Click here to read the full article.
There are plenty of things you can call “rigged” in Nevada.
Slot machines, for instance. Video poker. Roulette. The state is known for being the first in the nation to legalize gambling, after all — and if there’s one rule of gambling, it’s that games are “rigged” so that the house inevitably wins. There’s a reason casinos look like Roman palaces and not lean-to shanties in Karachi.
GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley and her supporters say they found two other things that were “rigged” in Nevada this week.
The first was the state caucuses, which award delegates toward the party’s nomination. The Las Vegas Review-Journal found plenty of Haley’s supporters who thought those, scheduled for Thursday, were “rigged” toward the Republican front-runner, former President Donald Trump.
That’s why Haley decided to take part in the symbolic state-mandated primary on Tuesday, which Trump did not. It wouldn’t award delegates, but at least it wouldn’t be “rigged,” right?
Well, then she lost to … absolutely nobody. So it became “rigged.”
This is a complicated sequence of events, so let me do a quick recap.
Continue reading here.
Scroll down for comments and share your thoughts!
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings