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United States41470 Posts
America hasn't yet been hurt by the import of raw materials from less developed economies. What is lost in the primary industry is more than made up by the sale of the technology to mechanize and specialize the industry, the financial services to provide the upgrades needed, and the opening of the market to American capital and investment. America is an advanced economy, it is not competing with farmers on Caribbean islands for agricultural productivity, they do the farming, America sells them the processing plants and the financing for the equipment.
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United Kingdom13775 Posts
Cuban cigars make fantastic gifts for anyone who smokes. I'm glad they're easier to get a hold of now, given that they sell them in cigar shops nowadays.
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On July 17 2017 03:43 mozoku wrote:Show nested quote +On July 17 2017 02:44 Leporello wrote:On July 17 2017 02:01 mozoku wrote:On July 16 2017 22:12 Nevuk wrote:On July 16 2017 20:34 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 19:32 Biff The Understudy wrote:On July 16 2017 19:27 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 16:17 Biff The Understudy wrote:On July 16 2017 14:07 GreenHorizons wrote:On July 16 2017 11:09 Wulfey_LA wrote: [quote]
No one gets to complain about Corruption and Money in Politics until they first identify the greatest offender of all time: Trump. No one even comes close to finding ways to moving other people's money into his own pockets using Politics. His personal Corruption is without precedent in USA history. No one should comment on corruption and money in politics until they also acknowledge what Trump's doing isn't new, it's just more flagrant and poorly executed. I don't think Obama took a single decision that was influenced by the perspective of personnal finantial gain. It seems to be shaping literally every single move Trump is doing, including his FP. How us that not new?! If you think the Obama administration didn't do anything because of bribery ("donations") then you're horribly naive. If you think the military industrial complex didn't impact Obama's foreign policy then you're horribly naive. Maybe Obama didn't get direct personal financial gain, idk, but he sure as hell played the pay-for-power game which allows business to undemocratically control governments. And of course being ex-president he now can flagrantly use his contacts and position to earn money, which honestly is about the same, just a little smarter. I love the cynicism, but I don't think you can compare an administration ran by a billionaire who clearly is there to promote his business interest and takes a foreign policy approach directly related to where his buildings and golf course are located and the Obama administration, which was certainly "corrupt" to a certain level as this is structural to american politics but was not ran by people who had direct private financial interest in what they were doing. Obama is no billionaire, and was certainly not there primarily to make money. Or if so, he was really shit at it. It's good not to be naive and to be critical, but that's not a reason to become blind. This shit, at that level, is unprecedented. Trump is awful and by far worse than Obama. Of course. If you see what I was replying to, you'd see I wasn't contradicting that, only the idea that Obama (or indeed any major politician, at least in the US) wasn't ever corrupt. But Trump will eventually be gone. The massive structural issues which make corruption and buying votes an inherent and entirely pervasive part of American politics likely won't because the only people who could change it are those who benefit from that corruption. I actually question whether or not he will eventually be gone. So far he's been able to flagrantly ignore the rule of law, I see nothing preventing him from declaring himself winner of the next election before the votes are counted and refusing to leave the white house after his second term. Can you give any examples of Trump "flagrantly ignoring the rule of law?" He hasn't passed any legislation and his travel bans have had legal issues since their rollout. His use of executive order has been no more expansive than Obama's was (and Obama actually did expand EO usage relative to his predecessors). In addition, he's being investigated for criminal wrongdoing related to his presidency. If anything, the rule of law is slaughtering Trump I think Trump is incompetent and a pretty terrible president so far imo, but you sound like you're getting your lines from some liberal equivalent of Fox News. In general, the amount of hyperbole about Trump as a president in this thread (and the left in general) isn't that different from Fox News during the Obama era. Even attempting comparisons to other Presidents is an exercise in failure. We don't know how Fox News would've reacted if Obama fired the FBI Director, then joked about it in a private Oval Office meeting with the very people the FBI Director was investigating, while claiming, "This will help". You know, we (the media, the public, the government) are looking into the legality of various actions. But this investigation should be happening under a different President. To make a different comparison: You have a soldier. Let's put him in the ww2 era, for simplicity. That soldier is constantly talking about how good and misunderstood the German and Japanese are. He even says they're better than some of these American soldiers who've served in the past. You even catch him laughing with some Germans while they make fun of some American soldiers. He even argues that Germany didn't really invade Poland. It's fake news. "Maybe Russia is in Ukraine, I don't know. Maybe Russia hacked us, I don't know". You can argue