"In this country everybody likes to be a winner — everyone's winner," Sanders said, citing Hillary Clinton's lead over Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders' lead over Hillary Clinton over the previous four years.
"I want to keep everybody from falling for people just thinking, there's nothing wrong with what a good leader we have, what a great leader we have. We should be able to put forward a plan that works for everyone."
Sanders has tried his hand at the presidency in different contexts because of political activism he believes is crucial to a successful and lasting American republic.
Write a mogul who isn't a billionaire and have high interest rate and do whatever it takes to raise the tax rate, and he's already getting big donations, they can never say yes because his money was not raised properly and, therefore, they can't say, wait for him to get $90 million a year in contributions, it's their turn, but no one's going to say, don't do it.
MATT HENRY: Thank you very much, Steve, but let me just make one more point. If you want to get a hold of this money, you'd have to get the person who has money, no matter how high and low the tax rate, because that person doesn't have a lot of money, just like someone who's just made $10 million a year in a year.
DONALD TRUMP: He's earned it in small percentage and in medium percentage, that's how many people in the business, because that's how much it takes to change his mind, you know, I think the middle class, they put a little more effort into getting more and more Americans into the business-driven economy and not paying tax.
But that's to go as far as it can. The middle class is so dependent on the middle class, they need to be paid the full cost of their economic services, which is the cost of getting that free education, where it's their turn and they can make these profits.
M
Write a mogul or mogul of the highest order, if you like me, how are the other two going to respond?"
Mr. Kasich went on: "If Hillary Clinton becomes president she will take all of the good work to improve the health care that this great group of women have earned for 15 years. In my opinion."
She turned to the issue last year, when she was re-elected as governor and is now being challenged by Mr. Obama in his bid to win his White House bid. Mrs. Clinton was accused of using "unfair" and "self-serving" campaign staff and then-Secretary of State Colin Powell, a former diplomat, was convicted of her conduct.
The New York Times put Mr. Kasich in the "strong hands" of Mr. Sanders, but Mr. Obama didn't. He has criticized Mrs. Clinton over her use of a private email server at the time she was secretary of state.
Mrs. Clinton's supporters say that she should get credit for saving more Americans from bankruptcy that has followed in her footsteps. But Mr. Sanders called the issue a "dysfunction" and said Mr. Kerry was not an "intelligent individual" and did not know who was on the panel.
The Democratic National Committee released a statement early Sunday saying it "would be inappropriate for our DNC Chair to endorse Mr. Kasich. Unfortunately, in his recent trip to Kentucky, he was asked about our choice and he stated
Write a mogul! (10,000 yen) — "We're going home." It's just a day in the life of a Japanese billionaire — or, better yet, if this has anything to do with a man who calls himself "Hirotoshi." It's an alluring one, at least for an established celebrity who spends much of his time running away from a small fortune. It's an insult.
This is why, if Trump had been given two, better, nonstop flights to take him to Tokyo to see a Japanese show and a big-time dinner like The Oscars — which was probably not where he wanted to go — it's almost improbable he would have accepted them at all. Trump's foreign policies and his views probably aren't the only things he's said and done over the years like this that bother him. He likes to boast about having the first black president. He called the Civil Rights Movement "beautiful." He even talked openly about taking a "bad" job and then running for president after being the subject of a New York Times-style cover story about his presidential campaign. He even called President Obama a "moron."
He made a point of calling Hillary Clinton a fraud for her apparent connections to Russia — a claim he made before the New York Democratic convention. But the truth is, he was just too soft on Hillary Clinton, too pro-Russian. And he called her a phony because he wasn't a foreign policy professional.
Write a mogul and find a way to move forward. By my count that's done. I want the party to be about a different mix."
Rove has expressed his willingness to work with both a major Republican and a moderate Democratic administration, as he has expressed during the campaign, but he would not say who he would meet with in the White House.
"I think he's going to continue to fight on behalf of the middle class and I know that it's going to help us move forward," Democratic Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) said at a luncheon with Republican congressional leaders this month.
"If you're serious about making the country great again, then you need to work for what Donald Trump wants, which is a plan where all Americans have a single voice on the economy and job creation — not just the wealthy and privileged. We have to move forward together as one, and not just if one is on the list of names that President Trump should hire."
The president-elect said he thinks "a lot" about the need for "fair and open competition" for jobs in the U.S., adding that he would fight to protect the workers, families and young men who benefit from the economic recovery. He suggested that Trump was embracing free trade deals, in hopes of "making it easier for them to succeed."
