Well this is embarrassing but not surprised.

Found the perfect mask you you.

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So what does this line mean?

There were people in that rally — and I looked the night before — if you look, there were people protesting very quietly the taking down of the statue of Robert E. Lee. I’m sure in that group there were some bad ones.
The rally “the night before” was the famous tiki-torch parade, in which attendees shouted “Jews will not replace us”—not the kind of thing you can find yourself unintentionally partaking in. And Unite the Right’s support of the Lee statue was mostly just a pretext. As Vox’s Jane Coaston noted, “it is fascinating just how little the statue of Lee, or honoring Confederate veterans, seemed to matter to the organizers and attendees of Unite the Right.” Instead, promotional materials for the rally described it as an attempt to, for instance, “end Jewish influence in America.”

Trump’s comments could only hold water in a different factual universe, in which a different sort of rally was attended by a different sort of people. As it is, the term for someone attending a white supremacist rally is “a white supremacist,” and the words of condemnation Trump managed for some are less significant than the words of sympathy he offered for others.

And he did more than just sympathize. Not only was he saying that “some” attendees at a white supremacist rally were “fine people,” his impulse was to use the aftermath of a terrorist attack to say that he also believed they were right. Trump viewed what happened in Charlottesville as an attack on his own supporters, so he defended their honor.
 
The rally “the night before” was the famous tiki-torch parade, in which attendees shouted “Jews will not replace us”—not the kind of thing you can find yourself unintentionally partaking in. And Unite the Right’s support of the Lee statue was mostly just a pretext. As Vox’s Jane Coaston noted, “it is fascinating just how little the statue of Lee, or honoring Confederate veterans, seemed to matter to the organizers and attendees of Unite the Right.” Instead, promotional materials for the rally described it as an attempt to, for instance, “end Jewish influence in America.”

Trump’s comments could only hold water in a different factual universe, in which a different sort of rally was attended by a different sort of people. As it is, the term for someone attending a white supremacist rally is “a white supremacist,” and the words of condemnation Trump managed for some are less significant than the words of sympathy he offered for others.

And he did more than just sympathize. Not only was he saying that “some” attendees at a white supremacist rally were “fine people,” his impulse was to use the aftermath of a terrorist attack to say that he also believed they were right. Trump viewed what happened in Charlottesville as an attack on his own supporters, so he defended their honor.
Got it. So you people can’t even read.
 
Got it. So you people can’t even read.
The urge to re-write history on Charlottesville is puzzling, it seems like to me the Trump campaign would be better off letting it go. But, let's read some what was said on the right about the incident in the immediate aftermath:
On Fox News’ The Five, conservative talking head Greg Gutfeld called Trump’s remarks “pure ignorance.” David Duke immediately thanked the President for his “honesty & courage” afterwards. Trump “messed up,” said then-speaker-of-the-house Paul Ryan. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell issued a statement saying “there are no good neo-Nazis.” Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) visited the White House to explain to the president why Trump’s comments were “painful.”

An even better exercise is to go back and read about the primary subject of the news conference where the remarks were made. He promised: "Our infrastructure will again be the best in the world." He was going to develop public-private partnerships to leverage taxpayer funding. The President also specifically mentioned having drugmakers bring manufacturing and jobs back to the US. That's the kind of policy Republicans and even Democrats appear to be in favor of. But, sadly, it didn't happen.
 
Well Trump is opening his mouth to change feet again, what a moron.

“You can’t have this guy as your president,” Trump argued. “You can’t have — maybe I’ll sign an executive order, you cannot have him as your president.”
 
Well Trump is opening his mouth to change feet again, what a moron.

“You can’t have this guy as your president,” Trump argued. “You can’t have — maybe I’ll sign an executive order, you cannot have him as your president.”
C'mon maaan, that's some humor, good stuff.:D
 
So does anyone remember last Feb and March what Trump said about the Covid-19.
How do we believe him now that he is saying a vaccine will be ready in a few weeks, mid October he now says.



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The urge to re-write history on Charlottesville is puzzling, it seems like to me the Trump campaign would be better off letting it go. But, let's read some what was said on the right about the incident in the immediate aftermath:
On Fox News’ The Five, conservative talking head Greg Gutfeld called Trump’s remarks “pure ignorance.” David Duke immediately thanked the President for his “honesty & courage” afterwards. Trump “messed up,” said then-speaker-of-the-house Paul Ryan. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell issued a statement saying “there are no good neo-Nazis.” Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) visited the White House to explain to the president why Trump’s comments were “painful.”

An even better exercise is to go back and read about the primary subject of the news conference where the remarks were made. He promised: "Our infrastructure will again be the best in the world." He was going to develop public-private partnerships to leverage taxpayer funding. The President also specifically mentioned having drugmakers bring manufacturing and jobs back to the US. That's the kind of policy Republicans and even Democrats appear to be in favor of. But, sadly, it didn't happen.
They only ones rewriting history are the TDS deranged. You have his exact words and you simply ignore them. Anyone who listens or reads with at the 5th grade level knows exactly what he was referring to.
 
Here's a little more info about campaign pictures and video footage:

A new ad released by President Donald Trump's reelection campaign that looked to capitalize on the August jobs report to portray the country as being in the middle of a "great American comeback" features foreign stock footage.

