#354101
According to Nate Silver, at fivethirtyeight.com, Ted Cruz has a 90% chance of winning the Wisconsin primary on Tuesday. Silver sees Cruz winning 42% of the vote, followed by Donald Trump at 34% and John Kasich with 22%.
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#354102
David and Edie Delorme are Christians who own a Texas Bakery. In February they were asked to bake a gay ...
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#354103
The sponsor of a bill to allow "Choose Life" license plates in Nebraska pulled his measure Monday after opponents tried to swap it for language creating "Black Lives Matter" or
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#354104
Not since Sarah Palin’s disastrous 2008 sit-downs with Charlie Gibson and Katie Couric has my brain hurt so much.
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#354105
His supporters believe that the Texas Sen. will be a champion for state's rights and limited federal government.​
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#354106
An anticipatory epitaph on Donald Trump's campaign.
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#354107
Trump faces long odds in Wisconsin, where the state's affinity for civility and their elected Republicans could hurt the bombastic frontrunner on Tuesday.
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#354108
Describing Donald Trump as a beneficiary of broad public mistrust of the news media given its widespread bias, The Daily Wire’s editor-in-chief Ben Shapiro said the Republican front-runner enjoyed a degree of imperviousness making deceptive statements given that subsequent critical examination of their veracity by said new media would not be believed.
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#354109
Donald Trump’s lies are massive and unceasing. Hardly a day goes by that doesn’t require some sort of soft walkback from his campaign, whether on his abortion positions or his self-funded campaign or his opponents.
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#354110

