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Bang / Guns
See other Bang / Guns Articles

Title: Trump Stuns Lawmakers With Seeming Embrace of Gun Control Measures
Source: MSN
URL Source: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli ... 1QI?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartandhp
Published: Feb 28, 2018
Author: staff
Post Date: 2018-02-28 20:44:27 by buckeroo
Keywords: None
Views: 3429
Comments: 29

WASHINGTON — President Trump stunned Republicans on live television Wednesday by embracing gun control and urging a group of lawmakers at the White House to resurrect gun safety legislation that has been opposed for years by the powerful National Rifle Association and the vast majority of his party.

In a remarkable meeting in the Roosevelt Room, the president veered wildly from the N.R.A. playbook in front of giddy Democrats and stone-faced Republicans. He called for comprehensive gun control legislation that would expand background checks to weapons purchased at gun shows and on the internet, keep guns from the mentally ill, secure schools and restrict gun sales from some young adults. He even suggested a conversation on an assault weapons ban.

At one point, Mr. Trump suggested that law enforcement authorities should have the power to seize guns from mentally ill or other dangerous people without first going to court. “I like taking the guns early,” he said, adding, “take the guns first, go through due process second.”

The president’s declarations prompted a frantic series of calls from N.R.A. lobbyists to their allies on Capitol Hill and a statement from the group calling the ideas Mr. Trump expressed “bad policy.” Republican lawmakers issued statements or told reporters they remain opposed to gun control measures.

“We’re not ditching any Constitutional protections simply because the last person the President talked to today doesn’t like them,” snapped Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of Nebraska.

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Democrats, too, said they were skeptical that Mr. Trump will follow through.

“The White House can now launch a lobbying campaign to get universal background checks passed, as the president promised in this meeting, or they can sit and do nothing,” said Senator Chris Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut.

At the core of Mr. Trump’s suggestion was the revival of a bipartisan bill drafted in 2013 by Senators Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, a Democrat, and Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania, a Republican, after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Despite a concerted push by President Barack Obama and the personal appeals of Sandy Hook parents, the bill fell to a largely Republican filibuster.

The president’s embrace did not immediately yield converts. Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, said that he was unmoved after the meeting, repeating the Republican dogma that recent shootings were not “conducted by someone who bought a gun at a gun show or parking lot.” Senator John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Republican who sat next to Mr. Trump looking alternately bemused and flustered, emerged from the meeting and declared, “I thought it was fascinating television and it was surreal to actually be there.”

But Mr. Trump suggested that the dynamics in Washington have changed following the Florida school shooting that claimed 17 lives, in part because of his own leadership in the White House, a sentiment that the Democrats in the room readily appeared to embrace as they saw the president supporting their ideas.

“It would be so beautiful to have one bill that everyone could support,” Mr. Trump said as Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California and a longtime gun-control advocate, sat smiling to his left. “It’s time that a president stepped up.”

Democrats tried to turn sometimes muddled presidential musings into firm policy: “You saw the president clearly saying not once, not twice, not three times, but like ten times, that he wanted to see a strong universal background check bill,” Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, said. “He didn’t mince words about it. So I do not understand how then he could back away from that.”

Just what the performance means, and whether Mr. Trump will aggressively push for new gun restrictions, remain uncertain given Mr. Trump’s history of taking erratic positions on policy issues, especially ones that have long polarized Washington and the country.

The gun-control performance on Wednesday was reminiscent of a similar, televised discussion with lawmakers about immigration last year at which he appeared to back bipartisan legislation to help young immigrants brought to the country illegally as children — only to reverse himself and back a hard-line approach that helped scuttle consensus in the Senate.

Mr. Trump’s comments during the hourlong meeting were at odds with his history as a candidate and president who has repeatedly declared his love for the Second Amendment and the N.R.A., which gave his campaign $30 million. At the group’s annual conference last year, Mr. Trump declared: “To the N.R.A., I can proudly say I will never, ever let you down.”

