Do you remember any of the parallels he drew? — Fooloso4
The institutions that have tasked themselves with informing the public have failed in that regard. — NOS4A2
Yes, a fair depiction. I noticed that academic and theologian David Bentley Hart, in a conversation with Peter O'Leary, calls this a modern reworking/revival of Gnostic mythos. — Tom Storm
The popularity of Trump in China is definitely something to think about. — Hailey
That was the question asked at the beginning of the American Civil War. — Paine
That is to say, party-ism truly "trumps" ideas of fairness. Democracies must be set up with respect for the game above all else. But here's the even more intriguing part of this mess. It's not just that Trump is flouting the rules of the game. It is the willingness of those who support the cult of personality to the point where, they don' even recognize it as flouting the rules. They will say, "he didn't really do anything wrong", or even worse, equivocate and say, "he is doing no worse than X, Y, Z politician". And thus, this political gaslighting is the new narrative. — schopenhauer1
It's the otherwise well-tempered folks that would vote for him that is the riddle to be solved. — schopenhauer1
It's the otherwise well-tempered folks that would vote for him that is the riddle to be solved. — schopenhauer1
This is a more hair-raising idea and I agree, that's some riddle. — Tom Storm
And failed. You can't tackle that one without the other side...Mexico.He made an attempt to stop illegal immigration along the southern border. — jgill
So did Neville Chamberlain. Flirting with tyrants and appealing to their narcissism, is the opposite of leading from principle and is anti-American, unless America is supposed to like fascist and authoritarian tendencies as official policy.He met with tyrants to try to reduce tensions. — jgill
Hint: He made an attempt to stop illegal immigration along the southern border. He made an attempt to influence NATO members to pay more their share. He met with tyrants to try to reduce tensions. . . .. feel free to ridicule. — jgill
They understand that he is a much more fearsome opponent on the world stage, as he actually knows what he's doing. — Wayfarer
Or perhaps I'm just gullible to Trump's speeches and interviews where he appears to be more sensible and competent than Baiden. — Hailey
I can't imagine Trump ever appearing more sensible or competent than Biden — Tom Storm
I certainly agree that deep down Biden is a more formidable foe to oppsing countries to the US. — Hailey
Guess what's happening here? :cool: — jgill
"We have to have a final certification of eligible candidates [for the primary ballot] by Dec. 14 for Arizona’s presidential preference election,” Fontes, a Democrat elected last year, told NBC News. “And because this will ultimately end up in court, we are taking this very seriously.” ...
“We need to run an election,” Fontes said. “We need to know who is eligible, and this is of incredible national interest. We aren’t taking a position one way or the other.
“If there are people who want to fight this out, they need to start swinging, because I have an election to run,” Fontes added.
:100: :up:My vague and distant impression is that
he didn't drain the swamp,
he didn't build the wall or make 'them' pay for it,
didn't lock her up,
didn't de-rust the rustbelt, transform the economy, or bring back the good old days.
Above all, he didn't make America great again, but made it a place where drinking disinfectant is suggested as an anti-viral, and religious fundamentalism is encouraged. — unenlightened
our politics have become particularly depraved lately — Ciceronianus
Call back Trump. … Trump is the man who can save the Western world. — Viktor Orbán
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.