Originally posted by blueeyedboy:[..]
It always astonished me the numbskulls who think Castro and Che Guevara were some kind of iconic heroes...
Originally posted by blueeyedboy:[..]
It always astonished me the numbskulls who think Castro and Che Guevara were some kind of iconic heroes...
Originally posted by bartajax:[..]
Wanna know why a lot of people voted Trump? Or should I say against Clinton? Your last statement. People are sick and tired of always being called a racist just because they aren't agreeing on something that is made to be socially accepted.
Originally posted by ahn1991:For the record, when you see someone speaking a language other than English and you tell them to go back to where they came from, that's not normal. That's racist.
Originally posted by LikeASong:[..]
They were iconic, no doubt about it. Heroes or villains depends more on each one's opinions on them, but iconic for sure.
Originally posted by amansman:[..]
No thats called Nationalism. Americans inferring anyone that doesnt speak English is from another country. Again not Racism
Originally posted by amansman:[..]
No thats called Nationalism. Americans inferring anyone that doesnt speak English is from another country. Again not Racism
Originally posted by ahn1991:[..]
This doesn't make any sense. If people are sick and tired for being called a racist, why would they vote for a candidate who has made remarks considered to be racist by everyone, including his own party, his own campaign, and his own running mate? To me it seems like these people want to double-down on their racism. It's like a racist coming-out party. They figure everyone is going to call them racists anyways, so they might as well go all the way.
Originally posted by ahn1991:[..]
No, I'm pretty sure that's racism. Thinking that anyone who doesn't match an exact racial profile doesn't belong in your country is a pretty textbook case of racism.
Also, you bring up the birther movement that Clinton brought up in 2008, but if you decided to fact check that, you'd realize it was mentioned by Clinton in 2008, but did not originate with her. Also, she quickly dismissed the Birther idea in 2008 while it's 2016 and Trump still thinks Obama is not an American citizen. Everything you are citing about Clinton dates from before 2010. I can give you a laundry list of questionable remarks Trump has made looking at just the past few months.
But hey, I guess people are willing to believe anything if they believe Trump's claim of massive voter fraud, even though the only legitimate case of voter fraud found ironically involves a Trump supporter attempting to vote twice.