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Respect voters’ choice in GOP candidate Donald Trump for president

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was criticized yet again for his treatment of women after calling a Washington Post editor “beautiful” after she asked him a policy question.

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For the full effect, you really have to read the whole interview for yourself. When he says Mexican immigrants are rapists and criminals, or that Islam hates America, people around the country take it as gospel – and the increasing animosity and bitterness that Trump has inspired with his rhetoric will only intensify if he is defeated.

“I don’t want to make a comment about the United Kingdom leaving but I think they may leave based on – I’m there a lot, I have a lot of investments in the United Kingdom and I will tell you that I think they may leave based on everything I’m hearing”. He spent, by the way – he spent 18 million dollars’ worth of negative ads on me. I mean, the countries over there don’t seem to be so interested. “You know, my hands are normal. But at the same time it can be solved to a large extent with jobs”. In many cases, they’re professionals. Liberals only believe in free speech if you agree with them.

As Belgian authorities struggle to deal with the aftermath of what appears to be two murderous bombings in Brussels on Tuesday for which ISIS has claimed credit, the question of whether the country’s next commander in chief has thought clearly about how to deal with the terror group is on the minds of many. “See, we are free trade”. “Slightly large, actually.” During the same meeting, he declined to go into as much detail on matters of policy, although he did unveil a preliminary list of foreign policy and national security advisers – just “page one”, as he later characterized the roster to reporters.

“But it is hard to act presidential when you are being …”

“I do think it’s a different world today, and I don’t think we should be nation-building anymore”, Trump said. “I just think they may leave”.

“Perhaps there’s a minor effect, but I’m not a big believer in man-made climate change….”

When Fred Ryan, the paper’s publisher and CEO, asked whether he would consider using a tactical nuclear weapon against ISIS forces, he began, “I don’t want to use, I don’t want to start the process of nuclear”. “And then this happened”.

Karen Attiah, a deputy digital editor for The Washington Post’s opinions section, described her interactions with Trump in an opinion piece for the Post.

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Trump’s inflammatory comments about various ethnic and religious groups, along with his advocacy of violence against protesters, has convinced about half of Americans, according to a recent Huffington Post/YouGov poll, that his campaign “exhibits fascist undertones” (only 30 percent disagreed).

Trump Goes to Washington to Prove He's Presidential