omar lujan: Lujan and roughly 10 friends, all in their 30s, are planning a viewing party Monday night at one of their homes, where they can drink beers and make comments as the candidates clash, according to National Observer. Trump extreme and at times outlandish statements make for good TV but also raise the alarm over the possible future of American policy, he said. While the political impact of the debate is not to be minimized, part of the appeal lies in waiting for Trump "to say something crazy," said Omar Lujan, 36, a researcher at Ryerson University in Toronto. The Republican candidate stance on immigration is of particular interest to Lujan, who hails from Peru and has family in the U.S."I find it quite entertaining but also a bit uneasy," he said. Smith has booked space at Eton House, a bar in east Toronto, to watch the debate on a big screen with dozens of others, many of them expats like him. The 90-minute debate is considered must-see TV by many and is expected to draw an estimated audience of 75 million or more viewers, with many more expected to keep tabs on the event online."It'll be more like the Superbowl than the Superbowl," said Alex Smith, an American expat who has been living in Canada for 46 years.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under omar lujan, american policy topics.
27.9.16