Cenk & John. Bob Corker’s empathy for Trump’s crusade. Sessions probing Uranium One. Roy Moore attacking Doug Jones results w/crazy reposts. Inauguration day acquittal. UN results.
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Comments
See Cenk got Wolfpac and Justice Dems funding before SJWs ruined the Political REVOLUTION….
Guatemala, Honduras, Togo PROBABLY r politically controlled by Corporate America…..
The Marshall Islands, Micronesia(Nauru & Palau is part of this Confederation? so y do they have a vote separate from their confederation?!). Are all under U.S. political control heavy as U.S. Territories(cough “Colonies”) unlike Puerto Rico, Gaum who r not looked as equals to other U.S. territories….so this can help y some of the Nine voted this way….
Does anybody know the song at 20:09?
I took Canada’s abstension to be a way of telling Trump to shut up; he’s going too far with the threats. Canada would risk offending its own trading partners by supporting US economic bullying.
Cell-phBoned
Roy Moore’s thoughts about democratic money and back and latino voters reminds me of something from Quebec politics. Jacques Perizeau blamed Quebec voting to stay in Canada during that referendum on “l’argent et des votes ethniques” (“money and ethnic votes”). Just struck me as interesting.
I was living in Quebec at the time of that referendum and remember it well…it was down to the wire and the nationalists squeaked a win. Parizeau’s statements at the time reflected a fear that “true Quebecois” were “losing their culture” to immigrants, and although his statements regarding “l’argent et les votes ethniques” weren’t necessarily inaccurate, they struck me as paranoid at the time. I now understand that there was a ton of money poured into the “No” campaign as it was in no one’s best interest to see Quebec separate…at least from an economic perspective. Being in the military at the time, what I found more interesting was the fracturing of the Canadian Armed Forces along linguistic (and arguably cultural) lines. As one close colleague said to me, “I love Canada, but I’m also Quebecois”. Had the “Yes” side won, the consequences would have been interesting to say the least…many Quebecois in the military voted “yes”, and more than one was ready to join the “Quebec Armed Forces” the very next day. As an anglophone living and working in Valcartier, PQ I was warned that the day following a “yes” victory, I might not want to come to work but perhaps take an “extended period of leave” until the situation became clearer. At the time, we were bogged down in Bosnia, and more than one person I worked with thought “Didn’t it happen like this over there?”
Hadn’t heard a military perspective before. I’m glad Canada has moved past that (for now), but divisive politics can happen anywhere. It’s important to remember that, stay vigilant and support our neighbours through tough times.