Onopa's Posts
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CFCman:Grow up looser |
Bolaino You are really a prophet, you see the future Where re you |
Sheggy13:Majority of white women voted for Trump 53 percent of white women voted for Trump while 43 percent voted for Hillary. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/nov/09/white-voters-victory-donald-trump-exit-polls |
They should not wake the sleeping lion oo Are they aware almost 50 million people voted for Trump The silent and calmness of the nativist should not be interpreted as cowardise I think we need annihilate some people so others can learn...it won't totally solve the problem but At least it will take them 50 years to form another uprising |
Since Trump has become President-Elect: 1. Russia and Syria have publicly announced wanting peace with the U.S. 2. Israel's Prime Minister announced that they want to repair the damaged relationship between them and the U.S. 3. DOW closed yesterday at an all-time high. 4. Canada and Mexico have announced they are willing to renegotiate NAFTA with the U.S. All in two days of electing Trump. Bad week for SJWs, great week for America and the world. |
Obama is the worst president that has ever rule America
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QUICK FACTS NAME Melania Trump OCCUPATION Model BIRTH DATE April 26, 1970 (age 46) PLACE OF BIRTH Novo Mesto, Slovenia Melania Trump is the wife of real estate billionaire and 2016 Republican President-Elect Donald Trump. Synopsis Born on April 26, 1970, Melania Trump is a former model and current third wife of real estate billionaire and 2016 Republican President-Elect Donald Trump. Early Life Melania Trump (born Melanija Knavs, germanized to Melania Knauss) was born on April 26, 1970 in Novo Mesto, Slovenia (then part of communist Yugoslavia). Her father was a car dealer and her mother was a designer for children's clothing. She grew up in a modest home with her younger sister and later discovered she had an older half brother, whom her father had from a previous relationship. Modeling Career At 16 Trump began modeling and two years later, signed on with an agency in Milan. Although she attended the University of Ljubljana, she dropped out after one year to pursue her modeling career. (Since 2006 she had previously claimed she had earned a degree in architecture and design from the university.) In her early days of modeling, Trump worked in Milan and Paris, before moving to New York in 1996. There she gained steady work, working with well-known photographers like Patrick Demarchelier and Helmut Newton and landing covers on magazines such as Harper's Bazaar (Bulgaria), Vanity Fair (Italy), GQ and Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue. Marriage to Donald Trump Melania met her future husband Donald Trump at a New York fashion party in 1998. Although she first refused to date him, the couple eventually began establishing a relationship and were engaged in 2004. The following year they married in a lavish Palm Beach, Florida ceremony with celebrity attendees including Shaquille O'Neal, Barbara Walters, Kelly Ripa, Matt Lauer, Katie Couric, and President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton, who was then a Senator from New York state. In 2006, Trump gave birth to Barron William Trump. Their son is husband Donald's fifth child. That same year she also became a U.S. citizen. http://www.biography.com/people/melania-trump-812016
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Burning America flag I can't wait for Trump to be sworn in This is the main reason Trump was elected Because of break down of law and order |
Pidgin2:Girl calm down election is over the propaganda and character assassination did not work Why bother yourself now that he won the election Trump is a nice guy A ladies man |
Pidgin2:Yeah you re proudly Nigeria Sorry Not everyone think the way Nigerians do |
Pidgin2:Yeah your are right She was a successful modern Those pictures are not different from what we see everyday in sporting industry Is part of the job Melania is way more beautiful and calm than your transgender that is currently in White House. |
At op Get a life The incoming firstlady is beautiful Unlike the transgender that is currently in White House
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I watched the conversation between Obama and trump. I have never seen Obama struggle this much to find words to use and stay civilized in the front of cameras. The thought that a man who never regard me as a president...insult, humiliate me is going to be my successor ![]() And Trump said at the front of the camera..this is my first time of meeting Obama. Good for him.. .obama is a wicked leader He has destroyed so many government all around the world.. .regime change Now make e feel how those leaders he topple their government de feel Stupid man. |
She is one of the most intelligent girl I have ever listen to speak |
These people protesting are they aware this is the actual reason Trump was elected That Obama is a useless leader as result there is break down of law and order in the society. Are they aware we won't tolerate this anymore Are they aware Trump is the law and order |
Deluded Christians |
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Lucas where are you |
He is a stupid man |
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Praise jag Obama and Hillary has been crushed |
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I want to hear the good news That Obama and Hillary has been crushed |
@op You are a lunatic, am happy you are now seeing clearly that your queen will not win this battle America people has already decide who will lead them And the person is Donald J Trump Nothing on earth will stop Trump presidency not even coward obama. The America people are prepared for this.. Millions of America population are already cleaning their GUNS incase of inventuality. They are prepared for civil war....ethnic cleansing They will put a bullet in Obama head.
