Pence is a born again Prod. He doesn't count
Anarchistbear said:
Pence is a born again Prod. He doesn't count
That, of course, is one of the major core senselessnesses of Republican Orthodoxy that one would tend to see more easily the more educated one is, i.e., the contradiction between (a) the Republican memes of "freedom" and anti-big-and-intrusive government, and (b) the Republican predilection to use the government to enforce the most personally oppressive regimes, especially sexually but, as much if not more, in terms of oppression of social groups disfavored by right wing orthodoxy.dajo9 said:iwantwinners said:not that terrible of an idea. As long as government is involved in marriages and the awarder of benefits to its members, it would be sensible to stipulate rules that uphold the integrity of that contract. It deters destructive behaviors that affect families. It could also deter people from getting married.okaydo said:
This is unfair. Views change over time. Pence could be pro-porn and adultery nowadays.
That may be the biggest government comment I've seen on Bearinsider.
Another Bear said:
I don't read Krugman. Smart guy but he's all over the place.
B.A. Bearacus said:
lol.B.A. Bearacus said:
Really long-winded way of saying "Fuuck You Donald!"
Lets hope it goes as planned so we don't end up with egg all over our face. Since there is no State Dept or US ambassador in South Korea something had to be done, but that still doesn't explain pulling the sanctions on Russia?Anarchistbear said:
Smart move sending Pompeo to NK. The Democrats if they all voted no could possibly block his nomination but seeing he is orchestrating NK, a number of chicken s$it Dems will vote to confirm. He's already acting like Secretary of State so I guess he is one.
That is pretty embarrassing for what it says about White people and who/what they will embrace--and an effective admission about the different standards they apply to "one of their own." You can deny that racism is an issue in this country or that the average white person is racist--but how else can you explain the lack of empathy and alignment with their non-white citizens? They are getting what they want and they fundamentally approve in unequal treatment.okaydo said:
Good post.bearister said:
Victor Cha senior adviser and Korea Chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, who was a leading candidate to be Trump's ambassador to South Korea tells Axios future editor Steve LeVine that the shift isn't as abrupt as it looks:
"They have already stated that they would halt all testing while in dialogue. This statement formalizes that promise."
"[T]he statement talks about a test ban, no first use, and no transfer all the trappings of a 'responsible' nuclear weapons state (which is what they ultimately wanted to be accepted as)."
"Thus, this is not a denuclearization statement, it is a statement that DPRK [North Korea] can be a responsible nuclear weapons state."
The key sentence: "No one believes this, but if they can get Trump to agree, that is all they need."
What to watch for, per Cha: "[T]he glaring unanswered question in all of this is what the U.S. will give in return for these up front N.K. concessions."
"We know what we want from DPRK, but no one is scrutinizing what the US administration is thinking of giving up sanctions? peace treaty? normalization? exercises? missile defense?" Axios
Quote:
President Trump is so unwilling to accept reality, and his advisers, even his lawyers, may be afraid of telling him the truth. Either Trump misunderstood what they've told him or his lawyers are making stuff up to pacify him:These are false, in fact so preposterous that non-lawyers can tell they are nonsense. You don't need to have gone to law school to know:
- Ty Cobb said the special counsel investigation would be over last Thanksgiving. Then by the end of the year.
- Rudolph W. Giuliani tells him he's going to get the Russia investigation to wrap up in the next week or so.
- One of his lawyers seems to have told Trump he's in no danger if he is not a "target" of the investigation.
- Trump seems to think everything in Michael Cohen's office and whatever they talked about fall into the category of attorney-client privilege.
- Trump's lawyers act like it is their decision whether Trump will have to give testimony to special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.
If Trump is buying the hooey he's being fed, he's really much dimmer than his supporters thought. And here's some more bad news his lawyers might not have told him (or if they did, he chooses to forget):
- No one has any idea when the Russia probe will end. Trump could fire Mueller, Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and the investigation would go on.
- Giuliani hasn't practiced law in decades, has no ability to influence Mueller and isn't all that helpful with respect to the Southern District of New York, where he ended his stint as U.S. attorney in January 1989.
- Trump might be a subject of the Russia investigation now, but Mueller can decide he is a target at any time really.
- "Fixing" isn't covered by the attorney-client privilege, and plotting crimes with your attorney isn't covered either. Most of what Cohen did does not seem to be legal work.
- Trump can be subpoenaed by the grand jury if he refuses to make himself available for an interview. A court would almost certainly enforce it.
The last point is no small matter. Even the Democratic National Committee's lawsuit against Russia's intelligence outfit (GRU), WikiLeaks, Jared Kushner, Donald Trump Jr., Roger Stone, the Trump campaign and others for conspiracy can force Trump and members of his inner circle to turn over documents and sit for depositions where they will have to testify under oath.
