2016 Presidential Campaign

hillary rodham clinton vs donald john trump who will win?

  • hillary rodham clinton

    Votes: 12 40.0%
  • donald john trump

    Votes: 18 60.0%

  • Total voters
    30

Corduroy

Senate Member
Feb 9, 2011
6,670
2
36
Vancouver, BC
I'm not sure being in bed with him is a prerequisite, but being on friendly terms with Pukin certainly doesn't hurt!

 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
If Dems have anything left on Trump, expect it to drop soon now to distract from the FBI news./QUOTE]

They've had some diversionary success with the bum squeezing but maybe itza not racey enough how about molesting siamese triplets and a monkey in a railway car in Pittsburg in 1997 or exposing himself in front of the bunny cage in a Florida zoo in ah 2003. His addiction to sex with creepy clowns maybe.

Umm. . . so what? They been slaughtering families in that part of the world non-stop for 7,000 years.It's a civil war. None of our business. There are no good guys.

History is no where near that detailed or complete, we don't have a very good idea of the last seven hundred years. There is no civil war in Syria and you know it.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
Or the English and the Irish.

or the English and the French


or the English and the Zulu


or the English and the Scots


or the English and the Germans


or the English and the Welsh


or the English and the Boers


or the Red Rose English and the White Rose English
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
What a great idea cliffy, post a pic that expresses your though. Got one for 'Why didn't I think of that?'
A little curious Megalooneytunes . Who are the schizoids and psychopaths supporting in this years elections?

What a great idea cliffy, post a pic that expresses your though. Got one for 'Why didn't I think of that?'
It's Clitford. HEEEEEEEEHAAAAWWWWWW HEEEEEHAAAAWWWWWW!
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
A little curious Megalooneytunes . Who are the schizoids and psychopaths supporting in this years elections?


It's Clitford. HEEEEEEEEHAAAAWWWWWW HEEEEEHAAAAWWWWWW!
In your election?? Wouldn't it be better to ask one of your political leaders.
Do you support the platform of the Pirate Party in Iceland?? If their 'revolt' a few years back targeted bankers and crooked politicians how many would that include if the US closed it's borders to them leaving before the revolt date and escaping criminal investigation an hard punishment when found to be guilty. I'm thinking eastern Russia should raise the property values on private land and perhaps restrict interaction with the native population for the 'refugees'. Perhaps Reservations can become sanctuaries from White Man's Law as it is a 'National Healing Center' that treats all persons sent to prison. The band would be the guards and have a electric beer cart or something similar to dispense the 'products' for the ones 'tenting in the old 'national parks' that are are already located on Reservation land anyway. Vending machines at the turnouts on the 'highway' is you are just passing through. We call them stores, duty free stores if you like to spend $20 to save $10.
Anything new with you in the last few hours?

