Friday, March 2, 2018

What matters to Americans?
Which side is out of touch?

Where are your concerns on this list?
  1. Immigration/Border Security
  2. Guns/Second Amendment
  3. Taxes
  4. Economy/Jobs
  5. Health Care
  6. Education
  7. School safety
  8. Moral Issues (abortion/gay/transgender)
  9. Bipartisanship
  10. Working with Trump
  11. Crime
  12. National Security/Terrorism
  13. Environment
  14. Impeaching Trump
  15. Integrety
  16. Foreign relations
  17. Russian Election meddling

http://www.suffolk.edu/documents/SUPRC/3_1_2018_tables.pdf

76 comments:

wphamilton said...

Actually a kind of interesting survey. My big take on it as there is relatively little voter concern for either opposing Trump or cooperating with him, and low priority for bipartisanship in general. Voters want this Congress to address the issues. Topical issues from the current news cycle of course figure prominently.

Integrity is way down the list, as are the "moral issues" such as abortion. I personally see those as opposed politically (integrity vs the GOP core moral issues) so it's kind of a wash, but at low priorities it won't really matter either way.

I consider it foolish to not place integrity at the top of the list, so in that regard my philosophy is "out of touch" with voters, but then I've had no illusion that voters care much about it so I don't own that.

The GOP has slightly lower approval than does Trump (almost 2-1 disproval), which isn't abnormal, but Congress in general has even lower approval. That's interesting because you'd think it means that Democrats are even more despised, but by the similar margins people want to vote for Democrats if the election was now. Perhaps they associate the work of "Congress" more exclusively with the majority party, and have a worse view of recent congressional work than of the party itself, and they just want to improve that.

Commonsense said...

The Economy/Jobs at number 4 may be a little deceiving. When times are good the concern about Jobs and the Economy naturally goes down.

However, at the same token a good economy help the incumbent party since people are reluctant to rock the boat.

wphamilton said...

BTW, how does your stance about the Mueller investigation and current indictments compare with how seriously Americans are taking it according to this survey? Out of touch?

Very seriously: 52%
Somewhat: 23%
Not very: 11%
Not at all: 9%

CH: ?

Commonsense said...

Yet Russian Election meddling is dead last.

It's like, yeah we take it seriously but it's not very important.

Anonymous said...

Every election is in large part about the economy, stupid.

In part the lost years stagnation cost Hillary biggy. That and her Ill Health.

Anonymous said...

100 % 0f the US Senate and US House Democrats voted against every worker keeping more of thier earnings.

commie said...

Not on the list....stupid trump sycophants....

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

Trump has bury right now: metastasizing scandal, an administration at war with itself, a chief of staff looking wobbly, egregious corruption, and open rhetorical betrayal of the base. It’s not that we haven’t seen all of this before — but it’s the combination of all these in a sudden and accumulating pile that seems more ominous than usual.

Trump’s best bet is that he can gin up another culture-war distraction and that the cult behind him — and the cult’s fear and loathing of the other tribe — will render him immune to the usual political crosswinds. All the evidence reveals that, so far, he would be right. His 85 percent approval rating from Republicans remains and probably will never decline — regardless of anything he does or might do. I suspect that even if there were a tape of him conspiring with Putin himself to tip the 2016 election, Fox would call it fake news, Trump would say it’s not his voice, and the GOP base would side instinctively with their newly beloved Kremlin over the Democrats. But I’ve begun to wonder if there’s a chance that the cultish following may falter as the reality of Trump’s ideological fickleness, managerial incompetence, and boundless corruption begins to seep through. At some point, surely even his supporters will have to say that this is finally enough?

Not here forever.

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/03/andrew-sullivan-is-this-the-beginning-of-trumps-end.html

Anonymous said...




ah yes. queen andrew.

it's nice to see that you two have kissed and made up, alky. it's been far too long since you've copy/pasted queenie's work.

commie said...

