But the fact that he has paid 850K to settle a rape accusation makes him 98% guilty in my mind already. For all practical purposes that is all the proof that I require. That's why I said I'd put Trump on the same footing if he had settled a rape case for such money. (the laughing face is regarding your "oh common" imitation btw :P ) — Agustino
Same reason Trump settled all of his cases. — Heister Eggcart
In April 2016, a woman named Katie Johnson filed a lawsuit accusing Trump and financier Jeffrey Epstein of raping her in 1994, when she was 13 years old.
The original lawsuit was dismissed due to technical filing errors. Johnson later filed the lawsuit again in June 2016 under the pseudonym "Jane Doe."
In October of 2016, federal judge Ronnie Abrams ordered a status conference hearing on the case for December of 2016. Trump, Epstein, and Jane Doe will also talk about a possible settlement and possible trial length.
In the wonderful world of the practice of law here in God's favorite country, civil actions are routinely settled; no liability for the claim made is determined or admitted in that case. Various factors are involved in deciding whether settlement is appropriate, but the truth of the allegations made is not necessarily a significant factor in the decision in most cases. Factors which are significant in most cases are the costs which would have to be expended in defending against the claim (e.g. attorney's fees); the length of time which will be needed to defend against the claims (what time you'll spend with lawyers, in court, preparing for discovery, preparing for trial, all of which reduces your ability to do other things like be with your family, do your job, run your business); the character of the presiding judge and his record in similar cases; the manner in which the allegations made may influence a jury; the ever-present possibility that a litigant will lose regardless of the evidence submitted; the likely results of an adverse decision; adverse publicity in some cases....in other words, factors which are significant regardless of whether the allegations made are true or false but because litigation is a nasty, expensive, time-consuming process the results of which are never certain. — Ciceronianus the White
I never made that argument.your "Trump is morally better than Clinton" argument. — Michael
Yes, I will then consider him the equal of Bill Clinton. I'd still choose him over Bill if I had to pick between who is going to the White House, because at least Trump is sorrounded by a social conservative network, and will do more good for the country than Bill et al. — Agustino
It's his wife. She probably just wanted more dough than she could get by a simple divorce proceeding.Trump settled with his ex-wife over a rape accusation — Michael
Yes I don't dispute this. But rich and powerful people, who easily have access to many lawyers, can outsource those worries, especially when they themselves are lawyers and have the necessary connections as Clinton was. Clinton didn't settle the case because he wanted to, or because he was scared, or because he was intimidated. He probably settled because a group of lawyers advised him to settle. It wasn't as John would have us believe such a stressful situation that that was the only way he could handle. Clinton isn't an idiot. I probably wouldn't have thought he was guilty had he settled for 100 grand, 200 grand, but close to a million is too much given the nature of the accusation. Furthermore, his well-known sexual promiscuity makes it more likely he would have attempted rape than otherwise. Not to mention that such a case would encourage all future women he has sex with to bring similar charges against him - it would set a precedent, because he would pay.In the wonderful world of the practice of law here in God's favorite country, civil actions are routinely settled; no liability for the claim made is determined or admitted in that case. Various factors are involved in deciding whether settlement is appropriate, but the truth of the allegations made is not necessarily a significant factor in the decision in most cases. Factors which are significant in most cases are the costs which would have to be expended in defending against the claim (e.g. attorney's fees); the length of time which will be needed to defend against the claims (what time you'll spend with lawyers, in court, preparing for discovery, preparing for trial, all of which reduces your ability to do other things like be with your family, do your job, run your business); the character of the presiding judge and his record in similar cases; the manner in which the allegations made may influence a jury; the ever-present possibility that a litigant will lose regardless of the evidence submitted; the likely results of an adverse decision; adverse publicity in some cases....in other words, factors which are significant regardless of whether the allegations made are true or false but because litigation is a nasty, expensive, time-consuming process the results of which are never certain. — Ciceronianus the White
Yes if it's possible they do. However, it depends on the circumstance. If your possible losses go up to 400 grand (fees, compensations, etc), and you settle for 5 million - then something is amiss.Individuals and corporations who have the resources to manage their reputations and images generally seek out of court settlements. They may or may not be guilty, they may or may not have been falsely accused. The thing they want most is for the subject and the uproar to go away. — Bitter Crank
Depends. If you settle a rape accusation with a stranger for 1 million, yes very likely you are guilty. If Trump were to settle Trump University cases for 1 million - it could be both ways (leaning on the guilty side however). Because those court cases have potential damages that could be greater than a million considering all the plaintiffs.Oh yeah. I should've googled it. He must be very guilty, then, because if you settle, you're guilty. Apparently. — Sapientia
Yeah - she dropped the lawsuit, there we go. Trump never settled it.So, I looked it up, and I found the Jill Harth lawsuit. The lawsuit says Trump attempted to rape Harth. Harth dropped her lawsuit after Trump settled another lawsuit (alleging breach of contract) related to the American Dream Festival. — Sapientia
It's his wife. She probably just wanted more dough than she could get by a simple divorce proceeding. — Agustino
Yeah - she dropped the lawsuit, there we go. Trump never settled it.
