Bearister, I'll see your anarchy and raise you an "Anarchy in the USA"... in Dallas... in 1978. (Work warning: pejorative at 5 seconds.)
iwantwinners said:THIS is what finally signals to you that federalism is dead???? Again, selective (and unprincipled) outrage indeed.Unit2Sucks said:I think this is unconstitutional. If the court determines it is constitutional, then I believe federalism is effectively dead. The fact that it will pass congress with 100% republican votes in favor of it will be all the evidence anyone ever needed to know that republicans don't truly believe in limits on the federal government or states' rights. Well, to be clear they will still profess to believe in those things in response to democrat policies but it will be harder for them to do so with a straight face. Fortunately for republicans, their constituency doesn't require their justifications to pass the laugh test.bearister said:
How do you lads like this sticky wicket?
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/concealed-carry-reciprocity-act-showdown/
Not requiring justification to pass a laugh test is only unique to one ideological segment of the country???? K.
Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:THIS is what finally signals to you that federalism is dead???? Again, selective (and unprincipled) outrage indeed.Unit2Sucks said:I think this is unconstitutional. If the court determines it is constitutional, then I believe federalism is effectively dead. The fact that it will pass congress with 100% republican votes in favor of it will be all the evidence anyone ever needed to know that republicans don't truly believe in limits on the federal government or states' rights. Well, to be clear they will still profess to believe in those things in response to democrat policies but it will be harder for them to do so with a straight face. Fortunately for republicans, their constituency doesn't require their justifications to pass the laugh test.bearister said:
How do you lads like this sticky wicket?
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/concealed-carry-reciprocity-act-showdown/
Not requiring justification to pass a laugh test is only unique to one ideological segment of the country???? K.
Uh yeah, it proves once and for all the self-anointed party of federalism has given up all pretense. Do you somehow hold out hope that Democrats will safeguard federalism?
Of course this won't stop republicans from continuing to federalism-signal but what's new.
Just one will do. Any of them. Maybe you're right, and I've overlooked them.AunBear89 said:
If you don't know by now, then you are either willfully ignorant or just not very bright.
I'll let you decide which you are. Either way, you are Cheeto Benito's dream voter.
Again, what is so profound about pointing out that parties will trample over their own espoused principles if it suits their political and ideological agenda?Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:THIS is what finally signals to you that federalism is dead???? Again, selective (and unprincipled) outrage indeed.Unit2Sucks said:I think this is unconstitutional. If the court determines it is constitutional, then I believe federalism is effectively dead. The fact that it will pass congress with 100% republican votes in favor of it will be all the evidence anyone ever needed to know that republicans don't truly believe in limits on the federal government or states' rights. Well, to be clear they will still profess to believe in those things in response to democrat policies but it will be harder for them to do so with a straight face. Fortunately for republicans, their constituency doesn't require their justifications to pass the laugh test.bearister said:
How do you lads like this sticky wicket?
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/concealed-carry-reciprocity-act-showdown/
Not requiring justification to pass a laugh test is only unique to one ideological segment of the country???? K.
Uh yeah, it proves once and for all the self-anointed party of federalism has given up all pretense. Do you somehow hold out hope that Democrats will safeguard federalism?
Of course this won't stop republicans from continuing to federalism-signal but what's new.
So, the only thing I can think of is how inspiring were both (a) the Raiders of those years (with a lot of unknown guys from who knows where playing their ass off); and (b) this unknown piano player, from who knows where, doing the same.prospeCt said:
iwantwinners said:
But right, you're not actually principally in support of federalism at all costs, just not when it supports your politics. Both parties do this. ACA??? Individual mandate??? States can demand their residents to buy health insurace (Mass) and buy auto insurance (ALL) in ways the Fed, in theory, cannot. But continue on with the partisan hackery of selective and political outrage.
iwantwinners is too lazy to look up the quotes. Ha, I enjoy a good laugh.Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:
But right, you're not actually principally in support of federalism at all costs, just not when it supports your politics. Both parties do this. ACA??? Individual mandate??? States can demand their residents to buy health insurace (Mass) and buy auto insurance (ALL) in ways the Fed, in theory, cannot. But continue on with the partisan hackery of selective and political outrage.
Please direct me to any quotes by me in favor of federalism. No one is denying the democrats are more generally in favor of federal power, but only the republicans have made it a foundational issue for them to which they continuously excoriate democrats.
I guess it's not unlike republicans paying lip service to fiscal conservatism when they invariably blow up the deficit when they have control.
You're not saying anything profound or unique to one segment of the political landscape. Republicans are extreme hypocrites? Of course they are. Are they the only ones? Of course they're not.Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:
But right, you're not actually principally in support of federalism at all costs, just not when it supports your politics. Both parties do this. ACA??? Individual mandate??? States can demand their residents to buy health insurace (Mass) and buy auto insurance (ALL) in ways the Fed, in theory, cannot. But continue on with the partisan hackery of selective and political outrage.
