And the center is not evil. Meeting in the middle is how democracy works. It's normal to get frustrated that things aren't the way they should be, but we're better off facing our problems together than becoming polarized and thus unable to deal with anything.
We will stand together. That's who we are. — frank
but there was never the option never to play the game in the first place — schopenhauer1
That goes without saying. Only actual existing people have options. — Benkei
And the center is not evil. Meeting in the middle is how democracy works. It's normal to get frustrated that things aren't the way they should be, but we're better off facing our problems together than becoming polarized and thus unable to deal with anything. — frank
You can always just shoot the other side and be done with. Might be a good solution for a lot of things really. Every 50 years we divide in two camps based on ideology and one of them gets to shoot the other based on a flip of the coin. We can have a debt jubilee afterwards. Good times will be had by (half of) all! — Benkei
I'm not a socialist.Not even a democratic socialist. The US got its wealth through a system Bernie wants to destroy. He has no understanding of the economy at all. It would be insane for him to be president. — fishfry
I believe Bernie could have beaten Trump in 2016. I don't think he can beat him in 2020 unless there is a humongous economic collapse. And there is currently a seriously nonzero probability exactly that. The Fed's been blowing bubbles of digital money into the system since the last financial crisis, which in effect never actually went away. It just got papered over, literally. When the bill comes due it will be a crash the likes of which the world has never seen. — fishfry
And Bernie? No no no no no. Unbelievable that an ignorant guy like that could be in charge of the country. — fishfry
I think I somehow can't believe a 78 year old who had a heart attack a few months ago is the likely nominee and is surrounded by screaming youngsters like a rock star. — fishfry
I used to be a left winger. It's spin I believe because I watched it happen and I think for myself. I stand with Trump, warts and all. As opposed to what's become of the Dems. — fishfry
A lot of liberals just don't get it. I used to be a liberal. I'm off the reservation. Just how it is. I'm not alone. A lot of former liberals are in shock at what's become of our former side. So yeah, I'm mind boggled too. — fishfry
Centrism, the ideology of the "what (I claim to be) the right compromise between (what I claim to be) good faith rational actors on the debate stage of politics" is simply a euphemism of militating for the status quo -- or then just lazy thinking that such status quo militants take advantage of.
The ideology of militating for the status quo (such as the now famous Iowa "coin flipper") is not a good faith ideology that the policy compromise between different world views actually forms a new coherent world view, rather it is the ideology of maintaining privilege and advantage of the the people that happen to benefit from the current status quo. — boethius
Militant centrists (those willing to defend the status quo through democratically bad faith actions of propaganda, changing laws to entrench the status quo, and fixing elections) do not actually have the status quo as an ideology. Attributing good faith to militant centrists is an analytical mistake. Their ideology is their own privilege and defending it against the risks change brings; and from this ideology, when change seems inevitable, the coherent decision is to ally with fascists, as, yes they may do all sorts of terrible things hardly acceptable in polite society to placate an enraged reactionary brownshirt movement, but they at least do not change the class structure of society ... — boethius
To argue "Well, climate change would exist without Trump" is, at best, childish to the point of embarrassment.
— Xtrix
No, it is not. — Nobeernolife
US policy does not determine the world climate. — Nobeernolife
If I assume that all the wild-eyed claims about global warming being solely caused by human burning of fossil fuels were true... — Nobeernolife
You could have Trump entact 100% of the most radical green agenda, and it would not make any difference. — Nobeernolife
The world is a lot bigger than the US, and the approx. 1100 bb of proven oil reserves (maybe double that including fracking) will be consumed regardless. Or do you think India, China, and Africa (heading towards a population of 4 billion within the next 50 years) give a wet fart about what the policy the US has?
To assume that a US president can determine the world`s climate is simply megalomania. — Nobeernolife
What Xtrix is saying is blatantly false. Trump is not responsible for climate change. This shouldn't even be a matter of debate. — frank
I'm not a socialist.Not even a democratic socialist. The US got its wealth through a system Bernie wants to destroy. He has no understanding of the economy at all. — fishfry
I'd vote for Bloomberg/Clinton over Trump.
