This was the president we elected. This is our first taste of winning since Judge Gorsuch. We are glad you saw what the Judge Moore victory meant. Well done Mr. President. This week you were my President. Keep up the fight against the corrupt establishment. Bringing health insurance competition across state lines... winning. Telling the truth about Iran winning. Not forcing employers to provide birth control if it against their conscience... winning for all Americans. (even if they wanted the birth control) Lets take down that mandate next. winning... winning and more winning. And nice rebound on immigration... we might be winning there again too. I love winning and I am not going to get sick of it. Now lets drive the bums out of Congress.
George Lopez booed off stage at charity gala for Trump jokes. https://pagesix.com/2017/10/14/george-lopez-booed-off-stage-after-trump-jokes-flop-at-gala/ Memo to Hollywood. We love our president. We don't like you very much however. Keep it up and see.
"Little" George is a "loser" and "Very Bad Person". Many people don't know this, but he was born in Kenya to Muslim Parents.
Actually it reminds me of how foolish people can be to waste their money on a poorly designed, Chinese made piece of junk.
Shrinks go against their own principles and march for Trump's removal. Psychologists march through New York to call for Trump’s removal from the presidency A group of psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health professionals marched through New York City on Saturday to call for President Donald Trump to be removed from office, said The New York Post. More than 120 mental health professionals marched along Lower Broadway to publicly advocate for the presidential Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment and end Trump’s presidency. The amendment allows for a cabinet to oust a president from office should they become “unable to discharge the powers and duties” of the presidency. “We can sense the power of Trump’s underlying fear that he is worthless and weak by how intensely he resists and retaliated against any criticism,” said Cornell University psychologist Harry Segal to the Post. “No matter how minor, he can’t let anything go.” “We’re actually suffering from his narcissistic personality,” said clinical psychologist Michelle Golland. “He has no empathy. You can feel it, the way he spoke about the San Juan mayor… She has PTSD and our president mistreats her. She is re-victimized. That is a narcissist.” The group is part of a national coalition of mental health professionals called “Duty to Warn,” who are sidestepping a half-century of tradition by speaking openly about the mental health of a public figure who they do not personally treat. The so-called “Goldwater Rule” is actually Section 7 of The American Psychiatric Association’s (APA) Principles of Medical Ethics, which states that it’s unethical to publicly speculate about public figures’ mental health. After Fact magazine devoted a full issue in 1964 to dissecting the mental health of then-presidential candidate Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), Goldwater successfully sued the magazine’s editor for libel in the Goldwater v. Ginzburg case.
Unless it goes through Congress it can and will be reversed with the sign of a pen by the democrat president in Jan 2021 https://www.cnbc.com/2017/10/10/trumps-approval-ratings-drop-in-every-state.html Trump's approval ratings drop in every state A new survey from Morning Consult finds that President Trump's approval ratings have fallen in every state since he took office. Nationwide, Trump's net job approval has dipped by 19 points since January. The survey interviewed 472,000 registered voters across 50 states. Christina Wilkie | @christinawilkie Published 9:57 AM ET Tue, 10 Oct 2017 President Donald Trump's approval ratings have dropped in every state since he took office, according to a large new poll released Tuesday by Morning Consult. The poll, which surveyed 472,000 registered voters between January and September, also found a 19-point drop in Trump's net approval ratings nationwide. Trump has failed to improve his standing among voters anywhere, the poll found, even in the states where he won by large margins in the 2016 presidential election. The results paint a worrisome picture for Senate Republicans next year, who will be defending eight seats. Democrats, however, will be fighting to hold on to 25 seats, making the overall risk of Republicans losing their Senate majority relatively small. In Tennessee, Trump's net approval rating is down 23 points. Indiana saw a negative swing of 17 points. Both states have Senate races in 2018. The number of voters who disapprove of Trump's job performance nationwide has also climbed by double digits: In January, the president's disapproval rating was 39 percent — by September that figure had climbed 13 points, to 52 percent. In Nevada and Arizona, two states where vulnerable Republican senators are running for re-election next year, 51 percent of voters statewide said they disapproved of Trump's job performance. The sheer size of the president's negative approval swings also suggests that in some states, independents and Democrats may be starting to coalesce into one voting bloc. And in Washington, where positive approval ratings often translate into political clout on Capitol Hill, the poll bodes poorly for the White House. As the Trump administration prepares to push a tax overhaul bill and possible immigration reform, the numbers suggest that the president's leverage could be diminished in these and future fights. The poll's margin of error ranged from 2 to 6 percentage points, with lower error margins in more populous states.