UK to ban Donald Trump petition numbers grow. Trump will be pleased with his new Engl

Blackleaf

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Britain is a country which doesn't ban certain dangerous Islamist organisations but may ban an American presidential hopeful just because he said a few things that the PC Brigade don't agree with.
 

French Patriot

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Sep 17, 2012
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Britain is a country which doesn't ban certain dangerous Islamist organisations but may ban an American presidential hopeful just because he said a few things that the PC Brigade don't agree with.



The British oligarchs will not ban their Muslim slaves. Those fools are the force the oligarch uses to murder other Muslims and keep the population under pressure so that it reproduces faster.


Do not forget that reproduction is the greatest weapon this Muslim war has. That is why the Muslim oligarchs wage war against their own. Like we need more population!


Regards
DL
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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The British oligarchs will not ban their Muslim slaves.

Because the British Left-wing ruling Establishment detests everything about Britain, her proud history and everything this greatest country in the world stands for and wants it all destroyed, as well as its majority white, Christian populace.

That's why they want to flood the country with every Tom, Dick and Abdul under the Sun. It was to make Britain dark and non-Christian and that's why they love immigration and hate Trump.
 

French Patriot

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Sep 17, 2012
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Because the British Left-wing ruling Establishment detests everything about Britain, her proud history and everything this greatest country in the world stands for and wants it all destroyed, as well as its majority white, Christian populace.

That's why they want to flood the country with every Tom, Dick and Abdul under the Sun. It was to make Britain dark and non-Christian and that's why they love immigration and hate Trump.



I am not going to go to much of this but the trend to not support whites seems to be everywhere. I did an O.P. on the promotion of white reproduction that did not go well at all.


I do agree that the government is not a friend to whites or to those who love democracy. Muslim ideology and the Western ideology are not compatible at all.


Regards
DL
 

Ludlow

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wherever i sit down my ars
What you have is a growing sentiment of isolationism and protectionism. Couple of good ism's there which are not anything new. Some thought is was the way to go in the thirties and it only made the already fvcked up situation worse. WW2 came along and with that common purpose where people came together as one the situations eventually improved . Paranoia and reactionary knee jerk responses are all we need .
 

French Patriot

Council Member
Sep 17, 2012
2,005
30
48
What you have is a growing sentiment of isolationism and protectionism. Couple of good ism's there which are not anything new. Some thought is was the way to go in the thirties and it only made the already fvcked up situation worse. WW2 came along and with that common purpose where people came together as one the situations eventually improved . Paranoia and reactionary knee jerk responses are all we need .



War does bring people together. Perhaps that is why the U.S. is funding ISIS.


Regards
DL

So how will a ban work if the subject of the ban has no intention of going to this third world country in the first place?



The ban is not created to be effective. It is there to give a political message.


So far the Brits are showing a lot of solidarity with Trump's ideology of banning.


Regards
DL
 

Ludlow

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Jun 7, 2014
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wherever i sit down my ars
War does bring people together. Perhaps that is why the U.S. is funding ISIS.


Regards
DL





The ban is not created to be effective. It is there to give a political message.


So far the Brits are showing a lot of solidarity with Trump's ideology of banning.


Regards
DL
Yes Hitler, Mussolini and Roosevelt use to hang out in the Bahamas together. Play a little golf, croquet, you know. Plan out a little war to boost the economy. Maybe you are the one needing medication. National Inquirer on the news stands in your Area? You might want to prepare for the imminent alien invasion forecast for later this year.
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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Mexican flags define decade-long battle over Trump's Scottish golf course

Strange forces seem to be at work along the remote Scottish coastline just north of Aberdeen.

It's a place of wild beauty, where the sand dunes rise to great heights. If it weren't for the bone-chilling cold blowing in with the spray off the North Sea, parts of it could be mistaken for the Sahara or Saudi Arabia's Empty Quarter.

But there are other disorienting vistas. None more so than the sight of a Mexican flag flapping in a field overlooking the dunes.

It's a not-so-subtle message directed at the man who has just become the 45th president of the United States — someone locals say they've learned a fair bit about after a decade of watching him do business.

"The last person you thought you'd see here was Donald Trump," says Susan Munro, recalling the first and only time she met the man, not long after he'd bought up a stretch of land along the coast, promising to turn into one of the world's best golf courses.

"He was out for a stroll, just looking at what he just bought, and that was about it. I thought, 'Oh well, he seems all right.'"

Until it all went wrong.

The Munros lived right next to the site earmarked by Trump for his clubhouse at Trump International Golf Links.

When they refused to sell their land, diggers hired by Trump International arrived and started building up berms. They completely blocked the couple's views of the dunes and the sea beyond that they had enjoyed for more than two decades.

"It's just awful. I feel like I'm in prison now," says Munro.

Similar intimidation tactics were used against others who refused to sell; one neighbour was reportedly sent a bill for a fence constructed in front of his property.

That's when the Mexican flags started going up.

Scottish officials had courted Trump's investment, inviting him in. It was a chance to diversify an economy long dependent on the fortunes of North Sea oil, says James Bream, of the Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce.

"Since the investment began, we have a world-class golf course. It's in the top 100 in the world," Bream says. "We have a fantastic new hotel, which provides fine dining, and the course and facilities provide employment for over 100 people. So the development is significant in a regional sense."

