Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#881
Posted 2016-February-10, 10:29
#882
Posted 2016-February-10, 10:35
barmar, on 2016-February-10, 10:29, said:
Good question. I tend to think that reestablishing diplomacy with Iran is no small achievement. Whether that "lives up to the promise of his Nobel Peace Prize" is more difficult to say.
-gwnn
#883
Posted 2016-February-10, 11:08
barmar, on 2016-February-10, 10:29, said:
That award was premature at best. I took it to be aspirational after the disastrous years before.
I don't judge foreign policy solely on the basis of whether or not bad things happen. There are always other actors and other interests. No country can completely control what others do--let alone individual actors within those countries--no matter how many weapons and soldiers one's country produces.
What a country can do is to make sure that it's own foreign policy is responsible and constructive and as effective as possible. That's the standard to use.
In bridge, taking the right line sometimes fails when an inferior line would have succeeded. And sometimes a fine player misses an inference. But acting thoughtfully on the best information available is the way, and measure, of success.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#884
Posted 2016-February-10, 14:33
barmar, on 2016-February-10, 10:29, said:
I didn't think so at first but upon reflection it cannot have been easy or simple to turn off the Bush/Cheney torture machine, avoid further military misadventures, normalize relations with Cuba, and build a bit of trust between the U.S. and Iran, all the while fending off Netanyahu's vitriol and contempt without sucker punching him for going around the President's back to plead his case to the Republican Congress.
#885
Posted 2016-February-10, 14:40
barmar, on 2016-February-10, 10:29, said:
Obama's Nobel Prize was for not being George Bush. He succeeded admirably.
Personally, I hoped for more from Obama. With this said and done, I think that he's the best President I've seen in my lifetime, with the possible exception of LBJ.
#886
Posted 2016-February-10, 15:03
The committee was making a political statement, nothing else. I tire of seeing awards that are intended to honor the accomplishment of the recipient being used to express the social/political views of the awarding committee.
Anyway, unless two Nobel Peace Prizes are to be given to the same person, we will never know if a Nobel Prize Committee, meeting next year, would judge his accomplishments as worthy of this award. Too bad.
#887
Posted 2016-February-10, 15:28
When you disturb the hive, honey vs stings is the comparator. With people and their rights to self-determination, "physician heal thyself" might better serve the interests of all concerned.
#888
Posted 2016-February-10, 16:12
kenberg, on 2016-February-10, 15:03, said:
The committee was making a political statement, nothing else. I tire of seeing awards that are intended to honor the accomplishment of the recipient being used to express the social/political views of the awarding committee.
Anyway, unless two Nobel Peace Prizes are to be given to the same person, we will never know if a Nobel Prize Committee, meeting next year, would judge his accomplishments as worthy of this award. Too bad.
This made me curious about what people (not organizations) might have won two Nobel prizes, and I found these four: John Bardeen, Marie Curie, Linus Pauling, and Frederick Sanger. Only one of the prizes (Pauling, 1962) was the Peace prize.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#889
Posted 2016-February-10, 16:48
PassedOut, on 2016-February-10, 16:12, said:
And only 2 people have won a Nobel Prize twice in the same category. Noone has so far been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize twice.
#890
Posted 2016-February-10, 17:17
billw55, on 2016-February-10, 10:35, said:
Wasn't this the peace prize he received after being in office for only a few months?
Maybe it was given to him in advance.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#891
Posted 2016-February-10, 22:51
Quote
If he does, there will be an outpouring of praise from self-proclaimed centrists, who will declare Kasich the sensible, responsible Republican of their dreams. So let me attempt what will surely be a futile preemptive strike, and note that on economic policy — which sort of matters — Kasich is terrible, arguably worse than the rest of the GOP field.
It’s not just his balanced-budget fetishism, which would be disastrous in an economic crisis. He’s also a hard-money man.
Ted Cruz has gotten some scrutiny, although not enough, for his goldbuggism. But Kasich, when asked why wages have stagnated, gave as his number one reason “because the Federal Reserve kept interest rates so low” — because this diverted investment into stocks, or something. No, it doesn’t make any sense — but it tells you that he is viscerally opposed to monetary as well as fiscal stimulus in the face of high unemployment.
So no, Kasich isn’t sensible. He’s just off the wall in ways that differ in some ways from the GOP mainstream. If he’d been president in 2009-10, we’d have had a full replay of the Great Depression.
Krugman is also quite worried about the bond market.
Somebody please wake me up.
#892
Posted 2016-February-11, 06:31
#893
Posted 2016-February-11, 08:29
y66, on 2016-February-10, 22:51, said:
Krugman is also quite worried about the bond market.
Somebody please wake me up.
