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The Presidency of Donald J. Trump: No smocking guns. The Presidency of Donald J. Trump: No smocking guns.

07-06-2017 , 09:24 AM
In the last few weeks we have confirmation that Putin ordered the hacks via communications.

Trump still says Russia MAY have been involved, ignoring all credible intelligence.

&%)&*(_*%#
07-06-2017 , 09:27 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Max Cut

https://twitter.com/DaniellaMicaela/...86799726567424
god, his response is so ****ing infuriating
07-06-2017 , 09:33 AM
Trump went there to chew gum and **** on the American IC and press and appears to have run out of gum.
07-06-2017 , 10:07 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Clovis8
There is simply no historical evidence to support any of this. Who would have attacked Canada in the absence of the US?
Probably Tojo and Stalin.
07-06-2017 , 10:10 AM
Putin: "Donald darling, it was us. We hacked into your election. We wanted you to win my friend."

Trump: "I think you did. Could have been other people, could have been other countries. Nobody really knows."
07-06-2017 , 10:12 AM
lotsa heritage being celebrated in Poland today

07-06-2017 , 10:12 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Max Cut

https://twitter.com/DaniellaMicaela/...86799726567424
guilty
07-06-2017 , 10:18 AM
I almost spit my coffee out at "We did some very heavy research."
07-06-2017 , 10:20 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by bobman0330
I mean, wasn't 19th century nationalism essentially the use of mass media to harness the deplorables and weaponize their belligerence?
Yes. Tons of mass media existed not to give a fair accounting of events but instead to do just that. Really up until WWII, the media landscape was far more partisan, far closer to naked and explicit propaganda, and everyone expected it to be so.

The notion of Walter Cronkite and David Brinkley and the network nightly news boys holding court and constraining the worst impulses of the country, and helping to shape and define how people viewed current events, and providing a non-partisan barometer on the condition of governance -- I'll grant there was probably some truth to that effect but it is worth pointing out THAT phenomenon was by no means the historical standard. It was the exception.

Also note, related, but not quite irrelevant: the early 19th century (~1790-1820) in the US was defined largely by at times was a ferocious battle (at least at the elite level) between Americans who favored France (like Jefferson) versus Americans who were claimed to be hopeless Anglophiles like Hamilton. Later in the 19th century as slavery became paramount, Americans viewed foreign policy increasingly through that dynamic: the war with Mexico, trade with Britain, etc. was colored entirely by what people thought about slavery expansion and later abolition. In the 20th century, there was a vibrant anarchist/left streak in America while elites grasped to laissez faire capitalist theories and countries seen as pushing back against socialism and later Communism.

Contrast with the immediate post-WWII period when America largely had a consensus about what our values were and where we stood in the world (democracy, capitalism) vis a vis the Soviet Union (socialist, totalitarian).

I think the biggest take away is that tons of Americans grew up in the post-war period, or their parents did, and our ideals about what's normal and what's expected have entirely been shaped by a period where partisanship was quieted, we shared a common enemy with clearly delineated values, resources were shared far more equitably (among whites anyway), economic growth was exceptional and broad, the interests of racial minorities largely ignored by whites, and the media was far more unified and less partisan. That is to say, a lot of our ideals and notions were shaped by a very, very unique time in history and I'm not convinced we've been able to divorce ourselves from a highly contextual environment that simply couldn't continue.

It seems like the ideological right has adapted far better than the left. The left -- or at least the dominant party that best represents it in the US -- seems almost made prisoner to these old norms and spends alot of time fretting about how they've been dismantled by the right. I think it's fair to say they've been hastened by the right and Trump but the left should take seriously that some of this may have been inevitable.

Last edited by DVaut1; 07-06-2017 at 10:38 AM.
07-06-2017 , 10:22 AM
His only access to the CIA has been media reports. If he weren't a moron he'd at least pretend he's doing his job.