Stop being so silly
He's right, a terrorist can only kill so many.
Being a refugee is much more dangerous than being a soldier as sanctions hit you first and soldiers last. Since making people move because of gunfire and other things that go boom is what is done in a war so war crimes is the law that is in place. It seems to me the existing laws can be upgraded from 1948 to 2018 so just what an infraction actually is.
Higher compensation rates apply if you think about the past more than it deserves and there are many examples available of what those crimes are when living in a 'sensitive time'.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,416
3,460
113
North Korea nuke threat awaits next U.S. president
Matthew Pennington, The Associated Press
First posted: Friday, October 28, 2016 01:10 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, October 28, 2016 01:35 PM EDT
WASHINGTON — If North Korea has been a foreign policy headache for Barack Obama’s presidency, it threatens to be a migraine for his successor. The next president will likely contend with an adversary able to strike the continental U.S. with a nuclear weapon.
Whoever wins the White House in the Nov. 8 election is expected to conduct a review of North Korea policy. It’s too early to predict what that portends, but the North will grab more attention of the next president than it did for Obama, who adopted strategic patience: ramping up sanctions in a so-far fruitless effort to force the North to negotiate on denuclearization.
With surprising candour this week, National Intelligence director James Clapper said that persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons is probably a “lost cause.” That appeared to challenge to a key tenet of U.S. policy shared by U.S. allies and adversaries alike that agree on the goal of the denuclearization of the divided Korean Peninsula, however distant it may be.
But Clapper was also channelling what many experts are thinking. Leader Kim Jong Un appears to see nuclear weapons as a guarantee of his own survival. Six-nation aid-for-disarmament talks have not convened since Obama took office in 2009, during which time the North’s capabilities have leapt ahead.
“Without a shift in U.S. strategy toward North Korea, the next U.S. president will likely be sitting in the Oval Office when the regime finally acquires the ability to strike the continental United States with a nuclear weapon,” said a recent Council on Foreign Relations report.
Speaking at the council in New York on Tuesday, Clapper said that North Korea has yet to test its KN-08 intercontinental ballistic missile, so it is unclear if it works, but the U.S. operates on the “worst-case” assumption that Pyongyang is potentially capable of launching a missile with a weapon on it that could reach Alaska and Hawaii.
Experts have estimated the missile, which can be moved by road, making it harder to target in a pre-emptive strike, could be operational by around 2020.
With five nuclear tests now under its belt, the North may already be able to miniaturize a warhead for use on a short-range missile, if not on an intercontinental missile. It has also launched two rockets into space, and has begun testing submarine-launched missiles. U.S. experts estimate that it now has 13 to 21 nuclear weapons, and could have as many as 100 by 2020 — approaching what India likely has today.
Clapper said the best hope for the U.S. is probably to negotiate a cap on the North’s nuclear capabilities. But that implies recognition of North Korea as a nuclear weapons state, which the U.S. has said it will not do.
“The dilemma for policymakers in dealing with North Korea is that if one accepts that the door to negotiation of denuclearization with North Korea is closed, the alternative set of options involves either acquiescence to a nuclear North Korea on the one hand or pressure leading to regime change on the other,” said Scott Snyder, senior fellow for Korea studies at the council.
Of the U.S. presidential candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton wants the international community to intensify sanctions as the Obama administration did with Iran, which eventually opened the way for a deal to contain its nuclear program.
Divining what Republican Donald Trump might do is tricky. He wants the U.S. to leverage its trade ties to get China to rein in its unpredictable ally. But he’s also said he’d be ready to meet Kim, and suggested detaching the U.S. from the problem by allowing its allies Japan and South Korea to get nuclear weapons.
U.S. experts who held unofficial talks with North Korean officials in Malaysia last week maintain that negotiations on denuclearization are still possible.
“I think the best course would be to test the proposition by some serious engagement in which we see whether their (North Korea’s) legitimate security concerns can be met,” said Robert Gallucci, who negotiated a 1994 disarmament agreement that curbed North Korea’s nuclear program for nearly 10 years.
He added that the concerns of neighbouring South Korea and Japan — they face the most immediate threat from Pyongyang — would also have to be met.
“We don’t know for sure that negotiations will work, but what I can say with some confidence is that pressure without negotiations won’t work, which is the track we are on right now,” said another participant, Leon Sigal from the New York-based Social Science Research Council.
But there is a deep, bipartisan skepticism in Washington about talks with Pyongyang, which has recanted on past accords and says it will never give up its nuclear weapons. It claims it needs nukes to deter an invasion by the U.S., which has 28,500 troops in South Korea.
Still, North Korea has not entirely closed the door to talks.
A July government statement suggested it remained open to discussions on denuclearization of the peninsula. The U.S., however, slapped sanctions on Kim the same day for human rights abuses. The North said that was tantamount to declaring war.
North Korea nuke threat awaits next U.S. president | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
A look at the latest FBI news on the Hillary Clinton email case

Comey said in July that the FBI had found no evidence of intentional or wilful mishandling of classified information, of efforts to obstruct justice or of the deliberate exposure of government secrets. Those were elements that Comey suggested were needed to make a criminal case.

Nothing in the letter appears to change that standard.

A look at the latest FBI news on the Hillary Clinton email case - National | Globalnews.ca