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Bytor Peltor 10.22.2020 12:50 PM

Donald Trump was impeached by Democrats to protect Joe Biden!!!

!@#$%! 10.22.2020 12:59 PM

 

The Soup Nazi 10.22.2020 01:04 PM

This is epic... :D:D:D

h8kurdt 10.22.2020 02:16 PM

Well you're gonna have to explain how she can be a good fit for you guys. I mean, you do know her history and views, right?

Bytor Peltor 10.22.2020 06:36 PM

The free minded freethinkers who thought the Steele Dossier was a legitimate document, those stories NEVER BLOCKED by twitter or FB, are now calling verified emails from Hunter Biden 'Russian Disinformation'

!@#$%! 10.22.2020 07:48 PM

 

h8kurdt 10.23.2020 04:14 AM

So has anyone changed their votes after those debates? Didn't think so.

Elections don't half run on and on and on and on.

Bytor Peltor 10.23.2020 06:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
So has anyone changed their votes after those debates? Didn't think so.

Elections don't half run on and on and on and on.



What the American press refused to cover, Trump brought it up. Biden lied over and over, I think the internet is going to crash today from all the search engines with people fact checking!

Best Argument For Trump 2020

!@#$%! 10.23.2020 06:25 AM

raw pork

 

tw2113 10.23.2020 09:56 AM

Anyone undecided about if they'll vote for Trump or not isn't going to show up in the first place.


I'll be glad when this 4 year long election cycle is over, though we'll be moving into the next election cycle on November 4th, regardless of who wins.

h8kurdt 10.23.2020 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
Anyone undecided about if they'll vote for Trump or not isn't going to show up in the first place.


I'll be glad when this 4 year long election cycle is over, though we'll be moving into the next election cycle on November 4th, regardless of who wins.


And whoever wins the loser will have a fair share of protests and uproar to follow. Reckon the whole thing is gonna be a mess.

!@#$%! 10.23.2020 10:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
Anyone undecided about if they'll vote for Trump or not isn't going to show up in the first place.


I'll be glad when this 4 year long election cycle is over, though we'll be moving into the next election cycle on November 4th, regardless of who wins.

it’s not about election cycles anymore. it’s about kooky conspiracy theories, outright lies, and rampant lunacy.

it’s designed to inflame the stupids and turn everyone else off.

however this time around i think it has backfired and we’ll see greater turnout. “normal guy 2020” has a chance.

but still so much to do...

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
And whoever wins the loser will have a fair share of protests and uproar to follow. Reckon the whole thing is gonna be a mess.


there’s a fair share and there’s an unfair share.

i expect the deficit hawk protests to be astroturfed again if biden wins and flips the senate.

but our infrastructure upgrade is overdue regardless...

better to use debt to refit our ports and improve our energy grid and expand rural internet than to just make billionaires richer as we’re doing right now.

_tunic_ 10.23.2020 05:06 PM

President Trump’s Twitter accessed by security expert who guessed password ‘maga2020!’

The Soup Nazi 10.23.2020 06:55 PM


And for the second time, at that: first in 2016 with "yourefired". That's how very stable geniuses roll.

The Soup Nazi 10.23.2020 07:07 PM

What's the other title of Star Wars: Episode IV? ;)

Quote:

I was wrong that Trump would lose in 2016. I’m doubling down in 2020.

Opinion by Fareed Zakaria
Columnist
Oct. 22, 2020 at 7:25 p.m. GMT-3

In 2016, I was one of those people who didn’t think Donald Trump could win the presidency. Like many, I studied the polls and believed they showed a comfortable margin voting against him. I thought people would see through him. He was just too weird, too vulgar, utterly ignorant about most policy issues and pathologically incapable of telling the truth, even about trivial things. During the 2016 campaign, for example, he claimed that he had met Vladimir Putin, something that was easy to disprove.

But I think what convinced me most that Trump would lose was that I believed in a different America. Trump had catapulted himself onto the political stage with birtherism — a shameless effort to exploit White prejudice against the first Black president, Barack Obama. Trump announced his campaign for the White House by making slurs against Mexicans. He proposed a “total and complete shutdown” of the nation’s borders to all Muslims from anywhere in the world. Throughout the campaign, his rhetoric toward foreigners and minorities was insulting.

