Yep. And Trump loves conspiracy theories.Trump has claimed he "wouldn't be surprised" if George Soros was funding the "invading" immigrant caravan which was the manufactured story leading up to the mid-term election - The idea that non-whites are "replacing" whites is a key component of white nationalism ideology. — Maw
Yet you are silent. Because, after all, what are you supposed to say? He’s the president of the United States.
You feel this happening. It bothers you, at least to some extent. But his outrageous conduct convinces you that you simply must stay, to preserve and protect the people and institutions and values you hold dear. Along with Republican members of Congress, you tell yourself you are too important for this nation to lose, especially now.
You can’t say this out loud — maybe not even to your family — but in a time of emergency, with the nation led by a deeply unethical person, this will be your contribution, your personal sacrifice for America. You are smarter than Donald Trump, and you are playing a long game for your country, so you can pull it off where lesser leaders have failed and gotten fired by tweet.
Of course, to stay, you must be seen as on his team, so you make further compromises. You use his language, praise his leadership, tout his commitment to values.
And then you are lost. He has eaten your soul.
:up:Regarding the Border Wall: let’s remember the H.L. Mencken saying - ‘for every complex problem there is a solution that is clear, simple, and wrong.’ — Wayfarer
Now, imagine if, when those Russians reached out to Donnie, if they'd reported it straightaway to the FBI. — Wayfarer
If you're going to criticize what I said, you should read me more carefully. What I said is that a border wall does not solve *all* important problems (e.g. it does not reduce asylum seeking), and I also said that his rhetoric MIGHT have contributed to the current influx of asylum seekers ("better come now before the wall goes up or the border is closed"). I'm not claiming to know this for a fact, but it is certainly a possibility.So basically Relativist agree's that there are problems at the border, but then comes the Freudian slip: Trump's border wall doesn't work, Trump's rhetoric is bad. — ssu
Thanks for the link - it's a very interesting read, even though it's extremely depressing.James Comey’s May Day OP is a must read. — Wayfarer
Trump said in December:Trump preached that the wall would solve all important problems, ignoring credible criticism. — Relativist
No Sir. President Trump did not preach that the wall would solve all important problems. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The community, the meso level of society is who is being impacted by this influx. Nothing from the national level will solve the people who are now being essentially abandoned at Phoenix Greyhound bus station, Phoenix Sky Harbor airport, wherever there is a hope of transportation. If our ngo can come up with it, they take in the refugees off the street, treat their many times severe medical conditions and then purchase tickets for them to move further into the country to a 'family' member or a sponsor. If the ngo is unable to help or if the refugee decides on their own accord to depart until their court date which is currently 3 year out, where do they go? Our communities cannot nor should they be put in the position to have their lives overrun simply because our elected officials, ALL OF THEM, can get their heads out of the sand and recognize that we cannot handle it. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
this most inept and mendacious of presidents — Wayfarer
What I was criticizing was that Tiff wasn't talking about Trump's wall, she was talking about what was happening in Arizona. It's actually a good thing sometimes to put these things into some kind of context. Sure, Trump uses scare tactics as often as he can and in the way only Trump can. Yet immigration is an issue, especially when you look at this from the perspective of US policy and take into account the near history with the Obama and Bush administrations. Deportations increased in each of the first four years President Obama was in office, topping 400,000 in fiscal year 2012. Obama oversaw more deportations than George W. Bush did, just as Bush oversaw more than Bill Clinton did. Just for comparison, Trump deported last year 256 000 people.If you're going to criticize what I said, you should read me more carefully. What I said is that a border wall does not solve *all* important problems — Relativist
Well, I think we had the similar idea/meme going viral in Europe in 2015-2016 that the borders would be closed without any rhetoric similar to Trump, and indeed that did happen. The EU did tighten it's border security and the mass migration at the scale that we saw earlier did end.I also said that his rhetoric MIGHT have contributed to the current influx of asylum seekers ("better come now before the wall goes up or the border is closed"). I'm not claiming to know this for a fact, but it is certainly a possibility. — Relativist
FWIW: Anyone who "expected" Mueller to develop a prosecutable case for criminal conspiracy by Trump was misguided. On the other hand:What this thread needs is more psychobabble.
https://thegrayzone.com/2019/05/07/gabor-mate-russiagate-interview-transcript/ — unenlightened
What about the multiple secretive meetings between Trump and Putin over the last few years? They certainly weren't a projection of my supposed trauma. — Evil
Relativist
569
What this thread needs is more psychobabble.
https://thegrayzone.com/2019/05/07/gabor-mate-russiagate-interview-transcript/ — unenlightened
FWIW: Anyone who "expected" Mueller to develop a prosecutable case for criminal conspiracy by Trump was misguided. On the other hand:
- anyone who suggests there was a "Russian Hoax" is ignoring the facts; there was a great deal of suspicious behavior that showed an investigation was warranted:
-- numerous interactions between members of the campaign and Russians
-- Trump's lying to the public about his (and his campaign's) interactions with Russia
-- Trump's instructing subordinates to mislead, lie and fabricate evidence
-- Trump's activities that (per Mueller) may have constituted obstruction
- Trump tried to impede the investigation and have MAY have actually succeeded in this (read about his dangling of a pardon to Manafort, who subsequently lied and may have continued to not be forthcoming).
- It is reasonable to consider whether or not Trump's behavior constitutes criminal obstruction of justice. This is not "moving the goalposts" (as Trump apologists assert) because there were no goals regarding "getting Trump on criminal conspiracy with Russia" (regardless of whether or not there were individuals who hoped for, or expected that). It is absurd to suggest that an investigator of possible criminality should ignore other criminal behavior that is uncovered during the course of the investigation. — Relativist
Yet the vast majority of people thinking that borders shouldn't be totally open aren't white nationalists. — ssu
In some years it's reported that Trump lost more money than any other tax payer. — praxis
I think official documents equivalent to passports have been used since Ancient Egypt. The Chinese used them extensively. Passports have been used here since the time of Finland being the Grand Dutchy of Russia and Finns traveling to Russia and Russians traveling to Finland needed a passport starting from 1819. During that year a bureau for Passports was established in St. Petersburg for Finland.We've been issuing passports since about 1912 (taking the Brits) and the rest of Europe a bit later. — Benkei
At a Trump rally today, Trump states that we have "thousands of people marching up" and "hundreds and hundreds" immigrants trying to come in, with only "two or three border security patrol" and that we "don't let them use weapons...other countries do...we can't" and asks "how do we stop these people?" to which, an attendee shouts "shoot them!" Trump, along with other attendees laugh.
This is several days after it was reported that member of a border militia who were stopping and rounding up immigrants asked a fellow militia member, "why are we just apprehending them and not lining them up and shooting them?" and that "We have to go back to Hitler days and put them all in a gas chamber." — Maw
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