Republicans 2016

After 14 years of watching Christie, a warning: He lies | Moran
http://www.nj.com/opinion/index.ssf/2015/06/after_14_years_of_watching_christie_a_warning_he_l.html


Most Americans don't know Chris Christie like I do, so it's only natural to wonder what testimony I might offer after covering his every move for the last 14 years.

Is it his raw political talent? No, they can see that.

Is it his measurable failure to fix the economy, solve the budget crisis or even repair the crumbling bridges? No, his opponents will cover that if he ever gets traction.

My testimony amounts to a warning: Don't believe a word the man says.

If you have the stomach for it, this column offers some greatest hits in Christie's catalog of lies.

Don't misunderstand me. They all lie, and I get that. But Christie does it with such audacity, and such frequency, that he stands out.

He's been lying on steroids lately, on core issues like Bridgegate, guns and that cozy personal friendship with his buddy, the King of Jordan. I'll get to all that.
 
Gov. Chris Christie’s Phony Truth-Telling
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/01/opinion/gov-christies-phony-truth-telling.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0


On his new website, Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey portrays himself as a guy who gets attacked for “telling it like it is,” but that’s what his mom told him to do from her deathbed.

It is part of the legend Mr. Christie has carefully cultivated for many years, with startling success. He is described as “brash” and “bold,” with a certain rough charisma that his political opponents just cannot handle. “I get accused a lot of times of being too blunt and too direct and saying what’s on my mind just a little bit too loudly,” he says in the first video for his presidential campaign, showing him with a selected group of adoring voters.

It’s fundamentally nonsense.
 
Donald Trump’s Immigration Statements Will Find A Home In His Party
http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/...ion-statements-will-find-a-home-in-his-party/

Donald Trump’s appearances on entertainment television look like they’ll be limited to his cameo in “Home Alone 2.” He was dismissed by Univision and then canned by NBC Universal. On Wednesday, Macy’s announced that it would pull his menswear line from its shelves, and New York City said it was reviewing its contracts with him, which include a golf course in the Bronx.

All of this is because of Trump’s deliberately strident comments about immigrants from Mexico and other countries who entered the U.S. illegally. This kind of language doesn’t play well with corporate America or the de Blasio administration, but there are already signs that enough Republicans may be open to his anti-immigrant message to give him mileage in the primary season. There are several reasons for this.

Most Republicans are more anti-immigration than their party’s official stance.
 
The only politician I ever liked that tried to be president was Ron Paul because he didn't play the game. It was the constitution or nothing even on things he didn't personally like like. He personally wasn't for abortion, gay marriage and was a devout christian but realized these are state/ moral issues the federal government has no place making it isn't part of the constitution. People have freedom of choice.

Sadly his Ran I don't see that conviction that Ron had. I would love the war on drugs to end and the IRS however I don't seem him crazy enough to take a stand on it as he tries to appease people. A libertarian is completely about following the constitution imo.

Some might say Ran plays the game of politics but for me that game that has been played for so long is the reason we are at this messed in the first place.

So that being said I could care less who wins we are fucked either way unless somebody else follows the constitution that I'm unaware of but with more of a backbone.
 
Morning Plum: How Dems will cast GOP as party of the past
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...-how-dems-will-cast-gop-as-party-of-the-past/

Is the 2016 GOP presidential nominee really going to campaign for the White House on pledges to…

1) scrap a hard-won international agreement to curb Iran’s nuclear program

2) withdraw the U.S. from participation in a global climate accord

3) reverse the ongoing restoration of diplomatic relations with Cuba, and

4) repeal a health law that continues to expand health coverage to tens of millions of people, nearly seven years after it was signed

…while…

5) fudging on how, or whether, to overhaul our immigration system and integrate millions of undocumented immigrants already here (before “securing the border”), an issue of enormous importance to the fast-growing Latino voting bloc, and

6) continuing to hold out against same-sex marriage even as it takes hold nationwide?


 
Since I haven't been keeping up with all this, does anybody know or understand the position of these candidates on free trade agreements? I just read somewhere that Jim Webb is an advocate for free trade.
I ran across this old article concerning Ross Perot.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-08-15/nafta-20-years-old-–-here-are-20-facts-show-how-it-destroying-economy
This goes for both parties and any independents.
As far as I can tell everyone on both sides is a "free trade advocate" meaning trade defined by a complex set of laws bound into a text with the words free trade on the cover. They only differ on the details of those laws and the governments that should or should not be signatories.
 
