happens all the time. I bought mortgages back when the market went bad, I bought mortgages back at tremendous discounts, and I love doing that," he said. "There's nothing like it actually, it gives me a great thrill. But in the United States with bonds, that won't happen because you know in theory the market doesn't go down so that you default on debt, and that's what happens."
Whether through debt buyback or restructuring, neither of Trump's debt-reduction proposals from the past week square with his party's core approach on the issue -- deep spending cuts and entitlement program reform.
The Republican Party's official platform argues the U.S.'s looming "debt explosion" should be averted through "immediate reductions in federal spending, as a down payment on the much larger task of long-range fiscal control." These cuts "must be accompanied by major structural reforms," according to the platform, and pointing to programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security, the GOP argues that "we must restructure the twentieth century entitlement state."
I LOVE this tidbit:
:lol2Quote:
He also repeated his claim that he is "the king of debt."
"I understand debt better than probably anybody. I know how to deal with debt very well. I love debt -- but you know, debt is tricky and it's dangerous, and you have to be careful and you have to know what you're doing," Trump said.
This guy has such a hardon for Trump, funny stuff..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guPaiTI86UM
Ex Speaker of The House talks shit about the current Speaker of The House
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yht78LcTycw
Milo is a funny guy.
He's a gay conservative who especially hates feminists. He's British, speaks well, and is good at debating.
I enjoy watching his stuff, but I also can't help thinking that he's one of those gay guys who hates women because he sees them as useless to him. I've noticed that a lot of gay guys tend to either love women (as friends, that is) or hate them, without much in between.
Also, Milo has a fetish for black guys (he might only fuck black guys actually). This is extremely useful for a conservative provocateur since the left's primary response to any argument is "that's racist."
I don't think he hates women--search for some of his videos where hes talking with Christina Hoff Sommers or Ann Coulter. He hates the 3rd wave modern college campus feminism like Trigglypuff: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIpkdusnIkE
I'm starting to think Trump is just a social expirement put on by the media, to see if we as a public are really stupid enough to actually elect this asshole.
Are you that fucking ignorant??? The money raised by issuing government debt was collected from entities that BOUGHT the debt! The Federal Reserve -- not the Treasury -- issues money these days. If fact, the Treasury hasn't printed it's own currency for about 50 years.
Trigglypuff's friend is trying to get the girl who recorded her in trouble:
http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2016/0...g-trigglypuff/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BY1H1rZL53I
http://i3.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/...12/245/961.png
Speaking for myself--the #1 reason I cannot vote for or stand Hilldog:
https://www.instagram.com/p/BFPCtFfmhWB/
These families deserved better--they deserved the truth about how their sons died. I can't forgive or overlook that.