No, it's not reasonable at all - they were two different cases - one regarding business dealings and another regarding rape accusations. It's also quite likely that they - the husband/wife - launched both cases just to get some money out of Donald - the business one quite possibly being a fair one - hence the settlement - and the rape one just out of vengeance, and to put more pressure on Trump.He settled the case with her husband. It's a reasonable inference to assume that part of that settlement agreement was that she drop her case against him. Again with the rationalisations. — Michael
I did say already that I would support Trump even assuming he is on equal moral footing with Clinton. Why? Because he has a different support network, a social conservative one, which will guide the country much better than Clinton's progressive network. In fact, if Clinton was associating herself with people like Mike Pence - would have run from the Republican side in other words - and Trump from the Democrats, I would have supported Clinton. It's very simple. As I said hundreds of times before, I don't like either of them. But Trump being elected in this case is superior to Clinton - not necessarily because he is Trump, but because of the people he is associated with, and whom he depends on.It would be far more honest if you stop with all the character attacks and moralizing and just admit that all you care about is having a Republican rather than a Democrat in power. — Michael
Why? Because he has a different support network, a social conservative one — Agustino
But Trump being elected in this case is superior to Clinton - not necessarily because he is Trump, but because of the people he is associated with, and whom he depends on. — Agustino
No, it's not reasonable at all - they were two different cases - one regarding business dealings and another regarding rape accusations. — Agustino
It's also quite likely that they - the husband/wife - launched both cases just to get some money out of Donald.
I did say already that I would support Trump even assuming he is on equal moral footing with Clinton. Why? Because he has a different support network, a social conservative one, which will guide the country much better than Clinton's progressive network. In fact, if Clinton was associating herself with people like Mike Pence - would have run from the Republican side in other words - and Trump from the Democrats, I would have supported Clinton. It's very simple. As I said hundreds of times before, I don't like either of them. But Trump being elected in this case is superior to Clinton - not necessarily because he is Trump, but because of the people he is associated with, and whom he depends on.
