5 days ago
#427480 Quote
Gyeq Presidential Poll-O-Rama, 10/28
Donald Trump faces new questions about his views on workplace sexual harassment. The Republican presidential nominee told the Washington Post Tuesday that a woman facing harassment must take responsibility for how to respond, clarifying his stance from earlier this week. I think it s got to be up to the individual,  Trump said.  It also depends on what s available. There may be a better alternative; then there may not. If there s not a better alternative, then you stay. But it could <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley vaso</a>  be there s a better alternative where you re taken care of better. Donald Trump goes on the offensive against everyoneOn Sunday, he told USA Today if his daughter Ivanka faced harassment,  I would like to think she w <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley canada</a> ould find another career or find another company if that was the case.  In the same interview, Trump seemed to question the women who reportedly accused former Fox News chief Roger Ailes of sexual harassment.                                                                                                        Eric Trump: Ivanka would not  allow  sexual harassment          01:25                   <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pl>stanley polska</a>                                                     But he apparently adjusted his position on sexual harassment after his son, Eric Trump, made comments on  CBS This Morning  Tuesday that sparked a firestorm of criticism, reports CBS News correspondent Julianna Goldman.                                         She wouldn t allow herself to be objected to it,  Eric Trump said of Ivanka.  And by  Ljtt Republican congressman retires after North Carolina redraws gerrymandered map
This March 2010 photo shows a man identified as Jared L. Loughner at the 2010 Tucson Festival of Books in Tucson, Ariz.                                                      AP Photo/A <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.us>stanley cup</a> rizona Daily Star, Mamta Popat                                        Jared Lee Loughner, the young man who allegedly shot Rep. Gabrielle Giffords  D-Ariz.  and killed six others <a href=https://www.stanleymug.us>stanley mug</a>  in Tucson on Saturday, would seem to defy easy categorization. Yet the evidence does provide clues into the mind of a man who even the staunchest partisans should be able to agree held muddled politics far outside the mainstream. It seems clear based on Loughner s YouTube videos and MySpace page that he held a grudge against the U.S. government - and that he had had become obsessed with Giffords <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley becher</a> , the local embodiment of that government. Start with his reading list: As Mark Potok of the Souther Poverty Law Center notes, the central theme running through the books - Mein Kampf, The Communist Manifesto, George Orwell s 1984 and Animal Farm, Ayn Rand s We The Living - is  the individual versus the totalitarian state.   Potok, who follows the far-right fringe, also picked up on the apparent roots of Loughner s suggestions that the government was engaging in mind control through grammar - an antigovernment extremist named David Wynn Miller, who ascribes nefarious intent to, among others, the U.S. Postal Service.                                          David Wynn Miller told Politico he agreed with Loughner s statement in a Yo
0