Donald Trump

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Hmmmm...assumes many facts not in evidence, primarily the notion that ANYONE could get a Constitutional Amendment through the entire process in one election cycle, AND that the furor would have died down within that 2 yr election period.
I assume you mean furore, but I got all excited at the thought of the 'Fuhrer' dying within a 2 year election period.
 
I assume you mean furore, but I got all excited at the thought of the 'Fuhrer' dying within a 2 year election period.
fu·ror
/ˈfyo͝oˌrôr/
noun
  1. an outbreak of public anger or excitement.
    "the article raised a furor among mathematicians"
    synonyms: commotion, uproar, outcry, disturbance, hubbub, hurly-burly, fuss, upset, tumult, brouhaha, palaver, to-do, pother, turmoil, tempest, agitation, pandemonium, confusion; More
    • ARCHAIC
      a wave of enthusiastic admiration; a craze.

      Maybe it is just the American spelling and my keyboard autocorrect?
 
fu·ror
/ˈfyo͝oˌrôr/
noun
  1. an outbreak of public anger or excitement.
    "the article raised a furor among mathematicians"
    synonyms: commotion, uproar, outcry, disturbance, hubbub, hurly-burly, fuss, upset, tumult, brouhaha, palaver, to-do, pother, turmoil, tempest, agitation, pandemonium, confusion; More
    • ARCHAIC
      a wave of enthusiastic admiration; a craze.

      Maybe it is just the American spelling and my keyboard autocorrect?
Well you learn something new everyday on here. There are indeed two spellings but the online community is in a furore/furor over differences in definition.

Some dictionaries erroneously list furore as simply a British variant of furor, and this inadequate claim is widely repeated on the web. But while furore and furor are indeed often variants of each other, furore is more narrowly defined. In U.S. and Canadian English, we might describe a rabid dog or a manically behaving person as being in a furor. This would sound odd to English speakers outside North America, who are used to the furore spelling and only the public uproar sense.
 
fu·ror
/ˈfyo͝oˌrôr/
noun
  1. an outbreak of public anger or excitement.
    "the article raised a furor among mathematicians"
    synonyms: commotion, uproar, outcry, disturbance, hubbub, hurly-burly, fuss, upset, tumult, brouhaha, palaver, to-do, pother, turmoil, tempest, agitation, pandemonium, confusion; More
    • ARCHAIC
      a wave of enthusiastic admiration; a craze.

      Maybe it is just the American spelling and my keyboard autocorrect?
I think fuhrer, or in Trump's case wannabee fuhrer would be more appropriate.
 
Prediction...

Shortly following Trump's State of the Union address - a national emergency is declared.
 
Prediction...

Shortly following Trump's State of the Union address - a national emergency is declared.
I'm intrigued to see how off script he goes tomorrow night. His tiny todger will be tingling at the thought of billions watching him talk bollocks for 90 minutes minimum.
 
I'm intrigued to see how off script he goes tomorrow night. His tiny todger will be tingling at the thought of billions watching him talk bollocks for 90 minutes minimum.

Last year it was cripplingly embarrassing to watch. I doubt this will be any different.
 
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