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Sean Spicer resigned. sm


Posted: Jul 21, 2017

"Spicer stepped down Friday after disagreeing with President Trump's appointment of Anthony Scaramucci as communications director." This was surprising to me. Even with so many rumors floating about his going/staying, I still thought he would be there for a while. ;

Voted/supported Trump - Wokeup

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I had high hopes, I believed. Now I wonder if Trump truly wants the presidency because he's doing everything in his power to get himself out of this role.

Not me. This onslaught of hate makes me support him - even more.

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xx

It's not hate, it's the fact that he is not what - any of you thought you

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were voting for. He is, however, exactly what those who didn't vote for him knew he was. Dig in, you're in for a very sad awakening.
Sounds like an Obama description here. - ---
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---
Not at all! - It all belongs
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to Trump and his chaotic administration! Nice try though!
Trump may not turn out to be - so great but
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I think you are in for a rude awakening, not his supporters.

Me too. Food stamp use lower, jobs are up, illegals - are down, among others.

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The media is mocking Made in America week.

Only 6% of Americans care about Russia according.

#1 - Health Care 35%:
#2 – Unemployment/Jobs 13%:
#3 – Terrorism 11%:
#4 – Immigration 10%:
#5 – Climate Change 10%:
i didn't see where the media was mocking MIA week. - Truthhurts
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I heard and saw one tiny bit of a conference he held and that was on Fox. Other than that, I didn't see or hear a single thing in the news on TV or on line (of course, I don't pay attention to liberal and crappy sites like MediaMatters and Slate).
You should care about Russia - old and burned out
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The integrity of our elections is fundamental to our democracy.
Then you should care about Clinton pay-for play - schemes and what "interference"
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she sold on a regular basis.
Whether I care about it or not - old and burned out
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really doesn't matter. Trump is president now.
Yeah and you did not care when Obama/CLinton - lied nonstop
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So, no credibility when you endlessly spew hatred for Pres. Trump.
Who says we don't - care about that?
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Everyone cares about things that hurt America and are illegal - nobody here is giving Clinton a pass - we are just talking about the current president and what he may have or has done.
It sounds like you just cited a reason for everyone to support - Voter Fraud Investigation sm
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Or did I misunderstand you?

"The integrity of our elections is fundamental to our democracy."

Therefore, we should all support Trump's voter fraud investigation to the fullest extent of the law.

Do you agree?
Sorry. That post should include a warning - sm
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WARNING: You've got a lot of credibility riding on the next few keystrokes.
Bring it on. The only significant fraud is Russian interference. nm - oldtimer
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.
Only in the minds of the Liberal Fascists - The most significant fraud
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Is Liberal Fascists fake attempt at acting like they give a damn about the USA.
Very good point. However, the Liberal Fascists - only want things that they
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think will help them. If benefits President Trump or the Republicans in any way, the Liberal Fascists start with the faux outrage and screaming foul or I should say, Russia, Russia, Russia.
Very similar to - when anyone
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points out something that Trump did or said - the right isolationists start screeching Obama and Clinton or Fake News! Denial is a sad thing!
Exactly. MSM and Fascists are lying about these - accomplishments every dat
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and the Liberal Fascists are following in lock step with MSM talking points.

Obama total waste of a good suit for eight years. Trump making headway of the mess Obama left behind.
Can't help but laugh at your delusional post! nm - oldtimer
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.
Can't help but laugh at your delusional posts - Dems provide hypocritical chuckles all day
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;)

I agree with you. Sick to death of the Dems nonstop - hatred. Independent

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and nonstop obstructionism. I have never seen such a hateful, obnoxious, vile group as the Liberal Fascists (interchangeable term with Dems). Sick of every single one of those hateful gas bags.
Do you know what an oxymoron is? nm - oldtimer
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Yep - DemAlinsky's and their memes - xxx
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xxx
I think that would be a no. - nm
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.
They've also redefined what socialism is. Providing roads - and a post office is one thing,
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providing a means of living off other's work is another. They've lumped it all together.

Voted and still support Trump. I didn't sign up for - the media trying to bring him

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down. I voted for somebody to fight back against the media lies. He does and still does. He needs people around him who do too.

What about his lies day after day? - nm

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.
What lies? I see the media lying day after day. - How about Obama lying about me saving
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2500 a year on health insurance. The media never called him out on that.

I've already had 8 years of lying.
Notice how the Liberal Fascists ignored Obama, Clinton, - Pelosi, Schumer, Abadeen
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lying for years, and that is only a few of the Lyin' Dems.

