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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#12281 User is offline   akwoo 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 00:43

View Postkenberg, on 2019-March-08, 21:42, said:

It accepts that providing opportunity will not suffice.


The underlying theology of Evangelical Christianity in the US has, since the early 19th century, been Wesleyan/Arminian - some people are predestined for salvation and have an easier path to it but everyone can work towards it and make it to heaven by working hard at building their faith.

If you're paying attention to Evangelical circles, you'll have noticed a considerable uptick in the popularity of Calvinism - God has predestined everyone either to heaven or to hell.

I think there is a reason.

A few will, through some combination of birth and early childhood environmental factors, have some talent that enables them to do something no machine can do.

Everyone else will be made economically obsolete by automation.

I've said this before - I think it's more likely than not I will die as a result of nuclear war, because what I've described above is not a stable social dynamic.
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#12282 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 01:11

Ken, I am not surprised, but still disappointed by your post. At some point, I'll try to respond thoroughly. In the mean time, some quick comments:

View Postkenberg, on 2019-March-08, 21:42, said:

The case against is pretty straightforward: We are not going to do it.

That seems a little disingenuous, as you are clearly against it also on the merits. Why don't you tell us why?

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It accepts that providing opportunity will not suffice.

No, it accepts that in the current USA, opportunity depends on your parents income and wealth. Do you disagree? If you don't, do you have plans to change it?
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke
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#12283 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 01:23

In another example of no lie too small and no lie to big for Dennison to tell:

Katy Tur Busts Trump’s Latest Lie ― And She’s Got The Video To Prove It

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Trump on Saturday claimed he was “in an arena” at the time, telling a joke, being “sarcastic” and “having fun with the audience” when he called on Moscow to hack his campaign rival in the now-infamous moment.

Is this the 9,000th or the 10,000 lie since the king of liars was elected?

Quote

But as MSNBC’s Katy Tur pointed out on Monday, none of that is true.

Trump didn’t make the comments at a rally, and he wasn’t “having fun with the audience.”

He made the comments at a news conference. And when given an opportunity at the time by Tur to back away from calling on a foreign power to help his campaign against Clinton, Trump didn’t indicate he was joking at all.

This was very unfair of Katy Turic to use actual video of Dennison to prove yet another lie. And Turic seems to have forgot to include the fake laugh track of the audience laughing at Dennison making a joke. Totally not sporting at all to prove Dennison has lied yet again. Really, this is the equivalent of the Dennison boys going hunting and then shooting big game that are enclosed in cages. What's the challenge in that?
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#12284 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 08:07

View Postkenberg, on 2019-March-09, 07:10, said:

Upon reflection I decided to delete this.

To save time, you can use the new delete button
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#12285 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 09:19

View Postjohnu, on 2019-March-09, 01:23, said:

In another example of no lie too small and no lie to big for Dennison to tell:

Katy Tur Busts Trump’s Latest Lie ― And She’s Got The Video To Prove It


Is this the 9,000th or the 10,000 lie since the king of liars was elected?


This was very unfair of Katy Turic to use actual video of Dennison to prove yet another lie. And Turic seems to have forgot to include the fake laugh track of the audience laughing at Dennison making a joke. Totally not sporting at all to prove Dennison has lied yet again. Really, this is the equivalent of the Dennison boys going hunting and then shooting big game that are enclosed in cages. What's the challenge in that?



I find it odd that Individual-1 is even bothering to try to spin this episode as joking around. The Russians (likely due to translation problems B-) ) took his words seriously:

Quote

As it turns out, that same day, the Russians — whether they had tuned in or not — made their first effort to break into the servers used by Mrs. Clinton’s personal office, according to a sweeping 29-page indictment unsealed Friday by the special counsel’s office that charged 12 Russians with election hacking.

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#12286 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 17:22

Usually when Dennison denounces something, he is really denouncing himself for exactly the thing he accuses other people.

Analysis: Trump says the Democrats are ‘anti-Jewish.’ The numbers don’t bear that out.

The anti semite Manchurian President had this to say:

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On Friday, President Trump criticized Democrats for broadening the focus of their anti-hate measure. “I thought yesterday’s vote by the House was disgraceful,” the president told reporters as he left the White House to assess tornado damage in Alabama. “The Democrats have become an anti-Israel party. They’ve become an anti-Jewish party, and that’s too bad.”

Of course, Dennison is defacto head of the anti semite wing of the Republican party.

Quote

... the president has come under fire for remarks that some found anti-Semitic.

