Hillary Clinton once said that she wants to ?keep track?

Skulnik

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Democratic presidential hopeful and New York Senator Hillary Clinton as she campaigns 30 December 2007 in advance of the 03 January Iowa Caucus at Pineview Elementary School in Iowa Falls, Iowa. AFP PHOTO/Stan HONDA (Photo credit should read
Stan Honda/AFP/Getty Images

by Patrick Howley24 Nov 2015899


Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton once said that she wants to ?keep track? of all the illegal immigrants in the United States, to prevent terrorist attacks.

Speaking at an Iowa town hall during her previous presidential campaign in November 2007, Clinton pitched an idea similar to a database for illegals to stop another potential terrorist attack like 9/11.

Clinton?s statement, made years before Republican candidates Donald Trump and Ben Carson drew fire for supposedly favoring a database of some kind to track possible terrorists, further confuses Clinton?s immigration stance as it applies to national security concerns.

?So what are our options? I think you?re not going to be able to get people to come out of the shadows if you say if they come out of the shadows then you?re going to deport them. And so therefore you?ve got to give them some sanctions, penalties, fines, but bring them out so we know who?s here,? Clinton said then.

?I feel really strongly about this because, you know, some of those hijackers who flew those planes into the World Trade Center, they came here legally and they overstayed so they were here illegally and we didn?t have a clue. I want to know who?s in this country. I want to keep track of them,? Clinton said.


So bring them out of the shadows. If they ever committed a crime, either in the country they came from or in this country, deport them immediately no questions asked. If they?ve been here and been lawful, then I think they?ve got to pay fines, they?ve got to pay back taxes, they?ve got to try to learn English, and they?ve got to wait in line, they can?t get ahead of anybody else who?s been here legally and waited. And they have to stay out of trouble, and keep working, and be law-abiding, and maybe in ten or fifteen years they can get legalization.

The Clinton campaign did not immediately return a request for comment as to whether Clinton still holds this policy position in 2015.
 

THE KOD

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Rick Wilson, a Florida GOP strategist who has agreed to help produce TV ads for Mair?s group if it raises funding, told The Hill, ?I expected that the other candidates and campaigns would by now have stepped up to knock down Trump?s numbers, and I was wrong. Unlike Donald Trump, I will admit when I have made an error.?

But Wilson added that capsizing the businessman?s chances at this point would require a significant financial effort.

?It?s going to need a sustained commitment from people who need to understand that if you hand the Republican nomination to Donald Trump, you hand the White House to Hillary Clinton,? he said.

Some experts still contend that Trump will fall of his own accord, or that his current poll ratings will prove deceptive. Statistician Nate Silver, of the FiveThirtyEight website, has argued that the majority of voters only make their decisions much closer to polling time.

Others have cited the 2012 cycle, when several Republican candidates? stars rose and faded, to suggest that Trump will lose altitude before the first votes are cast.

Silver?s thesis seems to rest on the idea that late-deciding voters will make completely different choices than those who have already tuned in to the process ? a supposition that may be true but is unproven for now.

As for 2012, while it is true that former Speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.) was leading the RCP average at the equivalent point to now, that was to be a relatively short-lived phenomenon, just as earlier boomlets for candidates such as then-Rep. Michele Bachmann (Minn.) and businessman Herman Cain had proved to be.

In fact, the consistency of Trump?s polling performance this cycle has more in common with the steady showing of eventual 2012 nominee Mitt Romney than anyone else.

Other anti-Trump forces within the GOP hold out hope that as the field winnows, the whole dynamic of the race will shift, with primary voters coalescing around a different option.

But none of that is guaranteed. Trump remains as bullishly confident as ever. And Republican insiders know the hour is getting late.

?If Trump is not your cup of tea, it?s time to bring your own coffee pot out and start brewing something,? said Robinson.
.......................................................

Hillary close now with her billion to spend.

Trump gets trampled and its 8 long years


at least she is white huh ronnie boy
 

Skulnik

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Mar 30, 2007
21,751
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Jefferson City, Missouri
Rick Wilson, a Florida GOP strategist who has agreed to help produce TV ads for Mair?s group if it raises funding, told The Hill, ?I expected that the other candidates and campaigns would by now have stepped up to knock down Trump?s numbers, and I was wrong. Unlike Donald Trump, I will admit when I have made an error.?

But Wilson added that capsizing the businessman?s chances at this point would require a significant financial effort.

?It?s going to need a sustained commitment from people who need to understand that if you hand the Republican nomination to Donald Trump, you hand the White House to Hillary Clinton,? he said.

Some experts still contend that Trump will fall of his own accord, or that his current poll ratings will prove deceptive. Statistician Nate Silver, of the FiveThirtyEight website, has argued that the majority of voters only make their decisions much closer to polling time.

Others have cited the 2012 cycle, when several Republican candidates? stars rose and faded, to suggest that Trump will lose altitude before the first votes are cast.

Silver?s thesis seems to rest on the idea that late-deciding voters will make completely different choices than those who have already tuned in to the process ? a supposition that may be true but is unproven for now.

As for 2012, while it is true that former Speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.) was leading the RCP average at the equivalent point to now, that was to be a relatively short-lived phenomenon, just as earlier boomlets for candidates such as then-Rep. Michele Bachmann (Minn.) and businessman Herman Cain had proved to be.

In fact, the consistency of Trump?s polling performance this cycle has more in common with the steady showing of eventual 2012 nominee Mitt Romney than anyone else.

Other anti-Trump forces within the GOP hold out hope that as the field winnows, the whole dynamic of the race will shift, with primary voters coalescing around a different option.

But none of that is guaranteed. Trump remains as bullishly confident as ever. And Republican insiders know the hour is getting late.

?If Trump is not your cup of tea, it?s time to bring your own coffee pot out and start brewing something,? said Robinson.
.......................................................

Hillary close now with her billion to spend.

Trump gets trampled and its 8 long years


at least she is white huh ronnie boy

Scott, i'm surprised at you, you like her because she's WHITE?

xstop

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THE KOD

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Scott, i'm surprised at you, you like her because she's WHITE?

xstop

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no but you will not have the race card to play with her as President.

I hate the bitch.

But facts are facts.

she steamrolls Trump

and Trump is still threatening to go third party . :142smilie
 
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