The ad, which paints an incomplete picture of the American economy amid the coronavirus pandemic, does so in part by featuring stock footage from countries outside the United States, including a warehouse in Ukraine and publicly available footage of two models -- one from Italy and another from Ukraine - but which appear in the ad to represent images from the U.S.

At around the 15-second mark, the ad targets former Vice President Joe Biden by claiming he would "kill countless American businesses, jobs and our economic future" and flashes a clip showing what is meant to represent a U.S. warehouse with the lights being dramatically turned off.

But the footage is readily available stock images of a Ukrainian wallpaper warehouse from a video production company named PromZone Media Group, the company confirmed to ABC News.

Earlier in the ad, two models are shown looking distraught as the narrator warns that a Biden administration would reverse progress made amid the pandemic, but the footage also is from outside the United States, using models from Europe.

A woman shown looking upset while using a cell phone is Ukrainian and the footage was shot in Ukraine, Ukrainian production studio Stockbusters confirmed to ABC News.

Footage in the ad showing a man looking distraught in front of a desktop computer is from stock footage websites and, according to the credits, is from Italy and credited to an Italian photographer.

The ad is currently running in battleground states with a little over half a million behind it across North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan, according to ad service firm CMAG. It is part of the campaign's effort to push past the coronavirus pandemic that has ravaged the country since January and to shift attention to the economic recovery despite millions of Americans remaining unemployed.

The Trump campaign declined to comment.

In the ad, the Trump campaign uses the August jobs report to claim the economy is on the rebound but fails to mention that millions of Americans still unemployed and that the unemployment numbers are still far higher than before the pandemic. In February, the unemployment rate was 3.5% and is now 8.4%, though unemployment has fallen from record highs during hit during the pandemic and not seen since the Great Recession.

This is not the first time the Trump campaign has inserted foreign stock footage into its advertisements, though it is not clear whether decisions to do so have been intentional. Not every piece of stock footage has a clear indication of when or where the photos or videos are from -- and failure to vet them can result in embarrassing situations.

In 2016, astute observers of one Trump campaign tweet noticed that soldiers pictured on a graphic image blurred by the American flag were actually wearing Nazi SS uniforms. The campaign then told The Guardian that the photo selection was the fault of of "a young intern who did not see the very faded figures within the flag of the stock photo." The intern later apologized and deleted the tweet.

In another ad released last week, the Trump campaign looked to draw a contrast between Trump and Biden and how they deal with protests and job creation. The campaign, however, appeared to use footage from Vice President Mike Pence's 2019 visit to Gerdau Ameristeel steel mill. A company spokesperson told ABC News that 200 workers at the mill would be impacted by a decision to idle melting and rolling operations, with some being laid off over the summer and others allowed to work in St. Paul or given the opportunity to work somewhere else within the company. The spokesperson said he could not confirm where the footage was taken, but a worker confirmed that it is Gerdau Ameristeel in a Facebook post, according to the Washington Post.

Earlier this summer, as protests arose in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd, the Trump campaign used an image from Ukrainian protests in 2014 next to an image of Trump meeting with law enforcement officials at the White House. Captioned under the two photos were the words "Public safety vs chaos & violence," an attempt to show supporters that Trump is best suited to handle the protests.

And last year, the Trump campaign released a series of Facebook ads to highlight real voters across the country who were endorsing the president's reelection campaign by using models in stock video footage from France, Brazil and Turkey.

One of the actors described as "AJ from Texas" can be found under the search "Mature Man Portrait stock video" on Getty Images. During the ad, small text at the bottom of the screen reads "actual testimonial, actor portrayal."
 
So does anyone remember last Feb and March what Trump said about the Covid-19.
How do we believe him now that he is saying a vaccine will be ready in a few weeks, mid October he now says.



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Don't believe him and don't take the vaccine. Save it for the rest of us. Fauci et. al. are clueless wonders when it comes to manufacturing and distribution. It is the manufacturers who dictate that. They have been ramping up production already. If the media was doing it's job, instead of bitching about Trump, they would be asking the manufacturers how many doses are already available and what their production rates are.
 
Then there's this:
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  • The Trump campaign released an ad that incorrectly spelled Nobel as "Noble" to celebrate his second nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize.
  • A far-right Norwegian lawmaker again put forth President Donald Trump's name for the prestigious award, citing his role in normalizing ties between the United Arab Emirates and Israel.
  • Anyone can be nominated for the prize, and hundreds of candidates are submitted every year.
 
Don't believe him and don't take the vaccine. Save it for the rest of us. Fauci et. al. are clueless wonders when it comes to manufacturing and distribution. It is the manufacturers who dictate that. They have been ramping up production already. If the media was doing it's job, instead of bitching about Trump, they would be asking the manufacturers how many doses are already available and what their production rates are.
So would you like to bet your vote. I bet that the vaccine will not be released by November 3, if it is I will vote for Trump but if its not you vote for Biden. :)

It probally won't be ready by next summer.

Oh 7,000,000 Covid-19 cases reached in the US today, MAGA
 
Trump the racist ....pfft...apparently he’s not very good at it .....

 
Trump the racist ....pfft...apparently he’s not very good at it .....

Boy is that old 30 40 years could you not find anything newer, probally not.

Funny no one has called Trump a racist in this thread but his HUTA force needs to defend him.
 
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OK, this one wins the 'WTF Dummer than Shit Award' beating out the former first place holder.....You.:rolleyes::D:p

I don't care who you are that's funny. :):):););)
 

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