Hey rat hole.....ever wonder why you don't get a writing gig and queen andrew does?????

Simple....you're an idiot...

Loretta said...

"it's nice to see that you two have kissed and made up, alky. it's been far too long since you've copy/pasted queenie's work."

There's something wrong with both of them.

cowardly king obama said...

This is hilarious

How many airline passengers does it take to kill a $40 million tax break for Delta Air Lines? 13.

The Georgia legislature removed a jet-fuel tax break from a larger tax package Thursday. Lawmakers were upset that Delta, which is headquartered in Atlanta, dropped the National Rifle Association from a discount-fare program in an effort to appear neutral on gun policy.

After the firestorm, Delta will review all its marketing programs to avoid those that might become political, CEO Ed Bastian announced Friday.

But the airline said only 13 passengers ever bought tickets with an NRA discount. That translates into each discount costing the airline about $3 million in tax breaks.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2018/03/02/delta-reviews-all-fare-discount-programs-after-nra-dispute-costs-georgia-tax-break/388587002/

C.H. Truth said...

. I suspect that even if there were a tape of him conspiring with Putin himself to tip the 2016 election, Fox would call it fake news, Trump would say it’s not his voice, and the GOP base would side instinctively with their newly beloved Kremlin over the Democrats

The irony escapes liberals on this one.

Even as there is no evidence of any collusion, provided or even remotely suggested by anyone... liberals still decry any attempts by Trump to declare his innocent as part of this equally nonsensical "obstruction" argument.

It's like the old joke about the conspiracy theorist. You know they crossed over into the abyss when the lack of any proof of their conspiracy is written off as just more evidence that not only does the conspiracy actually exists, but the lack of evidence is also obvious proof of an elaborate cover up.

We are in the fourteenth month of the Trump Presidency and the same old characters are writing the same old rhetoric that they were writing a year ago. Makes you wonder if they will still be writing the same rantings a year from now?

Commonsense said...

Another inconsistency is how people feel about the economy and their personal financial situation vs their overall opinion about the direction of the country.

Most people say the economy is doing better but overall the country is on the wrong track.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

The tariffs are under attack from all sides. It was another example of his compulsive disorder

Commonsense said...

We are in the fourteenth month of the Trump Presidency and the same old characters are writing the same old rhetoric that they were writing a year ago. Makes you wonder if they will still be writing the same rantings a year from now?

The answer would be yes.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

'Trade wars are good,' Trump

Commonsense said...

Well Roger you almost had it.

A legitimate policy diffrence but you then you go and ruined it by saying he has a compulsive disorder.

You path back to mental health will be a long one.

Anonymous said...

But the airline said only 13 passengers ever bought tickets with an NRA discount. That translates into each discount costing the airline about $3 million in tax breaks.


this could be one of the more expensive episodes of virtue signaling in recent memory.

Commonsense said...

How can one company be so clueless about its home base?

Anonymous said...

Blogger Commonsense said...

How can one company be so clueless about its home base?
.

imo, liberalism is compulsive.

this was all about "doing SOMETHING."

"we must hurry to be one of the first companies out there that can be counted among the cool kids, so DO SOMETHING."

"HURRY!"


so do something they did. and the dumb fucks cost themselves $40 MILLION. fucking brilliant.

if i'm the CEO of delta i'm firing my VP of social justice today and i'm not backfilling the head count.

Anonymous said...

Papa Johns canned as NFL Pizza.

Because they dared to question Blacklivesmurders and kneelers.

Commonsense said...

First rule of business is to avoid politics whenever possible.

Because no matter what you do, you piss off half of your potential customer base.

Anonymous said...

Wages increasing fast then they ever did during the Lost Years.

Bonuses being spent by workers and saved in 529 plans and 401k plans

Anonymous said...

The Nancy Polosi/cuckhold Schumer Bill.

Anyone seen it? The one they want to pass to make kids in public schools safe.

