The proof is in the pudding. — NOS4A2
The economy lost 2.9 million jobs. The unemployment rate increased by 1.6 percentage points to 6.3%.
The international trade deficit Trump promised to reduce went up. The U.S. trade deficit in goods and services in 2020 was the highest since 2008 and increased 40.5% from 2016.
The number of people lacking health insurance rose by 3 million.
The federal debt held by the public went up, from $14.4 trillion to $21.6 trillion.
Home prices rose 27.5% — https://www.factcheck.org/2021/10/trumps-final-numbers/
The question as to weather a president can declassify at will or has to follow a process are addressed in the quotes I cited, all of which contradicts your assertions saying otherwise. — NOS4A2
That you’d shift focus to their opinions on an impeachment strategy in order to avoid this accounting is obvious. — NOS4A2
Can a president secretly declassify information without leaving a written record or telling anyone?
That question, according to specialists in the law of government secrecy, is borderline incoherent.
If there is no directive memorializing a decision to declassify information and conveying that decision to the rest of the government, the action would essentially have no consequence. Departments and agencies would continue to consider that information classified and so would continue to treat it as a closely held secret, restricting access to records containing it.
“Hypothetical questions like ‘What if a president thinks to himself that something is declassified? Does that change its status?’ are so speculative that their practical meaning is negligible,” said Steven Aftergood, a secrecy specialist with the Federation of American Scientists.
He added: “It’s a logical mess. The system is not meant to be deployed in such an arbitrary fashion.”
What about obstruction and disobeying a subpoena?
Even if evidence emerged that Mr. Trump technically deemed the documents declassified before leaving office, that would also not help him with other legal problems arising from his hoarding of government documents despite repeated efforts to retrieve them.
The other two criminal laws cited in the search warrant affidavit — concealing or destroying government records, and concealing documents as part of an effort to obstruct an investigation or other official effort — do not have to involve national security secrets.
In May, the Justice Department obtained a grand jury subpoena for all sensitive documents remaining in Mr. Trump’s possession. His representatives turned over a few while falsely saying that no others remained. Notably, it demanded all records “bearing classification markings” — not classified records — so the claim that the former president had technically declassified them would also seem to be irrelevant to whether he unlawfully defied the subpoena.
Michael’s reasoning attempts to make us believe that a President must follow “established procedures” as outlined by another president’s executive order ... — NOS4A2
...and that the lower courts get to decide what the leader of the entire American military can and cannot declassify. — NOS4A2
As Lawfareblog determined: — NOS4A2
There’s thus no reason why Congress couldn’t consider a grotesque violation of the President’s oath as a standalone basis for impeachment—a high crime and misdemeanor in and of itself. This is particularly plausible in a case like this ...
I’m aware that the case has to do with the inadvertent declassification of documents, and said as much. — NOS4A2
The power to declassify at will is satisfied by article 2 of the US constitution — NOS4A2
... he shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed ...
He is not obligated to follow any procedures other than those that he himself has prescribed. — NOS4A2
Finally, as the district court recognized, the suggestion that courts can declassify information raises separation of powers concerns. In light of the executive branch’s “compelling interest” in preventing declassification of highly sensitive information ...
Declassification cannot occur unless designated officials follow specified procedures.
As explained above, Executive order 13,526 [Order] established the detailed process through which secret information can be appropriately declassified.
declassify anything at will — NOS4A2
I feel rather strongly that we need to move away from an expression of profit solely in terms of money. — Benkei
If it doesn't improve the world we're living in, why should we be bothering? — Benkei
The simpler the writing is, the more difficult it is to understand it. — god must be atheist
To say "This rock exists" is saying something about the rock. — hypericin
Let’s suppose some sort of universal mind creates me and everyone else — Art48
"Well, I don't want any to-day, at any rate."
"You couldn't have it if you did want it," the Queen said. "The rule is, jam to-morrow and jam yesterday – but never jam to-day."
