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MAGA Ang Moh Dotard Trump the most Jealous of Xijinping's office term limit OFF

Ang4MohTrump

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Something he most wanted but can not get!


https://www.rt.com/usa/420403-trump-xi-lifelong-president/

‘Maybe we’ll give it a shot,’ Trump reportedly said of China's presumed 'lifelong presidency'
Published time: 4 Mar, 2018 04:58
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FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump and China's President Xi © Thomas Peter / Reuters
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US President Donald Trump has again invoked wrath online after reports that he praised the Chinese ruling party's move to repeal presidential term limits. Trump supposedly believes this makes Xi Jinping "president for life."
TrendsChina news, Donald Trump, US
The US leader reportedly let the remark slip during a fundraiser he was hosting at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Saturday. The story was reported by CNN, which claims to have obtained a recording.

"He's now president for life. President for life. And he's great," Trump reportedly said of Xi, referring to the reports that China’s Communist Party proposal to repeal term limits can end up in a lifelong presidency for the Chinese leader. "And look, he was able to do that. I think it's great. Maybe we'll give that a shot some day,” he added, according to CNN, which reported Trump was in high spirits as he made the triggering remark.

In late February, China’s Central Committee proposed removing a constitutional limit on the number of consecutive terms for the president and the vice president, as well as making Xi Jinping’s program manifesto on the country’s political system a part of the Constitution.The amendment to codify the changes in the law is slated to be approved at the forthcoming meeting of China’s Parliament this month.

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Soros accuses Trump of seeking ‘mafia state,’ pledges to devote efforts to Europe & US
This caused Chinese social media to explode with speculations that Chinese President Xi Jinping is seeking to extend his tenure indefinitely. Faced with the backlash, the Chinese Communist Party paper denied that the amendment paves the way for Xi's life-long rule, clarifying that it “does not mean changing the retirement system for party and national leaders, and does not mean a life-long term system for leading officials.”

It is common for high-ranking Chinese officials to go into retirement when they reach the age of 68. While the rule is unwritten, the senior officials tend to abide by it. Xi is currently 64.

During the fundraiser, Trump also took a swipe at Attorney General Jeff Sessions for his lackluster response to Trump's calls to launch an investigation into Hillary Clinton’s email scandal.

“It's a rigged system. And we don't have the right people in there yet. We have a lot of great people, but certain things, we don't have the right people,” he said, before asking “is Hillary a happy person?”

"When she goes home at night, does she say, 'What a great life?' I don't think so. You never know. I hope she's happy,” he said.

Trump’s reported gaffe triggered a predictable Twitterstorm. Rep. Rohit Khanna (D-California) called it “the most un-American sentiment expressed by an American President.”

“George Washington would roll over in his grave,” he wrote.

Trump’s critics also rushed to accuse him of showing “autocratic” tendencies with his “beyond outrageous” joke.

Trump’s supposed adulation for Xi comes amid a bitter economic row with China, the EU and Canada over his recent decision to impose a 25 percent tariff on imported steel and a 10 percent tariff on imported aluminum. While the announcement stoked fears of potential trade wars, Trump indicated that he would not mind starting a few, as they are “good and easy to win.”

On Friday, China said it is mulling whether to retaliate against the proposed measures. Trump has been antagonizing China since before the start of his presidency. He infamously challenged the “One China” policy by taking a congratulatory call from the president of Taiwan, which Beijing considers its territory, and repeatedly accused China of undermining the US economically.
 
https://www.rt.com/usa/420405-florida-shooting-survivors-trump-hangup/

Parkland school shooting survivor boasts of snubbing Trump White House invitation
Published time: 4 Mar, 2018 06:03 Edited time: 4 Mar, 2018 08:03
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February 14, 2018 Parkland school shooting survival Cameron Kasky speaks to students and the media in Coral Springs, Florida, US, February 20, 2018 © Joe Skipper / Reuters
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A student who survived the Parkland school shooting has boasted on HBO that he hung up on US President Trump when invited to his White House listening session. A fellow survivor called him out for his counterproductive behavior.
TrendsDonald Trump, Florida school shooting
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students David Hogg and Cameron Kasky appeared on the Friday night edition of HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher – one of the myriad interviews they have landed in the weeks since 17 of their schoolmates and teachers were killed in mid-February.

“I hung up on the White House the other day,” a smiling Hogg said, saying the timing of Trump’s invitation was “very offensive considering the fact that there were funerals the next day, there was mourning we still had to do.

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Parkland massacre survivor boycotts school until Florida passes gun legislation
“I ended on this message with them. I said, ‘We don’t need to listen to President Trump. President Trump needs to listen to the screams of the children and the screams of this nation,’” Hogg said.

“We appreciate that you are willing to let us rebuild the world that you f****d up,” Kasky added later, after saying he was willing to accept the collective apologies of older generations.

