Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association
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  1. #61
    Join Date
    May 2006
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Quote Originally Posted by middlefinger View Post
    Fake news, those are pictures of Detroit.
    Rules are written in the stone,
    Break the rules and you get no bones,
    all you get is ridicule, laughter,
    and a trip to the house of pain.

  2. #62
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
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    Douglassville, Pennsylvania
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Step one, convert voter registration to Democrat: Check
    Gender confusion is a mental illness

  3. #63
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    Mar 2011
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    (Berks County)
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    I voted for Ted Cruz in the primary back in 2016, and happily voted for Trump in the general election. This time, I'm pulling the lever for Trump in both the primary and general. Looking forward to seeing how high his numbers are this time around!

  4. #64
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Quote Originally Posted by Lexington View Post
    I voted for Ted Cruz in the primary back in 2016, and happily voted for Trump in the general election. This time, I'm pulling the lever for Trump in both the primary and general. Looking forward to seeing how high his numbers are this time around!
    Just more evidence that I'm ahead of the curve, I was pro Trump from the beginning.
    Gender confusion is a mental illness

  5. #65
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Quote Originally Posted by Walleye Hunter View Post
    Just more evidence that I'm ahead of the curve, I was pro Trump from the beginning.
    Stupidity is inherited, ignorance is a choice.
    Galations 6:9...And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up.
    Ashli Babbitt - Patriot

  6. #66
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Quote Originally Posted by Walleye Hunter View Post
    Just more evidence that I'm ahead of the curve, I was pro Trump from the beginning.
    Out of all the Republicans running in 2016 Trump was always my second choice. I never had a first choice because I was hoping that a no bullshit, ass kicking, non-pc, true conservative would magically appear in time to save the Republican Party, but that didn't happen, so Donald was the next best thing.
    "It's hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong."
    Thomas Sowell

  7. #67
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    Feb 2020
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    Dallas, Pennsylvania
    (Luzerne County)
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    I was sayIng America needs a business man to run it a long time ago. Really it makes sense. I remember saying that crap back when Clinton was in office. I wasn’t political back then at all. I just figured it made sense. We need to get these blue states red and get rid of these people controlling gun grabbers. I know that much. Lol if Bernie got in God help us all....

  8. #68
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Quote Originally Posted by jthrelf View Post
    Personally I wouldn't. Just adds to the total number of votes and those metrics could be used to energize the commie base.
    ^^^^THIS^^^^^
    The USA is now a banana republic. Only without the bananas....or the Republic.

  9. #69
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
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    carbon cty, Pennsylvania
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    .

    Bernie Sanders’s Long Career




    On the menu today: a reminder that Bernie Sanders’s controversial remarks came when he was well into adult life; the grim outlook for Sanders in the general election in Florida and Pennsylvania; and why you shouldn’t always bet on the candidate who’s hot on social media.

    People Will Discuss ‘Ancient History’ When the Nominee Is an Ancient Candidate

    As winter turns to spring, and as spring turns to summer, prominent Democrats and left-leaning public voices will try to gaslight you.

    Some of the Democrats who are most worried about nominating Bernie Sanders right now will bury their doubts and objections down deep and insist that anyone who isn’t on board is some sort of unthinking lunatic, or that not being a Sanders supporter must reflect a complete endorsement of everything Donald Trump has done as president.

    One of the arguments you are certain to hear in defense of Sanders, when others criticize his past stances and statements, is a variation of: “Why are you bringing up all this ancient history?”

    The correct answer is: “Because you guys nominated an ancient candidate. You notice nobody’s talking about what Pete Buttigieg did in the 1980s.”

    Bernie Sanders was born three months before the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    This means Sanders was 28 years old when he wrote: “The manner in which you bring up your daughter with regard to sexual attitudes may very well determine whether or not she will develop breast cancer.”

    Sanders was 30 years old when he wrote his infamous op-ed about women’s rape fantasies.

    He was 31 years old when he decided that George McGovern was too centrist for him.

    He was 32 years old when he discussed eating placentas with a new mother on a Vermont commune. “How long after the birth were you eating the afterbirth? Don’t all mammals eat the afterbirth?”

    He was 33 years old when he ran for a U.S. Senate seat while collecting unemployment benefits.


    Sanders was 38 when he joined the Socialist Workers Party and became its presidential elector in Vermont for the 1980 election. The Socialist Workers Party’s candidate declared of the American hostages in Iran, “we can be sure that many of them are simply spies . . . or people assigned to protect the spies.”

    He was 39 years old when he was elected mayor and received “his first steady paycheck.” (Think about how many steady paychecks you had collected by age 39, or how many you will collect if you’re younger than 39.)

    He was a 40-year-old mayor when he declared at a United Way fundraiser, “I don’t believe in charities.”

    He was a 44-year-old mayor when he told the Los Angeles Times that he espouses “traditional socialist goals — public ownership of oil companies, factories, utilities, banks, etc.” He was the same age when he asked, “We’re spending billions on military. Why can’t we take some of that money to pay for thousands of U.S. children to go to the Soviet Union?”

    That was the same year Sanders traveled to Nicaragua and attended the rally led by Daniel Ortega. For what it’s worth, Kurt Eichenwald reported:

    The Republicans also had video of Sanders at a 1985 rally thrown by the leftist Sandinista government in Nicaragua where half a million people chanted, “Here, there, everywhere/the Yankee will die,” while President Daniel Ortega condemned “state terrorism” by America. Sanders said, on camera, supporting the Sandinistas was “patriotic.”

    Sanders was a 46-year-old mayor when he decided that the University of Vermont Medical Center was no longer a tax-exempt institution in the eyes of the city and sent the hospital a tax bill for $2.9 million.

