*2016 US Presidential Elections* - Candidates, Statistics, Campaign Timelines, Debates

Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway: ‘Rape would not exist’ if women were strong enough


Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway argued in 2013 that “rape would not exist” if women had the same physical strength as men.

In a recently resurfaced video clip from the PBS program To the Contrary, Conway said that she objected to women in combat.

“Women are already making incredible contributions to the United Sates military and will continue to do so,” she opined. “But the military’s first and primary mission is to win wars and to be as completely as capable and efficient and uber-ready as it can be. But we also don’t want to put our women in harm’s way.”

After panel members pointed out that women who pass the physical exam should have the same rights as men, Conway brought up the topic of rape unprompted.

“If you are suggesting that physical fitness experts say it’s different, I’ll accept that,” she said. “Except to say that we should not have the girl’s version and the boy’s version of that physical fitness test.”

“But I’ll tell you,” Conway added. “If we were physiologically — not mentally, emotionally, professionally — equal to men, if we were physiologically as strong as men, rape would not exist. You would be able to defend yourself and fight him off.


According to CNN, the exchange was brought to light by the Democratic Coalition Against Trump, an anti-Trump super PAC.

“Most people who think like Donald Trump would only express their views in private, because they’re shameful,” The Daily Show co-creator Lizz Winstead said in a statement from the super PAC. “But not Kellyanne Conway. Not Eric Trump, when he said that Ivanka wouldn’t allow herself to be subject to sexual harassment. And certainly not Donald Trump himself.”

“They seem to think it’s acceptable to blame rape victims for their assaults, deny women the right to control their own health care, and downplay sexual harassment in the workplace. It’s not.”
http://www.rawstory.com/2016/08/tru...-would-not-exist-if-women-were-strong-enough/


Yeah, if women were as strong as men, rape wouldn't be a thing. Nobody has ever been raped at gunpoint. No man have ever ben raped by another man. Prisons are men only and we all know that nobody ever got raped in jail.

It's kinda sasd to see her bringing the issue of rape to the conversation for no reason and make some non-sensical statement about it because she was making a good point about women in the military : No male-test, no female test, one single test for everyone, all those who pass it are in, all those who fail are out. Final. But because of that stupid statement about rape, medias wil not report this, they will report on her rape comment. And this has nothing to do with some liberal bias from the medias, they would do the same with Hillary. It's just that the medias need controversies, catchphrases, they need scandals, they need short controversial sentences to put on the headlines of the newpaper or as title for their article, something that would make the people who wil see it think "Wow, did he/she really sais that ?!"
 
Are you really going to go down the "rape" path after the shit Bernie Sanders said?

Oh that's right, you're a loony lefty.

Damn you fuckers are more scared than I thought.
 

Supafly

Retired Mod
Bronze Member
Are you really going to go down the "rape" path after the shit Bernie Sanders said?

Oh that's right, you're a loony lefty.

Damn you fuckers are more scared than I thought.

Hey Cletus, it's YOUR damn country. We get to watch shit going down from across the pond. You get hit first-hand.

But hey, it's only for four years, hopefully.
 

Mayhem

Banned
Several Hispanic Trump surrogates reconsider support

http://www.politico.com/story/2016/09/donald-trump-hispanic-leaders-arizona-immigration-227615
Several major Latino surrogates for Donald Trump are reconsidering their support for him following the Republican nominee’s hardline speech on immigration Wednesday night.

Jacob Monty, a member of Trump’s National Hispanic Advisory Council, quickly resigned after the speech. Another member, Ramiro Pena, a Texas pastor, said Trump's speech likely cost him the election and said he'd have to reconsider being part of a "scam." And Alfonso Aguilar, the president of the Latino Partnership for Conservative Principles, said in an interview that he is “inclined” to pull his support.

“I was a strong supporter of Donald Trump when I believed he was going to address the immigration problem realistically and compassionately,” said Monty, a Houston attorney who has aggressively made the Latino case for Trump. “What I heard today was not realistic and not compassionate.”

He withdrew from the board following Trump’s speech in Phoenix, which was heavy on calls for border security and emphasized that all immigrants in the country illegally were subject to deportation.

