Underhill
Well-Known Member
I don't believe it. That list isn't nearly long enough.
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Do you remember why? People forget that Trump didn't & doesn't exist in a vacuum. He was one of 2 alternatives, both bad, but the other being worse.
It's too early to tell. But the results must be compared to the likely results of electing the other.
It's one thing to disagree with Trump or those who voted for him,
but it's another to go off the deep end with anger & personal animosity.
(But please notice an IMPORTANT distinction here - there was no evil intent on my part or @Sunstone 's part to deceive anyone. This is as opposed to trump, who absolutely intends to deceive.)
Hooray for you, you found one error in an article positively LOADED with factual claims, you get a gold star.
As for "BS narratives", are you largely in agreement with the claim that trump has told a long list of lies? If so, then voter trend or no trend, I stand by my assertion that we cannot afford to let lying become normalized. trump IS a frequent liar. It's Orwellian. We cannot allow his steady steam of lies replace reality.
When it comes to 'replacing reality', why are Trump's lies worse than false narratives though?
Of course not.I still see no support for that opinion.
Like NPR...my only radio source?I'm assuming that its origin in years of incessant Hillary bashing from conservative political commentary media.
Did you get that from conservative sources?My criticisms of Hillary are her trust of Bush and subsequent vote to go to war last decade, and her corporatism.
You mistakenly presume that what you see is what I see.I just don't see the merit in condemning her for using an unsecured server, but not Trump for giving classified information directly to the Russians in the Oval Office.
Nor of objecting to the Clinton Foundation, but not the Donald J. Trump Foundation.
Nor to collecting fees for giving speeches, but not for using the White House to promote his personal business interests (emoluments).
Nor to a lie about being under enemy fire, but not about releasing taxes and the myriad lies listed in the link in the OP.
Nor for condemning her for Benghazi, which she could not prevent, but not Trump and the recent attempted baseball massacre, which he was equally powerless to prevent.
Dang....you just keep beating this dead horse.By pseudo-principle, I mean an idea that is wheeled out selectively. A bona fide principle is one that applies everywhere is can. If one objects to lying, by which I mean saying something known to be untrue or even failing to correct a misapprehension for a non-loving purpose, he should object to it in every instance. If he doesn't, then I don't believe that objects to lying as a principle, and that when he does object, it is for some other reason. Likewise with any of the principles being invoked by those who object to any of the other matters in the list above preceding "but not" while giving a pass to the ones following that phrase.
I don't know if you are guilty of that here or not since I don't know what your specific objections to Hillary are. But you might want to reflect on whether you have done that, and if so, do you consider it reasonable and consistent?
I have to say that the people that find Clinton more objectionable than Trump are not thinking critically, meaning that they have been indoctrinated. Sorry if that offends, but I just can't see how it is possible to come to the conclusion you have evaluating all of the available evidence impartially and open-mindedly. Bush is clearly an utter disaster for America. He's an intellectual and moral black hole as the OP's link begins to document.
How many more character flaws does he have besides pathological liar? He's a malignant narcissist, vengeful, a bully, stiffs his employees and contractors, a vexatious litigator, a bigot, a misogynist, a sexual predator, and a loose cannon.
What's your analogous list for Hillary?
The likely result of a president Hillary would be similar what we saw with a President Bill and a president Barack.
I don't see anybody going off the deep end. The left's reaction seems commensurate with the offenses. The man is gutting the EPA, science research, health care for the poor and the working poor, and has no respect for church-state separation. Some of us happen to consider those things good things to have and damaging to the nation to trample on. They have a right and a moral duty to express vehement objection.
Anger is appropriate here, as is ridicule. Righteous indignation is a virtue.
Dang....you just keep beating this dead horse.
Just accept that those who voted for a particular candidate have their reasons.
You don't get to claim that your reasoning should be adopted by everyone else.
If the reasons given before the election were unconvincing, I'm sure that wouldn't change now.The horse isn't dead yet. I keep hearing it tell me how much worse a candidate Hillary was. I'm still looking for the reason why.
I read your posts Rev. I have read literally hundreds of them on the subject of the 2016 election alone.If the reasons given before the election were unconvincing, I'm sure that wouldn't change now.
Only "hundreds", eh.I read your posts Rev. I have read literally hundreds of them on the subject of the 2016 election alone.
You never really did this, and I was looking.
Does this kilt make my butt look big?Lying has not only become socially expected, but also accepted. There's something called "justified dishonesty," which human beings have always engaged in. The difference now, is that it has permeated the social landscape on a consistent, massive scale, and the value of the truth has been diminished to the point that agendas and justifications always trump it (pun intended). We are, it seems, living in what pretentious people might call a "post-truth" era. I think the long-term ramifications of this are going to be more damaging than most people imagine.
Does this kilt make my butt look big?
I love the post-truth era.No, your butt is just making the kilt look small.
I love the post-truth era.
I can't tell from here.Does this kilt make my butt look big?
Does it involve pulling my finger?I can't tell from here.
Come sit on my lap.
If you do, I'll show you a trick
Tom
If you want it to.Does it involve pulling my finger?
I would say that no generalizations could be made. Some lies are world threatening, some have only minor repercussions.
In general I think it's far more damaging when a president lies than when a columnist creates a slightly misleading graph.
What about the shock and outrage about various electoral results because people had been repeatedly told it was pretty much a foregone conclusion based on statistical illiteracy among journalists and bogus claims about the reliability of their polls from pollsters?
I think we need to know more about the possibility of electronic voting machines being hacked. The machines are hackable, and we know that the Russians would likely hack them if they could. What would stop them?
That would also account for the disparity between the polling and the official counts.