Hogg, Kasky and a number of other students leaped into the media spotlight in the days following the shooting, with their message promoting gun control and a boycott on the National Rifle Association (NRA). The campaign has already cost the NRA a number of financial partnerships as companies were pressured to sever ties with the gun rights lobby.

But fellow student and shooting survivor Kyle Kashuv, who created a mobile phone app to help his classmates get emotional support, slammed Hogg and Kasky for the “inflammatory roles” they played on HBO. He even predicted one might win an Oscar for the performance at Saturday night’s awards.

Earlier Kashuv, who unlike the campaigning students, was not verified by Twitter within a week after the Parkland shooting, chided the pair for hanging up on the president, saying that turning down the opportunity for dialogue was “counterproductive.” It would be “an honor to discuss with you how we can come together to support our common goal: to make sure kids are safe,” he added, addressing Trump.

While campaigning for gun control, Hogg and others have been attacking Republican politicians and Trump, accusing them of taking “blood money” which, they claim, enables gun violence.
 
Not 1 but 7 Harban Singh to ensure Putin win:

http://www.postregister.com/article...-7-rivals-register-russia’s-presidential-race

Putin, 7 rivals register for Russia’s presidential race

Posted: February 13, 2018 4:52 a.m.

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FILE - In this file pool photo taken on Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2018, Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures while speaking during a meeting with the Russian athletes who will take part in the upcoming 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympic Games in South Korea, at the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside in Moscow, Russia. The 65-year old Russian leader has served two four-year presidential terms in 2000-2008 before shifting into the prime minister's seat due to term limits. (Grigory Dukor/Pool Photo via AP, File)

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In this photo taken on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2018, Russian celebrity TV host Ksenia Sobchak, who wants to challenge Russian President Vladimir Putin in the March 18 presidential election, speaks during an interview to the Associated Press in Moscow, Russia. The daughter of Putin's patron in the 1990s, the late reformist mayor of St. Petersburg, she has assailed the Kremlin's policies but avoided personal criticism of Putin. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

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In this photo taken on Friday, Jan. 12, 2018, the Communist Party's candidate for the 2018 Russian presidential election Pavel Grudinin shows his candidate's ID to the media at the Russia Central Election commission in Moscow, Russia. President Vladimir Putin is set to easily win a fourth term in the March 18 presidential election in a race against seven rivals. Grudinin the 57-year old millionaire strawberry farm director has been nominated by the Communist Party, but he's openly proud of his wealth and rejects basic Communist dogmas. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

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FILE - In this file photo taken on Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2017, Russian lawmaker Vladimir Zhirinovsky, leader of the nationalist Liberal Democratic Party, speaks at the State Duma, the Lower House of the Russian Parliament in Moscow, Russia. Zhirinovsky the 71-year old leader of the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party has won notoriety for his xenophobic statements. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)

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FILE In this file photo taken on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2018, Russian politician Grigory Yavlinsky during Independence Day celebrations at Spaso House, the residence of the American Ambassador, in Moscow, Russia. Yavlinsky the 65-year old liberal economic expert is another veteran of Russian politics. He ran against Putin the 2000 election, garnering about 6 percent of the vote. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)

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FILE - In this file photo taken on Tuesday, May 31, 2016, Russian politician and businessman Boris Titov speaks during the Russian International Affairs Council in Moscow, Russia. Putin's 57-year old business ombudsman Titov runs for the first time. He has been nominated by a pro-business party. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin, File)

By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
Associated Press
MOSCOW (AP) — Russia’s election officials have registered eight candidates for the March 18 presidential election, including President Vladimir Putin.

With his approval ratings topping 80 percent and rivals trailing far behind, Putin is set to easily win a fourth term. Putin’s most vocal critic, the 41-year-old opposition leader Alexei Navalny, has been barred from the race due to a criminal conviction that he calls politically motivated.

Here is a quick look at the Russian presidential candidates.

VLADIMIR PUTIN

The 65-year-old Russian leader served two four-year presidential terms in 2000-2008 before shifting into the prime minister’s seat due to term limits. Putin continued calling the shots during the next four years as his longtime associate Dmitry Medvedev served as Russia’s president. Before stepping down to let Putin reclaim the top job in 2012, Medvedev initiated constitutional changes that extended the presidential term to six years.

A Putin victory in March would put him on track to become Russia’s longest-serving leader since Josef Stalin. The legal limit of two consecutive presidential terms means that Putin won’t be able to run again in 2024, but many observers expect him to continue playing the top role in Russian politics even after that.

KSENIA SOBCHAK

The 36-year-old star TV host casts herself as a choice for those who have grown tired of Putin and his familiar challengers and want liberal changes. The daughter of Putin’s one-time patron, the late reformist mayor of St. Petersburg, she has assailed the Kremlin’s policies but largely avoided personal criticism of Putin.

