Trump Caught Bragging About Sexual Exploits: ‘Grab ’em by the P*ssy’ - NOW Says Tape FAKE

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Ana está en llamas !!!
Ana Navarro: The Voice For GOP Women (And Men) Abandoned By Their Party
The Good Men Project

October 13, 2016, 11:30 pm

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Let’s stipulate that Donald Trump has (gleefully) thrown plenty of his party mates under the bus. From attacking Speaker Paul Ryan to Senator Ben Sasse, to claiming Senator Ted Cruz’s father was somehow involved in the JFK assassination. It’s been a surreal ride, and even Trump supporters can’t deny that their nominee has been happy to attack his own party.

Enter Ana Navarro, a Republican strategist and contributor to CNN. She feels absolutely no qualms about telling the truth, as she sees it, about DJT. And frankly, it’s been amazing to watch.

So rather than write about it, I’ll let Navarro do the talking. We’ll start here:

And here:

And don’t forget this one:

Anyone else disgusted by the Trump comments on sexual assault, and those who continue to excuse and defend him, will feel sweet catharsis hearing Navarro skewer all those foolish and dangerous arguments.

Thank you, Ms. Navarro.
 

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‘Orange is the New Black’ cast says ‘f--k you’ to Donald Trump in ‘Vaginas Against Trump’ T-shirts
‘Orange is the New Black’ cast says ‘f--k you’ to Donald Trump in ‘Vaginas Against Trump’ T-shirts
BYNICOLE BITETTE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Saturday, October 15, 2016, 9:58 AM

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Lea DeLaria posts photo to Twitter with cast and crew of Orange is the New Black in t-shirts that say "Vaginas against Trump" on October 14, 2016. The caption read, “CAST & CREW OF OITNB SAYS F--K YOU TRUMP.”

(@REALLEADELARIA VIA TWITTER)
tweeted a photoof cast and crew members wearing T-shirts that read: "Vaginas against Trump" on Friday night.


9 PHOTOSVIEW GALLERY
The women accusing Donald Trump of sexual assault
Co-stars Taryn Manning (Tiffany "Pennsatucky" Doggett), Emma Myles (Leanne Taylor), Beth Dover (Linda Ferguson) and Julie Lake (Angie Rice), along with some of the show's crew members, are all seen donning the tees in the snap.

Trump's lewd remarks inspire sex assault victims to share stories

One user responded to the image — and strongly worded message — by writing, "love diminishing women as just a body part. So classy."

campaign-2016-trump.jpg

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump does not have the vote of women on the “Orange is the New Black” cast and crew.

(EVAN VUCCI/AP)
DeLaria, 58, quickly fired back at the man, calling him an "a-hat."

"You're right! I'm objectifying women," she wrote, sarcastically. "I'm so glad this straight white guy was able to point out my evil ways."

oitnb16f-3-web.jpg

Taryn Manning and Lea DeLaria star in Netflix’s “Orange is the New Black.”

(JOJO WHILDEN/NETFLIX)
The Anti-Trump fashion choice comes just one week after the presidential nominee wascaught on a hot mic video from 2005 spewing sexist banterwith then-"Access Hollywood" host Billy Bush.

Lil Jon responds to Trump calling him 'Uncle Tom'

Trump is heard on the video saying that he can "grab women by the p---y" and get away with it because he's a star.

"Vaginas Against Trump" shirts are being sold through an organization by the same name. The Facebook page for the organization appears to have started at least a week before Trump's recent video.

"We see your sexist, racist, oppressive ways and today we say NO MORE!" the website for "Vaginas Against Trump" reads.

Women-Tweet-About-Periods-Donald-Trump.png


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The Women Who've Had Enough

Gender-equality advocates fed up with the Republican Party are
protesting outside of Trump businesses around the country



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Alaa Chaker stands with other anti-Trump protesters outside the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. Waleed Shahid



When 24-year-old Natalie Green heard Donald Trump’s lewd comments about women on the 2005 Access Hollywood tape leaked earlier this month, she felt a rush of anger and fear. Green said she was sexually assaulted as a young teen and had never shared her story publicly.

“But to listen to someone who is a presidential candidate brag about sexually assaulting women is absolutely disgusting and despicable,” she said. “I felt like I had to do something.”

And she did. Last Tuesday, Green shared her personal story to a crowd for just the second time in a week outside the new Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. She and hundreds of young women and allies assembled last week to protest in more than a dozen U.S. cities. Their objective: to condemn Trump’s rhetoric and demand that Republican leaders unendorse him.


But their concern runs deeper than Donald Trump, Green said. They also seek to call attention to what they characterize as the Republican Party’s history of “sexist, racist politics,” both nationally and locally, which they believe have allowed Trump to thrive today. Democratic leaders and the Clinton campaign have hesitated to tie the GOP with its presidential candidate. But many women voters and women’s advocacy groups, such as those protesting last week, have already made that determination. To them, traditional Republicans and Donald Trump hold very few differences.

