Hillary Living RENT FREE inside Rightie Heads

zappasguitar

Well-known member
How bad is it for deranged Righties with CDS?


Wi-Fi password for the Republican presidential debate tonight: ‘stophillary’


The Republican National Committee has officially confirmed that the GOP and its candidates are an extremely petty bunch. In their latest prank for media attention, the RNC will make every reporter type “StopHillary” to access the wi-fi network at tonight’s debate in Milwaukee hosted by Fox Business Network.

“We like to force the media to understand that there’s two parties at every chance we get,” RNC Chairman Reince Priebus told POLITICO. Ted Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler posted a picture of the RNC debate password on twitter...

After the Republican candidates complained about CNBC’s “gotcha” questions, the FBN moderators, Neil Cavuto and Maria Bartiromo, will likely take it easy on the candidates at tonight’s debate. Politico reports Cavuto said she will try and make herself invisible. Bartiromo added: “After that [CNBC] debate, I realized, I knew my marching orders. It was clearer than ever what my marching orders are, and that is to help the viewer, help the voter better understand what each candidate’s plan is; is it a realistic plan, can it work and how is it different from the next guy or gal, and that’s what I plan to focus on." Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief Gerard Baker will join Cavuto and Bartiromo.

A Fox Business promo ad released last week said: "CNBC never asked the real questions, never covered the real issues. That's why on Nov. 10, the real debate about our economy and our future is only on Fox Business Network.”

Arguing with the largely liberal media is not the way to capture the hearts of swing voters. The GOP has been getting a taste of their own medicine lately, the CNBC debate being the best example. Their candid, boisterous remarks have changed the dynamics of political discourse. Whether or not Donald Trump is running a ‘comic book’ campaign is a completely valid question. What does he expect after he goes around calling everyone pathetic losers? Now, because it’s not working in their favor, they have something to say about it. But, a “StopHillary” Wi-Fi password isn’t going to win votes. Jokes on you.

After the CNBC debate, the Republican National Committee pulled out of another planned in Februrary on NBC News. Priebus called the CNBC debate a “crap sandwich” in an interview with FOX News.

Marco Rubio (R-FL) spoke out on the debate controversy in an interview with Fox & Friends. “I don’t think it’s atypical from what you see among most people in the mainstream media, which is privately they believe they’re smarter than the people running, and they can’t wait for their chance to show off in front of their buddies by asking some question they think is going to embarrass, especially, Republicans,” Rubio said.

Donald Trump had expressed his concerns about the “unfair” CNBC debate before it started, even threatening that he wouldn’t attend. According to Politico, an aide to Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) told CNBC they can “go f**k themselves” because the network wanted to scrap opening statements.

President Obama joked about how tthe candidates could complain about the questions that were apparently "too hard" at the CNBC debate.

Donald Trump and Ben Carson are still dominating the polls going into tonight's debate. Without any "gotcha" questions, how will Fox Business get the most out of the candidates?

http://www.rawstory.com/2015/11/wi-...ican-presidential-debate-tonight-stophillary/
 
roflmao.gif



I bet all the reporters were crying over having to use that password....
 
http://www.nysun.com/editorials/spitzer-wins-one/15795/





Spitzer Wins One

Editorial of The New York Sun | June 21, 2005










The attorney general of New York, Eliot Spitzer, finally won one in court yesterday when he defeated an attempt by a group of banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, to restrain him preemptively from subpoenaing their records. Mr. Spitzer prevailed on that procedural matter before Judge Sidney Stein of the federal court for the Southern District of New York. But as the attorney general goes on to attempt to regulate the practices of the national banks, he may have to make a detour through Congress.

Mr. Spitzer is attempting to obtain information from the banks about the mortgage rates they charge to minority homebuyers. Banks are required to collect and publicly release some of this information under the 1975 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, enacted to prevent racial discrimination in the housing market. The publicly available data suggest to some people that the banks might be discriminating. Mr. Spitzer launched an investigation in April, and has requested that banks provide additional information.

The banks have argued that non-race factors, such as credit scores, explain the difference between mortgage rates for some minorities and whites that appeared in the public disclosure. Maybe. At issue, though, is which regulator should look into this - Mr. Spitzer or the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the federal agency charged with oversight of national banks.

Mr. Spitzer argues that states should be allowed to regulate the banks that do business within their borders. The banks argue that under federal law, the comptroller alone has authority to regulate national banks. A spokesman at the comptroller's office, Kevin Mukri, says that the federal government has been scrutinizing claims of discriminatory lending for "many, many years."
 
Don't you have a slew of 5 dollar Johns banging down the door of your trailer that you should be servicing, you dumb fucking negro?

No, that's your wife you are thinking of.

But hey, congrats she's upped her "fee" to $5 a trick.

Makes buying another bottle of Thunderbird easier when you don't have to earn your keep 25 cents at a time like she used to.
 
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