Another Pro-Republican Newspaper endorses Clinton.

http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/23/politi...ent/index.html

I reported about 3 weeks about the Dallas morning news- ending it's nearly 75 year streak of endorsing a republican President and endorsing clinton, yet another major paper in Ohio that has endorsed a republican for POTUS for nearly 100 years.
Washington (CNN)The Cincinnati Enquirer, one of Ohio's largest newspapers, is backing Hillary Clinton after supporting Republican presidential candidates for nearly a century.

"The Enquirer has supported Republicans for president for almost a century -- a tradition this editorial board doesn't take lightly. But this is not a traditional race, and these are not traditional times," the editorial board of the Enquirer published Friday. "Our country needs calm, thoughtful leadership to deal with the challenges we face at home and abroad. We need a leader who will bring out the best in all Americans, not the worst."
"That's why there is only one choice when we elect a president in November: Hillary Clinton," the editorial reads.
The Gannett publication announced its endorsement in advance of the first presidential debate between the two nominees. Ohio is a battleground state that both candidates have increasingly worked harder to win.
The paper said Clinton was a "competent" secretary of state who made "mistakes" in Benghazi that were "tragic" but called Republicans' assessment of her actions a "diabolical conspiracy."
"Clinton, meanwhile, was a competent secretary of state, with far stronger diplomatic skills than she gets credit for. Yes, mistakes were made in Benghazi, and it was tragic that four Americans lost their lives in the 2012 terror attacks on the US consulate there," it wrote. "But the incident was never the diabolical conspiracy that Republicans wanted us to believe, and Clinton was absolved of blame after lengthy investigations."
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is more interested in his self that the country, the paper concludes.
"Trump brands himself as an outsider untainted by special interests, but we see a man utterly corrupted by self-interest. His narcissistic bid for the presidency is more about making himself great than America," the board said. "Trump tears our country and many of its people down with his words so that he can build himself up. What else are we left to believe about a man who tells the American public that he alone can fix what ails us?"
While the editorial board are sympathetic to voters interest in the change that Trump could bring, the Enquirer concludes that not all change is good.
"Our country needs to seek thoughtful change, not just change for the sake of change. Four years is plenty of time to do enough damage that it could take America years to recover from, if at all," it wrote.
R.M.'s Avatar
  • R.M.
  • 09-23-2016, 10:28 PM
You are trying way too hard/
You are trying way too hard/ Originally Posted by R.M.
I just want you to guys to wake up and smell the coffee and put down the booze and the Trump kool aid.
Can you show me pro liberal newspapers that are rejecting Clinton and supporting Trump? Can you name me lifelong democrats who say they are voting for Trump?

Answer this question: Is there overwhelming opposition from republicans who are not going to support Trump?
R.M.'s Avatar
  • R.M.
  • 09-23-2016, 11:33 PM
I don't drink alcohol it has empty calories and has no nutritional value. It also reduces the amount of fat your body burns for energy.
https://pjmedia.com/ronradosh/2016/0...icans-are-not/

http://thehill.com/homenews/campaign...p-endorsements

https://www.queerty.com/a-gay-libera...trump-20160204

Yssup Rider's Avatar
So does this mean you're predicting the GLBTEIEIO vote will come in for Drumpf now that you found a blog?

How queer!
R.M.'s Avatar
  • R.M.
  • 09-24-2016, 01:18 AM
I B Hankering's Avatar
http://conservativetribune.com/membe...ign=manualpost Originally Posted by R.M.
+1

"[I]t is not Trump but his opponent who is so intemperate as to compare Putin’s moves in Ukraine to what Hitler did—an insult that throughout all the Cold War and to this day, no American president has ever offered to any Soviet or Russian leader, not even the enormous butcher Josef Stalin, with whom in fact we joined to win the Second World War. And it is not Mr. Trump but Michael Morell, a former CIA director now high in the councils of the dim-retard candidate, who has publicly suggested, without rebuke from anyone, that we should begin 'killing Russians,' a doubly illegal act of war."

(Politico)
.
http://conservativetribune.com/membe...ign=manualpost Originally Posted by R.M.
OMG you found one fucking DEMOCRAT who abandon ship - for every 1 DEM I will spot you 10 republicans who are voting or clinton.
I B Hankering's Avatar
OMG you found one fucking DEMOCRAT who abandon ship - for every 1 DEM I will spot you 10 republicans who are voting or clinton. Originally Posted by Luke_Wyatt

Dim-retard presidential candidate Jim Webb: "I could vote for Trump, but not hildebeest"


(WaPo)
.
lustylad's Avatar
Can you name me lifelong democrats who say they are voting for Trump? Originally Posted by Luke_Wyatt
Yes, here's another one. And they are genuine about switching their allegiances - not lying trolls like you pretending to be something you're not.


Party Loyalty Can’t Make Me Vote for Clinton

A lifelong Democrat, I’m backing Trump because he can shake up our politics and revive the economy.


