So none of these articles posted have links and sources?What time do the Fake News Awards start? Can't think of anything more appropriate for this thread.
So none of these articles posted have links and sources?
My bad, thought u were trying to say all the stuff posted in this thread was fake. Has Trump even followed up on his fake news awards?
Did you quote the right person? I'm saying the POTUS giving out fake news awards awards is pure fukkery. And this is the place to discuss it.
SHS in yesterday's press briefing demoted the awards to a "Potential Event". So it may still happen.My bad, thought u were trying to say all the stuff posted in this thread was fake. Has Trump even followed up on his fake news awards?
No prob.My bad, thought u were trying to say all the stuff posted in this thread was fake. Has Trump even followed up on his fake news awards?
in the article they link to a wapo story about how the trump admin admitted that an obama epa rule that they rescinded would have prevented as many as 4,500 premature deaths per year by 2030.
Is Donald Trump hoping foreign terrorists attack the United States?
That terrifying question is subtly embedded in a story this weekend reported by Michael Scherer, Josh Dawsey, and Sean Sullivan of the Washington Post on the Republican Party’s growing alarm about the upcoming 2018 midterms.
The story details GOP woes and Democratic hopes before pivoting to some more optimistic Republican voices, including a sensible point from Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX):
“Who knows what 2018 will be like? Nobody called 2016, right?” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.), the second-ranking Republican in that chamber. “Everybody thought Hillary Clinton was going to get elected and that Chuck Schumer was going to be the majority leader. And none of that turned out to be true.”
Trump, though, is thinking about a different, possibly crazy, comparison:
In private conversations, Trump has told advisers that he doesn’t think the 2018 election has to be as bad as others are predicting. He has referenced the 2002 midterms, when George W. Bush and Republicans fared better after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, these people said.