It's not an attack. It's a prediction. I predict you can't avoid the consequences of an overloaded medical system if you are a medical professional. It's essentially a mathematical certainty at this point. — boethius
I have no idea who you are but remaining humble is my suggestion for a start on how to deal on an interpersonal level with others.I wish your patients luck. As for you personally, you'll get what you deserve in this situation. — boethius
He’s angry the CCP was blaming the American military for the pandemic. — NOS4A2
My head hurts, literally :angry:Keep on truckin lady. You'll beat them number yet. :up: — Sir2u
I think all this stuff is decreasing confidence in the government, which might be a good thing. — frank
The theater is going to come to a close, but everyone knew how this movie ended anyway, regardless of what plot twists might have happened along the way. — Hanover
Thank you for being informed and suggesting a possible blend of the options.I have a problem with the first question. — Noah Te Stroete
Why would I rather be other than I am? I’ve tried being other people, but it never works out. :wink: — Noah Te Stroete
Mind if I am part of the crowd? I promise I won't start a food fight :wink:eh. There's a crowd I won't bother with anymore. There's no profit in it. — frank
Well, I was kind of drunk when I wrote it (I am more drunk now.)
I take issue with the notion of indirect responsibility though because it seems to be essentially hollow: perhaps a village or a town bears some abstract "responsibility" for a school shooter.
Ultimately, the responsibility falls on the perpetrator. And I'm not blaming iran for this one; I do believe it was an honest mistake. — BitconnectCarlos
Question: why do we talk about Trump, but not Putin's persecution of homosexuals or Chinese concentration camps? — frank
I'll ask you what I asked NOS4A2 and didn't get much of an answer, how will Trump prevent Iran acquiring a nuclear bomb? — Punshhh
In fairness, you take a lot of flak on Trump from just about every angle and manage to stay remarkably good-natured about it, which is admirable. And with 15 small businesses, I imagine you have headaches enough on your plate. — Baden
At the moment on Iran, I'm at the thank-fuck-nobody-else-had-to-die stage. Hope it stays like that for the forseeable. — "Baden
Again I refer you (@ArguingWAristotleTiff) to my question (b) from a prior thread. GOP - otherwise loyal tRUMPkins - Senator Lee, R-UT & Senator Paul, R-KY (so far) seemed to have answered. Nakedly shameful wreckless disregard for U.S. national security by your president, Tiff (et al). Is this shitshow what you 'voted' for? :roll: — 180 Proof
Ah contrair, mon amie - he's very much mine too! Thus, my visceral - and vociferous - critical reactions to him. But you mistake my rhetorical emphasis for disavowal when really I'm just trying to keep front & center that it's (MAGA-supporters like) you who claim tRUMP (so much more than the majority of Americans - me included) enough to defend his indefensible conduct. Yeah I claim him as "my president", Tiff, and accept my duty, in solidarity with my fellow citizens, to resist (i.e. civilly disobey) tRUMP's pathological perfidy & various abuses of power in the near-term and hold him criminally, constitutionally & electorally accountable in the long-term. So yeah, "my president", my national disgrace, My Cosmopolitan Duty to take out the presidental trash! Care to join me, chère? :flower: — 180 Proof
If someone assassinated Bush Jr for his part in the Iraq war, would you consider that justice? What about stormin' Norman? Does he deserve to die? And can't we do away with Trump for his betrayal of the Kurds? Or is your rule that only American lives matter (because you can be sure that most Iranians have exactly the same view only in the inverse). For me as a neutral military leaders are in the same broad category—people whose job is to kill in the interests of their country. Is there some reason I should think differently? You have to take a step back from your position on one side or the other to make a convincing moral argument. Otherwise, we're just talking about strategy, which is fine, but let's make that explicit. — Baden
Prude. — Michael
I've always supposed that people voted for Trump because they really did not know what he is. After all, most folks have little or no experience with his degree of evil or the potential of its toxicity. But you say you knew. If that's true, then shame on you! Your vote was a disgrace! For so many reasons and in so many ways! Here, take a lesson: the bad man is not going to be good to you or for you. And if he's bad enough, even the two+ thousand miles between you and him will not protect you - and Trump has already been that bad! — tim wood
So it doesn't trouble you - a patriotic American - that president sold out his country's national security in the ill-advised attempt to personally benefit from extorting a foreign power to "dig-up oppo-research" on a political rival? — 180 Proof
Do you really think the same president who assassinated the second highest official of a sovereign state (& regional hegemon!), and who also took credit for it publicly (self-incriminating testimony against interest with respect to Executive Order 12036 - evidence of guilt: lack of prior notification to both NATO Allies (or even Israel, Saudi Arabia, et al in the region) abroad & the Congressional "Gang of Eight" at home ... for starters), only then to threaten, again publicly, to follow-up that strategically useless act with a campaign of no less than "52" war crimes (i.e. Violations of International Law according to the Geneva Convention, to which the United States is a treaty signatory) if that assassinated official's regime retaliates (or responds in kind - which they may yet do as per "eye for an eye" logic, etc) is now acting to make his country safer and not just, as usual, trying to distract (this time) from his pending trial in the U.S. Senate with another self-inflicted crisis? — 180 Proof
What values and/or historical principles do you really think you're defending, Tiff, when you defend this president? — 180 Proof
He's chosen the weak dick moment. Probably he was given little choice by those who know better. — Baden
Based upon the above, The Last Word is the world's oldest thread. It's also a continuation of the old Last Word thread from the old PF, making it older than this Board itself. — Hanover
Trump is an ignoramus who knows nothing about international or military affairs. There is no 'there' there behind the stupidities apparent in his interviews and his rallies. He wasn't even aware attacking cultural heritage sites was illegal. He indicated this himself in his most recent comments. Let that sink in Tiff. The commander-in-chief of the most powerful army in the world knows less about military affairs than the average man on the street. At least this time he has had the sense, after being put in his place by the Pentagon and others, to shut up and back off. He needs to leave this stuff to the experts in future. — Baden
:down:Iran gave Trump the finger, but did it in a smart way. They've called his bluff with a direct and open attack on US military forces, but done it in such a way that Trump has virtually no support internationally for further action against them. So, if he doesn't retaliate after all his bluster he'll look weak and be diminished. If he does, he'll be starting a war that no-one, including Americans, want, that none of his tradiional allies bar Israel will support, that everyone will blame the US for, and that America will lose in the same way it lost in Iraq and Afghanistan. Stupid strategic mistake about to be punished. — Baden
I don't understand the correlation. I was under the impression that Israel was incapable of defending itself until recently when I was "enlightened" to how well armed Israel is. Which leads me to question what role you think the USA would play if Israel is attacked?If there is a war, look to Israel. Couldn't be better timing for Netanyahu. — Baden