Loretta said...

Beautiful ceremony for America's Pastor.

Refreshing. Why couldn't we have a real Christian Pastor commenting here...

Pastor James said...

You have one. One who never became a lackey for Nixon.

By the way, I greatly admire Billy Graham,
but that was one mistake he made, as he himself was big enough to admit.

James said...

Where are your concerns on this list?

You left off one of the most important ones.

18. Insane man in the White House.

Loretta said...

Let me repeat myself...

Refreshing. Why couldn't we have a real Christian Pastor commenting here...

We have a fraud who sows seeds of discontent and division.

Commonsense said...

His interpretation of Matthew 19:14 makes me cringe.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

Trump Firings/Resignations/Departures*
Yates
Flynn
Bharara
Walsh
Comey
Dubke
Shaub
McFarland
Corralo
Spicer
Short
Harvey
Priebus
Mooch
Cohen-Watnick
Higgins
Bannon
Gorka
Sifakis
Icahn
Price
Powell
Manigault
Dearborn
Katz
Winfree
McCabe
Porter
Sorensen
Raffel
Hicks
*By my count

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

I'm just fine.

But the President is not fine.
President Donald Trump's decision on Thursday to impose hefty tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum was as much of a surprise for the White House as it was for everyone else, NBC News reported Friday.

Trump unilaterally made the decision to announce the new taxes on foreign imports in a fit of rage about a number of other issues that were weighing on his administration. Citing an internal document, NBC reported that White House lawyers and staff had not conducted any review of the drastic change Trump suddenly made to U.S. trade policy.

The day before, Trump campaign veteran Hope Hicks announced plans to resign as White House communications director. Hicks had reportedly been berated by Trump after she testified before the House Intelligence Committee that she had to tell "white lies" for the president.

Trump had also recently resumed his ongoing attacks against his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, tweeting on Wednesday that Sessions' recent decision regarding a probe into potential FBI surveillance abuses was "disgraceful."

And it was revealed this week that Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, recently had his top-level interim security clearance downgraded — along with a number of other White House aides with the same temporary status.

An official familiar with the president's state of mind said Trump became "unglued" by Wednesday evening.

Incensed and looking for a new fight, Trump was spurred to start a trade war by his Commerce Secretary and White House trade director, both of whom have advocated for increased protections against foreign goods, two officials told NBC.

The White House told NBC that it "was well-prepared to support the president's announcement" and that "many of the attendees had been in the White House before and had already been vetted for attendance at a presidential event."

The White House did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment on NBC News' report.


JAMES'S FUCKING DADDY said...

The lying "pastor" reminded me of the moving memorial service conducted by the Rev. Dr. Billy Graham for President Richard Nixon’s funeral . Its quite lengthy but starts:

"Today, in this service, we remember with gratitude his life, his accomplishments, and we give thanks to God for those things he did to make our world a better place."

...

"The great king of ancient Israel, David, said on the death of Saul, who had been a bitter enemy: “Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel.” Today, we remember that with the death of Richard Nixon, a great man has fallen. We have heard that the world has lost a great citizen, and America has lost a great statesman. And those of us that knew him have lost a personal friend."


Yes, Rev Graham was a true believer and good pastor.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Trump unilaterally made the decision to announce the new taxes on foreign imports in a fit of rage about a number of other issues that were weighing on his administration.



suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuure he did, alky.

you've got to be the must gullible assclown i've ever seen.

Anonymous said...

Blogger Loretta said...

Beautiful ceremony for America's Pastor.



made more beautiful by the fact that 0linsky decided to skip it.

Anonymous said...




Parkland students are fundraising for the DNC

https://twitter.com/ComfortablySmug/status/969647940691218432/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw&ref_url=http%3A%2F%2Face.mu.nu%2F


fucking ghouls.



Anonymous said...

Of Course.

Anonymous said...

These shooting don't happen at private Catholic Schools.