    Sanders declared, “There are a heck of a lot of people up there making a heck of a lot of money,” when a Superior Court judge ruled against the city on all counts, and the state supreme court ruled against the city as well.

    He was at least 47 years old when he declared: “I have my own feelings about what causes cancer and the psychosomatic aspects of cancer.”

    In 1994, then-53-year-old congressman Bernie Sanders voted for the crime bill — you know, the one everyone keeps giving Joe Biden grief about.

    The crime bill that created 60 new death penalty offenses under 41 federal capital statutes, the one that eliminated higher education for inmates, authorized boot camps for delinquent minors, and created fifty new federal offenses, including membership in a gang, and three-strikes provisions.

    Bernie Sanders was 57 years old when, as a congressman, he tried to get nuclear waste from Vermont dumped in Sierra Blanca, Texas, a small, extremely poor, and mostly Latino town, which brought charges of “environmental racism”:

    On May 11th, about a dozen activists met with Sanders at his office. The delegation included two University of Vermont students who had just completed a thorough analysis of the scientific arguments in support of the Texas dump; they found numerous unanswered questions and more than a few outright falsehoods in the proponents’ arguments. Several participants in the meeting were astonished by the “independent” congressman’s vehement and unrelenting support for shipping nuclear waste 2400 miles to West Texas.

    It was the best site geologically, he claimed, much better than having nuclear waste scattered across the country, and besides, how dare we accuse Bernie Sanders of environmental racism? The August meeting with the Texas delegation featured Sanders at his most obstinate, insisting that he’d done the right thing and that he was no longer interested in the issue now that the compact bill had passed the House.

    Bernie Sanders was 62 years old when he voted against creating the Amber Alert system, contending “its sentencing provisions were an unconstitutional intrusion by Congress, taking power that should rest with the judiciary.” The bill passed the House 390 to 24 and the Senate 98–0.

    None of these are the actions or statements of a confused, rebellious teenager. Yes, they date back to five decades ago, but the candidate has been around for almost eight decades. He was a grown man when he said and did these things, and they aren’t so easily dismissed as youthful naivete and indiscretions.

    Hey, Who Needs to Win Florida, Anyway?

    The Democrats appear to be on the verge of unofficially conceding the state of Florida in 2020, nominating a man who believes that Fidel Castro doesn’t get enough credit for all the good things he did.

    Last night on 60 Minutes, Sanders declared: “We’re very opposed to the authoritarian nature of Cuba but you know, it’s unfair simply to say everything is bad. You know? When Fidel Castro came into office, you know what he did? He had a massive literacy program.”

    There are about 2.3 million Cuban Americans in the United States, and roughly 1.5 million live in Florida. Oh, and more than 200,000 Venezuelan immigrants have moved to Florida from 2000 to 2017.

    Back in 2016, Donald Trump won the Cuban-American vote in Florida, 54 percent to 41 percent. Trump won Florida by 1.2 percent in 2016, but that amounts to a margin of 112,911 votes.


    First-term Barack Obama was much less open about normalizing relations with Cuba than second-term Obama, and Hillary Clinton wasn’t as openly pro-Castro (or pro-normalization) as Obama was. (People forget she went after Sanders’s embrace of Castro during the primary debates.) Maybe Sanders’s “Fidel is getting a bad rap” routine doesn’t lose all the Cuban-American votes in Florida, but it probably doesn’t improve on that 54–41 split. The Vermont senator is going to have to make up those votes elsewhere.

    Hey, Who Needs to Win Pennsylvania, Anyway?

    The Democrats appear to be on the verge of unofficially conceding the state of Pennsylvania in 2020, nominating a man who pledges to ban fracking.

    Don’t take it from me, take it from Democrats in the Keystone State:

    Pennsylvania’s top Democrats, including Gov. Tom Wolf and U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, have tried to discourage talk of a fracking ban
    , while labor leaders point to thousands of building trades members working on gas drilling sites, laying billions of dollars in pipelines and building massive refineries.

    “Nobody can tell me what these new jobs are that are going to replace these good union jobs in the energy industry if we ban fracking,” Rick Bloomingdale, the president of the Pennsylvania chapter of the AFL-CIO, said in an interview Thursday.

    Wait, there’s more!

    After the fracking ban bill was introduced earlier this month, U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, D-PA., wrote a letter urging House Speaker Nancy Pelosi not to move the bill.

    “If this bill were enacted — and survived likely court challenges — it would eliminate thousands of jobs in my state and likely millions across the country,” Lamb wrote. “It would also remove from our energy grid the source of power that has been most responsible for reducing carbon emissions in our country.”

    ADDENDUM: Peter Hamby, arguing that Democrats are far too pessimistic about Sanders: “Instead of asking if Sanders is unelectable, ask another question: What if Sanders is actually the MOST electable Democrat?

    In the age of Trump, hyper-partisanship, institutional distrust, and social media, Sanders could be examined as a candidate almost custom-built to go head-to-head with Trump this year.”

    Of course Sanders could win; if 2016 taught us anything it is that elections are unpredictable. By the time you read this, the coronavirus will have knocked U.S. stock markets for a loop. We don’t know how this will impact the global economy, and maybe Trump won’t be running for reelection with such a great economy this fall.
    https://www.nationalreview.com/the-m...s-long-career/
    Ecclesiastes 10:2 ...........

  10. #70
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
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    Stone's throw from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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    Default Re: Vote for Bernie?

    Trump's reelection isn't guaranteed, especially since the Dems and media are weaponizing coronavirus against him and the economy is going south. Considering that, only an idiotic asshole Republican would vote for Bernie.

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