Your Opinion: 'The pure politician'

Dear Editor:

I just want to be on the record and say, the 2016 presidential election makes just amount of sense as an elevator in an outhouse.

We all have our talents, the Democrats have their illusions and Republicans have their reality.

Politicians are driven with deviance, paranoia and suspicion rather than evidence and finding out the truth.

Regarding the January 2016 "American Rifleman" article "She Flips, He Flops," "Hillary Clinton remarks in a group of donors, in which she said that the Supreme Court "got it wrong" on the Second Amendment. She knows full well that if she is elected president and has the opportunity to replace just one of the justices in the Heller and McDonald majorities with an anti-gun nominee, a new Supreme Court would overturn those landmark decisions as soon as it possibly could. Without the individual right to keep and bear arms, there would then be nothing standing in the way of federal gun confiscation." Chris W. Cox.

"Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman, John Podesta, discussed fomenting 'revolution' in the Catholic Church with a progressive activist in an email released by WikiLeaks." "There needs to be a Catholic Spring, in which Catholics themselves demand the end of a middle ages dictatorship and the beginning of a little democracy and respect for gender equality in the Catholic Church." Art Moore, Oct. 12, 2016.

"I am Roman Catholic and I am a female age 44. If you are a devout Catholic you would know we follow the True religion of Jesus Christ. Women play very important roles in our faith. I support male priests. You can be a disciple of Christ as a female, male, and any age of reasoning. The concept of female priests is not in our tradition. Look at the many female saints. Their worth is no less because they are female. Our faith is about tradition and law. Participating in Mass and receiving the Eucharist is not all that is our faith. Just because the world changes its view on matters doesn't mean religion will also." Cynbel Clasher, Oct. 12, 2016.

"Cooperative Congress Election Study cited Sen. Al Franken's 2008 victory in Minnesota as a prominent example where illegal voting may have swayed an election. Mr. Franken won his race by 312 votes." Kellan Howell, The Washington Times, Oct. 25, 2016.

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