Ah contrair, mon amie - he's very much mine too! Thus, my visceral - and vociferous - critical reactions to him. But you mistake my rhetorical emphasis for disavowal when really I'm just trying to keep front & center that it's (MAGA-supporters like) you who claim tRUMP (so much more than the majority of Americans - me included) enough to defend his indefensible conduct. Yeah I claim him as "my president", Tiff, and accept my duty, in solidarity with my fellow citizens, to resist (i.e. civilly disobey) tRUMP's pathological perfidy & various abuses of power in the near-term and hold him criminally, constitutionally & electorally accountable in the long-term. So yeah, "my president", my national disgrace, My Cosmopolitan Duty to take out the presidental trash! Care to join me, chère? :flower: — 180 Proof
I really cannot make out what you mean. Do you mean that in Trump you got what you wanted, that he and his actions are what you wanted? What knowledge did you have that made your vote "appropriate"? And by no means do I think this a mere difference between Republican and Democrat - were it just that, my questions and observations to you would be out-of-court and rude.I could see the difference between the two and voted appropriately with that knowledge. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
this neo-fascist, pocket proto-mini-Hitler. — tim wood
Never mind probabilities. What has he done? What has he done right? And I think his record is too awful for one man by himself to accomplish. Somewhere he gets guidance/advice/pressure. Or do you think he mans and manages his boat all by himself. In fact, why do we not try reading your post!is it likely that everything he does is wrong — Brett
Sorry, that's not me.What you and others appear to have done is create a sort of cartoon character of Trump and then imagine him performing in ways that the character would behave; — Brett
Do you have any evidence this is not what he does, because it seems to me that he and others have made it clear that this a fair approximation of what he does. And do you listen to him speak?like he’s sitting in the White House eating hamburgers, watching tv, and thinking about attacking another country, then his hamburger goes cold, so he gets angry and assassinates some innocent abroad.
Nice to know I'm a multitude. But your characterization is just a little enthusiastic, don't you think? Let's go back. What has Trump done right? What has Trump one wrong?In fact you’re the trigger happy characters that jump up and down, waving your arms about, whenever Trump does something.
Sorry, I've seen Nixon, Reagan, Bush 1&2, and now Trump. I know a scoundrel crook/criminal fraud liar when I see one. How? NIxon, Reagan, Bush 1&2, and now Trump. To be sure, though, Trump by far outdoes all of these - it's the fundamental incompetence, corruption, evil viciousness that's uniquely his.Just using a little reason here on a philosophy forum, is it likely that everything he does is wrong, that he might not get something right even by chance?
Why don't you try proof-reading your posts. Just in case you hadn't noticed, this is not any kind of response "to the elected" & etc. As to reason, all the time; perhaps when you're feeling able, you might try it.When are you going to apply a little reason to your responses to the elected President of the United States?
Not denied. I wonder, though, how you'll get cured. Me? I'm just angry and I think I have a lot of company, and a lot of justification. But where have I said anything false? Why don't you attempt to post an arguments on merits, instead of propaganda and nonsense.Obviously “Trump derangement syndrome is a real condition.
added that Soleimani and his Quds Force “were responsible for the deaths of hundreds of American and coalition service members and the wounding of thousands more.” — ArguingWAristotleTiff
What, exactly, counts as Trump derangement? Derangement implies error in both fact and degree. Where in all the criticism of Trump is there any essential error in either fact or degree? Answer this lest you make it clear that the derangement lies in its being called out, and thereby the derangement being in those who call it out.I think Trump derangement syndrome infects both sides though, not just his opponents. Maybe ww disagree there? — DingoJones
I think Trump derangement syndrome infects both sides though, not just his opponents. — DingoJones
Some of the Trump agenda is standard for a Republican president. — tim wood
Derangement implies error in both fact and degree. — tim wood
Well, this is an interesting question. The Republican party has been infected in a variety of ways since at least the 1920s. Harding was a maybe a crook, but apparently popular. Coolidge a Republican, but not a populist by any stretch, but the economy was good (until it exploded). Hoover also a Republican. In the background religious fundamentalism was looking for a home.I don’t know if Trump really is a Republican. — Brett
Again I refer you (@ArguingWAristotleTiff) to my question (b) from a prior thread. GOP - otherwise loyal tRUMPkins - Senator Lee, R-UT & Senator Paul, R-KY (so far) seemed to have answered. Nakedly shameful wreckless disregard for U.S. national security by your president, Tiff (et al). Is this shitshow what you 'voted' for? :roll:What I found so distressing about that briefing was that one of the messages we received from the briefers was, 'Do not debate. Do not discuss the issue of the appropriateness of further military intervention against Iran. And then if you do, you'll be emboldening Iran'.
The implication [from the briefers] being that we would somehow be making America less safe by having a debate or a discussion about the appropriateness of further military involvement against the government of Iran. Now, I find this insulting and demeaning, not personally, but to the office that each of the 100 senators in this building happens to hold.
It is not acceptable for officials within the executive branch of government — I don’t care whether they’re with the CIA, with the Department of Defense or otherwise — to come in and tell us that we can’t debate and discuss the appropriateness of military intervention against Iran. It’s un-American. It’s unconstitutional, and it’s wrong. — Sen. Mike Lee, R-UT
Thanks for you sketch, Tim. It just shows how the whole political discourse has evolved. And I think of Trump's antics will be taken by the Party even when he leaves.It's long been my belief that real Republicans constitutes a wing of the Democrat Party, perhaps not even identifying themselves as Republican. — tim wood
Perhaps someone has that position, but it seems like an extreme one. IOW one can be critical of the recent choices made without remotely assuming anything like this. Administrations can pressure a non-unified military to take certain steps, steps which than lead to situations where it becomes much harder to take a step back. The military can also consider itself NOT a policy maker, but rather the one who carries out the policies of administrations or Congress (remember when they used to be the ones who declared wars?). And so their intelligence is aimed at carrying out policy, which is seems, in this case, they managed extremely well, killing the target. And while they also killed others, including Iraquis, these people were fine targets and within the policy.What is more likely? All the representatives of government, the military and all that advises them are complete morons who want to destroy the USA. — Tzeentch
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