Patrick Svitek on Twitter

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

“.@TedCruz: "I have always been faithful to my wife."”
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#354111
A student at Edinburgh University in Scotland is claiming that she was hit with a “safe space complaint” because she raised her hand to disagree with something during a student-council meeting. Imogen Wilson, vice president for academic affairs at the school’s student association, claims that she was also threatened with removal from the meeting over the hand gesture, but ultimately allowed to stay. (Phew!) #ad#According to an article in the Washington Times, Wilson had risen her hand to express disagreement with another student’s resolution proposing a boycott of Israel — which was a problem because the school’s official “Safe Space Policy” forbids “hand gestures which denote disagreement or in any other way indicating disagreement with a point or points being made.” Yes, seriously. And it gets worse: The hand-raising was not the only thing that got Wilson in trouble during the meeting. Apparently, she also made the mistake of shaking her head disapprovingly — an offense so serious that she was threatened with yet another violation because of it. #share#Seeing as we are talking about adults here, all of this is obviously insane. Fortunately, however, it turns out that not all of these students are so completely cuckoo. In fact, the incident prompted one of Wilson’s classmates, Charlie Peters, to launch a petition against the policy: “I believe an institution which upholds the principles of free speech and diversity is superior to a Students’ Association that patronises its own students by insinuating that they cannot handle opinions that differ from their own,” the petition states. “We are adults, we do not need condescension or safeguarding.” At the time of publication, Peters’s petition had nearly 1,200 signatures. — Katherine Timpf is a reporter for National Review Online. 
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#354112
The federal government is spending $143,000 on “intervention” efforts to get Mexican-American women and their daughters talking with each other about obesity.
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#354113
MP3: http://www.fdrpodcasts.com/#/3251/the-clintons-war-on-women-roger-stone-and-stefan-molyneux Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/stefan-molyneux/fdr-3251-...
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#354114
Rapper Azealia Banks Calls for Sarah Palin to Be Gang-Raped by Black Men
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#354115
Donald Trump feels confident he will take home the nomination in July. The GOP front-runner calls Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s delegate win in Louisiana “illegal.” ...
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#354116
Learn more about Ted Cruz: www.tedcruz.org Follow Ted: twitter.com/tedcruz Like Ted: fb.com/tedcruzpage Ted’s Instagram: instragram.com/cruzforpresident Dona...
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#354117
MILWAUKEE — Some Republicans see Wisconsin as more than just a single presidential primary.   Rather, they view it as a pivotal moment in a brutal battle for the future of the Republican Party.   Opponents of maverick front-runner Donald Trump, notably rival candidates Ted Cruz and John Kasich, see Tuesday's contest as essential to their efforts to deny him the delegates he needs to claim the GOP presidential nomination.   "Tuesday is going to be a turning point in this election," Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, the former presidential candidate who now backs Cruz, said in Green Bay on Sunday.   Campaigning with Cruz on in Kenosha, Wis., on Monday, Walker said he isn't against anybody, but predicted that the primary will be a positive move for Cruz "getting to the 1,237 delegates he'll need at the convention."   While polls give Cruz a lead in the Badger State, Trump — after a period of struggles over his comments about women and foreign policy — is predicting an upset that will all but clinch the GOP nomination.   "If we do well here, folks, it's over," Trump told supporters during a rally Monday in La Crosse, Wis. "If we don't win here, it's not over — but wouldn't you like to take the credit here in Wisconsin for ending it?"   Cruz, citing Trump's low approval ratings among women, Hispanics, and other groups of voters, has told crowds in Wisconsin that the New York billionaire's nomination would be a "train wreck" in the fall election — before quickly adding "that's actually not fair to train wrecks."   Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who campaigned Monday in New York state, is also looking for delegates in Wisconsin, while  Trump has called on him to exit the race.   Responding to Trump's attacks, Kasich said Monday: "I thought we got out of the sandbox years ago."   The race in Wisconsin —  the state where the GOP was born — reflects only the latest internal battle among Republicans , something of a tradition for more than a century. Ever since the pivotal 1912 campaign between Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, conservatives and more moderate Republicans have fought for control of the party.   This time, it's Trump and his band of insurgents who believe the GOP "establishment" has failed the public against more established party members who believe the businessman cannot win a general election and may cost them control of the U.S. Senate and House.   Trump enjoys a large delegate lead headed into Wisconsin, his 736 delegates are well ahead of both Cruz (463) and Kasich (143), according to the Associated Press.   Rivals hope a loss in Wisconsin, combined with the businessman's other political problems, will generate an anti-Trump bandwagon that will prevent him from obtaining the 1,237 delegates necessary to win on a first ballot at the convention.   Whoever wins the nomination faces a tough challenge reuniting a riven Republican Party.   "I will never under any circumstances support Donald Trump," said Steve Finn, 50, a plumber from Milwaukee who backs Kasich. Speaking during a  weekend Milwaukee County Republican fish fry, Finn said Trump would be "awful for the country."   Trump, Cruz, and Kasich have withdrawn pledges to support the GOP nominee if it is not them. Some Republicans hope for the emergence of another candidate at the July convention in Cleveland, perhaps House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Trump backers have revived talk of a third-party bid if he is denied the nomination.   Trump supporters who saw their candidate at Nathan Hale High School near Milwaukee said the party should rally around the New York businessman, saying he is bringing new voters to the party and can defeat Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders.   Kathy Hanko, 46, a businesswoman from Waukesha, said Trump will work with establishment Republicans, and vice-versa, mainly because of the importance of the fall election: "Are they going to take Trump, or are they going to take Hillary?"   Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette Law School Poll, said his surveys reflect GOP divisions that are "likely to persist into the fall." He also said there is evidence that there will be more Republican support for the eventual nominee "than the rhetoric of 'never Trump' might suggest," largely because of intense dislike for Clinton, the likely Democratic nominee.   Republican infighting is nothing new.   A little more than a century ago, in 1912, a former Republican president (Theodore Roosevelt) challenged a sitting Republican president, William Howard Taft. When the party renominated Taft, Roosevelt ran as a third-party candidate and split off enough votes to help elect Democrat Woodrow Wilson.   In 1964, enough Republican moderates refused to support conservative nominee Barry Goldwater, to cost the Arizona senator a chance to defeat President Lyndon Johnson and leading to big Republican losses in Congress.   Former Wisconsin governor Tommy Thompson, a Republican who attended the fish fry to stump for Kasich, recalled fears of a fatal Republican split during the 1976 convention battle between President Gerald Ford and conservative challenger Ronald Reagan.   "There were accusations this was going to destroy the party," Thompson said.   Ford did (narrowly) lose the 1976 election to Jimmy Carter, but the party did reunite to elect Reagan four years later.   While not all Republicans will endorse the eventual nominee, Thompson said, enough of them will rally out of desire to reclaim the White House after eight years on the outside.   "All of this is intramurals," Thompson said. "The Super Bowl is the election in November."
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#354118
There can be no more beating around the bush. If you are a constitutional conservative who cares about the Supreme Court and safeguarding our constitutional form of government, you must oppose Donald Trumps candidacy. A Trump victory would all but cede control over the Supreme Court to the Left for a generation or more, allowing a liberal majority to undo every victory achieved by the late Justice Antonin Scalia.
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#354119
Planned Parenthood Exec Slams Hillary Clinton For Calling A ‘Fetus’ An ‘Unborn Child’
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#354120
The actor said Democrats should reject the "simplistic propaganda" about Clinton winning.
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#354121
Skeptics say effort could open the door to the risky lending that caused the housing crash in the first place.
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#354122
The pro-Trump online media is telling half the story.
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#354123
Trump praised the Japanese economic model just as the Lost Decade was beginning.
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#354124
Sen. Ted Cruz on Monday reached out to female voters, claiming Donald Trump seems to have "a problem with strong women" as the two prepared for Tuesday's Wis...
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#354125
A number of influential political players will be attending the conference, including Ted Cruz, who will be speaking on Saturday afternoon.
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