DIDGORI-GEOეს წაიკითხე და აბზაც-აბზაც გაანალიზე, მერე მიხვდები რაც დაგიწერე წინა ფოსტში
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lobbing rhetorical stink bombs at a large group of voters is not the normal way to get ahead in U.S. politics. Nor is alienating prominent figures of your own party.
But Donald Trump has turned the do's and don'ts of campaigns on their head, prospering with tactics that could sink anyone else.
A review of "Trumpisms" that only Trump could get away with.
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ABOUT THOSE HUDDLED MASSES YEARNING TO BREATHE FREE
After Mitt Romney's 2012 loss to President Barack Obama, the Republican Party went through a period of soul-searching and determined that candidates needed to stop alienating Latino voters if they wanted to recapture the White House.
Enter Trump, who in his announcement speech accused the Mexican government of sending its criminals and rapists across the border and has proposed building a massive border wall and deporting every person in the country illegally.
He's thrived.
Romney, in contrast, earned plenty of grief merely by suggesting that people in the country illegally would deport themselves if the U.S. denied them work and public benefits.
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MOCKING PRISONERS OF WAR
Arizona Sen. John McCain may not be some conservatives' cup of tea, but he nonetheless spent 5 1/2 years as a prisoner of war after his plane was shot down over North Vietnam. He refused to leave, ahead of his fellow prisoners, when given the chance.
Trump, who has accused McCain of doing too little to help veterans, knocked the senator in July, first disputing that he was a hero, then declaring: "He's a war hero 'cause he was captured. I like people that weren't captured, OK?" Even the most partisan Democrats hail McCain's service to his country.
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TAKING ON MEGYN KELLY AND FOX NEWS
Trump was furious at Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly for asking about his history of insulting comments aimed at women during the first GOP debate, and he has not forgiven her in the weeks since.
Trump repeatedly has questioned Kelly's professionalism and went as far as to tell CNN that she had "blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever" during the debate.
The Kelly feud has led to clashes between Trump and Roger Ailes, the Fox News chairman, who has called on Trump to apologize. Republicans tend not to pick a fight with Fox.
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LATE NIGHT TWEETS FROM TRUMP
It's late in the night and all through the house, not a creature is stirring — except Trump. He's developed a habit of logging onto Twitter in the wee hours to deliver an assortment of broadsides, often at the previous evening's cable news shows.
While other candidates might be sunk by petty name-calling and a hair-trigger reaction to what is said about them, that seems to slide off Teflon Trump.
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FLIP-FLOPPING
Flip-flopping is trouble for most politicians, but Trump has done it merrily and with apparent impunity. He has shrugged off his old support for abortion rights and a single-payer health care system, and his former identification with the Democratic Party, with that-was-then-this-is-now nonchalance.
Trump says conservative darling Ronald Reagan was once a Democrat, too, and Trump says he shouldn't be held accountable for past views.
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UNSAVORY SUPPORT
Two brothers were on their way home from a Boston Red Sox game when, police said, they brutally beat a sleeping homeless man who is Hispanic. One later allegedly justified the attack by saying Trump "was right" about deporting "all these illegals."
While he eventually denounced the incident, Trump's initial response was tepid. "I think that would be a shame," he said, before adding: "I will say, the people that are following me are very passionate. They love this country. They want this country to be great again. And they are very passionate."
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http://bigstory.ap.org/article/0c5643730da...se-6-trumpisms#
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ესეც ნახე, როგორ შეუდო მიკი რეიგანმა ტრამპს მამაისის არასათანადოდ მოხსენიებისთვის და მისი სახლით ამნიპულირებისათვის
Author and columnist Michael Reagan wondered if his father, former president Ronald Reagan would be considered a RINO, and stated of GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, “if this keeps going forward, my father may actually say, ‘You know, the party left me. I didn’t leave the party'” on Friday’s “Alan Colmes Show” on Fox News Radio.
Reagan stated that his father wouldn’t be giving the same message as current GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump on deporting illegal immigrants in the US, and that Ronald Reagan wouldn’t deport people covered under the DREAM Act. He continued, “what Ronald Reagan would do, is he would call everybody together, and say, ‘Bring out the immigration bill. Let’s look at the areas we agree on. Okay, give me that piece of legislation. I’ll sign it. The things we disagree with, we’ll get together the next time, and we’ll talk about those things.’ You’ve got to work with the other side, I don’t care if you agree or disagree with the other side.”
Reagan added, “it’s like we’re always looking for an enemy,” and that the enemy was previously Communism, and now the enemy “has become the illegals that are in here.” And “I don’t agree with the illegals in here. I think something needs to be done, but you’re not going to round up 11 million people and throw them out of the United States of America –.”
Reagan also said he likes any of the current or former governors among the current GOP presidential field. He specifically addressed the criticisms that Ohio Governor John Kasich and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush weren’t conservative enough, stating, “we find more reasons to throw people under the bus, or off the bus than find ways to bring them in. We don’t look at all the good that they’ve done in their respective states. … You know, if Ronald Reagan were to run today, and you only knew him as governor of the state of California, would he be referred to as a RINO? I mean, he raised taxes, signed an abortion bill, no-fault divorce, and my God, he was a union leader.” And “as president, he signed the amnesty bill. But before that — and that’s what we’re doing anymore, we’re trying to find ways not to support people, than ways to support people. Ronald Reagan had the 80/20 rule. Now, it’s the 100% on my side, or I’m not with you at all. We have to find ways to embrace people and to be inclusive. This party, the Ronald Reagan Republican Party was more inclusive when he was the head of it than, in fact, it is today. Today, it seems to be more of an angry party. I’m sorry, but when you’ve got — when Ann Coulter’s your spokesman on immigration — the fact is, if — you can’t go across this country and find a Hispanic that doesn’t love Ronald Reagan. You can also not go across this country and find a Hispanic that likes the Republican Party, because the only voice they here is, ‘Get the hell out of my country.'”
Reagan did criticize former Arkansas Governor and GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, saying he was running to be “pastor-in-chief,” and that his dad would have followed the law, and that you can’t pick and choose which Supreme Court rulings to follow. He continued, “I think he [Huckabee] said [Dred Scott is still the law of the land], and he also said the Constitution was written — was divinely inspired. I thought that was the Bible. … I — you sit there, and sometimes you just shake your head. And what happens in these — the political realm, he is reaching out to a certain segment, within the conservative movement, Christian movement, that all buys into that, and he’s hoping they show up in Iowa.”
Reagan further commented on Trump, and expressed his concern that if Trump wins the nomination, he would fail to attract support. And that it’s “scary to me” that “somebody who can malign and say the things he says about other Republicans on that stage, and you have people out there who, in fact, support that. My father — at the end of the day, if this keeps going forward, my father may actually say, ‘You know, the party left me. I didn’t leave the party.'”
The discussion then turned to the Democratic side of the presidential race, Reagan commented, “This country right now, needs an elder statesmen, and that is Joe Biden.” He also stated that both parties need an “elder statesman.”
http://www.breitbart.com/video/2015/09/12/...will-leave-him/კარგად მოუსმინე