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MAGA
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She b witch
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You can go and die prof Trump is the next president of the United States of America No body can stop him And nothing anybody can do about it except cry.
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Obama tenure enlapse January 2017 He has refuse to govern Black people are killing themselves in Chicago almost every day Obama is not going for third term He is wasted tax payers money campaigning for a criminal |
By Jennifer Smith For Dailymail.com 15:50 EDT 02 Nov 2016, updated 17:10 EDT 02 Nov 2016 Donald Trump won 91 per cent of bets on who will win the presidential election over at the start of the week in another indicator of his growing popularity. The Republican candidate's odds at becoming president improved from 5/1 last week to 9/4 on Wednesday, according to Irish bookmaker Paddy Power. Only nine per cent of bets placed on the election on Monday and Tuesday in the UK and Ireland, where election betting is legal unlike in the US, cast Hillary Clinton as the winner. Only last week the betting company was so sure she would win that it paid out more than $1million on her winning. It is the latest blow to her once invincible campaign and comes after the FBI's revival its probe into her use of emails while she was Secretary of State. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3898708/Trump-wins-91-election-bets-despite-oddsmakers-paying-1million-Clinton-victory.html?ito=social-twitter_dailymailus
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Obama is becoming desperate You are going to jail Trump is the next president |
By Eric Bradner and Marshall Cohen, CNN Updated 9:02 PM ET, Tue November 1, 2016 African-American turnout has dropped in North Carolina, Florida and Georgia The GOP has improved its standing in Florida, Iowa and North Carolina Washington (CNN)A dip in African-American turnout has knocked Democratic early voting numbers off their 2012 pace in key battleground states like North Carolina. The trend is also evident in early vote data from other swing states that could play key roles in deciding the election, including Florida and Georgia. More Latino voters, however, are among the more than 24.4 million American voters who have already cast their ballots -- including 12.4 million in battleground states -- according to a CNN analysis of the latest early voting numbers. Republicans appear to be in better position than they were in previous presidential elections in Florida, Iowa, North Carolina and Ohio, while Democrats have improved their standing in Colorado and Arizona. CNN has partnered with Catalist, a data company that works with progressive candidates and groups, to receive detailed early vote return information this year. Catalist's voter list connects returned ballots with demographic and registration information, such as party registration, gender and age, and allows a closer look at who has already cast a vote. These are not results -- ballots aren't tallied until Election Day. But the findings provide clues on who is voting and which party is turning out to vote. And while the numbers track voters' party affiliations, not all Democrats are voting for Hillary Clinton, and not all Republicans are supporting Donald Trump. Here's a look at the early voting data from several battleground states: Arizona Democrats still lag Republicans by about 40,000 early votes so far in Arizona, but that's less today than the 70,000-vote lead Republicans held at this point in 2012. That difference means the GOP's 10% edge in 2012 is a 4% edge now, with more than 1 million ballots cast. That 10% early vote margin largely matched the size of Mitt Romney's victory -- which suggests Clinton's campaign appears to have a fighting chance to flip the state. Two-thirds of Arizona voters cast their ballots before Election Day in 2012 -- making these early voting numbers crucial to watch for Clinton and Trump. Colorado Despite Trump's late move to turn the state competitive, Democrats remain ahead in ballot returns in the entirely vote-by-mail state. Of the more than 1 million Coloradoans who have voted so far, Democrats have a lead of 2.4 percentage points. At this point four years ago, the GOP had 2.8-point edge, and that