But at the meeting, the president repeatedly rejected the N.R.A.’s top legislative priority, a bill known as “concealed carry reciprocity,” that would allow a person with permission to carry a concealed weapon in one state to automatically do so in every state. To the dismay of Republicans, he dismissed the measure as having no chance at passage in the Congress. Republican leaders in the House had paired that N.R.A. priority with a modest measure to improve data reporting to the existing instant background check system.

“You’ll never get it,” Mr. Trump told Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the House Republican whip who was gravely injured in a mass shooting last year but still opposes gun restrictions. “You’ll never get it passed. We want to get something done.”

Mr. Trump also flatly insisted that legislation should raise the minimum age for purchasing rifles from 18 to 21 — an idea the N.R.A. and many Republicans fiercely oppose. When Mr. Toomey pushed back on an increase in the minimum age for rifles, the president accused him of fearing the N.R.A. — a remarkable slap since the N.R.A. withdrew its support for Mr. Toomey over his background check bill.

“If there’s a Republican who’s demonstrated he’s not afraid of the N.R.A., that would be me,” Mr. Toomey said after the meeting.

The president appeared eager to challenge the impression that he is bought and paid-for by the gun rights group. While calling the N.R.A. membership “well-meaning,” he also said he told the group’s leaders at a lunch on Sunday that “it’s time. We’re going to stop this nonsense. It’s time.”

Officials at the gun group were taken aback by the president’s comments and immediately ramped up their lobbying against measures they have long said would damage the Second Amendment and do little to protect people against gun violence.

“While today’s meeting made for great T.V., the gun control policies discussed would make bad policy that wouldn’t keep our children safer,” said Jennifer Baker, a spokeswoman for the N.R.A.’s lobbying arm. “We are going to continue to work to pass policies that might actually prevent another horrific tragedy.”

But at least for Wednesday, Mr. Trump seemed willing to veer far from the N.R.A. script, even seeming to suggest that he might back an ban on assault-style weapons when Ms. Feinstein asked what they could do about “weapons of war.” The N.R.A. has helped to defeat an assault weapons ban since the last one expired in 2004.

The reaction in Washington was swift. Breitbart.com, a right-wing site once led by Stephen K. Bannon, the president’s one-time chief strategist, published a story with an all-caps, bright red headline: “TRUMP THE GUN GRABBER.”

The site added that the president “CEDES DEMS’ WISH LIST — BUMP STOCKS, BUYING AGE, ‘ASSAULT WEAPONS,’ BACKGROUND CHECKS. TELLS SCALISE TO TAKE A HIKE — AFTER SURVIVING ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT.”

The president did return several times to a proposal that conservatives like: arming teachers in schools so and ending the “gun free zones” around schools that Mr. Trump said had made America’s schools among the most vulnerable targets for mass shooters.

“You’ve got to have defense too,” the president told the lawmakers. “You can’t just be sitting ducks. And that’s exactly what we’ve allowed people in these buildings and schools to be.”

But several times, he acknowledged how controversial that proposal is, and seemed to accept the idea that it might not be included in a comprehensive gun control measure that could pass through both chambers in the Congress.

He also backed a modest measure sponsored by a Republican and a Democrat in the Senate to improve the quality of the data in the background check system. But he told the bill’s author, Sen. John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, to consider just adding that proposal to the broader expansion of the background check system.

“It would be nice to add everything on to it,” Mr. Trump said. “Maybe change the title. Maybe we could make it much more comprehensive and have one bill.”


Eliminate some or all semi-automatic firearms from the citizenry?

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#1. To: buckeroo, *Bang List* (#0) (Edited)

expand background checks to weapons purchased at gun shows and on the internet

Mr. Trump suggested that law enforcement authorities should have the power to seize guns

You have to pass it, to see if your guns get confiscated.