Also, he's really combating the Obama choked hypotheses that he once had.
07-06-2017 , 10:22 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by vaya
And as you've recently seen on this very forum most "liberals" are really conservative reactionaries
Definitely some truth to this. Cross-posted from the Tragic Death thread:


https://twitter.com/jbouie/status/882962075991113729


https://twitter.com/fivefifths/statu...63763741302785
07-06-2017 , 10:22 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by fatkid
I almost spit my coffee out at "We did some very heavy research."
He's had people on it for months, the best people. You won't believe what they're finding believe me
07-06-2017 , 10:24 AM
aflame,

The idea that we'd all be muslims if we lived in saudi arabia or rednecks if we lived in mississippi is all well and good but there are still such things as objective facts even if half the country disagree. An all knowing and all powerful being is a logical impossibility, republican policies will have the effect of tens of thousands of extra people dying a year for the sake of a tax cut on the very wealthy. Everyone has opinions but republicans are denying a shared set of facts in a way that democrats generally don't. They aren't arguing for the merits of their positions given the facts of the matter they are saying we'll cover everyone and it'll be cheaper and great and the best healthcare you've ever seen MAGA!
07-06-2017 , 10:26 AM
Quote:
Liberals and conservatives are like a cat being angry at a dog because they dont understand each other and this is why. Its almost pointless to sit around and be angry that others have different stuff in their heads. Like i have mentioned Ted Cruz supporters are drastically different from us liberals, but just like us they are fighting for what they feel is right too just like we do. Rationality isnt an important thing, your feelings and moral intuitions is a imporant thing.
The bolded may seem like a joke but it really is the underlying proposition behind Trumpism. Do we continue on a path largely based on facts and science, or do go down a darker path that is completely anti-reason, anti-knowledge, anti-enlightenment. It seems like a no-brainer that we should keep making progress, but you certainly have to wonder how so many people like aflametotheground keep picking the "Dark Ages" option as the best possible option.
07-06-2017 , 10:30 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by DVaut1
Yes. Tons of mass media existed not to give a fair accounting of events but instead to do just that. Really up until WWII, the media landscape was far more partisan, far closer to naked and explicit propaganda, and everyone expected it to be so.

The notion of Walter Cronkite and David Brinkley and the network nightly news boys holding court and constraining the worst impulses of the country, and helping to shape and define how people viewed current events, and providing a non-partisan barometer on the condition of governance -- I'll grant there was probably some truth to that effect but it is worth pointing out THAT phenomenon was by no means the historical standard. It was the exception.
Television. The production was owned by entertainment organizations, access controlled by the government, there were basically three competitors and it all had to be underwritten by large corporations.
07-06-2017 , 10:31 AM
It's amazing that there are people who watch something like this and go "yeah I totally see where your coming from Prez!"

Gaslighting doesn't really describe it anymore. It feels like I'm living in a Richard Brautigan book.
07-06-2017 , 10:34 AM
Einbert: I wouldnt take the sentence out of context. Im talking about how we come to chose our sides in politics, we know its to a great extent based on our moral intuitions. So im not saying that we shall go backwards to the middle ages. Im saying that humans will let their moral intuitions guide them in the political landscape. Our feelings are great at telling us what is important to us, our rationale is great at telling us what is true. Both are important, and neither one alone will lead you anywhere, you need both.
07-06-2017 , 10:35 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by poconoder
Возможно, через 10 лет, когда вы посетите Президентскую библиотеку Трампа, расположенную в парке Трамп (бывший Центральный парк) в Манхэттене, вы можете рассказать нам о том, насколько вы недооценили возможности Трампа.
no

Quote:
Originally Posted by aflametotheground
the alt right is pretty crazy stuff. but i would challenge some ppl around here to ask themselves if they have ever seen opinions that would be equivalent to an alt left? have you ever seen anything like that on this very forum even?