So, you don't think Sean supported him? - Truthhurts

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I'm starting to get a wee bit tired of some of Trump's attitude. The rumor is (and I'll bet it's true), next to go will be Priebus.That guy is okay with me...let him go, but I think Sean worked his butt off for Trump and that's the thanks he gets.

Same with Chris Christie (I know, CC is out of favor with just about everyone now) but he really got the shi**y end of the stick. There are others that worked hard for him that didn't deserve the treatment.

It's not the media bringing him down - old and burned out

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It is his own irrational, childish, boorish behavior and his total inability to govern.
And here you are back to Obama again. - "It is his own irrational, childish, boorish
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Glad Dems finally recognize how Obama screwed up so much in eight years.
Wow! are we - back on the
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playground in elementary school? I know you are but what am I? Good grief!
Wow - Maybe you are. Good Grief is right! - Obama/Clinton lied routinely
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as a matter of sport, destroying America purposefully. Let us know how you like the swings and slides..Good grief indeed. Take a good hard look at the damage Obama/Clinton did, then get back to us after your nap...'K

I'm still trying to figure out exactly what the - media has lied about

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Why don't you clear that up for me. The only lies I see are coming out of Trump and his supporter's mouths. What lies are you talking about?

In my opinion, the Russians already won. You fell for all the propaganda and that is what got this illegitimate president in office. I'm just waiting to see who is going to throw who under the bus.
If you have to even ask that question, then you must - be an avid watcher of MSM.
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Nuff said.

He seems to be attacking all those who supported him - Truthhurts

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from the beginning. Sean is probably miffed because he was doing both Press Secretary and Communications Director and probably thought Trump was going to put him in that role.

Sean, Priebus and Sessions were first on board with Trump and all three have been attacked.

I'm beginning to wonder what he (Trump) expects from his supporters in the W.H. He wants everyone to know what he's doing regarding his campaign promises, yet he sabotages the good things he may have done by focusing on some stupid tweet or today's news (Spicer announcement)which creates mass media hysteria where they focus on the small non-newsworthy items instead of what he may have accomplished in the week.

Scaramucci is a good pick. He hit back at CNN and - 3 executives lost jobs,

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with Mueller expanding the scope of the investigation, the stakes are high. Trump needs street fighters to take on those who are trying to bring him down, which is pretty much all of the media.

They run the DNC now.

This media opposition to Trump is not going to stop. - It's Cloward and Piven. They are

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going to continue.

The MSM hates him and the RINO establishment can't let an outsider succeed.

Turn off the TV. Just listen to people you trust.

You get 100 pts in my book for the C-P reference - Genius! nm

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nm
Long but good read. You might be the only person here - that actually reads it.
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The CLOWARD-PIVEN STRATEGY [of Manufactured Crisis
—Obama’s strategy for destroying the economy]

In their 1966 article, Cloward and Piven charged that the ruling classes used welfare to weaken the poor; that by providing a social safety net, the rich doused the fires of rebellion. Poor people can advance only when “the rest of society is afraid of them,” Cloward told The New York Times on September 27, 1970. Rather than placating the poor with government hand-outs, wrote Cloward and Piven, activists should work to sabotage and destroy the welfare system; the collapse of the welfare state would ignite a political and financial crisis that would rock the nation; poor people would rise in revolt; only then would “the rest of society” accept their demands.

The key to sparking this rebellion would be to expose the inadequacy of the welfare state. Cloward-Piven’s early promoters cited radical organizer Saul Alinsky as their inspiration. “Make the enemy live up to their (sic) own book of rules,” Alinsky wrote in his 1971 book Rules for Radicals. When pressed to honor every word of every law and statute, every Judaeo-Christian moral tenet, and every implicit promise of the liberal social contract, human agencies inevitably fall short. The system’s failure to “live up” to its rule book can then be used to discredit it altogether, and to replace the capitalist “rule book” with a socialist one.

The authors noted that the number of Americans subsisting on welfare — about 8 million, at the time — probably represented less than half the number who were technically eligible for full benefits. They proposed a “massive drive to recruit the poor onto the welfare rolls.” Cloward and Piven calculated that persuading even a fraction of potential welfare recipients to demand their entitlements would bankrupt the system. The result, they predicted, would be “a profound financial and political crisis” that would unleash “powerful forces … for major economic reform at the national level.”