Not a fan of Rand, but he occasionally speaks the truth despite his politics.

Rand Paul Philosophizes On Tax Rates: “If We Tax You At 50%, You Are Half Slave, Half Free”

Andrew Kaczynski Jul. 6, 2015

Republican presidential candidate Rand Paul, speaking last week in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, said he believes a 50% tax rate leaves individuals “half-slave, half-free.”

“Now you can have some government, we all need government,” the Kentucky senator said while discussing Thomas Paine and the role of government at the local public library. “Thomas Paine said that government is a necessary evil. What did he mean by that?”

Paul said he believes that “you have to give up some of your liberty to have government,” saying he was “for some government.”

“I’m for paying some taxes,” continued Paul. “But if we tax you at 100% then you’ve got zero percent liberty. If we tax you at 50% you are half slave, half free. I frankly would like to see you a little freer and a little more money remaining in your communities so you can create jobs. It’s a debate we need to have.”

Paul, who was discussing his recent tax proposal, described his plan to “leave more money in Iowa” and “send less money to Washington.”

“This past week I put forward a plan to have a simple flat tax, where everybody pays there fair share,” said Paul earlier in the speech. “Everybody pays, and you can fill it out on one page. Fourteen-and-a-half percent for personal income tax, fourteen-and-a-half percent for business tax.”

Paul said he believed the way to create jobs was to leave money in the local communities.

“The way you get jobs creation is you need to leave more money in the productive sector,” he said. “You are the productive sector. When you look at Washington, that’s the non-productive sector.”
 
Not a fan of Rand, but he occasionally speaks the truth despite his politics.

Rand Paul Philosophizes On Tax Rates: “If We Tax You At 50%, You Are Half Slave, Half Free”

Andrew Kaczynski Jul. 6, 2015

Republican presidential candidate Rand Paul, speaking last week in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, said he believes a 50% tax rate leaves individuals “half-slave, half-free.”

“Now you can have some government, we all need government,” the Kentucky senator said while discussing Thomas Paine and the role of government at the local public library. “Thomas Paine said that government is a necessary evil. What did he mean by that?”

Paul said he believes that “you have to give up some of your liberty to have government,” saying he was “for some government.”

“I’m for paying some taxes,” continued Paul. “But if we tax you at 100% then you’ve got zero percent liberty. If we tax you at 50% you are half slave, half free. I frankly would like to see you a little freer and a little more money remaining in your communities so you can create jobs. It’s a debate we need to have.”

Paul, who was discussing his recent tax proposal, described his plan to “leave more money in Iowa” and “send less money to Washington.”

“This past week I put forward a plan to have a simple flat tax, where everybody pays there fair share,” said Paul earlier in the speech. “Everybody pays, and you can fill it out on one page. Fourteen-and-a-half percent for personal income tax, fourteen-and-a-half percent for business tax.”

Paul said he believed the way to create jobs was to leave money in the local communities.

“The way you get jobs creation is you need to leave more money in the productive sector,” he said. “You are the productive sector. When you look at Washington, that’s the non-productive sector.”

Just out of curiosity, just what kind of jobs is he thinking that can be "created" by leaving a little more of our tax dollars in the community?
 
Just out of curiosity, just what kind of jobs is he thinking that can be "created" by leaving a little more of our tax dollars in the community?
I'm not sure I understand your question. It depends on what the rightful owners of those funds decide to do with them. I've never thought of taxes as our property. We don't get to spend it, the government does, more often than not against the interests of the people it collected from.
 
Just thinking...What could you do if you got to keep a little more of your income? You would be able to buy more food for the family, Maybe get a better or newer car. Help send your kids to college, maybe even enough so your wife wouldn't have to work. But your certainly not going to open a factory and put people to work. Maybe a service related business if you can get through all the bull shit paperwork and regulations. You can't build anything and compete with the large corporations.
We got fucked over pretty bad starting with the maquiladora project and trashing the immigration laws back in the 60s. Then came NAFTA. So what are we going to create?

