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Scott

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Posts posted by Scott

  1. 1 hour ago, SFLUFAN said:

    Any "moderate conservative" who claims that they voted for the Imbecile because he's a "businessman" is lying.

     

    No one in their right mind should have voted for him based on his business acumen.

     

    They voted for him because he had an R next to his name, nothing more/nothing less.  And they will do that again in November.

    Not entirely true. People started rabidly supporting him in the primary, when there were plenty of (R)s to vote for. 
     

    It’s astounding how many people support him on nothing but the fact that he is unfiltered. He “tells it like it.” He “talks like me.” Etc. At least a dozen people in my personal life have given this as their reason for supporting him. 

     

    We know he’s a bad businessman. But most lay people don’t. They know he’s a gold-plated billionaire who was on that show for all those years and has his name on all those buildings. And beyond that, moderates don’t give a shit about his specific business record - they know that he’s a greedy capitalist from the corporate world. They know he’ll slash tax rates, regulations, etc.

  2. Hardcore trump voters will never vote for anyone but trump. They’re beyond help. But there are a ton of people who don’t love trump, who will never vote for a perceived socialist, and who would be open to a more moderate candidate. I know a ton of people in the medical community who don’t love trump but would never vote for Bernie due to a concern about being taxed to oblivion. They’d be open to Bloomberg. It’s fine not to start out in a defensive position - just make sure your starting position is one that appeals to enough voters that you can win the election. I don’t know that Bernies platform accomplishes that. The question is this: do you go with a moderate liberal and assume the extreme liberals and some disaffected conservatives will come along, or do you go with an extreme liberal and hope you’ll win the election without any conservatives and without some moderate liberals? Do you bet that the extreme platform is appealing enough to turn out new and previously uninspired voters?

  3. Bloomberg would be infinitely better than trump. I don’t like Bloomberg buying the election, but let’s not pretend that there’s no difference between him and trump.  This is why I hate all the shitty in-fighting right now. A bunch of people are gonna get butthurt and refuse to vote for someone like Bloomberg. And they can nurse that butthurt all the way through another 4 years of trump. 

  4. My coworker’s toddler was life-flighted from their local regional hospital to a larger medical center in a bigger city about an hour away. My coworker obviously had no influence on the flight path or chosen destination. He was told by his insurer that since there was a hospital closer than the one that was ultimately used, he had to pay out of pocket for the helicopter ride. Again, my friend had no say in any of this. But because Tulsa is slightly closer to him than Little Rock, he owes the hospital $40,000 out of pocket. 

  5. 12 hours ago, b_m_b_m_b_m said:

    Yeah best not to be prepared and have a pillow fight to Milwaukee

    Far better to have fractious in-fighting that becomes so bitter that broad swaths of would-be voters get fed up with the party and stay home on Election Day. 
     

    For casual voters (like 95% of my friends and relatives who actually vote) everything is about optics. Republicans are a pro-trump monolith right now. Dems look divided and disorganized. “Bernie’s a nazi” and “Pete’s a racist” probably aren’t going to be our rallying cries to victory. 

  6. 1 minute ago, Firewithin said:

     

    eh lets come back to this one when he keeps voting for all of the shitty things they want to keep doing

    Y'know what's weird? You don't have to agree with someone every single time. You don't have to support every single thing they do.

     

    I'll cheer him when he does something I find agreeable, and chide him when he does something I find disagreeable.

     

    If our response to someone from the other "team" having a backbone is to shit on them, we're going to silence them and prevent any future behavior of a similar kind.

    • Like 1
  7. 17 minutes ago, SFLUFAN said:

    How many goddamned Kennedys have been undeservingly elected to public office?

    Give me any Kennedy over any Trump any day.

     

    I wasn't alive for JFK's presidency, but I don't hear the support for him and his family described as a cult of personality. Trump's is certainly that. We have ignorant people tuning in for their favorite reality tv show and cheering on their favorite sports team. It's way beyond, or below, politics.

  8. The cynicism on this board is nauseating. Everyone must be run through a weird purity test, and damn them forever if they don't score 100%.

     

    I'm not usually a Romney fan, but his speech on the Senate floor was one of the most honorable, inspiring things I've seen in a long, long time. Massive credit to him.

     

    I could certainly be proven wrong, but I don't see a cunning politician angling for future higher office - I see a deeply religious man actually committed to upholding his oath of office and to serving the God he believes in. We should support this, not deride it.

    • Thanks 1
  9. 1 minute ago, sblfilms said:

    Man who probably raped a woman is admirable to some, not to others.

     

    People aren’t just glad that somebody bad will be gone, they are glad that they will suffer as they die. Call that behavior whatever makes you feel better about it.

    Quit making ridiculous generalizations to support an argument you can't let go of from over a week ago.

     

    Not everyone who will be glad to watch the Rush Limbaugh era end is excited that it's happening because of lung cancer. Are some people? Sure. Is everyone? No. Are most people? I doubt it.

  10. 1 hour ago, Jose said:

     

    Pretty stark contrast with the Kobe thread, eh?

