In regards to the EC? Yes. It is my opinion that the EC should be abolished.Do you consider the US Constitution to be dated?
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In regards to the EC? Yes. It is my opinion that the EC should be abolished.Do you consider the US Constitution to be dated?
In regards to the EC? Yes. It is my opinion that the EC should be abolished.
Nor should you. My guess is that if Saint Hillary had won no one, no one, on that side of the aisle would be calling for an end to the EC vote. Remember, before the election, it was widely reported that Saint Hillary had the EC vote locked up and that it was virtually impossible for Trump to pull off a win... even if he got the popular vote.Well, your post#67 stated that you think foreigners see our political process as being a dismal failure since the EC system decided the winner. However, the EC system is not something new. It's been the law since inception.
If foreigners think our political process is a dismal failure, then they should stay in their home countries instead of trying to come here. I certainly wouldn't want to exchange our system with anyone elses in the world.
You would be quite wrong.My guess is that if Saint Hillary had won no one, no one, on that side of the aisle would be calling for an end to the EC vote.
Right, but that wasn't your question.Well, your post#67 stated that you think foreigners see our political process as being a dismal failure since the EC system decided the winner. However, the EC system is not something new. It's been the law since inception.
The difference is that the world doesn't think less of someone for voting for Obama, Reagan, Clinton, or even Bush the way that it thinks less of someone for voting for Trump.It's not really fair to include all eligible voters to portray a detriment to Trump, because you can say the exact same thing about every president.
It is just as easy to support an unjust system as a winner as it is to condemn one as a loser. Just something to think about.Nor should you. My guess is that if Saint Hillary had won no one, no one, on that side of the aisle would be calling for an end to the EC vote. Remember, before the election, it was widely reported that Saint Hillary had the EC vote locked up and that it was virtually impossible for Trump to pull off a win... even if he got the popular vote.
Correct, this is an issue that I have been debating about since I could vote. Others might seek to undermine the issue by pulling from recent examples but the debate doesn't, nor should it, stop there.You would be quite wrong.
Efforts to democratize the USA presidential election have been ongoing for many years. And will continue.
Not everyone is as partisan as some people are.
Tom
A lot of it isn't Trump himself per se. To a large extent, it's Trump's popularity with American voters that was responsible for the change in attitudes toward the US.
Trump was seen as a bigoted, sexist, blowhard and a shady businessman with a string of bankruptcies and lawsuits in his wake, running on a platform of xenophobia. I think most of the world saw him as almost a joke candidate until he started to be successful. The fact that he turned out to be actually electable has made a lot of people in other countries think less of American voters and make them question how well they actually know the American people.
That reflection started in November, if not when Trump won the Republican nomination.
The states most dependent on NATO pay either close-to or more than the 2% of their GDP. Poland, Estonia, Greece, the places that are either closest to Russia or are otherwise traditional American hold outs.It is my understanding that the member countries agreed to support NATO with a certain amount of blood and treasure, neither of which is really forthcoming.
No. No I don't. NATO is integral to America's ability to project power over the globe. It, far more than our nuclear arsenal, is why we're still the premier super-power.As far as an extension of the US military, we must be talking about a different NATO. However, if this is the case then I believe that you and I can agree that NATO should be disbanded and the billions of dollars thta we bleed into the organization could be better spent here.
No. No I don't. NATO is integral to America's ability to project power over the globe. It, far more than our nuclear arsenal, is why we're still the premier super-power.
Isolationism ****ed over tens of millions the last time we decided to take our ball and go home. And it seems to be happening again because the ******* descendants of the America First Party and their Sivlershirt thugs have gotten a candidate in office.
"Their share"? I'm tired of this nonsense peddled by people without the first clue of what NATO is, how it was formed, and what its purpose is. There is NO rule in the NATO charter or in any NATO documentation stating that the members have to pay anything. NATO was an American invention, we were the one pushing for it, so we could have bases of operation for our armed forces in Europe. They were meant initially just to be infrastructure for the United States Armed Forces. Places to refuel, rearm, rest and redeploy our men and material. That's it.
The 2% number bandied around? That pompous dumbasses have claimed the other member-states should be paying? That wasn't a rule. It was a suggestion. Why didn't we make it a rule? We could've. We have the over-whelming majority of the power in NATO after all. But why didn't we? Because the people actually running the United States Military know that NATO does more for us than it does any other member-state. NATO provides the logistical backbone of American military might. Our Airforce in particular depends on NATO bases.
