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Government Privacy Republicans United States Politics

Will Trump's Presidency Bring More Surveillance To The US? (scmagazine.com) 412

An anonymous reader reports that Donald Trump's upcoming presidency raises a few concerns for the security industry: "Some of his statements that industry professionals find troubling are his calls for 'closing parts of the Internet', his support for mass surveillance, and demands that Apple should have helped the FBI break the encrypted communications of the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone," writes SC Magazine. One digital rights activist even used Trump's surprise victory as an opportunity to suggest President Obama begin "declassifying and dismantling as much of the federal government's unaccountable, secretive, mass surveillance state as he can -- before Trump is the one running it... he has made it very clear exactly how he would use such powers: to target Muslims, immigrant families, marginalized communities, political dissidents, and journalists."

Edward Snowden's lawyer says "I think many Americans are waking up to the fact we have created a presidency that is too powerful," and the Verge adds that Pinboard CEO Maciej Ceglowski is now urging tech sites to stop collecting so much data. "According to Ceglowski, the only sane response to a Trump presidency was to get rid of as much stored user data as possible. 'If you work at Google or Facebook,' he wrote on Pinboard's Twitter account, 'please start a meaningful internal conversation about giving people tools to scrub their behavioral data.'"

Could a Trump presidency ultimately lead to a massive public backlash against government surveillance?
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Will Trump's Presidency Bring More Surveillance To The US?

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  • Yes! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mitreya ( 579078 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <ayertim>> on Sunday November 13, 2016 @08:46AM (#53275279)
    Yes he will
    But so would have Clinton.
    • by Tesen ( 858022 )

      Yes he will

      But so would have Clinton.

      Yes to both, but to varying degrees and different implementations. We will see first hand and history will tell us what President-Elect Trump will do/has done. As for Secretary Clinton, it is all speculation with very little basis in reality as to what she would have done, but 100% sure yes, she would have too.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        "As for Secretary Clinton, it is all speculation with very little basis in reality as to what she would have done, but 100% sure yes, she would have too."

        Errr...you do realize you've contradicted yourself in one sentence, yes?

        • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:50AM (#53275433) Journal

          They didn't contradict themselves; they *certainly* did. :)

          Seriously though I took it as not contradictory meaning:
          --
          We can only speculate.
          I'm willing to speculate that she almost certainly would have.
          --

          She's actually been in politics, observable by the public, since 1977. In those 39 years, she has manifested a belief that the elites like her are better than common plebes. No more reason they shouldn't watch us than a parent shouldn't watch a six year old; based on what her view seems to be.

          Trump's public life has been all about drumming up publicity for his buildings and his brand, not about policy. I doubt he's thought much about public policy at all. He DOES have a huge ego. Such a big ego that he thinks a) he should be president and b) most of America will agree he should be president. Unfortunately all presidents have that megalomania.

          • by Tesen ( 858022 )

            They didn't contradict themselves; they *certainly* did. :)

            Seriously though I took it as not contradictory meaning:
            --
            We can only speculate.
            I'm willing to speculate that she almost certainly would have.
            --

            Close. She does have a history of availing herself of government surveillance and in this day and age it is a certainty that any president will avail themselves of surveillance, but to what extent is speculation for Clinton, as for Trump we are going to live through it :)

          • Trump thinks "policy" is what police do. No fear of any policy making from his side.

            He may or may not take action, but you can be jolly sure it will not be preceded by any planning - or even thinking.

            • Trump lacks public policy experience. That's a big problem.

              He built a $2 billion dollar business empire, with one of his first projects being razing rail yards and building a whole new neighborhood around his new luxury hotel. He can and does plan a project, quite well.

              • He built a $2 billion dollar business empire

                If Trump's business empire is only worth $2 billion, instead of the $4 billion that he claims, then he's an even worse businessman than we thought. Starting with $200 million 40 years ago, $2 billion now would be far below average for the stock market, whereas $4 billion is only slightly below average.

        • by Tesen ( 858022 )

          "As for Secretary Clinton, it is all speculation with very little basis in reality as to what she would have done, but 100% sure yes, she would have too."

