The GOP insists on saying MANY things that aren't true, but they repeat them louder and louder and fool the population into thinking it's true.B.A. Bearacus said:
Because we all have a respect for academia and most of us for truth.
I think he's done now. His oppontent (Janz) might not win this election round but after this gets broken open, his base in California will turn on him. The hypocrisy of undocumented labor probably won't flip any hardline voters but having his family business out of his district could. You know, he's no longer a California farmer and businessman.BearChemist said:
https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a23471864/devin-nunes-family-farm-iowa-california/
1. Devin Nunes's family has relocated their dairy farm from California to Iowa (Steve King's district) secretly.
2. Like any other dairy farm in Iowa, undocumented labors were norm.
bearister said:
President Mushroom and taxes:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/10/02/us/politics/donald-trump-tax-schemes-fred-trump.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share
bearister said:
Thomas Friedman: The American Civil Wae, Part II
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/02/opinion/the-american-civil-war-part-ii.html
But wait, I thought these people decried affirmative action, the social safety net, the Nanny State, government intervention, blacks who can't get over slavery, women who complain about a glass ceiling, and all various forms of the Liberal "victim."bearister said:
"We're seeing at this moment a president of the United States do five things. He is using mass rallies that are fueled by constant lying to incite fervor and devotion in his political base. The second thing we see him do is to affix blame for every problem in the world. Many of them are complex, not so different from the issues faced at the end of Agrarian age and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. We see him attack minority populations with words like "invade" and "infest." The third thing he does is a create a shared sense of victimization caused by the scapegoated populations. This is the high act of Trumpism: From Trump to Sean Hannity to Laura Ingraham, everyone is a victim. The fourth thing he does is he alleges conspiracy by nefarious and unseen hidden forces the "deep state." And the fifth thing is the assertion that "I am the law, that I am above it." He just said immigrants don't get a hearing; they don't get a court representation." Steve Schmidt
"If the party of Lincoln and Eisenhower and Teddy Roosevelt and Reagan is to be redeemed and resurrected, then the party of Trump must be obliterated. Annihilated. Destroyed. And all of the collaborators, the complicit enablers, the school of cowards, need to go down. Maybe something can regenerate from that." Steve Schmidt
How, Steve?bearister said:
"We're seeing at this moment a president of the United States do five things. He is using mass rallies that are fueled by constant lying to incite fervor and devotion in his political base. The second thing we see him do is to affix blame for every problem in the world. Many of them are complex, not so different from the issues faced at the end of Agrarian age and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. We see him attack minority populations with words like "invade" and "infest." The third thing he does is a create a shared sense of victimization caused by the scapegoated populations. This is the high act of Trumpism: From Trump to Sean Hannity to Laura Ingraham, everyone is a victim. The fourth thing he does is he alleges conspiracy by nefarious and unseen hidden forces the "deep state." And the fifth thing is the assertion that "I am the law, that I am above it." He just said immigrants don't get a hearing; they don't get a court representation." Steve Schmidt
"If the party of Lincoln and Eisenhower and Teddy Roosevelt and Reagan is to be redeemed and resurrected, then the party of Trump must be obliterated. Annihilated. Destroyed. And all of the collaborators, the complicit enablers, the school of cowards, need to go down. Maybe something can regenerate from that." Steve Schmidt
A super-majority in the Senate is needed for both forms - higher under the 25th Amendmentbearister said:
I assume impeachment or removal under the 25th Amendment would be a good start. Republican politicians that supported him would disavow him three times before the rooster crow
B.A. Bearacus said:
Mushroom D in Minnesota sounds like he's back on the market extramarital sex...
"A man shouts that he loves Trump. Trump responds, "I love you too, but you're not my type."
B.A. Bearacus said:
Mushroom D in Minnesota sounds like he's back on the market for some of that extramarital poontang...
"A man shouts that he loves Trump. Trump responds, "I love you too, but you're not my type."
B.A. Bearacus said:bearister said:
Thomas Friedman: The American Civil Wae, Part II
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/02/opinion/the-american-civil-war-part-ii.html
Excerpts:
This also feels worse than the divisions over Vietnam and civil rights because there were three huge forces holding us together back then that are missing today: a growing middle class, the Cold War and a sane Republican Party.
It would be easy to blame both sides equally for this shift, noted Ornstein, but it is just not true. After the end of the Cold War, he said, "tribal politics were introduced by Newt Gingrich when he came to Congress 40 years ago," and then perfected by Mitch McConnell during the Barack Obama presidency, when McConnell declared his intention to use his G.O.P. Senate caucus to make Obama fail as a strategy for getting Republicans back in power.
The shift in the G.O.P. to tribalism culminated with McConnell denying Obama his constitutional right to appoint a Supreme Court justice with almost a year left in Obama's term. As NPR reported: "Supreme Court picks have often been controversial. There have been contentious hearings and floor debates and contested votes. But to ignore the nominee entirely, as if no vacancy existed? There was no precedent for such an action since the period around the Civil War."
In a speech in August 2016, McConnell boasted: "One of my proudest moments was when I looked Barack Obama in the eye and I said, 'Mr. President, you will not fill the Supreme Court vacancy.'"
That was a turning point. That was cheating. What McConnell did broke something very big.
This sounds like the GOP's last stand before it eats a round of bullets, or a pill in the bunker, in a fit of self-destruction.bearister said:
Under Trump, Steve Schmidt wrote, the party had become "corrupt, indecent, and immoral." With the exception of a select few, the GOP was "filled with feckless cowards who disgrace and dishonor the legacies of the party's greatest leaders."