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Tump mocks Obama at conference of teh jews and gets huge applause
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/tr...rticle/2586432
never been prouder to be a jack mormon than right now (except for the pro-muslim immigrant stuff). although it is pretty funny that mormons can see through trumps fake religiosity but cant see through joseph smith's.
" Mormon Voters Really Don’t Like Donald Trump — Here’s Why
It’s not just Mitt Romney.
posted on Mar. 19, 2016, at 7:44 p.m.
McKay Coppins
McKay Coppins
BuzzFeed Staff
Speaking before one of his smallest crowds this campaign season, Donald Trump declared Friday night at a rally in Salt Lake City that he loves the Mormons.
The feeling does not appear to be mutual.
So far in 2016, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have proven to be one of the most stubbornly anti-Trump constituencies in the Republican Party — a dynamic that will likely manifest itself in Utah’s presidential caucuses next week.
National polling data focused on Mormon voters is hard to come by, but the election results speak for themselves. Even as Trump has steamrollered his way through the GOP primaries, he has repeatedly been trounced in places with large LDS populations.
In Wyoming, the third-most-heavily Mormon state in the country, Trump was able to muster just 70 votes in the low-turnout Republican caucuses there — losing to Ted Cruz by a whopping 59 points.
In Idaho, the country’s second most Mormon state, Trump lost the primary by 18 points.
And in the Mormon mecca of Utah, the most recent primary poll has Trump in third place — more than 40 points behind Cruz and 18 points behind Kasich.
The pattern holds at the county level as well. As New York Times data journalist Nate Cohn illustrated, the larger the proportion of Mormons in a given county, the worse Trump has generally performed in the primary contest there.
This dynamic was perhaps most vividly demonstrated earlier this month in the deeply conservative Madison County — home to Brigham Young University–Idaho and a population that’s estimated to be upward of 95% Mormon. Cruz won the county with 57% of the vote; Rubio came in second with 27%. Trump won a total of 539 votes — less than 8% of the county electorate, and just barely enough to squeak by fourth-place Kasich.
If Trump is wiped out in Tuesday’s Utah caucuses as expected, many will no doubt credit Mitt Romney, who has spent recent weeks on a high-profile crusade to stop the billionaire. But LDS voters’ skepticism of the billionaire — which, polls suggest, predates Romney’s emergence as an anti-Trump champion — is rooted more deeply in Mormon culture and politics.
That’s because while Mormons make up the most reliably Republican religious group in the country, they differ from the party’s base in key ways that work against Trump.
On immigration, for example, the hard-line proposals that have rallied Trump’s fans — like building a massive wall along the country’s southern border to keep immigrants out — are considerably less likely to fire up conservative Latter-day Saints. The LDS church has spent years lobbying for “compassionate” immigration reform. In 2011, church leaders offered a full-throated endorsement of “the Utah Compact,” a state legislative initiative that discouraged deporting otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants and offered a path to residency for families that would be separated by deportation.
These pro-immigrant attitudes are common among rank-and-file believers, many of whom have served missions in Latin American countries. Mormons are more than twice as likely as evangelicals to say they support “more immigration” to the United States, according to Notre Dame political scientist David Campbell. And a 2012 Pew survey found Mormons were more likely to say immigrants “strengthen” the country than they were to call immigrants an overall “burden.” When Romney ran for president in 2012 on a restrictionist immigration platform, his views were widely noted in LDS circles for being at odds with his church.
Many Mormon voters are similarly wary of another Trump campaign hallmark: Muslim-bashing.
Last year, when the billionaire proposed banning all Muslims from entering the United States in the wake of the San Bernardino terrorist attack, Trump became the only candidate in either party this election cycle to elicit a response from LDS church leadership.
“The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is neutral in regard to party politics and election campaigns. However, it is not neutral in relation to religious freedom,” the statement read, before proceeding to quote the faith’s 19th-century founder, Joseph Smith, saying he would “die in defending the rights of … any other denomination who may be unpopular and too weak to defend themselves.” (In case the message wasn’t clear enough, the church-owned Deseret News went on to publish a story highlighting the growing alliance and solidarity between Mormon and Muslim leaders.)
During last year’s debate over the potential national security threat posed by Syrian refugees coming to the United State, Utah Gov. Gary Herbert was the only Republican governor in the country to say refugees were welcome in his state.
Trump is off-putting to Mormons for more predictable reasons as well. His blatant religious illiteracy, his penchant for onstage cursing, his habit of flinging crude insults at women, his less-than-virtuous personal life and widely chronicled marital failures — all of this is anathema to the wholesome, family-first lifestyle that Mormonism promotes. And demographically speaking, Mormons tend to reside outside Trump’s base of support anyway. They have higher-than-average education levels, whereas Trump does best among voters without any college education; they are more likely to be weekly churchgoers, while Trump performs better with Christians who attend services infrequently.
