Talason wrote:jebale ih čiče
Тек ће.
Talason wrote:jebale ih čiče
Biden: MY SON-
— your favorite dad (@malcolmpyeung) September 30, 2020
Trump: pic.twitter.com/D0wYx5cuoy
Talason wrote:meni je neshvatljivo da su ovo kandidati
It's not just that Trump is a bad president. It's that he's a bad person.
— Ezra Klein (@ezraklein) September 30, 2020
2016. sam se pitao zar demokrate nemaju nekog boljeg kandidata od sveomrznute babeTalason wrote:meni je neshvatljivo da su ovo kandidati
Beau Biden was not a loser. pic.twitter.com/hwzlZrjh75
— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) September 30, 2020
absolutely agree with this. I think Biden is both politically and personally a pretty awful guy, but he undeniably loves his kids in a way that’s totally alien to Trump. the only way for him to not get dragged down by Trump in the next 2 debates is more son moments https://t.co/odp9mREFap
— Dank Meme Themed 36th Birthday Party (@ByYourLogic) September 30, 2020
odlicna je teorijazvezda je zivot wrote:absolutely agree with this. I think Biden is both politically and personally a pretty awful guy, but he undeniably loves his kids in a way that’s totally alien to Trump. the only way for him to not get dragged down by Trump in the next 2 debates is more son moments https://t.co/odp9mREFap
— Dank Meme Themed 36th Birthday Party (@ByYourLogic) September 30, 2020
sta mislite o ovoj teoriji? (dobro, znamo da voli ivanku al da ne ulazimo u to)
WATCH: "Macho Man" by the Village People plays as Air Force One rolls up to President Trump's rally in Duluth, MN pic.twitter.com/MQmHlgvm89
— The Hill (@thehill) October 1, 2020
Talason wrote:meni je bilo neshvatljivo da u srbiji kandiduju panića, ćosića, dinar avrama, mićunovića i još ko zna koliko njih kao spas za bilo šta, ako je 65 penzija, onda zdravo, meni na pamet neće pasti da se sa 65 (ako doživim) bavim bilo čim osim ničim, čim se kao čiča trtiš odma nisi pravi čovek za to
imao si 6 decenija da radiš nešto, sad idi da piješ и да чуваш unučiće, prošao je tvoj pik svih talasa
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/09/30/trump-debate-2020-analysis-423916
To Trump, the pivotal moment of the campaign was the second presidential debate. On the second Sunday in October, the Republican nominee arrived in St. Louis a dead man walking. Just 48 hours earlier, the Washington Post had publicized an old recording on which Trump boasted about grabbing women by the genitals. A number of leading Republicans publicly renounced his candidacy. Many more pleaded with the party chairman, Reince Priebus, to remove him from the ticket. The morning before the debate, Priebus warned Trump, “Either you’ll lose in the biggest landslide in history, or you can get out of the race and let somebody else run who can win.”
But the reality TV star wasn’t going to walk away—not from such high drama, not from such huge ratings. In an interview several years later, Trump told me that he viewed the debate as an experiment in “who likes pressure.” Voters wanted to see how a prospective president would handle being tested, being pushed. Trump responded to that pressure. With his back to the wall, facing scrutiny like no presidential hopeful in memory, Trump turned in his strongest stage performance of 2016. He was forceful but controlled. He was steady, unflappable, almost carefree. Even his most noxious lines, such as suggesting that Clinton belonged in jail, were delivered with a smooth cadence and a cool smirk, as if he knew a secret that others didn’t.
“That debate showed that I like pressure, because there was some pressure. What were the odds? Like 50-50, will he show up?” Trump told me. “That debate won me the election.”
I happen to agree with him. At a moment of genuine crisis, with his campaign on the brink of collapse just one month before the election, Trump projected a confidence that became contagious. The calls for his ouster ceased. The party got back to work boosting his candidacy. His poll numbers began to rebound. Trump had passed the pressure test. He had stopped the bleeding in ways that kept his base intact while demonstrating a resiliency, a certain defiance, that was appealing to some voters still on the fence.
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - More than 50 Republican former national security officials will endorse Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden on Thursday, joining one of several Republican organizations opposing the re-election of President Donald Trump.
The group, called Former Republican National Security Officials for Biden, launched in August with 70 members. The new endorsements will bring it to nearly 130 individuals who have publicly broken with the Republican president, including seven who served under Trump, people familiar with the effort said.
Others worked as senior defense and security officials in the administrations of Republican Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush.
Retired Army General Stanley McChrystal, the former commander of U.S. troops in Afghanistan, also endorsed Biden on Thursday during an interview with MSNBC.
McChrystal, who resigned in 2010 after a Rolling Stone article quoted him making unflattering remarks about Biden and other civilian officials, said he always respected Biden and the incident was “more smoke than fire.”
“We have to believe in our values. You have to believe that your commander in chief, at the end of the day, is someone that you can trust, and I can trust Joe Biden,” he said.
The 56 new people in the group endorsing Biden include Greg Brower, a former FBI assistant director; Larry Pfeiffer, a former CIA chief of staff; and Alden Munson, former deputy director of National Intelligence.
The group will start running full-page newspaper ads on Thursday in seven competitive states that will help decide the Nov. 3 election: Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Florida, Arizona, North Carolina and Texas, a person involved in the effort said.
The ad accuses Trump of being unfit to serve as president and of having failed America with his response to the novel coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 200,000 people in the United States and triggered a severe economic downturn.
The group also will run a TV ad during “Fox & Friends,” which Trump is known to watch. The ad features Michael Leiter, former director of the National Counterterrorism Center, accusing Trump of making the United States less safe because of his disregard for facts, his criticism of America’s intelligence officials and his demeaning of U.S. allies.
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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-republicans-biden-exclus/exclusive-over-50-republican-former-u-s-national-security-officials-join-biden-endorsement-idUSKBN26M5F3