Their article called for “cadres of aggressive organizers” to use “demonstrations to create a climate of militancy.” Intimidated by threats of black violence, politicians would appeal to the federal government for help. Carefully orchestrated media campaigns, carried out by friendly, leftwing journalists, would float the idea of “a federal program of income redistribution,” in the form of a guaranteed living income for all — working and non-working people alike. Local officials would clutch at this idea like drowning men to a lifeline. They would apply pressure on Washington to implement it. With every major city erupting into chaos, Washington would have to act.

This was an example of what are commonly called Trojan Horse movements — mass movements whose outward purpose seems to be providing material help to the downtrodden, but whose real objective is to draft poor people into service as revolutionary foot soldiers; to mobilize poor people en masse to overwhelm government agencies with a flood of demands beyond the capacity of those agencies to meet. The flood of demands was calculated to break the budget, jam the bureaucratic gears into gridlock, and bring the system crashing down. Fear, turmoil, violence and economic collapse would accompany such a breakdown — providing perfect conditions for fostering radical change. That was the theory.

Cloward and Piven recruited a militant black organizer named George Wiley to lead their new movement. The three met in January 1966, at a radical organizers’ meeting in Syracuse, New York called the “Poor People’s War Council on Poverty.” Wiley listened to the Cloward-Piven plan with interest. That same month, he launched his own activist group, the Poverty Rights Action Center, headquartered in Washington DC. In a calculated show of militancy, he sported dashikis, jeans, battered shoes, and a newly grown Afro. Regarding the Cloward-Piven strategy, Wiley told one audience:

“[A] a lot of us have been hampered in our thinking about the potential here by our own middle-class backgrounds – and I think most activists basically come out of middle-class backgrounds – and were oriented toward people having to work, and that we have to get as many people as possible off the welfare rolls.... [However] I think that this [Cloward-Piven] strategy is going to catch on and be very important in the time ahead.”

After a series of mass marches and rallies by welfare recipients in June 1966, Wiley declared “the birth of a movement” – the Welfare Rights Movement.

Cloward and Piven publicly outlined their strategy at the Second Annual Socialist Scholars Conference, held in September 1966 at New York City’s Hotel Commodore. To read an eyewitness account of their presentation, click here.

In the summer of 1967, Ralph Wiley founded the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO). His tactics closely followed the recommendations set out in Cloward and Piven’s article. His followers invaded welfare offices across the United States — often violently — bullying social workers and loudly demanding every penny to which the law “entitled” them. By 1969, NWRO claimed a dues-paying membership of 22,500 families, with 523 chapters across the nation.

Regarding Wiley’s tactics, The New York Times commented on September 27, 1970, “There have been sit-ins in legislative chambers, including a United States Senate committee hearing, mass demonstrations of several thousand welfare recipients, school boycotts, picket lines, mounted police, tear gas, arrests - and, on occasion, rock-throwing, smashed glass doors, overturned desks, scattered papers and ripped-out phones.”

These methods proved effective. “The flooding succeeded beyond Wiley’s wildest dreams,” wrote Sol Stern in the City Journal. “From 1965 to 1974, the number of households on welfare soared from 4.3 million to 10.8 million, despite mostly flush economic times. By the early 1970s, one person was on the welfare rolls in New York City for every two working in the city’s private economy.”

The National Welfare Rights Organization pushed for a “guaranteed living income,” as prescribed by Cloward and Piven, which it defined, in 1968, as $5,500 per year for every American family with four children. The following year the NWRO raised its demand to $6,500. Though Wiley never made headway with his demand for a living income, the tens of billions of dollars in welfare entitlements that he and his followers managed to squeeze from state and local governments came very close to sinking the economy, just as Cloward and Piven had predicted.

In their 1966 article, Cloward and Piven had given special attention to New York City, whose masses of urban poor, leftist intelligentsia and free-spending politicians rendered it uniquely vulnerable to the strategy they proposed. At the time, NYC welfare agencies were paying about $20 million per year in “special grants.” Cloward and Piven estimated that they could “multiply these expenditures tenfold or more,” draining an additional $180 million annually from the city coffers.

New York City’s arch-liberal mayor John Lindsay, newly elected in November 1966, capitulated to Wiley’s every demand. An appeaser by nature, Lindsay sought to calm racial tensions by taking “walking tours” through Harlem, Bedford Stuyvesant, and other troubled areas of the city. This made for good photo-ops, but failed to mollify Wiley’s cadres and the masses they mobilized, who wanted cash. “The violence of the [welfare rights] movement was frightening,” recalls Lindsay budget aid Charles Morris. Black militants laid siege to City Hall, bearing signs saying “No Money, No Peace.”

