Trump's Madison Square Garden rally

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:JD says we all have to stop “being so offended.” In other words: he agrees with everything they said: Jewish people are cheapskates, something something Black people and watermelons, Latinos have too much procreative sex, the implication that all women are pretty just hookers no matter who they are or what they do. JD agrees with all of it, as does Donald when you consider that he hasn’t bothered to say anything.


People are offended because the "jokes" were told at an official political rally for a presidential candidate. The comments were offensive, not funny.


It was not a “joke”. It was a racist tirade.


Jon Stewart thinks the guy is funny fwiw https://x.com/piersmorgan/status/185123092544...kHaGKqgGqkHvzMN6JuFg

He’s had roast jokes that are funny. I hate Trump and I can even admit that - and that’s all Stewart was saying when you actually watch the show. Doesn’t mean having him at a political rally was in any way a good idea.


Of course it wasn’t a good idea. It was a terrible idea but come on the outrage is ridiculous and predictably used as a political baseball bat by the dems and I don’t blame them. The cnn/msnbc journalists performance act is over the top.


You don't get to tell the victims of a racist statement that they don't get to be offended. You also don't get to tell people who care about the victims of the racist statement to not feel offended.


No one is telling anyone anything. Have you watched Kill Tony's shows? He makes his living off being offensive. That being said, hiring him for a campaign event was not a good idea. Why is this so difficult?


So difficult about what? No one here has watched Kill Tony's shows. Thus he's not some universally beloved figure who can push the envelope because we're all already on his side. What we saw was some d****it we'd never heard of before saying wildly offensive things about a place, and a lot of people, who he does not seem well positioned to make those sorts of comments about. If he wanted to get up there and roast d****it white guys, it'd probably have been fine.

But also you're allowed not to be offended by it! I was shocked, honestly, and that's on me because after a DECADE of this I should not still have the capacity for being shocked. But the people you should be lecturing right now are the Puerto Ricans in swing states who do seem to have taken this more seriously than you'd like them to. So go lecture them. I'm sure they'd welcome your wisdom.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What do the DCUM lawyers think of Alina Habba at the MSG rally? Totally normal lawyer behavior?


She’ll be disbarred after he loses


She's on the road to follow Lin Wood, Rudy Giuliani, Sydney Powell, John Eastman, and others.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Which party is more anti-Semitic?


Hmmmm. Which one is preferred by neo-nazis?


I don't know, because neo-nazi's fortunately are not are a serious presence in modern day America. I have never even seen one except in Democrat campaign ads. The realistic, modern test of anti-Semitism is which party supports Hamas, who butchered thousands of innocent Jews and talks non-stop about destroying Israel for the past year. That would be the Democrats.


False.

Being disgusted with how Israel’s military is systemically killing innocent Palestines isn’t anti-Semitic.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Whatever happened to civility? Forget the political ramifications of insulting a particular ethnic group. MAGA claims to want to return to 1950's America, but this kind of language and vulgarity would have been unheard of in those days.


Check out how uncivil politicans were in the past, it would shock you.

In the 18th century, John Adams called Alexander Hamilton a “bastard brat” and wrote that Hamilton had “a superabundance of secretions which he could not find whores enough to draw off,” according to historian Ron Chernow.

In the 1880s, rumors of Grover Cleveland’s out-of-wedlock child led to a song from his Republican opponents: “Ma, ma, where’s my pa?” When Cleveland won the presidency, the response came: “Gone to the White House, ha ha ha!”

“Old-fashioned American politics was full of those kinds of vile comments,” said Arnold Shober, who teaches government at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. “We’ve kind of lost that over the last 70 years, and I think it’s just coming back.”

Not that 20th century politicians shied away from vulgarities. Here’s President Bill Clinton describing his 1970s El Camino pickup truck: “I had Astroturf in the back. You don’t want to know why, but I did.”




They used to throw the dead off the stagecoach in those days. I’d like to think we’ve evolved to more civilized times. Also, reading about a line in an 18th century newspaper doesn’t have the same effect as it does now. Let’s try to stop sanewashing this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Whats worse - the 30k libs showing up for a rally tonight on the ellipse or the 30k showing up for a KKK rally on the ellipse in 1925?


