Trump is out there putting people in cages and Plutocrtizing the cabinet and someome thinks the most appropriate response is to extensively cite milennia old dead people on virtue ethics and the subtleties of Machiavelli. It's almost like you want Trump to win. The US burning down might not be such a bad thing after all. It'd take a bunch of political incompetants with it. — StreetlightX
It is not simply a matter of Trump's character but of the character of whoever it is we vote into office. Suppose candidate X puts forth policy proposals that you agree with, but X is not trustworthy and his actions raise serious questions about whether he has any intention of doing what he proposes to. Will you vote for him because you like the policies he is running on? — Fooloso4
There's nothing more disempowering than moral outrage. — Janus
Again, I don't see how this follows. Perhaps you could make a structured argument for all these claims. — Echarmion
Streetlight thinks we ought to change the topic of the thread to discuss politics rather than character. But we're the peanut gallery here, and we like to think we're judging the politician's character, not the politician's policies. There's no fun in the latter. — Metaphysician Undercover
When politics is confused with morality, people fucking die. Morality is for those who can't think. — StreetlightX
The decision to do so is directly related to his amoral character — Fooloso4
It's pretty clear that a great deal of Trump's opponents have been uniquely useless at actually opposing anything whatsoever, insofar as their efforts continue to centre upon utterly unpolitical - that is to say, unactionable - vectors of resistance. — StreetlightX
Trump is stacking the courts and destorying the environment... — StreetlightX
The midterms proved to be a significant and effective opposition, and it even seemed reactive to the ‘personality’ of the Trump administration, with a record number of women elected, and a Muslim woman as well. — praxis
The midterms proved to be a significant and effective opposition, and it even seemed reactive to the ‘personality’ of the Trump administration, with a record number of women elected, and a Muslim woman as well.
— praxis
The most effective 'reactions' to Trump to my mind have been precisely those who have not merely re-acted but acted to change the conversation entirely. Medicare for all, the green new deal, labour reform - substantial policy agendas which have shifted the conversation away from Trump's diva-nature and onto things that will actually have an effect on people's lives. — StreetlightX
When politics is confused with morality, people fucking die. Morality is for those who can't think. — StreetlightX
Conservatives are using these proposals to motivate their party, you realize. — praxis
If you were to substitute “morality” with “religion” in this statement I could agree. Otherwise, it could use some explaining. — praxis
focusing on how Trump is distracts form seeing what is being done (not just by Him but in His name!) and trying to counteract it. — Janus
I refer you to the majority of the discussion around Trump, which is almost singularly devoid of policy or process, of which this thread and it's participants are exemplary. — StreetlightX
If everyone thought it was a moral outrage, Trump would have long since been abandoned by his party. — Echarmion
Especially since as a 'strategy', it has quite obviously been - and will continue to be - a marked failure.In fact more than a failure, banking on 'moral outrage' at this point would count as outright maliciousness and strategic support for Trump, if I did not believe instead in the infinite capacity of human stupidity. — StreetlightX
I just don't agree we shouldn't care about the character of the people we elect. — Echarmion
Imagine thinking immigration policy is a result of either charatcter or morality. — StreetlightX
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