North Korea doesn't pose a credible threat, — Tzeentch
N Korea isnt a real threat to US security, but it has proven it can hit Japan by mistake when trying to hit us, which makes it a perfect victim. — ernestm
So what? He only wants to win the next election. Wartime presidents never lose an election. I don't think the logical process needs to go any further than that. — ernestm
One important distinction among wartime elections is between an election
during a war and the first election after a war. The first election after a war can be seen as a referendum on whether the war was successful. In fact, however, we know that the incumbent often has lost in such an election even after success in war. Winston Churchill experienced this phenomenon in 1945, just as George H.W. Bush did in 1992. The lesson is simple and familiar by now: successful prosecution of a war does not necessarily translate into reelection.
[...]
There are simplistic claims that wartime presidents always get reelected. One problem with those claims is selection bias: presidents who do not think they can get reelected pull out of the race, so the potential effects of Korea in 1952 and Vietnam in 1968 on the reelection of Truman and Johnson cannot be tested. Omitting these elections would lead to exaggeration of the chances of an incumbent winning reelection during war-time if these were instances when the incumbent would not have won.
[...]
The patterns that emerge from this historical review are very clear. Presidents who sought reelection during wartime have won. How much the war-time contributed to their reelection, however, cannot be discerned with available data. Again, two presidents stood down rather than attempting reelection during wartime—Truman in 1952 and Johnson in 1968—and their decisions not to run were at least partly due to the difficulty they would have had winning reelection; thus it is not as if reelection during wartime is always a cinch. — Changing Horses in Wartime? The 2004 Presidential Election by Herbert D. Weisberg and Dino P. Christenson
So it could be any day Trump feels like starting the bombing. — ernestm
ust hope that everyone is rational enough to not want to die. — Wallows
Not wanting to die is based on a comparison, whether one realizes that or not. — Jake
Appreciating life is not the same thing as not wanting to die. — Jake
Again, you don't have anything to compare life to apart from your neighbor who always smiles every day when going to work and coming back from it. — Wallows
North Korea doesn't pose a credible threat — Tzeentch
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