Spare me this jingoistic garbage. European forces(largely Anglo-French) played the vital role in the ground operations during the Yugoslav Wars, and that is both before and after the United Nations organized the likes of SFOR, KFOR, IFOR ad etc.
Europe is not to blame for whatever "problems" exist regarding NATO, made-up and otherwise, because we're the ones who built it, pushed for it, wrote the charter, so on and so forth. This was our baby. We cajoled numerous states to join.
You want to start fixing NATO? Then make it more than just a glorified extension of the United States Military. Because that's what it was when it was first created, and that's what it is to this day. These problems are of our own design. Trump is the first President to raise a serious fuss* about how NATO is run. Coincidentally he is also the single least-qualified individual to have ever won the office.
I wonder if those two things are somehow related.
*Obama and Bush jr both brought up they'd like to see some European members expand their responsibilities within NATO, but they never phrased it in the childish insulting manner Trump has, probably because Trump is just a tactless moron.
Okay, that makes a lot more sense. Haha. Get that coffee flowing!
It seems you also couldn't care less about any American business that relies on trade treaties.
Or any tourist-oriented business in a border state.
I've always wondered why conservatives all say that. I see conservatives dismiss accurate opinions because someone may not be American.
It's an anger thing
I have a thought regarding this, interested in your input. What do you think would happen if the citizens of these countries began to vote on political platforms that are against US interests due to the undiplomatic nature of Trump and the boys? Would that shift your thinking at all?
For a fictional example: "Newly elected president to Quetzal-land vows to make good on political promise to reject *super money making business deal for the US*. Here is what he had to say: 'We will no longer bow to the bully tactics and bullish tendencies of the US led my President Trump-.'" etc.
Since the dissolution of the Warsaw pact, seems there is little practicality left as it applies to NATOs role and influence.
The states most dependent on NATO pay either close-to or more than the 2% of their GDP. Poland, Estonia, Greece, the places that are either closest to Russia or are otherwise traditional American hold outs.
Germany and France don't pay 2%, but on the flip side they spend more than enough on their internal infrastructure(which keeps the NATO bases in their countries up and running) or in the case of Germany, their armaments industry is also the back-bone of all American heavy weapons. Rheinmetall in particular supplies the gun barrels for our tanks, artillery and so on.
Germany also shoulders 15% of the "common-funder" civil and military budgets, which take care of maintenance of the NATO HQs, the Integrated Command Structures and the Security Investment Programmes.
It should also be pointed out that there exists no "debt" department in NATO. Nothing even remotely like that exists.
No. No I don't. NATO is integral to America's ability to project power over the globe. It, far more than our nuclear arsenal, is why we're still the premier super-power.
Isolationism ****ed over tens of millions the last time we decided to take our ball and go home. And it seems to be happening again because the ******* descendants of the America First Party and their Sivlershirt thugs have gotten a candidate in office.
Maybe, maybe not. I suppose the US has that benefit.Pbbbft...like that would happen. The world is going to lust after the American dollar even if they have to hold their collective noses to do so. Also, I don't think you'll find a more business friendly president than Trump.
I know plenty of Canadians who would just as soon vacation in Cuba as Florida. It also doesn't take much to get a Torontonian to shop at the outlet malls in the Toronto suburbs instead of at the slightly cheaper ones in Buffalo.Pbbbft...like that would happen. The world is going to lust after the American dollar even if they have to hold their collective noses to do so.
Unless you're in the automotive sector in Detroit. They depend on quick and easy border crossings to get parts from suppliers in Canada.Also, I don't think you'll find a more business friendly president than Trump.
Why would someone who's worried about globalism and interventionism vote for Trump?Well, maybe they really don't know the American people. Even Americans at the elite level (the same ones worried so much over "image") don't really know the American people, and that's why they're ostensibly baffled by Trump's election.
A lot of American workers are tired of getting screwed by globalism, and many Americans in general are getting tired of all this interventionism and America's role as the world's policeman. If the rest of the world can't understand this, then that's on them. It's not "xenophobia" to want to stop all this global insanity that America has been a part of.
Why would someone who's worried about globalism and interventionism vote for Trump?
I'm being serious. I don't see the connection. His policies and promises don't seem to be in line with the reasons you say he was elected... not unless we're talking about an "I'm so frustrated with the status quo that I want someone to just burn the whole thing down" sort of motivation.