Yeah - she dropped the lawsuit, there we go. Trump never settled it. — Agustino
No, but with my limited knowledge of the situation, I suspect that Trump had done something that was illegal in the business and he would have lost that case, hence why he settled. Simple. And I also suspect that the wife started the other case merely to add pressure on Trump for the case he was having against her husband, which is exactly why she dropped it as soon as they got what they wanted from that case.No, not there we go. He settled the other case. Curious how your suspicion and cynicism evaporates when it's about Trump. You don't suspect that there was any link, any relation, any pressure, any negotiation, between settling the one case and dropping the other? No, of course you don't, because of your bias. — Sapientia
Not the demonisation - rather I think these people have been deceived by consumerism and the mass-media to live in ways that have destroyed and demeaned their true potential - and of course they cannot recognize this, for the psychological burden would be too much. They'll never say "yes we are wrong" - they've invested too much in such a life. Philosophers like Thomas Nagel are right - they don't want God to exist - because if He does - then they're fucked. I do think what is understood in today's world by progressivism is cancerous. This over-emphasis on sex, this over-emphasis on gender, on race, on transgender, on I don't know what other lunacy is crazy - because it seeks to impose itself over everyone, and through means of social pressure pull all of society in its direction.Then I had the demonisation of everyone in America and the western hemisphere who isn't socially conservative as therefore progressive and "cancerous — WhiskeyWhiskers
I have never claimed that Trump or his administration would change this. Also, none of my morality is puritanical - unless of course you also think that Judaic, Christian, Islamic, Buddhist and Hindu morality is also puritanical. Now I'm asking you honestly - do you think that is the case?that Trump and his socially conservative support network are going to somehow make hundreds upon hundreds of millions of people throughout America and the rest of the western world do a 180 on their way of life, their fundamental beliefs, and their emotive behaviour, by following the Puritan-esque moral precepts of Agustino from the philosophy forum. — WhiskeyWhiskers
:-! lol - the article doesn't work for me as I need to pay to read it, but alas. Currency manipulation isn't a one-act event. It's a continuous long-term way of behaving by a central bank in order to influence its currency in order to achieve a certain goal. Now there are boundaries which limit what a country can do without undermining itself. An expensive currency means cheap imports but expensive and thus unattractive exports. A cheap currency means the opposite - expensive imports but very attractive exports. The fact is that the Chinese yuan vs the dollar is quite probably undervalued despite the protests of the IMF to the contrary. It's not as undervalued as it was in the past, because rampant Chinese inflation - something that they have been struggling to control - increased the value of the yuan beyond the point where they could fully control it by dumping it in exchange for USD. This doesn't mean they have stopped doing it - not at all. They're still doing their best to do it. China runs trade deficits with all the partners from whom it has large imports - these are mostly natural resources - countries like Saudi Arabi - which China needs to manufacture. Why are they running trade deficits? Because the yuan is still cheap - and therefore their imports are more expensive than they ought to be.Trade restrictions on currency manipulators. Oh wait, none of the US’s big trading partners had engaged in currency manipulation in the past year, the Treasury said in its twice yearly foreign exchange market report to Congress. But you and Trump know, despite not working for the Treasury, something they don't, I bet. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Potentially becoming a billionaire is not a realistic incentive for your average Joe.He'll also "encourage an entrepreneurial mindset". As if potentially becoming a billionaire wasn't enough incentive. As if people are going to stop what they're doing with their lives to become entrepreneurs because President Trump is a billionaire. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Because by voting Trump I'm not voting FOR social conservatives, I'm voting AGAINST progressives. I have said that a million times. It's not a vote for support, it's a strategic vote. Trump will be - pragmatically - more effective at harming the progressive movement than any socially conservative candidate. So he is needed to prepare the way, as I have said.How can this be a strategic vote for social conservatives when Trump himself is quite clearly, under your own definition, blatantly not a social conservative? His track record proves that. He's been married three times, divorced twice, cheated on his wife, had extra-marital sex, and admitted to sexually assaulting women. You actually should be voting for Hillary - she's still married to her first husband, she hasn't committed adultery, nor has she had children out of wedlock. Trump is a "cancerous" progressive, Hillary is a social conservative according to your definition. So what the hell are you even talking about anymore? — WhiskeyWhiskers
All of our decisions affect each other. But do you see me crying to the progressives "Oh your decision to encourage promiscuity will affect me!! My children will be encouraged to follow your ways, my wife will be encouraged to screw other men and divorce me!! Ahhh such a disaster!! I demand you tell me what evidence that my wife and children won't be affected by this exists?? I am being very nasty and demanding with you, because the burden of proof is on you! You are engaging in actions which affect me!! Not directly, but they will influence my cultural environment which will in turn influence me!!!"Yes, I'm being nasty and demanding. Because the burden of proof is on you to provide me with evidence to justify your decision. Yes, I want evidence. Your decision will affect me. Even though I don't even live in America, it will drastically affect me because we live in a globalised world. — WhiskeyWhiskers
No because it's not like Trump wants to repeal Obamacare (which by the way is what most Americans have consistently said they wanted - check the polls that I linked to you before). So stop ignoring evidence.Obamacare (nothing to do with Trump). — WhiskeyWhiskers
A President does not require expertise on any of these issues. He requires the capacity to listen to a bunch of suggestions, and choose the best course of action. Trump, after having worked in a business which is quite possibly the most complicated business you can work in - construction - has what it takes to look at different plans and proposed courses of actions and to say "we do it this way" and then make sure that it gets done. His business as CEO of Trump Organization is precisely that - to choose from what people tell him, and to ensure that it gets done - cheaply, quickly and well. That's why he's qualified. Crooked has no real experience in doing things. Neither do many other politicians. They have experience in talking about stuff, and making big plans, we're gonna do this and we're gonna do that, while they sit with a finger up their asses. The real question is can they actually get the job done in the real world, with real people, and with all the difficulties that will come their way - difficulties one cannot plan for, and that one cannot spend hundreads of years analysing. Obama proved that he can't - with both Iraq and Obamacare for example.First of all I asked for evidence of Trumps expertise on economics, health care, foreign policy, counter-terrorism, immigration, diplomacy, trade, etc. I got nothing except watery bullshit. — WhiskeyWhiskers