Observers believe that Sobchak’s involvement in the race will help combat voter apathy and boost turnout to make Putin’s victory look more impressive. Some think she also could help the Kremlin counter Navalny’s calls to boycott the presidential vote and could split the ranks of the liberal opposition. Sobchak has denied being in collusion with the Kremlin.

PAVEL GRUDININ

The 57-year-old millionaire strawberry farm director has been nominated by the Communist Party, but he’s openly proud of his wealth and rejects basic Communist dogmas.

Until 2010, Grudinin was a member of the main Kremlin party, United Russia. He has been openly critical of Russia’s current political and economic system, but avoided criticizing Putin. His nomination has been seen as an attempt by the Communists to broaden the party’s appeal beyond aging voters nostalgic for the Soviet Union.

VLADIMIR ZHIRINOVSKY

The 71-year-old leader of the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party has won notoriety for his xenophobic statements. This will be the sixth time he has run for president. While Zhirinovsky has catered to nationalist voters with his fiery populist rhetoric, he has steadfastly supported Putin and his party in parliament has invariably voted in line with the Kremlin’s wishes. He won 6 percent of the presidential vote in 2012.

GRIGORY YAVLINSKY

The 65-year-old liberal economic expert ran against Putin in the 2000 election, garnering about 6 percent of the vote. Yavlinsky has denounced the Kremlin’s policies and frequently criticized Putin, calling for more political freedoms and a more liberal economic course. His support base is a relatively small number of middle-aged and elderly liberal-minded voters in big Russian cities.

BORIS TITOV

Putin’s 57-year-old business ombudsman is running for president for the first time, nominated by a pro-business party. Before becoming an advocate for business, Titov had a successful career dealing in chemicals and fertilizers. His platform has focused on creating a more favorable business environment.

SERGEI BABURIN

The 59-year-old legal expert played a prominent role in Russian politics in the 1990s, opposing the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union and becoming one of the leaders of a parliament rebellion against President Boris Yeltsin in 1993. He spent several stints in parliament and served as a deputy speaker of the lower house in the 1990s and the 2000s. After failing to make it to parliament in 2007, he left politics and served as the rector of a Moscow university. He has been nominated for the presidential race by a fringe nationalist party.

MAXIM SURAIKIN

The 39-year-old has been nominated by the Communists of Russia, a fringe group that casts itself as an alternative to the main Communist Party. He was trained as an engineer and ran a small computer business. In 2014, Suraikin ran for governor of the Nizhny Novgorod region, getting about 2 percent of the vote.
 
Putin is adding another 6 years to his 18 years rule, Xi can continue without limit, Rocketman is lifetime. Dotard so Jealous! Buay Tahan Liao!
But Why LHL want Run Road?


https://tw.news.yahoo.com/習近平稱帝-川普喊棒直呼-我也要-070721571.html


習近平稱帝 川普喊棒直呼「我也要」

三立新聞網 setn.com

9.4k 人追蹤
三立新聞網
2018年3月4日 下午3:07
國際中心/綜合報導

中共近日提出修憲建議,內容提到要取消國家主席的任期限制,等同於將習近平國家主席的任期無限延長,消息一出後,也被外界嘲諷說,習近平是想要稱帝。但這看在美國總統川普眼裡,可說是相當羨慕,竟說「美國有天也該試一試」。

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▲川普(左)、習近平(右)。(合成圖/中央社)

據《CNN》報導,川普近日在一個募款餐會時發表了一個演說,內容提及中共將修憲無限期延長習近平的任期時,竟不諱言地說「這很棒」,還說自己並不介意當個「終身總統」,認為美國有天也該效法這個制度。

募款餐會上的嘉賓聽到後,對此似乎並不感到荒謬,反而還報以笑聲回敬,而川普彷彿在同溫層獲得溫暖,不斷抱怨自己在競選期間被調查,還說昔日對手希拉蕊一點事也沒有,怒批這根本就是腐敗的制度;此外,川普還攻擊前總統布希,認為他下令攻打伊拉克「根本就是史上最差的決定」。

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https://tw.news.yahoo.com/習近平取消任期制-川普喊讚-躍躍欲試-111300834.html


習近平取消任期制 川普喊讚 躍躍欲試

世界日報World Journal

477 人追蹤
世界日報
2018年3月4日 下午7:13
中共中央委員會上月25日提出修憲案,建議取消中國國家主席連任不得超過兩屆的規定,為習近平的「無限期領導」鋪路。川普總統3日在一場募款餐會上,讚賞中國修憲廢除國家主席任期限制。川普說:「這樣很棒,或許有一天我們也能夠試試看」。

有線電視新聞網(CNN)根據取得的現場錄音報導,川普在佛羅里達州海湖莊園舉行的共和黨閉門募款午宴上說:「他(習近平)現在是終身領導人,而且他很棒。他可以這麼做,我覺得很棒。或許我們有一天我們也能夠試試看」。川普語畢,現場支持者爆出掌聲與歡呼。