By Andrew Stein
Updated Sept. 23, 2016 10:47 a.m. ET


I have been steeped in the Democratic Party all my life. My father, Jerry, was a New York City Democratic chairman and power broker, and I grew up in and around the Democratic Party. When I was a young man, former senators and Democratic presidential and vice-presidential nominees Hubert Humphrey and Estes Kefauver stayed at my apartment and we would proudly discuss the great traditions of the Democratic Party.

My father was a pallbearer at St. Patrick’s for Bobby Kennedy’s funeral. When I was young, Robert F. Kennedy and John F. Kennedy were (and remain) my political heroes. Four years ago, former New York Gov. and liberal lion Mario Cuomo spoke at my father’s funeral. I think his son, current Gov. Andrew Cuomo, is a very effective leader.

I was elected five times to the New York state Assembly as a Democrat. In 1977, I beat David Dinkins and Robert Wagner Jr. in the election for borough president of Manhattan, and then was elected twice as City Council president.

With this background it is very hard for me not to support the Democratic nominee for president this year. But I believe my party has become the party of the elites and moneyed class and has deserted its historic mission as the party of the working class and disadvantaged.

Given my level of discomfort with the current leftist orientation of the Democratic Party, I am now supporting Republican nominee Donald Trump for president. I urge my fellow Democrats to vote for Mr. Trump. I have known him since the early 1970s and have seen his deep concern for people, and how effective he has been while working on behalf of the average citizen.

Donald Trump is no racist. On the contrary, he offers the best hope for rebuilding our inner cities and creating better education and jobs for those trapped in poverty and lacking hope. When a hurricane devastated Puerto Rico in 1984, I asked Mr. Trump to provide a 727 airliner to bring critical supplies to the island. He did so and without publicity. I asked him to rebuild the Wollman Skating Rink in Central Park because the city couldn’t complete it in 10 years. Mr. Trump did it in under six months and under budget.

While he has made some controversial and provocative statements, I strongly believe he will bring needed change and vitality to our nation and shake up our political system, which is in a state of crisis. He is for strong pro-growth policies like reducing the marginal and corporate tax rates and eliminating thousands of job-killing and business-stifling regulations, the biggest of which is ObamaCare.

Mr. Trump is also for rebuilding the military, which has been decimated by Obama’s dangerous cuts and sequestration. He is a strong supporter of Israel and will not abandon our allies in the Mideast and around the world. Unlike Hillary Clinton, he will not allow tens of thousands of immigrants who cannot be vetted properly to come to the U.S.

Hillary Clinton, on the other hand, is the personification of the establishment and status quo. She voted for the war in Iraq and supported the Iran nuclear deal, two of the worst, and most-dangerous, mistakes in American foreign policy during my lifetime.

Everywhere in the world America’s position is far worse now thanks in large measure to her actions as secretary of state. The whole saga of her private unsecure emails and server and the appearance of massive pay-for-play at the Clinton Foundation are also profoundly troubling.

Her domestic record is as bad as her international one. When Mrs. Clinton was elected to the Senate, she promised to create 200,000 new jobs in upstate New York. When she left office in January 2009, the region had a net loss of 8,000 jobs. Now she promises to create 10 million new jobs in the nation. Why should we believe that she will do that, based on her failed record in New York state?

Sometimes a break with your own party is compelled by events. This is not to say it is an easy decision politically or personally. It can be wrenching. In 1973 I was appointed by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to be chairman of a commission to investigate patient abuse and massive Medicaid fraud in the New York state nursing-home industry—which was extensively covered by the press. The nursing homeowners were protected by the Democratic leadership in the state Assembly. I had to fight those leaders in my own party to get the needed reforms passed.

As President Kennedy once said to his trusted speechwriter and confidante Arthur Schlesinger Jr., “Sometimes party loyalty asks too much.” This is the case in this election. I believe Donald Trump will make a great president and I ask my fellow Democrats to vote for him. The future of the nation may very well depend on it.

Mr. Stein, who held elective office in New York between 1969 and 1994, is now a business consultant.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/party-lo...ton-1474498244
R.M.'s Avatar
  • R.M.
  • 09-24-2016, 06:50 AM
I don't drink alcohol it has empty calories and has no nutritional value. It also reduces the amount of fat your body burns for energy.
Originally Posted by R.M.
OMG you found one fucking DEMOCRAT who abandon ship - for every 1 DEM I will spot you 10 republicans who are voting or clinton. Originally Posted by Luke_Wyatt
Yes, here's another one. And they are genuine about switching their allegiances - not lying trolls like you pretending to be something you're not.


Party Loyalty Can’t Make Me Vote for Clinton

A lifelong Democrat, I’m backing Trump because he can shake up our politics and revive the economy.


