People, please. It was just a joke.
Just for fun, make the case for Obama and his polices and make the case against Trump and his. If you understand them, their views, then intelligence doesn't require you to believe either, but it does require you be able to explain them. Otherwise, if you can't do that, if you really don't even know your opponents positions, on what basis, other than feelings, do you oppose them or, how could you be able to persuade them otherwise?
People, please. It was just a joke.
Sure, but the ongoing conversation became interesting.
otherwise, if you can't do that, if you really don't even know your opponents positions, on what basis, other than feelings, do you oppose them or, how could you be able to persuade them otherwise?
*ULTIMATELY* -we generally do NOT base our positions on these things solely on facts. .
She can't be said to have reasoned opposition to Trump if her opposition is based solely on his 'rapist' comments.
I think few things annoy me more regarding Trump than the misrepresentation of the meaning of his rapist remarks. It is clear from the sense of his comment that he was not saying all Mexicans were rapists and drug dealers.
It's like someone disputing that they are rapists by saying "We're not rapists - we're doctors and bankers and nurses. We are programmers and accountants."
And you know what? That statement is utterly wrong in the same way that people are saying the Trump remark. They're not ALL DOCTORS. Or ALL nurses. And so on.
But it is a construct of English to describe a generalization about some of the members of a group. If you watch TV or read the news, you will come across this usage every single day and think nothing of it.
I'm familiar with sweeping generalizations - and this kind of defense - when people insulted my religion, saying we were all a bunch of delusional morons, naive fools, uneducated nitwits.
And I might answer "uneducated? We're MIT and Harvard graduates, PhD holders and stockbrokers and lawyers". A sentence that in the meaning in every way defends and debunks what was said about us - but very obviously does NOT say we are *ALL* MIT and Harvard graduates.
The problem Trump faces is one that Newt Gingrich wrote about back during the takeover of the House - now that he was a national figure, EVERY phrase and EVERY remark *would* be parsed in a way to put him in as bad a light as possible. And he had to craft his words to be terse and either to the point - or to be innocuous.
You know, we hate how politicians speak out of both sides of their mouth, take both positions on a subject and refuse to be precise - but we force them to be that way.
They won but to what effect? They ended up with Trump because their voters had had enough of them winning and doing nothing with it even though they had a central unifying issue; the ACA.
It's the single big thing that I wish for anything that the country could do away with - party, and the power the party holds. Stuff is done to advance the party under the delusion that the country is best served when YOUR side is in control - but once control is achieved - the only goal is to acquire more control, NOT advance the objectives that will "help the nation". This happens a lot - when you have two adversaries so diametrically opposed, they lose sight of the point of their existence and spend all their time trying to BEAT their opponent. Eventually, they will expend great effort SCREWING the people they purport to advocate for, to continue holding power.
Well, let's consider it our 'Manhattan' projection and figure it out.
We know human beings are predisposed, if not hard wired, for cognitive dissonance and confirmation bias. They're probably biologic at core, in our DNA, evolved in order to protect our own which improves our own chances of survival. The herd, when attacked, tends to stick together rather than disperse. If we're agreed this far then we can agree that we're choosing to embark on an attempt to, basically, over come a close relative to the sex drive and self preservation.
So, now what?
Herds are fine. But, don't give two herds automatic control of all the others.
We live in a democratic republic. We need to have the same rules for all parties with respect to getting people on the ballot. As it is now, any D or R is automatically on the ballot if the media says they are (literally, in MD, the ballot is allowed to be established by media report). Change that. Not any other party gets that. Any other party has to jump through huge hoops to get on the ballot.
Level the playing field.
We, the people, can make that happen.
It's not JUST at the ballot. Senate and House rules decide how things are run, based on which *party* controls things. PARTIES have been running things for so long that it's hard to change.
And parties have been running things for so long, they don't realize that party control tends to supersede what is the nation's best interest.
That's the allure to me of politics; we CAN. But how????
If 25% of us support Hillary and 25% Trump and 50% neither, what then? Only the 50% who support neither can even begin to be said to actually want to change the thing.
By getting much more involved in local politics than national. By going to county commissioner meetings, and speaking. By watching the legislature of the state, and talking about THAT at bars and on-line and at the barber shop. Drive those conversations such that your state rep starts talking with you, too, because he knows you're watching him.
I think it's fair that the House and the Senate set their own rules on how to control themselves. .
So, where does the argument lie that we're not happy with our local politics? If 'going' local is where the changes are to be made, isn't that to say that local politics are already making the people happy enough?
Their rules are designed not to control themselves but to shield them from where the actual control was set up to come from; we, the people.