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...stashing-2-1-trillion-overseas-to-avoid-taxes
 
Just thinking...What could you do if you got to keep a little more of your income? You would be able to buy more food for the family, Maybe get a better or newer car. Help send your kids to college, maybe even enough so your wife wouldn't have to work. But your certainly not going to open a factory and put people to work. Maybe a service related business if you can get through all the bull shit paperwork and regulations. You can't build anything and compete with the large corporations.
We got fucked over pretty bad starting with the maquiladora project and trashing the immigration laws back in the 60s. Then came NAFTA. So what are we going to create?

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...stashing-2-1-trillion-overseas-to-avoid-taxes
I agree with you, in principle. Though if Rand really could swing a 14.5% tax across the board (and keep all else the same), there would be an economic recovery not seen since before the 1913 Federal Reserve Act.

But all else wouldn't be kept the same. In this era of central banking and fiat money lost tax revenue means nothing. It would be a trivial mater to replace it all with government debt purchased by the Federal Reserve. The various corporate lobbies would be even more powerful than before, and they would be sure to get exemptions and loop holes written into any bill Rand as president would ultimately be forced to sign.

I personally don't want the tax code changed. I rely on all those complex laws and technicalities. For many hard working people and struggling businesses simplifying the tax code would be a disaster.
 
Walker Assures G.O.P. Voters He Is as Horrible as Trump
http://www.newyorker.com/humor/boro...sures-g-o-p-voters-he-is-as-horrible-as-trump

MADISON, WISCONSIN (The Borowitz Report) – Serving notice that he intends to go toe-to-toe with the controversial real-estate mogul, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker used the official announcement of his Presidential candidacy to assure Republican voters that he is as horrible as Donald Trump.

“Donald Trump has grabbed a lot of headlines over the past few weeks by spewing bigotry and venom,” Walker told an enthusiastic crowd of supporters. “I want to make it clear that when it comes to those things, I take a back seat to no one.”

Concluding his speech with a line that triggered a standing ovation, Walker said, “To those who thought Donald Trump was the only sociopath in the race, let me say this: not anymore.”

Prior to his announcement, aides to the Wisconsin governor had privately fretted that by establishing his identity as an arrogant and ill-informed merchant of hatred, Trump had appropriated Walker’s brand.

In the hopes of proving that Trump has no monopoly on odiousness, aides have released a point-by-point comparison showing that on such key issues as worker’s rights and health care, Walker is just as terrifying as the former reality-show host.

Acknowledging that Trump has dominated media attention for now, Walker’s aides believe that the governor will eventually reclaim his rightful mantle as the worst person in the race.

“Sooner or later, the Trump candidacy is going to fall apart and voters are going to be looking for another dick to vote for,” one aide said. “Scott Walker wants to be that dick.”
 
Donald Trump: A False Flag Candidate?
A warmongering racist lunatic lets loose – and he’s crazy like a fox

Justin Raimondo, July 13, 2015

That we have to take Donald Trump seriously confirms my longstanding prognosis that we’ve entered another dimension in which up is down, black is white, and reason is dethroned: in short, we’re living in BizarroWorld, and the landscape is not very inviting. Yet explore it I must, since the reality TV star and professional self-promoter is rising in the polls, and garnering an inordinate amount of media attention – and whether the latter is responsible for the former is something I’ll get into later, but for now let us focus on what practically no one else is paying much attention to, the Trumpian foreign policy.

Right off the bat, we run into trouble, however, since the signature sound-bites that characterize the Trump style don’t really qualify as anything close to a “policy.” Yet his various effusions on this topic do indeed translate into a mindset, which one might call blowhard-ism. And as much as it resembles the semi-coherent rantings of a drunk loudly pontificating in the dark recesses of some hotel bar at a Rotarians convention, it does reflect some “serious” trends to be found in the high-toned precincts of the foreign policy Establishment, not to mention among Trump’s fellow presidential aspirants in the GOP clown show.