Because it's more likely given the circumstance. It's not just "oh he has a rape case against him" - you have to understand the circumstance, and what it suggests.How do you determine the likeliness of this? And why don't you say the same about the accusations against Clinton? It's just rationalisations and hypocrisy. — Michael
No, because that matters too. It's a cumulative set of issues that add up.Then all your talk about Bill being accused of rape is a red herring. — Michael
Sure, it's not sufficient as a condition. There needs to be a lot more there, and I'm not saying Trump's will be a great Presidency. As I've said before, progressivism as per Obama and Clinton is a cancer. Trump is merely the chemotherapy - not a good thing definitely, but better than the alternative - also a way to prepare the stage for social conservative candidates themselves.It's not at all clear to me that having a high concentration of social conservatives is both a necessary and sufficient condition for an effective administration. — WhiskeyWhiskers
It's to do with the current situation that the Western world and the US finds itself in.If this was the case, then literally any Republican candidate would do. Not only that, literally any group of regular Joe's off the street would be able to govern the country as long as they were socially conservative. What is it about having a socially conservative support network that makes for an effective administration? — WhiskeyWhiskers
Not never - democrats weren't always like this. It's the New Left, from the 1960s onwards that has corrupted the Democratic Party. So again, you have to look at it as a historical situation. You are trying to take my pronouncements and apply them generally and forever - that's the wrong approach. What I said is valid only for this time period, and for the people in question.And also, would you want to therefore claim that the democrats can never be effective in their administration simply because they lack a support network that is socially conservative? — WhiskeyWhiskers
It's not any help, but as I said, it's not a sufficient condition being socially conservative, but it is necessary.Furthermore, how does being anti-gay marriage, pro-family, pro-life, pro life-long monogamy, etc, have anything whatsoever to do with economic expertise, health care, foreign policy, counter-terrorism, immigration, diplomacy, trade, and god knows what else you need to be well informed on? — WhiskeyWhiskers
Sure, it's not sufficient as a condition. There needs to be a lot more there, and I'm not saying Trump's will be a great Presidency. As I've said before, progressivism as per Obama and Clinton is a cancer. Trump is merely the chemotherapy - not a good thing definitely, but better than the alternative - also a way to prepare the stage for social conservative candidates themselves. — Agustino
It's to do with the current situation that the Western world and the US finds itself in. — Agustino
Not never - democrats weren't always like this. It's the New Left, from the 1960s onwards that has corrupted the Democratic Party. So again, you have to look at it as a historical situation. You are trying to take my pronouncements and apply them generally and forever - that's the wrong approach. What I said is valid only for this time period, and for the people in question. — Agustino
It's not any help, but as I said, it's not a sufficient condition being socially conservative, but it is necessary. — Agustino
Yes it would be. Trump is still better than Crooked on economics, health care, counter-terrorism and immigration. Probably much worse on diplomacy and trade though.You concede that there needs to "be a lot more there" for effective administration. Would this be, by any chance, an expertise on economics, health care, foreign policy, counter-terrorism, immigration, diplomacy, trade, etc? — WhiskeyWhiskers
Because our current society is greatly troubled by high divorce rates, high adultery and cheating rates, high out of wedlock birth rates, especially for the African American population in the US, and perpetual poverty and crime which emerges from such social instability. The fact that our children have close to a 1 in 2 chance of their parents divorcing - that alone is a big big problem (and by the way this isn't solved by giving benefits to single moms and all that crap. You have to go to the root of the problem. Otherwise you're merely covering the problem up instead of addressing it). Add on top of this the fact that we've come to live in a very promiscuous society, which no longer values ways of life which are necessary for social stability - to avoid conflicts and harm between people - and we have one of the most important problems facing modern Western society. Up there with radical terrorism (another one which the media never speaks about properly) and global warming.You believe that being anti-gay marriage, pro-family, pro-life, pro life-long monogamy, etc, in the US, is a necessary condition for improving the current situation that the Western world finds itself in? How exactly? — WhiskeyWhiskers