Hondo68  posted on  2018-02-28   20:49:55 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: buckeroo (#0)

It would be nice to add everything on to it,” Mr. Trump said. “Maybe change the title. Maybe we could make it much more comprehensive and have one bill.

Donald's hands are cramped from all the signing he has done, hard to read much more into this than a fishing expedition, once again he has thrown it out there to see what will emerge. politics is the art of the possible and you don't know what is possible until you ask, but he reads the temperament of the voters well

paraclete  posted on  2018-02-28   21:17:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: paraclete (#2)

Donald's hands are cramped from all the signing he has done, hard to read much more into this than a fishing expedition, once again he has thrown it out there to see what will emerge. politics is the art of the possible and you don't know what is possible until you ask, but he reads the temperament of the voters well

That's my sense of him,also.

In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.

sneakypete  posted on  2018-02-28   21:21:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: buckeroo (#0) (Edited)

Mr. Trump’s comments during the hourlong meeting were at odds with his history as a candidate and president who has repeatedly declared his love for the Second Amendment and the N.R.A., which gave his campaign $30 million. At the group’s annual conference last year, Mr. Trump declared: “To the N.R.A., I can proudly say I will never, ever let you down.”

So much for Trump's good word and consistency.

By sacrificing the lives of a few kids, the radical left has won an important step in imposing its revolution on a disarmed helpless population. That was the original intention.

rlk  posted on  2018-02-28   21:45:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: hondo68 (#1)

You have to pass it, to see if your guns get confiscated.

ROTFL! A parody of a Nancy Pelosi quote.

buckeroo  posted on  2018-02-28   22:54:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: All (#4) (Edited)

Upon further reflection:

Mr. Trump’s comments during the hour long meeting were at odds with his history as a candidate and president who has repeatedly declared his love for the Second Amendment and the N.R.A., which gave his campaign $30 million. At the group’s annual conference last year, Mr. Trump declared: “To the N.R.A., I can proudly say I will never, ever let you down.”

What we've been seeing, and hearing, is accusations of a crooked Hillary when it is convienent. What we're getting now is demonstrations of a crooked deceptive Trump whose word and integrity are no good. People will accept it out of desperation to believe in the opposite of the Obama-Hillary political axis.

By sacrificing the lives of a few dozen kids, the radical left has won an important step in imposing its revolution on a disarmed helpless population. That was the original intention. The deaths of those kids under a corrupt warped sheriff is, in the minds of the radical left, a miniscule and acceptable price to to pay to achieve the necessary propaganda to achieve imposition of their version of a society of economic and social equality.

When I was much younger, the pawn shops and sporting goods stores were filled with various guns brought home as war souveneers. Magazines even offered 20 MM cannons used for knocking the treads off enemy tanks. Yet there wasn't the violence we see today. The problem that we see today is not the availabily of guns. It is the propagandizing corruption and mental illness of the population.

rlk  posted on  2018-03-01   3:32:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: buckeroo, Take the Guns First (#5)

Hondo68  posted on  2018-03-01   3:48:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: rlk (#4)

So much for Trump's good word

Ease up on the drama. He ain't done shit, yet, when it comes to confiscating weapons. He often will get the libtard media off his back with a little verbal hope and prayer. If Trump gives them anything, it won't be enough, and they will be at full odds again.

If you haven't noticed, a week later, and every morning noon and night, LameStreamMedia is still plastering the TV with kids running from a school with their hands up... and then comes the images of tricked out AR's.

The liberal left controls the strings... you just best hope the conservative Supreme Court Justices continue the forefathers wishes.

I'm the infidel... Allah warned you about. كافر المسلح

GrandIsland  posted on  2018-03-01   7:27:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: GrandIsland (#8)

He ain't done shit, yet, when it comes to confiscating weapons. He often will get the libtard media off his back with a little verbal hope and prayer. If Trump gives them anything, it won't be enough, and they will be at full odds again.

SPOT ON.

