Friday, August 16, 2019

Disgusting prick and his disgusting supporters



"That guy’s got a serious weight problem. Go home, start exercising," Trump said as the individual who interrupted Trump's speech was escorted out of the arena.

  The Hill
Disgusting prick.  (*Update below.)
"Get him out of here please. Got a bigger problem than I do,” Trump quipped. “Got a bigger problem than all of us. Now he goes home and his mom says, 'What the hell have you just done?'"

[...]

The interruption came as Trump slammed Democrats, accusing them of demeaning law enforcement and describing their opponents as "fascists and Nazis."

Moments later, Trump continued with his usual remarks, telling supporters that his movement is "built on love."

The Associated Press reported that the president may have actually mistaken one of his supporters for a protester when he made the remark.
Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang, a former tech entrepreneur, recently took to the Iowa state fair, where he mocked Trump's weight.

"Like, what could Donald Trump possibly be better than me at? An eating contest?" Yang asked this past weekend.

"Like, if there was a hot-air balloon that was rising and you needed to try and keep it on the ground, he would be better than me at that," he added. “Because he is so fat.”
Not good, Andrew, even if true. And it may well have been what caused him to go beyond his usual "go home to mommy" remarks to protesters.


"The bottom line is, I know you like me, and this room is a love fest, I know that, but you have no choice but to vote for me, because your 401(k)'s down the tubes, everything's gonna be down the tubes," Trump said while speaking in Manchester, N.H.

"So whether you love me or hate me, you gotta vote for me,” he added.

Trump's remarks echoed those he made hours ahead of his Thursday evening rally. Speaking to reporters in New Jersey on Thursday afternoon, the president insisted that U.S. economic growth would end if the nation elected a Democrat to the White House next year.

"Frankly if for some reason that happened in the 2020 election, you'll see this economy go down the tubes. I will tell you that right now," Trump said.

  The Hill

So....here's our indefatigable Daniel Dale covering that 90-minute  New Hampshire campaign rally:



Trump is spending an unusually long time soaking in the adulation before speaking.

From Aaron Rupar:


Back to Daniel:

Trump says his is the greatest movement in the history of America, then makes it the greatest political movement. He says he is turning around the "big beautiful ship" of state even though he had to deal with a "fake witch hunt."

Trump: "We are doing very well with China despite the fact that they want to have you believe to the contrary." He falsely says "there's no price increase," then says people should "talk to these people, the fake news."

Trump says the "biggest beneficiary" of the tariff battle with China is "the farmers."

Unbelievable.

Trump is doing the thing where he polls the crowd at length on whether he should keep using Make America Great Again or adopt Keep America Great. He asks, "Is there anything better than a Trump rally?" The crowd shouts "nooo." He begins mocking Joe Biden.


That's pretty rich coming from a guy who schlumps along with his head protruding and slumped shoulders, dragging his feet.


Schlumpy Trump

Trump is talking about the demotion of NYT deputy Washington editor Jonathan Weisman, whom he again wrongly calls "deputy editor," which is how Weisman was identified on Fox News today.
Trump, touting the economy, says there are now "great farming events" happening in Wisconsin.

Trump says the LNG plant in Louisiana where he spoke "could never have happened, could never have happened" without him. It got its approvals from the Obama administration in 2014. Trump also said the Pennsylvania plant where he spoke Tuesday wouldn't have happened without him. His administration did have a small role in that one, but Shell announced under Obama in June 2016 that it had made a "final" decision to build.

Trump says the Democrats could be "communists," though, in fact, they could not be communists. He says he knows the "fake news" will criticize him for this, but they're "not far away."

Trump warns that he could revive the nickname Pocahontas "very easily" and "very quickly" if necessary.
Sounds like he just did.

"I never said China was gonna be easy," says Donald Trump, who famously said "trade wars are good and easy to win."

Trump falsely says that NATO members' military spending was going downward until he came along. It rose in both 2015 and 2016, after NATO countries recommitted in 2014 to their 2%-of-GDP guideline.

Trump repeats his usual claim that the US paid Iran $150 billion. The nuclear deal allowed Iran to access some of its own assets that were stuck in international financial institutions; experts say the total was less than $100 billion.

Trump is telling his story about how it's a good thing that a poll showed he's less popular in Germany than Obama was, since it means he's doing his job and sticking up for America.

Trump, warning of a stock market crash if he loses, tells the crowd: "You have no choice but to vote for me, because your 401(k)s down the tubes, everything's gonna be down the tubes. So whether you love me or hate me, you gotta vote for me."

Trump is telling another version of his story about the unnamed businessman who doesn't like him and who he doesn't like but who's still working to get him re-elected because he has "no choice." This version of the story is situated "the other day" and "in the White House."