On Iraq, The Donald makes much of his alleged opposition to the Iraq war – a position no one has documented to my satisfaction – but now that we’re back there, what’s Trump’s plan? "We shouldn’t have been there,” he opines, and yet “once we were there, we probably should have stayed.” While this may sound bafflingly counterintuitive, not to mention flat out contradictory, you have to remember two things: 1) In Bizarro World, contradictions do exist, A is B, and the sensible is the impossible, and 2) Similar things were said about the Vietnam war by politicians less obviously nutso than The Donald. As Murray Rothbard put it in a 1968 newspaper column he wrote for the Freedom Newspapers chain:

“A lot of people throughout the country are beginning to realize that getting into the Vietnam war was a disastrous mistake. In fact, hardly anyone makes so bold as to justify America’s entrance into, and generation of, that perpetual war. And so the last line of defense for the war’s proponents is: Well, maybe it was a mistake to get into the war, but now that we’re there, we’re committed, so we have to carry on.

“A curious argument. Usually, in life, if we find out that a course of action has been a mistake, we abandon that course and try something else. This is supposed to be the time-honored principle of ‘trial and error.’ Or if a business project or investment turns out to be an unprofitable venture, we abandon it and try investing elsewhere. Only in the Vietnam war do we suddenly find that, having launched a disaster, we are stuck with it forevermore and must continue to pour in blood and treasure until eternity.”

I’m editing a new collection of Rothbard’s work, entitled The Coming American Fascism and Other Essays, due out from the Ludwig von Mises Institute pretty soon, which is where I came upon this, and it got me to thinking: maybe it wasn’t the 9/11 terrorist attacks that tore a hole in the space-time continuum and blew us into Bizarro World – maybe it happened much earlier.

At any rate, The Donald’s bloviations about staying in Iraq are nothing new: the man is a veritable volcano of well-worn bromides which he keeps stored under his toupee and emits when the occasion calls for it. Which wouldn’t distinguish him from most other politicians except for the fact that Trump’s words might as well be coming out of the mouth of a twelve-year-old. For example, in spite of his alleged opposition to the Iraq war, in 2011 he told a reporter:

“I always heard that when we went into Iraq, we went in for the oil. I said, ‘Eh, that sounds smart.’"

Which is precisely what a somewhat disturbed adolescent is wont to do: grab someone else’s lunch money if he thinks he can get away with it. Elaborating on his larcenous plan in 2011, Trump averred:

“I very simply said that Iran is going to take over Iraq, and if that’s going to happen, we should just stay there and take the oil. They want the oil, and why should we? We de-neutered Iraq, Iran is going to walk in, take it over, take over the second largest oil fields in the world. That’s going to happen. That would mean that all of those soldiers that have died and been wounded and everything else would have died in vain – and I don’t want that to happen. I want their parents and their families to be proud.”

Just like the criminally-inclined parents of a juvenile delinquent would be proud of their son’s very first bank heist. As Rothbard was fond of saying: “Are we to be spared nothing?”

Trump’s foreign policy views belie his reputation as an unconventional politician who’s willing to say what others don’t dare even think to themselves. Indeed, he sounds like most of the other GOP presidential wannabes when it comes to the pending nuclear deal with Iran:

“Take a look at the deal [Obama’s] making with Iran. [If] he makes that deal, Israel maybe won’t exist very long. It’s a disaster. We have to protect Israel. And we won’t be using a man like Secretary Kerry that has absolutely no concept of negotiation, who’s making a horrible and laughable deal.”

Is Trump willing to go to war with Iran? He positively drools at the prospect:

“America’s primary goal with Iran must be to destroy its nuclear ambitions. Let me put them as plainly as I know how: Iran’s nuclear program must be stopped – by any and all means necessary. Period. We cannot allow this radical regime to acquire a nuclear weapon that they will either use or hand off to terrorists. Better now than later!”

And speaking of drooling, get this:

“Who else in public life has called for a preemptive strike on North Korea?”

I’m glad you asked. The answer is: http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1211527,00.html, the former the current Secretary of Defense and the latter a former Secretary of Defense. In their jointly authored book, Carter and Perry claim then-President Bill Clinton was minutes away from authorizing just such a strike before Jimmy Carter called with the news that the North Koreans were willing to negotiate. And then there’s http://thehill.com/video/house/291579-rep-king-us-could-make-preemptive-strike-on-north-korea, another loudmouth New Yorker in the Trump mold, not to mention James Woolsey, Bill Clinton’s CIA Director, as well as this guy.

So you think Trump is crazy? He may well be, but he’s just reflecting the general lunacy that afflicts large portions of the political class in this country. Far from opposing the elites, Trump is merely echoing – often caricaturing – their looniest effusions.

