TRUMP: Best President ever Topic

Obama built the concentration camps and caged the children.
6/26/2019 7:40 PM
Fuckin' go and DIE back in the pit DougTard. Just when you couldn't be hated more you say some ignorant ******* garbage that you KNOW is not only NOT TRUE, but you use it like your Orange Lyin Master as BULLSHIT PROPAGANDA. Just stay in the Pit you HYPOCRITICAL ASSFUCK.
6/26/2019 7:53 PM
Posted by dino27 on 6/26/2019 3:53:00 PM (view original):
back to a serios comment that will be ignored.
trump has continuosly been saying that obama caused child seperation from parents and that trump was forced to do it and that he himself ended child seperation.
says on tv constantly.
cant make this stuff up.
obama tried at all costs not to allow it and only did it when the parent was dangerous for the child....done rarely....an undisputed fact.
there was recently a COURT DECISION stopping trump from his policy of separating kids for that purpose.
trump is now taking credit for it.
cant make this stuff up.

these lies are among the most evil of his lies.
a liar like this is certainly not fit to be a president of the united states.

Democrats Love Suffering So They Can Blame Republicans

Jun 26, 2019




RUSH: I’ve got all kinds of montages of the media going on and on and on about the plight of kids. And really what I want to show is there’s nothing new about this. Grab sound bite number 10. This is a montage about the separated children having no soap and having no toothbrushes, and it’s another one of these classic montages where everybody in this montage, countless different media people all say the identical thing.

MARCY KAPTUR: This administration has failed to provide detained children with soap, toothbrushes, toothpaste.

GEOFF BENNETT: It does not take an act of Congress to get those kids a bar of soap and a toothbrush.

MATT GUTMAN: …denied soap and toothbrushes.

NITA LOWEY: …soap and toothbrushes…

HAKEEM JEFFRIES: They are without soap! They are without toothpaste!

BRIAN WILLIAMS: …lacking soap and toothpaste. The president was asked about these.

LAWRENCE O’DONNELL: …children who have been denied soap and toothbrushes.

CHRIS CUOMO: No soap, toothbrushes…

DARRELL WEST: …don’t have money for a bar of soap.

GABE GUTIERREZ: …without soap or toothbrushes for days.

NANCY PELOSI: Soap, toothbrushes. This situation is child abuse.

RUSH: I don’t need to tell you all the Democrats, but half of ’em are elected in this montage, half of them are media people. And, you know, to young people, Democrats are on point, Democrats are filled with compassion, but this is nothing but theatrics. This is nothing but scripting. This is nothing but an old page in the playbook. This is what the Democrats always do. There isn’t anything new about this. And the fact is they love these circumstances.

They are happy when they find evidence of suffering anywhere so that they can blame it on Republicans. It is common. It is not new, and it’s not genuine.





Now, this is a montage, 24 years ago, a bunch of Democrats from our TV show about the school lunch budget cuts that were phantom. There weren’t any school lunch budget cuts in ’95 in that budget. But here.

REP. JOHN LEWIS: They’re comin’ for our children. They’re comin’ for the poor.

REP. THOMAS BARRETT: Why do the Republicans want to take apples and milk away from six-year-olds?

REP. LYNN WOOLSEY: Starving children is not the solution …

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: It’s cruel to kids.

SEN. DICK DURBIN: Stop declaring war on our kids!

REP. LITTLE DICK GEPHARDT: The Republicans are taking food out of the mouths of millions of needy children.

REP. LUIS GUTIERREZ: We’re gonna let the kids go hungry again.

SEN. TED KENNEDY: War on their children! War on their children!

RUSH: That was Ted Kennedy at the end. It was John Lewis: “They’re coming for our children. They’re coming for the poor!” Thomas Barrett: “Why do the Republicans want to take apples and milk away from 6 –” There is nothing new about this, folks. This is standard operating procedure for the American left and the Democrats.