- James B. Comey's memos don't exonerate Trump. They provide contemporaneous, highly detailed confirmation of his efforts to obstruct the investigation. Oh, and plotting to fire Mueller and then Rosenstein to get rid of the investigation evidences a corrupt intent. Based on information that is already publicly known, there are likely sufficient facts to make a case for obstruction.
- We already know about collusion the June 9 meeting at Trump Tower with Russian associates. Moreover, Paul Manafort may, according to prosecutors, have been the vital link between the campaign and Kremlin. No one and no document has exonerated Trump of collusion.
- The dossier has not been discredited. Some portion of it, according to Comey and others, was corroborated.
- If Trump fires Mueller and/or Rosenstein, there very likely will be mass protests, extreme pressure on the House to impeach and a batch of resignations at the Justice Department. Trump's presidency would effectively be over. (By the way, because Sessions was so worried about Trump firing Rosenstein that he had to suggest he'd quit in protest, Republican lawmakers are flat wrong when they say there's no chance Trump will fire Mueller or Rosenstein.)
- Trump may get subpoenaed in any number of civil cases (e.g., Summer Zervos's defamation case, Stormy Daniels's defamation case).
Why does all this remind me of the Russian nobles trying, trying and trying to figure out a way to get rid of Rasputin, 'til one or a group of them, either on their own or delegated, just cut the gordian knot and got him in a room and used all the devices of murder (way more, and for much longer, than it would take for any other person) 'til he finally expired.Another Bear said:
This is a good read: Are Trump's lawyers selling him a bill of goods, or is he not listening?Quote:
President Trump is so unwilling to accept reality, and his advisers, even his lawyers, may be afraid of telling him the truth. Either Trump misunderstood what they've told him or his lawyers are making stuff up to pacify him:These are false, in fact so preposterous that non-lawyers can tell they are nonsense. You don't need to have gone to law school to know:
- Ty Cobb said the special counsel investigation would be over last Thanksgiving. Then by the end of the year.
- Rudolph W. Giuliani tells him he's going to get the Russia investigation to wrap up in the next week or so.
- One of his lawyers seems to have told Trump he's in no danger if he is not a "target" of the investigation.
- Trump seems to think everything in Michael Cohen's office and whatever they talked about fall into the category of attorney-client privilege.
- Trump's lawyers act like it is their decision whether Trump will have to give testimony to special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.
If Trump is buying the hooey he's being fed, he's really much dimmer than his supporters thought. And here's some more bad news his lawyers might not have told him (or if they did, he chooses to forget):
- No one has any idea when the Russia probe will end. Trump could fire Mueller, Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and the investigation would go on.
- Giuliani hasn't practiced law in decades, has no ability to influence Mueller and isn't all that helpful with respect to the Southern District of New York, where he ended his stint as U.S. attorney in January 1989.
- Trump might be a subject of the Russia investigation now, but Mueller can decide he is a target at any time really.
- "Fixing" isn't covered by the attorney-client privilege, and plotting crimes with your attorney isn't covered either. Most of what Cohen did does not seem to be legal work.
- Trump can be subpoenaed by the grand jury if he refuses to make himself available for an interview. A court would almost certainly enforce it.
The last point is no small matter. Even the Democratic National Committee's lawsuit against Russia's intelligence outfit (GRU), WikiLeaks, Jared Kushner, Donald Trump Jr., Roger Stone, the Trump campaign and others for conspiracy can force Trump and members of his inner circle to turn over documents and sit for depositions where they will have to testify under oath.
- James B. Comey's memos don't exonerate Trump. They provide contemporaneous, highly detailed confirmation of his efforts to obstruct the investigation. Oh, and plotting to fire Mueller and then Rosenstein to get rid of the investigation evidences a corrupt intent. Based on information that is already publicly known, there are likely sufficient facts to make a case for obstruction.
- We already know about collusion the June 9 meeting at Trump Tower with Russian associates. Moreover, Paul Manafort may, according to prosecutors, have been the vital link between the campaign and Kremlin. No one and no document has exonerated Trump of collusion.
- The dossier has not been discredited. Some portion of it, according to Comey and others, was corroborated.
- If Trump fires Mueller and/or Rosenstein, there very likely will be mass protests, extreme pressure on the House to impeach and a batch of resignations at the Justice Department. Trump's presidency would effectively be over. (By the way, because Sessions was so worried about Trump firing Rosenstein that he had to suggest he'd quit in protest, Republican lawmakers are flat wrong when they say there's no chance Trump will fire Mueller or Rosenstein.)