just to mention a few things on the top of my head, there are ppl around here that believe that GOP are evil sadists. or that GOP are actively trying to kill people, particularly poor people. and some ppl view the senate as an illegitimate democratic institution after the SC judge norm violation. or they condemn or prejudice or ridicule people of religion and the white working class people, particularly males. religious people are frequently viewed or described as brainless or the pest of the earth.

so i would take a look at the environment i find myself in and ask if there are opinions floating around that arent challenged enough. we go crazy whenever we see something from the alt right (for good reason) but when there are radical left wing opinions we sort of just shrug at it and let it pass without the proper amount of resistance. i would say that this is a bit selective behaviour. i think alot of white working class people have tougher struggles than alot of the educated and intelligent people around here are aware of, so i would be careful to condemn whole groups of people like this.
Sure, such a thing exists but:

1. They are generally much more well-meaning than the alt-right.
2. They have no power whereas literally the president of the US is now an alt-right guy.
07-06-2017 , 10:35 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by All-In Flynn
Really, it would be an episode where Martin is going to vote for Trump. Frasier, Niles and Daphne spend the episode comedically failing to persuade him not to, and at the last minute, he changes his mind because of something he remembers about his dead wife. The dog then pees on a picture of Trump or something. The end credits would be a montage of Martin throwing out all his MAGA gear, but at the end keeping a Trump bobblehead for the dog to chew on.
A+. I was also just thinking after I wrote those posts that Frasier always *thinks* he has handled whatever situation with grace and aplomb, but really he just rambles through like a bit of a madman, making it through the day, but often the battle he was battling (with psychology) was completely disconnected from whatever real conflict was going on in business/society/politics or whatnot. He's his own centrist liberal Don Quixote, just like our modern Democratic leaders.
07-06-2017 , 10:36 AM
Are there any good books over the intersection of radio and US politics? It seems like it'd be place ripe for exploration.
07-06-2017 , 10:36 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by microbet
Television. The production was owned by entertainment organizations, access controlled by the government, there were basically three competitors and it all had to be underwritten by large corporations.
Also subject to the fairness doctrine til '87
07-06-2017 , 10:37 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Max Cut

https://twitter.com/DaniellaMicaela/...86799726567424
I don't know the exact context of this presser, but that seems like a terrible question to ask the POTUS when he's on stage with another world leader. Was there not a specific topic they were there to talk about? Or did Trump just say, "Hey Duda, let's go stand up there and let people just blurt out questions at us, yeah?"

Trump's response was not great, but that woman seems to be just as awful in the admittedly incomplete context of this clip.

I'm out of the loop. What is the end-game once she was successful in getting Trump to say the words, "Russia interfered with the US election"? If as she says, "everyone already knows" then ... what happens now that he's on record? Did they cut the part of the clip where she says, "Well, okay then" and smugly sits back down in her seat? Is that it? Or did this brave woman who finally nailed the POTUS down on the Russia issue start some chain of events that I'm unaware of?

Edit: Also, Mr. President, I will pay you 100 million Schrute bucks if you never say Obama's name again. Blaming the last guy is just awful. Eyes forward, please.
07-06-2017 , 10:37 AM
Quote:
just to mention a few things on the top of my head, there are ppl around here that believe that GOP are evil sadists. or that GOP are actively trying to kill people, particularly poor people. and some ppl view the senate as an illegitimate democratic institution after the SC judge norm violation.
All these things are just objectively true.

Edit: The Senate one is arguable I guess, but I'd agree with it more than I'd disagree.

Last edited by einbert; 07-06-2017 at 10:52 AM.
07-06-2017 , 10:37 AM
Trump on Russia.
07-06-2017 , 10:38 AM
i agree tilteddonkey. i did mention in a later post that i was not here to hammer the forum, i have had opinions like i mentioned myself. and some ppl still continue to have such opinions, its fine by me, i dont really care when i have to combat 100 people to be able to express that opinion.

      
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