Anonymous said...

Trump unilaterally made the decision to announce the new taxes on foreign imports in a fit of rage about a number of other issues that were weighing on his administration." Alky.

You drank your way thru 2016 Trump Election. He Ran on this.

Anonymous said...

made more beautiful by the fact that 0linsky decided to skip it." RRB

The Pimp was out selling Moochelle.

Commonsense said...

Was there any question the whole Parkland movement was backed by Democrat interest groups and PACs all along?

It stunk to high heaven even before the CNN mob hall.

Anonymous said...

#neveragain

I hope the 4 liberal stooges of CHT are not trick again.


commie said...


Sad how the Ga pols have made an issue about a whole 14 people getting a discount.. Seems the moral high ground taken by delta may ring true to a lot of other places.... BTW....they got the discount when they were going belly up....time to lose it since they are profitable. 30k workers in Ga could very well have a dramatic impact on the next election....Oh well!!!

Anonymous said...


2018 Economic Calendar
powered by econoday logo
Event Definitions
|
Today's Calendar
|

Consumer Sentiment
Released On 3/2/2018 10:00:00 AM For Feb(f), 2018
Prior Consensus Consensus Range Actual
Sentiment Index - Level 99.9 99.5 98.0 to 100.3 99.7
Highlights
Consumer sentiment, at 99.7, ended February roughly at the mid-month reading and well above January's 95.7. The tax cut appears to be the driver of the optimism and was quantified in yesterday's personal income & outlays report where personal taxes fell 3.3 percent in data for January."

100 % of Democrats in the US House & Senate voted against lower taxes on your earnings.

commie said...

And the sterile heifer lover thinks tariffs on steel will take all of those tax breaks away as prices increase....brilliant.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

What American is out of touch?

why did he raise tariffs when every single one of his staff and economic advisors, surprised?


Donald J. Trump
‏Verified account @realDonaldTrump

Alec Baldwin, whose dying mediocre career was saved by his terrible impersonation of me on SNL, now says playing me was agony. Alec, it was agony for those who were forced to watch. Bring back Darrell Hammond, funnier and a far greater talent!
3:07 AM - 2 Mar 2018
Because he is out of his fucking mind. 3;07 AM?

commie said...

Amazing....he berates Baldwin the day after Putin has a presentation of a nuclear attack on the US and announces a hypersonic cruise missile...Trump fiddles as the world burns and Putin gets another pass....Leading from stupidity....

Anonymous said...


Because he is out of his fucking mind. 3;07 AM?


who's out of their mind, alky? you're the one obsessing over a fucking tweet. a fucking tweet.

you have got to be some kind of a fucked up, mentally ill, psychologically unbalanced, liberal fucking WHACK JOB in the grip of stage 4 TDS to have this kind of reaction over a single fucking tweet.



Commonsense said...

Roger definitely should be on the no-gun list. Maybe the no-fly list also.

commie said...


Roger definitely should be on the no-gun list. Maybe the no-fly list also.


And you belong with rat hole playing with his 270 and seeing if it has a muzzle flash,.....

Anonymous said...

Dennis, wholly unoriginal.

Anonymous said...

I see Gorebal warming is kicking ass in England and US east coast. GW = More Snow

Anonymous said...

For the 4 liberal fucktard of CHT.

Breaking news
"Trump team floats a 10% tariff on imports
By John King and Jeremy Diamond, CNN
Updated 3:57 PM EST, Thu December 22, 2016.

Anonymous said...

For the 4 liberal fucktard of CHT.

Breaking news
"Trump team floats a 10% tariff on imports
By John King and Jeremy Diamond, CNN
Updated 3:57 PM EST, Thu December 22, 2016.

Anonymous said...



Donald Trump has floated big tariffs. What could the impact be?

By Louis Jacobson on Tuesday, June 21st, 2016

Anonymous said...

