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Rush Limbaugh: Let’s face it, Trump sounded like a liberal Dem in some things he said at debate
Hot Air ^ | February 15, 2016 | Allahpundit

Posted on 02/15/2016 5:12:56 PM PST by icwhatudo

Here we are in a Republican primary, and Donald Trump, out of the blue, starts blaming the Bush family for 9/11, for knowing that the intelligence was made up, that there never were any weapons of mass destruction, and they knew it, Trump said.

Michael Moore doesn’t even say that…

On the stage at a Republican debate, Donald Trump defended Planned Parenthood. Not the abortion stuff, he said, but the fact that they do great things for women’s health. Folks, there were a number of occasions where Donald Trump sounded like the Daily Kos blog, where Donald Trump sounded like the Democrat Underground, sounded like any average host on MSNBC.

(Excerpt) Read more at hotair.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: 2016debates; backonoxy; codepink; donaldtrump; michaelmoore; noclass; novalues; randpaul; ronpaul; rush; rushiswrong; sc2016; trump; trump2024; trumpiswrongagain; trumpvalues
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To: big'ol_freeper

Trumps tax plan will save me 500 per month in taxes. If that is big tax and spend then go for it!


141 posted on 02/15/2016 6:10:47 PM PST by central_va
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To: big'ol_freeper
They don't want to hear that.

Only a GOPe psyop would claim such a thing.

Gasp!

142 posted on 02/15/2016 6:10:51 PM PST by Thumper1960 (Cruz/Palin2016)
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To: digger48

That’s your quote. Own it.


143 posted on 02/15/2016 6:11:05 PM PST by big'ol_freeper (Trump: "Planned Parenthood does wonderful things")
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To: Thumper1960

Read what?

All I’m seeing is the outward effects of acute TDS


144 posted on 02/15/2016 6:11:27 PM PST by digger48
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To: Axeslinger
All we can go on, truthfully, is what the man says. I know I've evolved on political beliefs over the years, I cannot deny another man that same freedom of decision.

I know he's said different things, but generally on immigration and 2A, he's been consistent for a while now.

145 posted on 02/15/2016 6:11:27 PM PST by Lazamataz (I'm an Islamophobe??? Well, good. When it comes to Islam, there's plenty to Phobe about.)
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To: Behind Liberal Lines

No he’s a nationalist socialist.

And no, not the Nazi kind, but the European kind.


146 posted on 02/15/2016 6:11:34 PM PST by Jewbacca (The residents of Iroquois territory may not determine whether Jews may live in Jerusalem)
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To: HockeyPop

I must admit the talk of the wall, anti-mulsim immigration, and the anti-PC stuff made me really like him, and if you check my posting history I was an early fan...but his supporters have really turned me off and this debate made many in my family as well (who were considering him) rethink things.


147 posted on 02/15/2016 6:12:39 PM PST by icwhatudo (Low taxes and less spending in Sodom and Gomorrah is not my idea of a conservative victory)
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To: digger48

Akin to what we say about the weather in Indiana in the spring.

If you don’t like it, just wait 15 minutes.

Above is what you said about Rush Limbaugh oh courageous one.


148 posted on 02/15/2016 6:13:29 PM PST by lormand (Inside every liberal is a dung slinging monkey)
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To: HockeyPop

Over on twitter Im attacked for defending trump on some things. Its pretty funny.


149 posted on 02/15/2016 6:13:45 PM PST by icwhatudo (Low taxes and less spending in Sodom and Gomorrah is not my idea of a conservative victory)
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To: central_va
RE: Trumps tax plan will save me 500 per month in taxes.

I see you found another candidate

Trumps tax plan

150 posted on 02/15/2016 6:13:47 PM PST by big'ol_freeper (Trump: "Planned Parenthood does wonderful things")
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To: Behind Liberal Lines
I remember when free republic was a place where if somebody stood up on stage and screamed “Bush lied us into war” we would’ve recognized that person is a liberal idiot.