Lindsay answered these provocations with ever-more-generous programs of appeasement in the form of welfare dollars. New York’s welfare rolls had been growing by 12% per year already before Lindsay took office. The rate jumped to 50% annually in 1966. During Lindsay’s first term of office, welfare spending in New York City more than doubled, from $400 million to $1 billion annually. Outlays for the poor consumed 28% of the city’s budget by 1970. “By the early 1970s, one person was on the welfare rolls in New York City for every two working in the city’s private economy,” Sol Stern wrote in the City Journal.

As a direct result of its massive welfare spending, New York City was forced to declare bankruptcy in 1975. The entire state of New York nearly went down with it. The Cloward-Piven strategy had proved its effectiveness.

Crucial to Wiley’s success was the cooperation of radical sympathizers inside the federal government, who supplied Wiley’s movement with grants, training, and logistical assistance, channeled through federal War on Poverty programs such as VISTA’s.

The Cloward-Piven strategy depended on surprise. Once society recovered from the initial shock, the backlash began. New York’s welfare crisis horrified America, giving rise to a reform movement which culminated in “the end of welfare as we know it” — the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, which imposed time limits on federal welfare, along with strict eligibility and work requirements.

Most Americans to this day have never heard of Cloward and Piven. But New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani attempted to expose them in the late 1990s. As his drive for welfare reform gained momentum, Giuliani accused the militant scholars by name, citing their 1966 manifesto as evidence that they had engaged in deliberate economic sabotage. “This wasn’t an accident,” Giuliani charged in a July 20, 1998 speech. “It wasn’t an atmospheric thing, it wasn’t supernatural. This is the result of policies and programs designed to have the maximum number of people get on welfare.”

In a January 2011 article in the Nation magazine, Frances Fox Piven would reflect upon the elements that had helped make the welfare-rights movement successful in the 1960s:

“[B]efore people can mobilize for collective action, they have to develop a proud and angry identity and a set of claims that go with that identity. They have to go from being hurt and ashamed to being angry and indignant. Welfare moms in the 1960s did this by naming themselves ‘mothers’ instead of ‘recipients,’”

In the same 2011 article, Piven noted that “protesters need targets, preferably local and accessible ones capable of making some kind of response to angry demands.”

After the welfare-rights movement had run its course by the mid-1970s, Cloward and Piven never again revealed their intentions as candidly as they had in their 1966 article. Even so, their activism in subsequent years continued to rely on the tactic of overloading the system. When the public caught on to their welfare scheme, Cloward and Piven simply moved on, applying pressure to other sectors of the bureaucracy, wherever they detected weakness.

In 1982, partisans of the Cloward-Piven strategy founded a new “Voting Rights Movement,” which purported to take up the unfinished work of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Cloward and Piven despised America’s electoral system every bit as much as they despised its welfare system, and for much the same reason. They believed that welfare checks and voting rights were mere bones tossed to the poor to keep them docile. The poor did not need welfare checks and ballots, they argued. The poor needed revolution.

In their 1977 book, Poor People’s Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail, Cloward and Piven asserted that the “electoral process” actually served the interests of the ruling classes, providing a safety valve to drain away the anger of the poor. The authors wrote that “as long as lower-class groups abided by the norms governing the electoral–representative system, they would have little influence.… [I]t is usually when unrest among the lower classes breaks out of the confines of electoral procedures that the poor may have some influence,” as when poor people engage in “strikes,” “riots,” “crime,” “incendiarism,” “massive school truancy,” “worker absenteeism,” “rent defaults,” and other forms of “mass defiance” and “institutional disruption.”

In 1981, Cloward and Piven wrote that poor people lose power “when leaders try to turn movements into electoral organizations.” That is because the “capability of the poor” to effect change lies “in the vulnerability of societal institutions to disruption, and not in the susceptibility of these institutions to transformation through the votes of the poor.”

To advance their radical agenda, Cloward and Piven focused more intently on transforming the Democratic Party rather than the Republican Party. Because Democrats professed to represent the lower classes, many poor people believed they could get what they wanted by voting Democrat. Thus their energies would be channeled into useless “voter activity,” rather than strikes, riots, “incendiarism” and the like.