- Trump may get subpoenaed in any number of civil cases (e.g., Summer Zervos's defamation case, Stormy Daniels's defamation case).
mikecohen said:Why does all this remind me of the Russian nobles trying, trying and trying to figure out a way to get rid of Rasputin, 'til one or a group of them, either on their own or delegated, just cut the gordian knot and got him in a room and used all the devices of murder (way more, and for much longer, than it would take for any other person) 'til he finally expired - although, contrary to what they had hoped and thought, it did nothing to save the system (which, as we all now know, eventually devolved into something so horrible that even the descendants of Ivan the Terrible couldn't forsee it)Another Bear said:
This is a good read: Are Trump's lawyers selling him a bill of goods, or is he not listening?Quote:
President Trump is so unwilling to accept reality, and his advisers, even his lawyers, may be afraid of telling him the truth. Either Trump misunderstood what they've told him or his lawyers are making stuff up to pacify him:These are false, in fact so preposterous that non-lawyers can tell they are nonsense. You don't need to have gone to law school to know:
- Ty Cobb said the special counsel investigation would be over last Thanksgiving. Then by the end of the year.
- Rudolph W. Giuliani tells him he's going to get the Russia investigation to wrap up in the next week or so.
- One of his lawyers seems to have told Trump he's in no danger if he is not a "target" of the investigation.
- Trump seems to think everything in Michael Cohen's office and whatever they talked about fall into the category of attorney-client privilege.
- Trump's lawyers act like it is their decision whether Trump will have to give testimony to special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.
If Trump is buying the hooey he's being fed, he's really much dimmer than his supporters thought. And here's some more bad news his lawyers might not have told him (or if they did, he chooses to forget):
- No one has any idea when the Russia probe will end. Trump could fire Mueller, Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and the investigation would go on.
- Giuliani hasn't practiced law in decades, has no ability to influence Mueller and isn't all that helpful with respect to the Southern District of New York, where he ended his stint as U.S. attorney in January 1989.
- Trump might be a subject of the Russia investigation now, but Mueller can decide he is a target at any time really.
- "Fixing" isn't covered by the attorney-client privilege, and plotting crimes with your attorney isn't covered either. Most of what Cohen did does not seem to be legal work.
- Trump can be subpoenaed by the grand jury if he refuses to make himself available for an interview. A court would almost certainly enforce it.
The last point is no small matter. Even the Democratic National Committee's lawsuit against Russia's intelligence outfit (GRU), WikiLeaks, Jared Kushner, Donald Trump Jr., Roger Stone, the Trump campaign and others for conspiracy can force Trump and members of his inner circle to turn over documents and sit for depositions where they will have to testify under oath.
- James B. Comey's memos don't exonerate Trump. They provide contemporaneous, highly detailed confirmation of his efforts to obstruct the investigation. Oh, and plotting to fire Mueller and then Rosenstein to get rid of the investigation evidences a corrupt intent. Based on information that is already publicly known, there are likely sufficient facts to make a case for obstruction.
- We already know about collusion the June 9 meeting at Trump Tower with Russian associates. Moreover, Paul Manafort may, according to prosecutors, have been the vital link between the campaign and Kremlin. No one and no document has exonerated Trump of collusion.
- The dossier has not been discredited. Some portion of it, according to Comey and others, was corroborated.
- If Trump fires Mueller and/or Rosenstein, there very likely will be mass protests, extreme pressure on the House to impeach and a batch of resignations at the Justice Department. Trump's presidency would effectively be over. (By the way, because Sessions was so worried about Trump firing Rosenstein that he had to suggest he'd quit in protest, Republican lawmakers are flat wrong when they say there's no chance Trump will fire Mueller or Rosenstein.)
- Trump may get subpoenaed in any number of civil cases (e.g., Summer Zervos's defamation case, Stormy Daniels's defamation case).
*** are you talking about. Your identity -- and your view of others -- is so wrapped up in group identities like race, political affiliation/identity that you are woefully unaware of your own biases and moral projections as axiomatically superior.blungld said:That is pretty embarrassing for what it says about White people and who/what they will embrace--and an effective admission about the different standards they apply to "one of their own." You can deny that racism is an issue in this country or that the average white person is racist--but how else can you explain the lack of empathy and alignment with their non-white citizens? They are getting what they want and they fundamentally approve in unequal treatment.okaydo said:
I'm white and I see this outlook in many friends and family. It disappoints me greatly.
"Percentages more or less align with race and party affiliations" / "unique moral shortcoming" = chicken/eggiwantwinners said:*** are you talking about. Your identity -- and your view of others -- is so wrapped up in group identities like race, political affiliation/identity that you are woefully unaware of your own biases and moral projections as axiomatically superior.blungld said:That is pretty embarrassing for what it says about White people and who/what they will embrace--and an effective admission about the different standards they apply to "one of their own." You can deny that racism is an issue in this country or that the average white person is racist--but how else can you explain the lack of empathy and alignment with their non-white citizens? They are getting what they want and they fundamentally approve in unequal treatment.okaydo said:
I'm white and I see this outlook in many friends and family. It disappoints me greatly.
Those percentages more or less align with race and party affiliations, but you're decrying some sort of unique moral shortcoming here.