And in most cases they’re lying about it! It isn’t nearly as widespread or as bad as they want you to believe based on a picture or two they have to show you. You’re listening and watching left wing Democrat political activism when you watch the news people cover this so-called story. And there isn’t anything new about it. And what they don’t cover is the actual suffering and misery that goes on in places they control.

Donald Trump was asked about this by Maria Bartiromo in his interview with her this morning on the Fox Business Channel. Her question: “Yesterday the House passed a four-and-a-half-billion-dollar bill for humanitarian aid at the border. Then you’ve got Senator Warren,” Fauxcahontas, “saying she wants to decriminalize border crossings. You were the first to call this a crisis. I went to the border. We saw the position the people are being put in. It was disgusting. What’s your reaction to the four-and-a-half-billion-dollar aid bill?”

THE PRESIDENT: I’m not happy with it because there’s no money for protection. It’s like we’re running hospitals over there now. You know, people are coming up — what people don’t understand is you had separation. Separation’s a terrible thing, of the families. And I said, well, I’m gonna put people together, but there’s gonna be more people coming up. But — it has from that standpoint. And we’ve done a great job. You know, they’ll pick up one little site. We’ve done a much better job than Obama.

You know, Obama build all those cells. Those cells were built by the Obama administration. He put in all the cages. I remember for a while, they had fun with that, they had me for three days, and then somebody said, “Well, they were built in 2014, they were built by President Obama.” And immediately it stopped. If the Democrats would get rid of the loopholes and would fix asylum, it would take an hour, we could sit down, we could make a deal. They refused to do it, for two reasons. Number one, they want open borders. They legitimately want open borders.

RUSH: And the other thing they want is the issue. They love this. If I could impress upon you Millennials one thing, they love these circumstances for the political opportunity that presents them. And I mean that. I’m not trying to coat it in any way. No. Don’t misunderstand, I’m not saying that they actively love seeing people suffer, because they know these circumstances are gonna get fixed. They know this is gonna get resolved.

What they love is the opportunity, the photo-op. What they love is what they think they’re able to do, advance their own political agenda and cream and hurt Trump. That’s why they like this. That’s why they maximize it, that’s why they promote it. Notice there isn’t any concerted effort by the people reporting on this to put any of it in any kind of context, to give it any kind of historical context or explanation.

And in 1995, we gotta get rid of Bob Dole, we gotta get rid of any Republican that might threaten Bill Clinton. And in 2000 and 2004 we gotta stop George W. Bush or we’re gonna gin up action on the Iraq war, the Iraq war is killing people, Marines are raping innocent Iraqis, we gotta get rid of George Bush and put in John Kerry. It never changes, folks.

And the only thing that would make a change is a mass education process on the part of the American people who would no longer fall to this kind of stuff, it would no longer work politically, it would no longer be politically effective, then it would stop. An actual solution. Pelosi doesn’t want this fixed. If Pelosi solves this, then the media doesn’t get to report what they’re reporting the past two days on soap and toothbrushes and the unfortunately, sadly dead father and daughter in the Rio Grande.

If all of this gets fixed, they lose the issue to complain about it! They lose the photo-ops! They lose this or that. They can’t claim they fixed it ’cause they’re not in the White House. They only have the House of Representatives. They don’t have the Senate. So nothing they want is gonna pass. All they can do is stop things. They don’t want it fixed with Trump in the White House this close to the 2020 election. But none of that they tell you.


Related Links

6/26/2019 8:07 PM

US NEWS

‘Well, that’s awkward’! These alternate angle pics of AOC at the border last year seem to be missing something


FAKE PICTURES made to look like she is viewing children in a border camp. INSTEAD it's her making fake photos looking through a FENCE. Typical Dem Politician. FAKE and LIAR and working hand in hand with FAKE NEWS!
6/26/2019 9:23 PM

Maybe Meghan McCain has a point. This is a new low for the so-called president, and I didn't think that was possible.

