Rick Perry vs. Barack Obama The campaign has begun
#521
Posted 2012-March-25, 16:21
When I first read your post, I thought it was Sean Hannity, not Newt Gingrich, that you were quoting. Somehow it sounds natural from Sean Hannity. From Newt Gingrich, it is a new low for Newt.
As for Santorum, nothing he says can surprise me. I wouldn't be surprised if his ultimate goal was to reinstate the Inquisition (in fact, I might be surprised if it were not his ultimate goal).
#522
Posted 2012-March-25, 18:47
ArtK78, on 2012-March-25, 16:21, said:
When I first read your post, I thought it was Sean Hannity, not Newt Gingrich, that you were quoting. Somehow it sounds natural from Sean Hannity. From Newt Gingrich, it is a new low for Newt.
As for Santorum, nothing he says can surprise me. I wouldn't be surprised if his ultimate goal was to reinstate the Inquisition (in fact, I might be surprised if it were not his ultimate goal).
Just because Romney is sharp enough not to say something this stupd doesn't mean the LDS should get a free pass on a history of bigotry, either. IMHO.
#523
Posted 2012-March-26, 08:54
Gingrich's comment was inhuman. What a creep.
#524
Posted 2012-March-26, 14:46
#525
Posted 2012-March-26, 17:08
kenberg, on 2012-March-26, 14:46, said:
Gingrich sounded more like Klan to me.
#526
Posted 2012-March-26, 17:19
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#527
Posted 2012-March-26, 20:07
#528
Posted 2012-March-26, 20:59
What an absurd reading of the law. Zimmerman chased after and confronted Trayvon in a location that they each had equal right too yet he claims self defense? Trayvon has a much better claim to feeling threatened as per the 'stand your ground law' as he was unarmed, weighed nearly half as much and was being chased for no apparent(nor good) reason by an unknown stranger at night.
I suppose that was off topic, oh well here goes on topic!
I don't understand how twisted someone's thoughts must be to insist that Obama's expression of personal connection with such a tragic event is politically divisive. It wasn't politically divisive until the people lamenting Obama's comment made it so. The insane part is with a recent poll showing 75% of Americans wanting Zimmerman arrested, Newt and Santorum chose the wrong side.
They cut the pie took the smallest piece and then yelled at the other side for cutting the pie.
#529
Posted 2012-March-26, 21:38
Quite frankly, it is making me sick. Hopefully, I am not alone. I know Sam Harris is not shy when it comes to castigating belief systems. Maybe this political event will finally start a backlash against moral bigots.
#530
Posted 2012-March-27, 03:57
dwar0123, on 2012-March-26, 20:59, said:
so that's what happened... i'm glad someone knows, all this uncertainty gets tiresome
#531
Posted 2012-March-27, 06:58
dwar0123, on 2012-March-26, 20:59, said:
I don't understand how twisted someone's thoughts must be to insist that Obama's expression of personal connection with such a tragic event is politically divisive. It wasn't politically divisive until the people lamenting Obama's comment made it so. The insane part is with a recent poll showing 75% of Americans wanting Zimmerman arrested, Newt and Santorum chose the wrong side.
They cut the pie took the smallest piece and then yelled at the other side for cutting the pie.
One of my concerns about Santorum and friends is that they consider those who disagree with them to not only be wrong but immoral, and they might well include twisted and insane in their assessment. I find this approach no more appealing when it comes from the left. I realize you are not a campaign manager but name calling is not the way to win people to your point of view.
Of course "If I had a son he would look like Trayvon," did not mean that it would be ok if the kid that got killed was white. Nor did Obama mean that all black people look alike, another way the statement could be misread. But it seems to me that if he felt the need to comment, he could have done better. Regret about all of the lives lost to violence would have been good.
Race often plays a role, and probably here. But I expect that once Zimmerman decided to arm himself and patrol the neighborhood for people he thought were suspicious, and apparently he found a great many people to be suspicious, it was only a matter of time before something like this happened. Race ups the ante, no doubt, but this was a tragedy waiting to happen.
The Stand law sounds nuts. Apparently at the time of passage many police organizations explained to the legislature that the law was nuts. How this law will play out here, we shall see. I hope that this 75% who want Zimmerman arrested will also support legislators voting to repeal the law when the NRA goes on the attack. Want to place a bet?
#532
Posted 2012-March-27, 07:11
I don't know what this "stand your ground" law says, I have not read it. But it must be very bad indeed if the result is that all one need do is speak the words "self defense" and like magic, cannot be arrested for a shooting death. Zimmerman certainly did not "stand his ground" - all accounts agree he pursued Martin. If anyone has the right to claim self defense here, I would think it would be Martin. It is so sad, but I really do think that if Martin had won this fight, he surely would have been arrested and charged. I really do believe that Zimmerman would not have chased a white teen through the neighborhood.
All that said, I do want to keep the right to defend myself against violence with a gun. But definitely not to chase an unarmed man who has committed no crime!
-gwnn
#533
Posted 2012-March-27, 07:42
#534
Posted 2012-March-27, 07:53
billw55, on 2012-March-27, 07:11, said:
I know I have told this story before, but I am old so I get to repeat myself. One of my childhood memories:
My parents rented out the (very space limited) top floor of our house to a woman and her two kids who had left her abusive husband. One night the husband came to the side door demanding to get in to see his wife. He had been drinking, the night was warm, only the screen door was closed (and locked), my father was not at home. My mother had my father's 12 gauge pointed at the door explaining that he would not be coming in to see his wife. He left, which I have always believed extended his life by quite a bit.