          Errr...you do realize you've contradicted yourself in one sentence, yes?

          Badly worded on my part. The extent and type of surveillance that a Clinton administration would undertake is speculation at this point, but like prior administrations and the history of her, it would have been a 100% certainty that surveillance would be a cornerstone of her defense platform. In this day and age it is extremely difficult for it not to be.

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            > The extent and type of surveillance that a Clinton administration would undertake is speculation at this point,

            I'm afraid that former Secretary Clinton's party beliefs have been fairly clear, we saw them during her husband's administration. We also saw, with her email on a private server, that she's willing to ignore existing law, basic security practice, and a concern for setting safe precedents for IT in the name of political expediency.

            I expect Mr. Trump to be _much worse_ because he's a political "

          • by fyngyrz ( 762201 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @10:29AM (#53275565) Homepage Journal

            Clinton is of the same party, and has made a number of statements that align her closely with President Obama.

            President Obama (re)imposed the (un)PATRIOT(ic) act on the US; if that doesn't give you a guiding sense of where the party is, and very likely where Mrs. Clinton is in terms of invasive surveillance, imposition on personal liberty, and constitutional malfeasance, I don't know what would.

            Not to say President-elect Trump is likely to be any better, but inasmuch as his campaign was riddled with trivially disproved falsehoods, and in just the few days since the election, we've seen (at least) these radical pivots from him and/or his team...

            o Not getting rid of pre-existing conditions or the ACA as a whole;
            o Not dumping the banksters (met with them already to kill Dodd–Frank consumer protections)
            o Not cleaning house (already hiring the most in- of the in-movers and shakers and lobbyists, for his team)
            o Not actually building a wall, that was just figurative;
            o No special prosecutor for Clinton ("what a great campaign she ran!");
            o Making nice with President Obama after explicitly claiming he was the worst president ever;
            o The whole "no-ties with Russia" thing, oops, lots of ties, plus wikileaks admitted by the Russians now;
            o Going from "ultra-vet all Muslims at the border" to "we will not allow people in from terrorist regions"

            ...I don't see any way to associate his previously asserted goals with his actual intent. So I can't say he'd be any worse, either. The man is a policy cypher. A misogynist, xenophobic, sexist, rude, compulsive, racist, and frankly, none-too-bright policy-cypher with a grade school vocabulary and the rhetorical (lack of) skills of (at best) a 7th grader. Who knows what the heck he will do if the EC lets this farce come to fruition?

            What a weird set of circumstances.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Trump likes digging up dirt on people and threatened to put his political rival in jail (let's see if he was lying). This is exactly what people were warning about.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        She should be in jail. She broke the law in ways that would have had the average person in jail for a very, very long time.

      • Re:Yes! (Score:5, Funny)

        by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:49AM (#53275431)

        Trump likes digging up dirt on people and threatened to put his political rival in jail (let's see if he was lying). This is exactly what people were warning about.

        Come on now folks. This too shall pass. If we look at Germany, they had a few rough years from the late 30's to mid 40's. But today Germany is a pretty darn nice place.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Opportunist ( 166417 )

          At least 6 million people [wikipedia.org] would disagree that it's gonna pass...

          • At least 6 million people [wikipedia.org] would disagree that it's gonna pass...

            side notes - I'm really disappointed. Now not only is the wall not going to happen, apparently he's got more important things to focus on than putting his opponent in jail. Pepe' might not like this!

            Pull up a lawn chair, sit a spell, and enjoy some popcorn bro, what kinda beer you want? I even have Tequila and bourbon in case you want to do shots. The wife is making tacos too.

        • East Germany had it rough for a little bit beyond the mid 40s, too.
      • Re:Yes! (Score:5, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:50AM (#53275435)

        Trump likes digging up dirt on people and threatened to put his political rival in jail (let's see if he was lying). This is exactly what people were warning about.

        I guess that's why people are sitting in US military prisons for doing less than Hillary right. Never mind that team Obama and the IRS actually went after people for not having the right viewpoint. Or that in multiple states that democrats and AG's wanted to prosecute people for daring to have a point of view contrary to the orthodoxy on global warming.

