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Who wrote this?
“A president whose character manifests itself in patterns of reckless personal conduct, deceit, abuse of power, and contempt for the rule of law cannot be a good president”
“In a self-governing and law-abiding nation, we must never allow ourselves to be lulled into passive disgust or indifference, the civic equivalent of a shrug of the shoulders, We must never lose our sense, when appropriate, of outrage.” |
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The hell he can't. Bill Clinton was a good president. He was such a sleaze, that LAWYERS decided even he was beneath them, and they disbarred him. But he made the country better. Right or wrong? |
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Not a chance in hell President Trump could write that.
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mittens.
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Pretty sure he wasn’t actually disbarred either. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Woodrow Wilson was no peach.....
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Bill Bennett said that
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http://www.nbcnews.com/id/10904831/n.../#.XDJEn_ZFxhE |
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"In 2001, following a 5-year suspension by the Arkansas bar, the United States Supreme Court disbarred Bill Clinton" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disbarment |
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okee-dokey. |
Why bother Jim. This argument loses credibility because it requires honesty on the part of some people whom are truly offended by the concept of such a thing. This is where Spence dances while you pull strings. But he is giggling....🤡
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don't they all...well maybe not the "little known" part
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This could easily have been the Mainstream Media in 2012 while telling us how were all gonna die if Mitt Binders or something. |
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And you remember Wilson having SOME race issues? He was an out and out blatant racist. He supported the KKK in his praise of the movie Birth of a Nation which glorified the KKK. There was an actual and verified Klan resurgence after that. He segregated several agencies of the Federal Government. He stated that the negro race was inferior. Those just for starters. Trump, who Dems love to call a racist has not done anything close to the things Wilson did. And, according to you, Wilson was an "extremist." He was one of the founders of the Progressive movement who claimed the Constitution was outdated and an impediment to government doing what he considered needed to be done. When I wrote a post about the early Progressives and their desire to remove constitutional impediments to what they considered should be unfettered government, you accused me of citing extremists (Wilson, et al) to support my "extremist" views. So four of the biggest things you, and other Trump haters, like to accuse Trump of--racism, extremism, anti-free speech, and destruction of the Constitution--are actual Wilsonian traits which surpass anything, by a long shot, that Trump has done. Yet you give Wilson a pass with nary a slap on the wrist, and almost daily pile on Trump Your a sly chameleon that situationally changes its spots. That's why I say you're a slick con artist. Even more so than Trump who's supposed con is an open book. |
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Yeah, really. |
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I assume you have been listening to Glen Beck rant about Wilson. Several other reasons I would think you would try and brand Wilson as bad along with Roosevelt and Taft. They passed measures to regulate workplaces, food and drugs. They barred child labor and mandated school attendance. And they won antitrust laws to break up corporate monopolies. According to Roosevelt, corporations "should be so supervised and so regulated that they shall act for the interest of the community as a whole." But Roosevelt used a light touch in his regulation of corporations, which he called "indispensable instruments of our modern civilization." By contrast, Wilson pledged to use the newly empowered federal state to break up large companies and restore the economic competition of an earlier age. Defeating TR and Taft in 1912, Wilson immediately cut tariffs on imported goods, which he said benefited big businesses at the expense of consumers. He pushed through the Clayton Antitrust Act, which blocked price-fixing and prevented the same people from sitting on the boards of competing companies. And he instituted the Federal Trade Commission, which investigates unfair business practices. Wilson also tackled the nation's banking system, which had left American investors at the mercy of unscrupulous financiers and the unpredictable ups and downs of the economy. His answer was the Federal Reserve, which continues to regulate the national money supply and interest rates in order to cushion us against the worst blows of the business cycle. And he nominated Louis Brandeis—the nation’s leading champion of worker protections—for the Supreme Court. Unlike Trump he certainly was not the United State's Yeltsin. |
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