Posted on 11/08/2015 3:41:52 PM PST by TBP
[T]here is NOTHING remotely conservative about Donald Trump and his candidacy.
You have to give them a path, a path to citizenship. Where have I heard that one before? I know, Jeb Bush and Lindsey Graham and of course every Democrat as well. Heâs zero for one there.
How about taxes? When Trump ran for president in 1999, he proposed a gigantic wealth tax on the American people, a 14.25% levy that he calculated would raise $5.7 trillion and wipe out the debt forever in one fell swoopâa wealth tax, going into your bank account and pulling out money from bank accounts. Obama is into his second term, and he hasnât even suggested that.
Since the 80s, he struggled so much with his identity, he has switched parties five times. Remember, a few months ago when people wanted George Stephanopoulos fired because he gave to the Clinton Foundation, remember that? Well, Donald Trump has given even more to the Clinton Foundation than Stephanopoulos did. Heâs given over $100,000 to the Clintons.
Since 1990, heâs given at least $541,650 to Democrats, far more than he gave to Republicans. The guy gave money to Rahm Emanuel and Harry Reid, Harry freaking Reid.
Trump said, âIâm totally pro-choice. I hate it and I hate saying it. And Iâm almost ashamed to say that Iâm pro-choice but I am pro-choice because I think we have no choice.â What? And âI believe it is a personal decision that should be left to the women and their doctors.â
Donald Trump: I think Bush is probably the worst president in the history of the United States.
He indicated his ideal vice president would be diehard Obama supporter Oprah Winfrey, and he was a registered Democrat until 2009
How about eminent domain? Years ago, Trump was looking to add a few more parking spots to one of his casinos in Atlantic City. To do so, he needed to acquire the property of Vera Coking, a senior citizen who had lived there for over three decades. So, did he make her an offer she couldnât refuse? No, he decided to use eminent domain. Yes, this conservative argued that the government needed to take a wrecking ball to this sweet old womanâs home, her private property, because it was an eyesore.
Thatâs not all on eminent domain, of course, because the big one is when the government destroyed peopleâs homes in Connecticut so an office building could be built in the Kelo decision which might be the worst Supreme Court ruling of my lifetime. Trump said he backed the government 100%. Eminent domain is more than something he supports. Itâs his business plan. In fact, a nice chunk of Trumpâs wealth has come from using the force of government to take property from private individuals to line his pockets. Beyond the sheer lack of basic humanity, it definitely takes a liberal progressive to do something like that.
I think so. I would be gone from his camp in one second if I didn’t think so.
All I care about is that Trump is anti-immigration.
If we can put a lid on immigration, regardless of anything else he does or does not do, then the US has a chance to survive.
If we do not put a lid on immigration, then within 5 years the demographics of the US will ensure that we can forget about ever electing another conservative as President. We will have lost, and lost for all time. We will be a Third World country.
At that point, the Left will have won. They will be able to ram through their whole wish-list without even token opposition.
I see that being a Leftist is a lot different these days, if a Cruz supporter can be believed at all on anything.
That’s what Trump believes, and yet he’s a Leftist to the “True Believers on Ted’s Crewz”.
Is he?
http://www.newsweek.com/who-knew-trump-favors-amnesty-undocumented-immigrants-395512
But his supporters tend to overlook his other promiseârepeated in the Fox Business debate in Milwaukee on November 10âthat under his immigration plan âthey will come back.â
Thatâs right. Under Trumpâs immigration plan, almost all of the 11 million illegal aliens (save for a small minority with criminal records) will get to return and get permanent legal status to stay here in America. Trump supports amnesty.
https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2015/07/trump-it-seems-favors-amnesty.php
http://dailycaller.com/2015/07/24/donald-trump-on-amnesty-if-somebodys-been-outstanding-we-try-and-work-something-out-video/
Joe Scarborough asked Trump what he would do about the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants living in the country once America secured its southern border. After arguing the real number of illegal immigrants is much higher and saying the first thing America needs to do is âtake the badâ illegal immigrants and âget them the hell out,â Trump sounded like he was open to providing some type of pathway to legalization for the remainder.
âAnd then the other ones â and Iâm a very big believer in merit system, I have to tell you,â Trump said. âBecause some of these people have been here, theyâve done a good job, you know, in some cases sadly theyâve been living under the shadows.â
https://soundcloud.com/glennbeck/beck-blitz-donald-trumppro-amnesty
(This is from Trump on The O'Reilly Factor):
Donald Trump: The biggest problem is that you have some great, wonderful people coming in from Mexico that are working the crops, theyâre working cutting lawns, theyâre doing a lot of jobs that Iâm not sure that a lot of Americans are going to take those jobs. And thatâs the dichotomy. Thatâs the big problem because you have a lot of great people coming in doing a lot of work, and Iâm not so sure that a lot of other people are going to be doing that work. So, it is a very tough problem, but I do say this, you have a law, or at least you have to establish a law, and I guess weâre sort of a country and other people arenât supposed to be coming into our country illegally.
I think right now youâre going to have to do something. Itâs hard to generalize, but youâre going to have to look at the individual people, see how theyâve done, see how productive theyâve been, see what their references are, and then make a decision.
You have to give them a path. You have 20 million, 30 million, nobody knows what it is. It used to be 11 million. Now, today I hear itâs 11, but I donât think itâs 11. I actually heard you probably have 30 million. You have to give them a path, and you have to make it possible for them to succeed. You have to do that.
http://www.mothersagainstillegalaliens.org/?p=1436
http://www.alipac.us/f9/donald-trump%92s-amnesty-323656/
More links about Trump’s amnesty.