Please direct me to any quotes by me in favor of federalism. No one is denying the democrats are more generally in favor of federal power, but only the republicans have made it a foundational issue for them to which they continuously excoriate democrats.
I guess it's not unlike republicans paying lip service to fiscal conservatism when they invariably blow up the deficit when they have control.
iwantwinners said:
You're not saying anything profound or unique to one segment of the political landscape. Republicans are extreme hypocrites? Of course they are. Are they the only ones? Of course they're not.
Again, even when you are correct, it's disingenuous. Your outrage is selective and unprincipled. It's not that you detest being hypocritical, you detest when your opponent is being hypocritical.
no, it's disingenuous as a critique because it's selective outrage. Like when Faux News ramps up the selective outrage machine not because they are principally appalled but because it's a vehicle to vent their frustrations at the opposing political ideology. The majority of the OT board is Faux News, but in reverse.Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:
You're not saying anything profound or unique to one segment of the political landscape. Republicans are extreme hypocrites? Of course they are. Are they the only ones? Of course they're not.
Again, even when you are correct, it's disingenuous. Your outrage is selective and unprincipled. It's not that you detest being hypocritical, you detest when your opponent is being hypocritical.
Nice hysterics. You accuse me of lacking profundity before you make the prosaic claim that hypocrisy exists on both sides. Thanks for the enlightenment.
I'm not outraged at republican hypocrisy. I expect nothing less. That doesn't mean that calling republicans to task for federalism-signaling when they are doing the bidding of their masters is inappropriate.
That's fine. All you are saying is that you don't actually have principles and morals, but you have political leanings. You call out Republicans for one behavior but you abstain from doing so when Democrats are doing the same. Impressive and inspiring.Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:
You're not saying anything profound or unique to one segment of the political landscape. Republicans are extreme hypocrites? Of course they are. Are they the only ones? Of course they're not.
Again, even when you are correct, it's disingenuous. Your outrage is selective and unprincipled. It's not that you detest being hypocritical, you detest when your opponent is being hypocritical.
Nice hysterics. You accuse me of lacking profundity before you make the prosaic claim that hypocrisy exists on both sides. Thanks for the enlightenment.
I'm not outraged at republican hypocrisy. I expect nothing less. That doesn't mean that calling republicans to task for federalism-signaling when they are doing the bidding of their masters is inappropriate.
dajo9 said:
I like how unit2sucks has been accused of hypocrisy by 2 people now, without providing an example.
So you're saying the Trump voters are aligned with most sane people.B.A. Bearacus said:
10 out of 10 liberals are unhinged, have no self-awareness and don't believe any of the nonsense they parrot.Unit2Sucks said:dajo9 said:
I like how unit2sucks has been accused of hypocrisy by 2 people now, without providing an example.
Studies show that 9 out of 10 unhinged conservatives believe that you can't accuse Republicans of hypocrisy because feelings.
Not really. Anti-Obama Republican arguments then were birtherism, Muslimism, not-experienced-enoughism, liberalism, tax-and-spendism. If I'm missing any legitimate character arguments made then, please remind me of my oversights.iwantwinners said:
This board is like Republicans circa 2009 grappling with the earth shattering reality that Obama was president. No substance, nothing but character arguments.
I just read my post, to which you responded. It wasn't very well written. Character matters for the POTUS. He is our leader. I don't want an a-hole undeserving of the position in there. It annoys me when idiotic a-holes ascend to positions they don't (in my view) deserve. That is all.Another Bear said:
The character arguments against Trump holds up because they're clearly getting in the way of governing. Character flaws that lead to real mistakes are a real issue of concern.
There's the case with Trump's tweeting. It's sheer craziness from a policy perspective and communication perspective. There was a great write up about what happens when Trump tweets in the middle of the night, and it's not good.
Basically, the WH staff crafts/research policies and legislation, which takes time, maneuvering, adjustment and lots of coordination with legal teams, policy teams and everyone. It's slow and sometimes cumbersome.
Then Dotard tweets and metaphorically craps on the whole deal because now the policy team have to adjust all communications and policy to align with Trump tweet, to cover politics of the deal and make the talking points work.
This is about as a s s backwards as you can get. These staffers work hard with arcane rules and politics and Trump tweets and they start all over, or must adjust on the fly, under the gun.
The character arguments against Trump are legit. They keep him from governing effectively, and when you consider a NUKE...it's down right scary.
