Entertainment: Starting as a Succubus, Taking Hollywood by Storm Chapter 1049 1018: Name Your Good Qualities In Each Other
Watching Trump on TV blabbering, "We must target ISIS,"
"We can't add more enemies," Martin thought to himself:
"What's this guy Trump getting from Russia?"
He pondered if there was so shady deal among these three parties, whether he could leverage it.
Guinea's developnt pace needed to accelerate; recently, France, Egypt, and others had started to take notice of Guinea's growth.
In the final twenty minutes, the topic returned to dostic issues.
Due to a recent vacancy in the US Supre Court, many Republican congressn worried Obama appointing a new justice would tilt the court toward liberals, so they demanded waiting for the next president to appoint one.
On justice selection criteria, Hillary and Trump predictably differed.
Hillary implied she'd appoint a liberal justice to overturn Citizens United v. FEC, oppose corporate political contributions, and ensure voting rights for all.
Trump said he'd choose a staunch conservative justice, like the late Justice Scalia, to protect the Constitution, including the Second Andnt right to bear arms.
Yes, Trump opposed gun bans.
In the debate's final stage, an audience mber finally raised an unaddressed issue—energy—asking both candidates:
"How would you, if elected president, protect the environnt while avoiding massive worker layoffs?"
Trump imdiately reaffird support for "old energy" industries like coal, stating the US needs not just wind and solar but also coal and oil, and developing "clean coal" could avoid so pollution.
"Though not fully green, if it can boost local economies and jobs, so environntal sacrifice is necessary."
Then, he criticized Obama's environntal policies, saying they hurt local coal industries too much, letting foreign companies take advantage, so the US must revive its energy industry to provide more jobs for Arican workers.
Hillary, always a "green advocate," emphasized her support for new energy in her response.
Hillary first stated: "The US should beco the '21st-century clean energy superpower.'"
But then she pivoted, saying to address employnt, revitalizing coal regions' economies and helping workers there re-enter the workforce was needed.
Trump imdiately mocked: "See, see, this is a veteran politician's face— for votes, she ignores her own contradictions. So I'd like to ask, what specific asures does Ms. Clinton have to protect the environnt while boosting coal industries?"
Hillary didn't even glance at Trump, as if she didn't hear him, ignoring the jab and only saying to the questioner: "My team is crafting a comprehensive energy policy to ensure US energy independence, not relying on..."
Trump loudly said: "Everyone should be vigilant; Ching Chong's steel dumping hurts US businesses and workers. Their goods are starting to dominate every aspect of our lives."
Hillary also sternly said: "After taking office, I'll launch stricter anti-dumping investigations against Ching Chong."
Then she imdiately mocked Trump: "Mr. Trump claims to oppose dumping, but his 'Trump Tower' actually uses Ching Chong-imported steel, and plenty of his money is flowing in Ching Chong."
Trump instantly said: "My tower uses Ching Chong steel because it's cheap. But once I take office and implent anti-dumping policies, Ching Chong goods will lose their price advantage. Then, including , all Arican businessn will stop buying Ching Chong goods."
Trump's slick sophistry made Martin, watching TV, laugh.
Many Aricans were also amused.
More interestingly, they thought Trump made sense.
Businessn chase profit, naturally choosing "cheap and good" goods—so it's a policy issue.
Why did Japanese electronics and cars once dominate the US market?
Wasn't it because they were "cheap and good"?
With less than 10 minutes left, the debate's final question was less explosive.
It even drew knowing laughter from the audience.
An audience mber smilingly asked: "Ms. Clinton, Mr. Trump, I'd like you both to na one good quality in the other."
In this debate full of personal attacks, this question injected a bit of "cheerful atmosphere," easing the tension.
Then, Hillary's instinctive reaction was caught by the TV caras.
She rolled her eyes.
Clearly, praising Trump was sothing she was extrely, extrely, extrely unhappy about.
Laughter erupted in front of TVs.
Then, Hillary, in her response, cleverly avoided directly praising Trump, instead complinting his daughter Ivanka, present at the scene.
"I've known Ivanka for a long ti; she's a highly capable, well-educated woman."
On the word "woman," Hillary deliberately stressed, clearly mocking Trump's disrespect for won.
She continued: "Her daughter's achievents reflect Trump's good points, um, I really like Ivanka."
Trump said: "Though I disagree with all of Hillary's views, I must respect her never-give-up spirit."
"She's a 'fighter.'"
"I think that's a great trait." Trump said.
When saying "fighter," Trump also stressed, likely implying Hillary's belligerence.
Reviews
All reviews (0)