Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#8821
Posted 2018-January-05, 19:55
#8822
Posted 2018-January-06, 00:58
ldrews, on 2018-January-05, 19:31, said:
You seem to mesmerized by what he says. And while you are reacting to what he says (or tweets), he is changing the landscape underneath your feet.
No, asshole...
You produced yet another specious claim not 12 hours back.
You made the specific claim that Trump carries out his campaign promises while Obama did not.
Now, when people respond with evidence that Trump is, in fact, a pathological liar, you critique people for being obsessed with what he says.
You're such a ***** idiot.
#8823
Posted 2018-January-06, 01:23
ldrews, on 2018-January-05, 12:08, said:
Pretty crappy short term memory you got there...
People tried that a week ago.
Three posts in and your line of discussion had collapsed into subjective claims that taxation is immoral and creating strawmen.
You're too ***** stupid to be able to engage in a constructive discussion, hence the need to resort to senseless trolling.
#8824
Posted 2018-January-06, 04:34
ldrews, on 2018-January-04, 11:28, said:
barmar, if you do indeed succumb to this pressure, please be sure to include a statement in the rules that govern the situation. Future posters should be forewarned.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#8825
Posted 2018-January-06, 08:39
hrothgar, on 2018-January-06, 01:23, said:
People tried that a week ago.
Three posts in and your line of discussion had collapsed into subjective claims that taxation is immoral and creating strawmen.
You're too ***** stupid to be able to engage in a constructive discussion, hence the need to resort to senseless trolling.
Is ranting all that you are capable of? Pretty boring.
#8827
Posted 2018-January-06, 09:32
ldrews, on 2018-January-06, 08:39, said:
Oh, I'm plenty of fun...
You don't deserve anything more than insult and invective.
#8828
Posted 2018-January-06, 09:34
ldrews, on 2018-January-06, 08:39, said:
Oh, I'm plenty of fun...
You don't deserve anything more than insult and invective.
Seriously, if you were capable of an intelligent and nuanced discussion, things might be different.
But look at your last post.
You don't bother addressing any of the actual comments that I make.
#8829
Posted 2018-January-06, 10:31
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Btw, this would make Don Jr. the product of Fredo lay.
#8830
Posted 2018-January-06, 11:51
Winstonm, on 2018-January-06, 10:31, said:
And trolls re-named Phishers for Fredo and the rest of us phools?
#8831
Posted 2018-January-07, 01:21
ldrews, on 2018-January-06, 08:43, said:
That said, do you personally support the effort to suppress my posting?
As you know I write in "water cooler" rarely. But I do follow and read everything.
No, I do not support the idea of suppressing your postings.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#8832
Posted 2018-January-07, 11:44
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The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#8833
Posted 2018-January-07, 12:11
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#8834
Posted 2018-January-08, 00:03
hrothgar, on 2018-January-04, 04:25, said:
Businesses (typically) have a fiduciary responsibility to engage in profit maximization.
You really don't want an entity with the power of a government trying to maximize its profits.
Businesses are able to discharge their debts through bankruptcy.
Really bad things happen when governments do so. If the US were to do so, the results would be catastrophic.
Businesses and governments (should) have very different time horizons.
(I can go on like this for quite some time. The two types of organizations are very very different)
FWIW, I do agree that Trump is ignoring existing sensibilities.
In doing so, he is doing enormous and lasting damage to the long term reputation of the United States.
Other than "Brown people are inferior" and "Jews are good with money" its pretty damn hard to figure out what kind of "assumptions" Trump bases his policies on.
Mostly he is just twisting in the wind, boasting about stuff that he had little or nothing to do with, and acting like a disgrace on Twitter.
If anything, Trump is showing us how bad or compromised his judgment and common sense can be when he clings onto his cognitive biases for dear life.
Our President and the American populace must get out of autopilot and get to know their fellow man on a personal level. These misplaced
prejudices from the old societal order hold us back as a nation.
#8835
Posted 2018-January-08, 13:36
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So, Wolff was never given permission...that right, Fredo? You're sure about that? Maybe you want to rethink that part, you marmaluke?
#8836
Posted 2018-January-08, 16:25
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The independent five-member commission includes four people appointed by President Trump, three of them Republicans. Its decision is binding.
Here is the plan they nixed - Trump's free-market approach, for all the dumbasses who believe his schtick and support him.
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The result was, well, a little bizarre. As Vox explained a few months ago, Rick Perry unveiled a proposed solution in which utility companies would pay coal and nuclear power plants "for all their costs and all the power they produce, whether those plants are needed or not."
No, seriously, that was the plan. Consumers -- which is to say, us -- would effectively bail out obsolete plants, creating unnatural profits for their owners, even if utility companies had more affordable alternatives, and even if the plants themselves are not economically viable, because the Trump administration would mandate it.
#8837
Posted 2018-January-09, 09:47
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The Huffington Post's Ariel Edwards-Levy has some fun poll results demonstrating exactly how that is happening. Virtually all surveyed Donald Trump voters believe -- incorrectly -- that the economy added more jobs in 2017 than in 2016. A plurality of Hillary Clinton voters believe the opposite. Overall, a plurality of people surveyed believe more jobs were created in 2017 than in 2016. But when given a stronger prompt, the picture changes a bit: When people were asked whether more jobs were created in Barack Obama's last year or in Trump's first year, the numbers flip, with a narrow plurality crediting Obama.
There are several things going on here. One is that people in general probably believe (correctly) that, overall, 2017 was a better year for the economy, and also may have heard (again, correctly) that the official unemployment rate went down, and concluded (incorrectly) that all the economic and employment news, including newly added jobs, must have gotten better as well.
Another thing is that a stronger partisan prompt has no effect on Trump voters in this case because they don't need it. It seems likely that Republicans in 2017 were more likely to listen to good economic news and ignore the bad, and since all in all there was more good than bad, they would up thinking everything was good. From 2010 through 2016, as the mild but steady economic recovery chugged along, those same Republicans almost certainly underrated the economy -- just as Republicans tended to deny that the U.S. had entered into a recession during the first half of 2008, when George W. Bush was president.
That was an impressive feat of cognitive bias, but it's not the worst one I know about. Democrats during Ronald Reagan's presidency somehow convinced themselves that inflation actually rose while that Republican was in the White House. Since Reagan had been elected in large part because of 1970s inflation and few by the end of his term even talked about it, that was a truly impressive feat of partisan cognitive bias.
An even more impressive feat of cognitive bias is giving Reagan credit for getting inflation under control when, in fact, it was Paul Volcker who was appointed by Jimmy Carter.
#8838
Posted 2018-January-09, 10:32
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There's plenty of precedent. It reminds me of the government paying farmers not to farm.
#8839
Posted 2018-January-09, 19:45
No matter how we feel about Trump, I'm sure we can all join in on saying, "Thank you, Dianne!"
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
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