After white nationalists marched through Charlottesville, chanting “Jews will not replace us,” Trump called some of the protesters “very fine people,” a comment that drew harsh condemnation.

During the 2016 campaign, the president defended the use of an image of a six-point star, which resembled the Star of David, over a pile of $100 bills. The image was part of an attack against Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton; many Jewish leaders said it was anti-Semitic. At a speech to the Republican Jewish Coalition in 2015, Trump made comments that reinforced stereotypes about Jewish people. And in the final days of the campaign, he made headlines for running an ad that referenced the “global power structure” attempting to control the world through Clinton while featuring images of prominent Jewish leaders like George Soros.

Indeed, Dennison like to propagate scare stories about the globalists

Conspiracy theories about Soros aren’t just false. They’re anti-Semitic.

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This rhetoric echoed in a speech in which Trump declared that he was a “nationalist,” not a “globalist” — delivered on the same day Soros received a mail bomb. The term “globalist” is frequently used as a euphemism for Jew, including by far-right news site Breitbart, which surrounds Jewish former Trump economic adviser Gary Cohn’s name with globe emoji, for “globalist.”

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#12287 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 17:34

Has American become a banana republic with no respect for the rule of law? Only since Dennison became president.

It Exists: DOJ Finds Letter Ordering Scrutiny of Uranium One, Hillary Clinton

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After it claimed no such document existed, the Justice Department just unearthed a letter Matt Whitaker delivered to the Utah U.S. attorney directing a review of how the department handled the Clinton Foundation and the Uranium One issues.

Then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions wrote the letter on Nov. 22, 2017 for Utah U.S. Attorney John Huber.

Quote

The existence of a letter documenting Sessions’ directive that the DOJ revisit probes of Trump’s top political foe is a surprise because a department lawyer said in court last year that senior officials insisted it didn’t exist. The liberal nonprofit American Oversight obtained the letter through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request they filed on Nov. 22, 2017––the same day Whitaker emailed Sessions’ letter to Huber.

Justice department officials apparently committed perjury in covering up this letter and investigation. What else is new? :rolleyes:
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#12288 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-March-09, 18:29

View Postjohnu, on 2019-March-09, 17:34, said:

Has American become a banana republic with no respect for the rule of law? Only since Dennison became president.

It Exists: DOJ Finds Letter Ordering Scrutiny of Uranium One, Hillary Clinton



Justice department officials apparently committed perjury in covering up this letter and investigation. What else is new? :rolleyes:


This is awful, but at the same time I think it is important not to exaggerate accusations: perjury only applies to knowingly lying under oath. If you are not under oath, you may be guilty of making false statements but not perjury.

I'm not sure where this episode lands, but I don't know of anyone other than Whitaker (Big Dick Toilet Salesman) who testified under oath, and I'm not sure if he was asked this question even.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#12289 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 07:28

View Postakwoo, on 2019-March-09, 00:43, said:

The underlying theology of Evangelical Christianity in the US has, since the early 19th century, been Wesleyan/Arminian - some people are predestined for salvation and have an easier path to it but everyone can work towards it and make it to heaven by working hard at building their faith.

If you're paying attention to Evangelical circles, you'll have noticed a considerable uptick in the popularity of Calvinism - God has predestined everyone either to heaven or to hell.

I think there is a reason.

A few will, through some combination of birth and early childhood environmental factors, have some talent that enables them to do something no machine can do.

Everyone else will be made economically obsolete by automation.

I've said this before - I think it's more likely than not I will die as a result of nuclear war, because what I've described above is not a stable social dynamic.



There is a danger in getting off topic here but it's a lazy Sunday morning and I found this post interesting so a few thoughts.
"If you're paying attention to Evangelical circles," As the little pig said to the big bad wolf, not by the hair of my chinny chin chin

"you'll have noticed a considerable uptick in the popularity of Calvinism - God has predestined everyone either to heaven or to hell.". Yes, but they don't really mean it. I was confirmed in the Presbyterian Church when I was 13, I went every Sunday, I worried about whether I should pluck out my eye because it is better to lose an eye than to have my body cast into hell. When I was 14 the minister took me aside to explain that I had to get my parents to attend church more regularly so that they wouldn't burn in hell. Had been more theologically inclined I would have advanced the pre-destination argument to show that it didn't matter, but I took a more experimental approach. I found an isolated spot and shouted obscenities at God for five or ten minutes and when I wasn't struck dead I figured well, that's that, and I never went back to the church.
Actually, this might, in its own way, be on topic. I'm fine with religion, I believe in faith hope and charity, I even believe the greatest of these is charity, I just don't much care for being condemned to hell. I am also fine with providing opportunity, but I am not fond of being condemned for writing off some progressive ideas as not sensible. Whether a church or a political party, we might go a little easy on burning heretics, metaphorically or otherwise. People can, and do, walk away.