Speaking of loony effusions, Bill Kristol has said that he’s sick of the “elite” media dissing Trump. Dan Quayle’s Brain got out his neocon playbook to declare he’s “anti-anti-Trump.” Which is interesting, since the last time a Republican anti-immigration, anti-free trade candidate arose, Kristol and his fellow neocons were in a lather of fear and loathing: that’s because Pat Buchanan was not only one of the dreaded “nativists,” he was also militantly anti-interventionist. Buchanan dared to call out Israel’s amen corner as the agitators for Gulf War I and its successor: for that, he was branded an “isolationist,” a label affixed to him also on account of his economic nostrums. Yet those same nostrums, when given a far cruder expression by Trump, evince a kind of admiration in the Grand Marshall of the laptop bombardiers. And the reason for this is Trump’s limning of the neocons’ penchant for unabashed militarism and grandiose imperialism: The Donald told a Phoenix audience over the weekend that “I’m the most militaristic person in this room.” And his prescription for what we ought to do to counter ISIS sounds like a Weekly Standard editorial:

“I say that you can defeat ISIS by taking their wealth. Take back the oil. Once you go over and take back that oil, they have nothing. You bomb the hell out of them, and then you encircle it, and then you go in. And you let Mobil go in, and you let our great oil companies go in. Once you take that oil, they have nothing left. I would hit them so hard. I would find you a proper general, I would find the Patton or MacArthur. I would hit them so hard your head would spin.”

Finally, one has to wonder about the provenance of the Trump phenomenon. Seemingly coming out of nowhere, it’s been attributed to a populist upsurge against the regnant elites, who are so out of touch with the people that they never saw what was coming. The media, we are told, are biased against Trump – this is one of The Donald’s chief complaints – and now The People are rising up against the Washington-New York know-it-alls with their “big words” and pretentious airs.

Yet this analysis is lacking in one key ingredient: the facts. For the reality is that the media, far from ignoring Trump, have lavished so much attention on him that he’s eating up coverage that would otherwise go to the rest of the crowded Republican field. And that may be a clue as to what’s really going on here….

The usual “mainstream” media tactics regarding a political outsider they hate is to ignore him or her: the example of Ron Paul should suffice to make this point. Indeed, Jon Stewart pointed this out in a memorable “Daily Show” segment, and it took Paul three runs for the White House to get their attention. Trump has suffered no such fate: quite the opposite, in fact. The Donald’s every demagogic pronouncement is faithfully recorded and broadcast far and wide. Over a hundred reporters crowded into his latest appearances in Las Vegas and Phoenix. Jeb Bush, for all the many millions stuffed into his campaign coffers, couldn’t buy that kind of exposure.

This gift to the Trump campaign is being celebrated by Democratic politicos and consultants as if it were manna from heaven. The Republican “brand,” they aver, is being sullied beyond redemption, and they’re watching this unanticipated and providential miracle from the peanut gallery with unalloyed glee.

And yet … just how unanticipated is it?

As San Francisco Chronicle columnist Debra Saunders points out, Trump is not really any kind of Republican, and, what’s more, his links to the Clintons are well-documented and close:

“In 1987, Trump registered as a Republican in New York. But in 1999, he registered with the Independence Party. In 2001, he registered as a Democrat. In 2009 he was back in with the GOP.

“Hillary Rodham Clinton sat in the front row at Trump’s 2005 wedding with Melania Knauss.

“According to Politico, Trump has donated more than $100,000 to the Clinton Foundation.

“In the 2006 cycle, Trump donated $5,000 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, $20,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, but only $1,000 to the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

“When Trump flirted with running for president in 2012, CNN reported he had given $541,650 to federal Democratic candidates and committees since 1990 – more than the $429,450 he contributed to GOP candidates and committees.”

National Review‘s Jonah Goldberg rips the veil off Trump’s alleged nativism in a by turns anguished-and-amused plea to his fellow conservatives not to be taken in by The Donald’s act:

“You seem to think he’s an immigration hardliner, and he’s certainly pretending to be. But why can’t you see through it? He condemned Mitt Romney as an immigration hardliner in 2012 and favored comprehensive immigration reform. He told Bill O’Reilly he was in favor of a ‘path to citizenship’ for 30 million illegal immigrants:

“Trump: ‘You have to give them a path. You have 20 million, 30 million, nobody knows what it is. It used to be 11 million. Now, today I hear it’s 11, but I don’t think it’s 11. I actually heard you probably have 30 million. You have to give them a path, and you have to make it possible for them to succeed. You have to do that.’

