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

davesmom

Council Member
Oct 11, 2015
2,084
0
36
Southern Ontario
Watch it fellas! The smoking police will be petitioning to have this web site shut down. Pictures of people smoking? Indeed! How vile!
Hahahhahahahahaha.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
British odds makers have shortened the odds on a Trump victory from 4 to 1, to, 7 to 2.. in order to even out the betting. But this is the same group that had the Brexit defeat at 2 to 9, and, Leicester 5000 to 1 to take the EPL title. They are having a bad run.

You must mean 1:4 and 2:7. I can't imagine that there is a turf accoountant anywhere that is stupid enough to bet on Trump, not one that is going to stay in business, anyway. The dumb Yanks can fool themselves into fantasy outcomes like that but outside the U.S.? I don't think so. No one out there is biting, just the hillbillies and kiddy fiddlers of the GOP fringe.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
28,397
8,026
113
B.C.
You must mean 1:4 and 2:7. I can't imagine that there is a turf accoountant anywhere that is stupid enough to bet on Trump, not one that is going to stay in business, anyway. The dumb Yanks can fool themselves into fantasy outcomes like that but outside the U.S.? I don't think so. No one out there is biting, just the hillbillies and kiddy fiddlers of the GOP fringe.
Enough people are biting at 4 to 1 to take the odds down to 7 to 2 , it seems .
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
You must mean 1:4 and 2:7. I can't imagine that there is a turf accoountant anywhere that is stupid enough to bet on Trump, not one that is going to stay in business, anyway. The dumb Yanks can fool themselves into fantasy outcomes like that but outside the U.S.? I don't think so. No one out there is biting, just the hillbillies and kiddy fiddlers of the GOP fringe.


It should be about 110/1. I saw Hillary on the news tonight, she should be in jail. She knows better than trying to influence the wheels of justice. Absolutely disgusting and she considers herself to be a viable candidate for President? She's as ignorant as they come!
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
99
48
Alberta

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
Reading this site provides all the evidence one needs that Trumpites are on the bottom end of the IQ scale. It's no surprise the silliest posters here gravitate to Trump. The day Eaglesmack tried to use a National Enquirer article to prove a point, pretty much said it all.
It's a shame there are so many who lack your brilliance dipshyt.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
65
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
Trump booted a black man from his rally and called him a ‘thug.’ Turns out he is a supporter.



A black man was booed out of a rally that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump held in Kinston, N.C. on Oct. 28. The crowd started booing the man until Trump noticed him. Trump called the man a 'thug" and accused him of being a protester. The man turned out to be a Trump supporter. (Dalton Bennett/The Washington Post)
Midway into his speech, the crowd suddenly grew restless, so Donald Trump paused.

An increasing number of people began pointing at a person to Trump's right. Soon, hundreds of people who had gathered for his Wednesday evening campaign rally in Kinston, N.C., were frantically waving their “Trump Pence” signs in that direction.

Trump glanced at who his supporters were singling out: A black man wearing a suit jacket and sunglasses.

“That's all right, leave him alone,” Trump said, at first seemed dismissive of what he saw.

He quickly pivoted.

“We have a protester,” Trump declared. The crowd booed.

“By the way, were you paid $1,500 to be a thug?” he said, seemingly addressing both the crowd and the person simultaneously. “Where's the protester? Where is he? Was he paid?”

(Trump has accused Clinton's campaign of paying protesters to disrupt his rallies after an online video sting by the conservative group Project Veritas Action captured a Democratic operative describing “conflict engagement in the lines at Trump rallies.” The Washington Post's Fact Checker noted that Trump had “jumbled up a lot of the issues brought up in the video by Project Veritas” and rated the claim “Three Pinocchios.")

[Trump supporter charged after sucker-punching protester at North Carolina rally]

Somewhere in the crowd, Trump's security detail escorted a man out of the rally as the audience cheered.

“You can get him out,” Trump said, making a sideways motion with his thumb. “Get him out.”

[I was a Donald Trump supporter. Then I got booted from his rally.]

The person in question turned out to be C.J. Cary, a North Carolina resident, who claims to be a longtime Trump supporter.

Cary, in a phone interview Saturday with The Washington Post, said he had gone to the rally because he wanted to hand-deliver a note to the Republican presidential nominee. He made his way to about 20 to 30 feet from the stage and was shouting “Donald!” while waving his note around to try to catch his attention.

“Everyone else is waving Trump signs and I'm waving this white letter,” Cary, 63, said. He said that, coupled with the fact that he was wearing sunglasses during an evening rally to deal with his sensitivity to light, may have been what set people off.

