Isnt is strange the better President Trump makes the economy, the more angry and full of hate the democrats become.
Now most strange of all is the fact that many democrats have come out and said they are hoping for a recession. Their running dogs the MSM are blathering this almost all the time now. Democrats blind hatred for the president because he beat "her turn" the criminal serial liar Hillary, has gone way off the cliff. They don't seem to care at all a recession would hurt tens of millions of Americans.
Technically some wish for the harm of many Americans, no matter what it takes to get to Trump.
Maher stands by recession remarks: 'Very worth' getting rid of Trump
"The "Real Time" host blasted Trump over the move, calling the rollback “what any evil villain would do.”
Maher finished his show of support for a recession by declaring, “Yes, a recession would be very worth getting rid of Donald Trump and these kinds of policies.”"
Without a policy argument they must resort to their old policies and any lie they can latch onto be it russian collusion or
some other hoax.
Perhaps they will rewrite enough history and destroy enough racist democrat statues that the next generation will forget the sins of racist democrats.
Let us hope enough Americans will recall and understand the history of the country.
Seven arrested at Confederate statue protest in North Carolina
Remember when they told you Avenatti would be the next president?
The tantrum has lasted 3 years.
Even animals know enough to play games fairly in the interest of their social situations.
Think altruism, empathy and a sense of fair play are traits only humans possess? Think again
"Anyone who has owned dogs or spent much time watching them is familiar with the posture: hind end up, chest down on the ground, forelegs stretched forward, an eager expression on the face. It's obviously a friendly, playful gesture, and for most dog lovers, that's all you need to know. Ethologists--animal-behavior experts--go a step further. They call this move the "play bow" and know it's used not just by dogs but also by wolves and coyotes to signal an interest in the romping, pretend-fighting sort of games that canines of all kinds seem to love.
But Marc Bekoff, an ethologist at the University of Colorado, always suspected there was something more going on. True, the posture happens most often at the beginning of a bout of canine play. But it also happens in the middle, and not randomly. And the more closely Bekoff observed dog behavior, the more he began to recognize other ritualized motions and postures--some of them so fleeting that he couldn't really keep track. So he began making videotapes, then playing them back one frame at a time. "The more details I saw, the more interesting it got," he recalls. "It wasn't just dogs playing; it was also dogs exchanging an incredible amount of information as they played."
In short, Bekoff was able to show--after at least a decade of painstaking observation and analysis--that canine play is actually a complex social interaction in which the participants constantly signal their intentions and check to make sure their behavior is correctly interpreted. Dogs that cheat--promising a playful bite but delivering a harsh one, for example--tend to be ostracized.
That understanding is nothing short of revolutionary. Only a decade or so ago, scientists were arguing vigorously over whether animals had emotions: just because a dog looks sad or a chimp appears to be embarrassed doesn't mean it really is, the skeptics said. That argument is pretty much over. The idea of animal emotion is now accepted as part of mainstream biology. And thanks to Bekoff and other researchers, ethologists are also starting to accept the once radical idea that some animals--primarily the social ones such as dogs, chimps, hyenas, monkeys, dolphins, birds and even rats--possess not just raw emotions but also subtler and more sophisticated mental states, including envy, empathy, altruism and a sense of fairness. "They have the ingredients we use for morality," says Frans de Waal, a professor of primate behavior at Emory University in Atlanta, referring to the monkeys and chimps he studies."
Why dont democrats?