Trump outreach to blax/hispanix working — with WHITE moderates; Jesse Ventura praises Vladimir Putin and drug decriminalization (pot and heroin), launching new show on RT

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http://www.cnbc.com/2016/09/06/trump-minority-vote-commentary.html

 

I agree with this article but also believe his numbers with blax and hispanix are really rising. Unless vote fraud steals their votes, a good one-third of both groups will IMO probably vote Trump, and this may swing the battleground states of OH, NC, VA, PA and my own MI.

This is the year when voters want change, not a third term of Obama/Hillary.

I blogged in 2015 how 39% of blacks said in a poll they would NOT vote for Obama again. They have no jobs due to China, Mexico, and the illegal mexicans here, and drugs and crime are destroying their lives.

And they KNOW that under Hillary nothing will get better.

Put out your Trump yard sign, volunteer for the man and send him money.

Like me.

 

306-s-steel-st-birdsfoot-plant-trump-sign-2

 

….On Jesse Ventura

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/jesse-ventura-praises-vladimir-putin-193306560.html

 

If it were up to Jesse Ventura, marijuana would be legal, Gary Johnson would be president and the United States would abandon the two-party system.

Oh, and American media companies would act more like Russia’s.

That’s just some of what the former Minnesota governor, ex-professional wrestler and author told Yahoo News in a wide-ranging interview on Thursday.

Ventura dismissed concerns about Johnson’s qualifications after the Libertarian presidential nominee seemed to be unfamiliar with Aleppo during an appearance on MSNBC earlier in the day. Aleppo is the most populous city in Syria and the epicenter of the long and violent conflict that has sparked a global refugee crisis.

“Much ado about nothing,” Ventura said of the gaffe. “The reason is, Gary Johnson supports full withdrawal from the war. And I agree with him. So once you’ve withdrawn from the Middle East, who’s going to care about that city any more?”

‘What is Aleppo?’ Gary Johnson stumbles on foreign policy question

Libertarian Party presidential nominee Gary Johnson answered a question on what he would do about Aleppo, the battered city at the heart of the civil war in Syria, with a question of his own. Johnson asked Mike Barnicle on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” “What is Aleppo?” The response drew an immediate response of “You’re kidding?” from Barnicle and started trending on social media.

Ventura, whose is promoting his new book, “Marijuana Manifesto,” chalked it up to fatigue.

“Gov. Johnson, I can imagine, as tired as he is ” I’m on a book tour and I’m going 6 a.m. to midnight. He’s running for president ” you think you’re not going to make a mistake?” Ventura said. “You think that’s going to stop me from voting for him? He’s going to end wars ” to end the war on drugs too. These other two candidates, get ready: War is gonna continue.”

Ventura believes Johnson could win the presidency if he were allowed on the debate stage with Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.

“When I ran for governor of Minnesota, at Labor Day I was only polling 10 percent,” Ventura recalled. “I was allowed in the debates, and 60 days later I was governor. It can be done. It can be done if people can see an alternative.”

The 65-year-old Minneapolis native also dismissed the notion that there isn’t room for a third-party candidate in the current political climate.

“There isn’t room? If I’d have ran, I’d have beaten both these two,” Ventura said.

This is a bold claim given that third-party candidates have not enjoyed success in modern American politics ” and because he last held office in 2003.

So why didn’t he run for president?

“Because I don’t want the job,” Ventura replied. “Why should I clean up a 150-year mess I didn’t make? The Democrats and Republicans made the mess.”

Jesse Ventura: president should be able to smoke pot in the Oval Office

Former Minn. Gov. Jesse Ventura spoke to Yahoo News and Finance Anchor Bianna Golodryga about his new book, “Jesse Ventura’s Marijuana Manifesto.” He told Golodryga that he thinks the president should be able to smoke pot in the Oval Office.

On the subject of legalization, Ventura said it’s clear drug prohibition has not worked.

“Addiction should be treated medically, not criminally,” he said.

Ventura said his position applied to all drugs, including heroin.