That's when Trump's crowd turned on him, and Cary was removed from.



Cary said a security official noticed he appeared to be a supporter but said he should not have disrupted the rally.

“He asked me, 'What happened? You have on a GOP badge,'" Cary said. “I said, 'I'm yelling at Donald, and he thinks I'm a protester.'”

Cary explained that he had wanted to hand Trump a note, and the security official agreed to deliver the letter on Cary's behalf, he said.

"'If you had just gotten this to us we would have given it to him,'" Cary said he was told. "'But now that people think you're a protester, it's better that you leave.'”

In video footage, Cary can be seen waving to the crowd as he is escorted out of the rally. He later said it was “all fine” and that he still plans on voting for Trump.

Cary has not heard back officially from the Trump campaign but says at least one Trump surrogate in Georgia reached out to him after the incident.

“I was a little sad [that I was escorted out] but was more happy than sad because my purpose for being there was to give that document to Donald,” Cary said. “My mission was to make sure I got it in the right hands, because someone could have just easily tossed it or dropped it.”

The note Cary wanted to deliver was an eight-page document that emphasized that he was against both Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and President Obama: “I have to get ready to come to Kinston,” it read in part. “Donald I am not including everything. But you must defeat lying Hillary and lying Obama. These characters are bad really bad.”

[Video: Underwear-clad man sets Trump yard sign on fire]

Cary says he is a Marine veteran and Trump campaign volunteer, and he claims to have been corresponding with Trump since 1992. That year he wrote Donald and Ivana Trump “an impassioned letter” upon hearing they were separating. To his surprise, he says, Donald Trump wrote back, and he has been an ardent supporter of his ever since.

According to a report in the Rocky Mount Telegram, Cary has struggled with vandalism or theft of the more than 40 Trump signs he kept on his home in North Carolina town about 60 miles northeast of Raleigh.

Cary told The Post that he now has about 100 signs on his yard.

“I support Trump because he's honest,” Cary told the Telegram. “You can work with an honest person and convince them their vision isn't in the best interest of everyone. You can't work with dishonest people. That's why I don't like Obama — the worst president in American history.”



[Trump supporter charged after sucker-punching protester at North Carolina rally]

It was not the first time a Trump supporter has been ousted from one of his rallies. In August, Jake Anantha, a half-Indian student at Central Piedmont Community College, attended a Trump rally in Charlotte

“And what happened there shook my faith,” Anantha wrote in a guest column for The Post afterward. Security officials told Anantha that he was a “known protester,” and despite evidence to the contrary, insisted that he must leave.


“I still don’t know why I was asked to leave. But I think it has something to do with my race,” Anantha wrote. “My mother is white and my father is Indian. When [Trump's head of security Eddie] Deck saw me, I wonder whether he noticed that I look different from most Trump supporters. I wonder whether he assumed that I couldn’t possibly support Trump because of how I look.”

From the start of his campaign, Trump frequently has been accused of being racist, perhaps most notably because of his years-long refusal to acknowledge that Obama was born in the United States.

Trump and his surrogates deny allegations that he is racist. Most recently, former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani defended Trump on MSNBC by saying that “to call anyone a racist is outrageous” and noting that Trump has golf partners of different races.

“Racist? The last thing in the world Donald Trump is is a racist,” Giuliani told “MSNBC Live” anchor Stephanie Ruhle. “I’ve known him for 28 years. The man likes white people. He likes black people. He likes Hispanic people. He plays golf with them.”





A black man was booed out of a rally that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump held in Kinston, N.C. on Oct. 28. The crowd started booing the man until Trump noticed him. Trump called the man a 'thug" and accused him of being a protester. The man turned out to be a Trump supporter.







https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...opic-chain_trumpsupporter438pm:homepage/story





Just Brilliant!
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Reading this site provides all the evidence one needs that Trumpites are on the bottom end of the IQ scale. It's no surprise the silliest posters here gravitate to Trump. The day Eaglesmack tried to use a National Enquirer article to prove a point, pretty much said it all.
Being at the bottom of the pole means we are the foundation that holds up the top, without a solid foundation there is no cream of the crop.

ES was right, truth can come from the strangest of places.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Hillary's goose is pretty well cooked. Tampering with justice is a no-no that even the most ignorant of voters can pick up on and if a person can't be trusted to up hold the workings of the Justice system, what can they be trusted with? She seems to think this election trumps (excuse the pun) other common citizen's concerns. That in itself just goes to show what a shallow person she is.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
0
36