Glenn Beck has been on a long ride into the sunset these past five years. After so many years of being genuinely funny on the radio, it is shocking to see today’s desperate activist for… anti-Trumpism?
What is Glenn Beck these days? Other than the second choice endorsement for Ted Cruz.
Cruz originally wanted Palin.
Now, perhaps because he felt betrayed, Ted Cruz holds up the Beck endorsement as a slap in Palin’s face. Just months ago, Beck was declaring Sarah Palin has become a clown. He later said he regretted it but the clown meme was picked up with glee by the left and ot now follows Sarah Palin all around Google thanks to Glenn Beck.
For all the talk about Cruz wanting Sarah Palin on board, his staff didn’t seem too concerned about bringing in the guy who called her a clown and said he was embarrassed by his former support for her.
Beck, who has spent months trying convince everyone that Donald Trump was a secret agent for Hillary Clinton, pulled off a stunt in Iowa by administering a mock oath of office to Sen. Ted Cruz.
Cruz got the oath wrong.
Which is fitting, because he is getting a lot wrong these days.
Please see the next page for details on the Beck Cruz mock swearing in:
Truth hurts.
Heidi Andrea DeWolfe
2 Chronicles 7:14New King James Version (NKJV)
14 if My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.
Beck is a loser.
HAAAAAHAAHAAHAAAAAAHAGAGAG
#TrumpTrain2016
lol
Yep. gonna unfollow truth n action… Thought this was a conservative sight, but I see now how one sided you are, no neutrality here
far, far worst is Beck, the pecker head.
Cruz can not legal be president due to he is not a natural born citizen and that doesn’t include naturalized citizenship. According to wikipedia and our laws.
Eligibility
See also: Age of candidacy and Natural-born-citizen clause
Article II, Section 1, Clause 5 of theConstitution sets the requirements to hold office. A president must:
be a natural-born citizen of the United States;[note 1]be at least thirty-five years old;have been a permanent resident in the United States for at least fourteen years.
A person who meets the above qualifications is still disqualified from holding the office of president under any of the following conditions:
Under the Twenty-second Amendment, no person can be elected president more than twice. The amendment also specifies that if any eligible person serves as president or acting president for more than two years of a term for which some other eligible person was elected president, the former can only be elected president once. Scholars disagree whether anyone no longer eligible to be elected president could be elected vice president, pursuant to the qualifications set out under the Twelfth Amendment.[69]Under Article I, Section 3, Clause 7, upon conviction in impeachment cases, the Senate has the option of disqualifying convicted individuals from holding federal office, including that of president.[70]Under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, no person who swore an oath to support the Constitution, and later rebelled against the United States, can become president. However, this disqualification can be lifted by a two-thirds vote of each house of Congress.
Natural-born-citizen clause (Redirected from Natural Born Citizen Clause)
Status as a natural-born citizen of the United States is one of the eligibility requirements established in the United States Constitutionfor election to the office of President or Vice President. This requirement was intended to protect the nation from foreign influence.[1]
The U.S. Constitution uses but does not define the phrase “natural born Citizen”, and various opinions have been offered over time regarding its precise meaning. The consensus of early 21st-century constitutional scholars, together with relevant case law, is that natural-born citizens include, subject to exceptions, those born in the United States. For those born elsewhere, there is an emerging consensus that they are also natural born citizens provided they meet the legal requirements for U.S. citizenship “at the moment of birth”, but the matter remains unsettled.[2][3] Every president to date was either a citizen at the adoption of the Constitution in 1789 or born in the United States; of those in the latter group, every president except two had two U.S.-citizen parents.[4]
The natural-born-citizen clause has been mentioned in passing in several decisions of the United States Supreme Court, and by some lower courts that have addressed eligibility challenges, but the Supreme Court has never directly addressed the question of a specific presidential or vice-presidential candidate’s eligibility as a natural-born citizen. Many eligibility lawsuits from the2008 and 2012 election cycles were dismissed in lower courts due to the challengers’ difficulty in showing that they had standing to raise legal objections. Additionally, some experts have suggested that the precise meaning of the natural-born-citizen clause may never be decided by the courts because, in the end, presidential eligibility may be determined to be a non-justiciable political question that can be decided only by Congress rather than by the judicial branch of government.[5][6]
How dumb can you get