- Jun 28, 2004
- 6,971
- 17,045
you
Trump gon' have that fossil fuel energy sector jumpin like da trap at da first of da month.
Yeah, in towns where you aren't allowed to be after sunset.
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you
Trump gon' have that fossil fuel energy sector jumpin like da trap at da first of da month.
you
Trump gon' have that fossil fuel energy sector jumpin like da trap at da first of da month.
Yeah, in towns where you aren't allowed to be after sunset.
only bozos i see are da cry babies that can't handle dissenting opinions that aren't in lockstep with da collective liberal goosh that plagues this thread.
i swear da kotex stock must've gone up da minute some of these snowflakes figured out Trump was gonna take this broad to town on election night
Imma replace my pocket sand with Adobo, so when Ninja catches this fade, it gonna taste like home #bleedat
Nigel Farage plans to move to the United States, even if he doesn’t become the U.K.’s ambassador to Washington.
The UKIP acting leader and MEP told friends that he is preparing to emigrate with his wife, Kirsten, the Times reported Thursday, with friends saying he would feel “freer” on the opposite side of the Atlantic.
Farage made headlines this week after President-elect Donald Trump tweeted that he would do “a great job” as British ambassador to the U.S. That angered the British government, which said there was “no vacancy.”
That came days after Farage became the first British politician to congratulate Trump on his victory in person, with the pair posing outside a golden door at Trump Tower in New York.
Asked about his visit to see the tycoon last week, Farage hinted at relocating to the U.S. “If I were rich I wouldn’t be living in the middle of New York,” he said, “I’d be out in Maine, somewhere coastal.”
On Wednesday night, Farage celebrated his contribution to the Brexit campaign and Trump’s election win at a party at the swanky Ritz hotel in London. It was hosted by UKIP donor Arron Banks.
Farage was presented with a silver salver of Ferrero Rocher, advertised as being the chocolates of choice at diplomatic parties. Addressing guests from the top of a grand staircase, Farage said 2016 “will stand out as one of those great historic years — the election of The Donald was something of a completely different order,” the Times reported.
Farage will visit Trump’s team in Washington in early December, the Telegraph reported late Wednesday.
The HillVerified account@thehill 13h13 hours ago
Trump will relax restrictions to accept corporate donations for inauguration: report http://hill.cm/42cGKMh
DawgThe HillVerified account@thehill 13h13 hours ago
Trump will relax restrictions to accept corporate donations for inauguration: report http://hill.cm/42cGKMh
The HillVerified account@thehill 13h13 hours ago
Trump will relax restrictions to accept corporate donations for inauguration: report http://hill.cm/42cGKMh
Swamp getting deeper ....trump still that "outsider" his supporters wanted ?The HillVerified account@thehill 13h13 hours ago
Trump will relax restrictions to accept corporate donations for inauguration: report http://hill.cm/42cGKMh
The HillVerified account@thehill 13h13 hours ago
Trump will relax restrictions to accept corporate donations for inauguration: report http://hill.cm/42cGKMh
President-elect Donald Trump reportedly turned away the intelligence officials responsible for getting him up to speed on US national security concerns and world affairs, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday night.
Trump, who has been meeting with domestic and international dignitaries in the two weeks since he won the election, has only received two classified intelligence briefings according to the Post, while Vice President-elect Mike Pence reportedly participated in the meetings almost every day.
Post reporters Greg Miller and Adam Entous wrote that Trump got his first classified briefing days after the election, and a second one on Tuesday, before heading to Florida for Thanksgiving.
The intelligence briefing is a summary of feedback from the 16 US intelligence agencies and a roundup of the CIA's secret international operations.
Sources within Trump's transition team who were cited by the Post suggested that, separate from the daily briefings, Trump deems choosing people for national security positions within his administration a priority.
The report follows concerns from within Washington that the president-elect — who has never held public office before — is unprepared for the gravity of daily Oval Office duties.
The Obama administration began nudging the Trump transition team about one such concern on Tuesday, warning that the incoming administration should pay close attention to North Korea, which has grown increasingly belligerent toward the US under its leader, Kim Jong-un.
One unnamed official told the Post "Trump has a lot of catching up to do," while David Priess, a former CIA officer who was on George W. Bush's daily briefing team, said Trump's absence from the meetings "is not unprecedented over the decades-long scope of these briefings."