(C) Some very fine right wingers showing up in Charlottesville.



https://www.ajc.org/translatehate/great-replacement
“White nationalists and far-right protestors chanted "Jews will not replace us" during the infamous 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, VA.”


You do know that whole thing was a setup. Pedos, ANTIFA, Ukrainians. All there to play the part - PAID ACTORS. You people need to learn discernment. Tiki torches - gimme a break.


These guys aren’t paid actors:

Jason Kessler was the lead organizer of the rally. A Charlottesville resident, Kessler said he felt the city had "absorbed these cultural Marxist principles ... about blaming White people for everything." He said he believed there was "anti-White hatred" coming out of the city.

Christopher Cantwell was sentenced to 41 months in prison back in February.
Christopher Cantwell was sentenced to 41 months in prison back in February.
Christopher Cantwell became the face of the rally after being featured in a Vice documentary. He went viral again after the rally in the infamous "Crying Nazi" Facebook video. Cantwell is currently serving a 41-month federal prison sentence for extortion and threatening a person. He is representing himself during the civil trial.

White nationalist Richard Spencer, left, and Nathan Damigo of Identity Evropa speak to select media in a building serving as office space on August 14, 2017, in Alexandria, Virginia.
White nationalist Richard Spencer, left, and Nathan Damigo of Identity Evropa speak to select media in a building serving as office space on August 14, 2017, in Alexandria, Virginia.
Richard Spencer is a White nationalist who led the torchlight rally on the night of August 11, 2017. He and nine other people were banned from the University of Virginia campus in 2018. Spencer is representing himself in the civil trial.

James Fields is serving two concurrent life setnences after driving his car through the crowd of protesters in 2017.
James Fields is serving two concurrent life setnences after driving his car through the crowd of protesters in 2017.
James Fields drove his car through a crowd of protesters on August 12, 2017, resulting in dozens of injuries and the death of Heather Heyer. He is serving two concurrent life sentences.

The other defendants are also known names in the White nationalist movement, including Identity Evropa leader Elliot Kline and founder Nathan Damigo, Traditionalist Worker Party leader Matthew Heimbach, National Socialist Movement former president Jeff Schoep and Andrew Anglin, who founded The Daily Stormer.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Whats worse - the 30k libs showing up for a rally tonight on the ellipse or the 30k showing up for a KKK rally on the ellipse in 1925?


(C) Some very fine right wingers showing up in Charlottesville.



https://www.ajc.org/translatehate/great-replacement
“White nationalists and far-right protestors chanted "Jews will not replace us" during the infamous 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, VA.”


You do know that whole thing was a setup. Pedos, ANTIFA, Ukrainians. All there to play the part - PAID ACTORS. You people need to learn discernment. Tiki torches - gimme a break.


I'm hoping you are just kidding around and aren't serious about this. I mean, there's some funny trolling that goes on around here but there are also some really stupid kinds of people who would actually believe something like that and earnestly say it out loud.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:JD says we all have to stop “being so offended.” In other words: he agrees with everything they said: Jewish people are cheapskates, something something Black people and watermelons, Latinos have too much procreative sex, the implication that all women are pretty just hookers no matter who they are or what they do. JD agrees with all of it, as does Donald when you consider that he hasn’t bothered to say anything.



He’s not going to apologize. His campaign vetted it and told the comedian he could call Harris a c*nt. That’s where they drew the line.

https://newrepublic.com/post/187657/donald-tr...n-kamala-harris-joke


Ah, you’re going with the old “anonymous sources” and “campaign staffer,” I see. And from a far-left source. But sure, very believable.


CNN reports that the c*unt joke was nixed by the campaign.

Which means that the rest was read through and APPROVED before the comedian walked on stage!


Oh noes!!! *clutching pearls*

This fake outrage is getting old.


+1
Especially, because the campaign notes that much of his act was ad libbed. They still made a big mistake allowing him to perform, but it’s not like they approved his racial jokes.