    The contrast is appropriate when one person was admirable and the other was one of the vilest pieces of shit in American history.

    1 hour ago, sblfilms said:

    I mentioned how ghoulish this board gets when somebody they hate dies. Celebrating suffering and such. I really don’t get that impulse.

    Ghoulish seems a weird word. I don't need to hear about his death rattle. But rejoicing that something bad will be gone from the world hardly seems worthy of all the high-horse moralizing and passive aggressive condemnation.

  11. 5 minutes ago, SFLUFAN said:

    The word "moderate" used in a political context literally makes my skin crawl.

     

    "Moderates" have been complicit in some of the worst suffering in human history because of their commitment to that mythical ideal.

    I think the term gets misused a lot in our everyday dialogue.

     

    I think it isn't meant to describe someone whose views fall in the middle of the spectrum of ideas; I think instead it describes someone who isn't committed to one party or the other, and who might support separate tenets from each party. Outdoorsmen, for example, who want public land access but also want gun rights. Or someone like myself who would like to cut funding for the military but would also like lower taxes. It's not that I don't know where I stand on the issue of taxation or environmental protection or whatever - it's that sometimes you have to hold your nose and vote for a candidate with whom you disagree on multiple issues - and for many people like that, they don't know whom they disagree less with - Trump or the Dem nominee.

     

    (That isn't my particular situation. I'll never vote Republican. But I know a lot of people who would love to vote for someone other than Trump, but who fear someone perceived to be as radical as Bernie). 

     

    Side note in Bernie's favor: I think Bill Maher made a great point on Friday. He said other than Trump, Bernie is the only candidate who has an army. Who has people willing to get in the streets. I think that's where we are these days. And I think Maher is right.

  12. I've been deliberately paying as little attention as possible to this carnival of shit, because if I focus too much on it my soul is going to wither up and die.

     

    Having said that, what exactly is the stated reason for going to such lengths to prevent witnesses from testifying? How is it not glaringly obvious that this is what guilty people do?

     

    Is there seriously any other way to interpret it? What's the lie the Right is pushing? That Bolton is going to give up the launch codes on accident if he's allowed to be questioned?

  13. 12 minutes ago, Kal-El814 said:

     

    None of that makes commentary about the “complicated” parts of his legacy out of bounds. Let’s stop the pearl clutching about giving a moment to “mostly great” person because referring to him in those terms is such a basic and reductive way to talk about anyone. Nobody here is doing a disservice to Kobe and to pretend otherwise is a stretch.

    My intention is not to be basic or reductive. We can only know these public figures to a limited degree. And Kobe’s legacy is mostly one of positivity. Screaming about his rape allegation seems to me like those people who scream about MLKJr plagiarizing his college essays or whatever. Yeah, he probably did some bad shit, and we can talk about that, but do we need to scream about it on MLK day, when most of the world is trying to reflect on all the good he did for the world?

  14. 2 minutes ago, LazyPiranha said:

     

    Ignoring the parts we aren't comfortable with accomplishes nothing.

    I feel like this conversation has served no purpose. No one is suggesting we ignore the crimes and misdeeds of others. 
     

    And you don’t have to be in my house slapping me in the face for it to have an impact. I view humans as complex puzzles - people do good and bad things. In my opinion, it’s not inappropriate to give those who loved someone a moment to process their grief before immediately mentioning the single worst thing the deceased did while they were alive. I guess we’re splitting hairs over what is tactful in polite, respectful society.  You can bring up someone’s worst qualities 4 minutes after their violent death. You have that right. And the conversation is worth having at some point. But stay the fuck away from me. 

  15. 4 minutes ago, LazyPiranha said:

    My mindset on the issue is simple.  The fact that he just died is meaningless to this discussion.  No one here is gatecrashing the man's funeral and grabbing the mic from the eulogy to read out the indictment.  His family aren't on this board reading these posts.  We are protecting no one and nothing by dropping our monocles at the mention of his probable rape, the only thing we're doing is further removing the topic from any point of discussion.  His sudden death doesn't suddenly change the past or remove any of his previous problems from the conversation.

    You don’t give a shit about him. That’s clear, and that’s fine. But to many people he was a very important, influential part of their lives. His death affected them. I’m sure plenty of people have friends or parents who did something heinous in their lives; but upon hearing of their death, they’ll probably recall the positive impact they had rather than that heinous act. I don’t think we’re doing a disservice to victims to let those who loved a mostly great person to have a few minutes to grieve and process the death before we run in and pour salt on their wounds. 

  16. 2 minutes ago, Jose said:

    One last thing and I'll try not to say anything else because I feel like this thread has devolved into a pointless argument:

     

    I do find it interesting post-MeToo where we were told to believe all women that many people in this thread are suggesting that maybe he didn't actually rape that woman despite the fact that there is actual evidence in this case.

    There’s a big difference between saying, “I don’t believe the woman. That man is innocent” and saying “I don’t have enough facts to fairly make a decision.”

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