Because the propaganda process continues, same with politicians needing to start raising funds soon after an election. The mainstream propaganda porn industry has to keep up the game because it's all they know at this point... they can't and aren't allowed to 'stop on a dime'.... all they can do individually, is get off that wheel of destruction, but few will as it's all they know... asleep like the rest of the sheep, programmed like a fake distress call, programmed to lure in unsuspecting travellors into their trap.Turgon said:One thing I'd like to make mention of. I was listening to CBC Radio and they were discussing the election results, and it's pathetic how they are trying to spin things around. They started out with a segment where they exhaustively repeat and discuss all of trumps sexcapades and how he is a misogynistic womanizer, his disrespect of women, etc. And the way the segment was set up was to make this portion have an impacting impression on the psyche. Because immediately afterwards, they quickly bring up, in a dismissive way, Hillary's email and Clinton foundation scandals, which I almost missed, considering how much time was spent on Trump. The kicker being, after discussing how Trump would bring both scandals up throughout the campaign, that it was compared to yet another form of sexism! Basically alluding that the reason those scandals have been brought up, is not because Hillary is a criminal involved in shady dealings, but because she's a woman! Thank DCM I don't listen to mainstream media very often. They seem to be in overdrive, fomenting a lot of race and gender division, trying harder then ever to split and pigeonhole people into pockets using a level of emotional manipulation and programming that, even though has been going on for decades and longer, seems more in-your-face, and bordering on insane right now.
Well geez I met with a curtain of disapproval when I expressed my skepticism earlier in the year with regard to there being a close Trump/Hitler parallelism. What next? Maybe you will even end up agreeing with my contention that the Black Lives Matter "movement" may in large part have been orchestrated by the likes of George Soros? Oh well, no hard feelings. . . or not too many (the accusation/diagnosis of my being schizoid still rankles a little.)Niall said:Woodsman is correct that we've softened our stance on 'Trump-as-new-Hitler', in part because his jarringly racist statements have been toned down as he became a serious candidate, but it's also informed by our understanding that the US system is structurally 'locked-in' to an ideology (and a methodology) that has been so successful for about a century that its precepts have become tautology: the US is the 'exceptional' standard-bearer of 'liberty and freedom and democracy', thus the way it does business is always justified.
Alada said:Mal7 said:I still think the comparisons of Trump to fascism and Nazism are overstated. Although polling data should be taken with caution, a February poll shows Trump receiving 10% of the black vote. This is equal or higher to that of any other Republican candidate. It is also comparable to the % of black voters favoring the Republican candidate in the pre-Obama elections. (The black vote traditionally greatly favours the democratic party, with only 10% support for the Republican nominee in pre-Obama elections. When Obama was running that fell to 4-5% support for the Republican candidate.)
I don’t. And it might be a mistake to equate visible levels of racism to how fascist or not Trump and what he represents is.
Laura said:Mal7 said:Many people here really don't seem to like Donald Trump. They seem to me to be quick to accept any source that makes out Trump to be unacceptably sexist, racist, dangerous, or psychopathic.
How about you spend some time doing deep research into the evolution and emergence of Nazi Germany? Watch videos about it, too. Read my article "The Mystic vs. Hitler".
[NB:I have changed my forum name from Mal7 to 7777, preferring to have more anonymity now that I am no longer an FCM member.]7777 said:I think Trump's sometimes distasteful style of campaigning has helped him to win the Republican nomination, and that he will be presenting more moderate ideas in the campaign for the general election. In this audio clip at 2:18-2:20 the ban has become "just a suggestion":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzNZ6oMH3sY 'Trump Changing Tune: Muslim Ban “Just A Suggestion"' - The Young Turks. May 12 2016.
sedenion said:Vous savez que notre gouvernement (france) est tellement con qu'ils n'avaient écrit qu'une seule lettre de félicitation adressée à Clinton et n'avaient même pas prévu dans leur pire cauchemars l'élection de Trump ? Nous, on est mort de rire ici... Franchement, en France faut être honnête, dans la "résistance" (entre guillemets hein, parce-que bon) on peut pas encadrer les américains, mais là, on en viendrait presque à vous aimer.