Pena delivered a harsh condemnation in an email to senior Trump and Republican National Committee leaders, obtained by POLITICO.
"I am so sorry but I believe Mr. Trump lost the election tonight," said Pena, a pastor at Waco's Christ the King Church. "The 'National Hispanic Advisory Council' seems to be simply for optics and I do not have the time or energy for a scam."

Pena addressed his message to Jennifer Korn, the RNC's national director for Hispanic Initiatives, along with Karen Giorno and Alan Cobb, both senior Trump advisers. Helen Aguirre Ferre and Lourdes Aguirre, both RNC Hispanic outreach officials, were copied as well.
"I will pray over the next couple of days but it is difficult to [imagine] how I can continue to associate with the Trump campaign," he wrote. "I owe my national audience an explanation."
“When we met [earlier in August] he was going to approach this issue with a realistic plan, a compassionate plan, with a plan that was not disruptive to the immigrants that were here that were not lawbreakers,” said Monty, one of the Latino leaders who met with the candidate at Trump Tower recently, a gathering at which Trump reportedly softened his tone toward undocumented immigrants already in the country. “He didn’t deliver any of that.”

Aguilar was once a Trump critic who earlier this summer set aside his qualms about Trump’s rhetoric toward Hispanic people, and organized a letter of support signed by himself and other prominent Latino conservatives. Since then, he has repeatedly defended Trump in media appearances, as has Monty. Neither plans to support Hillary Clinton.
“It’s so disappointing because we feel we took a chance, a very risky chance,” Aguilar said. “We decided to make a big U-turn to see if we could make him change. We thought we were moving in the right direction … we’re disappointed. We feel misled.”

Aguilar said he was not speaking on behalf of any organization, and hadn’t reached a final conclusion, but was deeply troubled by Trump’s address, saying that while the campaign has recently promised to deal with undocumented immigrants already living in the country in a “humane” way, “did you hear anything in that speech that was compassionate and humane? No.”
He went on to add, “I can tell you there’s a real possibility we will withdraw support from Donald Trump because of that disappointing speech.”
 
Are you really going to go down the "rape" path after the shit Bernie Sanders said?

Oh that's right, you're a loony lefty.

Damn you fuckers are more scared than I thought.
You mean when he sais police, not campuses should deal with rape ? What's wrong with that ? Rapie is a crime and crimes are police's job, not campuses'.


Anyways, I don't go down the rape path. I just notice that Conway had a point when se said that both men and women should have to pass the same test. But she compltely blew it up by bringing rape to the table.
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
Trump's immigration speech was for white men. Needs to lock down their support

My God, what an ironic difference from his appearance with Mexican President Peña Nieto just a few hours earlier in Mexico City! Huge mistake....he had a chance to reach out to the minorities that he desperately needs in some sort of diplomatic fashion in order to be elected. Instead, he chose to backslide into his primary-era rhetoric. That's what he believes and those are the people with whom he is most comfortable....a minority of American voters come November. If Clinton weren't such a flawed candidate herself, she'd easily be leading him by 15 points. You can see the difference in his advisors being manifested at key points in time.....Kelleyanne being the primary influence when he was in Mexico City and Bannon once he was back in Phoenix. I don't trust Clinton at all but Trump is downright scary....showing classic ADHD symptoms in all candor. Disappointing options for president to say the least.

Time is running out for him. He can't keep delivering his message in this fashion and expect the American electorate to show their approval from a majority standpoint. Still lots of time left for him and certainly plenty of time for Hillary to fuck this up but, so far, it's one step forward followed by two steps backwards for the Donald it would appear. He's his own worst enemy.
 

Supafly

Retired Mod
Bronze Member
I believe he is just ridig it out, not willing and able to openly admit he fucked up.

And after the major elections, he will call it a cheat and go back home
 
Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto to Trump: We 'Will Never Pay for a Wall'


Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto has doubled down on his assertion that he told Donald Trump that his country would not pay for the Republican presidential nominee's proposed border wall.