I didn’t believe Americans would go for this. I arrived in the United States in 1982, in the midst of a deep recession, as a brown-skinned student on a scholarship with a strange name, no money and no contacts. I found a country that welcomed me with open arms. I still remember being stunned at how friendly and genuinely warm people were to me. I had been more aware of being Muslim in India than I was in America.

Perhaps I lived a sheltered life in New England college towns and New York City, but I saw very little of Trump’s brand of naked racism. I knew that it existed, of course, had read about it in books and newspapers, seen it on television and in movies, but I didn’t truly understand the magnitude of the phenomenon. So I placed less weight on the evidence for Trump’s victory than I should have. I simply couldn’t believe someone with his racially charged worldview could win over the nation.

And here’s the thing: I still don’t. First, many Americans voted for Trump despite his race-baiting, not because of it. But more important, a majority of Americans disapprove of Trump and have for almost his entire presidency. His average approval rating throughout his term is the lowest of any president since we started counting. As the New York Times’s Nate Cohn has said, Trump’s luck was that he ran against the second-most unpopular presidential candidate in modern American history (after him). Because of the electoral college and small margins in three states, he was able to capture the White House.

There are parts of Trump’s coalition who are anxious about the country’s future — and their own place in it — and are thus susceptible to the snake oil being peddled by a clever salesman. The United States is changing. If you consider the core of Trump’s support — Whites without a college degree — you see that they are shrinking as a share of the adult population. If you take the core of Joe Biden’s support — Whites with a college degree and minorities — they are growing in even greater measure. The New York Times analyzed the data and found that in Florida, the core Trump voting bloc of non-college-educated Whites has fallen by 359,000 since 2016, while the Biden coalition has grown by 1,579,000 people. In Pennsylvania, Trump’s base shrank by 431,000, while Biden’s grew by 449,000.

If Biden wins, his challenge will be to make all Americans understand that the country has always been a grand experiment, an attempt to create the first universal nation. Today, living up to that ideal means embracing all kinds of people — Black and White, native-born and immigrant, gay and straight, and many more. It’s a messy process, and it can seem disruptive and disorderly. It sometimes gets bogged down in squabbles over terminology and political correctness. But it is all part of a noble effort to ensure that everyone in this country finally feels they are included in the American Dream. Ever since the nation’s birth, it has gradually expanded the idea of liberty and democracy, making America great by surging forward into the future rather than lapsing back into nostalgia for the past.

Meanwhile, I will take my chances and once again predict that Trump will lose this election. Humbled as I am after these four years, I would still rather bet on — and believe in — the best in America.

The Soup Nazi 10.23.2020 07:23 PM

On the other hand, "betting on and believing in the best of America" is kinda hard to do right now, isn't it. New York Times op-ed by novelist Brian Groh:

Quote:

The Skull in My Backyard

The radicalization of a small American town.


Oct. 23, 2020

LAWRENCEBURG, Ind. — For 20 years, off and on, I’ve lived in this small, blue-collar town about 30 minutes west of Cincinnati. My grandparents, immigrants from Germany, bought my old farmhouse, on 15 acres, during World War II. I’ve always felt that this town embodies much of what I love about the Midwest: friendliness, a lack of pretension and a prevailing sense of decency among neighbors.

A few weeks ago, I met up with a good friend, an 84-year-old retiree named Frank, who lives nearby. He told me that he’d put up a “Biden-Harris” lawn sign, and within 36 hours it had been stolen. In response, his girlfriend taped another sign to the inside of their ranch home’s front window. Frank immediately took it down. “The chair I like to sit in is right there,” he explained. “The next time they come, I’m afraid it might be a brick, or a bullet.” Just a few years ago, I would have said that Frank was overreacting. Now I’m not so sure.

Over the past four years my hometown has become radicalized. This is a loaded word, but it’s the only way to describe it.

As recently as 2008, I saw Bill Clinton speak at our community center, where the crowd was so large that people had to listen to him from loudspeakers in a nearby firehouse. The mood was electric. “People are broke at the end of every month,” he said. “This has to change.” He promised that with Democratic leadership, it would. An aggressive new energy policy would bring jobs, with higher incomes.

And this promise was very welcome. At the time, the best job I could find was at a call center, selling home security systems. But I felt hopeful. I stuck an Obama sign in my yard and a campaign bumper sticker on my old Corolla. Like a lot of my neighbors, I believed that Democrats would, in fact, improve the town’s fortunes, and on election night, Barack Obama carried the state.

