Sorry: What is Nm?bearister said:
Nm
mikecohen said:Sorry: What is Nm?bearister said:
Nm
Why? Oligarchy power, with him as the chief oligarch. What Putin did in Russia is his vision for America.Another Bear said:
No doubt...and yet he can still be correct about Trump.
Everything Trump is doing is being pulled from the Nazi playbook. Trump is pulling away from allies and looks to destroy NATO. Trump is destabilizing the U.S. and world economies with a trade war the U.S.can't win given trade deficits and the U.S. economy is largely consumer driven.
The question is WHY.
The only thing I can figure is Nazi nihilism, high-risk moves without strategy ending in disaster.
Conservatives and Trump supporters how do you answer the question of WHY towards Trump's policies. Are his policies helping his base?
Using Occam's Razor, isn't the simplest answer that all these moves by Trump favor Putin (and therefore at least appear to be done at Putin's behest)?Another Bear said:
No doubt...and yet he can still be correct about Trump.
Everything Trump is doing is being pulled from the Nazi playbook. Trump is pulling away from allies and looks to destroy NATO. Trump is destabilizing the U.S. and world economies with a trade war the U.S.can't win given trade deficits and the U.S. economy is largely consumer driven.
The question is WHY.
The only thing I can figure is Nazi nihilism, high-risk moves without strategy ending in disaster.
Conservatives and Trump supporters how do you answer the question of WHY towards Trump's policies. Are his policies helping his base?
Quote:
Why? Oligarchy power, with him as the chief oligarch. What Putin did in Russia is his vision for America
mikecohen said:
Using Occam's Razor, isn't the simplest answer that all these moves by Trump favor Putin (and therefore at least appear to be done at Putin's behest)?
I'm not necessarily against the tariffs on China.oski003 said:
Trump's tariffs are aimed at China, who steals American technology with and without the help of American Corporations. That is the why. We develop. They steal. They pollute and build with cheap labor. We buy. He's trying to get us out of this rabbit hole though I feel his methods are drastic.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-oregon-standoff-trump/trump-pardons-oregon-ranchers-whose-case-led-to-refuge-occupation-idUSKBN1K021QQuote:
U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday pardoned Oregon cattle ranchers Dwight Hammond and his son, Steven, after both were convicted on arson charges, sparking the 2016 occupation of a wildlife refuge, according to a White House statement.
My NYC fold say similar and more disparaging things. Worst person they've ever met.NYCGOBEARS said:
A legitimately wealthy billionaire hedge fund guy I know here says that Trump is a guy living off a credit card with a very large limit and there's no way he can ever pay it off. He scoffs at the notion that he is either a businessman or wealthy.
blungld said:My NYC fold say similar and more disparaging things. Worst person they've ever met.NYCGOBEARS said:
A legitimately wealthy billionaire hedge fund guy I know here says that Trump is a guy living off a credit card with a very large limit and there's no way he can ever pay it off. He scoffs at the notion that he is either a businessman or wealthy.
okaydo said:blungld said:My NYC fold say similar and more disparaging things. Worst person they've ever met.NYCGOBEARS said:
A legitimately wealthy billionaire hedge fund guy I know here says that Trump is a guy living off a credit card with a very large limit and there's no way he can ever pay it off. He scoffs at the notion that he is either a businessman or wealthy.
His presidency mirrors his businessman status. He's too big to fail, has no real friends, and has a lot of people along for the ride because they can get stuff off of him.
Actually there's some truth to this. While real estate development might have huge transactions, the operations are often very small, family centered and autocratic and thus dysfunctional elements slip through without much problem. An ex worked for a Silicon Valley developer and the total operating staff was about 30 despite huge holdings, with basically one guy calling the shots. Lots of pararells to Trump and family but obviously different. Construction was farmed out as was a lot of the hands-on property management. I don't think it's a stretch to say if you came from this world and environment, government and diplomacy might be unwieldy and foreign. Also the loyalty thing seemed very important but it was rewarded from what I saw, unlike Trump.Quote:
His presidency mirrors his businessman status. He's too big to fail, has no real friends, and has a lot of people along for the ride because they can get stuff off of him.
Unit2Sucks said:
The pew study sounds like garbage. How do you account for recency bias? Or the fact that the number of presidents during a person's lifetime depends on how old they are.
Take millennials for example. Pew includes kids born in 1986 - so although Reagan was technically in their lifetime, that's not really meaningful - and 13% have Reagn as a top two.
Here is the real takeaway from the study. Americans seem to be in agreement that the Bush's were bad at Presidenting. And that the only president that Republicans are proud of is Ronald Reagan. Everything else seems to be noise.
Unit2Sucks said:
I think it's garbage because the "denominator" (if you will) differs depending on the age of the survey respondent. Obama gets better marks than Kennedy, for example, yet people who were actually alive during Kennedy's presidency rate him higher.
The politico article, by the way, would lead one to believe that 44% of people surveyed consider Obama to be the best or second best of recent presidents but the question is based on the responden's lifetime. Pew doesn't disclose the age mix so depending on how representative the various groups are of the population at large, this could wildly unrepresentative. They called up households and asked for the youngest person in the house. Unless I missed it, they aren't correcting to reflect the age mix in this country so if for whatever reason they got a hold of a lot of millennials, Obama will seem more popular - in large part because he had less competition amongst younger people who've been alive for fewer presidents.
It's a weird way to ask a question and the result is basically meaningless because the respondents are essentially answering different questions.
Quote:
It's high time we called Trump by his real name -- traitor, perhaps our country's worst traitor ever. I speak not of his attack on our allies, his appeasement of our adversaries, his assault on the press, his coddling of racists, his repulsive misogyny, his rampant corruption, his terrible cronyism, his brazen nepotism, his abuse of children, his obstruction of justice, his contempt for our justice system, or his war on the environment. I speak of his systematic destruction of our economy.
Trump is hell bent on engineering a complete meltdown of U.S. trade. This will do enormous and lasting damage to our economy, not to mention our international relations. According to the Business Round Table, more than one in five U.S. jobs are directly supported by international trade. U.S. exports and imports now total 30 percent of U.S. GDP -- roughly $6 trillion.