Ken
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#12290 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 09:35

This from Adam Gopnik reminded me of Ken:

Quote

Pragmatism is not a way of negating principle but, rather, the realist’s way of pursuing principle.

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#12291 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 09:42

This explains so much, almost as if Gordian's knot had been attacked with a sword.

Quote

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Backers of a U.S.-Russian plan to build nuclear reactors across the Middle East bragged after the U.S. election they had backing from Donald Trump’s national security adviser Michael Flynn for a project that required lifting sanctions on Russia, documents reviewed by Reuters show.

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#12292 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 10:20

That Adam Gopnik quote reminded me of David Brooks.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#12293 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 10:46

From The “dignity of work,” Sherrod Brown’s plan for Democrats to win back working-class voters, explained by Dylan Scott at Vox:

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The senator from Ohio won’t run for president in 2020. But his economic platform is still inspiring Democrats.

Sherrod Brown is preaching a message he believes can win working-class voters for Democrats in 2020: the dignity of work.

“Work hasn’t been rewarded in this country the way we like to think it was historically,” Brown told me in a recent interview. “No job is menial if you make an adequate wage. You really start with that. One job should be enough.”

Brown is trying to bring back an old-fashioned, worker-centered populism to the Democratic Party. But he has decided that he won’t do that by running for president himself. The senator announced on Thursday that he would fight for the “dignity of work” from the United States Senate instead of pursuing the White House in the 2020 campaign.

“I will keep calling out Donald Trump and his phony populism. I will keep fighting for all workers across the country. And I will do everything I can to elect a Democratic President and a Democratic Senate in 2020,” Brown said in a statement. “The best place for me to make that fight is in the United States Senate.”

His lane in the presidential race would have been narrow one: He didn’t have the established base of Bernie Sanders, the popular charisma of Kamala Harris, the profile of Elizabeth Warren, or the Obama mantle of Joe Biden. His message will still have a place in the Democratic primary, however, as some of those candidates pick up the “dignity of work” rhetoric.

“The more they mention it, the better it is. I’m glad they’re mentioning it,” Brown told me before he had made his decision. “We knew that if I didn’t run, it’d still have an impact on the debate.”

Brown says this ethos is drawn from the words of Martin Luther King Jr., who once said that “all labor has dignity.” It is a belief that anybody who works a full-time job should be able to live a middle-class life — and a recognition that there are many kinds of “work” that we don’t treat as such.

Brown has drawn from a half-century of economic data and liberal theory to formulate a comprehensive and accessible narrative about how the American economy has changed. Productivity and wages had once increased in parallel, but that connection broke starting in the 1970s. American workers kept increasing their productivity, but real wages have fallen.

In short, work isn’t worth as much as it used to be. Brown lays the blame at the feet of corporations and their embrace of the gospel that their duty is to maximize their stock value. He says they’ve marginalized workers by eroding their collective bargaining power and through other forms of exploitation. He sees the worker-employer relationship as a fundamentally adversarial one.

“Something changed with Milton Friedman’s preaching ... Friedman preached that companies had one loyalty and that is to stockholders,” Brown tells me. “It probably gave employers some economic and moral justification for doing what they might have wanted to do.”

His prescription is a thorough yet knowingly practical one: a tax overhaul, a minimum wage hike, and a strengthening of worker rights.

More

If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#12294 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 13:38

View Postkenberg, on 2019-March-08, 21:42, said:

\But really the bottom line is that there is not a chance in hell we would do such a thing.

While I'm generally a believer in pragmatism, too, there's a case to be made for dreaming. I'll bet many people thought the same way about the end of slavery, women's suffrage, civil rights, perhaps also gay marriage.

It probably won't happen, but if we don't try it definitely won't happen.

#12295 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 14:13

View Postbarmar, on 2019-March-10, 13:38, said:

While I'm generally a believer in pragmatism, too, there's a case to be made for dreaming. I'll bet many people thought the same way about the end of slavery, women's suffrage, civil rights, perhaps also gay marriage.

It probably won't happen, but if we don't try it definitely won't happen.