President Obama slapped a stiff 35% tariff on Chinese tires in 2009 after American companies complained about unfair competition. They said China was flooding America with tires at low prices making it tough for U.S. companies to compete. The tire tariff gradually waned, and finally ended in 2012.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

Despite what the racist denial of the President issuing his tarrif's when he was in a Nixonian rage, his decision endangers the world economy and could trigger inflation we haven't seen sine the 1980s.

Europe is preparing 25% tariffs on U.S. goods from Levi's to Harley Davidson bikes in a sign of brewing retaliation for President Trump's imposition of a levy on foreign steel, and economists are warning of a sharp hit to the global economy and markets.

Why it matters: Economists tell Axios that, should Trump proceed with his 25% steel tariffs, and tit-for-tat retaliation cascade, there is serious risk of a blow to global GDP growth, which the International Monetary Fund had forecast at 3.9% for 2018 and 2019.

Already, U.S. metals prices have surged since Trump's announcement. Aluminum, for instance, soared to a three-year high this morning, up by 11.8% since the president spoke, report the FT's Henry Sanderson and Neil Hume.

John Ferguson, director of global forecasting for the Economist Intelligence Unit, tells Axios that, even short of a full-fledged trade war, a low-grade exchange of high tariffs could trigger prolonged stock market declines such as happened yesterday and today.

That could cascade this way:

Companies pull back capital spending plans
Consumers, with less money in their pocket than expected, curtail their spending.

Global GDP growth, reliant on capital and consumer spending, suffers.

In one example of this already happening, Sweden's Electrolux announced it will hold off on a $250 million expansion of its appliance manufacturing plant in Springfield, TN., because of the tariffs, reports Rick Rothacker of the Charlotte Observer.

"The impacts could add up to a meaningful slowdown in global GDP," Ferguson said.

Go deeper: Winners and losers in the trade crisis

This post has been updated with the postponement of Electrolux's investment.

https://www.axios.com/how-a-trump-trade-war-could-slow-down-the-global-economy-1520013182-c846834d-14a4-4b79-83b1-83a55baae05c.html

cowardly king obama said...

Two sides to every story,
_____________________________________

Tariffs on steel, aluminum are long overdue

Yesterday, President Donald Trump said that he has decided to impose tariffs of 25% on all steel imports and 10% on aluminum imports, promising to sign the measures next week. Trade remedies for steel and aluminum are long overdue.

Trump promised quick action after announcing investigations of the national-security threats imposed by steel and aluminum imports nearly a year ago. Delays worsened the import crisis for thousands of U.S. steel and aluminum workers, many of whom are facing layoffs and plant-closing announcements.

The crisis in steel and aluminum trade is driven by the development of massive amounts of excess production capacity, which has led to import dumping by China and a number of other countries singled out in the Commerce Department’s reports on its Section 232 investigations into the impact of imports of steel and aluminum products on national security
The United States is the world largest importer of steel, and imports exceed exports by nearly four to one. Ten steel furnaces have closed since 2000, and we have lost 52,000 U.S. steelmaking jobs (37.8%) since January 2000.

Meanwhile, world steelmaking capacity has increased 127% since 2000, reaching 2.4 billion metric tons. Global excess capacity is 700 millions tons, nearly 30% of this total. China is by far the largest steel producer and exporter, and the largest source of excess capacity, in the world. For some types of steel, such as electrical transformers, only one U.S. producer remains.

Between 2013 and 2016, U.S. aluminum industry employment fell by 68%. Six smelters shut down, and only two of the five remaining smelters are operating at full capacity, despite an increase in U.S. demand for primary aluminum. There is only one remaining U.S. producer of high-quality aluminum alloy needed for military aerospace needs, and maintaining and upgrading our infrastructure, which must be done for reasons of economic security, is a major use of aluminum.