I'm not the biggest Trump supporter here (I still like Ted Cruz more) but I'd vote for him in a heartbeat over the alternative on the other side. I also believe that being an outsider or a non-establishment republican does NOT in any way make you by default a "conservative". After all, it is possible to be a none GOPe candiadate because of standing far to the left of anything the GOP would support (although that seems to be getting more and more impossible with time)

I think ,not Donald Trump or not even a real conservative is to blame, but George W Bush himself bears much of the blame for the "Bush lied about Iraq" attacks and all the other attacks.

More than a decade has gone by with unanswered daily attacks against the man from the left, from the "mistake of going into Iraq" to "the worst economy since Hoover".

Bush had NEVER responded to the criticism coming from the left and not even that coming from our president President.

Worse! He has publically agreed with them...

George Bush, in a moment of reflection ahead of his departure from the White House, last night admitted that the decision to go to war against Saddam Hussein on the basis of flawed intelligence was the biggest regret of his presidency. The acknowledgment marks the first time that Bush has publicly expressed doubts about his rationale for going to war on Iraq.

George W Bush told ABC News which aired in December 2008, he said that despite briefings in early 2001 warning that Al Qaeda was prepared to attack, "I think I was unprepared for war" when terrorists struck the United States on 9/11.

Isn't it remarkable that it took the criticism of a non-establishment republican to actually get George W Bush to respond after nearly a decade of unanswered attacks from the left, from Hillary, and from Obama?

Bush threw us and anybody who stood behind him UNDER THE BUS long ago.

151 posted on 02/15/2016 6:13:51 PM PST by tsowellfan
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To: Lazamataz

No, you go on persons actions. Talk is cheap as we have find out on FR.


152 posted on 02/15/2016 6:15:57 PM PST by beandog (TrumperTantrum)
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To: digger48
All I am seeing is "false god worship" and "he can do no wrong" syndrome.

"I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters"

He's right. I have to admit, he is right.

153 posted on 02/15/2016 6:16:19 PM PST by Thumper1960 (Cruz/Palin2016)
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To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

“Hush Bimbo”

The libs at your community collage are impressed with your creative attacks on Conservatives.

Please provide proof for your lib-smears.


154 posted on 02/15/2016 6:16:43 PM PST by lormand (Inside every liberal is a dung slinging monkey)
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To: icwhatudo

Free Republics new Motto...We eat our own.


155 posted on 02/15/2016 6:17:43 PM PST by Yorlik803 ( Church/Caboose in 2016)
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To: lormand
...you flip and you flop by agreeing with a Trump-sucker denigrating Rush Limbaugh.

No. I did not.Only minutes before the soundbite mentioned in the article,the case could be made by the TDS crowd that it sounding like he was favoring Trump by talking about the strategery behind it.

For what was a flippant joke, it sure got a bunch of panties wadded in TDS Land

156 posted on 02/15/2016 6:18:07 PM PST by digger48
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To: icwhatudo

[ from February 17, 2011 ] Defector Admits Lying Extensively About Iraq’s Alleged WMD
The New American ^ | 17 February 2011 | Michael Tennant
Posted on 2/15/2016, 6:12:20 PM by VitacoreVision

If any doubt remained that the U.S. and British governments’ case for invading Iraq was based almost entirely on lies, the Guardian has just put such doubt to rest. The British newspaper published a story based on interviews with Iraqi defector Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi, code name “Curveball,” in which Janabi admitted “that nearly every word he had told his interrogators from Germany’s secret service, the BND, was a lie.”

