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Lorenzo

Trad climber
Portland Oregon
Mar 7, 2016 - 04:59pm PT
As a practical matter, it will be over at the next Supetuesday.

Too many delegates will be committed.
dirtbag

climber
Mar 7, 2016 - 05:02pm PT
Happie, I think the answer to your question is kind of complicated because each state has its own filing deadline.
John Duffield

Mountain climber
New York
Mar 7, 2016 - 05:18pm PT
Craig Fry

Trad climber
So Cal.
Mar 7, 2016 - 05:18pm PT
Escopeta

Trad climber
Idaho
Mar 7, 2016 - 05:22pm PT
Craig Fry

Trad climber
So Cal.
Mar 7, 2016 - 05:23pm PT
This is the state of the GOP
wiener size....
I'm sure this will excite all the 14 year old wiener boys
zBrown

Ice climber
Mar 7, 2016 - 05:57pm PT
Just say no to Meldonium Trump.

...the ... Drug Sharapova took is used to treat heart problems, diabetes and wild boar impotence
Escopeta

Trad climber
Idaho
Mar 7, 2016 - 06:43pm PT
Norton

Social climber
Mar 7, 2016 - 06:53pm PT
wow

what does Hillary waving to someone have to do with Trump telling his followers
to raise their hands and pledge to register and vote for him?

weak, you pick that one up in high school today?
Escopeta

Trad climber
Idaho
Mar 7, 2016 - 06:54pm PT
Craig, is that you?
crankster

Trad climber
No. Tahoe
Mar 7, 2016 - 07:08pm PT
Cosmic, what exactly are the similarities between Hillary Clinton, Methodist gal from Illinois & odds-on favorite to be the first woman president of our great nation, and Adolf Hitler?

Wouldn't you agree that there are more similarities between Trump and Hitler, what with the hate and bigotry stuff? And that "raise your hand and pledge" deal? You wouldn't do that right?

Read this first:

Trump’s flirtation with fascism

So it has come to this: The front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, at a campaign rally in Orlando Saturday, leading supporters in what looked very much like a fascist salute.

“Can I have a pledge? A swearing?” Trump asked, raising his right hand and directing his followers to do the same. He then led them in pledging allegiance — not to the flag, but to Trump, for which they stand and for whom they vowed to vote.

Trump supporters raised their arms en masse — unfortunately evoking the sort of scene associated with grainy newsreels from Italy and Germany.

Among those not engaging in such ominous imagery were the demonstrators, who, by my colleague Jenna Johnson’s account, interrupted Trump’s event more than a dozen times. The candidate watched a supporter grab and attempt to tackle protesters, at least one of them black, near the stage. “You know, we have a divided country, folks,” Trump said. “We have a terrible president, who happens to be African American.”

Loaded imagery, violence against dissenters and a racial attack on the president: It’s all in a day’s work for Trump.

In the preceding days, he had asserted (and later retracted) his confidence that as president the military would obey his orders to do illegal things: torture detainees and target non-combatant kin of terrorists for death. He said House Speaker Paul Ryan, a fellow Republican, would “pay a big price” for defying him, and he said Sen. John McCain, who criticized Trump, needs to “be very careful.” Trump explained his initial hesitance to disavow support from the Ku Klux Klan and white supremacists by saying such groups could have included “the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies” — prompting the head of the Anti-Defamation League to call his words “obscene.”

And some still deny Il Duce Donald’s autocratic tendencies?

Abe Foxman, a Holocaust survivor and the retired longtime head of the ADL, said that Trump leading thousands in “what looks like the ‘Heil Hitler’ salute is about as offensive, obnoxious and disgusting as anything I thought I would ever witness in the United States.” He told the Times of Israel that Trump is “smart enough” to know what he was doing.

I’ve perhaps never agreed with Glenn Beck before, but the right-wing radio personality was right to hold up a Nazi ballot on ABC’s This Week on Sunday morning. “We should look at Adolf Hitler in 1929,” said Beck, who usually saves his Nazi analogies for liberals. Beck added: “Donald Trump is a dangerous man with the things that he has been saying.”

The Germans, too, find him dangerous — and they should know. Der Spiegel, the German newsmagazine, last month called Trump “the world’s most dangerous man” and leader of a “hate-filled authoritarian movement” who “inflames tensions against ethnic minorities …while ignoring democratic conventions.”

I wish I could enjoy Trump, who at last week’s debate defended the size of his penis. But this isn’t a conventional debate between Democrats and Republicans or insiders and outsiders. Trump is on the wrong side of a struggle between decency and bigotry, between democracy and something else.

Yet, incredibly, the other candidates in the race — Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and John Kasich — all said they’d support Trump if he wins the nomination. The morning after Trump’s salute, the morally neutral Republican National Chairman Reince Priebus told CBS’s John Dickerson the that his “role is to basically be 100 percent behind” the eventual nominee.

A braver man, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), sent a letter Friday to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff asking if he would heed orders to torture detainees or to target noncombatant relatives of terrorists. Trump, who in reply said Graham “should respect me” and bragged that he “destroyed” Graham’s presidential candidacy, has retreated slightly, saying he’d change laws to allow things such as waterboarding. Without that, he said, “we’re weak.”

Trump lately shows his strength by talking about his wish to punch protesters in the face or by asking them “are you from Mexico?”

As some Republican office holders and donors belatedly try to unify the anti-Trump movement, more are seeing Trump’s words and deeds foreshadowing darker things. On Monday, Jane Eisner, editor of the Jewish Forward, quoted Holocaust historian Deborah Lipstadt: “Some people didn’t approve of Hitler’s anti-Semitism, but they went along with it because he was going to make Germany great again.”

And comedian Louis C.K., who says he would like to see a conservative president, wrote to his fans about Trump this weekend that “we are being Germany in the ’30s. Do you think they saw the [expletive] coming? Hitler was just some hilarious and refreshing dude with a weird comb over who would say anything at all.”

Where does Trump’s flirtation with fascism end? Nobody knows.

But don’t say you didn’t see it coming.

Twitter: @Milbank
Craig Fry

Trad climber
So Cal.
Mar 7, 2016 - 07:14pm PT
saying that we are dealing with 14 year olds here give 14 year olds a bad name

Esco, is that You?
who is it?
it's not me.
High Fructose Corn Spirit

Gym climber
Mar 7, 2016 - 07:16pm PT
jstan

climber
Mar 7, 2016 - 07:23pm PT
HFCS at a loss for words?????????

Everyone hold on while I make a note in my diary.
zBrown

Ice climber
Mar 7, 2016 - 07:46pm PT
Am I president now?

wilbeer

Mountain climber
Terence Wilson greeneck alleghenys,ny,
Mar 7, 2016 - 07:53pm PT
NO,he is not.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
Mar 7, 2016 - 08:58pm PT
Why is Hillary showing us how big her hand is?
Gary

Social climber
Where in the hell is Major Kong?
Mar 7, 2016 - 09:26pm PT
Why is Hillary showing us how big her hand is?

There once was a miss from Wake Forest
Who had a gigantic clitoris.
Most of her friends, you see,
Thought her name was Marie,
But her intimates knew her as Horace.
thebravecowboy

climber
The Good Places
Mar 7, 2016 - 09:31pm PT
#golfclap
Ken M

Mountain climber
Los Angeles, Ca
Mar 7, 2016 - 09:45pm PT
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