Trump doesn't understand thievangelical christians,

or Carson's popularity? Donald should watch all of those megachurch evangelist preachers in action. He should look at the audience of mindless zombies enthralled with complete bullshit. It's not just Iowa. It's thievangelical Terri Schiavo brained christians.

Wouldn't it be easier to make a list of the things Trump does understand?
 
It's wishful thinking. He's hoping that VBM would be your (male) username, so he could start trolling you.
Because he only likes (and trolls) men.

And how the fuck would you know who VBM was, Dishrag?
 
And the reason that thievangelical closes his eyes when he speaks is because he gets such a splitting headache ATTEMPTING to think. At least he makes an attempt. That's more than his thievangelical zombies do.

What an insightful, intelligent post. Keep up the good work.
 
Who else will pay for the free college?

Making higher education something you can only get if you are from an upper-middle class or rich family or willing to go into crippling, non-dischargeable debt is just stupid. It keeps the number of skilled workers in the US low and the debt is part of why we're going into a decade of a global demand and youth unemployment crisis. (If a whole subset of the population is stuck is shitty, low-wage jobs and devoting most of their money to servicing debt, they don't have the ability to buy goods and services/generate demand. It's a self-sustaining cycle of low wages, high debt, and lack of demand.)

If you look at the countries in Europe that actually stood up to the banks, which also happen to be some of the most socialist countries on the continent, they're doing great. Europe's problems do not stem from actually investing in their people, they stem from the banks stealing from them and the political incoherence of the Eurozone project.
 
Making higher education something you can only get if you are from an upper-middle class or rich family or willing to go into crippling, non-dischargeable debt is just stupid. It keeps the number of skilled workers in the US low and the debt is part of why we're going into a decade of a global demand and youth unemployment crisis. (If a whole subset of the population is stuck is shitty, low-wage jobs and devoting most of their money to servicing debt, they don't have the ability to buy goods and services/generate demand. It's a self-sustaining cycle of low wages, high debt, and lack of demand.)

If you look at the countries in Europe that actually stood up to the banks, which also happen to be some of the most socialist countries on the continent, they're doing great. Europe's problems do not stem from actually investing in their people, they stem from the banks stealing from them and the political incoherence of the Eurozone project.

How did that work out in Greece?
 
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