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malaise

(269,054 posts)
Tue Oct 17, 2017, 07:23 PM Oct 2017

I heard someone on CNN refer to Groper Don the Con as a gentleman

Let me make it perfectly clear - the word gentleman has meaning (a chivalrous, courteous, or honorable man) and Groper Don the Con does not qualify. He does not even come close.
It is why he has been ostracized and shunned by all of polite society for decades.

He's a fucking short-fingered vulgarian - an uncouth racist scumbag.

The time has come for M$Greedia to stop normalizing this nasty, vulgar, deplorable fascist

5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I heard someone on CNN refer to Groper Don the Con as a gentleman (Original Post) malaise Oct 2017 OP
I could think of a lot of things to call Trump. lpbk2713 Oct 2017 #1
+1,000 I did not know that a man could steal money from people, hire artisans and skilled malaise Oct 2017 #3
Do you recall who said that? Boomerproud Oct 2017 #2
It was in the morning malaise Oct 2017 #4
In politics, gentleman has an ironic usage marylandblue Oct 2017 #5

malaise

(269,054 posts)
3. +1,000 I did not know that a man could steal money from people, hire artisans and skilled
Tue Oct 17, 2017, 07:31 PM
Oct 2017

workers and then deny them payment, grab women by their private parts, and generally speak about them in crass vulgar terms, be a public racist and still be called a gentleman - are these fugging people crazy? Are basic words for sale?

EFUCKINGnough!!!!

malaise

(269,054 posts)
4. It was in the morning
Tue Oct 17, 2017, 07:32 PM
Oct 2017

She was speaking about McCain and the Con and said these two gentlemen. I did let out two 'bad words'.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
5. In politics, gentleman has an ironic usage
Tue Oct 17, 2017, 07:36 PM
Oct 2017

For example, when one Senator is really mad at another, he calls him "the Gentleman from Alabama," instead of what he is really thinking, "The fucking moron from that shithole." Is it possible this is what they meant?

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