Do you ever get tired of Trump's lies and those of his yes-men and women?
Just to be clear, I believe Trump is claiming that criticisms to his administration’s actions surrounding the issue (cuts to CDC funding etc.) is a hoax, or something like that, and not that the virus itself is a hoax.
What's the point here? Is the argument something like... some people do not keep their word, therefore Trump can pull out of any and all agreements that he chooses to?
In the posted video, Trump says “and this is their new hoax.” If you’re too brainwashed to believe that he wasn’t referring to Democrats and the coronavirus, well, then there’s little chance of me opening you eyes.
Who is this hapless demographic that gets duped by Facebook/social media content and ads? Are there really people that look at this and go "Ah, that's gotta be true because I saw it on Facebook!". I guess there is, but I'm wondering how ignorant one must really want to be to believe everything because it's on social media. I'm imagining thousands of little old ladies that have been introduced to social media and don't know that anyone can post anything, and they are constantly saying "Oh my!". It just doesn't make sense who is being manipulated whether by foreign or internal trolls.
The title reads:
“Donald Trump: Coronavirus is Democrats' 'new hoax'”
I image that most Trump supporters have poor reading comprehension, or just tend to see what they want to see.
And here I thought it was the scientists predicting climate catastrophe!
Is this a version of what you will tell your doc when he informs you that you have Stage 3 cancer?
"Well, a voodoo priest and a gypsy with a crystal ball told me before that I would die and they were wrong, so on that basis I will proceed with caution regarding fact-checked medical advice."
So you would actually prefer an apocalypse if it meant lowering taxes and regulations?
What do you mean by this?
Imagine getting upset because Sanders acknowledged some objectively good things Cuba has done. Very American to condemn other states as authoritarian while the US has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world.
I can respect the libertarian principle that less is best for government, even though I don't embrace it. But where collective action is needed, like climate change in particular, there is no hope for this being solved by a free market or by individuals voluntarily choosing to behave nobly.
If you set aside your belief that action is unnecessary, and accept the premise that action IS needed (hypothetically), would you agree?
By opposing any Green New Deal, does that mean you oppose any government interventiions that are aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions?
If yes, do you really believe the free market can solve the problem?
If no, then what sort of interventions do you favor?
I think swinging the country in the direction of a new New Deal is a very smart choice and very much needed, after years of neoliberal policy -- the results we see all around us. If you really feel we're (the working and middle classes) better off now than we were in the 50s and 60s under New Deal policies, that's a debate worth having.
Why does it only seem to be right-wing manchildren who use this new slang?
God you're pathetic.
Love the Limbaugh talking points, though.
Once again, only half the story. Plenty of European countries that have less strong unions do use minimum wage laws and they are also considered socially democratic.
Denmark and Sweden have very strong unions with high membership and the collective employment agreements contain minimum wages that are binding on all employees regardless of union membership. Companies cannot go around these unions. So even these countries have effective minimum wages they simply come about in a different way.
Denmark does have minimum wage laws for foreign employees.
You did, by linking Sanders' proposals with "socialism," and going on to say that "socialism" never works. So either Sanders' proposals are more in line with China and India, or else they're like Denmark and Sweden and thus NOT socialism.
Your entire worldview reeks of Cold War paranoia.
Ohh, I see. Great -- so then Bernie's policies aren't socialism either. Good to know. So you shouldn't have a problem bringing these clearly non-socialist countries' policies to the US.
Do you still contend that “Denmark and Sweden (among others) are failed states”?
So tell us: how are you defining "socialism"? And please inform us why Denmark and Sweden (among others) are failed states.
Federal judges have moved more than three dozen times in three years to temporarily prohibit enforcement of Trump policies that were challenged before them. That contrasts with about 20 for Barack Obama and even fewer for George W. Bush, both of whom served eight years, according to senators and witnesses at the hearing.
