Identity politics (and by close extension, anti-Trumpism) is, in my view, a consolation prize for those who missed the civil rights era. — NOS4A2
You're probably right. I'm very opposed to people pretending it's the 1960s because that stands in the way of objective progress on actually going back to the 1960s.
I have a job at GM waiting for me. I can't deal with all this global warming, which, let's face it, has Ukrainian involvement.
I'm in favor of nuking everything from Moscow on eastward. Arent you?
I have yet to be bitten. In fact that ol’ dog is working night and day to make the reasons I voted for him a reality. That’s all that I ask for in a president. — NOS4A2
Thought you weren't an American. But if that's your standard for a president, you shouldn't have, be allowed to, or even want to vote - you are incapable of judging even your own self-interest father than 12 inches away. Trump is a kind of storm . The mariner is always prepared, and indeed understands the possibilities of storms. You ignore/deny them. That you have yet to be bitten, as an expression of your creed and m.o., says it all.
It looks like Adam Schiff received 4 Pinocchios for his false claim that he or his committee didn’t speak to the whistleblower before the complaint was lodged. Why would he lie about that? DNC fingerprints all over this.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2019/10/04/schiffs-false-claim-his-committee-had-not-spoken-whistleblower/ — NOS4A2
That's great you feel that way Nosferatu. Sadly, the facts aren't on your side on the issue as to whether Trump is a net good or detriment to upholding American ideals about governance and foreign policy. — Wallows
Provide some facts that support the notion that Trump is upholding American ideals. Be sure to state the ideals he is upholding.The facts aren’t on your side. We won’t know whether Trump’s presidency is a net good until his term(s) are over. History might tell us, as anti-Trumpists presume, that his term is an aberration. I happen to suspect it will be the other way about. — NOS4A2
Provide some facts that support the notion that Trump is upholding American ideals. Be sure to state the ideals he is upholding.
I've started reading some Geuss and like it a lot. So far, the gist seems to be that 'politics is not applied ethics' because there is no universal ethics that can be applied. — praxis
... a shared skepticism about a particular way of thinking about what is important in human life which I take to be characteristic of contemporary European societies.
You must not have read the post from Wallows before you responded to it. There is ample evidence that Trump is a detriment to American values, and yet you indicated it's unknown if history will deem him a net good or net bad TO AMERICAN VALUES (that is the implication of the context).Why would I provide facts for something I have never argued? — NOS4A2
he facts aren’t on your side. We won’t know whether Trump’s presidency is a net good until his term(s) are over. History might tell us, as anti-Trumpists presume, that his term is an aberration. I happen to suspect it will be the other way about. — NOS4A2
You make the fundamental error - based in what I don't now - that the bad man will do the good thing. He won't, because he cannot.
. It doesn't appear to make sense, for example, that Trump has captured the amount of support from Evangelicals that he has, being the 'bad person' that he is. However, Trump supports issues that are important to Evangelicals, such as being anti-abortion. Does Trump actually care about abortion or is it merely a means to an end for him? Do Evangelicals actually care if he cares? I doubt it. So where is the true morality in any of this? Nowhere. — praxis
This is partly what I mean when I say that Trump supporters are generally far better attuned to the things that matter: they grasp - however cynically and nihilistically - the importance of power. They understand - in a way liberals are laregely clueless about - the instrumentalities of politics entirely unsubordinated to moral injunctions, even if they use the latter in service of the former. This is partly why the perpetual confusion of Trump opponents over how such an alliance between him and evangelicals is possible is itself so exasperating.
When Trump supporters are treated as dupes - again, a debilitating individualization of politics - and not as eagle-eyed clear about what they are doing, the only idiots here are aghast liberals who, in thinking themselves superior and immune to being hoodwinked, are the only clueless ones in the room. Without a proper understanding of power, Trump opponents will flounder and even play right into the hands of all they apparently hate. Treating the political as a space of morals and individuals is fatal, absolute suicide. — StreetlightX
if a Democrat like Obama did any ounce of what Trump did, he would have been impeached long ago. — schopenhauer1
The difficulty is fighting lies by legal means. If you get into the ring with someone who will kick you in the balls and gouge your eyes out while you have to play by gentlemen’s rules, then you’d better have some pretty good moves. — Wayfarer
I don’t see it as a political battle, but a battle for the rule of law — Wayfarer
If it were a dispute over policy then it would be political. But it’s happening because the incumbent is demonstrably unfit for office and has failed to lawfully exercise his duties as President. — Wayfarer
A strong democracy where all that matters is the majority who have power is indeed not a strong one after all. I disagree with this idea that it's just playing better politics. If that's the case, why even have a democracy?
Because to 'play politics' is to 'play democracy'. There's nothing democratic about the 'odious' focus on the backroom deals and personalities of the rich and powerful. The issues are to change the conditions under which truth, lies, and significance circulate in society. the If you don't address those conditions, no amount of dewey-eyed nostalgia for a time when there were Good People will do anything. Systemic problems require systemic solutions, not shitty psycho-individual tinkering. The latter is simply complicity - you may as well be a Trump supporter. — StreetlightX
My main claim that the party that is in power can do what they want as long as they don't hold themselves to standards. — schopenhauer1
It's like Wayfarer who keeps asking 'how could the GOP be so hypocritical?' as though he expected any answer of substance. — StreetlightX
But it's a rhetorical question - he knows it, everyone who reads it knows it - so the only thing it is a statement of masturbatory political commentary. It's a psychological feel-good mechanism and nothing more. — StreetlightX
When Trump supporters are treated as dupes - again, a debilitating personalization of politics - and not as eagle-eyed clear about what they are doing, the only idiots here are aghast liberals who, in thinking themselves superior and immune to being hoodwinked, are the only clueless ones in the room. — StreetlightX
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