It's not Reverand or Pastor, it's President. If character matters, you must have had outrage your whole life over presidential winners. Unless there is a double standard or something.FuzzyWuzzy said:I just read my post, to which you responded. It wasn't very well written. Character matters for the POTUS. He is our leader. I don't want an a-hole undeserving of the position in there. It annoys me when idiotic a-holes ascend to positions they don't (in my view) deserve. That is all.Another Bear said:
The character arguments against Trump holds up because they're clearly getting in the way of governing. Character flaws that lead to real mistakes are a real issue of concern.
There's the case with Trump's tweeting. It's sheer craziness from a policy perspective and communication perspective. There was a great write up about what happens when Trump tweets in the middle of the night, and it's not good.
Basically, the WH staff crafts/research policies and legislation, which takes time, maneuvering, adjustment and lots of coordination with legal teams, policy teams and everyone. It's slow and sometimes cumbersome.
Then Dotard tweets and metaphorically craps on the whole deal because now the policy team have to adjust all communications and policy to align with Trump tweet, to cover politics of the deal and make the talking points work.
This is about as a s s backwards as you can get. These staffers work hard with arcane rules and politics and Trump tweets and they start all over, or must adjust on the fly, under the gun.
The character arguments against Trump are legit. They keep him from governing effectively, and when you consider a NUKE...it's down right scary.
It's an utter leap of faith on your part to say I have had outrage my whole life over presidential winners. You're projecting on to me something you can't possibly know anything about.iwantwinners said:It's not Reverand or Pastor, it's President. If character matters, you must have had outrage your whole life over presidential winners. Unless there is a double standard or something.FuzzyWuzzy said:I just read my post, to which you responded. It wasn't very well written. Character matters for the POTUS. He is our leader. I don't want an a-hole undeserving of the position in there. It annoys me when idiotic a-holes ascend to positions they don't (in my view) deserve. That is all.Another Bear said:
The character arguments against Trump holds up because they're clearly getting in the way of governing. Character flaws that lead to real mistakes are a real issue of concern.
There's the case with Trump's tweeting. It's sheer craziness from a policy perspective and communication perspective. There was a great write up about what happens when Trump tweets in the middle of the night, and it's not good.
Basically, the WH staff crafts/research policies and legislation, which takes time, maneuvering, adjustment and lots of coordination with legal teams, policy teams and everyone. It's slow and sometimes cumbersome.
Then Dotard tweets and metaphorically craps on the whole deal because now the policy team have to adjust all communications and policy to align with Trump tweet, to cover politics of the deal and make the talking points work.
This is about as a s s backwards as you can get. These staffers work hard with arcane rules and politics and Trump tweets and they start all over, or must adjust on the fly, under the gun.
The character arguments against Trump are legit. They keep him from governing effectively, and when you consider a NUKE...it's down right scary.
One thing is clear: the American electorate is fickle, and they vote primarily on character scaled with one or two issues they find important. I thought Trump was going to lose in an epic landslide because of this. I was shocked he won. I underestimated the cultural resentment and the degree to which the social justice movement rhetoric alienated so many (in their minds).
I don't think you make up the majority.iwantwinners said:no, it's disingenuous as a critique because it's selective outrage. Like when Faux News ramps up the selective outrage machine not because they are principally appalled but because it's a vehicle to vent their frustrations at the opposing political ideology. The majority of the OT board is Faux News, but in reverse.Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:
You're not saying anything profound or unique to one segment of the political landscape. Republicans are extreme hypocrites? Of course they are. Are they the only ones? Of course they're not.
Again, even when you are correct, it's disingenuous. Your outrage is selective and unprincipled. It's not that you detest being hypocritical, you detest when your opponent is being hypocritical.
Nice hysterics. You accuse me of lacking profundity before you make the prosaic claim that hypocrisy exists on both sides. Thanks for the enlightenment.
I'm not outraged at republican hypocrisy. I expect nothing less. That doesn't mean that calling republicans to task for federalism-signaling when they are doing the bidding of their masters is inappropriate.
A couple of things (in reverse order):drizzlybears brother said:I don't think you make up the majority.iwantwinners said:no, it's disingenuous as a critique because it's selective outrage. Like when Faux News ramps up the selective outrage machine not because they are principally appalled but because it's a vehicle to vent their frustrations at the opposing political ideology. The majority of the OT board is Faux News, but in reverse.Unit2Sucks said:iwantwinners said:
You're not saying anything profound or unique to one segment of the political landscape. Republicans are extreme hypocrites? Of course they are. Are they the only ones? Of course they're not.
Again, even when you are correct, it's disingenuous. Your outrage is selective and unprincipled. It's not that you detest being hypocritical, you detest when your opponent is being hypocritical.
Nice hysterics. You accuse me of lacking profundity before you make the prosaic claim that hypocrisy exists on both sides. Thanks for the enlightenment.
I'm not outraged at republican hypocrisy. I expect nothing less. That doesn't mean that calling republicans to task for federalism-signaling when they are doing the bidding of their masters is inappropriate.