But it fell far short of what Trump had originally promised to develop: $1.5 billion US in investment that was to result in a second golf course, holiday homes, more hotels and some 6,000 jobs.

That promised investment was deemed significant enough for authorities to brush aside environmental concerns. The system of dunes on which Trump International wanted to build the golf course was protected as a site of "scientific interest."

"Mr. Trump has behaved in a disgraceful and disgusting fashion from the first time he stepped foot here," says Martin Ford, a local councillor in Aberdeenshire who cast the deciding vote against Trump International's original proposal because of the area's special status.

"Since he first came here [in 2006], we've been left with the worst of all possible worlds. Implausibly large economic benefits were promised. They have not been delivered. But a very remarkable, amazing dune system that has been here for thousands of years [has] been vandalized by the construction of a golf course across a large part of it."

Despite the local council's rejection, the Scottish government of the day intervened to push the development through.

But relations soon soured, too, between Trump and his former champions.

Alex Salmond — Scotland's first minister at the time — today admits he'd do things differently.

"My main problem with Donald Trump as far as the golf course is concerned is he didn't deliver what he promised."

His problem with Trump becoming U.S. president, Salmond says, is more related to character.

"Because as soon as somebody says no to Donald Trump, then he goes totally into the stratosphere. And that's the danger we all face … because that bit of character is a real danger to us all."

Salmond says he was demoted by Trump, going from being "the greatest politician on the planet" to "mad Alex" after he refused to cancel a wind farm project that fell within view of the Trump golf course.

That's when the second phase of development sputtered to a halt.

Some say Trump was looking for an excuse to back out of a bad investment; the golf course was reportedly losing money. (The billionaire-turned-president also owns a second golf resort in Scotland, farther south in Ayr.)

But Salmond believes it's more about payback.

Trump International refused to let the properties that got away actually get away — he tried to convince the Scottish government to expropriate them.

Trump himself got involved with a very public mud-slinging match against a local fisherman and farmer named Michael Forbes, denouncing his property as a "slum" after Forbes wouldn't sell.

For his efforts, Forbes was awarded the title of "Top Scot" back in 2012 during the Glenfiddich-sponsored Spirit of Scotland Awards.

It was Trump's fight against the "little guys" that started to turn those who supported the investment against Trump, according to those in the nearby village of Balmedie.

"I thought it was good to start with because he's taking money into the community and stuff," says resident Gary Greenhowe. "But what he did to a few people trying to [keep] land and stuff wasn't very nice."

Mark Mitchell says he resented the pro-Trump coverage found in the local newspaper; its editor happened to be married to Trump International's chief executive in Aberdeenshire.

CBC News requested an interview with that editor to ask about attitudes toward the Trump controversy. But in a rather Trump-like moment, he said wouldn't go ahead with the interview if he was going to be asked about allegations of conflict of interest. (Ultimately, CBC was asked to leave the newspaper's offices.)

Now local residents say they are awaiting the next chapter. It's not clear if Trump — or his designates — will be back to pursue original development plans, but reports suggest he will press ahead.

"There's a big difference between somebody getting bullied out of their house and the fact that this guy now has his fingers on the nuclear button," adds Mitchell.

Mud-slinging and Mexican flags define decade-long battle over Trump's Scottish golf course - World - CBC News
 

Danbones

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Benjamin Netanyahu to be arrested for war crimes when he arrives in London
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/105446

Petition calls for Obama to be tried for 'war crimes' in The Hague
https://www.rt.com/usa/332014-obama-petition-war-crimes/

Arrest Barack Hussein Obama & His Criminal Assistants in the Commission of Treason!
https://www.petition2congress.com/4...n-obama-his-criminal-assistants-in-commission

WhiteHouse.Gov Petition Calls For Treason Charges Against President Obama
WhiteHouse.Gov Petition Calls For Treason Charges Against President Obama - The Political Insider

guess Trump will have to get in line...
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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Benjamin Netanyahu to be arrested for war crimes when he arrives in London
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/105446

Petition calls for Obama to be tried for 'war crimes' in The Hague
https://www.rt.com/usa/332014-obama-petition-war-crimes/

Arrest Barack Hussein Obama & His Criminal Assistants in the Commission of Treason!
https://www.petition2congress.com/4...n-obama-his-criminal-assistants-in-commission

WhiteHouse.Gov Petition Calls For Treason Charges Against President Obama
WhiteHouse.Gov Petition Calls For Treason Charges Against President Obama - The Political Insider

guess Trump will have to get in line...



 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Course he's visiting London. He is getting a State Visit and there is a trade deal to negotiate. The Lefties and Remoaners will just have to get used to it. It's important.

The Queen won't touch him with a barge pole. Maybe, he can buy a reception with some of her distant cousins.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Is that the same Queen who has greeted Assad, Mugabe, Seko, Nazarbayev, Museveni, Bolkiah, Amin and Jinping?

Meeting Mr Trump will be a doddle for her.

She did not include his supposed visit in her throne speech. Getting forgetful in her old age? The US is hardly a "Whoops! I forgot about them!" omission.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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She did not include his supposed visit in her throne speech. Getting forgetful in her old age?

She didn't write the speech.

The US is hardly a "Whoops! I forgot about them!" omission.

A foreign country 4,200 miles away is quite easy to forget when writing a speech about the government's policies in the new parliament.