Liberator  posted on  2018-03-01   9:21:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: GrandIsland (#8)

Trump's people-skills are off the chart good. The GOPe and Left still can't figure him out.

Dubya was exposed as a teenage boy masquerading as a man compared to Donald Trump; Without the Leftist Media covering for 0bama and the Klintons, they'd have been flayed for their constant BS in the public arena. 0bama in particular was nothing but a poseur and punk.

Trump has no doubt dealt with every kind of reptile out there while conducting business for what? 40 years?? That and living in NYC are the only things that prepared him for the GOPe-Media onslaught....and WINNING.

Liberator  posted on  2018-03-01   9:28:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: buckeroo (#0) (Edited)

...after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Despite a concerted push by President Barack Obama and the personal appeals of Sandy Hook parents [blah-blah propaganda]...

The Democrats' Fake Media is still reminding us of the Great Black Op, "Sandy Hook"? AND 0bama's theater??

LAME.

Liberator  posted on  2018-03-01   9:32:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: rlk (#4)

By sacrificing the lives of a few kids, the radical left has won an important step in imposing its revolution on a disarmed helpless population. That was the original intention.

My take as well. In October 2016 I had a conversation with an Englishman from Great Britain, a supporter of Nigel Farage and Brexit. He told me Trump was an interesting phenomenon but that we had better get ready for Trump--if elected--to renege on every one of his campaign promises. He said they all do it. Eerily prescient remark.

treeingwalkercoonhound  posted on  2018-03-01   10:49:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: buckeroo (#0)

that would expand background checks to weapons purchased at gun shows

Out of all the mass shootings involving an AR-15, how many were purchased by the shooter at a gun show?

Let's expand that. Out of all the shootings, period, involving an AR-15, how many were purchased by the shooter at a gun show?

I'm guessing zero or close to zero.

misterwhite  posted on  2018-03-01   11:01:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: buckeroo (#0) (Edited)

"he wanted to see a strong universal background check bill ..."

I hear that phrase a lot. Like I hear "comprehensive immigration reform". But no one defines it.

Anyone know what a "strong universal background check bill" would contain? Would it contain federal registration, for example?

misterwhite  posted on  2018-03-01   11:08:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: buckeroo (#0)

he wanted to see a strong universal background check bill

Why? So the ATF could ignore those laws, too?

"It is a federal crime for felons and other prohibited gun purchasers to attempt to buy a gun. The (U.S.) Department of Justice, however, has not been prosecuting people who fail background checks at licensed gun dealers ... In 2009, the Federal Bureau of Investigation referred more than 71,000 such cases to ATF, but U.S. attorneys ultimately prosecuted only 77 of them."

misterwhite  posted on  2018-03-01   11:20:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: rlk, Deckard, Buckeroo, hondo68, GrandIsland, sneakypete (#4)

By sacrificing the lives of a few kids, the radical left has won an important step in imposing its revolution on a disarmed helpless population. That was the original intention.

Absolutely. This agenda and conspiracy of ONE MORE blood-sacrifice from the radical left (as well as a PTB) is real...and far worst than we ever imagined.

(The Vegas Op was yet another case of fake negligence and fake sloppiness that demonstrates a real conspiracy "by whatever means necessary" to disarm America. Clearly and desperately now to the extent of committing and/or allowing Mass Murder of Americans in broad daylight.)

Check out THIS recent tweet and assessment/analysis from a FL school administrator. It is well worth the read in its entirety.

I've posted his bonafides in his own words as a preface to his complete tweet.

He asks ALL the right questions of the schools, gubmint agencies, LE, and yes, especially CNN. The strong inference is that they have ALL coincidentally and obviously appeared to have colluding on setting up what has been A FIX. From Soup to Nuts.

" My name is John Bouchell and I am not a bot. I was in school administration after spending a stint in the military.

