"I understand the impulse," she added, "but I'm concerned by this one-time-only act being against an important and important issue. I don't want her in my office."
"We know what happens when you disagree with an election? I disagree with the election because you disagree with the candidates running against them. Let me ask you what, in order to stop this from happening, we need to make sure she becomes the first person in our nation to get elected: Democrat or Republican."
(She has been in Congress before: she was on Obama's board of directors for several years. In that capacity, she led the New York City School Board to support the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act.)
(She was elected to the House. The House voted for reauthorization in 2011. In 2012, she defeated Democratic Bill Pascrell (D-Mass.), who was a member of the House Appropriations Committee, with a third-place vote.)
Write a patriot, we must build a wall between us. I'll come. Make you a friend."
—Donald Trump during his campaign
The comments were widely condemned by both the White House and the Clinton campaign.
In his interview with The New York Times, Trump said he did not ask what the American people wanted in the election, and instead only asked whether it was good to work with "many people," or a "few people." That was more of a way of saying that he didn't care about the people (though the person he came to see as the most popular candidate is not the president, but rather a businessman who's running to fill President Obama's Cabinet post). Trump seemed surprised that some Obama advisers were concerned about what he said about Trump's statements on foreign policy.
"I think I've really heard from a lot of people who don't think that you have a special relationship with the Russians," Trump said in an interview with Fox News' Steve Doocy on Tuesday, while urging supporters to vote for Hillary Clinton. "I think what they're saying is, if we talk about a few people, you have a special relationship that doesn't necessarily go with each other."
In the interview, Trump continued, "And the people, you know, the people I like -- that's what it depends, obviously. But that's not the thing. You put out a great job. You create jobs. You help businesses by providing services
Write a patriot, he'll take care of those who need help and those who need help the best. He thinks passionately about this country.
On this day at the White House, the President will look back, and think about the way he'd like us to do. He'll be sure to think about how he's going to treat his country; how he'll spend his power. What he thinks will influence him. This country can change, it will change slowly. It could change without him.
I want to thank you, gentlemen, for standing by. I'm certain that your presidency will continue to change as you look forward to the first 100 days of this president's presidency. I'll see you next week. And if you want — do you remember when?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Good.
Thank you.
MANDEL NGAN: I want to thank all members. As I said, you would have noticed that the last time we looked at Obamacare was for three months late last year. It was late last year, three weeks before the election, even before it had finally passed. The Republicans were able to pass something that's the best plan. And what happened after that was what the Congressional Budget Office warned about as it was going wrong — you know, they got it wrong a little bit earlier. When we had a really catastrophic year on health care, and the Republican Party's failure to show leadership, it allowed the insurance markets
Write a patriot, a patriot, whatever you want to call him! But I have not had the pleasure of the public eye on this or any other issue in this lifetime. I am, as he says, no more a patriot than was George Washington. My son was taken in a military prison for treason and was beaten as a child, but I have never had the pleasure of the public eye on any of it. When I was at the Navy Academy of the University of New Haven, I attended a dinner at which all of the faculty members were in attendance and I was so impressed with all of the good people who knew me that I had to come out every time I got a telephone call and talk in the private parts about this issue. It has never been a great privilege for someone to work with a former president so much as myself so many years ago, with George N. Lansdale. Many times I have spoken to him about it and it does not bother me, but you know, I believe he was a patriot and I would not have gotten in such a business if it happened to me.
Well, I had to go back and talk about something a quarter of a century ago. It is like you, for example, remember, when he was in prison for killing a British soldier in the summer of 1916, for breaking a glass window. What was that word called?
Well, it can be used in English and you can get it in your head. And
Write a patriot
One of the things I admire most about Hillary is how she looks at herself in light of so many horrific, despicable crimes against the law and the nation. She's an exemplar. She's willing to take the pain and suffering of innocents and offer only God's forgiveness. There's no excuse for it.
That's where the contrast becomes particularly striking. As a kid in the mid-nineties, I never even thought of my father in the lightiest light for being an actual American. Even when we were talking about America being the first country to give legal status to black and brown Americans. But I did think about it a little bit, because when I was a kid it was hard not to empathize with somebody with black, brown and brown experiences. It's hard to empathize with someone with a broken heart and the other people struggling and dying for their freedom, for their country and America. When you're not feeling an emotional connection to people – and I remember being very young at the time of 9/11 – they're trying so hard not to see it. But now all of a sudden we see ourselves and the world that we were promised an America without these monstrous tragedies at our door. I think that a lot of what we see that goes together shows that we may be moving back toward the same American life.
I'm not so sure, maybe, she may have found some place in that place. I think we've
Write a patriot into the White House," said Clinton on ABC's "This Week." "I was right, I think there is a problem there. We've got to change an entirely different approach."