There is a world of difference between this and what Zimmerman did. It may be difficult to get the law right, but we must try.
#535
Posted 2012-March-27, 09:07
kenberg, on 2012-March-27, 07:53, said:
Agree. One criteria is that we should be confident of who the aggressor is. Which is most certainly not the case in the Zimmerman-Martin situation.
-gwnn
#536
Posted 2012-March-27, 09:23
Health-care provision at center of Supreme Court debate was a Republican idea
Quote
“We wanted to find an alternative that was more consistent with market-oriented economic ideas and would involve less government intervention,” Pauly said.
His solution: a system of tax credits to ensure that all Americans could purchase at least bare-bones “catastrophic” coverage.
Pauly then proposed a mandate requiring everyone to obtain this minimum coverage, thus guarding against free-riders: people who refuse to buy insurance and then, in a crisis, receive care whose costs are absorbed by hospitals, the government and other consumers.
Now we have 26 states and all of the republican candidates asking the court to find a new "constitutional right to be a free rider" on the backs of responsible folks. And it seems possible that an activist court will actually enact such a right, although I'm guardedly optimistic that they won't. However powerful the free-lunch movement has gotten in the US, I find it hard to believe that a majority of the supreme court will swallow that politically popular kool-aid.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#537
Posted 2012-March-27, 13:04
kenberg, on 2012-March-27, 06:58, said:
This is actually very interesting to me. In my own head, I didn't think I resorted to empty name calling, I don't think I actually called anyone a name. But I have read enough of these forums to know that you are generally a fair and impartial moderate and would really like to know how I crossed the line with you.
I don't think Obama's original comment was politically divisive and I have yet hear anyone articulate an actually explanation of how it is. Calling someone out for being politically divisive, is in and of itself politically divisive and doing that when the original person wasn't being politically divisive requires a fairly twisted thought process, hence my comment.
As we all know, politicians will do seedy things to get ahead, both sides, no doubt. What I found funny is that in this case, Newt and Santorum choose a position that appeals to such a minority of people that it can't be politically advantageous. Hence the action seems insane to me, as it defeats their own motives as I understand them.
I know your not above cutting people down, you referred to both sides as being a rerun of dumb and dumber, I am curious how I crossed the line.
Quote
Well, many people don't even think the incident really has anything to do with the law. Of those that believe the law actually excuses Zimmerman(legally), I think the vast majority will want the law repealed. Of those that think the law doesn't apply and Zimmerman is just a murderer with the police coming up with some absurd legal defense, I think you are right and that many won't want the law repealed. How this actually all plays out is something worth watching.
#538
Posted 2012-March-27, 15:25
billw55, on 2012-March-27, 09:07, said:
i'm glad someone knows the facts here... all that uncertainty was becoming tiresome... of course, it appears there was an eyewitness - but he was probably paid off
#539
Posted 2012-March-27, 17:16
dwar0123, on 2012-March-27, 13:04, said:
I know your not above cutting people down, you referred to both sides as being a rerun of dumb and dumber, I am curious how I crossed the line.
I suppose that I may need to eat a little crow. Thanks to Y66 for posting a link to the full Obama remarks. Many of the things that I thought Obama should have said, he said. He began by saying that he did not want to say anything that would cause problems for a full investigation, and went on to describe the necessity for examining all aspects of this. The laws, the context, and of course examining as near as possible what actually happened. I fully agree with all of that, and in the full context of the statement, where he talked about all parents, I think it is not right to pounce on a portion of it that, in isolation, might not sound so good (to me, anyway).
Part of my thinking was that it would be dumb for a president, and a lawyer at that, to appear to have formed a judgment in an ongoing investigation about who was to blame. His full statement in fact stays clear of that.
To the case itself,well, there will be lawyers. But my take: Zimmerman just sounds so much like various people that I have had the misfortune to know from time to time. Way back in grade school there was this kid who missed no opportunity to cause me grief. Stick his foot out to trip me, that sort of thing. Finally I slugged him, so then he ran home and told his mother. A person should not be allowed to aggravate a guy until the guy confronts him, and then shoot the guy because the confrontation scares him. It's not right. I don't know exactly what happened, but this sounds like it is about it, and I don't know what the law says, but it's not right to do this. But, as the pres says, we should look fully into exactly what happened.
I gather Zimmerman has been a real pain for the 911 operators. Maybe we will find out he just follows black people around, maybe we will find out that he is an equal opportunity jerk.
Anyway, this doesn't really answer why I got upset. Something about twisted set me off I think.
#540
Posted 2012-March-28, 07:18
PassedOut, on 2012-March-27, 09:23, said:
Health-care provision at center of Supreme Court debate was a Republican idea
Now we have 26 states and all of the republican candidates asking the court to find a new "constitutional right to be a free rider" on the backs of responsible folks. And it seems possible that an activist court will actually enact such a right, although I'm guardedly optimistic that they won't. However powerful the free-lunch movement has gotten in the US, I find it hard to believe that a majority of the supreme court will swallow that politically popular kool-aid.
I wonder if Adam Smith concerned himself with shopping around for the best deal for a doctor?