The economic situation of the US isn't good at all. Life is becoming more expensive in the large cities, there is more and more competition, people are becoming more and more isolated. Terrorism is rampant - just this year there were quite a few attacks, including the Orlando attack, and the more recent attacks. More importantly, the US is struggling to beat a band of nomads in the deserts of Syria for over 3 years - inadmissible. How long does it take to exterminate ISIS? ISIS are nobodies compared to the resources the US has available. Within 1 year, they should have been exterminated. Furthermore, the Middle East has been left in chaos because of Obama (whom Trump was right about - he actually is the founder of ISIS) by the way he has withdrawn from Iraq. The US shouldn't have left Iraq without maintaining a sizeable force there to ensure peace. The gun control situation is a problem - and Trump will probably not address that very well, I admit that. Immigration is also a very big problem - because it is tied with other problems - such as drugs, poverty, and crime - all of which create social imbalances, which manifest also through the lack of social conservatism noticed. Obamacare is a disaster in terms of healthcare, probably half of the population, if not more according to many sources find that it has done more harm than good. Trump will likely be somewhat negative on trade and green energy.And the situation the US finds itself in? The economic situation? The terrorism situation? The gun control situation? Immigration, trade, employment, wages, food stamps, poverty, home ownership, health care, energy situation and on, and on? How is it at all relevant to any of these? Can you explain the cause and effect behind that? — WhiskeyWhiskers
I don't know who the hell this factcheck.org is supposed to be or what hidden interests may be behind it. Obama's successes - that's a mirage. What's the success? Obamacare? ISIS? Supreme Court imposing the legality of gay marriage on all states? Really?? That's the "success" of Obama? Pff.Ok, let's talk about now, the last 8 years. Factcheck.org breaks down Obama's (and his non-socially conservative support network's) successes and failures. Given that there is actual fact-based evidence of Obama's successes, doesn't this prove that having a socially conservative support network is not in any way a necessary condition for effective government? — WhiskeyWhiskers
And this is exactly what we find the Obama administration to be. More black people are in poverty today. Many black communities are still riddled with crime, and no better than before. More black children are born out of wedlock in circumstances that are almost guaranteed to keep them in life-long poverty than ever before. He hasn't even done any good for black people - it's just been a way to shove it to them, be like "yeah there you go, you have a black president now". It means nothing. Black folks aren't living any better today than before. And yet "oh what are Obama's failures?". Are you kidding me? Obama himself is a failure - pure and simple.One would expect to find Obama's administration a complete and utter failure (given cancerously progressive they all are), if it were a necessary condition. It's empirically not. How do you explain this? — WhiskeyWhiskers
Yes it would be. Trump is still better than Crooked on economics, health care, counter-terrorism and immigration. Probably much worse on diplomacy and trade though. — Agustino
Because our current society is greatly troubled by high divorce rates, high adultery and cheating rates, high out of wedlock birth rates, especially for the African American population in the US, and perpetual poverty and crime which emerges from such social instability. The fact that our children have close to a 1 in 2 chance of their parents divorcing - that alone is a big big problem (and by the way this isn't solved by giving benefits to single moms and all that crap. You have to go to the root of the problem. Otherwise you're merely covering the problem up instead of addressing it). Add on top of this the fact that we've come to live in a very promiscuous society, which no longer values ways of life which are necessary for social stability - to avoid conflicts and harm between people - and we have one of the most important problems facing modern Western society. Up there with radical terrorism (another one which the media never speaks about properly) and global warming. — Agustino
I don't know who the hell this factcheck.org is supposed to be or what hidden interests may be behind it. Obama's successes - that's a mirage. What's the success? Obamacare? ISIS? Supreme Court imposing the legality of gay marriage on all states? Really?? That's the "success" of Obama? Pff. — Agustino
And you think Crooked is an expert right? Trump knows and understand business, he can think from a businessman's perspective while in office, which will be helpful at least in economics. Also he has a knack for getting things done, which will be helpful in the case of both illegal immigration and terrorism. He has the right attitude. Also, the job of President isn't about doing things yourself. It's about getting others to do things and making sure that they do do them.Does it not occur to you that Trump couldn't possibly be an expert (though I'm sure he'd call himself the best expert) on a single one of these issues because he has absolutely no political experience or relevant education? — WhiskeyWhiskers
In-so-far as progressivism is a root cause of the moral decay of society, and Trump is against progressivism, he will help. I do not claim he will reduce them - perhaps not. But he will ensure that the progressives stop with their advances, which will prepare the groundwork for a future social conservative candidate to come and finish the job.So you're telling me you believe that a Donald Trump presidency is going to somehow reduce the divorce, adultery and cheating rates, and out of wedlock birth rates, all, presumably, without prohibitive legislation? And that he's going to re-establish your preferred moral code into the heart of society again? Again, how? — WhiskeyWhiskers