But things didn’t improve. Not really. The latest census reports median household income in Lawrenceburg as $30,735, with a little over 32 percent of us in poverty. And in 2014, according to The New York Times, our small county (which is over 97 percent white) sent more people to prison than San Francisco. In January, our hospital cited a “higher number of uninsured patients” as a reason it needed to “right-size” its work force by laying off 31 employees and eliminating behavioral health services.

And there are darker omens. Last fall, my teenage nephew came running into the house, wide-eyed, saying he’d found a human skull in the woods. I followed him until, panting at the bottom of a ravine, I saw the skull trapped in a thicket of sticks and leaves, missing several of its front teeth. The police arrived, and for the rest of the night, I watched from my bedroom window as flashlights swept over the long grass, through the woods, until they were finally swallowed by darkness.

It was an overdose, an officer told me later, the victim most likely another casualty of the nation’s opioid epidemic. (In 2017, in this county, there were 80 opioid prescriptions for every 100 residents.) The young man seemed to have died higher up on the hill, where they found more of his remains. The rain must have washed his skull down the slope.

The skull felt like a portent, but also a turning point. Months later, I noticed a vendor at a roadside stand selling Trump flags. “Trump 2020: Keep America Great,” one read. Another read “Trump 2020: No More [Expletive].” It was more than half a year away from the election, and I remember thinking: Why flags? A flag was something people fought under, and for; something people carried to war. By the summer, another vendor popped up selling flags with even bolder slogans like “Trump 2020: [Expletive] Your Feelings,” “Liberty or Die,” “Make Liberals Cry Again.” The economy was in the dumps but the flag business was booming.

And not just Trump flags. In the past few months, I have seen three Confederate flags hoisted in neighbors’ yards, where previously I’d seen none. Just a few weeks ago, two masked men appeared outside our high school, holding a large KKK flag and fliers, apparently scouting for young recruits.

At times, all of this has felt like a horror movie, where it starts off happily enough — in a sun-drenched, idyllic farmhouse — and then the darkness slowly takes over. The change has occurred so slowly that at times, I hardly noticed it, until one day I barely recognized my hometown.

Last week, I drove down for a closer look at the nearest Trump stand, where alongside the flags hung Trump T-shirts. One read, “I’m a Deplorable.” And it reminded me of my grandparents, of how they felt while still in Germany: willing to work as hard as anyone but seeing no way to improve their circumstances. In my more charitable moments, I can see my neighbors’ xenophobia and racism and their Trump-loving thuggishness as symptoms of alienation from people who feel forsaken and disdained. This is, perhaps, the part of me that still feels deeply connected to where I live. But I’ve been appalled by the ugliness I’ve seen here this past year. And more often, in the dwindling autumn light, I find myself staring at my grandparents’ old farmhouse and wondering if it’s finally time to pack my bags.

The Soup Nazi 10.23.2020 11:59 PM

Sharon Van Etten got it right in ten words:

 

The Soup Nazi 10.24.2020 09:41 PM

And then there were none:

Murkowski Shifts Stance, Says She Will Vote to Confirm Barrett to Supreme Court

More: https://news.google.com/stories/CAAq...S&ceid=US%3Aen

The Soup Nazi 10.25.2020 03:48 PM

Tim Alberta’s Funny Feelings

Over the past month, Politico Magazine chronicler of US politics Tim Alberta has written of “funny feelings” he’s had about the election: hunches, accumulated in his travels through American political battlegrounds, of under-appreciated electoral dynamics.

On Oct. 6, he proffered four: that “Trump fatigue” was peaking at the wrong time for the president, “wash[ing] out” potential sympathy over his Covid-19 diagnosis; that the “silent majority” is one of opposition to Trump; that Democrats may come to regret pushing for more early and absentee voting, as those ballots are subject to disqualification when people don’t follow envelope rules to a “t,” fail to sign them, or when the ballots are delivered too late; and that “Trump might lose women voters by numbers we’ve never imagined.” On Oct. 13, he tendered three more: that yard signs point (very inexactly) to “multiplied” Trump support in MAGA-heavy areas, while Biden signs have cropped up in surprising places, like blue-collar pockets in the Midwest and in heavily GOP suburbs; that turnout will soar to historic heights, as the choice this year is an accessible one; and that a “Biden blowout” would prompt the GOP establishment to move on from Trump, “quickly.”