LDS voters are not a political monolith — just ask BYU’s Bernie Sanders fan club — and Trump will no doubt be cheered on by a noisy minority of supporters in the Beehive State Tuesday. But it’s difficult to imagine a Republican presidential nominee more naturally repellent to Mormons than The Donald.
In fact, a poll released Saturday by Y2 Analytics asked likely Republican caucusgoers in Utah how they would vote in the general election if Trump won the GOP nomination. Only 29% of these die-hard Republicans said they would pull the lever for Trump; 25% said they would write in another candidate, 15% said they would vote third-party, 8% said they would not cast a vote for president at all, and 7% said they would vote for the Democratic candidate.
If anti-Trump Republicans are serious about backing a third-party ticket in the general election, they would do well to schedule some campaign stops in Provo."
http://www.buzzfeed.com/mckaycoppins...why#.ytj1x8XZ8
Goin after each others wives now. Dis gon b gud
Washington (CNN)Donald Trump escalated his feud with Ted Cruz on Twitter Tuesday — but this time he also involved the Texas senator's wife.
The real estate mogul tweeted that the Texas senator should "be careful" or he would "spill the beans on your wife" Heidi Cruz.
"Lyin' Ted Cruz just used a picture of Melania from a G.Q. shoot in his ad. Be careful, Lyin' Ted, or I will spill the beans on your wife!," he tweeted Tuesday evening, just minutes before polls closed in Arizona. Trump tweeted and deleted a similar version of the Tweet about 10 minutes earlier.
Trump appears to be referring to a Facebook advertisement targeted to Mormons that shows Trump's wife, Melania, posing nude. That ad was produced by an anti-Trump super PAC, Make America Awesome, which has no known connection to the Cruz campaign.
Cruz responded on Twitter by saying that the ad was not from him and if he went after his wife, then Trump is a "coward."
"Pic of your wife not from us. Donald, if you try to attack Heidi, you're more of a coward than I thought. #classless," Cruz tweeted.
Heidi Cruz is a senior executive for Goldman Sachs, and took a leave from in order to help her husband's campaign. She has become one of the campaign's most accomplished fundraisers.
CNN has reached out to the Trump and Cruz campaigns for comment.
Trump previously has used Twitter to threaten the Ricketts family, which has financed a negative ad campaign against him.
Holler at me via Myspace
Even though Bernie Sanders has *very* little chance to beat Hillary for the Dem Party nod, he now absolutely has no chance of getting many evangelical voters even if Trump is the GOP candidate. Because those folks are rabid supporters of the right-wing Iraels government. Rabid! And Israel can do NO wrong in their eyes, which Sanders has now clearly disagreed with.
So I went to vote and didn't get to vote.
Handed one of them my ID, she said I was registered independent. Wtf ok so I ask if there's a form to change that so I can vote today. She handed me a form and said i still won't be able to vote today. I said no matter what I can't vote today? She said nope.
That's bullshit imio. I'm a bit steamed about it.
That's a little ironic, isn't it?
"There is nothing more important than voting for Bernie Sanders. This may be our last chance."
And then, due to negligence, you let that chance go by.
Great doc on rise of trump
Some podcast I listen to regularly played an interview of Trump on Oprah around ten years ago and he's saying the same things now as he said then. It's actually pretty interesting because he said he probably would never run for President but if he did it would have to be under certain circumstances and he'd think he'd win. Funny how things play out.
Trump 2016
Yeah it was ironic, lol
Maybe it was negligence on my part or maybe I fell victim to one of Hillary's voter suppression tactics. Don't let the independents vote or have the ability to modify their party affiliation in time to vote. Bernie Sanders just so happens to be the longest-serving independent in U.S. congressional history. `
Last edited by FPS_Russia; 03-23-2016 at 03:48 PM.
he certainly makes a few good points
Ted Cruz Had at least 5 Affairs
http://theconservativetreehouse.com/...s/#more-114240
I think Trump may be one step ahead again. Trump made a big deal about the pretty much unknown Melania ad so he could go after Cruz's wife and get Cruz on record again saying how important his wife is to him. Trump most likely knew this story was coming. And yes one of the women they are alleging had an affair with Cruz is now a Trump spokeswoman.
"Amanda Carpenter is the conservative activist, CNN contributor, and writer for Mark Levin and the Conservative Review who recently published a “BLACKLIST” targeting anyone who supports Ted Cruz’s primary opponent, Donald Trump"
Last edited by bukowski72; 03-24-2016 at 06:24 PM.
Cruz wouldn't be so vehemently chastising Trump so publicly if Trump didn't have anything. Cruz is looking like a scared puppy backed into a corner with all his bellowing b.s.
since when is fucking a hooker considered an affair?
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