Let me explain: As usual, I was a teacher, a coach and later became an administrator. I worked at all three levels of public school in administration. Like most athletic males I was assigned as a part of a school security team- at all three levels. Eventually, I was trained by the Department of Homeland Security, Several sheriff's departments, and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, GBI. Prior, I was trained the military...."...

...I was a likely person to help with school security and had an extensive background in technology and video surveillance as well. I held an SCI security clearance which is the very highest we have in America....

As an administrator in charge of a large High School of 1,800 students and 140 employees, I held tabletop exercises and wrote publications & power points presentation, & helped with both multiple school & mult-jurisdiction school systems training as developer and presenter.

I say these things to help you to understand my background to weigh my opinion as to the events in Parkview Florida, (30 minutes from my home where I live, now retired from School administration)....

NO REPORTERS EVER CONTACTED MY STUDENTS for interviews or opinions.

I never spoke to a national law enforcement agent much less the USSS. So, to hear the FBI were the first responders only beating CNN by minutes in a wealthy Florida area saturated with Law Enforcement shocked me.

Seeing the amazing amount of CNN coverage so well organized and all espousing one message and only one message is equally troubling. Seeing a student saying she actually walked with the shooter while evacuating and HEARD shots shocked me. Seeing video of a student telling us she was told they would have a drill that day with actors deeply troubles me. Seeing the same young man over and over who visited CNN that day and whose father is an FBI agent troubles me..."

(AND THERE IS MUCH MORE)

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/966396341877342208.html

Liberator  posted on  2018-03-01   11:42:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: misterwhite (#14)

"he wanted to see a strong universal background check bill ..."

I hear that phrase a lot. Like I hear "comprehensive immigration reform". But no one defines it.

Right -- no one defines these terms. Exactly because they are purposely undefinable. And purposely fully subject to weaselly or fascist interpretation.

They are PC Word-Salad phrases that sound as if they are intended to mean something good.

As soon as we see or hear the words, "Universal" or "Comprehensive" OR "Reform," we are being set up for legislation or laws that ignore or circumvent the US Constitution, common sense, and consent of the governed.

Liberator  posted on  2018-03-01   11:56:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Liberator (#17)

Well put.

misterwhite  posted on  2018-03-01   12:09:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: hondo68 (#1) (Edited)

"Take the guns first, go through due process second."

This comes from a president who only a few weeks ago wondered aloud on Twitter, "Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?":

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul

Those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively disseminating it.

Deckard  posted on  2018-03-01   12:49:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Deckard (#19)

Peoples lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation. Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused - life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process? — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 10, 2018

Hondo68  posted on  2018-03-01   14:18:56 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: Deckard (#19)

Donald Trump: Take the guns first, go through due process second.

Deckard: This comes from a president who only a few weeks ago wondered aloud on Twitter, "Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?"

You can stop lathering up with such extreme cod indignation as though you were on stage acting in a Victorian melodrama or burlesque.

There is nothing new here.

George Washington set the precedent when his first action of 1776 was a campaign to confiscate the private arms from all citizens in Queens County, New York. The impoundments occurred without trial, though the Army did provide receipt. Guns were confiscated from individuals without due process.

Furthermore. don’t act acrimoniously and be shocked when you learn that:

Five states allow guns to be seized before someone can commit violence

In the wake of massacres similar to Wednesday’s school shooting in Parkland, Fla., a small number of states have passed “red flag laws” that allow the seizure of guns before people can commit acts of violence.

California, Washington, Oregon, Indiana and Connecticut have statutes that can be used to temporarily take guns away from people a judge deems a threat to themselves or others. Lawmakers in 18 other states — including Florida — plus the District of Columbia have proposed similar measures.

At the federal level, Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Calif.) and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) introduced legislation last May that would encourage states to adopt the approach.

Mental illness, escalating threats, substance abuse and domestic violence are among the circumstances in which a judge can order weapon restrictions under the statutes.