At the Faith and Freedom Coalition conference, the so-called president said "We needed 60 votes & we had 51, & sometimes we had a hard time with a couple. Fortunately, they're gone now. They've gone on to greener pastures. Or perhaps far less green, but they're gone. Very happy they're gone."

There was reportedly embarrassed laughter during this segment. He also praised "TiVo" as being a cool way to watch tv, declared victory in the War on Christmas, and blamed Obama for family separations.

He's nuts.

And the big problem for Trump and Republicans is, he has no staff to stop him from doing this. Faith and Freedom is the easiest gig for a Republican. Say two words: "abortion" (bad!) and "Israel" (good!). You're done.

If people walk away from a FAITH AND FREEDOM speech by a Republican president running for re-election feeling sick and stunned?

6/26/2019 10:37 PM
I was curious why Californians bought electric cars at at least twice the rate of people in every other State, so I thought I'd share what I found:

The stock of plug-in electric vehicles in California is the largest in the United States, with cumulative sales of over 500,000 plug-in cars by the end of November 2018.[4] California is the largest U.S. car market with about 10% of all new car sales in the country,[5] but has accounted for almost half of all plug-in cars sold in the American market since 2011.[4][6] Since November 2016, China is the only country market that exceeds California in terms of cumulative plug-in electric car sales.[7] In 2017, California's plug-in car market share reached 4.8%, while the national share was 1.1%. Also in 2017, the state's plug-in segment market share surpassed the take-rate of conventional hybrids (4.6%) for the first time.[2][8][9] The plug-in market share rose to 7.8% in 2018, again ahead of conventional hybrids (4.1%), and for the first time sales of all-electric cars outsold conventional hybrids.[10][11]

The Government of California has been actively supporting the adoption of plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs), and zero-emission vehicles in general, and has in place several financial and non-financial incentives to increase their market penetration. The Governor of California, Jerry Brown, issued an executive order in March 2012 that established the goal of getting 1.5 million zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) on California roads by 2025.[12][13][14] In January 2018, Governor Brown set a new goal of getting a total of 5 million zero-emission vehicles in California by 2030.[9]

As part of the state's government incentives, in addition to the existing federal tax credit, plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) and fuel cell electric vehicles (FCV) are eligible for a purchase rebate of up to US$2,500 through the Clean Vehicle Rebate Project (CVRP).[15][16] Also applicants that purchase or lease battery electric vehicles or a plug-in hybrid meeting California’s Enhanced Advanced Technology Partial Zero Emission Vehicle (Enhanced AT PZEV) are entitled to a clean air sticker that allows the vehicle to be operated by a single occupant in California's carpool or high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV) up until January 1, 2019.[17][18]

6/27/2019 9:00 AM
Again all3 you make no point. Because people in Cali have concern for the environment that makes them worthless in your opinion? Again I say you are a MORON.!
6/27/2019 9:25 AM
Posted by RCBracco on 6/27/2019 9:25:00 AM (view original):
Again all3 you make no point. Because people in Cali have concern for the environment that makes them worthless in your opinion? Again I say you are a MORON.!
Electric cars are dirtier and more polluting than diesel cars. More harmful to the planet.

What produces the electric these cars run on? Wind and solar? HA HA!
6/27/2019 7:45 PM

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6/27/2019 8:30 PM


The Porsche Taycan is one vehicle in a new breed of big-battery EVs.

Electric cars don’t have enough driving range. That’s been the reason, according to conventional wisdom, why EVs are not purchased in higher numbers. And it’s the reason that automakers—starting with Tesla—produce vehicles packed with giant battery packs capable of storing as much as 100 kilowatt-hours of energy. The race for big-battery EVs now includes the Chevy Bolt and Hyundai Kona EV (both with 64 kWh packs), as well as 95 kilowatt-hour batteries carried by the Jaguar I-Pace and Porsche Taycan.

