Spindrift
Time Person of the Year, 2006
Every time I've seen Conway interviewed, it reminds me of a kidnap victim being forced to read a statement with a gun pointed at her head off camera.
Has she been blinking in morse code?
Every time I've seen Conway interviewed, it reminds me of a kidnap victim being forced to read a statement with a gun pointed at her head off camera.
Has she been blinking in morse code?
Lotta mispeakin' coming from Trump spokesfolks.
Obviously they didn't really 'mean' Atlanta. We need some of Trump's translators to jump in and tell us which city they really meant.
Metaphorical Atlanta.
Alternate Atlanta.
Obviously they didn't really 'mean' Atlanta. We need some of Trump's translators to jump in and tell us which city they really meant.
I get it, the problem was grammar.The post was perfectly clear to me; the BBC do not support the Trump administration's claim that terrorist attacks have been under-reported in the media, and demonstrated this lack of support by linking to their coverage of all (except, I think, one) of the attacks listed that actually happened, and pointing out the nonexistence of the ones that were simply made up. If you read the first link in Planigale's post, it's clear what it is: a very thorough and rigorous debunking of the Trump administration's claim.
Don't look too hard for enemies. It causes friendly fire incidents.
Dave
That was highlighted. Followed by this:SG said:White House List Contradicts Trump Claim That Terror Attacks Go Unreported
Planigale said:Well the BBC do not support this.
Oh, well.![]()
If you were to describe Guy Fawkes as the person behind the parliament massacre, would you be being imprecise, or would you be lying?...
I would say that if you were not actually lying, you were so woefully imprecise, ignorant and unprepared as to disqualify you from commenting on it.
I would expect anyone commenting on Guy Fawkes to have some basic knowledge of what happened there, and otherwise to say "I don't know" rather than making stuff up. And a person not so informed would have to be pretty stupid to think others are equally uninformed, and dishonest to try to get away with it. I am not entirely sure why you are so insistent on trying to save Conway's bacon here, but it seems to amount to a choice between dishonesty trimmed with stupidity and stupidity trimmed with dishonesty.
<snip.
So let's take an average undecided voter. Maybe he voted for Trump, but really just against Hillary. We want him to vote for a Democrat in 2018, or at least to question his vote of 2016. How will he react to the hubbub?
Well, he's going to read a headline that says she invented a massacre. If he reads no further, I guess that's a win for our side. He thinks they are making stuff up. On the other hand, if he reads further and finds that there was no massacre, but there were two terrorists who killed Americans and planned to kill more, what's his reaction then? I think his reaction is, "Donald Trump is trying to stop scum like that from coming into the country, and all the Democrats can do is whine that she said something about a massacre, when what they meant was that they had prevented a massacre. Those Democrats are idiots."
That's the way I see it, anyway. I don't know. I don't do marketing, so maybe it plays better than I think it does.
In other words there's nothing to be done but "lie back and think of the Queen."?
In other words there's nothing to be done but "lie back and think of the Queen."?
In this particular case, if people knew the truth about "the Bowling Green Massacre", it would probably be a win for Trump. So don't go there. Talk about that little Iranian girl who needed heart surgery. That's a winning issue.