My radar tells me Trump is sincere. Not so with Cruz, who has changed his PUBLIC, CAMPAIGN position and uses deceptive debating techniques to avoid giving honest answers to questions. That’s just on the TV-presentation sincerity issue. I have more serious reasons for thinking Cruz is a phony.
If you have a candidate who is less squishy on immigration, trot out what he has to say. Cruz is less anti-immigration than Trump. Same with Carson. Rubio is pro-establishment.
Who do you propose as an alternative?
Here is Senator Cruz’s position as of June 2013:
“This Gang of Eight bill is a disaster. It is the exact same thing we saw in 1986. The last big immigration reform was in 1986, and the federal government told the American people, we’re gonna grant amnesty for the three million people who are here illegally. And in exchange for that we’re actually gonna secure the borders. We’re gonna solve illegal immigration, and the problem is gonna go away.
“Now, we saw what happened. The amnesty happened, the borders never got secured, and now three decades later, instead of three million people, it’s 11 million people.
“11 million, 12 million. We don’t have an exact number, but it is three to four times bigger than what it was in 1986, and we’re hearing the exact same empty promises. What the Gang of Eight bill does is it grants legalization now. It takes everyone who’s here illegally and says, “You’re legal,” and then just like in 1986 it promises, “sometime in the future, trust us, wink-wink, we’ll secure the border.” I don’t think the American people are that foolish. You know, fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. If this bill is enacted, it will make the problem worse. If this bill is enacted, in another decade or two we’re gonna be back here not with 11 million, but with 20 million or 30 million people here illegally. This is a broken system. I think what Americans want is fix the problem, stop playing political games, actually secure the border and make a legal immigration system that works.
“Well, the Democrats want this for pure politics. Chuck Schumer was very candid in the Senate Judiciary Committee when he said, “If there is no citizenship, there can be no reform.” This is all about their endeavor. They want to grant amnesty, and they hope to get a lot more Democratic voters, or they want this to be voted down and use it as a political issue in 2014 and 2016.
On the Republican side, sadly, a lot of the support of it is political as well. You know, after 2012, all of the Washington political consultants and all the mainstream media came to Republicans and said, “You’ve got to do better with Hispanics, and the way to do better with Hispanics is to embrace amnesty.” And, look, a lot of Republicans in Washington were scared. I gotta tell you, I think that political argument is complete nonsense. If you look at the last time we enacted amnesty in 1986, the next election was 1988, the Republican share of the Hispanic vote went down. It is not the case — Hispanics are not the single-issue, monolithic voters.”
I see nothing there that is incompatible with what he is saying now. And furrthermore, he led the fight against the bill — and put up a petition against it.
Meanwhile, here is Donald Trump’s position as of earlier this year:
(July 26)
“Now, a lot of these people are helping us, whether itâs the grapes, or whether itâs jobs, and sometimes itâs jobs, in all fairness, I love our country, but sometimes itâs jobs that a citizen of the United States doesn’t want to do. I mean, there are jobs that a lot of people donât want to do. I want to move them out, and weâre going to move them back in.
“Iâve been giving it so much thought, you know you have a â on a humanitarian basis, you have a lot of deep thought going into this, believe me. I actually have a big heart.â¦I mean, a lot of people donât understand that, but the DREAMers, itâs a tough situation, weâre going to do something, and one of the things weâre going to do is expedite â when somebodyâs terrific, we want them back here.
“I have to tell you: Some of these people have been here, they’ve done a good job. You know, in some cases, sadly, they’ve been living under the shadows. ... If somebody’s been outstanding, we try and work something out.”
[The article continues] This is in line with what CNNâs Chris Moody reported Trump saying during a press conference in Chicago at the end of June. When asked what he would do about the illegal immigrants already residing in the country once the border was secured, Trump replied, âgive them a path,â according to Moody.
https://soundcloud.com/glennbeck/beck-blitz-donald-trumppro-amnesty
(As of July 14)
http://liberteanow.us/2015/07/14/2601/
Trump: You have to give them a path. You have 20 million, 30 million, nobody knows what it is. It used to be 11 million. Now, today I hear itâs 11, but I donât think itâs 11. I actually heard you probably have 30 million. You have to give them a path, and you have to make it possible for them to succeed. You have to do that.
(As of August 10 — remember all these dates are THIS YEAR)
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/422351/donald-trump-immigration-amnesty-build-wall
“Asked about his immigration ideas on CNN, Trump was a mess, beginning with the old “jobs Americans wonât do” canard favored by open-borders proponents (a canard because it always leaves out the relevant qualifier: “at current wages”), then suggesting that we should deport the millions of illegals who are already here only to turn around and bring them back (”I want to move them out, and weâre going to move them back in, and let them be legal”). This process would include those brought here as young children, who will be deported and recycled based on the criterion of whether they are — Trumpâs word — “terrific.” What might constitute a federal terrificness standard remains unclear. “Weâre going to do something,” Trump said. “Iâve been giving it so much thought. You know you have a, on a humanitarian basis, you have a lot of deep thought going into this, believe me. I actually have a big heart.”
Deporting some 11 million illegals who have for many years evaded deportation only to reimport them under an expedited legal immigration system, the contours of which currently are undefined, and then granting them some sort of permanent legal status is simply another variation on amnesty, and a complicated, expensive, and thick-headed version of amnesty at that. Like the proposed reform program of 2007, which would have purportedly required illegals to be present in their country of origin when applying for legal status, this isnât just amnesty — itâs also amnesty-laundering.
These are pro-amnesty positions Trump took EARLIER THIS YEAR. By contrast, Ted Cruz fought the amnesty bill in the U.S. Senate two years ago.
Not so; his record is better. See above.
See post #207.
Oops — I meant #209.
Check post #209.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.