In its reports, which presented tariffs as one of three optional responses, the Commerce Department found that unfair steel and aluminum imports “threaten to impair the national security.” In addition to China, other key countries identified in the Commerce reports (singled out for the highest possible tariffs) included Brazil, South Korea, Russia, Vietnam, and six others in steel; and Hong Kong, Russia, Venezuela, and Vietnam in aluminum.

China’s exports, in particular, are so widespread that they are having pernicious effects on global trade in many downstream steel products. This helps explain why it is necessary to have tariffs on imports from all countries, and not just unfair traders like China
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/tariffs-on-steel-aluminum-are-long-overdue-2018-03-02

cowardly king obama said...

There does appear to be a different characterization of how he acted, one explanation appears a little deranged and jumbled:

A) "Despite what the racist denial of the President issuing his tarrif's when he was in a Nixonian rage"

B) "Trump promised quick action after announcing investigations of the national-security threats imposed by steel and aluminum imports nearly a year ago"

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

We are in the fourteenth month of the Trump Presidency and the same old characters are writing the same old rhetoric that they were writing a year ago. Makes you wonder if they will still be writing the same rantings a year from now?

the (rants) are the news from the White House. It is total chaos. The 71 year old man is not going to change. We can't believe anything he says.

After the televised meeting that got positive reviews, because he said that he would support a lot of gun control, and said that no one should be afraid of the NRA. He had the NRA into the Oval Office, and the NRA was happy with the results of the meeting. Since then he said one neutral tweet, but has not stated support of anything since. He has a history of changing his mind after he exhibits the ability to compromise, he does a 180 because his base doosn't like it.

His Presidency will be a total chaos, because of his personality. Jared is going to be outed too. Or the corruption will embrace the President.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

the racist

Is rrb. Not a description of the President.

Loretta said...

" one explanation appears a little deranged and jumbled:"

Deranged TDS.

It's the reason CH blocked him on Facebook.

Anonymous said...

So sad,HB so uncivilized.

Anonymous said...

Despite what the racist denial of the President issuing his tarrif's when he was in a Nixonian rage, his decision endangers the world economy and could trigger inflation we haven't seen sine the 1980s. "

Obama did it. Crickets from you.

Inflation in the 80'S = 5.82 Average

Inflation. In the 70"s = 7.26 Average.

HB, You are the blogs retard.

Anonymous said...

HB the blog retard cheers on pres. Pimp.
"Between 2013 and 2016, U.S. aluminum industry employment fell by 68%..:.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

Kansas seems to have a high percentage of idiots.

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

Let's hope he just says he will do it and not follow up.

So far, Mr. Trump is not having any of that criticism, saying on Twitter on Friday that “trade wars are good, and easy to win.”
Continue reading the main story
Related Coverage

Opinion Editorial
Trade Wars Are Destructive. Of Course Trump Wants One. MARCH 2, 2018
Trump Calls Trade Wars ‘Good’ and ‘Easy to Win’ MARCH 2, 2018
Top Chinese Official Plans U.S. Trip to Address Trade Friction FEB.
23, 2018
Trump to Impose Sweeping Steel and Aluminum Tariffs MARCH 1, 2018


That’s not how trade wars usually go.


• The president appeared eager on Friday to defend his decision to levy sweeping tariffs, calling trade wars “easy to win.”

• Many economists say the opposite: that even the prospect of a trade war will hurt economic expansion.

• In many ways, the tariffs are economically small and symbolically huge. Here’s why.

Even the prospect of a trade war could hurt the economic expansion underway. That’s because any uncertainty can prompt companies to curtail investment or hold off on hiring.

If other countries follow up on their threats to retaliate, the pain could be significant. Beyond tariffs, their tools include taking strategic strikes at certain industries or taking their grievances to the World Trade Organization.

Any actions threaten the global supply chains on which the American economy is heavily dependent. The number of workers who will lose out if countries are cut off from America far exceeds the number who stand to gain from the pending tariffs.