Ten years earlier, when Cloward and Piven determined that the welfare state was acting as a safety valve for the establishment, they resolved to destroy the welfare state. The method of destruction they chose was drawn from the teachings of Saul Alinsky: “Make the enemy live up to their own book of rules.” And so they did, challenging the welfare state to pay out every penny to every person theoretically entitled to it. Alinsky called this sort of tactic “mass jujitsu” – using “the strength of the enemy against itself. Now Cloward and Piven concluded that the Democratic Party was also acting as a safety valve for the establishment. Thus they would try to force Democrats to “live up to their own book of rules” — i.e., if the Democrats say they represent the poor, let them prove it.

Cloward and Piven presented their plan in a December 1982 article titled, “A Movement Strategy to Transform the Democratic Party,” published in the left-wing journal Social Policy. They sought to do to the voting system what they had previously done to the welfare system. They would flood the polls with millions of new voters, drawn from the angry ranks of the underclass, all belligerent and the demanding their voting rights. The result would be a catastrophic disruption of America’s electoral system, the authors predicted.

Cloward and Piven hoped that the flood of new voters would provoke a backlash from Democrats and Republicans alike, who would join forces to disenfranchise the unruly hordes, using such expedients as purging invalid voters from the rolls, imposing cumbersome registration procedures, stiffening residency requirements, and so forth. This voter-suppression campaign would spark “a political firestorm over democratic rights,” they wrote. Voting-rights activists would descend on America’s election boards and polling stations much as George Wiley’s welfare warriors had flooded social-services offices. Wrote Cloward and Piven:

“By staging rallies, demonstrations, and sit-ins … over every new restriction on registration procedures, a protest movement can dramatize the conflict.... Through conflict, the registration movement will convert registering and voting into meaningful acts of collective protest.”

The expected conflict would also expose the hypocrisy of the Democratic Party, which would be “disrupted and transformed,” the authors predicted. A new party would rise from the ashes of the old. Outwardly, it would preserve the forms and symbols of the old Democratic Party, but the new Democrats would be genuine partisans of the poor, dedicated to class struggle. This was the radical vision driving the Voting Rights Movement.

ACORN spearheaded this “voting rights” movement, which was led by veterans of George Wiley’s welfare rights crusade. Also key to the movement were Project Vote and Human SERVE, both founded in 1982. Project Vote is an ACORN front group, launched by former NWRO organizer and ACORN co-founder Zach Polett. Human SERVE was founded by Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven, along with a former NWRO organizer named Hulbert James.

All three of these organizations — ACORN, Project Vote and Human SERVE — set to work lobbying energetically for the so-called Motor-Voter law, which President Bill Clinton ultimately signed in 1993. At the White House signing ceremony for this bill, both Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven were in attendance. The new law eliminated many controls on voter fraud, making it easy for voters to register but difficult to determine the validity of new registrations. Under the new law, states were required to provide opportunities for voter registration to any person who showed up at a government office to renew a driver’s license or to apply for welfare or unemployment benefits. “Examiners were under orders not to ask anyone for identification or proof of citizenship,” notes Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund in his book, Stealing Elections. “States had to permit mailing voter registrations, which allowed anyone to register without any personal contact with a registrar or election officials. Finally, states were limited in pruning ‘deadwood’ –people who had died, moved, or been convicted of crimes – from their rolls.

The Motor-Voter bill did indeed cause the voter rolls to be swamped with invalid registrations signed in the name of deceased, ineligible or non-existent people — thus opening the door to the unprecedented levels of voter fraud and “voter disenfranchisement” claims that followed in subsequent elections during the 1990s, and culminating in the Florida recount crisis in the 2000 presidential election. On the eve of the 2000 election, in Indiana alone, state officials discovered that one in five registered voters were duplicates, deceased, or otherwise invalid.

The cloud of confusion hanging over elections serves leftist agitators well. “President Bush came to office without a clear mandate,” the leftwing billionaire George Soros declared. “He was elected president by a single vote on the Supreme Court.” Once again, the “flood-the-rolls” strategy had done its work. Cloward, Piven, and their disciples had introduced a level of fear, tension, and foreboding to U.S. elections previously encountered mainly in Third World countries.

In January 2010, journalist John Fund reported that Congressman Barney Frank and U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer were preparing to unveil legislation calling for “universal voter registration,” whereby any person whose name was on any federal roll at all — be it a list of welfare recipients, food stamp recipients, unemployment compensation recipients, licensed drivers, convicted felons, property owners, etc. — would automatically be registered to vote in political elections. Without corresponding identity-verification measures at polling places, such a law would vastly expand the pool of eligible voters, thereby multiplying the opportunities for fraudulent voters to cast ballots under other people’s names.