7777 said:Well geez I met with a curtain of disapproval when I expressed my skepticism earlier in the year with regard to there being a close Trump/Hitler parallelism. What next? Maybe you will even end up agreeing with my contention that the Black Lives Matter "movement" may in large part have been orchestrated by the likes of George Soros? Oh well, no hard feelings. . . or not too many (the accusation/diagnosis of my being schizoid still rankles a little.)
Pierre said:Trump protests intensify, as doubts swirl about spontaneity
By Perry Chiaramonte
Published November 10, 2016
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/11/10/trump-protests-intensify-as-doubts-swirl-about-spontaneity.html
With tens of thousands of people taking to the streets to protest Donald Trump’s presidential election victory, questions are swirling about whether the anger is as organic as advertised.
From coast to coast, demonstrators are burning flags and effigies of the president-elect while declaring that they refuse to accept Trump’s victory. But observers online are claiming that, in some cases, protesters were bused to the scenes - a telltale sign of coordination.
“Anti-Trump protestors in Austin today are not as organic as they seem,” one local in the Texas capitol tweeted Wednesday, along with photos offered as evidence.
Others claimed to have found ads posted on CraigsList in which a Seattle-based non-profit was soliciting “Full-Time Activists.”
“We are looking for motivated individuals who are seeking Full-Time, Part-Time, and Permanent positions,” reads a line from the ad from Washington CAN! posted on Wednesday.
Rumors have also been circulating that the new batch of anti-Trump protesters has been bankrolled by individuals like billionaire liberal activist George Soros and groups like Moveon.org.
“WTF, @georgesoros busing in & paying #protestors to destroy cities is domestic #terrorism. #fakeProtests #BlueLivesMatter have tough days,” read one tweet in response to the viral picture of buses in Austin.
Another theory floated on social media is that many of the signs that were distributed at rallies across the country appeared to be exactly the same, indicating they were printed and distributed by an organized group.
Trump tweeted about the protesters Thursday night:
Just had a very open and successful presidential election. Now professional protesters, incited by the media, are protesting. Very unfair!
Wednesday’s protests occurred in nearly every major city, and more are expected to come in the days leading up to President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
Some of the most troubling dissent was in the city of New Orleans where protesters wound up defacing the Lee Memorial, spray painting “Die Whites Die” and “F--- Trump” and “F--- White People.”
Other messages scrawled on the memorial included "F--- Pence" and "We are ungovernable" next to a symbol of the letter "A" in a circle -- protester shorthand for anarchy.
In Chicago, several thousand people marched through the Loop. They gathered outside Trump Tower, chanting “Not my president!” One resident, Michael Burke, told The Associated Press that the president-elect will divide the nation and stir up a deep-seated hatred.
Hundreds of protesters gathered near Philadelphia's City Hall despite chilly, wet weather. Participants — who included both supporters of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who lost to Clinton in the primary — expressed anger at both Republicans and Democrats over the election's outcome.
In Boston, thousands of anti-Trump protesters streamed through downtown, chanting "Trump's a racist," and carrying signs that said "Impeach Trump" and "Abolish Electoral College." Clinton appeared to be on pace to win the popular vote, despite losing the electoral count that decides the presidential race.
In the Midwest, protesters gathered in Minneapolis, Omaha, Nebraska and Kansas City. Mo. The Des Moines Register also reported that Iowa’s capital city saw some people protest as well, though it was kept to small numbers.
On the West Coast, some of the protests became unruly with fires being started. Thousands of protesters burned a giant papier mache Trump head in Los Angeles and started fires in Oakland intersections.
Los Angeles demonstrators also beat a Trump piñata and sprayed the Los Angeles Times building and news vans with anti-Trump profanity. One protester outside LA City Hall read a sign that simply said "this is very bad."
Late in the evening Wednesday, several hundred people blocked one of the city's busiest freeways, U.S. 101 between downtown and Hollywood.