This week, Alberta’s antennae received two more signals: that the “suburban realignment isn’t just a female phenomenon,” as White, college-educated men seem to be turning against Trump and could be the election’s key demographic—and that broadly, “[w]e’re overthinking this campaign.” Of that last hunch, Alberta writes: “Generations of pollsters and journalists have fixated on the question of which candidate voters would rather have a beer with—a window into how personality translates into political success. Here’s the thing: Americans have been having a beer with Trump for the past four years—every morning, every afternoon, every evening. ... Like the drunk at the bar, he won’t shut up. ... Americans are tired of having beers with Trump. His own supporters are tired of having beers with Trump.”

Skuj 10.25.2020 03:52 PM


Is Susan Collins still very concerned? Even Ray Charles could see this coming. I cannot watch that shitshow tomorrow. It will make me ill. McConnel should rot in hell. And I hope Obama will apologize for being such an idiot on this one in his upcoming memoir, which I will buy.

The Soup Nazi 10.25.2020 11:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skuj
Is Susan Collins still very concerned? Even Ray Charles could see this coming. I cannot watch that shitshow tomorrow. It will make me ill. McConnel should rot in hell. And I hope Obama will apologize for being such an idiot on this one in his upcoming memoir, which I will buy.


Wait, which one is Murkowski and which one is Collins again?

Susan Collins Voting Against Barrett to Be 'Fair and Consistent'

Bytor Peltor 10.26.2020 12:46 PM

Happy Amy Coney Barrett Confirmation Day!

!@#$%! 10.26.2020 12:52 PM

 

h8kurdt 10.26.2020 02:09 PM

This 60 minutes interview that ends with Trump storming off because he doesn't like the tough questions is hilarious. What a wuss. Guy needs to grow a pair.

The Soup Nazi 10.26.2020 02:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
This 60 minutes interview that ends with Trump storming off because he doesn't like the tough questions is hilarious. What a wuss. Guy needs to grow a pair.


Too late. He'll die a tantrum-throwing toddler.

Skuj 10.26.2020 03:06 PM

I'm shocked. SHOCKED I tell you!!

https://thehill.com/homenews/media/5...-for-president

(I'm still trying to recover from my recent 10sec glance at that webpage.)

!@#$%! 10.26.2020 07:09 PM

the sarcasm in this piece will go whoosh over the heads of the stupids, and the evil enablers will ignore it, but here it is regardless:

Opinions
I believe in the president, now more than ever

Opinion by
George T. Conway III
Contributing columnist
Oct. 26, 2020 at 12:51 p.m. EDT

I believe, more than ever, in the president.

I believe Sleepy Joe Biden and that “monster” Kamala D. Harris would turn America into a “socialist hellhole,” and we’d all have “to speak Chinese.” I believe they “want to take out the cows” and “any form of animals.” There will be “no airplanes,” they’ll “rip down the Empire State Building,” and we’ll only have “little, tiny windows.”

I believe Sleepy Joe leads an “organized crime family.” I believe he and President Barack Obama committed “the greatest political crime in the history of our country,” and it will be “a very sad, sad situation” if the attorney general doesn’t indict them.

I believe Hunter Biden is a criminal, because someone got hold of his “laptop from hell,” and because of some guy named Bobulinski, whoever he is. I believe Fake News reporters are also criminals because they won’t report this.

I believe the laptop didn’t come from Russian intelligence. I believe Hunter Biden flew from his home in Los Angeles to Philadelphia, and then took a train to Delaware, because he needed a legally blind repairman there to fix his laptop. I believe Rudy Giuliani when he says the odds are “no better than 50/50” he worked with a Russian agent to dig up dirt on the Bidens.

I believe “the president knows all about this” dirt-digging, so all the dirt must be true. I believe Giuliani may have been duped by fake Kazakh rubes but could never be conned by real Russian spies.

I believe Giuliani was just tucking in his shirt.

I believe the president doesn’t know much about QAnon other than “they like me very much,” and that it’s not “a bad thing” they are “very much against pedophilia.” I believe people should be able to make up their own minds whether Biden had Seal Team Six killed to cover up the faking of Osama bin Laden’s death.

I believe Harris is “nasty,” a “communist” and a “madwoman.” I believe we can’t have “a socialist president — especially a female socialist president.” I believe she has a funny name, and it’s possible “she doesn’t meet the requirements” for the vice presidency because her parents were born abroad.