I was blown away by Brooks' op-ed. My first thought was that he's been experimenting with ayahuasca which seems only slightly more likely than Americans ever agreeing to reparations. I'm looking forward to hearing more about his epiphany.
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#12296 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 15:10

View PostWinstonm, on 2019-March-09, 18:29, said:

This is awful, but at the same time I think it is important not to exaggerate accusations: perjury only applies to knowingly lying under oath. If you are not under oath, you may be guilty of making false statements but not perjury.


From the article,

Quote

“It strains credulity to believe that the Justice Department didn’t know about this letter when they swore under penalty of perjury that it didn’t exist–you don’t exactly forget about a formal directive to investigate Hillary Clinton signed by Jeff Sessions,” he added


This quoted person was Austin Evers, who heads American Oversight, who filed the FOIA request. True, the actual person making the sworn testimony may not actually have known about the letter, but the higher ups who covered up the existence of the letter could be guilty of obstruction of justice (or perjury).
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#12297 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 15:19

View Postjohnu, on 2019-March-08, 16:05, said:

Just an interesting example of the theory of 6 degrees of separation:

Trump cheered Patriots to Super Bowl victory with founder of spa where Kraft was busted

Quote

The woman who snapped the blurry Super Bowl selfie with the president was Li Yang, 45, a self-made entrepreneur from China who started a chain of Asian day spas in South Florida. Over the years, these establishments - many of which operate under the name Tokyo Day Spas - have gained a reputation for offering sexual services.

After Robert Kraft was busted for soliciting sex at one of these spas, he may be also severely punished by the NFL, possibly forced to relinquish control of the Super Bowl champ NE Patriots.


Even fewer degrees of separation than first reported:

Massage parlor magnate helped steer Chinese to Trump NYC fundraiser, attendee says

In defense of Dennison, money is money and it spends nicely no matter where it comes from. Certainly no worse than taking money from Russian oligarchs.
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#12298 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 16:58

View Postbarmar, on 2019-March-10, 13:38, said:

While I'm generally a believer in pragmatism, too, there's a case to be made for dreaming. I'll bet many people thought the same way about the end of slavery, women's suffrage, civil rights, perhaps also gay marriage.

It probably won't happen, but if we don't try it definitely won't happen.


I am not in favor. I'll try to explain. I am on decent terms with both of my ex-wives. I rarely hear from either, but my first wife called recently with some questions and we had a decent conversation, My two kids actually seem to like having me around. I am grateful. These are people who, if they were to say that I owed them something for my past, I might well agree. And I can think of a few other people in my past where I could understand them not speaking highly of me. .Afaik, no one has a legal claim that would stand up, and I really don't see that anyone, black, white, red, whatever, has a personal claim against me that would stand up. So the claim has to be a group claim based on the fact that I am white. In a word: No way. Ok, that's two words. I enthusiastically support efforts to provide opportunity for everyone. I have no plans whatsoever to give, say, 50K to someone because he is black and I am white. Make out of this whatever you will, I am not doing it, at least not willingly.
Ken
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#12299 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 17:20

View Postjohnu, on 2019-March-10, 15:10, said:

From the article,



This quoted person was Austin Evers, who heads American Oversight, who filed the FOIA request. True, the actual person making the sworn testimony may not actually have known about the letter, but the higher ups who covered up the existence of the letter could be guilty of obstruction of justice (or perjury).


I stand corrected.
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#12300 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-March-10, 17:37

This may seem an innocuous story, but from my perspective it shows the incredible risk of having a malignant narcissist as president.

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Republican donors present at the RNC fundraiser with President Donald Trump confessed that they don’t understand why the president would lie about flubbing Apple CEO Tim Cook’s name.

During a fundraiser where Trump ranted about Democrats hating Jews and made jokes about blackface, the president also announced that he actually said “Tim Cook Apple.” The president explained he said the name really quickly and said “Cook” very quietly, so no one could hear it, Axios reported.

The video shows a different story. Presumably, even if Trump had said “Cook,” his lips would have moved. They did not.

Two donors at the event told Axios they didn’t understand why Trump would lie about something so ridiculous, particularly when it was captured on video.

“Nobody cared, they said, and Tim Cook took it in good humor by changing his Twitter profile to Tim Apple,” Axios reported.

“I just thought, why would you lie about that,” on donors told Axios. “It doesn’t even matter!”


Why would Individual-1 lie about this? Because he has to. He has no choice.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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  1. PeterAlan