about legality, but the bottom-line is, if I were that soldier's superior, I would not order him into battle with other soldiers. I would do everything I can to keep him out of fighting with other men. He should not be there. And Donald Trump should not be Commander-in-Chief. In any other day, he'd be gone. Go back some generations, a man who has behaved similarly would not just be impeached, he'd be in much worse problems. Don't compare this to Obama -- literally none of it fits. There is no basis. Obama didn't have personal lawyers speaking for him on Sunday morning talk shows, about why we should just ignore our President's disgusting lack of loyalty, and other inappropriate behaviors. The irony here is that we started with the rule of law. Look, I agree American would be better off without Trump as president right now. It's not like Trump can't be replaced by a generic president that would do a similar (almost certainly better job) job without the potential of a catastrophic collusion with Russia to undermine our national security or something. But what basis is there to impeach him on? Impeachment requires breaking of the law. And, currently, it doesn't make sense to bring a legal case against him. The legality of what Trump has done is debatable (as xDaunt has notably pointed out), and it seems likely that stronger evidence against him will surface. When Mueller decides he has enough evidence to prosecute, Trump will face consequences. But investigations take time, and you only get one chance so you don't prosecute prematurely. Furthermore, given the huge political implications, it makes sense for Mueller to be conservative and wait until he has ironclad proof. Does that mean Trump is necessarily given the same authority as other presidents? We don't know. It's been reported that the intelligence agencies aren't sharing methods with Trump. Congress is looking to set the Russia sanction into stone. Who knows what else is going on behind the scenes along the same lines. Show nested quote +I don't recall much hyperbole about Obama that even smells like many of the genuine claims that can be leveraged against Trump. Also remind me who started the birther nonsense? What claims can correctly be levied against Trump is irrelevant when it come to degrees of hyperbole. Moreover, this discussion should be extended to lunacy in general because Fox News does more in that area than just hyperbole. Here are some of the loony claims against Obama that I remember from the Right: "Obama is trampling the rule of law." A claim that is as valid as Nevuk's, which I'm betting most people here initially agreed with. "Obama has destroyed our global image, and it will take decades to clean this up." Another claim made earlier in this thread against Trump. Sure, Trump has probably hurt America's image, but not irrevocably by any means. Of course, there also some loony behavior that's unique to "The Resistance" but is Fox News-worthy in terms of quality: The furor over Trump's refusal to say that he would accept HRC's presidency if she won at a debate, only for the slogan at anti-Trump protests after Trump won to be: "We reject the president-elect." Demanding a recount of vote after the election because a computer science professor suggested it was theoretically possible to hack the election--despite there being zero evidence that the voting results were at all compromised. "The Resistance" movement in general, where progressives are happy to encourage (and threaten to primary) their congressmen to use the same obstructionist tactics that they spent 8 years lambasting Republicans over. There are dozens of other examples as well that I'm sure I'm missing. Don't get me wrong, what Fox News does is disgusting and probably more organized and widespread among their base. But there's a lot of loonies on the Left too, and a lot of Fox News-esque tactics are being turned a blind eye to here (and by the Left in general) as long as they're anti-Trump (i.e. agree with the liberal/progressive worldview).
Specifically to the question of "what basis is there to impeach" -- the only basis required to impeach is a majority of Congress and the will of the people. That's it. You say that there is a legal basis required -- and that is factually, historically, completely incorrect.
William Blount Samuel Chase West Humphreys And LOTS of others... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impeachment_in_the_United_States
These people weren't indicted for a crime. West Humphreys was a traitor, for sure, but not accused in any legal sense, ever. They just were plainly unfit for the jobs they had.
There seems to be "new standard" of impeachment, which you just espoused with full conviction, that any cause for impeachment would also immediately be followed by a criminal indictment, as if they're one and the same. This is nonsense. Impeachment is not a legal proceeding. It is a political one, that relies on the common-sense and loyalty of our representatives.
Trump's behavior with the Russians in the Oval Office should have been the end of his Presidency, given all the context, if Republican Congressman actually had loyalty to their country. The Republican Congresses of the past abso-fucking-lutely would have. He'd be gone now.
Instead we need to wait, as if the immediate step after impeachment is hand-cuffs and a jail cell. This is despite the fact that almost none of the impeachments in our history have actually had any legal-merit. I'll say it again: It is a political procedure, not a legal one. You do not need a conviction of an illegal act to impeach, it would just certainly be a strong reason to do so.
But in Trump's case -- given the severity of the crimes suspected, given his behavior over everything in regards to the crime, whether he was directly involved or not, waiting for an actual indictment is.... unthinkably unnecessary.
