POLITICAL DISCUSSION FORUMS › Forums › US NEWS & OPINION › National Day of Mourning Observed
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BadBoyz.
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December 4, 2018 at 17:51 #5618
Desert_Fox
Participant::https://www.usps.com/national-day-of-mourning/welcome.htm
President Donald J. Trump has declared December 5 as a national day of mourning, calling on Americans to remember the vast contributions of former President George H.W. Bush.
To honor the life and legacy of President Bush, the Postal Service will observe the national day of mourning.
All Post Office® locations will be closed.
Regular mail will not be delivered.
Package delivery will be limited.I don’t remember this happening before when a past president has died. Is my memory faulty?
". . . those who claim to know the Mind of God, who will tell you what God thinks and how He will judge and condemn others—those people are the greatest of all blasphemers." Aloysius Xingu Leng Pendergast
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December 5, 2018 at 11:07 #5658
Gale
Participant::Trump traveled 250 yards to greet George W. Bush. He used a stretch limo and an eight-vehicle motorcade to make the trip.#DemForce https://t.co/2OAHebuiEW
— Victura (@VictorVictura) December 5, 2018
He can’t read. He can’t write or speak coherently.
He can’t think about anything other than himself.
And now he can’t walk.
“I take no responsibility at all.” Donald Trump
“Anyone who wants a test can get a test.” Donald TrumpDecember 5, 2018 at 11:28 #5660Capricorn
Keymaster::https://www.usps.com/national-day-of-mourning/welcome.htm President Donald J. Trump has declared December 5 as a national day of mourning, calling on Americans to remember the vast contributions of former President George H.W. Bush. To honor the life and legacy of President Bush, the Postal Service will observe the national day of mourning. All Post Office® locations will be closed. Regular mail will not be delivered. Package delivery will be limited. I don’t remember this happening before when a past president has died. Is my memory faulty?
He is trying to destroy one American institution after another.
" All tyrannies rule through fraud and force, but once the fraud is exposed they must rely exclusively on force. " — George Orwell.
December 5, 2018 at 11:36 #5662Dragon
Participant::https://www.usps.com/national-day-of-mourning/welcome.htm
President Donald J. Trump has declared December 5 as a national day of mourning, calling on Americans to remember the vast contributions of former President George H.W. Bush.
To honor the life and legacy of President Bush, the Postal Service will observe the national day of mourning.
All Post Office® locations will be closed.
Regular mail will not be delivered.
Package delivery will be limited.I don’t remember this happening before when a past president has died. Is my memory faulty?
Gerald Ford (2007)
Ronald Reagan (2004)
Richard Nixon (1994)
Lyndon B. Johnson (1972)
Harry S. Truman (1972)
Dwight D. Eisenhower (1969)
John F. Kennedy (1963; assassinated)
Franklin D. Roosevelt (1945; died in office)
Woodrow Wilson (1924)
William McKinley (1901; assassinated)-
This reply was modified 4 years, 6 months ago by
Dragon.
December 5, 2018 at 12:01 #5664Gale
Participant::WORD OF THE DAY: Narcissisticolepsy
[nahr—suh-see-kuh-lep-see]
noun Pathology
a condition characterized by frequent and uncontrollable periods of deep sleep when people aren’t talking about you. #GeorgeHWBushFuneral pic.twitter.com/ZW1PdoiRSi
— Mrs. Betty Bowers (@BettyBowers) December 5, 2018
“I take no responsibility at all.” Donald Trump
“Anyone who wants a test can get a test.” Donald TrumpDecember 5, 2018 at 12:26 #5665Desert_Fox
ParticipantDecember 5, 2018 at 12:53 #5671Gale
Participant::<script async=”” src=”https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js” charset=”utf-8″></script> He can’t read. He can’t write or speak coherently. He can’t think about anything other than himself. And now he can’t walk.
Trump using a motorcade to travel 250 yards sounds egregious until you stop to consider that many of the people who voted for him use motorized scooters to travel around Walmart… #WednesdayWisdom
— Cyrus McQueen (@CyrusMMcQueen) December 5, 2018
“I take no responsibility at all.” Donald Trump
“Anyone who wants a test can get a test.” Donald TrumpDecember 5, 2018 at 17:06 #5678December 5, 2018 at 17:08 #5679December 5, 2018 at 17:09 #5680December 5, 2018 at 17:10 #5681December 5, 2018 at 17:11 #5682December 5, 2018 at 19:04 #5688Gale
Participant::Unable to read.
“I take no responsibility at all.” Donald Trump
“Anyone who wants a test can get a test.” Donald TrumpDecember 5, 2018 at 19:24 #5691Desert_Fox
Participant::https://www.apnews.com/f10420da35394d30b37d69ec27be6bb6
Trump odd man out as presidents assemble for Bush funeral
WASHINGTON (AP) — There was no mistaking the odd man out.
Wednesday’s funeral service for former President George H.W. Bush served as a rare reunion of the remaining members of the presidents club, but the front-row banter among Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter and their spouses came to an uneasy end when President Donald Trump and wife Melania arrived.
The encounter was a real-time illustration of the uneasy ties between the current occupant of the White House and his predecessors, suggesting Trump as a member-in-name-only of the Oval Office fraternity. While the funeral ceremony itself was a warm celebration of the late president, the relationships between the surviving presidents are considerably cooler.