Trump says that it's only in "fixed polls" that he could be losing to Elizabeth Warren.

Trump says that you used to not be allowed to call people Nazis but now Democrats keep calling people that, complaining, "'He's a Nazi.' Think of that. 'He's a Nazi.'"

There's a protester. The president says, "That guy's got a serious weight problem. Go home, start exercising."

! Trump repeats one of my favorite lies of his, saying that, years before his campaign, "They named me Man of the Year in Michigan. I said, 'How come?' I didn't even understand it myself." There is no Man of the Year in Michigan. Lots of us have looked into it.

Trump is repeating his usual gross exaggeration of the number of people ("32,000" who showed up for his rally in Michigan...in November 2016. His capacity was 4,200; there were thousands outside, but local journalists said no way even close to 30,000.

Trump says New Hampshire was "taken away from us." He doesn't elaborate. (Before the rally, he repeated parts of the usual conspiracy theory about illegal voting.)

Trump passingly repeats his claim that 17 car companies are coming back into Michigan. It is not clear where he came up with that number.

Are there even 17 car companies in the world? I've totally lost track. I'm so old I remember when there were less than half a dozen on the roads, and you could identify each, as they were so unique.
Trump talks about Hillary Clinton some more. There are loud "lock her up" chants. Trump says she did lots of bad things. He is talking about her emails.
Is it not time to move on? She's not in the 2020 running.
Trump is talking at some length about how tall his campaign manager is. "It's nice when you don't have to look for anybody, you just look over and you see a guy who's twice as tall as everyone," he concludes.

Trump boasts that Iran is not seizing American ships in the Strait of Hormuz: "They're not touching our ships...they're takin 'em from this country, that country."

Trump again suggests that the US has only "now" become the top oil and natural gas producer in the world. That happened in 2012, per the US government's Energy Information Administration. It's crude oil in particular in which US became #1 under Trump.

Trump says countries have been "changing and charging tariffs on us for years." He almost never concedes that he has misspoken, instead just saying "and (correct word)."

"Almost"? I have yet to see even one instance.
Trump, talking about mining in Minnesota, brings up Ilhan Omar, who is booed.

Trump says the WSJ editorial board and other people who advocate a quick deal with China and removal of the tariffs "understand nothing about trade or business."

The crowd went quiet as Trump mused about tariffs and the Wall Street Journal editorial board. It perked back up when he denounced "globalism" and said, "I'm the president of the United States of America. I'm not the president of the world."
"The crowd" doesn't understand anything about tariffs or policy. They just came there to hear the people they hate being slandered. They came for a dose of red meat - a hate rave, not a campaign.
There are big cheers for Trump saying "it's not the gun that pulls the trigger, it's the person holding the gun." He says, as he did before the rally, that he will give "major consideration" to building new "institutions" for "deranged" and dangerous people with mental illnesses.
Yes, let's lock up people with mental illnesses who've never committed a crime, but leave hateful, misogynistic men with arsenals of military grade weapons alone.
"By the way, the wall is being built," Trump says to big cheers and a "build that wall" chant. As of last month, zero new miles had been built; there were about 50 miles of replacement fencing built. Trump criticizes the "fake news" for not counting this.

Trump is touting progress against the opioid epidemic, citing declines in opioid prescriptions, overdose deaths and other data I think is accurate. "We're doing ads, beautiful ads," he says, "and I think they're having a big impact. You'll see."

Trump says that he's still going to repeal and replace Obamacare, you watch, and it's going to work out better than if he'd done it the time it was done but John McCain (whom he doesn't name this time) stopped them.

Trump adds 30+ to the number of judge vacancies he inherited, then mocks the media for saying Obama was "a great president": "If he was a great president, how come he left me 138 judges to appoint?" Not saying Obama was great, but the answer is McConnell.

Trump falsely says people had tried to get a Right to Try law passed for 44 years before he did it. A libertarian think tank started pushing this concept in 2014.

For more than the 80th time in office, Trump falsely says that people were trying to get Veterans Choice passed for "five decades" until him. It was a John McCain-Bernie Sanders bill. Obama signed it into law in 2014.

Trump says that NASA facilities had lots of weeds and cracks in the ground when he took office but are now beautiful.

Trump wrongly says Venezuela was one of the richest countries in the world "15 years ago." It was true more than 50 years ago, but not 15.

Trump pledges again to find "new cures for childhood cancer." He promises, "Within one decade, the AIDS epidemic in the United States will be gone." He says, "It breaks your heart what's happened," but it'll be "eradicated" soon.

Trump concludes with his regular "great again" finale.

And, as always, Aaron Rupar covered it, with video clips.  A few:











*UPDATE:





UPDATE:  He lied about the crowd again.

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