"I repeat what I told him personally, Mr. Trump: Mexico will never pay for a wall," Peña Nieto said in Spanish on his official Twitter account on Thursday, responding to an earlier tweet from Trump saying "Mexico will pay for the wall."

The Twitter fight comes as the Mexican president and GOP nominee gave contradictory accounts of their meeting Wednesday, ahead of an immigration speech in which Trump recommitted to mass deportation of undocumented immigrants living in the United States.
"We did discuss the wall; we didn't discuss payment of the wall," Trump told reporters at a press conference alongside Peña Nieto after their meeting in Mexico on Wednesday. "That will be for a later date."
But Peña Nieto later tweeted "At the start of my conversation with Donald Trump I made clear that Mexico will not pay for a wall."
"After that, the conversation moved on to other topics and unfolded in a respectful manner," he added in another tweet.
http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/201...ique-pe-nieto-trump-we-will-never-pay-n641736
 

Mayhem

Banned
Latinos for Trump founder warns of ‘taco trucks on every corner’ if Trump’s not elected

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nat...er-warns-taco-trucks-corner-article-1.2775121
A lot of Americans would definitely not have a problem with this.

In a bizarre diatribe on his own culture, a founder of the Latinos for Trump group said Thursday on MSNBC's "All in With Chris Hayes" that there would be "taco trucks on every corner" if Donald Trump loses this November.

"My culture is a very dominant culture," Mexican-born Marco Gutierrez told Joy Reid, who was guest-hosting the show. "It is imposing and it's causing problems. If you don't do something about it, you're going to have taco trucks on every corner."

Reid appeared baffled by Gutierrez' anti-culinary sentiment, saying, "I don't even know what that means" before asking Dominican-born New York State Sen. Adriano Espaillat to chime in.

"I'm offended," Espaillat shot back.

Gutierrez meagerly tried to mop up the beans he just spilled without addressing his taco truck comment.

"We have a lot of good things that we're bringing to the United States, but we also have problems," he said.

Social media users had a field day with Gutierrez' taco-slamming remarks, which come just one day after the loudmouth Republican he's supporting briefly met with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto in Mexico City.

"If we really want to make America great again, taco trucks on every corner is a pretty good place to start," Jeff Xxxxx tweeted.

Another Twitter user hinted at the boisterous billionaire trailing behind Hillary Clinton in several major polls.

"Let me get this straight, (Donald Trump) loses AND we get taco trucks on every corner?? Heaven on earth!
#Imwithtacos," Heidi Xxxxx tweeted.
 

Supafly

Retired Mod
Bronze Member
So I am a campaign operative for the opposing party.

I have several people from a certain ethnic group to endorse the opponent appearing to be be open minded and understanding.

A few months later the same people become offended by what the opponent says in a speech and withdraw the endorsement.
After reading the text of the offensive speech, it is clear that the speech is not insulting or demeaning to the ethnic group at all and far less than previous statements when they still supported him.

No way was this an orchestrated endorsement with plans on pulling the endorsement in the final stages of the campaign.

No way, I tell ya.
 
I saw the video of that exchange and I was flabbergasted. I'm Mexican and I had absolutely no idea what the hell he was talking about

You're Mexican?
Therein lies the problem.
Why do you not identify as American?

My ancestors are from Germany, I do not identify as German

bekommen auf meinem ebene bru!!!
 

Yeah, latinos are silently supporting a man who called them criminals, drug-dealers and rapists :facepalm:


Down boy! Down! I meant that I'm of Mexican heritage. 1st generation
So you're as much american than Marco Rubio, but more than Ted Cruz
 
Donald Trump's Immigration Speech Leads to Fallout with Latino GOP Leaders


Donald Trump has lost the support of several Latino leaders following his Wednesday night speech on immigration.


Donald Trump is facing backlash on Thursday from some of his top conservative Latino surrogates following his Wednesday night Phoenix, Arizona, immigration speech — one that they consider anti-immigrant.

With their influence, the Republican presidential nominee had shown signs last month that he was softening his approach toward undocumented immigrants, drawing the ire of many of his original supporters who were attracted to the New York businessman because of his harsh stance on immigration. However, in recent weeks, he led some Latino leaders to believe he had a change of heart that could have even provided a path to citizenship.

