http://www.salon.com/2015/10/02/the_donald_is_a_fraud_the_unseemly_truth_about_his_american_success_story_partner/
On Fri, Apr 29, 2016 at 1:50 PM, wrote:
>
> Message: 10
> Date: Fri, 29 Apr 2016 11:22:02 -0400 (EDT)
> From: "Jim Fernandes"
> To: "GoaNet"
> Subject: [Goanet] Miscrap - 5
> Message-ID:
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
>
> After the most recent primary elections in some of the late stage states,
> it's a done deal. It's going to be Hillary against Trump in November.
>
> But Jim, what about Rafael? He has just picked his VP candidate? Does that
> not count for anything?
>
> Who are you talking about? Carly Fiorina?
>
> I don't know what Rafael and Carly have been smoking lately, but whatever the
> heck they are inhaling, it's working quite well to make them go delusional!
>
> This year's elections are bound to be very interesting though.
>
> On one hand, you have die hard Democrats who would be willing to do anything
> for the Clintons, regardless of how much dough Hillary got to pocket from
> Wall Street. Then, there are those that hate them like scourge on the face of
> this earth. I am a big fan of Bill (not Hillary though) and if there was a
> way for him to run again, I'd vote for him in a heart-beat. But that's not
> reality - I am being as delusional about voting for Bill Clinton back to
> office again, as much as Rafael is, about becoming the next American
> president. Democrats need to understand, that just because Bill has a huge
> fan base, they are going to vote for his wife. It doesn't work that way.
>
> Donald Trump, with his 'speaking-his-mind' attitude has garnered a huge
> following in the US, such that, even his party bosses are dumb founded as to
> why people vote for him. Average Joe's like me, who were supporting Sanders
> on the Democratic side, began to like him even more as months went by.
>
> The reasons? There are many
>
> 1. He may not sound or even speak like a politician but he is no dumb dude.
> He is a very sharp negotiator - a skill that will come really handy if he
> becomes the next US president.
>
> 2. He does not care about sounding politically correct. I would rather have a
> president who speaks what's on his mind (the way it is), rather than being
> cautious about what the press and the pundits want to hear.
>
> 3. Trump is not indebted to any political groups. He does not need to bend to
> any Wall Street or Washington lobbyists as he is not relying on their
> largesse to get elected.
>
> 4. He does not like illegal immigrants sucking up America's resources - a
> stance every American should embrace.
>
> 5. He does not like American multinationals summarily offshoring large number
> of jobs - a cause that is very dear to me and many US citizens.
>
> 6. I understand he does not like Obamacare - something that I disagree with
> him about, but as long as he replaces it with something better - I am OK with
> it. The Obamacare omelet has already been scrambled into law - it can't be
> un-scrambled, but I would love if Trump could make it even more palatable.
>
> 7. He is a very good entertainer and he has made enough money on his own in
> real estate. He does not need our money to enrich himself further. I think he
> wants to leave a memorable legacy for America and no amount of additional
> wealth would do that for him. On the other hand, Hillary is dumb (remember
> she used her personal email account to conduct official US business?), boring
> and greedy. I don't like politicians accepting large sums of money from
> influential lobbyist groups for an hour's worth of work - specially, when
> they were going to run for the nation's top job. This cannot bode well for
> the country ... too much baggage to deal with.
>
> 8. Finally, I do not like what I would characterize as 'Dynasties'. There are
> many people who can run this place - we don't need a former President's wife
> to do that.
>
> Trumps thoughts on making Mexican's pay for the border wall, the Muslims,
> guns, women's right to choose etc are all just sound bytes - there's nothing
> much he could do about these issues. Even if he does attempt to tackle these
> items, he wouldn't get past the courts.
>
> I think, given enough support by the Sander's crowd (who tend to be mostly
> younger centrist Democrats and who helped Obama to get into the White House)
> will be the key to putting a non-career politicians such as Trump to take the
> White House.
>
> See attached link on Trump's next strategy - This article was published just
> a couple of hours ago on CNN.
> http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/29/politics/donald-trump-bernie-sanders/index.html
>
>
> Jim Fernandes
> Colva / Scarsdale, NY.
>
--
*
No offense meant. But let the chips fall where they may.