The tales Janabi wove about Saddam Hussein’s supposed mobile biological weapons program formed the basis of much of then-U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell’s 2003 presentation to the United Nations Security Council in which he laid out the case for war against Iraq, saying:

We have firsthand descriptions of biological weapons factories on wheels and on rails….
The source was an eyewitness, an Iraqi chemical engineer who supervised one of these facilities. He was present during biological agent production runs. He was also at the site when an accident occurred in 1998. Twelve technicians died.
He reported that when UNSCOM was in the country and inspecting, the biological weapons agent production always began on Thursdays at midnight because Iraq thought UNSCOM would not inspect on the Muslim Holy Day, Thursday night through Friday. He added that this was important because the units could not be broken down in the middle of a production run, which had to be completed by Friday evening before the inspectors might arrive again.
In fact, says the Guardian, “everything [Janabi] had said about the inner workings of Saddam Hussein’s biological weapons program was a flight of fantasy,” yet the U.S. government swallowed it whole despite the fact that prior to Powell’s speech, according to Janabi, “he had not met a U.S. official, let alone been interviewed by one.” (At the time he was living in Germany, having been granted asylum; he and his family, with an assist from the BND, have since become German citizens and have remained in the country.) Moreover, Janabi had already been exposed as a liar in 2000, so any allegations he made should have been considered highly suspect. Nevertheless, there was Powell, telling the entire world that Iraq was teeming with weapons of mass destruction, using “diagrams that [Janabi] knew had been prepared from his fraudulent descriptions.” The paper aptly dubs Janabi’s snow job “one of the greatest confidence tricks in the history of modern intelligence.”

The path to success was, however, made much smoother for Janabi by the fact that the Bush administration, along with the government of British Prime Minister Tony Blair, so desperately wanted to find an excuse to invade Iraq that it grasped at the flimsiest of straws that could be used to build its case. It is known, for example, that both the U.S. and U.K. governments tried to provoke Saddam into firing the first shot in the war and that the Blair government had, in the words of BBC correspondent Andrew Gilligan, “sexed up” its intelligence dossier supposedly proving the existence of Iraq’s WMD incontrovertibly. As the so-called Downing Street Memo put it, “the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.” A ready-made source of such phony intelligence was simply too good to pass up.

That these governments were looking for “facts” to support their war policy is evident from Janabi’s statements to the Guardian. Janabi says that he “thought his story about the mobile trucks had been discounted” in 2000 after both German and British intelligence confronted him with evidence to contradict his assertions, at which point he readily admitted he had been wrong. He did not speak to his handlers again until May 2002, when they began asking him questions unrelated to the alleged mobile biological weapons labs. Then, in January 2003, they suddenly began questioning him about the mobile labs again — “the first time they had talked to me about this since 2000,” Janabi said. The paper writes that Janabi “says it was clear to him that the drums of war were beating ever louder” at that time. The next month everything Janabi had related about the supposed mobile labs showed up in Powell’s speech.

What else can one conclude but that the American and British governments sought out Janabi’s “intelligence” to bolster their case for war, ignoring all evidence to the contrary? They were certainly not above using other suspect intelligence for the same purpose, such as the obviously phony documents that supposedly proved that Saddam had sought to purchase yellowcake uranium from Niger.

Further evidence that this is precisely what happened has been provided by Tyler Drumheller, who was the chief of CIA covert operations in Europe at the time of Powell’s presentation. Drumheller, who also saw through the yellowcake documents and reported that Iraq had no WMD program, told the Guardian that “right up to the night of Powell’s speech” he had been warning then-CIA Director George Tenet that Janabi’s intelligence was unreliable but (obviously) was ignored.

The newspaper adds:

[Drumheller] recalled a conversation he had with John McLaughlin, then the CIA’s deputy director. “The week before the speech, I talked to the Deputy McLaughlin, and someone says to him, ‘Tyler’s worried that Curveball might be a fabricator.’ And McLaughlin said, ‘Oh, I hope not, because this is really all we have.’ And I said, and I’ve got to be honest with you, I said: ‘You’ve got to be kidding? This is all we have!’”
Asked whether Powell … could have made a public case for war without Curveball, he said: “Not at the time they did ... it would have been a lot less dramatic and there would have been a lot more debate in Congress in the U.S. than if you have a source who says, for example, they can drop anthrax over the city of London.”