      • >"Trump likes digging up dirt on people and threatened to put his political rival in jail (let's see if he was lying). This is exactly what people were warning about."

        By "people", you mean Hillary? Yep, that is what candidates do. And yeah, it is called justice in her case, if it happens. She probably should be in jail. Of course, he probably should be too, but that is a different story.

    • Re:Yes! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:06AM (#53275317)

      +1 exactly.

      This is why so many of us are upset about the process. WE DON'T HAVE ENOUGH CHOICE. We end up having to elect people based on conflicting single issues. But when both candidates share the same negatives, and surveillance is just one, you lose, regardless.

      There is ZERO doubt that Hilary Clinton would bring more surveillance. Same with Trump. She would have been all sneaky about it and probably lie about it too. He will more likely be loud and annoying about it.

      • There is ZERO doubt that Hilary Clinton would bring more surveillance. Same with Trump. She would have been all sneaky about it and probably lie about it too. He will more likely be loud and annoying about it.

        Although he still desperately needs his twitter account taken out of his tiny hands, Trump has been substantially quieter than usual. I suspect the volume will be pretty selective.

      • Yes but out of the two, the chances are that Trump would do less than Clinton simply because of the politics in place.

        If Clinton were elected, she would have full support of the Democrat base regardless on what craziness she would propose, and the Republicians would bow to the media pressure to pass anything she would want in congress.

        Trump is a totally different matter. Democrats and most of the media will never support anything he proposes even if it was a democrat issue, and many Republicans don't suppor

        • Re:Yes! (Score:5, Informative)

          by breech1 ( 137095 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @12:06PM (#53275923)

          Trump is a totally different matter. Democrats and most of the media will never support anything he proposes even if it was a democrat issue, and many Republicans don't support him either. If he does anything out of the ordinary he will be impeached faster than the news media can say "Trump is Grand Wizard Adolf Stalin."

          I've seen that line of thinking before and I think it's wishful thinking. The Republicans that were against Trump did so only because they thought he was damaging their election chances. But Trump won. And now Republicans will line up behind him to support whatever he wants. There might be some intraparty squabbling, but that will only be over the scale of an idea. As for impeachment, that'll never happen. Democrats won't have a majority in the House anytime soon to force the issue and Republicans won't impeach one of their one.

          • Don't forget that a successful impeachment results in President Pence, who, might actually be worse than Trump.
    • Losing their minds (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:08AM (#53275321)

      Will a Trump Presidency cause Slashdot editors to lose their minds and post story after story on how a Trump Presidency will affect (insert pet cause here)

      • by seven of five ( 578993 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @10:14AM (#53275509)
        Slashdot has editors????
    • Agreed. Food for thought:

      Since we are hurtling down this slope to forfeit our privacy, primarily as a volunteer operation, which candidate would have slowed the roll?

      It's too late this time, and there may exist issues more important to you and yours than an overreaching government... but students of history are probably correct that we should concern ourselves with this issue.

      The people in power, regardless of their political affiliation, love their surveillance state. Who could we have elected that would

    • IMHO this is the result of decades of people saying "don't throw your vote away by voting third party."
      Of course the US election system isn't good at rewarding for voting third party.
      Possibly single transferable vote would be better.
      • Re:Yes! (Score:5, Informative)

        by FlyHelicopters ( 1540845 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:48AM (#53275421)

        IMHO this is the result of decades of people saying "don't throw your vote away by voting third party."

        And they are all correct, in our First Past the Post election system, you ARE throwing away your vote by doing that...

        If you want to change it, you have to change the election system.

        • By voting for the two major parties no matter what you are sending a message that they can put up the two most disliked candidates and you will vote for them any way.
          I agree that the problem is the election process. But how are you ever going to change that?
          The two major parties have 0 incentive to change it.
        • by Z80a ( 971949 )

          Well, technically speaking, the lib party will have federal funding the next time around thanks to how many votes it got this time around, and may even have a shot of growing more and more, and maybe in 2-3 elections get a real shot at a president.