His act was in the teleprompter. He used the same "joke" the night before to a thud and said "I will use it tomorrow at the rally and it will be better received" - and frankly, it was well received inside MSG. It was the rest of the country that saw it who was aghast.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Whats worse - the 30k libs showing up for a rally tonight on the ellipse or the 30k showing up for a KKK rally on the ellipse in 1925?


(C) Some very fine right wingers showing up in Charlottesville.



https://www.ajc.org/translatehate/great-replacement
“White nationalists and far-right protestors chanted "Jews will not replace us" during the infamous 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, VA.”


You do know that whole thing was a setup. Pedos, ANTIFA, Ukrainians. All there to play the part - PAID ACTORS. You people need to learn discernment. Tiki torches - gimme a break.

And there really IS a child sex ring run out of the basement of Comet Pizza!
Anonymous
Hinchcliffe and his fans are still getting it wrong. They are mistakenly saying "oh they don't have a sense of humor" and "it's all just phony Trump-hating faux outrage."

That's NOT what it's about. If you still don't get it, here's an insight from one of America's best comedians ever, who was well known for his share of outrageous humor.



Even though this interview was from years ago and George Carlin is no longer with us, his analysis is spot on
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Hinchcliffe and his fans are still getting it wrong. They are mistakenly saying "oh they don't have a sense of humor" and "it's all just phony Trump-hating faux outrage."

That's NOT what it's about. If you still don't get it, here's an insight from one of America's best comedians ever, who was well known for his share of outrageous humor.



Even though this interview was from years ago and George Carlin is no longer with us, his analysis is spot on


Carlin may have been edgy for his time but as a late Gen Xer, I never so much as cracked a smile growing up watching his HBO specials. Always thought to myself it was a boomer thing
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Hinchcliffe and his fans are still getting it wrong. They are mistakenly saying "oh they don't have a sense of humor" and "it's all just phony Trump-hating faux outrage."

That's NOT what it's about. If you still don't get it, here's an insight from one of America's best comedians ever, who was well known for his share of outrageous humor.



Even though this interview was from years ago and George Carlin is no longer with us, his analysis is spot on


Wow. So thoughtful and so spot on.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hinchcliffe and his fans are still getting it wrong. They are mistakenly saying "oh they don't have a sense of humor" and "it's all just phony Trump-hating faux outrage."

That's NOT what it's about. If you still don't get it, here's an insight from one of America's best comedians ever, who was well known for his share of outrageous humor.



Even though this interview was from years ago and George Carlin is no longer with us, his analysis is spot on


Carlin may have been edgy for his time but as a late Gen Xer, I never so much as cracked a smile growing up watching his HBO specials. Always thought to myself it was a boomer thing


I'm a Millennial and his late-in-life stuff was amazing. Pretty sure you're missing a chip in your motherboard.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hinchcliffe and his fans are still getting it wrong. They are mistakenly saying "oh they don't have a sense of humor" and "it's all just phony Trump-hating faux outrage."

That's NOT what it's about. If you still don't get it, here's an insight from one of America's best comedians ever, who was well known for his share of outrageous humor.



Even though this interview was from years ago and George Carlin is no longer with us, his analysis is spot on


Carlin may have been edgy for his time but as a late Gen Xer, I never so much as cracked a smile growing up watching his HBO specials. Always thought to myself it was a boomer thing


Carlin was much more popular before and after us: boomers and Millennials (boomer kids). He doesn't speak as much to Gen X and Gen Z (Gen X kids).
Anonymous
Just sit and bask in the beauty of some trashbag rally-lover finding George Carlin meh in order to make the racist ‘humor’ acceptable. Amazing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Hinchcliffe and his fans are still getting it wrong. They are mistakenly saying "oh they don't have a sense of humor" and "it's all just phony Trump-hating faux outrage."

That's NOT what it's about. If you still don't get it, here's an insight from one of America's best comedians ever, who was well known for his share of outrageous humor.



Even though this interview was from years ago and George Carlin is no longer with us, his analysis is spot on


I assume Carlin is referring to Andrew Dice Clay, a true hack and one trick pony if ever there was one.
Forum Index » Political Discussion
Go to: