dissabte, 19 de novembre del 2016

Donald Trump vs. Hillary Clinton

This is an unbiased comparison of the political positions and policies of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, candidates for president from the Democratic and Republican parties respectively.

On many issues, the candidates' positions align with the political platform of their party — Clinton is pro-choice, Trump is pro-life; Clinton supports the DREAM Act and a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, while Trump wants to deport all undocumented immigrants and build a wall on the Mexican border; Clinton wants to expand gun control legislation, Trump does not; Clinton wants to raise taxes on high-income households while Trump wants to cut taxes for all income brackets.

On other issues, the lines are more blurry. Clinton has served as Secretary of State in the Obama administration, where she was responsible for orchestrating U.S. foreign policy. Trump has criticized not only Clinton's role as Secretary of State, but also questioned key foreign policy elements like NATO and U.S. presence in Japan.

(Words of the Web)

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are the candidates for the presidency in The United States. Donald Trumps was born on June 19, 1946 in Queens, New York City and Hillary Clinton on October 26, 1947 in Chicago, Illinois. He is from a Republican Political Party, and she from a Democratic. Trump studied in Fordham University and in the University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School, he is Moderately Conservative. Instead Hillary studied in Wellesley College and in the Yale University, she is more Liberal. The current position of Trump is the Businessperson, he have the Trump Organization, and Clinton was Secretary of State, (1/21/2009- 2/1/2013). Coming up next, in this chart we can see a little comparison of them and their political opinions. 
Donald Trump versus Hillary Clinton comparison chart
Donald TrumpHillary Clinton

  • current rating is 3.32/5
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  • current rating is 3.4/5
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Abortion is a woman's unrestricted rightDisagreesStrongly Agrees
Legally require hiring women & minoritiesDisagreesStrongly Agrees
Comfortable with same-sex marriageAgreesStrongly Agrees
Keep God in the public sphereStrongly AgreesAgrees
EPA regulations are too restrictiveStrongly AgreesStrongly Disgrees
Make voter registration easierAgreesStrongly Agrees
Stricter punishment reduces crimeStrongly AgreesDisagrees
Absolute right to gun ownershipAgreesStrongly Disagrees
Expand ObamaCareDisagreesStrongly Agrees
Vouchers for school choiceStrongly AgreesStrongly Disagrees
Prioritize green energyStrongly DisagreesStrongly Agrees
Marijuana is a gateway drugDisagreesDisagrees
Stimulus better than market-led recoveryStrongly DisagreesStrongly Agrees
Higher taxes on the wealthyDisagreesStrongly Agrees
Pathway to citizenship for illegal aliensStrongly DisagreesStrongly Agrees
Privatize Social SecurityAgreesStrongly Disagrees
Support & expand free tradeStrongly DisagreesDisagrees
Expand the militaryAgreesNeutral/No opinion
Support American ExceptionalismAgreesDisagrees
Avoid foreign entanglementsAgreesDisagrees
Webs of informationhttp://www.diffen.com/difference/Donald-Trump-vs-Hillary-Clintonhttp://presidential-candidates.insidegov.com/compare/40-70/Hillary-Clinton-vs-Donald-Trump

Update Nov 9, 2016: Donald Trump has won the election and Clinton has conceded. Trump has won at least 290 electoral votes so far, with Clinton winning 232, 16 are still in play as votes are being counted in Michigan. Clinton had a small lead in the nationwide popular vote. 
Trump is the President level 3
Crowds of people chanted “Not my president” in the streets of California to express their anger at the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States.
Making sure that their voices were heard, hundreds marched through big cities using anti-Trump slogans and shouting insults at the newly-elected president.
Republican Donald Trump's victory over Hillary Clinton shocked many people and ended eight years of democratic control of the White House, but clearly, as the protests show, many people are not pleased with the outcome.
Summary: In The United States all is over, the elections are finished, and they have a president: Donald Trump. Are people satisfied with the outcome? It seems no. Many people is shocked with the Republican Donald Trump's victory... The crowd are in the streets and they are manifesting with slogans against Trump and saying bad words to the president... 
My opinion: 
Personally, I think Donald Trump is not the best candidate for the precidency of USA, but now that is over, so we can't do anything, we are in Spain, no have a vot. But the crowd in The United States is protesting for his president, maybe they can do something or maybe not. In my opinion this is lost,  to my mind they cannot do anything, only say the words that they want and feel much better... 
Difficult words:
chant: say repeatedly
march: walk
express: show
outcome: a result

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