ultimately wasn't enough for Romney to carry the state. However, there's some good news for Republicans: As more ballots are counted, the size of the Democratic lead is shrinking -- with the party's advantage remaining at about 24,000 votes for the past week. Republicans hope a simple mail delay in returns from the state's rural counties, compared with quicker delivery from Denver, will ultimately narrow the gap. Florida Registered Republicans have a very narrow lead in Florida early voting. They're up by about 8,800 votes, which is a better position than they were in eight years ago, when they trailed registered Democrats by about 50,000. Helping the GOP: The burst in Democratic turnout two weekends before Election Day in 2008 does not appear to have materialized this year. The demographics of Florida's have also changed since 2008. The white vote has remained about 72%. But the black vote has dipped from 15% in 2008 to 12% this year. Latinos have boosted their share of the vote from 9.4% in 2008 to 14% today. In each of the two previous presidential races, more than half of Florida's electorate voted early. The early vote share was 56% in 2012, and that number is expected to continue climbing in 2016. Georgia About 1.5 million ballots have been cast in Georgia -- a 28% increase compared to 2008 and a 32% bump over 2012, when half the state voted early. The Peach State doesn't register voters by party, so it's impossible to know whether more Democrats or Republicans have voted. But if Clinton is going to pull off the upset here, she'll need strong turnout from African-Americans -- and there are signs that their share of the vote has dropped a bit from where it was at this point in 2012. Black voters made up 36% of Georgia's early voting population at this stage of the 2012 race, compared to 31% this year. Iowa Democrats are ahead among the 448,000 votes cast so far in Iowa -- but they're still behind the party's 2012 pace in a state that Clinton's campaign has long admitted will be tough to win. Democrats led by 58,000 votes, an edge of nearly 12%, at this point in 2012. Today, they are up by nearly 42,000, or 9.3%. That's a drop in the Democratic lead of about 5 points over the last week. Overall early vote numbers in Iowa are down, as well, from 491,000 ballots cast at this point in 2012. Nevada Overall turnout in Nevada lags behind 2012 -- with 420,000 ballots cast so far in 2016, compared to 460,000 at this point four years ago. But the Democratic advantage in a state Obama carried appears to have held. Democrats lead by about 32,000 votes -- 7.5 points ahead of Republicans, roughly where they were in 2012. And the Democratic lead has grown in recent days. Nevada is a crucial early voting state. In 2012, 69% of the state's electorate cast their ballots before Election Day. North Carolina For the first time this cycle, Democrats are ahead by more than 200,000 early votes, and they have a 13.4-percentage-point lead over Republicans. But that's still off the party's 2012 pace in a state Romney narrowly won: Four years ago, Democrats were up by 292,000 votes at this stage, or 17.9 points. The black vote is also down in the Tar Heel State. At this point in 2012, the electorate was 67% white and 28% black. Today, it is 73% white and 23% black. The Latino vote has ticked upward in North Carolina, from 1.1% at this point in 2012 to 1.8% in 2016. North Carolina reduced its early voting window, but the total ballots cast so far slightly outpace 2012 -- when 61% of the vote was cast early. Ohio Republicans continue to outperform their results from 2008, the last year with comparable results. The GOP has an edge over Democrats of 4.7% now, while Democrats held a very slight lead at this stage in 2008. So far, nearly 1.2 million votes have been cast in Ohio -- a drop of about 13,000 from 2012. After the last presidential election, Ohio's Republican-controlled legislature slashed back the number of early voting days. There are some signs that the drop-off has been heavier in Democratic-leaning counties, bad news for Clinton. CNN's Sonam Vashi contributed to this report. http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/01/politics/early-voting-update-black-vote-decreasing/index.html?sr=fbCNN110116early-voting-update-black-vote-decreasing/1155PMStoryLink&linkId=30594804
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