Inauguration Day For Trump

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
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ummm
ladies:
YES SIZE DOES MATTER
though usually guys don't lie about how small it is unless it is someone elses
;)

CNN DEBUNKS ITS OWN CLAIM THAT TRUMP INAUGURATION WAS SMALL
A photo from CNN proves the actual size of Trump's inauguration crowd
The Alex Jones Show - JANUARY 24, 2017
CNN Debunks Its Own Claim That Trump Inauguration Was Small » Alex Jones' Infowars: There's a war on for your mind!



And that refutes the article somehow?
Bullsh!tter...^
it certainly refutes YOU as it did on the other thread
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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oh...my bad..
it went up since cannuck was thusly refuted on the other thread

All them shiny new QA dollars repatriating
get those factories hummin NOW dudes!!!
 

EagleSmack

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Feb 16, 2005
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And that refutes the article how?

20,000 Pts!

Can You Count Suckaaaaaaa!


 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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The Trump proclamation that everybody missed

Gregory Korte - USA Today

Buried under a stack of presidential paperwork President Trump signed shortly after his inauguration was his first official proclamation, declaring last Friday a "National Day of Patriotic Devotion."
But by the time anyone found out about it, it was already over.
Trump proclaimed the day to honor his own inauguration, proclaiming a "new national pride" that would "strengthen our bonds to each other and to our country."
But the White House never released the proclamation until it arrived Monday at the Office of the Federal Register, where it was scheduled to be published Tuesday.
The proclamation continues a tradition that began with President George H.W. Bush in 1989 and followed by every president since. The one-page proclamations read like mini-inaugural addresses, and can set a rhetorical tone for the entire presidency.
And Trump's tone is distinctly different from his predecessors, said Brandon Rottinghaus, a University of Houston professor who studies presidential proclamations.
Trump's proclamation "is missing the personal humility" seen in the previous proclamations, he said. Instead, it strikes a more nationalistic note.
"A new national pride stirs the American soul and inspires the American heart. We are one people, united by a common destiny and a shared purpose," Trump's proclamation said. "There are no greater people than the American citizenry, and as long as we believe in ourselves, and our country, there is nothing we cannot accomplish."
Trump's "National Day of Patriotic Devotion" is the first inaugural proclamation that doesn't explicitly invoke God — although it speaks of "sacred values" and prayers for peace — or quote previous great Americans like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln or Martin Luther King, Jr.
Bush, for example, proclaimed a "National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving" in his 1989 inaugural proclamation. "I am humbled before God and seek his counsel and favor on our land," he said.
"These proclamations trend towards humble and gracious language as new presidents struggle with the enormity of the task in front of them," Rottinghaus said. "There is an awestruck tone to most of these first proclamations as incoming presidents acknowledge they are fallible and burdened with a great responsibility."
For Bill Clinton, the proclamations declared a "National Day of Fellowship and Hope" in 1993, and a "National Day of Hope and Renewal" in 1997. George W. Bush returned to his father's "National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving" in 2001. And for President Obama, the days were known as the "National Day of Reconciliation and Renewal" in 2009 and the "National Day of Hope and Resolve" in 2013.

"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer"
 

Cliffy

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Nov 19, 2008
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Cut him some slack, Cliffy, he's the best thing to hit the U.S. since Harry Truman!
I don't agree at all and I will not cut him any slack. His Orwellian approach to governance is leading to a complete police state. The US has always been a police state but now all pretense has been abandoned. And if you think this is not our fate too, you just aren't paying attention to the big picture.
 

Ocean Breeze

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Jun 5, 2005
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The Trump proclamation that everybody missed

Gregory Korte - USA Today

Buried under a stack of presidential paperwork President Trump signed shortly after his inauguration was his first official proclamation, declaring last Friday a "National Day of Patriotic Devotion."
But by the time anyone found out about it, it was already over.
Trump proclaimed the day to honor his own inauguration, proclaiming a "new national pride" that would "strengthen our bonds to each other and to our country."
But the White House never released the proclamation until it arrived Monday at the Office of the Federal Register, where it was scheduled to be published Tuesday.
The proclamation continues a tradition that began with President George H.W. Bush in 1989 and followed by every president since. The one-page proclamations read like mini-inaugural addresses, and can set a rhetorical tone for the entire presidency.
And Trump's tone is distinctly different from his predecessors, said Brandon Rottinghaus, a University of Houston professor who studies presidential proclamations.
Trump's proclamation "is missing the personal humility" seen in the previous proclamations, he said. Instead, it strikes a more nationalistic note.
"A new national pride stirs the American soul and inspires the American heart. We are one people, united by a common destiny and a shared purpose," Trump's proclamation said. "There are no greater people than the American citizenry, and as long as we believe in ourselves, and our country, there is nothing we cannot accomplish."
Trump's "National Day of Patriotic Devotion" is the first inaugural proclamation that doesn't explicitly invoke God — although it speaks of "sacred values" and prayers for peace — or quote previous great Americans like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln or Martin Luther King, Jr.
Bush, for example, proclaimed a "National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving" in his 1989 inaugural proclamation. "I am humbled before God and seek his counsel and favor on our land," he said.
"These proclamations trend towards humble and gracious language as new presidents struggle with the enormity of the task in front of them," Rottinghaus said. "There is an awestruck tone to most of these first proclamations as incoming presidents acknowledge they are fallible and burdened with a great responsibility."
For Bill Clinton, the proclamations declared a "National Day of Fellowship and Hope" in 1993, and a "National Day of Hope and Renewal" in 1997. George W. Bush returned to his father's "National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving" in 2001. And for President Obama, the days were known as the "National Day of Reconciliation and Renewal" in 2009 and the "National Day of Hope and Resolve" in 2013.

"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer"
Kinda surprised that he did not name the holiday Trump day. It would fit his delusions of grandeur. Between his obsessions(crowd size and voter faud ) and delusions. one might be a tad concerned re: his mental status.and that does not begin to cover his immaturity and narcissism. This is one for the books
 

Mowich

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Dec 25, 2005
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And if you think this is not our fate too, you just aren't paying attention to the big picture.

This statement reminds me of the boy who cried wolf, Cliff - frankly, it is little more than over-the-top rhetoric. You can bet your bottom dollar that the chances of a police state are zero to none under our current PM and his sunny ways government. Canada under any government no matter their political stripe will never become a police state. It is not in our collective nature, nor will it be in the future.

Don't be so quick to judge all Canadians on the actions of a minority of Trump-aping twits that grab the headlines of news-starved media. They are but small voices in a much broader more comprehensive narrative.