Tenet has denied that Drumheller ever made an official warning to CIA headquarters, insisting that he only found out about Janabi’s unreliability in 2005. Powell, meanwhile, is calling for an investigation into why the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency failed to inform him of Janabi’s unreliability prior to his speech.

The use of defector intelligence with no corroboration is not accepted practice at intelligence agencies, argues Carne Ross. Ross, who says he “was Britain’s Iraq expert at the U.N. Security Council and responsible for liaison with the weapons inspectors” during the years just prior to the Iraq war, writes that because “defectors had a powerful incentive to exaggerate the nature of Iraq’s development of WMD,” they were considered “the least convincing sources” of intelligence. Therefore, their allegations, as with all other intelligence, were always “subjected to rigorous cross-checking before inclusion in overall analyses.” “In the years I worked on the subject (1997-2002),” Ross maintains, “the picture produced by this method was very clear: there was no credible evidence of substantial stocks of WMD in Iraq.”

Ross continues:

And it was this method — clearly — that was abandoned in advance of the war. Instead of a careful cross-checking of evidence, reports that suited the story of an imminent Iraqi threat were picked out, polished and formed the basis of public claims like Colin Powell’s presentation to the U.N. Security Council, or the No. 10 dossier. This was exactly how a false case for war was constructed: not by the deliberate creation of a falsehood, but by willfully and secretly manipulating the evidence to exaggerate the importance of reports like Curveball’s, and to ignore contradictory evidence. This was a subtle process, elaborated from report to report, in such a way that allowed officials themselves to believe that they were not deliberately lying — more editing, perhaps, or simplifying for public presentation.
… Others of my former colleagues in the [Ministry of Defense] and Foreign Office have freely admitted to me that this is precisely what took place. Yet, for all its subtlety and secrecy, we should name this process for what it was: the manufacture of a lie.

It is probably too much to expect any Bush or Blair administration officials to pay the price for their deliberate deceit. Indeed, as Ross points out, “We can expect that those who constructed it — Tony Blair, Dick Cheney et al. — will now amend their usual arguments to suggest that they were innocently misled by evidence such as Curveball’s.” They will also no doubt fall back on the old standby that the world is better off without Saddam — something that Curveball himself is counting on to salvage his reputation, telling the Guardian that while he is “very sad” about the tens of thousands of Iraqis civilians who have been killed as a direct result of his lies, “there was no other way to bring about freedom to Iraq.”

Curveball, have you seen any news out of Egypt lately?

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3397547/posts


157 posted on 02/15/2016 6:18:24 PM PST by Grampa Dave (Delegate count to date: Trump 18, Cruz 10, Rubot 9, Kasich 4, Carson 3, Yebe 3)
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To: Lazamataz

When did we start solely relying on what a person says to elect them to the most powerful office on earth?

And why do we have to in his case? Ok it’s his first run at political office, but....Where are the foundations he’s started with his “billions” to advance ANY conservative causes? Where is the evidence that he’s done ANYTHING to advance the conservative agenda?

A year ago we would’ve laughed at the very notion that he would run as a Republican.

Cheers FRiend.


158 posted on 02/15/2016 6:18:24 PM PST by Axeslinger (Trump: the Kaitlyn Jenner of conservatism. One's not a woman, one's not a conservative.)
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To: Jewbacca

ok. again, i respect rush’s contributions to conservatism. maybe i should have said a reluctant gope but a gope nevertheless. but i’ve explained myself already on this thread.


159 posted on 02/15/2016 6:18:42 PM PST by dadfly
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To: Thumper1960

To say that the Trump-suckers are lemmings is an insult to lemmings.


160 posted on 02/15/2016 6:18:46 PM PST by lormand (Inside every liberal is a dung slinging monkey)
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