>:O Your propaganda efforts are hilarious. Okay let's have some fun. First - less people are getting married than before. Second - people are getting married late, if ever, compared to before. This means that while the population increases, the number of marriages will obviously increase but at a slower rate - hence if you calculate the statistics you linked me to, you will find that the marriage rate is decreasing, as is the divorce rate. This is only natural when you have a population which grows at a faster rate than people get married. It has absolutely NOTHING with whether less married people divorce today, than they did 50 years ago. The statistic of 50% that people know is the correct one. Of all marriages 50% end in divorce. This isn't the bullshit that oh in 15 years 80% were still together - as in one of the links you have provided. That's not the question. The question is over a lifetime are they still together? The other statistic - about marriages compared by the time when they got married - the lie of course is that if you adjust the 2000s generation to 25-30 years of married life (even though they haven't lived it yet, but we can predict by extrapolating the trend) you will find out that they will divorce more than any one else before.Divorce rates are not as high as people believe: the truth about divorce rates is surprisingly optimistic, this is the original source for that link, as you can see, the rate of divorce is falling, some incorrectly believe the 50% number, and here's one more source. — WhiskeyWhiskers
As I said - he will ready the ground for reversing that by dealing with the progressives. Someone else will need to come afterwards to reverse that slide.It's very clear to everyone that you have moral issues with how individuals in free society choose to conduct themselves in their own private lives, but I fail to see how simply having a republican (especially a life-long democrat kind of republican) president is going to magically reverse whatever slide into decay you perceive to be happening, especially years after their term. — WhiskeyWhiskers
The way you frame this is ridiculous. This is obviously meant to suggest "what is your business in being concerned how others conduct themselves in their private lives in a free society? You have no place here". There is no freedom to be immoral and hurt other people. For no one.It's very clear to everyone that you have moral issues with how individuals in free society choose to conduct themselves in their own private lives — WhiskeyWhiskers
Divorce RATE - I don't care about the rate. The rate is calculated with reference to the population. Of course that is decreasing, for the reason I have described before. I'm interested in the percentage of marriages that end in divorce. The divorce/marriage ratio is a clearer indicator of that.The fact is there is no reason to believe that anyone has this kind of sway, even a republican president, when you accept the fact (and I bet therein lies the crux) that divorce rates have been falling year after year under republican and democratic presidents alike. — WhiskeyWhiskers
As I said, if progressivism is cancer, then Trump is chemotherapy.And the fact that you actually believe Trump is a republican (or any of the things he says) tells me you've bought wholesale into his con. He's already been divorced twice, married three times, and committed adultery. And bragged about using his power to get away with sexually assaulting women. And you think he's the solution to societies ills? Jesus Christ, he is the very best example of the exact problem you claim to hate. — WhiskeyWhiskers
A PhD doesn't make you smart.Yeh, those research experts. Who the hell do they think they are? With their Ph.D's, Pulitzer prizes for journalism, fancy letters after their names, and awards for impartial journalistic integrity. You've spun a wheel of abstract a priori's, what do they know? — WhiskeyWhiskers
I never said complete and utter failure. But they were a failure, yes.If I can't get you to agree that Obama's terms have not been a complete and utter failure — WhiskeyWhiskers
No it wouldn't - because as I have said to you before, Democrats weren't always like this. Only after the New Left came into power, after the 1960s, did Democrats become so anti social conservatism, and so rooted in the promotion of promiscuity.I don't have much hope of you attempting to address substance of the argument that disproves your claim that a socially conservative support network is a necessary condition for administrative success. If that were the case, it would be logically impossible for a successful democratic presidency. Think about that. Really think about what you're saying and compare it to reality. It would be as impossible as drawing a square circle. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Yes because I don't listen to the corrupt progressive media (who are the majority of all media), nor do I get involved in viewing corrupt Hollywood (also a majority progressives) and neither do I like the academia (90% progressives in some social science universities). These three entities have the largest concentrations of progressives out of any.And what's even more bizarre is that you've come to the US political scene from the outside, you didn't even grow up in it. — WhiskeyWhiskers
If by "outside" you mean the brainwashing media - then sure.I don't like being so dismissive, but you don't seem to realise how utterly insane the idea of a President Trump looks from the outside. — WhiskeyWhiskers
But Trump being elected in this case is superior to Clinton - not necessarily because he is Trump, but because of the people he is associated with, and whom he depends on. — Agostino
Hillary Clinton is competent? Really? So she was competent in the way she handled the emails? She was competent in the way she handled Benghazi? She was competent in the way she handled the Iran deal? The only time when she was competent was when she used her foundation as a pay for play scheme - yeah, she actually was competent in that.competent public official — Wayfarer
Hillary Clinton is competent? Really? So she was competent in the way she handled the emails? She was competent in the way she handled Benghazi? She was competent in the way she handled the Iran deal? The only time when she was competent was when she used her foundation as a pay for play scheme - yeah, she actually was competent in that. — Agustino
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.