I believe the president is the “least racist person” in any room he’s in. I believe it was fine for him to tell the Proud Boys to “stand by,” because “somebody’s got to do something about antifa and the left.” I believe “corona” sounds like a “beautiful seaside island in Italy,” and so we must say “China plague.”

I believe the president has already announced his new, “incredible” health care plan, and it’s something “nobody has seen … before.” But I believe if it hasn’t been announced yet, it will be “very soon,” perhaps in two weeks. I believe that the president will improve on Obamacare by getting the Supreme Court to “end it,” which would be “so good.”

I believe it was the strategy of a stable genius for the president to urge Congress to pass a stimulus bill, and then, three days later, refuse to negotiate one, and then, seven hours after that, demand Congress “IMMEDIATELY Approve” one.

I believe the president was “not looking to be dishonest” about the China virus and that he played it down because he didn’t want “to create a panic.” I also believe he “up-played” it. I believe he doesn’t and shouldn’t “take responsibility at all” for his handling of it, but that he does take “full responsibility” and that it’s not his fault.

I believe the virus “affects virtually nobody,” and that the death count would be “very low” if we didn’t count Democrat states. I believe doctors and hospitals have overcounted deaths because they “get more money” for doing so.

I believe we’re “rounding the final turn” with the virus and that we have more new cases than ever because we have “the best testing in the world by far.” I believe other countries test only “when somebody comes into the hospital and throws up all over the floor.”

I believe we will develop “herd mentality,” which will make the virus “go away.” I believe a vaccine is “ready,” coming “momentarily,” “within weeks.” And I believe Deborah Birx is “Pathetic!” for saying the virus was “extraordinarily widespread,” that Anthony S. Fauci, who has “been here for 500 years,” is a “disaster,” and that all the scientists are “idiots.”

I believe the Fake News people are “dumb bastards” because “all they cover” is “covid, covid, pandemic, covid, covid,” because “they’re trying to scare everybody” from voting. I believe it “should be an election law violation!” I believe that “on November 4, you won’t hear about it anymore.”

I believe “the Fake News only shows the Fake Polls.” That includes Fox News, whose polls are “totally FAKE.” I believe a “SILENT MAJORITY!” supports the president — look at all those boaters. I believe he has a 96 percent approval rating among Republicans — up from 93 percent, 94 percent and 95 percent.

I believe “the ballots are out of control,” and people should vote by mail and then vote again in person, to test the system. I believe the only way the president will lose “is if the election is rigged” and that he’s right not to commit to a peaceful transfer of power.

I believe the president will not only win, but he’ll also “negotiate” a third term, which he’s entitled to because Obama and Biden spied on him.

I believe that if the president somehow does lose, he might “have to leave the country.” I believe he probably should.

===

the original piece is chockful of links to countless trump absurdities (you can spot them by the quotation marks) and can be found here:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...ore-than-ever/

Skuj 10.26.2020 07:13 PM

We are rounding the corner. Rounding the corner.

Bytor Peltor 10.27.2020 05:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bytor Peltor


 


While I dread the thought of living in a country where Kamala Harris is President, regardless of who is elected one week from today, yesterday was the most important day of Donald Trumps Presidency......and no better way to celebrate Crooked Hillary’s birthday: )

Typical Democrats who portray themselves as being the “diverse” and “empowering women” party yet not one DEM present and accounted for when a black Supreme Court Justice swore in Amy Coney Barrett???

 

!@#$%! 10.27.2020 06:36 AM

 

h8kurdt 10.27.2020 07:04 AM

Oh Bytor, you do make me wonder.

tw2113 10.27.2020 12:22 PM

Here's a good question, for those on his side, why do you like Trump?

h8kurdt 10.27.2020 12:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
This 60 minutes interview that ends with Trump storming off because he doesn't like the tough questions is hilarious. What a wuss. Guy needs to grow a pair.


And if course the journalist is now getting death threats for daring to question their dear leader. Fucking idiots.

The Soup Nazi 10.27.2020 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
This 60 minutes interview that ends with Trump storming off because he doesn't like the tough questions is hilarious. What a wuss. Guy needs to grow a pair.


Let this be a lesson to Adam Driver and anyone who storms off of an interview: you'll be compared to DONALD TRUMP. So outsmart the interviewer, tell them rationally why you think the questions are bullcrap, use humor/sarcasm (actual sarcasm, not the Drumpf kind), anything but walk out, or you'll be nothing but a mook "pulling a Trump"...