中共中央委員會上月提出修憲案,為習近平「無限期領導」鋪路。僅具橡皮圖章功能的全國人民代表大會本月5日開議,肯定會通過這項提案,中共修憲幾乎成為定局。

中共修憲引發全球關注,川普之前被批評未譴責中方修憲案,如今卻予以讚美。尚不清楚71歲的川普是否只是開玩笑;白宮則未立即回應。

民主黨籍國會眾議員羅康納(Ro Khanna,賓州)立即在推特上發文表示,「無論是否為玩笑話,談論如習近平等人成為終身主席,是美國總統所說過最沒有美國情操的話。(美國國父)華盛頓(聽到)都會在墳裡打滾。」

羅斯福總統1932年贏得第四個總統任期後,1951年通過的憲法修正案限制總統只能連任兩次,每任四年。若需要修改現行規定,首先得取得國會兩院三分之二議員或三分之二州議會的支持,再經四分之三的州議會批准,才能生效。

這不是川普首次稱讚習近平,川普去年11月訪問中國時,盛讚習近平是「偉大的紳士」,並形容他是「中國一百年來最有權勢的國家主席」。川普還說,習近平在他訪華期間招待地「非常好」。

川普雖然常說習近平的好話,但他今年元月告訴「路透」,指美方將對中國竊取智慧財產祭出「重罰」,也對中採行嚴厲的貿易政策。川普去年12月告訴「紐約時報」,「為了北韓問題,我一直以來對中國採行軟調,因為對我來說,唯一比貿易更重要的事,就是戰爭。」

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WHOLE WORLD CAN SEE NOW DOTARD IS DROOLING !

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SEE HOW BASTARD DOTARD TRUMP DOUBLE STANDARD + SELT-CONFLICT


http://fortune.com/2018/03/04/trump-xi-president-for-life/


Trump Praises Xi as China's 'President for Life,' Says U.S. May Give It 'A Shot Someday'

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The Waldorf Astoria Is Now Controlled by China
By Bloomberg
10:28 AM EST
U.S. President Donald Trump appeared to praise Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping’s efforts to extend his tenure in a speech to donors, according to a recording released by CNN.

“Don’t forget China’s great and Xi is a great gentleman. He’s now president for life,” Trump told Republican backers. The crowd erupted in laughter in response to the remarks made Saturday at his Mar-a-Lago estate.

The remarks come as China’s national parliament gathers in Beijing for two weeks of meetings expected to culminate in Xi’s appointment to a second term and a constitutional change allowing him to stay on indefinitely. The Communist Party announced the planned amendment Feb. 25, in a surprising break with succession practices set up after Mao Zedong’s fraught tenure.


“And look, he was able to do that,” Trump said. “I think it’s great. Maybe we’ll give that a shot some day,” he said, prompting more laughter. The White House didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

The comments could add another source of tension between the world’s two largest economies days after Trump pledged to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, fanning fears of a trade war. The plan to repeal term limits has prompted unusually open expressions of dissent in China.

Unified Leadership
Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Yesui, a spokesman for China’s National People’s Congress, sidestepped a question at the legislature’s opening news conference Sunday about whether Xi would stay on “forever.” Zhang said repealing term limits was necessary to preserve unified leadership, since Xi’s other two titles — party leader and military chief — don’t face similar restrictions.

“It is conducive to upholding the authority of Central Committee of the Communist Party, with Xi Jinping at its core,” Zhang said.

Last week, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders called the term-limits move a “decision for China to make about what’s best for their country.”

“The president has talked about term limits in a number of capacities during the campaign,” Sanders said. “It’s something that he supports here in the United States. But that’s a decision that would be up to China.”

The U.S. president’s tenure is limited to two full terms under the 22nd Amendment, which received the requisite support from two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of the states in 1951. Changing the Chinese constitution is much easier, requiring approval from two-thirds of the National People’s Congress, which has historically voiced little opposition to the leadership’s proposals.


‘Revisionist’ Power
Li Datong, a former senior editor at the official China Youth Daily newspaper, wrote a public letter to urge China’s legislators to vote against the move. Li said the move made the country vulnerable to repeating the power struggles of past eras.

“It planted the seeds for China to once again fall into turmoil,” Li wrote.

The Trump administration has branded China a “revisionist” power and describes the country’s efforts to alter international norms as a threat to U.S. security. Still, Trump has spoken positively of Xi’s rapid consolidation of power, telling Fox Business News in October that “some people might call him the king of China.”

On Saturday, Trump described Xi as “the most powerful president in 100 years, you know, person in 100 years in China,” a period that would cover Mao and almost the entire span since the last emperor was forced to abdicate in 1912.
 
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