These big-battery EVs solve the range problem by providing as much as 300 miles of driving on a single charge. However, it is now dawning on automakers and analysts that bigger is not always better when it comes to EV batteries.

According to a study released today by Ricardo, the British auto supplier and research firm, one of the unintended consequences of large batteries is greater environmental impact.

6/27/2019 8:37 PM
Will Your Electric Car Save the World or Wreck It?

The manufacturing of batteries, such as in those in electric vehicles, may have a greater environmental impact than you thought. (Image courtesy of Tesla.)

Patting yourself on the back for buying a Prius? It might surprise you to find that electric vehicles, dependent on batteries, may have significant negative environmental impact. You may have cut back on greenhouse gas emissions at the pump only to step into other environmental pitfalls.

Here’s something that electric car companies do not want you to know: the materials that make up your car battery are born deep in mines, may be extracted by child labor and in some of the most polluting ways possible. Even if the mining industry were ecologically sustainable, lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries have been known to explode and/or catch fire. Avoiding such incidents, the batteries are extremely difficult to recycle, often resulting in the disposal of a spent, but still toxic and flammable battery in your local landfill.

The Lithium Battery

Why use lithium to power cars? Casting aside environmental considerations for a moment and looking at the basics of battery power versus fossil fuel, you’ll note one big advantage to battery-powered electric vehicles (BEVs) when it comes to energy efficiency. Where energy efficiency for internal combustion engines is between 20 and 60 percent, an electric motor can be 60-80 percent efficient. The drawback, on the other hand, lies in energy density. The energy by mass of gasoline is 2 orders of magnitude greater, 2,000Wh/kg, compared to a modern Li-ion battery with only 200Wh/kg.

Keeping that in mind, the challenges behind building the battery in a BEV cannot be understated. Getting a ton of metal, plastic and rubber to move for any significant amount between refuels or recharges requires exceptionally high energy-density. In all of engineering, there has only ever been one battery material that can cut it: Li-ion. Known for its singularly high-power output per kg compared to other electric batteries, Li-ion batteries keep our smartphones and laptops powered long enough to serve their purposes as portable devices.

Though the magic Li-ion powers both the iPhone and the Tesla, it is like comparing a matchstick to a bonfire. The iPhone 6 weighs in at six ounces whereas a Tesla Model S contains a whopping 12 kg of pure lithium alone. In Li-ion batteries, it’s the lithium ions that move from anode to cathode to release energy from the battery–and back again during the recharging period. This constant discharge/charge cycle process slowly chips away at the capacity of the battery over time. And where a smartphone may have a three-year battery life with 500 charge/discharge cycles, this kind of lifespan is not acceptable for a $75,000 vehicle. To make the battery last as long as possible, you need the three best ingredients for your cathodes and anodes: cobalt, nickel and graphite.

And therein lies the problem. Getting any of these materials out of the ground is neither friendly to the environment nor the miners. EVs and their appetites for batteries are on the verge of causing major upheaval in the world's metal markets. 10 years after the first Tesla, many of us are only just beginning to assess the impact.

Meeting Demand

Lithium consumption has been growing exponentially since the early 2000s and is, according to some sources, expected to quadruple again by 2025. In 2016, Tesla CEO Elon Musk tried to quiet concerns about the lithium shortage by likening lithium to the “salt on the salad” of the Li-ion battery. "Our cells should be called nickel-graphite, because primarily the cathode is nickel and the anode side is graphite with silicon oxide,” he explained.

Musks’ words don’t tell the whole story. Lithium is sold not as a pure element but as lithium carbonate. A 70kWh Tesla engine uses 63kg of lithium carbonate, the price of which doubled in 2017, compared to the year before to $13.90 per kg. The rather heavily-salted BEVs of the 21st century are shaping up to be a global driving force of lithium demand by exponential proportion. According to industry data from Deutsche Bank, BEVs have caused an estimated 150 percent increase in lithium consumption since 2013. Meanwhile, traditional battery and non-battery demands hold steady.