By Andrew Stein
Updated Sept. 23, 2016 10:47 a.m. ET


I have been steeped in the Democratic Party all my life. My father, Jerry, was a New York City Democratic chairman and power broker, and I grew up in and around the Democratic Party. When I was a young man, former senators and Democratic presidential and vice-presidential nominees Hubert Humphrey and Estes Kefauver stayed at my apartment and we would proudly discuss the great traditions of the Democratic Party.

My father was a pallbearer at St. Patrick’s for Bobby Kennedy’s funeral. When I was young, Robert F. Kennedy and John F. Kennedy were (and remain) my political heroes. Four years ago, former New York Gov. and liberal lion Mario Cuomo spoke at my father’s funeral. I think his son, current Gov. Andrew Cuomo, is a very effective leader.

I was elected five times to the New York state Assembly as a Democrat. In 1977, I beat David Dinkins and Robert Wagner Jr. in the election for borough president of Manhattan, and then was elected twice as City Council president.

With this background it is very hard for me not to support the Democratic nominee for president this year. But I believe my party has become the party of the elites and moneyed class and has deserted its historic mission as the party of the working class and disadvantaged.

Given my level of discomfort with the current leftist orientation of the Democratic Party, I am now supporting Republican nominee Donald Trump for president. I urge my fellow Democrats to vote for Mr. Trump. I have known him since the early 1970s and have seen his deep concern for people, and how effective he has been while working on behalf of the average citizen.

Donald Trump is no racist. On the contrary, he offers the best hope for rebuilding our inner cities and creating better education and jobs for those trapped in poverty and lacking hope. When a hurricane devastated Puerto Rico in 1984, I asked Mr. Trump to provide a 727 airliner to bring critical supplies to the island. He did so and without publicity. I asked him to rebuild the Wollman Skating Rink in Central Park because the city couldn’t complete it in 10 years. Mr. Trump did it in under six months and under budget.

While he has made some controversial and provocative statements, I strongly believe he will bring needed change and vitality to our nation and shake up our political system, which is in a state of crisis. He is for strong pro-growth policies like reducing the marginal and corporate tax rates and eliminating thousands of job-killing and business-stifling regulations, the biggest of which is ObamaCare.

Mr. Trump is also for rebuilding the military, which has been decimated by Obama’s dangerous cuts and sequestration. He is a strong supporter of Israel and will not abandon our allies in the Mideast and around the world. Unlike Hillary Clinton, he will not allow tens of thousands of immigrants who cannot be vetted properly to come to the U.S.

Hillary Clinton, on the other hand, is the personification of the establishment and status quo. She voted for the war in Iraq and supported the Iran nuclear deal, two of the worst, and most-dangerous, mistakes in American foreign policy during my lifetime.

Everywhere in the world America’s position is far worse now thanks in large measure to her actions as secretary of state. The whole saga of her private unsecure emails and server and the appearance of massive pay-for-play at the Clinton Foundation are also profoundly troubling.

Her domestic record is as bad as her international one. When Mrs. Clinton was elected to the Senate, she promised to create 200,000 new jobs in upstate New York. When she left office in January 2009, the region had a net loss of 8,000 jobs. Now she promises to create 10 million new jobs in the nation. Why should we believe that she will do that, based on her failed record in New York state?

Sometimes a break with your own party is compelled by events. This is not to say it is an easy decision politically or personally. It can be wrenching. In 1973 I was appointed by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to be chairman of a commission to investigate patient abuse and massive Medicaid fraud in the New York state nursing-home industry—which was extensively covered by the press. The nursing homeowners were protected by the Democratic leadership in the state Assembly. I had to fight those leaders in my own party to get the needed reforms passed.

As President Kennedy once said to his trusted speechwriter and confidante Arthur Schlesinger Jr., “Sometimes party loyalty asks too much.” This is the case in this election. I believe Donald Trump will make a great president and I ask my fellow Democrats to vote for him. The future of the nation may very well depend on it.

Mr. Stein, who held elective office in New York between 1969 and 1994, is now a business consultant.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/party-lo...ton-1474498244 Originally Posted by lustylad
Reading is fundamental.
LexusLover's Avatar
Can you name me lifelong democrats who say they are voting for Trump? Originally Posted by Luke_Wyatt
When you say "life long" ....

... are you including the period of time from popping out of the womb until .... a day before the person was old enough to vote?

... For instance .... for you that would be about 95% of your "life"!
  • DSK
  • 09-24-2016, 08:18 AM
When you say "life long" ....

... are you including the period of time from popping out of the womb until .... a day before the person was old enough to vote?

... For instance .... for you that would be about 95% of your "life"! Originally Posted by LexusLover
He has been bitch slapped across this entire thread. He should quit the forum.
  • DSK
  • 09-24-2016, 08:19 AM
. Originally Posted by I B Hankering
Poor Luke, bitch slapped again and again.
. Originally Posted by I B Hankering
Is Webb on the ticket with Clinton, you dick faced cum gobbler?