“There’s no distinction,” said Eleanor Smeal, president of the Feminist Majority Foundation. “[Trump] has laid bare Republican positions ... they might use more careful, calculated language, but that’s where they are.”

Proponents of that idea do have a point. For one, there’s the most recent and obvious way Republican leaders have tacitly accepted Trump’s past and present behavior. The leak of the 2005 video footage was followed by a New York Times article in which two women alleged sexual assault against the candidate. This led to a number of other allegations against him, and since this time he has insulted the physicality of some of these accusers and threatened legal action. In light of the scandal, Republicans have widely criticized Trump, but a troubling amount of hesitation remains among the party’s leading officials. House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, for example, have repudiated his comments, but have not formally withdrawn their endorsements.

The concerns over Trump and the GOP are policy-driven too: The activists draw a line between Trump’s political interests and those of other conservatives. During Wednesday’s final presidential debate, Trump did not explicitly state his desire to have the landmark
Roe v. Wade decision overturned—much to the dismay of many pro-life conservatives. He did, however, express plans to appoint a Supreme Court justice who would overturn the decision “automatically.” If the court does make that determination, Trump said, then abortion regulations would be left to the discretion of individual states.

But state abortion regulations have not been helpful for women seeking to have the procedure, said Terry O’Neill, president of the National Organization for Women. The track record of Republican vice-presidential nominee Mike Pence is just one example, she added. The state of Indiana had strict abortion policies—that resulted in the arrests of women for feticide—before Pence became governor in 2013. But in March of this year, he signed a bill that sought to enact further abortion restrictions statewide until a federal judge blocked the measure in June. According to a New York Times report about the law’s stipulations:


In addition to holding doctors liable if a woman has an abortion solely because of objections to the fetus’s race, sex or a disability, like Down syndrome, the law restricts fetal tissue donation and requires doctors performing abortions to have admitting privileges at a hospital or to have an agreement with a doctor who does.
Beyond abortion, Trump has aligned with other conservative positions. Before his demands for a U.S.-Mexico wall, other Republican officials campaigned for a more concrete boundary. Senator John McCain released an ad in 2010 where he asked law enforcement to “complete the danged fence” along the Mexico border. And Trump’s calls for a system of “law and order” in the wake of protests against police brutality mirror President Nixon’s successful 1968 campaign with a “law and order” platform—which helped to drive criminal justice efforts that disproportionately criminalized communities of color.

Even with these striking similarities between Trump and the Republicans who have denounced him, women’s rights advocates could run into a problem with linking the two. If they succeed in convincing the public that the line dividing traditional conservatism and Trumpism is actually imaginary, won’t that simply encourage Republicans who now oppose Trump to back him? A few of the women at Tuesday’s protest in Washington, D.C. hinted at a possible answer—pointing to ways in which Trump does, after all, represent a departure from the past.

Alaa Chaker, 22, said Trump is “creating a dangerous America.” She has noticed a genuine fear during this election, not just among Muslims like herself, but among other minority groups in the United States. Twenty-two-year-old Ambar Pinto, who also attended the D.C. protest, agrees. As an undocumented immigrant born in Bolivia, who came to the United States when she was 12, she said her family constantly lives in fear of deportation. In this year’s election, she said, that threat feels more intense for her. So she’s not simply working to defeat Trump; she sees herself as battling to prevent his ideas from spreading further and shaping the country’s future.


SOURCE: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/10/women-fed-up-with-trump/504998/



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If you defend President Donald J. Trump's sexist Twitter attack, "you're an enabler."


 

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Trump [NOW] Says Access Hollywood Tape
Where President Boasts of Grabbing Women
'By the Pussy' Is Fake



President Donald Trump now claims that the Access Hollywood tape on which he boasted of sexually assaulting women may not be genuine, according to a report in The New York Times.

On the tape, which surfaced weeks before the November 2016 presidential election, the former reality star can be heard bragging to TV presenter Billy Bush of grabbing women “by the pussy.”

Trump faced calls to step aside from the race after the tape went public, and apologized for the remarks, dismissing them as “locker room talk.”

However according to the Times, the president told a senator earlier this year that the tape was not genuine and repeated the claim to an adviser recently.

The president apparently sees parallels between the situation he faced after the release of the tape in 2016 and that currently faced by Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore.

Moore has faced calls to step aside by senior Republicans after being accused of sexually molesting a 14-year-old girl and making sexual advances towards several teenagers in the early 1970s, when he was in his early 30s and a district attorney.

Trump told the press at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida Tuesday that Moore had denied the claims, and of the Alabama Senate race remarked "We don't need a liberal person in there."


http://www.newsweek.com/trump-now-c...e-which-he-boasted-sexually-assaulting-722513


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SEE IT: Donald Trump caught on hot mic spewing sexist chatter about women in 2005: ‘Grab them by the pussy’


Mary Trump Book Claims Trump Praised Her Breasts and His Own Sister Called Him a Clown

 
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