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To: Kaslin

I cannot believe America hasn’t tried a Trump person before.


2 posted on 10/27/2016 4:41:12 AM PDT by Daniel Ramsey
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To: Daniel Ramsey

That is maybe because there hasn’t been one before.


3 posted on 10/27/2016 4:43:12 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Daniel Ramsey
I cannot believe America hasn’t tried a Trump person before.

the Donald tried several years back. He did not make it very far in the primaries. Oprah was his running mate...

6 posted on 10/27/2016 4:52:57 AM PDT by rjsimmon (The Tree of Liberty Thirsts)
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To: Daniel Ramsey
I cannot believe America hasn’t tried a Trump person before. ___________________________________________________ I'll bite. Maybe, George Washington?
14 posted on 10/27/2016 6:39:01 AM PDT by Freemeorkillme
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To: Daniel Ramsey; Freemeorkillme

“If George Washington were alive today, what a shining mark he would be for the whole camorra of uplifters, forward-lookers and professional patriots!

He was the Rockefeller of his time, the richest man in the United States, a promoter of stock companies, a land-grabber, an exploiter of mines and timber. He was a bitter opponent of foreign entanglements, and denounced their evils in harsh and specific terms.

He had a liking for forth-right and pugnacious men, and a contempt for lawyers, school-masters and all other such obscurantists.

He was not pious. He drank whiskey whenever he felt chilly, and kept a jug of it handy. He knew far more profanity than Scripture, and used and enjoyed it more.

He had no belief in the infallible wisdom of the common people, but regarded them as inflammatory dolts, and tried to save the Republic from them. He advocated no sure cure for all the sorrows of the world and doubted that such a panacea existed. He took no interest in the private morals of his neighbors.

Inhabiting These States today, George would be ineligible for any office of honor or profit. The Senate would never dare confirm him; the President would not think of nominating him. He would be on trial in the newspapers for belonging to the Money Power. The Sherman Act would have him in its toils; he would be under indictment by every grand jury south of the Potomac; the Methodists of his native State would be denouncing him (he had a still at Mount Vernon) as a debaucher of youth, a recruiting officer for insane asylums, a poisoner of the home. And what a chance there would be for that ambitious young district attorney who thought to shadow him on his peregrinations– and grab him under the Mann Act!”

–HL Mencken, ‘Damn! A Book of Calumny’, 1918


15 posted on 10/27/2016 6:47:05 AM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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