Trump gave the two Obamas a handshake before taking his seat in Washington’s National Cathedral without greeting the others. Hillary Clinton nodded at Melania Trump but then stared straight ahead.The last of the five presidents to arrive was George W. Bush, who made a point to shake hands with all four couples — and appeared to share a moment of humor with Michelle Obama, slipping something into her hand. Bush then took his seat with the rest of the Bush family, across the aisle from the ex-presidents.
Some discomfort with Trump was perhaps to be expected.
Since his swearing-in, Trump has spurned most contact with his predecessors — and they have snubbed him in return. But while the staid group of Oval Office occupants has been disrupted since Donald Trump’s election, the Bushes had made it known to the White House months ago that, despite differences in policy and temperament, the late president wanted Trump to attend the national service.
The ceremony’s tributes at times stood as an unspoken counterpoint to Trump’s leadership, as historian Jon Meacham eulogized Bush by recounting his life’s credo: “Tell the truth, don’t blame people, be strong, do your best, try hard, forgive, stay the course.” George W. Bush added of his father: “He could tease and needle, but not out of malice.”
The late Bush was the de facto chair of the modern incarnation of the president’s club, transcending contentious campaigns and party lines to bring together fractious personalities who share that rarified experience.
Trump has sought to meet the elder Bush’s passing with grace, a contrast to the rhythms of much of his tumultuous presidency. He came to office after a campaign in which he harshly criticized his Democratic predecessors and co-opted a Republican Party once dominated by the Bush family. Despite the traditional kinship among presidents, Trump’s predecessors have all made their discomfort known in different ways.“It’s unusual that a cabal of ex-presidents from both parties dislike a sitting president and that’s what you’ve got happening right now,” said Douglas Brinkley, a history professor at Rice University.
The Trump-Obama handshake marked the first direct interaction between the current president and his immediate predecessor since Inauguration Day 2017. Trump has not spoken to Democrats Clinton or Obama since that day.
He did speak with the younger Bush during the contentious confirmation process for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, as the previous Republican president helped lobby for his former aide. Democrat Carter has been briefed by White House officials on North Korea, though it was not clear if he has engaged directly with Trump.
By virtue of health, longevity and opportunities for continued influence, ex-presidents are sticking around longer than ever and staying active in the public eye.
Past presidents often built relationships with their predecessors, Brinkley said. “Bill Clinton would reach out to Richard Nixon for advice on Russia,” he said. “Harry Truman leaned heavily on Herbert Hoover. It’s endless.”
To be sure, Brinkley added, those ties vary from president to president and there have been chilly relationships as well, noting, for example, that “FDR would never talk to Herbert Hoover.”
Busy with a mix of personal pursuits, charitable endeavors — and, in some cases, paid speaking gigs — the former leaders don’t mingle very often, making a funeral in their group a big occasion. Bonded by the presidency, they tend to exercise caution in their comments about each other. Still, all the living former presidents have aimed barbs — directly or indirectly — at Trump.
In a speech in September, Obama slammed the “crazy stuff” coming out of the White House without directly naming Trump. Last year, the younger Bush made a speech that confronted many of the themes of Trump’s presidency without mentioning him by name, cautioning that “bigotry seems emboldened” and the nation’s politics “seems more vulnerable to conspiracy theories and outright fabrication.”
Over the summer, Carter told The Washington Post that Trump’s presidency was a “disaster.” And Clinton — stung by Trump’s defeat of wife Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential race — told a weekly newspaper in New York state after her stunning loss that Trump “doesn’t know much.”
Even the late Bush’s feelings about Trump were harsh at times. In Mark K. Updegrove’s book “The Last Republicans,” published last year, the elder Bush called Trump a “blowhard.”
The late Bush said he voted for Clinton in 2016 while George W. Bush said he voted for “none of the above.”
There have been other moments when the ex-presidents offered more sympathetic sentiments for Trump. After Trump’s surprise victory, Obama stood in the Rose Garden at the White House and said he was “rooting” for the next president. Carter told The New York Times in 2017 the media had been harder on Trump than other presidents. Clinton said in June that America should be rooting for Trump to succeed in his North Korea talks.
While he has struggled to set the right tone in past moments of national grief, Trump has gone out of his way to address Bush’s passing with consideration, issuing kind statements and ensuring that Bush family members have whatever they need for the funeral. On Tuesday, first lady Melania Trump welcomed Laura Bush and other family members for a tour of the White House Christmas decorations. And Trump and the first lady visited with members of the Bush family at Blair House.
This is true not just at funerals but for most of America as well.
". . . those who claim to know the Mind of God, who will tell you what God thinks and how He will judge and condemn others—those people are the greatest of all blasphemers." Aloysius Xingu Leng Pendergast
December 5, 2018 at 22:06 #5698December 6, 2018 at 09:56 #5703Patriot
ParticipantDecember 6, 2018 at 10:00 #5704basilfawlty
Participant::There are childish minds at work on this thread, but considering the sources it is no surprise.
Hm, Self criticism…..very wise
December 6, 2018 at 10:23 #5705Johnny Yuma
Participant::There are childish minds at work on this thread, but considering the sources it is no surprise.
Don’t you just love how they jerk each other off?
December 6, 2018 at 11:56 #5706BadBoyz
Participant::There are childish minds at work on this thread, but considering the sources it is no surprise.
#TRAITORTRUMP4PRISON!
December 6, 2018 at 12:09 #5707BadBoyz
Participant::Don’t you just love how they jerk each other off?
#TRAITORTRUMP4PRISON!
December 6, 2018 at 18:03 #5728Desert_Fox
Participant -
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