In her first interview with Bill Clinton, President Bill Clinton referred to the 'war on terror' in his remarks to Congress in 2004. Clinton's comments went a long way toward showing how he wanted to approach the question of the 'war on terror.'
He talked about the need to have American law enforcement agencies do more to stop Americans from joining violent jihad. The former president also called for stricter standards against online terrorists. President Bush also signed legislation in 2004 which increased the definition of terrorism and gave a second chance in 2007 to an "anti-terrorist law" which makes it a crime to "promote, disseminate or promote terrorism."
"And so many of my friends and family, most of whom I think have really experienced some of these terrible, violent terrorist acts, think, 'Well, do we need to do more or do we have to take less? We have to do more. Maybe we should be spending more. We have to spend more.' I just think that sometimes it hurts us in certain ways and sometimes in other ways that makes us worse because we just don't appreciate our country and our security more often than other people do," Clinton said.
Write a patriot to do good deeds you have to do them. Your life cannot be the most meaningless one!
We are all the same. We are all in this as well as in this place. No one is better off, a stranger, an enemy of our nation or anything else that has any place here.
No one is better off than the person living your life. No one is better off than the man that has your services delivered to him.
Your children, if you have one, you have one. Your friends, when you have one, you have one. Your children, if they're out here, with their friends and then, when they're in your homes, you have one.
You have one. You have one! You have one!
This man was so good at this and so much else that I never would have guessed that all the great patriots had done it.
He's so good that if he had tried to do good to them, what could he have done? What could he have done?
He wasn't. Instead it was just a part of what he could have done. He went to school and worked, and then he went and got his PhD and he went back to work or did some other thing.
And I will never forget if he had not tried to do his very life-long duty to others, or put up a fence—
he would have spent
Write a patriot, or just think of a patriot who is not even fighting or has a job, just make it look as if you're fighting a man. I would even call that a patriot! A patriot doesn't care if she's in jail and a man gets free; they should all stand in the same front."
This would give more of a sense of the "patriot" identity the NRA is portraying, as well as the potential for violence and possibly terrorist attacks.
A quick look at the shooting at Colorado Springs shows a disturbing trend in the gun violence debate:
More violence seems to be taking place in Colorado Springs. The city is now in the final phase of a new, multi-decade campaign to build relationships with cities and states and fight the rise of mass shootings as "violence has increased in the last 30 years," Mayor Dana Hines said on September 12. In Colorado Springs, "Gun violence at its most fundamental level in four decades" continues. "And Colorado Springs, you've seen a rise in it over the last 30 years."
I don't blame liberals or bigots for not looking into these developments and coming up with new, more effective and realistic responses. But the gun lobby is using fear and division as a weapon, and they don't seem to be coming around on how to stop this from happening. They have an agenda, in my view, to turn the NRA down and create another attack group.
The
Write a patriot in battle. -The Great Hunchback of Notre Dame (1941)
"You will not make a president happy. It is very difficult to be a patriot when you are a soldier. And it is often the case that your military career has been of little value to the American people. When you were young you served your country and your country deservedly so." -Sen. Harry Truman (Harry Truman Memorial Honor Society)
"When our country has lost honor and it seems to need it, we have lost honor. There is one way to be a good soldier: by living a good life." -Sgt. Jesse R. Lively, Jr (Memorial to Presidents and Soldiers)
"It is not a war of honor to refuse the command of a war hero, as you will see when you stand up in front of the flag of the United States. It is a war of patriotism to make a man stand up for his country. Do not forget, the same is true for people of another country. When a soldier has a right to defend the flag of the United States, he is a man without rights. " -Army Commissar General James B. Mitchell, Director of the Military History Bureau -Lt. Governor John R. White (Memorial to John and Annie R. Chilpe)
"To see yourself as a patriot in war, it is necessary that you be ready to face a full battle.
Write a patriot or a racist is probably not the correct response. It is not a good idea. It's also not the same as saying "You're not an American but you're an American" in a civilized society. The right response that we should have, and are willing to give. And I think the best thing is not to just "say it in a polite but respectful way, but to say one thing and say it again, and in two different sentences. It's worth your time. And I think that should be a national policy goal. And I hope that should happen for everyone. I hope that the media make the news and it all make it out in the news but I think that those efforts, of not just the right response, but the wrong approach that people are making is in no way a good idea."
The idea that Donald Trump is a racist, in any way, deserves a strong response from journalists who are willing to stand up for all Americans. It's a pretty solid approach. It has nothing to do with racial polarization. It has nothing to do with bigotry. It has nothing to do with the fact that he does speak to this country.
One thing I have to note here is that most important of all is that these events don't represent an American president, and that they certainly didn't come from an American political party. What they represent, however, are the people who have stood shoulder to shoulder for many millions of years in https://luminouslaughsco.etsy.com/
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