Measured and projected data on lithium demand. (Image courtesy of Deutsche Bank.)

Meeting the oncoming demand will not be easy. Currently, our main source of the stuff lies in the “lithium triangle” in the Andes mountains, between Argentina, Chile and Bolivia. China and Australia hold key reserves as well. But with China pushing for its own fleet of BEVs (in 2016, 30 percent of the world’s Li-ion batteries were used in Chinese electric buses alone), and Australia looking into supplementing its grid with megabatteries, it’s not likely that we’ll be seeing much of these reserves make it to US production lines. Instead, it’s far more likely that we’re looking at South America becoming the Middle East of the BEV era.

Chile, which accounts for a full third of the world’s lithium reserves, has already been called by some the “Saudi Arabia of lithium.” Bolivia, Chile’s impoverished neighbor, holds even more. Looking at projected demand, its likely that we will be heading smack into a political, territorial rearrangement of power not seen since OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) got together, with small countries becoming powerful, and using their resources for leverage over larger countries. With the widespread adoption of electric cars, such relationships could easily be established with battery materials, as occurred with oil before.

Impact of Extraction

Lithium production in South America doesn’t have so much to do with the element’s availability in the soil, but with water. The Andes mountains are very dry, but the lithium extraction process requires water in no small amount to bring the element up to the surface in a salty brine—500,000 gallons of water per ton of lithium, according to Wired. In some regions in Chile, 65 percent of water is used up in lithium production, diverting it from local food production. The brine then requires 12 to 18 months to evaporate. Any water returned to the farmers could be tainted with chemicals.


Rich brine pools containing lithium and other minerals evaporate in the Atacama desert in Chile. (Image courtesy of SQM.)

Another core concern lies in the vast wealth that lithium will represent for these smaller, poorer countries when demand starts to escalate. The lengthy evaporation period for the lithium brine can be sped up by heating the water, a process achieved by burning fossil fuels -- defeating the entire purpose of reducing greenhouse emissions in the first place. But when the price is up and the bottleneck forms, the desire for faster, cheaper production may outweigh our ability to maintain environmental standards.


Cobalt miners in the Republic of Congo often work in unsafe conditions, without proper equipment. (Image courtesy of Scholastic.)

Then there’s cobalt. In addition to the environmental concerns related to lithium production, cobalt mining is unequivocally destructive on multiple levels. Currently, half of the world’s cobalt is produced in the Republic of Congo. Concerning cobalt mining in the Congo region, journalists have revealed human and environmental abuses ranging from child and slave labor, to toxic waste leakage and radioactivity in cobalt mines. “In 2014, according to UNICEF, about 40,000 children were working in mines across southern DRC, many of them extracting cobalt,” The Guardianreported.

Although Tesla is doing everything in its power to lessen the amount of cobalt used in its batteries; reducing cobalt in the cathode directly corresponds to reducing the safety and lifecycle of the battery. Experts say that the lower limit on cobalt has pretty much already been achieved, and to go further would compromise the safety of the car.

Like the mining industry as a whole, graphite and nickel mining is associated with human rights abuses and can lead to pollution in the air and water. Residents near Chinese graphite mines have remarked on the sparkly nature of air particles, with the dust ultimately contaminating food and water supplies. In areas surrounding nickel mines, there have been increased rates of deformities and respiratory problems linked to pollution from nickel mining and smelting.

In previous interviews addressing materials supply, Tesla has stated that “[suppliers are] three or four layers removed from Tesla. It is obviously quite difficult to have perfect knowledge about everything that happens this far down in the supply chain, but we’ve worked extremely hard to gather as much information as possible and to ensure that our standards are being met.”

But if a major company can’t be relied upon to ethically source its batteries, who can?


The majority of the world’s cobalt currently goes into batteries. (Image courtesy of batteryuniversity.com.)