"It must come sometimes to 'jam to-day'," Alice objected.
"No, it can't," said the Queen. "It's jam every other day: to-day isn't any other day, you know."
"I don't understand you," said Alice. "It's dreadfully confusing!"
You seemed to claim that it cannot be, — noAxioms
He seems to exactly be addressing a problem that I also see. — noAxioms
Did he also not presume some kind of realism in the asking of his question? — noAxioms
And yet this fairly famous quote is purely philosophy. — noAxioms
Traditionally these are questions for philosophy, but philosophy is dead. Philosophy has not kept up with modern developments in science, particularly physics. Scientists have become the bearers of the torch of discovery in our quest for knowledge.
Model-dependent realism short-circuits all this argument and discussion between the realist and anti-realist schools of thought.
There is no picture- or theory-independent concept of reality. Instead we will adopt a view that we will call model-dependent realism: the idea that a physical theory or world picture is a model (generally of a mathematical nature) and a set of rules that connect the elements of the model to observations. This provides a framework with which to interpret modern science.
The claim that the rules and equations are prior to and give rise to the world is a hypothesis.
Yes, it is. — noAxioms
Rules and equations do not give rise to the universe.
— Fooloso4
Can you demonstrate this? — noAxioms
Since time is not material, it does not exist in reality — val p miranda
it [space] is just an immaterial existent — val p miranda
Either say what you mean or mean what you say.
Since time is not material, it does not exist in reality ... — val p miranda
it is just an immaterial existent — val p miranda
Who, now? — Banno
preponderance of low quality thread of a theological bent. — Banno
↪Fooloso4 space is place — val p miranda
A definition of space as a real immaterial existent that makes existence possible by providing place
— val p miranda
If space both exists and makes existence possible, does that mean that the existence of space make space possible by providing itself a place? Where is this place in which space is made possible? — Fooloso4
politically, socially, intellectually, historically, and culturally important. — Fooloso4
Since time is not material, it does not exist in reality and, therefore, does not have a reality definition. — val p miranda
Time, however, is a concept ... — val p miranda
A definition of space as a real immaterial existent that makes existence possible by providing place — val p miranda
Space meets the Kantian requirements as a transcendental because it is absolute, necessary and universal. — val p miranda
Do you get no comfort from the suggestion that we are all connected via the components we are made of? Conservation laws? Only the form changes, nothing is destroyed or created. — universeness
Job does not claim to be blameless but doesn't accept that he must be wrong by default either. — Paine
And by bringing up Job, I was thinking that expecting good results from living a good life is sort of an argument for the normative. — Paine
... to redeem the idea of god by embracing greater and greater abstractions. — Tom Storm
What do you make of Bentley Hart? — Tom Storm
Hart seems to make a similar a priori assumption. He makes the distinction between what is necessary and what is contingent and applies it in toto to existence, as if what is true of the relationship between things that exist must be true of the relationship between what exists and God. Since everything in the world is contingent, there must be something non-contingent which they rely upon. There is here a shift from ontological necessity to logical necessity. — Fooloso4
There is much more sophisticated theology by people like Paul Tillich or David Bentley Hart — Tom Storm
Philosophy is preparation for death. — Socrates
No, you’re assuming the story actually happened — Possibility
[emphasis added]To anticipate the obvious objection, yes this is not meant to be taken literally, but we should take the story on its own terms. These things happen in the story and if we are to understand the story we must attend to what happens in the story. — Fooloso4
To read a novel and point out that the things that happen in the novel did not actually happen is pointless. — Fooloso4
A story’s terms should not be bound by what happens. This only limits understanding. — Possibility
Read it again - there is no talk of a wager made at all. — Possibility
WAGERused to say that you are certain that something is true or will happen in the future:
I'd wager (that) she's interested in you.
He regrets doing that, I'll wager.
To wager is also to suggest as a likely idea:
I would wager that not one person in ten could tell an expensive wine from a cheaper one.
