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TRUMP

71.103 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 ... 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 ... 3556 »» | Laatste | Omlaag ↓
  1. forum rang 4 Mijn Vriend 1 september 2019 08:23
    www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-...

    A group of Hong Kong protesters on Saturday waved American flags, sang the U.S. national anthem and urged President Donald Trump to “liberate” the city from China.

    Doel is waarschijnlijk provoceren, maar van enig benul van de wereld getuigt het niet.
  2. forum rang 4 Mijn Vriend 1 september 2019 08:29
    quote:

    luchtschip schreef op 31 augustus 2019 23:58:

    30 mensen beschoten op de rijksweg(freeway nr 20) tussen Odessa en Midland in de staat Texas.

    Daders rijden nog in 2 verschillende wagens rond. Politie is zoekactie begonnen.

    twitter.com/KremlinTrolls/status/1167...

    Kunnen we afspreken dat je alleen melding maakt van 10 Jankdoden of meer per incident, dan is er ook nog ruimte / interesse voor meer opmerkelijke zaken.
  3. [verwijderd] 1 september 2019 10:08
    quote:

    Mijn Vriend schreef op 1 september 2019 08:29:

    [...]

    Kunnen we afspreken dat je alleen melding maakt van 10 Jankdoden of meer per incident, dan is er ook nog ruimte / interesse voor meer opmerkelijke zaken.
    Goed idee, maar men zou de grens nog iets scherper kunnen kiezen, bv 5 of 6. Daaronder ziet men door de bomen het bos niet meer:

    www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/12/...
  4. forum rang 6 gbakl 1 september 2019 17:26
    www.msn.com/nl-nl/nieuws/buitenland/t...

    ja hoor we zijn dol op trump, altijd al geweest !?
    vooral omdat hij zo uitblinkt in historisch besef met een aandachtsspanne
    van net meer dan 2 seconden, op een goede dag...

    (De oorsprong van de goudvisquote is een rapport van Microsoft Canada uit het voorjaar van 2015. Hierin staat dat de aandachtsspanne van de mens door de opkomst van de nieuwe media in de afgelopen jaren flink afgenomen zou zijn. Was de aandachtsspanne in 2010 nog 13 seconden, in 2013 zou het gedaald zijn tot 8 seconden, precies 1 seconde minder dan de aandachtsspanne van een goudvis.)
  5. forum rang 10 luchtschip 3 september 2019 00:48

    Reporter : Do you have a message for Poland on the 80th anniversary of World War II ?

    Trump : I just want to congratulate Poland.

    Afgelopen weekend herdacht Polen het feit dat 80 jaar geleden Wereldoorlog II begon.
    Nazi Duitsland viel vanuit het Westen Polen binnen en Rusland deed dat vanuit het Oosten in 1939.

    Een felicitatie is niet echt op zijn plaats.

    twitter.com/atrupar/status/1168391562...

  6. [verwijderd] 3 september 2019 10:32
    quote:

    josti5 schreef op 3 september 2019 10:04:

    [...]

    Ik kan mij goed voorstellen, dat jij dat niet begrijpt.

    Maak het maar weer persoonlijk.

    U citeert iets zonder de bron aan te geven en valt daarop een deelnemer aan.

    Maar laat maar zijn verder. Wanneer verder niemand vraagtekens heeft, is het prima.

    Laat dit verder aan luchtschip over.
  7. forum rang 4 Al Kipone 3 september 2019 14:35
    North Korea Missile Tests, ‘Very Standard’ to Trump, Show Signs of Advancing Arsenal

    American intelligence officials and outside experts have come to a far different conclusion: that the launchings downplayed by Mr. Trump, including two late last month, have allowed Mr. Kim to test missiles with greater range and maneuverability that could overwhelm American defenses in the region.

    Japan’s defense minister, Takeshi Iwaya, told reporters in Tokyo last week that the irregular trajectories of the most recent tests were more evidence of a program designed to defeat the defenses Japan has deployed, with American technology, at sea and on shore.

    Mr. Kim’s flattery of Mr. Trump with beguiling letters and episodic meetings offering vague assurances of eventual nuclear disarmament, some outside experts say, are part of what they call the North Korean leader’s strategy of buying time to improve his arsenal despite all the sanctions on North Korea.

    The rapid improvements in the short-range missiles not only put Japan and South Korea in increased danger, but also threaten at least eight American bases in those countries housing more than 30,000 troops, according to an analysis of the missile ranges by The New York Times. Such missiles, experts say, could be designed to carry either conventional or nuclear warheads.

    www.nytimes.com/2019/09/02/world/asia...
  8. forum rang 4 Al Kipone 3 september 2019 14:40
    Excuses, excuses.

    That’s what President Trump says companies offer when they complain about the economic pain caused by his trade wars.

    “Badly run and weak companies are smartly blaming these small Tariffs instead of themselves for bad management .?.?. and who can really blame them for doing that? Excuses!” Trump tweeted Friday.

    He elaborated on this critique during a subsequent interview with reporters.