On the side of the bond market link there is a link to a 1982 NYT article about Sanders. It's a hoot.
http://www.nytimes.c...t-alderman.html
#894
Posted 2016-February-11, 08:42
Phil, on 2016-February-10, 17:17, said:
Maybe it was given to him in advance.
I would say that your question was answered in advance:
kenberg, on 2016-February-10, 15:03, said:
hrothgar, on 2016-February-10, 14:40, said:
-gwnn
#895
Posted 2016-February-11, 11:57
Phil, on 2016-February-10, 17:17, said:
Maybe it was given to him in advance.
He was nominated after just 2 months in office, and awarded 6 months later. When they made the award, the Nobel Committee claimed that it wasn't just based on hope. But lots of people didn't believe them, and obviously still don't.
I think it's not uncommon to give the award to people who represent a movement, even if they haven't actually achieved much yet. It serves to raise awareness to the issue they're fighting for. An example is Malala Yousafzai -- she was already outspoken about female education in the third world, but I think it's likely that the prize raised the profile of her movement significantly.
I was just looking at the history of Peace Prize winners. I feel bad about how few of them I actually recognize the names of. But I also noticed the 1994 prize for Arafat/Rabin/Peres, for their efforts to create peace between Israel and Palestinians (the Oslo Accords). How's that peace process working out now?
#896
Posted 2016-February-11, 13:17
barmar, on 2016-February-11, 11:57, said:
I think it's not uncommon to give the award to people who represent a movement, even if they haven't actually achieved much yet. It serves to raise awareness to the issue they're fighting for. An example is Malala Yousafzai -- she was already outspoken about female education in the third world, but I think it's likely that the prize raised the profile of her movement significantly.
I was just looking at the history of Peace Prize winners. I feel bad about how few of them I actually recognize the names of. But I also noticed the 1994 prize for Arafat/Rabin/Peres, for their efforts to create peace between Israel and Palestinians (the Oslo Accords). How's that peace process working out now?
For Malala Yousafzai I think we need an award for being an extraordinary person. A truly fine person. An inspirational person. Peace Prize does not exactly cover that ground but, apologetically, it is the best we can do.
With Arafat/Rabin/Peres, peace is clearly the issue. The accords were of course unsuccessful and I do think that is relevant as to how deserving of the prize they are. The fact that it hasn't worked out is not disqualifying, the quality of the effort is relevant, the inherent difficulty of the problem is relevant, but how something works out in practice counts as well.
#897
Posted 2016-February-11, 15:18
Father of the United Nations Forces
In 1956, Great Britain, France and Israel launched an attack on Egypt aimed at removing President Nasser. The United States had not been informed, and the Soviet Union threatened to use atomic weapons against the assailants. The "Suez Crisis" found its solution when the President of the United Nations General Assembly, the Canadian Lester Pearson, won support for sending a United Nations Emergency Force to the region to separate the warring parties. This gained him the Peace Prize for 1957.
Pearson was a historian. In the inter-war years he was employed in Canada's Department of External Affairs. He was sent to Europe, and witnessed both the breakdown of the League of Nations and the outbreak of World War II. During the war he was stationed in Washington, where he worked on preparations for the founding of the United Nations. Many wanted him to be the first Secretary-General, but the Soviet Union was opposed. Instead, Pearson headed the UN committee that recommended the division of Palestine into a Jewish part and an Arab part.
So the (judicial) use of force is worthy of the PEACE prize....
#898
Posted 2016-February-12, 09:32
#899
Posted 2016-February-12, 10:28
Quote
IFILL: Let me turn this on its head, because when we talk about race in this country, we always talk about African-Americans, people of color. I want to talk about white people, OK?
SANDERS: White people?
IFILL: I know. (LAUGHTER)
So many people will be surprised to find out that we are sitting in one of the most racially polarized metropolitan areas in the country. By the middle of this century, the nation is going to be majority nonwhite. Our public schools are already there. If working- class, white Americans are about to be outnumbered, are already underemployed in many cases, and one study found they are dying sooner, don't they have a reason to be resentful, Senator -- Secretary Clinton?
Some stipulations. Sanders is quick-witted and I think "White people?" was intended humorously. And I laughed as well. Still.
Humor works best when it is based on truth. The candidates are asked if they would like to address the frustrations and hopes of struggling whites, and the thought that anyone would ask a Democrat such a question leads to laughter. And this laughter is from Democrats.
I thought that Hillary did a pretty good job with her response, but I imagine that this group of voters noticed that their concerns seemed to be an afterthought. This could partially explain the fact that many of them vote Republican.
At the very least, I think the Dems have a communication problem.
For those who might note that the laughter came before the full formulation of Ifill's question, I had no doubt about where she was headed as she started out her question.
#900
Posted 2016-February-12, 12:56
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