“This morning I heard the sheriff [in Parkland] lament the fact that he did not have the tools to remove the firearms from the shooter,” Joshua Horwitz, executive director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, said Thursday. “Had he lived in one of those states where this law is in place, he would have had the tools, and this shooting may have been averted.”

The nation’s patchwork of federal and state gun laws mainly involves background checks and actions to prevent people who pose a threat from buying firearms. The approach of the red flag laws is to seize guns from people who have them and to restrict their access until they are no longer deemed dangerous.

“We think of this as a new frontier,” said Jonas Oransky, deputy legal director of Everytown for Gun Safety, an advocacy group founded in 2014. “We don’t have a perfect system in this country, and we can’t stop every act of gun violence. This is a way for states to take some care and be somewhat nimble when there is a dangerous case.”

The laws allow family members or law enforcement officers to ask a judge for a “gun violence restraining order” or an “extreme risk protection order” against someone who behaves the way 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz, the alleged Florida gunman, did in recent years.

According to news reports, Cruz killed squirrels with a pellet gun, trained his dogs to attack a neighbor’s piglets, posted on Insta­gram about guns and killing animals and eventually threatened at least one teen. He showed signs of depression and had been treated at a mental health clinic.

Authorities say Cruz used an AR-15 assault-style rifle to kill 17 people and wound at least 15 others at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday. Cruz has been charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder.

In an Everytown study of mass shootings from 2009 to 2016, 42 percent of the attackers had shown warning signs of violent behavior. In most situations, however, the danger is suicide, not homicide.

When Duke University researchers looked at the application of Connecticut’s red flag law between 1999 and 2013, they found that police served 762 so-called “risk warrants” during that period and estimated that a gun suicide was prevented for every 10 to 20 seizures.

The police found guns in 99 percent of the cases in which they served the warrants, seizing an average of seven firearms from each person. Twenty-one people went on to commit suicide anyway, six by firearms.

Overall, suicides account for about 60 percent of gun deaths in the United States.

The National Alliance on Mental Illness has no formal position on red flag laws, according to Ron Honberg, a senior policy adviser for the organization, but hopes to see more states adopt them.

“It creates some mechanism to intervene at a particular point in time when a person may be in bad shape,” Honberg said. “Is it going to be 100 percent effective? No.”

In the three Western states with such laws, all adopted since 2014, a family member or law enforcement officer must petition a court about someone who appears to be a threat. Relatives often go to the police and ask them to do so, experts said.

A judge can quickly order the weapons surrendered if convinced of the threat. Within a few weeks, a full hearing is held on longer-term restrictions, which can last a year. Judges must allow people who want their weapons back to revisit the ruling.

In Connecticut, only law enforcement agents can ask for a risk warrant. And in Indiana, law enforcement can confiscate weapons without a judge’s order. The gun owner must ask the court to get the weapons returned.

States have long prohibited some convicted felons and people committed involuntarily from having firearms. At least seven states last year passed laws restricting access to guns for people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence crimes, and three require that offenders turn their guns in.

Horwitz and Oransky said the National Rifle Association and other members of the gun lobby have not put up much opposition to the statutes. “We would be happy if they came to the table and were supportive of those laws,” Oransky said.

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-01   14:43:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: Liberator (#17)

{Below is a posting reproduced from Free Republic I thought summed it up quite well on the same topic as this thread. FReepers are aware over there they are treading on very thin ice with JimRob because of the "Trump can do no wrong" contingent who have been zotting FReepers left and right over the past few weeks. Many are losing posting privileges and having their accounts suspended after many years of contributions because they question backpeddling by the almighty DJT. An earlier poster here had it correct: "--a rich big city kid who grew up with armed bodyguards around him all the time. What did he have to know about the 2d Amendment?"

To: All

We have been had....again. Bush got us back then when he pretended to be conservative (the day he stood on the pile of rubble and proclaimed Islam a religion of peace was the moment he showed his true colors) and Trump just showed us who he really is (His pile of debris).