"And I think everyone should take the lead," he argued, "but I think people have to keep fighting together
Write a mogul
Trump, by contrast, seems happy to take calls on economic issues. His most recent presidential campaign was filled with a few thousand Trump calls. Here's how the president has handled the presidential campaign:
Last summer, Trump called a Fox News journalist in a bid to ask her to drop her bid. The Fox News personality then claimed there was "no way I can be hired" and called them a scam that paid for Trump to drop out. She declined to comment about the alleged scam: "My career has never been about taking calls. My own career only has been about going to places, even though I could never achieve it."
To back up Trump's allegation that Fox News reporter Christina Grimm and another reporter are fake reporters, the president tweeted on Sept. 25 that, if she were out there, he'd get an Emmy or the Grammy. When the president wasn't tweeting, he'd always send his followers a retweet or a tweet that included a picture of Grimm and the reporter:
But it wasn't all smiles and happyries. As Trump had said in the days following the Paris attacks: "[T]he president is talking about things you know to be true, which will lead to a lot of good things for the United States." And he's taking a cue from both his campaign and the mainstream media, which has picked him back up now, albeit subtly.
In the week since the attacks on the U.S. and
Write a mogul in your midst.
It can be daunting, if not impossible. But being "the guy who's got money from the rich" isn't always the most effective strategy.
Take the case of Mark Cuban. In 2009, in an interview with The New York Times, Cuban, who was on his first day of trial, told me: "If we have to pay out to our own executives, then I need to be the one who takes them out of here. Otherwise, I am going to be a dictator." His story, about his years spent in the Cuban government under President Nicolás Maduro, is a reminder that what we do now has an immense influence that has to be put at the disposal of the American people at all levels.
Cuban was the face of what should have been a grassroots movement. With help from his own family, Cuban found a way to stay popular. He was one of the first people to say, "No, no, wait, wait! I'm not going to talk about this anymore, I'm not going to talk about this anymore," the story begins. As it unfolds, Cuban is told his story is getting louder. "This year, I came from a prison in Mexico," he said. "And every day in jail I met someone new -- one that needed me in their lives. I was trying to be my own man, trying to figure this out, I wanted to be my own man...
Write a mogul/philanthropist to join the White family.
There are two types of billionaires in the business spectrum.
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A: The first type of billionaire (like Apple, for example) is to buy himself (perhaps with the help of "hundreds" of millions or perhaps even hundreds of millions of dollars), or he may buy himself (i.e., the company he is buying) using the services provided by an existing stock.
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A: The second type (like a billionaire/philanthropist) is an entrepreneur who gets everything that can be done without paying taxes. A typical billionaire (like Apple or Google) can buy himself to pay for his services. Sometimes, he may be making good money running a business of his own, but often in this case the business will benefit from the tax benefit. This is why we consider it the third type of entrepreneur.
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Millionaires often get the kind of benefits that are given to traditional businessmen who are wealthy at the expense of corporations. The exception is that billionaires can be paid to make services work in their own ways if the corporate profits were so large and there were fewer workers involved. Many of these companies then can use their existing wealth to hire new employees.
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Write a mogul from your heart. If you can, it will be much better for us and millions of others on the planet, not to mention in the financial community.
The American people need to stand up — we need the voices of people who are against corporate bullying, not big donors. To help us do that, we need to join forces with Bernie Sanders and other progressives and other progressives who have made a positive impact in this country on Wall Street — and support Bernie's candidacy!
And let's keep working to help Sanders and other progressives take power from the big banks in this election cycle:
Help Bernie Sanders and other progressive progressive candidates come together around the world and have a global conference to help fight injustice, create jobs, and raise our economy to more sustainable levels.
Let's get our voices and commitments heard, and help make a difference for the many millions of working people, students, teachers, women, youth and seniors who all face massive economic distress.
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And with a $50,000 donation to help fund Bernie Sanders's upcoming presidential campaign, we think raising money like this will be a huge turnout.
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Click here to make an
Write a mogul on TV
After Trump took a shot at Ted Cruz on Sunday, the billionaire did not back down.
Still, he defended Trump's position as the billionaire's presumptive next presidential nominee by pointing to Cruz's remarks as proof the Texan doesn't think this country was founded on free enterprise and would not go to war with Russia to get them out of the way.
"I think he's right in that he's just putting it out there, he's correct," Trump said in an interview on CNN's "New Day."
Trump's comments come as he tries to clarify the way the country is set up over the next four days ahead of the March 26 conventions.
The Democratic presidential nominee says he was wrong to say that Democrats would be at war with Russia after it broke its diplomatic and military blockade of Iran's embassy in Washington.
"Those words are something I've said many times before, especially the statements by Bernie Sanders," Trump said.
Later Sunday night, Trump addressed the matter again. "I am not in Syria anymore.
"We're fighting a great war against terrorism. Very bad people have a tendency to go and put their money where their mouth is," he said. "In short. The terrorists, they want to go and murder more Americans with their stupid money. I don't fight for that money. Believe me." https://luminouslaughsco.etsy.com/
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