“Question: Just how many rapists and drug dealers did Donald Trump want to give green cards to?”

Trump has been playing the media with his supposed presidential ambitions for years, but it was clear then that it was just The Donald doing what he does best – promoting himself. So why now has he suddenly turned “serious”? I give that word scare quotes because 1) Serious is not a word one associates with a clown, and 2) It’s not at all clear that, for all his megalomania, he really thinks he can win the White House. He may be a lunatic but he’s far from stupid.

And so the question jumps out at us: Why now?

Although I have no concrete proof of my theory, there’s plenty of circumstantial evidence. His ties to the Clintons, his past pronouncements which are in such blatant contradiction to his current fulminations, and the cries of joy from the Clintonian gallery and the media (or do I repeat myself) all point to a single conclusion: the Trump campaign is a Democratic wrecking operation aimed straight at the GOP’s base.

Donald Trump is a false-flag candidate. It’s all an act, one that benefits his good friend Hillary Clinton and the Democratic party that, until recently, counted the reality show star among its adherents. Indeed, Trump’s pronouncements – the open racism, the demagogic appeals, the faux-populist rhetoric – sound like something out of a Democratic political consultant’s imagination, a caricature of conservatism as performed by a master actor.

Now I realize this is a “conspiracy theory,” and, as we all know, there are no conspiracies in politics. In that noble profession, everything is completely aboveboard and on the level – right?

Like hell it is.
 
Amazon: 'No evidence' of bulk sales for Cruz book

DYLAN BYERS 7/13/15

The New York Times' refusal to put Ted Cruz's memoir on its best-seller list is once again being called into question — this time by Amazon, the largest Internet retailer in the country.

On Sunday, an Amazon spokesperson told the On Media blog that the company's sales data showed no evidence of unusual bulk purchase activity for the Texas senator's memoir, casting further doubt on the Times' claim that the book — "A Time for Truth" — had been omitted from its list because sales had been driven by "strategic bulk purchases."

"As of yesterday, 'A Time for Truth' was the number 13 best-selling book, and there is no evidence of unusual bulk purchase activity in our sales data," Sarah Gelman, Amazon's director of press relations, said in an email.

Amazon's findings match those of HarperCollins, the book's publisher, which said Friday that it had "investigated the sales pattern" for Cruz’s book and found "no evidence of bulk orders or sales through any retailer or organization." Moments after that announcement, Cruz's campaign issued a press release accusing the Times of lying and calling on the paper to provide evidence of bulk purchasing or else formally apologize.

“The Times is presumably embarrassed by having their obvious partisan bias called out. But their response — alleging ‘strategic bulk purchases’ — is a blatant falsehood,” Cruz campaign spokesperson Rick Tyler said in a statement Friday. “The evidence is directly to the contrary. In leveling this false charge, the Times has tried to impugn the integrity of Senator Cruz and of his publisher HarperCollins.”

“A Time for Truth," which was published on June 30, sold 11,854 copies in its first week -- more than 18 of the 20 titles on the Times best-seller list for the week ending July 4, according to Nielsen Bookscan. On raw numbers, Cruz's book would have finished at No. 3 on the Times' influential list of hardcover nonfiction. However, the Times informed HarperCollins last week that Cruz's book would not be on the list.

In an email last week, Times spokesperson Eileen Murphy said "A Time for Truth" did not meet the paper's "uniform standards," which include "an analysis of book sales that goes beyond simply the number of books sold." In the case of Cruz's book, she said, "the overwhelming preponderance of evidence was that sales were limited to strategic bulk purchases."

As HarperCollins has noted, Cruz's book “ranked high on other publishing industry bestseller lists including Nielsen Bookscan (#4) … The Wall Street Journal (#4) and Barnes and Noble (#7),” all of which “omit bulk orders books from their rankings.”