Both the Living Wage and Voting Rights movements depend heavily on financial support from George Soros’s Open Society Institute and his “Shadow Party,” through whose support the Cloward-Piven strategy continues to provide a blueprint for some of the Left’s most ambitious campaigns to overload, and cause the collapse of, various American institutions. Leftists such as Barack Obama euphemistically refer to this collapse as a “fundamental transformation,” on the theory that society can only be improved by destroying the deeply flawed existing order and replacing it with what they view as a better alternative.

Major Resource: The Shadow Party, by David Horowitz and Richard Poe
I've read this more than once and I forget the universal - basic income is part of C-P.
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It amazes me how much the left continues to promote socialism - Genius! sm
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Who can honestly look at Russia, Venezuela, or any other socialist country and say, "Let's do that here!"

Oddly enough, it seems those who feel the strongest that Russia stole the election from Hillary.
I support public schools, public libraries, public highways, the - VTMT
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US Postal service, the FDIC, the U.S. Constitution, a safety net for those that need it, equal pay for equal work for men and women, public education, police and fire departments....all "socialist" concepts.
But it also - sounds very
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American! Thank you for your service!
That is not socialism. Bernie Sanders pushed this idea - that taxes for roads, etc. is socialism.
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It's not. Public education stinks.

Socialism is not in the U.S. Constitution. A Post Office is not socialism.

Anything that is paid for with our taxes... - sm
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for the benefit of all is socialism. In our case, it is democratic socialism because we have free elections.
The Post office is constitutional. The rest are taxes. If you - want to call everything socialism
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then you are turning it over to the govt with no say in how the money is spent. Our schools are financed through our property taxes.

They keep going up and up to the point that we are going to move. They just raised our gas tax in my state, they say to build roads. Guess what they did last time? The Dems diverted the money to the Medicaid program to pay for their reelection.

This is socialism alright. Handing your money over with no say in how it's spent.

Socialist concepts? This is how the left has rewritten - history and redefined terms.
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Wow.
David grew up with communist parents, so he knows - what he's talking about.
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Thanks for positing this.

Even Bernie Sanders couldn't beat the machine - the - media and the swamp.

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xx

going to miss him - lisa

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Loved Melissa McCarthy playing him on SNL. Sure T-Rump will like Huckabee Sanders more.

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including his son, Gamal.  This is viewed as another red herring appeasement by Egyptians as he has not resigned as president and the NDP is notoriously corrupt, meaning nothing is keeping them from replacing old corrupt leaders with new corrupt leaders, as was the case with the appointment of Suleiman as VP.   Nonetheless, this is at least a symbolic baby step in the right direction, behind more substantial reforms, to include the establishment of a transitional go ...

Last Night, Sean Hannity Had A Filmmaker On His Program Showing Clips Of His Jul 05, 2013
iflm The Cost of Amnesty." It was very interesting, from what I saw. I was unable to watch the whole thing, but it was certainly eye-opening. Before anyone spews hate against Sean Hannity just because he's a conservative, try watching the video clips he has posted on his website. There are 4 clips listed. Watch them all  You just might find them interesting. Too bad our Congress' eyes aren't open to this mess.     http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/hannity/index ...

Watch How Congressman Sean Duffy Decimates MSNBC's Andrea MitchellOct 09, 2013
All you have to do is go to Newsbusters.org and watch the liberal media trying to tell a savvy congressman that Obama IS trying to negotiate. He is not trying to negotiate anything, but if we stand firm he will have to cave in at the 11th hour. We the People will defund the GOP if they don't try to defund Obamacare. So they are actually being forced to do this. That's why Resident Obama is punishing the American people. That means at least get rid of the nightmarish things th ...

"Inside The Fox News Lie Machine: I Fact-Checked Sean HannityOct 21, 2013
  UPDATE I re-reported a Fox News segment on Obamacare -- it was appallingly easy to see how it misleads the audience BY ERIC STERN  I happened to turn on the Hannity show on Fox News last Friday evening. “Average Americans are feeling the pain of Obamacare and the healthcare overhaul train wreck,” Hannity announced, “and six of them are here tonight to tell us their stories.”  Three married couples were neatly arranged in his studio, the wives ...

Sean Hannity "Charity" Scam Uncovered ByMar 29, 2010
http://crooksandliars.com/logan-murphy/sean-hannity-being-attacked-right-mor ...