The Soup Nazi 10.27.2020 01:29 PM

I thought I had lost my ability of being shocked by these motherfuckers. Then I saw this (real photo, no doctoring):

 


Kellyanne Conway with PROUD BOY Tyler Gadsden, who's wearing a (I hope you're sitting down) "PINOCHET DID NOTHING WRONG" t-shirt.

Not much I can add.

Bytor Peltor 10.28.2020 08:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
This 60 minutes interview that ends with Trump storming off because he doesn't like the tough questions is hilarious. What a wuss. Guy needs to grow a pair.



It’s abundantly clear that h8kurdt didn’t watch the interview between President Donald Trump and Leslie Stahl......well, not the TRUE interview!

Donald Trump DID NOT storm off!

A producer who is off camera speaks out saying (at 00:27 seconds): “just one second Leslie, first warning, I think we have five minutes until Vice President Pence steps in, is that right?”

President Trump responds: “well, I think we have enough , we have enough here, I think we have enough of an interview,” as he gestures with his finger. Then President Trump points to someone off camera, possibly the producer and says, “let’s go meet for two seconds, ok?” Then the President walks off.

The previous minute and a half to two minutes was President Donald Trump putting Leslie Stahl in her place. President Trump kept mentioning the Joe Biden 60 Minutes interview from the previous week......President Trump DID NOT avoid any tough questions!

h8kurdt mentions it being “hilarious” that President Trump storms off, but I see how sad it is that h8kurdt is so easily duped by mass media. Just another Free-minded Freethinker who goes out of his way to avoid the TRUTH!

Anyone wish to fact check me can watch the unedited version that our President recorded and tweeted himself:

President Donald Trump tweet (10-22-20)
“Look at the bias, hatred and rudeness on behalf of 60 Minutes and CBS. Tonight’s anchor, Kristen Welker, is far worse!“


Click the link in the tweet to watch all 37 MINUTES and 51 SECONDS of the interview


After all the bellyaching regarding mask, Covid 19 and knowing that the President and a few of the staffers recently tested positive......Leslie Stahl wears NO MASK

President Donald Trump tweet
“Lesley Stahl of 60 Minutes not wearing a mask in the White House after her interview with me. Much more to come.”
 


Also, when the interview is completed, Kayleigh McEnany presents Leslie Stahl with the Presidents health care plan, yet 60 Minutes chooses not to share any of this during the interview???

President Donald Trump tweet (10-21-20)
“Kayleigh McEnany presenting Lesley Stahl (@60Minutes) with some of the many things we’ve done for Healthcare. Lesley had no idea!“
 


Kayleigh McEnany tweet (10-22-20)
“Lesley Stahl “DISCREDITED HERSELF”‼️

She repeatedly cited the Senate GOP Report on Biden corruption

@realDonaldTrump: “Do you think it’s OK for the mayor of Moscow’s wife to give him millions?”

Lesley falsely says “no real evidence of that”

It’s in the VERY report she cites!”

Lastly, for being considered a veteran reporter, Leslie Stahl was unprepared and whined throughout the interview.

!@#$%! 10.28.2020 08:18 AM

 

h8kurdt 10.28.2020 08:50 AM

Yeah, I saw the interview and I saw this bit too

A producer who is off camera speaks out saying (at 00:27 seconds): “just one second Leslie, first warning, I think we have five minutes until Vice President Pence steps in, is that right?”

President Trump responds: “well, I think we have enough , we have enough here, I think we have enough of an interview,” as he gestures with his finger. Then President Trump points to someone off camera, possibly the producer and says, “let’s go meet for two seconds, ok?” Then the President walks off.

That's him walking off because he couldn't handle another question. His voice has tightened up and he's flustered because he can't do tough questions without whataboutisms regarding Biden.
Thing is, we've seen him get upset and walk outseveral times throughout the years so why you think he isn't this time is beyond me. Actually it's not beyond me as it's obvious (and always has been) that trump could shit on your face and you'd still back him up.

If Biden had done the same you'd be wetting yourself with glee about it and you know it.

That's enough potty talk from me. Poo.

Silver ✴ Rocket 10.28.2020 02:32 PM

https://www.bitchute.com/video/S55HwMyFjSP3/

!@#$%! 10.28.2020 03:23 PM

who has time to watch that utter turd anymore? he’s on 24/7. enough of him. bye igor.


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