“A heroin addict ” because they have nowhere to get it, they have to buy it in the back alley, they don’t know if it’s good or not, they die from it,” he said. “That doesn’t mean it’s going in the 7-Eleven. You may have an area in a hospital where an addict can go, and then try and cure the addict.”

Ventura wouldn’t say how often he smokes marijuana, only that when he does, he does so legally: in Colorado.

The outspoken Ventura, whose son, Tyrel, hosts a television show on the Russian government-backed RT America, said he is going to be hosting one soon too.

“I just signed a contract with the only people that let me speak freely: ¦ Russia,” Ventura said. “I just signed a contract with RT America. I will be on there with my own show. I met Vladimir Putin in December and he assured me he will never interfere in anything I talk about.”

Jesse Ventura praises Vladimir Putin

Former Minn. Gov. Jesse Ventura spoke to Yahoo News and Finance Anchor Bianna Golodryga about his show on Russian Television. He praised Vladimir Putin and said Russia is “the only people who will let me speak free today, which is astounding.”

…Ventura on CNBC

Jesse Ventura

Katie Kramer | CNBC
Jesse Ventura

As a Navy SEAL and then a professional wrestler, Jesse Ventura has developed a reputation as a fighter. Now he’s taking on a new battle, the U.S.’s “War on Drugs” that has sought to outlaw illegal substance abuse, but led to a number of spillover effects.

In his new book, “Jesse Ventura’s Marijuana Manifesto”, the former Governor of Minnesota argues for the legalization of pot. He makes no distinction, however, between medical and recreational.

“I’m in favor of all. There is no difference. The entire plant is a medical plant,” Ventura told CNBC’s On the Money in an interview.

He said he took on the cause for a personal reason. “Someone very, very close to me developed ¦epileptic seizures and was seizing four times a week,” said the former governor.

Ventura said the person, who he declined to name for privacy reasons, took four types of pharmaceutical medicines. “None of them worked. They all had horrible side effects,” he added.

“Finally in desperation,” Ventura took the person to Colorado, where weed has been legalized. After taking medical marijuana the person has been “completely seizure-free and is completely off all of the pharmaceutical medicine,” for at least two years. “So marijuana cured the seizures,” he added.

Ventura highway

Ventura highway  

Including Colorado, at least 25 states and the District of Columbia have legalized some form of marijuana for either medical or recreational use, or both.

Contrary to what some skeptics say, however, Ventura argued the legalization movement has had a virtuous effect. “In every state that’s legalized marijuana, heroin use has gone down. The exact opposite of the propaganda they’ve been pumping into us for years.”

Meanwhile, the movement has boosted state coffers somewhat. The Colorado Department of Revenue has seen tax revenue on marijuana sales increase from $56 million in 2014 to $113 million last year, to an estimated $140 million this year.

Ventura added that the Rocky Mountain state now has millions more “to spend on schools and on infrastructure and all that.”

An end to the war on drugs?

At one point, Ventura was mooted as a potential independent presidential candidate. He told CNBC there was no love lost for either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton, both of whom have struggled under the weight of being polarizing.

“I would love to see Hillary and Donald both lose. You have two candidates here where their negatives are record high,” Ventura said. They’re both hated by the majority of the people. Well, vote for someone,” Ventura tells CNBC.

The former Minnesota governor is supporting Gary Johnson, the Libertarian former New Mexico governor, for president.

“I’m for Governor Johnson for two reasons,” Ventura said, citing armed conflict abroad and drugs. “I want out of the wars in the Middle East. Gary Johnson said he’ll do that. I want an end to ‘the war on drugs.'”

He did express some surprise at Trump success, who he said has “rattled his sword for years. I was surprised he finally did it.” In 1998, Trump backed Ventura’s independent bid for governor.

“My disappointment was he did it as a Republican. That’s why I can’t support him and won’t support him,” Ventura added.

“I don’t support Democrats and Republicans because they’ve been in charge for 150 years and look at the mess we’re in.”

On the Money airs on CNBC Saturday at 5:30 am ET, or check listings for air times in local markets.

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