Topic of the Day | Page 60 | Barking Hard

Topic of the Day

I think he was just ignorant honestly. Look at that clip I posted above in the 2012 debates, "The 1980's want their foreign policy back"
You think Obama was wrong about that ?
He was pointing out Russia was not something to be feared any longer, in 2012.

Putin just couldn't be pushed any further in his view. after 2014 in Ukraine. up until that point they were as close as we and Canada. maybe more so really.
Trump is right about that war should've never happened. he really should've said not escalated.it started in 2014.
30 years of better relationship down the drain. neo-cons won that one.
 
Bill Clinton could've avoided a ton of EU problems had he followed through with a more beneficial relationship with Russia back in the mid/late 90's. Like Putin said we reach an agreement, but POTUS talks with guys in suits and the agreement is gone.

Now we're starting to see why. The deep state used the JFK assassination to threaten POTUS if they had thoughts of their own like Trump. They tried to assassinate him twice because they knew he'd reveal how dirty and murderous they are. DJT lucked out. They missed. TWICE!
 
You think Obama was wrong about that ?
He was pointing out Russia was not something to be feared any longer, in 2012.

Putin just couldn't be pushed any further in his view. after 2014 in Ukraine. up until that point they were as close as we and Canada. maybe more so really.
Trump is right about that war should've never happened. he really should've said not escalated.it started in 2014.
30 years of better relationship down the drain. neo-cons won that one.
I mean Obama seemed pretty Neo conservative to I mean..... he got bin Laden but went in full aggression mode in Afghanistan leading to Isis, the drone attacks, Yemen, Libya, and Syria. Not bad for a Noble Peace Prize Winner there.

He was not exactly shy when using force. Which is why I think he was rather naive when it came to Russia.

I'm from the angle of being a Pro Ukraine supporter but at the same time questioning where all these millions of dollars of aid and what not are going/went.
 
Chuck Schumer wants more of your hard-earned money
Democrats continue to exhibit that they’ve learned little from their November election drubbing. The latest example comes from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who this month went on “The View” to criticize productive Americans.

Sen. Schumer told the hosts, “The Republican Party is a different kettle of fish than it used to be, and that’s why we’re fighting them so hard. They are controlled by a small group of wealthy, greedy people.” In a disparaging voice intended to mimic those who advocate for lower taxes and regulatory sanity, he added, “I made my money all by myself. How dare your government take my money from me. I don’t want to pay taxes. I built my company with my bare hands, how dare your government tell me how I should treat my customers.”

Democrats have so thoroughly transformed into the party of the government, for the government and by the government that one of their leading lights has no hesitation about openly maligning private-sector entrepreneurs and job creators. Where does Sen. Schumer think the trillions in cash that he and his fellow travelers crave to spend every year actually come from? The disconnect and lack of self-awareness are astonishing.

Sen. Schumer belittles “greedy” people trying to keep more of their own hard-earned money. But it is their money. Sen. Schumer, on the other hand, implies that the millions of Americans who pay income taxes should be happy that the government lets them keep any of their earnings at all. If wage earners advocate for lower taxes or less federal intrusion into their daily lives, they are rapacious fat cats or selfish misers. Yet Sen. Schumer and his cohorts constantly demand an ever-larger share of private-sector production to feed their addiction to spending other people’s money. Exactly who are the “greedy” ones?

In fact, many of the working-class and minority voters who have fled the Democratic Party in droves seek to improve their lives through hard work. They embrace the entrepreneurial spirit that has made the country the most prosperous in history. They welcome lower taxes and appreciate the dangers of government overreach. In contrast, Democrats sing the praises of “a large, intrusive state” that micromanages the economy, J.D. Tuccille of Reason recently noted.

President Donald Trump made clear to voters his desire to impose a modicum of restraint on a federal government gushing red ink to the tune of $37 trillion. His vision carried the day, and polls show most Americans support his efforts to attack waste and inefficiency while leading the nation toward a more sustainable fiscal path. Democrats scoff at this common-sense agenda at their own risk.
 
Back
Top Bottom