#353976
Jimmy Kimmel says policing Muslim neighborhoods will lead to more violent jihad. What a bigoted idea.
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#353977
A contested convention becomes more probable after the Wisconsin primary.
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#353978

QU Poll Release Detail

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Trump Leads In Pennsylvania As Clinton Edges Sanders, Quinnipiac University Poll Finds; Boy Next Door Kasich Runs Best In November Matchups
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#353979
CHAR·AC·TER ˈkerəktər/noun 1. the mental and moral qualities distinctive to an individual. Your character will determine your ability to read this entire post and learn something, or dismiss it imm…
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#353980
Courts: When Hillary Clinton and other liberals claim “systemic racism? in criminal justice, they’re not just talking about cops and courts. They also think juries are racist, and they’re pus…
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#353981

Ted Cruz: Now the odds-on favorite

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

With his decisive victory in Wisconsin, Sen. Ted Cruz has shaken up the Republican presidential race, David Gergen says.
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#353982
MILWAUKEE – Wisconsin Republicans handed Ted Cruz a decisive win Tuesday night -- and a resounding rejection to front-runner Donald Trump. The outcome could alter the story line in an already tumultuous?
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#353983
Newt Gingrich had a stern message for the Establishment if they think they’re going to put someone other than Cruz or Trump into the nomination at the GOP convention – give up the fanta…
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#353984
Dominant primary win over Trump shows that the Texan can extend his appeal beyond rural states.
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#353985
Donald J. Trump is being investigated by the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board over his visit to a polling place during today's Wisconsin primary.
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#353986
Ted Cruz’s definitive victory over Donald Trump in Wisconsin isn’t just about one day in the news cycle, or about “momentum.” Cruz has achieved something that a few weeks ago seemed impossible: he has made it more likely than not that Donald Trump will be defeated at the Republican National Convention. Here’s why.
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#353988
#353989
For perspective on how bad a loss Wisconsin was to Trump, Ted Cruz who is no friend of the establishment, outperformed Mitt Romney?s win against Rick Santorum and Ron Paul from 2012. Cruz, l…
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#353990
On Monday's New Day on CNN, co-host Chris Cuomo dismissively suggested that supporters of the "bathroom bill" in North Carolina that would bar men from using women's public restrooms in government buildings in reality support the measure because they "don't like these transgender people getting what they want." The segment almost seemed like a parody making fun of a liberal caricature as Cuomo seriously defended the idea of biological men choosing to identify themselves as women and using women's bathrooms.
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#353991
New Islamic State video quotes Qur'an, threatens jihad in London, Berlin, Rome Molenbeek: Muslim teen assaults female journalist live on air
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#353992
The Los Angeles Times went full Black Lives Matter on Tuesday when they published a piece on a study concluding that only black doctors can understand black patients. The reported study, conducted by University of Virginia researchers, asked a range of medical students–some of whom were residents that were beginning to treat patients–of physiological differences between blacks and whites:
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#353993
For a guy who claims to only hire the best, Trump sure does stumble into some stupid things. Like this report tonight that the campaign tossed its data guru then found it could not ?access so…
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#353994
Office for Civil Rights can justify its request for more money based on ever-expanding definitions of sexual assault.
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#353995
There was an old Saturday Night Live fake movie trailer narrated by horror-movie veteran Christopher Lee. John Belushi played a houseguest who couldn’t take a hint from a couple who just wanted to go to bed. The husband tells Belushi, “Look, I don’t want to be rude, but my wife is Very tired!” Belushi responds by picking up the TV Guide and saying dismissively, “Yeah. . . . Hey, there’s a good movie on tonight! I think I’ll call up some friends and watch it over here!” Then came Lee’s creepy voiceover: “It came without warning! They were just being Polite! They didn’t realize that they’d be stuck with . . . The Thing That Wouldn’t Leave”! #ad#John Kasich is this election season’s The Thing That Wouldn’t Leave. After investing everything in New Hampshire, Kasich came in second, doing worse than Jon Huntsman had in his