        • IMHO this is the result of decades of people saying "don't throw your vote away by voting third party."

          And they are all correct, in our First Past the Post election system, you ARE throwing away your vote by doing that...

          If you want to change it, you have to change the election system.

          In what sense? Do you mean that by voting for a third party you threw away your vote because your candidate couldn't win? I would say the same applies to voting for Hillary Clinton. The election results are clear evidence that she couldn't win. Maybe you mistakenly believed that she could, but if so, reality proves you were wrong. By voting for Clinton you voted for just as much of a losing candidate as Johnson or Stein or any of the others.

          There's no second place in a US Presidential election. If you didn'

    • by elrous0 ( 869638 )

      Yes he will
      But so would have Clinton.

      Thank you! Surveillance isn't a Republican or Democrat thing, it's a power thing. And EVERY President wants more power, no matter what they say on the campaign trail.

    • I think Trump's enough of a loose cannon that there's actually a reasonable (small, but non-zero) chance that we see Snowden pardoned.

    • Yes he will

      But so would have Clinton.

      Is drinking a glass of rat poison bad for your health?

      Yes it is.

      But so is a Pepsi!

      This kind of false equivalency is one of the things that got Trump elected.

      Now we don't know exactly what Trump would do, he's never had a job remotely like President, but we do know he openly praises authoritarians for doing authoritarian things, doesn't think much of constitutional restrictions, and is very vindictive.

      I think it's very likely that he'll want to use the surveillance apparatus to go after political and persona

  • Funny how that works (Score:5, Interesting)

    by IWantMoreSpamPlease ( 571972 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @08:47AM (#53275281) Homepage Journal

    >>...suggest President Obama begin "declassifying and dismantling as much of the federal government's unaccountable, secretive, mass surveillance state as he can -- before Trump is the one running it..

    When Obama got into power, I assumed he'd be the typical liberal. Little did I know he'd get very friendly with the expansion of the police state. He's enjoyed using the presidential powers at whim. Now that he's leaving, someone else gets to pick up the parts he so willingly put into place and use them.

    Should have thought of that before you put it into law eh there mr. president?

    • by Salo2112 ( 628590 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @08:55AM (#53275297)
      The typical liberal is perfectly happy with concentrating power in the state - as long as they are running the state. This is why the American left thinks the right to keep and bear arms is not an individual right.

      >>...suggest President Obama begin "declassifying and dismantling as much of the federal government's unaccountable, secretive, mass surveillance state as he can -- before Trump is the one running it..

      When Obama got into power, I assumed he'd be the typical liberal. Little did I know he'd get very friendly with the expansion of the police state.

      • by jbengt ( 874751 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:11AM (#53275329)

        The typical person is perfectly happy with concentrating power in the state - as long as they are running the state.

        FTFY

      • by haruchai ( 17472 )

        "The typical liberal is perfectly happy with concentrating power in the state - as long as they are running the state"
        Liberals have never been in control of the US Gov

        • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

          Liberals have never been in control of the US Gov

          Well somewhat right. The democrats for example are much closer to authoritarians and anti-constitutionalists then liberals. Hillary proposed restricting the 2nd amendment for example through XO's. Establishment republicans aren't any better, many of them hold anti-constitutionalist views as well and are more then happy to work with the democrats as long as it either gets them more power, or more power for the people who helped fund their campaigns...just like democrats. Both establishment democrats and

      • It looks like you and GP disagree, but you both bring up good points.

        > The typical liberal is perfectly happy with concentrating power in the state - as long as they are running the state

        Indeed. I posted here many times years ago reminding them that allowing President Clinton and then President Obama more amd more power meant that President Palin or President Trump would have more power soon. The nanny state doesn't seem so attractive when the nanny isn't someone you like.

        > When Obama got into powe

    • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:08AM (#53275319)

      Here's Glenn Greenwald's editorial [washingtonpost.com] on it. Dems were OK with surveillance and unchecked government power starting the day Obama was nominated.

      You say "typical liberal" as if that's a genuine belief system and not just a storytelling style designed to persuade a specific subculture.

      • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @01:15PM (#53276223)

        You say "typical liberal" as if that's a genuine belief system and not just a storytelling style designed to persuade a specific subculture.

        We really need some indication for distinguishing US "liberal" from actual "liberal" in discussions. US "liberals" jettisoned economic liberalism a century ago, and have gradually shed personal and social liberalism over the last half century. US "liberalism" has become some kind of authoritarian technocratic progressive welfare state; it is the antithesis of actual liberalism.

    • by haruchai ( 17472 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:10AM (#53275327)

      >>...suggest President Obama begin "declassifying and dismantling as much of the federal government's unaccountable, secretive, mass surveillance state as he can -- before Trump is the one running it..

      When Obama got into power, I assumed he'd be the typical liberal. Little did I know he'd get very friendly with the expansion of the police state. He's enjoyed using the presidential powers at whim. Now that he's leaving, someone else gets to pick up the parts he so willingly put into place and use them.

      Should have thought of that before you put it into law eh there mr. president?

      The only way Obama could have been considered a liberal is if he was being compared to hardline conservative. Just because the GOP loudmouths were labeling him a socialist for months before he was elected didn't make it true.

      • Obama is No true Scottsman? That's your defense of him keeping or expanding everything Bush did that was evil (and a continuation of Clinton) Really? Is that how you dance around Guantanamo not being closed too? He's had an executive order for everything else, but couldn't lift a pen in eight years? (I remember that being a big thing Bush was demonized for that Obama was going to fix just as soon as he took office - as breathlessly reported in the media)

        I don't see a reason to excuse Republicans for using
        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Obama is No true Scottsman .

          No, he's from the centrist wing of the Democratic party. Which doesn't "defend" anything; it just explains where his positions come from,e.g. like on energy, which was very bullish on production including DAPL. You might not have read the news but the US became a net exporter of energy in 2016.

        • by haruchai ( 17472 )

          "If it's ok when your team does it - if you're only sorry that they got caught"

          Holy crap, you've lost your fucking mind! I'd quote your entire post but your lunacy may be infectious.
          I stated that Obama is not & has never been a liberal. That's all. Period.
          And he's never considered himself one either.
          If you look, you'll find him speaking with Elizabeth Warren (2010, 2011?) about consumer protection and pursuing the Wall St fraudsters where he gets exasperated with her and starts a sentence with "you libe

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      What's more likely is that he got the real security briefing and was frightened.

    • This is why liberals didn't like him. Conservatives didn't like him because he was black.
    • "When Obama got into power, I assumed he'd be the typical liberal. Little did I know he'd get very friendly with the expansion of the police state."

      That's like saying:

      "When Tom got into banking, I assumed he'd be the typical banker. Little did I know he'd like to work with money."

      or

      "When Paul got into boxing, I assumed he'd be the typical boxer. Little did I know he'd really enjoy hitting people."

      When have liberals (the modern, government expanding kind) ever been shy about expanding the power of the police

    • When Obama got into power, I assumed he'd be the typical liberal. Little did I know he'd get very friendly with the expansion of the police state.

      Obama claimed to be a "liberal" (in the traditional sense). He turned out to be a progressive, and progressives favor police states; mass surveillance and suppression of dissent is the only way a progressive political program can be implemented.

  • by blibbo ( 928752 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @08:50AM (#53275287)
    There already should be public backlash against government surveillance, Trump or no Trump.

    Because people (including government people) aren't good at keeping secrets and make too many assumptions.

    There's no question in my mind that the US government spends too much money and other resources on this stuff. If Trump is the straw that breaks the camel's back and causes enough resentment to actually change something post-Trump then so be it.
  • Ow! My Balls! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @08:52AM (#53275291) Homepage Journal

    Could a Trump presidency ultimately lead to a massive public backlash against government surveillance?

    Unlikely. All they care about is cat videos.

  • by ebonum ( 830686 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:21AM (#53275353)

    It might be possible that a group at the NSA with lots of funding, a few smart people and little to no oversight leaked the Podesta emails. They have access to computers in botnets in Russia and Eastern Europe. They certainly have the hacking skills. They have the language skills. People in the intelligence community might not be big Hillary supporters.

