President Trump is coming to Town Monday
shouldawouldacoulda
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Posted 9:47 am, 07/23/2016
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Just vote for Drumpf, the king of big government.
Seriously: He is power hungry. He wants control as much as he wants that unhealthy orange glow.
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ENOG
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Posted 9:29 am, 07/23/2016
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"LET'S MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN ! " TRUMP/PENCE 2016
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Sparklin
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Posted 9:28 am, 07/23/2016
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Y'all been sucking the Democrap fumes too long.
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shouldawouldacoulda
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Posted 9:21 am, 07/23/2016
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Don't forget science. Conservatives are scared to death of science.
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Truthseeker911
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Posted 9:20 am, 07/23/2016
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And blacks, SWC, and those scary gays, too.
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shouldawouldacoulda
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Posted 9:17 am, 07/23/2016
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Oh, and women.
You guys **** yourselves over women.
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shouldawouldacoulda
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Posted 9:16 am, 07/23/2016
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Well that's not true.
You're scared of bathrooms.
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Sparklin
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Posted 9:15 am, 07/23/2016
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Conservatives only fear liberals with guns.
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shouldawouldacoulda
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Posted 9:13 am, 07/23/2016
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You live in Winston?
I thought conservatives were afraid of cities.
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Sparklin
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Posted 8:57 am, 07/23/2016
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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and vice presidential pick Mike Pence will campaign in Winston-Salem Monday night. It's Trump's second Triad stop in just six weeks.
The event will take place at 8 p.m. at the Winston-Salem Fairgrounds Annex, formerly known as the Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum Annex. Tickets will be made available to the public.
A senior state GOP official said Gov. Pat McCrory will introduce Pence, while Sen. Richard Burr, Rep. Virginia Foxx and Rep. Mark Walker also will attend the event.
Fairgrounds officials said the Trump campaign first contacted them Wednesday morning with a proposal to use the annex, which can seat between 2,000 and 3,500 people.
This will be Trump's third campaign appearance in North Carolina since June. He campaigned in Greensboro on June 14 and in Raleigh on July 5.
Trump also will speak Tuesday at the VFW National Convention in Charlotte--a day after presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton addresses the convention. The convention is closed to the public, but up to 12,000 people are expected to attend.
North Carolina is seen as an important battleground state in 2016, and NBC News political analysts recently called the state and its 15 electoral votes a toss-up. Clinton has campaigned in North Carolina twice since June.
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