Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Oy Vey God Save America from Donny T ( who now redefines meshuganah) .... Donald Trump Calls on the "Second Amendment People"to Assassinate Hillary Clinton ( lets call a stone a stone and shout it out)

Oy Vey God Save America from Donny T ( who now redefines meshuganah) .... Donald Trump Calls on the "Second Amendment People"to Assassinate Hillary Clinton ( lets call a stone a stone and shout it out) 

Donald Trump remark suggests threat against Hillary Clinton. A call to  2nd Amendment people to take action if he loses election

By Nick Corasaniti and Maggie Haberman, New York Times & Houston Chronicle ( with permission of the authors and both publications .... I have written and receive a retainer as a fact checker from both)

Photo: Chuck Liddy, MBR

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump obliquely suggested at a North Carolina rally on Tuesday that gun rights supporters could take action themselves if Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton were to become president. The remark caught some supporters at the event by surprise.

WILMINGTON, N.C. - Donald Trump on Tuesday appeared to raise the possibility that gun rights supporters could take matters into their own hands if Hillary Clinton is elected president and appoints judges who favor stricter gun control measures.

Repeating his contention that Clinton wanted to abolish the right to bear arms, Trump warned at a rally here that it would be "a horrible day" if Clinton were elected and got to appoint a tiebreaking Supreme Court justice.

"If she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks," Trump said, as the crowd began to boo. He quickly added: "Although the Second Amendment people - maybe there is, I don't know."

Oblique as it was, Trump's remark quickly elicited a wave of condemnation from Democrats, gun control advocates and others, who accused him of suggesting violence against Clinton or liberal jurists. Bernice King, daughter of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., called Trump's words "distasteful, disturbing, dangerous.... is he calling for the assassination of Hillary Clinton?"

Clinton's running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, expressed disbelief.

"Nobody who is seeking a leadership position, especially the presidency, the leadership of the country, should do anything to countenance violence, and that's what he was saying," Kaine said in Austin.
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He called Trump's remark "a window into the soul of a person who is just temperamentally not suited to the task."

And Dan Gross, the president of the Brady Campaign and Center to Prevent Gun Violence, which has endorsed Clinton, said Trump's statement was "repulsive - literally using the Second Amendment as cover to encourage people to kill someone with whom they disagree."

"For Trump, violence has become a standard talking point, a common punch line, and even a campaign strategy," Gross said.

Trump and his campaign did not treat his remark as a joke; instead, they insisted he was merely urging gun rights supporters to vote as a bloc against Clinton in November. "The Second Amendment people have tremendous power because they are so united," he told a CBS affiliate in North Carolina late Tuesday.

In an interview with Fox News, Trump grew adamant. "There can be no other interpretation," he said, adding, "I mean, give me a break."

But at his rally earlier in the day, Trump had actually been discussing what could happen once Clinton was president, not before the election.

And even those in Trump's audience appeared caught by surprise. Video of the rally showed a man seated just over Trump's shoulder go slack-jawed and turn to his companion, apparently in disbelief, when Trump made the remark.

The uproar over Trump's off-the-cuff remark came as his campaign has been contending with a series of public opinion surveys showing him quickly losing ground to Clinton, and just a day after his campaign had expressed satisfaction with his delivery of a prepared economic speech in Detroit, calling it evidence of a newfound political discipline.

Trump's fellow opponents of gun control stood by him, focusing on his depiction of Clinton as a threat to the Second Amendment.

"Donald Trump is absolutely correct," said Jennifer Baker, a strategist for the National Rifle Association. "If Hillary Clinton is elected, there is nothing we can do to stop her from nominating an anti-gun Supreme Court justice who will vote to overturn the individual right of law-abiding citizens to own a gun in their home for protection."

The association also began running a new commercial characterizing Clinton as "one of the wealthiest women in politics" and calling her a hypocrite for favoring gun restrictions while having been "protected by armed guards for 30 years." Her gun policies, the ad says, would leave ordinary people "defenseless."

Veiled references to gun violence have tripped up candidates before. In 2010, Sharron Angle, a Nevada Republican challenging the Senate majority leader at the time, Harry Reid, severely damaged her candidacy while discussing the importance of the Second Amendment.

"When you read that Constitution and the founding fathers, they intended this to stop tyranny," she said, adding: "It's to defend ourselves. And you know, I'm hoping that we're not getting to Second Amendment remedies. I hope the vote will be the cure for the Harry Reid problems."

Clinton herself learned the hard way: In June 2008, shortly before she conceded defeat in her Democratic primary contest with Barack Obama, she defended her perseverance in a way that critics said alluded to the possibility that Obama could be gunned down. "We all remember Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in June in California," Clinton said at the time. She apologized hours later.

Trump did not repeat his violent insinuation at a later event in Fayetteville, N.C.

But Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who has championed gun control since the Sandy Hook mass shooting in his state, called Trump's remarks "disgusting and embarrassing and sad. and calling to assassinate Hillary Clinton is unacceptable for any person aspiring to be President "

"This isn't play," Murphy wrote on Twitter. "Unstable people with powerful guns and an unhinged hatred for Hillary are listening to you, (Donald Trump)."

And Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., wrote on Twitter that the Secret Service should investigate Trump for making a death threat against Clinton: "Donald Trump suggested someone kill Sec. Clinton. We must take people at their word."

A Secret Service spokesman, who refused to identify himself, said that the agency was "aware of the comments and have taken additional steps to ensure her and her family's safety" but did not elaborate further.

Others seized on Trump's remark as an occasion for mockery. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., wrote on Twitter that Trump "makes death threats because he's a pathetic coward who can't handle the fact that he's losing to a girl."

Trump's campaign events have grown increasingly vitriolic, with angry chants and jeers directed at Clinton. People at his rallies have, with greater frequency, loudly called for violence against Clinton - catcalls that Trump has generally let pass.

And on Saturday, Trump praised his New Hampshire state co-chairman, state Sen. Al Baldasaro, who said recently that Clinton deserved to face a firing squad over the FBI's investigation of her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state.

In Wilmington on Tuesday, chants of "lock her up," which first gained traction during the Republican National Convention, were loud and frequent before Trump took the stage. But one speaker, former Mayor Rudy Giuliani of New York, tried to tamp those down.

"No, no, we're here to beat her, and keep her out of Washington," Giuliani said.

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