— Xtrix
Bloomberg and Clinton are exactly why the public wants Trump and Bernie. You cling to the neoliberal consensus perhaps because you don't know how truly evil it's become. Didn't the Iraq war teach you anything? — fishfry
I stand with Trump, warts and all. — fishfry
And Bernie? No no no no no. Unbelievable that an ignorant guy like that could be in charge of the country. — fishfry
Difference in what, exactly? Firstly, It is not all clear what you mean, and secondly, 15% difference is a far cry from the "end of civilization" that was claimed here, evil orageman Trump would produce.For starters, the US doing 100% of what it originally promised, it would make about 15% difference. — Benkei
Nothing wrong with reducing pollution, however "moving to alternative fuel sources" is easier said than done, seeing that currently the only viable alternative to fossil fuels is nuclear, and currently gen 4 nuclear technology is not fully developed yet.Second, locally it makes sense as well as it will lower pollution significantly if you move to alternative fuel sources and improve air quality (particularly due to reduced particulates). Investing in energy saving measures is even better as it will result in long term benefits freeing up resources (both money and fossil fuels) for other uses. — Benkei
Oh, it would certainly have an impact on policy.... i.e. China taking advantage of the US hobbling its economy, and African dictators gathering at the trough of "climate" subsidies for vague promises. It would NOT have an impact on the worlds climate.The US is a world leader, the wealthiest and most powerful country on Earth. To believe its climate policies and involvement in global agreements on climate change has little impact is mind-numbingly ignorant. — Xtrix
I do not buy the premise that we are all "doomed" because of some US political decisions. I am fully in favour of reducing the dependence on fossil fuels and on subsidizing research in alternative energy sources.But regardless -- what is your point, exactly? We should do nothing, since we're doomed anyway? Common attitude among deniers, but no less ridiculous. — Xtrix
If you never said that, why are you arguing? The only reason I jumped in here was because of the hysterical claim that "civilization" would not survive another 4 years of Trump.I never said Trump is responsible for climate change. Not once. — Xtrix
Oh, it would certainly have an impact on policy.... i.e. China taking advantage of the US hobbling its economy, and African dictators gathering at the trough of "climate" subsidies for vague promises. It would NOT have an impact on the worlds climate. — Nobeernolife
I never said Trump is responsible for climate change. Not once.
— Xtrix
If you never said that, why are you arguing? The only reason I jumped in here was because of the hysterical claim that "civilization" would not survive another 4 years of Trump. — Nobeernolife
I am not a climatologist, and obviously neither are you. And my comment were about politics, not climate.Yawn. And you know this for a fact because you're a climatologist, or at least have educated yourself on this topic. :roll: — Xtrix
Sounds great, doesn´t it. But who is "we", and what should this plan look like? You do not say. Clearly, in "we" you do not include China, India, and Africa. As I pointed out, even if the US did not exist, the rest of world would continue to consume fossil fuels.It would have a drastic impact on the climate if we enacted a plan to cut emissions by moving to renewables, taxing carbon, better regulating Big Oil, more efficient practices in agriculture, etc. To argue this would have no impact is, again, insanely ignorant. — Xtrix
Name-calling is not an argument, and on Google you can find all sorts of things, including critics of the global warming talking points.You're out of your league on this topic, and embarrassing yourself. Cut your losses and stop. It's not even fair -- I have the science community on my side. It's easy to Google and inform yourself. I highly recommend it. — Xtrix
Four more years of Trump's environmental policies will exacerbate the climate crisis. There's no doubt about that. He's also a climate denier. A Democratic alternative, no matter who it is (assuming they at least acknowledge climate change as a real threat), is a better choice for this reason alone. That was the point. — Xtrix
The fact that you take this to mean "Trump is responsible for climate change" or we "won't survive 4 more years of Trump" is pretty telling. It means that's what you want to hear. It's a straw man -- which is all you are informed enough to argue against. Which is to say, not at all. — Xtrix
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