Recycling

An immediate concern for some manufacturers may be supply chain bottlenecks, it is worth taking a glimpse at the far future. In truth, no one really knows if there is enough lithium for humanity’s projected needs or where lithium can come from. This is an ironic twist for those who thought that the electric car was the solution to our non-renewable fuel crisis, instead of another sustainability trap.

Whereas lithium batteries are said to be 95 per cent recyclable, the practice of recycling them is more easily said than done. Throughout their lifespan, lithium batteries undergo irreversible damage, meaning that they can’t simply be repurposed. Instead, they need to be entirely taken apart, the lithium extracted, and then re-manufactured. But even this is an oversimplification.

Battery manufacturers incorporate several additives into the electrolyte liquid in the Li-ion battery. The purpose of these additives is to improve the battery in many ways, such as by speeding up the manufacturing process, or making the battery more durable in hot and cold weather. But when manufacturers keep the battery cocktail a secret, repurposing the precious minerals contained within becomes difficult and, therefore, expensive.

Moreover, the electrolyte mixture is the component of the battery that has been known to explode when handled incorrectly, for instance, if it is subjected to high temperatures. This means that any attempt at creating a recycling process will need to find a way to ensure that the batteries are dismantled in a safe manner.

With these difficulties in mind, it’s not surprising that recycling rates for lithium battery is really low; only 2 per cent of lithium batteries in Australia are recycled, with the rest left to rot in landfills. But the problem does not necessarily come from members of the public carelessly tossing their cracked iPhones into the trash.

It might be argued that sustainable recycling infrastructure should come from the car companies—a process that is still not cost effective compared to market lithium costs, and therefore provides little incentive. “Recycled lithium is as much as five times the cost of lithium produced from the least costly brine based process,” Waste-Management-World stated. Even with our best efforts, recycled lithium is not pure enough to produce batteries, and the material ends up being used for non-battery purposes.

Adding up the Cost

“Under the average U.S. electricity grid mix, we found that producing a midsize, midrange (84 miles per charge) BEV typically adds a little over one ton of emissions to the total manufacturing emissions, resulting in 15 percent greater emissions than in manufacturing a similar gasoline vehicle. However, replacing gasoline use with electricity reduces overall emissions by 51 percent over the life of the car.”

That’s from a 2015 report from the U.S.-based Union of Concerned Scientists on battery-powered electric vehicles. The result is stunning: manufacturing a BEV adds an entire ton of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere more than a gasoline vehicle. But perhaps more shocking is that the total carbon footprint of a BEV is not zero, it’s half of what it is for the total lifespan of a gasoline vehicle.

Now, consider the cost of water loss to South American farmers, child labor in the Congo, impending geopolitical tensions, lack of recycling, and our current inability to expand the lifespan of a BEV past 10 years. Factor in also the infrastructure changes that it will require to install charging stations to every gas station in America.

That isn’t to say that the benefits of BEVs don’t outweigh the emissions and international conflict related to vehicles powered by fossil fuels, but it should inspire reflection into our global supply chain and technological developments. It’s clear that Li-ion batteries are not a panacea to the world’s energy problems in the midst of climate catastrophe. The problems raised by Li-ion battery production might spur new technologies that resolve these issues. Or the solution to these issues may not be technological at all.

6/27/2019 8:46 PM
Posted by DougOut on 6/27/2019 7:46:00 PM (view original):
Posted by RCBracco on 6/27/2019 9:25:00 AM (view original):
Again all3 you make no point. Because people in Cali have concern for the environment that makes them worthless in your opinion? Again I say you are a MORON.!
Electric cars are dirtier and more polluting than diesel cars. More harmful to the planet.

What produces the electric these cars run on? Wind and solar? HA HA!
SPEAKING OF MORONS!!!!!
6/28/2019 12:50 AM
LOLZ. Doug wants everyone to buy into an article that thinks 42% is "a majority."
6/28/2019 9:37 AM
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TRUMP: Best President ever Topic

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