“Industries that buy steel and aluminum, not to mention agricultural exporters, employ many times more people than the industries that the president wants to protect,” said Peter A. Petri, an economist and trade expert at Brandeis University’s International Business School. “Whether we go through with his approach is anyone’s guess, but business investment depends on predictable policy, and relentless chaos takes its toll even if cooler heads prevail on the policies that the president is tweeting about.”

Mr. Trump’s planned tariffs would, in effect, levy a tax of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on imported aluminum. The goal is to counter China, Russia and other countries that have flooded the global markets with cheap products and made it harder for the American steel industry to compete.

If put into effect, the tariffs would raise the price of steel and aluminum, squeezing automakers, beverage manufacturers and other industries that buy a lot of those materials. That would increase prices for consumers, kill some jobs in those industries or both.

The tariffs would almost certainly provoke a response from America’s trading partners — and not just China and Russia, because they would apply to every other country. On Friday, the European Union threatened to retaliate by imposing tariffs of its own on some goods from America, including bluejeans, bourbon and motorcycles.

If the back-and-forth stopped there, the American economy would lose 0.1 percent of its output this year, said Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. That loss would cost the country 190,000 jobs.

What worries many economists is the prospect that the retaliation will go even further. A cycle of increasingly harsh tariffs would slam the brakes on global growth.


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/02/business/trump-tariffs-trade-war.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=first-column-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news

Coldheartedtruth Teller said...

Wall Street Journal

What’s News
U.S. Tariff Plan Spurs Global Jockeying

President Trump plans to apply his steel and aluminum tariffs globally and won’t exempt allies such as Canada and Europe, a senior White House official said, an approach likely to intensify protests over the move.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-wont-exclude-allies-from-tariffs-white-house-says-1520029135

Even the Wall Street Journal will be bugging CH with the truth next year.

Commonsense said...

I'll take a flyer and say Russia, Russia, Russia is not playing too well.

CNN’s Primetime Ratings Drop 30 Percent From Same Time Last Year

The ratings are in for CNN, and they don’t look great.

According to AdWeek, CNN “was -30 percent in total prime time viewers, and -23 percent in total day viewers from last year” for the week of February 5–11.

CNN did not even crack the top 10 for primetime viewers on cable, while its competitors’, MSNBC and Fox News, were number two and number one, respectively.

The network’s commentators and guests have often been critical of President Trump.

On air, he has been compared to a communist or fascist dictator and someone with Alzheimer’s. (RELATED: CNN’s Ana Navarro Compares Trump To Someone With Alzheimer’s Or Dementia [VIDEO])

Recently, a CNN reporter went to Iowa to talk to Trump voters, many of whom dismantled the network’s Russia coverage, calling the Russia investigation a “political witch hunt from the get-go” and a “disgrace.” (RELATED: WATCH: Trump Supporters In Iowa Blow Every Single One Of CNN’s Narratives Out Of The Water)

Anonymous said...

HB really, you would think after 12 plus years of you being wrong on the Economy and your own failures in your personal life you would stop attempting to post on all things. But yet you have no knowledge or self control so you post the stupidest things.

"Despite what the racist denial of the President issuing his tarrif's when he was in a Nixonian rage, his decision endangers the world economy and could trigger inflation we haven't seen sine the 1980s. "

Obama did it. Crickets from you.

Inflation in the 80'S = 5.82 Average

Inflation. In the 70"s = 7.26 Average.

HB, You are the blogs retard. So inflation was so bad because during Reagan that it dropped from Carter Years.

commie said...

CNN’s Primetime Ratings Drop 30 Percent From Same Time Last Year

So!!!!!!!

Commonsense said...

As the old saying goes, the dogs aren't eating the dog food.

Loretta said...

"As the old saying goes, the dogs aren't eating the dog food."

He isn't going to get that, lol.

commie said...

Loathsome loser lesbian loretta posits...

He isn't going to get that, lol.

That you and cramps are a pair of idiots???? LOLOLOL