All conservatives need to figure out what we're to do next now that our leader has turned against us.

We can't let them tear us apart. If we go then there is no hope for the United States of America.

There was a bunch of us that kept thinking that surely he (Bush 2) was on our side but playing 3d chess. We got 8 years of Obama for that trip down elitist lane. Below is a posting reproduced from Free Republic on the same topic as this thread. FReepers are aware they are treading on thin ice because of the "Trump can do no wrong" contingent who have been zotting FReepers left and right over the past few weeks. Many are losing posting privileges and having their accounts suspended after many years of contributions as a result of questioning backpeddling by the almighty DJT. An earlier poster here had it correct:--a rich big city kid who grew up with . .

And let me tell you about his daughter and Chelsea. They (the elites) are all intermingled. They go to the same Country Clubs. They marry within their clique and more than often they marry kin to keep their blood all in the same families.

I had hoped that Donald was truly on our side and I kept hearing these mumblings of him making us look like fools and now I realize that it's true. We've been had......again

45 posted on 3/1/2018, 12:07:11 PM by ssfromla [ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies | Report Abuse]

treeingwalkercoonhound  posted on  2018-03-01   14:48:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: All (#22)

Sorry for the paragraph (my comment) inserted stupidly into the text of the FR comment.

treeingwalkercoonhound  posted on  2018-03-01   14:52:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#24. To: Gatlin (#21)

in which a judge can order weapon restrictions under the statutes.

So under a court order. Perhaps that's what Trump meant.

misterwhite  posted on  2018-03-01   14:56:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: treeingwalkercoonhound (#22)

I had hoped that Donald was truly on our side and I kept hearing these mumblings of him making us look like fools and now I realize that it's true. We've been had......again

Or Trump is playing the Democrats, pretending to be on their side, then waiting for them to show their true colors in the legislation.

He did it with DACA. He gave them a million more illegals and the Democrats sat on their hands.

Now he makes all these wild-ass statements about guns and waits for the Democrats to propose legislation so restrictive no one will vote for them in the mid-terms.

misterwhite  posted on  2018-03-01   15:03:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#26. To: hondo68 (#20)

Peoples lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation. Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused - life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process? — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 10, 2018
You have taken this quote entirely out of context and created a functional lie with a false action done with the intent to deceive. You needed to provide the context of that quote as it applied to what situation.

Trump was not relating that to a crazy person who may invade a school and kill a multitude of children and due process may take week, months and sometimes even years to take the weapon from the hands of a psychotic person hell bent on doing a mass shooting.

In that quote you posted, Trump was speaking of someone accused of a crime who may have been falsely accused.

Trump’s quote is true....you posting the quote here out of context is a lie by deception.

You need to remember:

Gatlin  posted on  2018-03-01   15:32:09 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#27. To: Gatlin, hondo68 (#26)

You have taken this quote entirely out of context and created a functional lie with a false action done with the intent to deceive.

Those are Trump's own words from one of his tweets.

Peoples lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation. Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused - life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process? — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 10, 2018.

In essence - you are calling Trump a liar when at worst he's a hypocrite.

“Truth is treason in the empire of lies.” - Ron Paul

Those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively disseminating it.

Deckard  posted on  2018-03-01   15:39:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: Gatlin, falsely accused by Trump (#26)

Trump was speaking of someone accused of a crime who may have been falsely accused

Yes, We the People from whom Trump wants to take their guns away, may have been falsely accused without any due process. Thanks for admitting that Trump is an ahole scofflaw tyrant, and a hypocrite.

Hondo68  posted on  2018-03-01   15:41:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#29. To: Liberator (#10)

Trump's people-skills are off the chart good.

He knows people and how to manipulate the DEAL.

For me, his end product is much more important than his PR skills. I like his tweets.

I'm the infidel... Allah warned you about. كافر المسلح

GrandIsland  posted on  2018-03-01   21:04:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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