    “A lot of badly run companies are trying to blame tariffs,” he said. “In other words, if they’re running badly and they’re having a bad quarter, or if they’re just unlucky in some way, they’re trying to blame the tariffs. It’s not the tariffs. It’s called ‘bad management.’?”

    On the one hand, Trump is a pretty credible source here: He does know a lot about bad management and excuses. So maybe we should believe him when he scapegoats corporations for not being able to manage the costs of his trade wars. In the president’s thinking, if a company can’t hack it when faced with a sudden, unexpected, government-imposed cost or other erratic policy changes, it simply doesn’t deserve to stay in business.

    On the other hand, this is an extremely odd interpretation of recent business complaints, given the rest of Trump’s economic agenda.

    After all, besides tax cuts, the main way that Trump has supposedly unlocked the economy’s great potential and put us on the path to 3 (or 4, or even 6!) percent growth is by reducing the government-imposed cost of doing business and providing more regulatory certainty.

    That’s the standard Trump talking point, anyway. According to the president, his pro-business, regulation-slashing rampage has enriched the average American family by $3,000 — an eye-popping number of dubious provenance, awarded three Pinocchios by The Post’s fact-checker extraordinaire Glenn Kessler.

    Trump and his various allies and surrogates likewise often repeat the boilerplate claim that the president’s “tax cuts and deregulation” agenda has supposedly already unleashed higher gross-domestic-product growth. That’s despite the fact that major independent forecasters believe 2019 GDP growth is on track for about 2.2 percent, which is .?.?. exactly what it averaged during President Barack Obama’s second term.

    www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/trump...
  9. forum rang 4 Al Kipone 3 september 2019 14:40
    meer;

    Trump surrogates often outright lie about what his tax cuts did and whom they targeted. On the deregulation point, though, they typically avoid any specifics altogether. And they’re rarely asked follow-up questions about which onerous, job-killing government regulations they’re thinking of when they brag about how Trump has so wisely rolled them back.

    Which is lucky for them. Because if you actually look over Trump’s regulatory rollbacks, it’s difficult to pinpoint which, if any, of them is supposedly unleashing all that (imaginary) growth.

    Perhaps the economy-growing deregulations that Team Trump is thinking of are his dozens of environmental rule changes. These do indeed help a handful of companies save money — by, for instance, allowing them to dump more mercury and arsenic into the water supply, pump more methane and fine particulate matter into the air, and use a pesticide linked to neurological damage in children.

    Presumably taking those options off the table could raise the cost of doing business, at least a little.

    Or maybe Trumpkins are instead thinking of the rescission of a requirement for for-profit schools to disclose (and maintain minimum) employment outcomes as a condition of continuing to receive federal aid.

    Or maybe they mean Trump’s repeal of a rule that said companies could only get lucrative government contracts upon certifying that they follow federal labor laws.

    Or maybe it’s the relaxation of yet another rule dictating how many hours long-haul truck drivers can go without sleeping.

    In each of these cases (and others), rolling back regulations might reduce costs and thereby boost profits for companies. But that doesn’t actually eliminate said costs. It just shifts them onto someone else — such as whoever lives downwind from the coal plant or happens to share the road with a sleep-deprived trucker.

    In other words, those government-imposed, “job-killing” costs were there to address what economists call externalities: costs imposed upon third parties. Unlike, say, Trump’s pointless but still costly trade wars, they were designed to correct a market failure, not to make a functional market fail.

    So maybe Trump’s comment about the interaction between burdensome government policies and “bad management” — that if you can’t handle a little extra government-imposed cost, you probably aren’t running a great business — was right, after all. He was just applying it to the wrong government policies. Listen to Trump’s insight, ye whiny, excuse-making businesses: If your company can stay afloat if and only if it dumps arsenic in the water, defrauds customers, cheats workers or gives kids brain damage, maybe you don’t deserve to be in business after all.
  10. forum rang 4 Al Kipone 3 september 2019 14:47
    Pinkeltjein Ierland:

    Speaking to reporters travelling with Mr Pence about the decision to stay in Mr Trump’s property, the vice-president’s chief of staff Marc Short said that the Trump hotel was a facility that “could accommodate the team,” despite having to travel between Shannon and Dublin for the official elements of the trip which comprises meetings with the President, Taoiseach and US ambassador in Dublin.

    He said that Mr Trump had suggested that Mr Pence stay at the hotel, but he said it wasn’t a “request” or a “command.” “It was a suggestion.”

    He said that the decision to stay in Doonbeg had followed normal protocol and had gone through the State Department for sign off an approval.

    “If you’re going to stay in the Doonbeg area with a footprint of our size, that is the one facility that can accommodate that,” Mr Short said.

    Goh, er is geen enkel hotelletje te vinden waar Pence en Mother kunnen slapen? Zouden zie niet op AirBNB hebben gekeken?

    Oplichters, corrupt tuig, farizeers, hypcriete minkukels :-)

    www.irishtimes.com/news/politics/penc...
71.103 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 ... 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 ... 3556 »» | Laatste |Omhoog ↑

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