The fracas between Cruz and the Times has been a boon to the Texas senator's presidential campaign, sparking outrage and sympathy from conservatives who suspect liberal bias from the Times and the mainstream media.

“It’s been a good week and a half with wall-to-wall coverage of the book, and yes, this latest unfortunate news courtesy of the New York Times is a chance to get yet more attention and drive readers to Senator Cruz’s book,” Keith Urbahn, the book's literary agent, said last week. “This controversy is already helping sales.”
 
Polls, online gambling odds and now Goldman. About as strong an indicator as one gets on the primary.

Goldman Sachs employees are filling Jeb Bush's campaign war chest

Colin Campbell
Jul. 15, 2015

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's (R) presidential campaign raised gobs of money from Goldman Sachs employees during his first 16 days as a candidate.

Bush's first campaign finance filing, released Wednesday, revealed that Bush raised almost $150,000 from people who specifically listed Goldman Sachs in their job title. Wall Street Journal reporter Beth Reinhard wrote that the investment bank appears to be "far and away" Bush's biggest employee contributor.

That total doesn't include spouses or others who did not list Goldman as their employer, even though their donations may be linked to the Wall Street powerhouse. And that's only looking at contributors who gave directly to Bush's presidential campaign, which launched just a month ago. Before that, Bush was raising far more money for his so-called "super PAC" that can take unlimited contributions.

Records show that the vast majority of donations from Goldman employees were $2,700, the maximum amount under federal campaign laws. Among the notable names were Robert Zoellick, Eric Lane, Gene Sykes, David Solomon, Dina Powell, and Timothy O’Neill.

Earlier this year, Politico's Ben White profiled Bush's push for Goldman cash, which he framed as a competition against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Democratic front-runner in 2016.

"Bush hopes to go head to head for Goldman money and support with Hillary Clinton, who also has strong ties to the bank and is expected to raise large sums from its executives to help fund her likely presidential campaign," White wrote. "And it means employees of the nation’s richest investment bank are increasingly putting their money on the two best-known candidates, both of whom are viewed across Wall Street as centrists who could cool some of the scorching anti-banker rhetoric and policies emanating from the Elizabeth Warren wing on the left and the tea party movement on the right."

Goldman Sachs declined to comment on the donations to Business Insider.
 
As a career military man, with nearly 50 years total between military and defense contractor. I can appreciate Trump's agrressive comments, however being a guy who's been through more conflicts than I care to remember, Trump has no idea what he is talking about.He's simply playing to the crowd.

He is not POTUS material and his rhectoric is nothing more than wishful thinking of a lunatic that has never experienced, nor has the ability to fathom the devastation of war. His flame will fade and sadley enough we will most likely be saddled with the status quo. None of the candidates that have a chance offer anything to effect a change. Business as usual. Says something about the IQ of the general public.
 
As a career military man, with nearly 50 years total between military and defense contractor. I can appreciate Trump's agrressive comments, however being a guy who's been through more conflicts than I care to remember, Trump has no idea what he is talking about.He's simply playing to the crowd.

He is not POTUS material and his rhectoric is nothing more than wishful thinking of a lunatic that has never experienced, nor has the ability to fathom the devastation of war. His flame will fade and sadley enough we will most likely be saddled with the status quo. None of the candidates that have a chance offer anything to effect a change. Business as usual. Says something about the IQ of the general public.

I don't disagree with your comments but don't you think they apply to most of the recent presidents and VPs, including the great Ronald Reagan? Since 1980, George HW Bush has been the only president with real military combat experience. Clinton and 'W' evaded the draft by one means or another, and BO has never served.

Some of Trump's support is coming from low IQ voters but you can't reject all his supporters as dumb. A LOT of intelligent Americans believe the US is in real trouble, and poll after poll has shown the vast majority of Americans think the country is on the wrong track. They don't believe politicians from either party have the courage or the ability to do what is necessary to fix it because they're controlled by special interest groups. Trump is willing to speak his mind without caring about offending anyone and he isn't beholden to lobbyists and donors. That is enormously appealing to a lot of people.

I don't believe Trump will win the nomination - or even maintain his current level of support, but at this point in time, it looks like he is tapping into the same silent majority that crossed party lines and resulted in Reagan's 1984 landslide. The other candidates better take notice because Trump's support isn't just due to low information voters - it's due to something much bigger.
 
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