"There was so much hope," said Jacob Monty, a member of Trump's Hispanic advisory council. "He used us as props."

Although Latino leaders had expected their influence to include a more humane element to Trump's overall immigration plan, Monty said that was not present in the Wednesday night speech.

"I was a strong supporter of Donald Trump when I believed he was going to address the immigration problem realistically and compassionately," said Monty, a Houston attorney, told Politico. "What I heard today was not realistic and not compassionate."

Immigration policy experts from both parties have routinely said that deporting the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants currently in the country is a completely unrealistic endeavor.

Alfonso Aguilar, president of the Latino Partnership for Conservative Principles, said he felt misled by Trump and his campaign after the Republican nominee said those immigrants without criminal records would not be deported.

"For the last two months, he said he was not going to deport people without criminal records," Aguilar said on CNN. He added: "And then we heard yesterday, and I was totally disappointed — not surprised, but disappointed — and slightly misled, because he gave the impression and the campaign gave the impression until yesterday morning that he was going to deal with the undocumented in a compassionate way."

However, the exodus of Latinos from the Trump camp may not translate into Hillary Clinton supporters.

"I'm going to flip, but not flop," Massey Villarreal, a Houston businessman, told NBC Latino. "I am no longer supporting Trump for president, but cannot with any conscience support Hillary (Clinton)."

Trump may see a vote of no confidence among his 23-member-strong Hispanic advisory board, with reports of half of the members readying their resignations Thursday.

The Republican Party has been losing Latino support in its leadership for months. In June, the Republican National Committee's head of Hispanic media relations, Ruth Guerra, resigned after telling co-workers she was not comfortable in a job where she was tasked to help get Trump elected.

If money is any indicator, however, Trump supporters were drawn to his Wednesday appearances. Trump raised more than $5 million in small donations during his afternoon news conference with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto and during his speech on immigration in Phoenix, Trump campaign digital director Brad Parscale told the Wall Street Journal.

The speech was a shock to many following what was understood to be a relatively friendly private sit-down with Peña Nieto — a win for many in the Latino pro-Trump camp. Trump said at a joint press conference that they had set aside the issue of who would pay for the multi-billion, Trump-proposed wall along the Mexico-U.S. border as a way to focus on common issues such as trade and security.

"We did discuss the wall; we didn't discuss payment of the wall," Trump told reporters at a brief press conference alongside Peña Nieto. "That will be for a later date."

While the Mexican president did not dispute the claim while he stood alongside Trump, he shortly thereafter contradicted Trump and posted on social media that Mexico would not pay for the wall.

"At the start of the conversation with Donald Trump, I made it clear that Mexico will not pay for the wall," Peña Nieto tweeted.

In Phoenix, Trump responded to Peña Nieto, saying, "Mexico will pay for the wall, believe me — 100 percent — they don’t know it yet, but they will pay for the wall." He added: "They're great people, and great leaders, but they will pay for the wall."

Angelica Salas, chair of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of America Action Fund, served up harsh criticism for Trump's Wednesday speech, saying viewers saw "the makings of a tyrant who is racist" in the speech.

She added: "A 10-point deportation plan is still mass deportation and the American public should see right through Trump's charade."
http://patch.com/us/across-america/...igration-speech-crash-burn-latino-gop-leaders


How to lose an election when you're facing the weakest democratic candidate ever ? Ask Trump.
It's so great to see him, just when he started to look a little less hate-ful, just when he seemed to have understood that he would never win a general election with his primarys stance, just whe you start to think "Hey, he might be more dangerous than we thought", he can't restrain himself and hateful Trump unleashes, again.
 

Yeah, latinos are silently supporting a man who called them criminals, drug-dealers and rapists :facepalm:

You need to :facepalm: yourself.



He didn't say Latinos he said illegals.

They aren't supposed to be here.

If they are insulted, they are welcome to go back to where they came from, and additionally, no one asked them to come to start with.

He wasn't my first choice, but it's fuckers like you getting all bent out of shape that has me hoping he wins.
 
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