    • > People in the intelligence community might not be big Hillary supporters.

      Plenty of people aren't "big Hillary supporters". To be a BIG supporter of hers you pretty much need to either be on her payroll on just not be paying attention. However, if your mission is national security, the completely unpredictable Trump is more worrisome for sure. He's not a politician, not a public policy guy. His public life has been all about being off-the-wall to drum up publicity for his businesses and his brand. N

      • 99% of them are people who try to use the excessive access they've been given to protect their country, which includes their families

        And also to keep tabs on love interests [washingtonpost.com], done commonly enough to garner its own official designation.

  • Without a doubt (Score:4, Interesting)

    by ThatsNotPudding ( 1045640 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:26AM (#53275361)
    Plus, they are one state away from having enough power to add or delete amendments to the Constitution. There is no way to stop them as they now control how votes and whose votes are counted.

    I'm sure there are a ton of good people in this country, but like in this election, they will continue to do nothing.This grand experiment in democracy is over and no one is coming to the rescue.
    • Re:Without a doubt (Score:5, Informative)

      by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:51AM (#53275439)

      Plus, they are one state away from having enough power to add or delete amendments to the Constitution.

      It takes 38 (3/4ths of 50) states to ratify an amendment. Republicans don't control 37 state legislatures [wikipedia.org]. It's 33 [rollcall.com].

      Hopefully we can get a balanced budget amendment anyway.

    • We do not have direct democracy because that has been shown time and again to be a form of mob rule that we cannot afford.

      Also interesting how you frame your comment as "they are" rather than "we are" because that is the actual problem with this country. So many divisions have been sown along the lines of identity politics, political parties and other artifically defined divided groups such that these groups feel compelled to amplify their rhetoric to attempt to wrest power from the others. These disto
  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @09:39AM (#53275401) Journal

    I'm taking the Climate Change denier position on the surveillance state.

    1. There's no real proof that there is ubiquitous surveillance.

    2. If if there was real proof of ubiquitous surveillance, there's no real proof that it's a bad thing.

    3. Anyway, it's too late to stop ubiquitous surveillance, so there's no point in trying.

    4, Ubiquitous surveillance might actually be good for us.

    5. All the privacy advocates are just in it for the money.

  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @10:35AM (#53275583) Homepage Journal

    Because he doesn't consider himself bound by his prior statements, and his supporters don't hold him to them.

    There are some things we know he won't do: build a border wall and make the Mexicans pay for it. There are other things we can be pretty sure he will do: lower taxes on the wealthiest people. But everything else will depend on how he feels that day.

    There's a reason both liberal AND conservatives don't like him, because he's basically unprincipled. But similar conversations are going on on both sides to the effect: maybe we can exploit some of this situation to our advantage.

  • by ledow ( 319597 )

    You voted for him.

    Everything that he does for the next four years is your responsibility.

    If that seems unfair, welcome to why I hate modern politics and think it's all bollocks. Were the opposing candidates any different in this regard? No, they never are.

    How much crap did any other president / prime minister promise and then never do? How's Guantanamo's promised removal coming along? 15 years later..

    You can't hand people power without also taking the responsibility for doing so, same way I can't just h

    • Hey, the odds said that if it wasn't Trump, it'd be Clinton. We were in for hell, we just are simply in a slightly different location in the toasty abyss.
  • Would've happened with Clinton or Trump. It is the one thing the two big parties agree on. You wanted bipartisanship? There it is!

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Sunday November 13, 2016 @11:32AM (#53275793)

    The cameras are gone, the show is over. He's now surrounded by people with urgent messages of dire need. They are concerned about trade, about national security, about oil, and about a popular revolt due to economic disparity.

    He will do what he's told to do.

  • by bobbutts ( 927504 ) <bobbutts@gmail.com> on Sunday November 13, 2016 @11:58AM (#53275887)

    It is bothersome to me that he seems to have unconditional support at the moment from many.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Sunday November 13, 2016 @12:07PM (#53275927)

    Better hop over to 4chan and grab some copies of Melania's pics before they are gone.

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