jbg
Active Member
Do you mean "civility" rather than "candor"?It makes for some fun debates but I agree, it's better for displaying some cander as well.
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Do you mean "civility" rather than "candor"?It makes for some fun debates but I agree, it's better for displaying some cander as well.
I went to synagogue twp Fridays after Trump was elected. At the time I had not yet changed my opposition to him. As we were walking out someone I did not know referred to Trump as a "pig." Given that it was a synagogue I found that particularly distasteful.I think there are certain privileges and powers which come with the job of President, and of course, it merits a certain level of respect and courtesy.
Of course, criticism is allowed, and some Presidents might be more harshly criticized than others. Satirizing and making fun of Presidents is also a time-honored tradition. For me personally, when I was a kid and my early perceptions of America and politicians were formulated, Nixon was President. I also perceived widespread hatred, scorn, and disrespect for Nixon and much of the government and military. "Pig" was a rather common epithet for politicians and police officers. Anyone who was considered "establishment" was a "pig."
I myself have probably said some nasty things about politicians over the years. But I've probably mellowed quite a bit in more recent years. Not much fazes me anymore.
It doesn't particularly bother me if people are disrespectful of politicians or other public figures. They actively chose to be in the hot seat, and if they can't produce satisfactory results, then they're going to be scorned and ridiculed.
I doubt you walk around calling people "potato head", "puddle brain" or "demented Grampa."Myself, I wouldn't normally use such derogatory terms about anyone. Though I don't see the POTUS as deserving any more respect than anyone else. I just give everyone the same degree of respect.
Yea. That's applicable as well. I think straightforward and honest dialog helps as it was the first thing that came to mind.Do you mean "civility" rather than "candor"?
stands on a higher plane, entitled to a modicum of respect.
...or a Marxist, or Socialist, or Communist....Sorry but I completely disagree. Respect is something earned, in all cases. And those in public office, who supposedly act on our behalf, should certainly have to earn respect. They are never on a higher plane. And when individuals demonstrate serious personal defects they only garner disrespect which is likely to lead to disrespectful monickers. I will not show respect to a liar, a racist, a misogynist, a fascist...
Trump earned that moniker long before he got elected.I went to synagogue twp Fridays after Trump was elected. At the time I had not yet changed my opposition to him. As we were walking out someone I did not know referred to Trump as a "pig." Given that it was a synagogue I found that particularly distasteful.
I turned to the lady and said "'excuse me'", he was just elected. I voted for Hillary but he deserves a chance." Someone who the week before was very upset with me for expressing some degree of sympathy for those in tears about the election thought I was almost "rabbinic" in the way I approached the matter.
Someone who talks about (and does) grabbing women's genitals without their consent is a pig. Someone who accidentally-on-purpose walks into a change room where young girls are changing so he can see them naked, is a pig. Someone who says, about a ten-year-old girl, "“I’m going to be dating her in 10 years. Can you believe it?”I will make no bones about it; I don't like Joe Biden or in general the job he's doing. And I will be the first to admit that I have used some choice language myself, but here goes.
Part of me really does not like terms like "demented president" (or stronger), "puddle brain", or "potato head." Right after Trump was elected (I didn't vote for him in 2016) someone in synagogue referred to him as a "pig" and I definitely had something to say. At that point I had not yet shifted to being a mild, intermittent supporter of some of the actions of the 45th President.
However, the President, whether Biden, Trump or otherwise, stands on a higher plane, entitled to a modicum of respect. The use of terms like that is just wrong, even if one totally dislikes him. And truly, I believe that epithets have no place in dialog. They tend to end all rational discussion.
Personally I don't disrespect tories or liberals on principle....or a Marxist, or Socialist, or Communist....
I'm starting to wonder of there is any politicians people would actually like these days.Personally I don't disrespect tories or liberals on principle.
Glad-handing is what FDR was good at. He gave away the store to Hitler and Stalin because he wanted to be liked. What else is new?I'm starting to wonder of there is any politicians people would actually like these days.
It seems , at least in the states, it was way back with FDR.
In debate, no, such things have no place.
But outside of that respect is not an entitlement but something that must be earned, and politicians usually fail at being decent and respectable people.
Glad-handing is what FDR was good at. He gave away the store to Hitler and Stalin because he wanted to be liked. What else is new?
Well Israel would not have come into existence and the Holocaust may well have been extended. FDR has a lot of Jewish blood on his hands. The Armed Forces did not bomb the rail lines to the camps. FDR did not allow the admission of Jews, even up to the non-generous quotas. I literally don't know where to start.I'm not so sure about that. One can also look at FDR as a rather shrewd geopolitician, especially when one looks at the end result of WW2. The U.S. was clearly in the most fortunate and favored position among the Allies. It's hard to say how things would have turned out if FDR had lived.
Well Israel would not have come into existence and the Holocaust may well have been extended.
FDR has a lot of Jewish blood on his hands. The Armed Forces did not bomb the rail lines to the camps. FDR did not allow the admission of Jews, even up to the non-generous quotas. I literally don't know where to start.
I rank FDR, as a President with:
- Carter
- Nixon
- Buchanan
- Pierce
- Andrew Johnson
I rank him a few levels above Hitler.
He had a certain fascination with Stalin, rushing to establish relations with the USSR in November 1933.
He was in a boundless rush to give the USSR Lend-Lease aid at a time Britain could have used it.
Most shockingly, starting in 1943, rather than advocating for the U.S. he pushed for the world to be run by the "United Nations", which eventually became the United Nations. He ensured that the U.S. would be weak there by allocating votes to Soviet Socialist Republics, and satellites, on a one-country, one vote basis. He ensured the USSR a Security Council seat, complete with a veto.
Basically, he threw a party at the expense of the West. Did I mince words?
He didn't want us in the war, which is also what most Americans wanted before we got attacked. It was the attitude of "Let Europe take care of Europe and leave us out of your mess".Glad-handing is what FDR was good at. He gave away the store to Hitler and Stalin because he wanted to be liked. What else is new?