There is no direct effect of social conservatism on economics. There is an indirect one as I have argued and explained to you before. Do you have any qualms with my explanation? Any reason for thinking it may not be the case? I have explained for example how out of wedlock birth rate which is very high keeps people in cycles of perpetual poverty, crime and so forth. See you're asking me for all these detailed explanations but it seems besides the point - you're not being open minded about this, you have decided Trump is the devil and that's it.I then asked for a cause and effect explanation of how being anti-gay marriage, pro-family, pro-life, pro life-long monogamy, has any bearing on a persons ability to improve the economy, gun control, terrorism, immigration, trade, employment, wages, food stamps, poverty, home ownership, health care, energy situation etc. I got watery bullshit. — WhiskeyWhiskers
I will get to this sometime later in another post, when I tackle the factcheck matters.I then asked, if being anti-gay marriage, pro-family, pro-life, pro life-long monogamy, etc is a necessary condition for success in other areas of government, how do you explain Obama's success in some of these areas despite being a cancerous progressive? I was again asking for a cause and effect explanation, evidence would be nice. Instead you ignored it. — WhiskeyWhiskers
And I told you in very concrete terms that it will not.I asked how, in concrete terms, a Donald Trump presidency is going to somehow reduce the divorce, adultery and cheating rates, and out of wedlock birth rates. I got watery bullshit. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Yes - except that Crooked and Trump aren't running for such a job :)If you interviewed someone for a job as an economist, a foreign affairs advisor, a healthcare systems adviser, a counter-terrorism expert, etc all rolled into one, and in response to you asking for their qualifications they said "I build great buildings and great companies" you would be as mad as them if you didn't laugh them out the door, down the street, and have them locked up in the nearest mental institution. — WhiskeyWhiskers
It's not a sleight of hand at all. It's what I mean by moral decay. A society which applauds sexual promiscuity, which approves of abortion and so forth is exactly a society undergoing moral decay.Then I asked if you could also cite actual evidence detailing the link between progressivism and societies moral decay. This is an empirical claim that can be observed and studied - and it would behoove society to do so, for its existence depends on recognising its own decay. You then refuse to cite any studies, and instead insist that they are in fact one and the same thing. A tautology, a trick of definitions and language. Why bother trying to establish B being caused by A when you can just say B is the same thing as A? — WhiskeyWhiskers
No - it is actually YOU who pointed me to the simplest calculations. You pointed me to the divorce rate and said "Oh look, past 9 years it's going down". Of course you didn't perform any fucking analysis on that data. I had to do that for you, and notice that the population for the past 9 years was increasing, while the number of marriages decreased, hence obviously the divorce rate would also have a downward pressure on it. Again this is nothing but the university educated kid who knows nothing about the real world. Things aren't so simple as your simple calculations. What you should do is take that divorce rate and divide it by the marriage rate - that, although is not the best stat to measure this - does give an indiction of what chances a marriage has to end in divorce.and how you wanted the SIMPLEST possible raw calculation of divorces, which if you were to read the pages I gave you you would see why that raw number is not appropriate, but as you said earlier simplicity makes complicated things easier — WhiskeyWhiskers
Trump ain't a social conservative. Did I ever say he was? I'm voting against the progressives - that's in accordance with a social conservative agenda.If you don't support Trump then you have a bloody funny way of showing it. If you support social conservatives, and Trump is a social conservative, then you support Trump. If he wasn't a social conservative, you wouldn't support him. Not only that, I'll remind you that, according to your own definition, Hillary is more socially conservative than Trump. Why don't you vote for Hillary? Let me guess, she's on team blue and Trump is on team red. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Sure - did I say you should never agree with them? Why are you jumping to such unwarranted conclusions?Just because certain institutions have a liberal bias does not mean you have grounds to entirely dismiss everything they have to say. It means you take it with a pinch of salt and look at both sides of the story. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Sure it doesn't mean that they're not to be trusted at all - I never said that. You keep engaging in all these biases that's it's very difficult to carry this conversation. But I do think people ought to be able to think for themselves, and talk from a standpoint of knowledge with the experts.Just because they don't, logically, necessarily, know any better does not mean they don't know anything at all and they're not to be trusted. Do you honestly think that a person who goes to university, studies hard on a specific subject, is tested by professors, scrutinised, corrected, recorrected, for years and years under the most stringent learning conditions and then has a successful career in their field, is not "necessarily" going to know what they're talking about?
Where else does this apply? Would you say your doctor, after having spent years in medical school and working in hospitals, doesn't "necessarily" know what they're talking about? — WhiskeyWhiskers
But education obviously isn't working, so we have a very real problem. People are more educated than ever today, and many are more immoral than ever. So what does it mean then? — Agustino
The culture must evolve itself — Agustino
my point is that regardless of how you call it - removing barriers or not - the government should be actively involved in shaping the macro-economic environment. — Agustino
I agree so how to educate them better?That they're educated badly. — Thorongil
What if this isn't possible? You need alternatives for scenarios in which this injunction cannot be followed through successfully.I naturally agree, but when it comes to human rights violations, I take a pretty firm stand that they must be stopped and the perpetrators of them punished, no matter if the surrounding culture changes. — Thorongil
I agree so how to educate them better? — Agustino
What if this isn't possible? — Agustino
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