race-ending performance in 2012. Kasich’s response? He didn’t just declare victory, he proclaimed, “Tonight, the light overcame the darkness.” Since then, Kasich has lost some 30 contests and won one — in his home state of Ohio. But still, he just won’t go. It’s not just that Kasich can’t take a hint, it’s that he appears to be living in a kind of fantasy world, largely defined by three myths or delusions. RELATED: The Anatomy of a Trump Defeat The first is the most endearing. Kasich has the best résumé of the remaining candidates. Heck, he arguably had the best résumé of the entire 2016 field, if by “best” you mean the longest and deepest government experience. He’s not delusional about that. It’s not just that Kasich can’t take a hint, it’s that he appears to be living in a kind of fantasy world. What he is confused about is the idea that a lot of people care that he was, say, the chairman of the House Budget Committee two decades ago. According to legend, a supporter once shouted at Adlai Stevenson, “Governor Stevenson, all thinking people are for you!” Stevenson shot back, “That’s not enough. I need a majority!” Even if Kasich is right that his résumé makes him the best qualified to be president — a debatable proposition — the simple fact is that after nearly three dozen contests, relatively few voters agree with him. #share#Ah, but what about the delegates? If it’s a contested convention and neither Donald Trump nor Ted Cruz has enough delegates to lock up the nomination, won’t they turn to Kasich? Not necessarily. But don’t tell that to the Ohio governor, who goes from interview to interview insisting that he’d be the natural choice for the convention. Why would he be? Well, that answer varies. RELATED: #NeverKasich Kasich’s most frequently stated reason is that delegates will choose him because he beats Hillary Clinton in the polls. And it’s true that Kasich does marginally better than Cruz in hypothetical matchups against Clinton — and a lot better than Trump. Left unanswered is why the delegates — many of them loyal to Trump and Cruz — would gamely back The Thing That Wouldn’t Leave. After the second or third round of voting, delegates are free to cast their ballots for whomever they want. There’s little evidence that they’d want Kasich, and they’d be under no obligation to vote for him over, say, Paul Ryan or Marco Rubio — or, for that matter, Rush Limbaugh or Shaquille O’Neal. Indeed, for many delegates, it would seem either unfair or downright crazy to skip over bigger vote-getters and back Kasich just because he won his home state of Ohio. RELATED: Kasich Team Pitches Electability to Potential Delegates Of course, what that leaves out is the fact that Kasich is running as a hopeful, positive, uplifting champion of light over darkness. That brings us to yet another Kasich delusion, and this one is shared by many of his backers as well. Call it the myth of Kasich the hugger. In South Carolina, a college student asked the Ohio governor for one of his supposedly famous hugs. It wasn’t until later that we learned the huggee worked for the hugger’s super PAC. More to the point, Kasich is simply not the touchy-feely guy he’s pretending to be or that he perhaps thinks he is. #related#The man is famously irascible, pugnacious, and sanctimonious. He’s prone to defending his policies, such as his expansion of Medicaid under Obamacare in Ohio, by insinuating that he cares more about his eternal soul than his critics. A lot of people talk about how unlikeable Cruz is. Well, I’ve met both men, and I’d much rather have a beer with Cruz. Maybe Kasich’s denial stems from the fact that he has never lost a race and can’t contemplate failing this time. I really have no idea. All I know is that it’s time for him to go. — Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a senior editor of National Review. He can be reached by e-mail at [email protected], or via Twitter @JonahNRO. © 2016 Tribune Content Agency
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#353996
A transexual transpecies transgalactic male human mortal recently had both his ears and his nose cosmetically removed as part of his transformation into a self-proclaimed dragon.
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#353997
Donald Trump is tearing the Republican Party apart. He’s not just doing so because he rejects both basic decency and traditional conservatism. He’s doing so because he’s spurred war between his followers and other conservatives. On the one side, there are Trump supporters who claim that non-nationalist populist conservatives paint them with too broad a brush. That’s not unfair. There are many reasons people support Trump, some mediocre (he fights!), some downright gross (he’ll stand up for white people!).
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#353998
Registration forms indicate that the Podesta Group signed up to lobby for the Sberbank of Russia.
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#353999
The prosperity that Denmark, Sweden, and Norway enjoy today was built with free-market reforms in the past.
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#354000

Campaign Announcement

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Alex Morash launches his campaign for State Representative for the First Barnstable District.
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