I don't think that's a particularly interesting scenario. Of course people react differently to different things. — flannel jesus
This is why Republicans are the most dangerous party in history. — Mikie
And when the vote was challenged, not a single mainstream media outlet wanted the ratings bonanza of turning it into a scandal. No court would hear it. But the same courts were eager to elevate a guided tour of the Capitol building as something akin to the storming of the Bastille. — yebiga
I'm not interested in whataboutism — flannel jesus
it paints a picture of culpability. If it's not his legal responsibility, it's his moral responsibility. The fact that he watched it on TV , with numerous people begging him to call his supporters off, and revised to do so for 3 hours - if it's not a crime, it is at the very least an instance of moral neglect of his duties. And it does make it look like he wanted it to happen, which supports the case that he incited it, which is very likely a crime — flannel jesus
it paints a picture of culpability. If it's not his legal responsibility, it's his moral responsibility. The fact that he watched it on TV , with numerous people begging him to call his supporters off, and revised to do so for 3 hours - if it's not a crime, it is at the very least an instance of moral neglect of his duties. And it does make it look like he wanted it to happen, which supports the case that he incited it, which is very likely a crime — flannel jesus
You might argue that he didn't want what happened at January 6 to happen, but he certainly didn't even do the bare minimum to stop it. Not so much as a tweet — flannel jesus
You agree with me in admitting that the press will manipulate us one side or the other. — javi2541997
I hope you are talking ironically.
It is a fact that Trump was already sentenced by the media — javi2541997
Imagine, just the 6 states that will decide the vote — yebiga
It is clear that the Public is easily manipulated by its media. — yebiga
I don’t even like the US constitution. — NOS4A2
Now, even run-of-the-mill rainstorms are causing regular flooding in the city.
Residents are striving to stay in their water-damaged homes, while community planners are tasked with fortifying the city from future flooding -- not just from powerful hurricanes, but from everyday rainstorms that are now causing more nuisance flooding than in years past. — jorndoe
That damn covid scam! It's still killing people! Not as many as it used to tho. It doesn't really rate much higher than flu these days. I'm taking a break from this forum for a while. Thanks for the discussion. :smile: — frank
I'm not really sure what accounts for that belief that those in leadership positions are perpetrating a giant fraud. I mean, when they give massive tax breaks to the rich, it's wide out in the open. They aren't trying to hide it. They don't have to. — frank
It happened everywhere in the US. We talk to each other, you know. :razz: — frank
You locked down to try to slow the spread so the hospital system wouldn't be more overloaded than it was.
Without the lockdowns, you would have gone outside in the morning to see what the people in 1918 saw: dead people laying in their yards. — frank
All spin, no substance. That's our world! — frank
You remember public frenzy, I remember the dying old man who doesn't believe it when people tell he has covid. I think his words were: "You just hear so many different things", or something like that. He's dead. — frank
A large number of people actually did die from COVID-19. Is that the part you didn't believe? Or what? — frank
(As an aside, you may entertain whatever view you like; around here you'll have to justify them unless you just want to talk about yourself.) — jorndoe
Activism (and possibly alarmism) can be a bona fides reaction, with scientific justification, and moral guts. — jorndoe
When governments can no longer be seen as honest brokers of information it puts a bomb underneath the narratives concerning a wide variety of social and political issues. That's why people are getting so cramped about it. — Tzeentch
climate activism (even alarmism perhaps) can be bona fides scientifically justified. Morally likewise. What of denialism/contrarianism then? — jorndoe
It didn’t originate with Marcuse. You made that up. Which proves my point about denialist imbeciles. — Mikie
Modern man’s despoliation of the environment is global in scope, like his imperialism [...] Today human parasitism disrupts more than the atmosphere, climate, water resources, soil, flora, and fauna of a region; it upsets virtually all the basic cycles of nature and threatens to undermine the stability of the environment on a worldwide scale. (Marcuse 1964) — Marcuse 1964
Accounts of this kind can be repeated for virtually every part of the biosphere. Pages can be written on the immense losses of productive soil that occur annually in almost every continent of the earth; on the extensive loss of tree cover in areas vulnerable to erosion; on lethal air pollution episodes in major urban areas; on the worldwide distribution of toxic agents, such as radioactive isotopes and lead; on the chemicalization of man’s immediate environment [...] Pieced together like bits of a jigsaw puzzle, these affronts to the environment form a pattern of destruction that has no precedent in man’s long history on the earth. — Marcuse 1964
Yea but Cassandra was right. — frank
— and getting away with knowing nothing. — Mikie
And remember we talked about the potential shutdown of the AMOC. That would essentially destroy western Europe. — frank
Now, a new study finds the collapse of the current, which is known as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, or AMOC, could happen far sooner than scientists have previously thought, possibly within a few decades, as a result of human-caused global warming.
—a valid theory—reveals that the charge is often used simply against information that they do not like. — NOS4A2
official truth — NOS4A2
Incidentally, ↪Mikie brought up Sortition, which seems a neat idea, sort of. — jorndoe
well, in democracy, government is part of voters (or in voters' employ if you like). — jorndoe
your preconceived notion of bad government. — Benkei
I believe it has already happened in some enclaves. — Janus
Will they be called "humananas", "hananas", or "bahumans", or "bahanas" ? — Agree-to-Disagree