You have missed my point. ... Here you are trying to excuse it or downplay it on one side after you mentioned it as a problem.
I didn't miss your point, but I think you missed my point in that people will gravitate towards issues they think they might be able to change. If it's something they can't change because the forces against it are too strong, then they'll go for something easier.
This is vague. Just say what you mean.
I shouldn't really have to spell it out for you, but as I mentioned in a recent thread, we need price and rent controls to get the economy back under control. We need increases in wages for the working classes. We need socialized medicine (not just a "single payer" system). We need to bring back manufacturing to the US and restore our industrial base. The only things we should be importing are those things that can't be mined or grown in the United States.
Also, we need a more coherent, neutralist approach to foreign policy. No more alliances or foreign entanglements. If another country does something that doesn't harm America, then we should stay out of their business. We should take a detached approach to foreign affairs and not get stuck in other countries' quagmires.
I have known plenty of New Yorkers that do not fit this description.
And I've known plenty who do.
That sounds like an excuse that avoids the issue. The idea is that "being a foul mouth blowhard" has consequences. Therefore these attributes should be considered.
This is only because people react irrationally and get upset by it. But that's their fault. Whatever consequences
they want to deliver are meaningless, and if they refuse to explain themselves or
why they're acting irrationally, then they're the ones making excuses and avoiding the issue.
I am not arguingthat demeanor should not be considered. While I do not think it should be the only factor, how someone behaves does matter. Please note you have been the one to move to a hyperbolic ad hominem by implying that the opponents (And perhaps the past presidents) were "soft-spoken wimps."
Technically, it's not an ad hominem because I'm not naming any names or directing it to anyone specific.
But again, there's two sides to every story. Those who say that Trump is "offensive" or "alienating our allies" are also being hyperbolic. The time to play nice was 20-30 years ago, but now, there's too much bad blood that it's too late. Trump's only been president for less than two years, but this particular aspect of our political culture (hyperbolic ad hominems) have been going on for decades. No one complained for all this time, yet now they do. But it's too late.
That sounds like an actual argument about actual policies. We may disagree here but we could very well have a discussion about American foreign policy.
This is something many Americans have been discussing for a long time. Maybe it doesn't make the mainstream media very much, but it's been discussed.
I don't think you realize how hyperbolic this sounds.
If you disagree, then just say so. All I would ask is that you give me a coherent explanation as to why.
Political correctness certainly plays a role. ... They did indeed have an effect. They could hardly be categorized as harmless.
The same can be said depending on who's making the statements, what the statements are, which group they're directing those statements towards, and what the context is. You say that "words do matter," and I agree, but if PC is about wanting everyone to "play nice," then it's too late for that. America is not a nice country. Our culture, as manifested in the blogs, in popular entertainment, on message boards like this one, and in the news media demonstrates a rather vicious and malicious attitude which has become part and parcel of our culture.
Political correctness is also a contributory factor, since it's not really about "rules" or anything. It's about people feeling that they have license to use abuse and ridicule (or even worse, such as firing them from their jobs) against those whom they feel have violated some imaginary "standard" that they've set. It is the very source and root of the malicious culture many in America are generating.
Didn't they think there would be consequences for
that? Didn't they realize what they were doing and what the ramifications were?
I remember some feminist blogger from NYC was writing something about a security guard in Iowa, who was ostensibly guilty of doing something "sexist." He was outed and named in this blog, and as a result, he got fired. Well, he ended up tracking this blogger down, flew out to NY, found her walking her dog in the park and confronted her. She apparently tried to defend what she did by saying "it's just a blog" or something like that. He shot and killed her. You play with fire, you get burned. It's as simple as that.
So, yes, you're right. Words do matter, but that's also a double-edged sword that few people seem to be conscious of.
I am not arguing that he is Hitler.
I never said that you were, did I?
You are indeed, yourself, making mountains out of mole hills and speaking in hyperbole if you are trying to characterize my post as making mountains of mole hills or arguing that Trump is Hitler.
Nope. You're just misreading and misconstruing, which is also another major problem in these discussions. People don't actually bother to READ or LISTEN to what other people are saying before jumping to conclusions. That's also what political correctness does. Instead of taking a statement at face value, they read too much into it and twist into something totally off the wall.
If you have so much disdain for that approach, why are you so quick to take it. If this is not what you are doing, and you agree that I have not done that, then why not address my actual points?
I think you misunderstood my criticisms and exactly which approach I was referring to.
I did not say there were not other sides.
Perhaps not, but when you say that Trump is offensive or that there are consequences to what he says, you appeared to be assuming that everyone would view his statements or actions in the same light that you would see them. Not everyone sees things in the same way, so if you want to convince people to not support Trump and that he is offensive, then it might be better to drop the assumptions and speak in more specific, concrete terms using examples.
Just as one example, there are those who often trot out a list of supposed "Trump lies," when a careful reading of that list would indicate that they could just as easily have been honest mistakes. That's a recurring theme. Once you get to the actual nuts and bolts of what is actually being alleged, it's very thin and spotty.
Where did I say he was a horrible person? You mentioned that hyperbolic arguments?
what exactly have I said with which you are taking issue Here?
I never said that you said that he was a horrible person. Again, you're reading too much into what I say.
Maybe you have wrongly assumed some people are using a tactic when they are not.
Oh, I know the tactic quite well, believe me.
Here's a way of identifying it:
1. Someone posts or says something which is considered "non-standard," whether it's politically incorrect, some sort of conspiracy theory, or anything else that the political elite doesn't really want people to say or believe.
2. The usual counter-responses generally do not carry any particular arguments to refute what is being said (since they believe it would be "beneath them" to actually engage in a serious debate over what they've already dismissed as "wacko"), and generally will include words like "ignorant," "simple," "irrational," "wacko," and other such choice terms.
3. Other counter-responses might try to play the "intellectual authority" card, where they believe that they know more or know better. They'll say "you don't know anything about ____," whether it's about law, economics, history, engineering, science, or whatever. And then, even after insinuating that they're an "expert" on whatever topic they're addressing, they
still won't address it in earnest or dazzle us with their expertise, since it takes too long and they can't be arsed to bother. Yet they respond anyway with endless loads of BS and invective.
These are tactics, and they're very easy to recognize once one develops an eye for them. In all honesty, I don't believe any of these people are smarter than anyone else, nor do I put much stock in their so-called "expertise." They're just good at manipulating and gaslighting. They're using a tactic in order to enforce conformity to their viewpoint - if not at the person they're arguing with, then as a demonstration to others to not question the status quo.
I don't really even mind that they're being hyperbolic, insulting, or whatever. I don't care about "nice." But what I would expect, once they get done with their BS, is to actually put something forth which explains their point of view and where they're coming from. If they're unwilling or unable to do so, then that pretty much proves that they never knew what they were talking about to begin with. They probably don't even know
why they believe as they do, as they're just conforming to a viewpoint without really understanding it.
And they may not even realize that they're using a tactic. They may honestly see it as "fighting the good fight," but they're wrong. Dead wrong.