President Trump said on Wednesday [12 June] that there would be nothing wrong with accepting incriminating information about an election opponent from Russia or other foreign governments and that he saw no reason to call the F.B.I. if it were to happen again.
“It’s not an interference,” he said in an interview with ABC News, describing it as “opposition research.” “They have information — I think I’d take it.” He would call the F.B.I. only “if I thought there was something wrong.”
... When the interviewer, George Stephanopoulos, noted that the F.B.I. director has said a candidate should call, Mr. Trump snapped, “The F.B.I. director is wrong.”
So, basically, there is a criminal regime in the White House now. — Wayfarer
And frankly, why did Trump let George Stephanopoulos, a loyal Clintonista, ask him anything at all? Hard to know. — fishfry
I'm a lot more concerned about that than I am about the latest leftist hysteria about whatever impolitic remark Trump made. — fishfry
Yet this faction [the religious right] did not abandon its faith in liberalism’s capacity to solve problems during the decades of Jim Crow. It did not cry, “To hell with the liberal order!” over mass incarceration. It did not erupt in fury over the shattering of Latino families at the border, or the Trump-made aftermath of the catastrophe in Puerto Rico. It did not question whether liberalism had failed after the first, third, fourth or 15th mass shooting at a school, or because it is typical for Americans to beg strangers on the internet for money to cover their health-care costs or after an untimely death. The state of emergency occurred when, and only when, liberal democracy ceased to guarantee victory in the culture war. The indignity of fighting for one’s rights within a democratic framework is fine for others, but it is beneath them.
Black Americans did not abandon liberal democracy because of slavery, Jim Crow, and the systematic destruction of whatever wealth they managed to accumulate; instead they took up arms in two world wars to defend it. Japanese Americans did not reject liberal democracy because of internment or the racist humiliation of Asian exclusion; they risked life and limb to preserve it. Latinos did not abandon liberal democracy because of “Operation Wetback,” or Proposition 187, or because of a man who won a presidential election on the strength of his hostility toward Latino immigrants. Gay, lesbian, and trans Americans did not abandon liberal democracy over decades of discrimination and abandonment in the face of an epidemic. This is, in part, because doing so would be tantamount to giving the state permission to destroy them, a thought so foreign to these defenders of the supposedly endangered religious right that the possibility has not even occurred to them. But it is also because of a peculiar irony of American history: The American creed has no more devoted adherents than those who have been historically denied its promises, and no more fair-weather friends than those who have taken them for granted.
Pity that people fall for it. — Wayfarer
I watched the first episode of the acclaimed new Chernobyl. THe opening lines were something along the lines of becoming so surrounded by lies that the concept of truth looses all meaning. — Wayfarer
Trump is strange in that he lies about dumb things where other politicians would tell the truth, but he’ll also occasionally tell the truth where others would lie, e.g., cheating on his taxes (“it makes me smart”) & accepting oppo research from a foreign government. — Erik
It says "Plato was right". — Benkei
I see the same people who hated Trump's guts yesterday, finding yet one more thing to get hysterical about so they can hate him some more today.
— fishfry
I think the description of anyone critical about Trump as 'haters' is part of Trump's dishonest rhetorics. I mean, this man is threatening world peace, the global economy, the office of the Presidency, the environment, science, Republican party principles, the separation of powers, and so much more. He lies almost every time he speaks, he routinely flouts principles and demeans the office. So when this is pointed out, those making the comment are 'haters' - they 'hate Trump'. And 'hate' is something that demeans the hater. So it defuses any real criticism - 'oh, you're just a hater'. It's part of the way that Trump continually demeans the public discourse. Pity that people fall for it. — Wayfarer
ok who taught him the word "obliteration"? — frank
How many times has the man been divorced? I am pretty sure he learned it from that experience. :razz: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
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