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I'd even go back to my original analogy. If you're in WW2, and you have a soldier who is laughing with the Germans, promotes their innocence, says they didn't really invade Poland, and calls your country's information "fake news" (Russia isn't really in Ukraine, maybe they didn't hack us, Putin doesn't kill journalists, I fired the FBI Director because of Russia, etc, etc, etc) you don't need to court-martial him before you remove him from fighting with your other soldiers.
Safety first. You don't allow a liability like that into a war, and you don't allow it in the Oval Office.
Unless you're a post-Bush Republican. Then I don't know what the fuck you're doing anymore.
How much easier would it be for us to find the facts and get to the truth about Russia's operations against us if Trump wasn't in the WH? A lot easier. We could all be more certain that our federal agencies could do their jobs without getting fired and humiliated, a la Comey.
We are plainly endangering ourselves because of Republican's cultish approach to politics as a game. I don't imagine how anyone could disagree that we'd be better off if our federal investigators had a boss that didn't joyfully fraternize with the very people we're investigating.
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https://www.yahoo.com/gma/caitlyn-jenner-latest-celebrity-consider-running-office-225008163--abc-news-topstories.html
If trump can do it,anyone can.
For those who think America would be better of now without president trump:no I doubt that. As the situation is now,its best for America that trump remains president. Trump having to step down would create an enormous chaos in both the republican as well as the democratic party. The situation is kinda stable now in all its madness. The media and the democrats are bashing trump,the republicans are putting up with him because what else can they do and the people who voted for him they will still like him. Everyone has found their place and plays their role,just imagine what would happen if trump would no longer be in the picture. The enemy to unite against for the democrats,the leader to reluctantly follow for the republicans,the guy to bash for the media and the guy to love for those who wanted the swamp to get drained. What if he suddenly not there anymore,it would be complete chaos. No its best for America to just sit this one out I think.
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I see what you're saying, but you have to expand your thinking from the political sphere. There are actual people who will be harmed by this administration and they don't see it. Allowing this to continue does more harm than removing him would.
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On July 17 2017 06:22 KwarK wrote: Eventually he'll realize that he can just flip it and start bragging about record disapproval numbers.
Ha ha,i can see this happening.
"you have these people here you see,they all hate me you know, but they still want me to be president because I am the only one who can do the job properly!"
something along those lines,it might even work.
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United States41470 Posts
If you can't imagine any a future with Trump resigning that is better than the current shitshow that's your own failure of imagination at fault. "Better the chaos we know" is not an effective defence.
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It might be a dogma but it is true to some extend. Like if there wont be any chaos and everything would go smooth,then it would maybe be better if pence was president (though probably not make a big difference in actual policy) but if the chaos would be huge then that would be very negative for the usa as a whole I think. As the policys probably wont change much anyway with pence they might as well sit it out with trump? New elections would be something else but I don't think there is any legal base for that to happen. Even for the democrats the current situation is kinda attractive. They have this hated president they can use as image to run against in all the local and state elections that are coming up.
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/07/16/opinions/trump-jr-meeting-putin-game-plan-opinion-mowatt-larssen-goodman/index.html
Cnn keeps going downhill,its starting to borderline conspiracy theories. "but this conspiracy is true !" is what they all say,and some off course are indeed true. tinfoil hats for cnn pls,next broadcast every anchor must wear one.
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United States41470 Posts
Democrats aren't complaining about collusion for the optics. The guy who colluded needs to be removed. His appointees need to have their security clearances held to the same standard as anyone else and their actions since taking office need to be reviewed in light of what we now know. It's not attractive to anyone to have Trump in charge.
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United States41117 Posts
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Well, I'm surprised they showed that graphic on FNN.
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On July 17 2017 10:47 ZerOCoolSC2 wrote:Well, I'm surprised they showed that graphic on FNN. Especially considering they put their grossly misleading headlines under a banner saying "Fox Facts". Misleading is pretty much the order of the day for the entertainment station.
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Re: American Coal (from several pages ago)
Given how long it takes to build coal plants, I would expect actual coal mining to take about five years to recover even if Trump rolls back ALL the Obama-era rules related to coal. On the other hand, I expect coal exports to recover sooner, largely driven by pathfinder electrification in Africa (extending a reliable grid to places that don't have it) and increased demand in India. Call it 3 years until coal mining returns to 2015 levels.
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United States41470 Posts
Coal power plants only make sense if you accept the necessity of a centralized western grid system and that's a sunk cost that has already been shouldered. A grid represents a colossal up front cost and ongoing overhead. We use it because we have it and our current system is built around it, in the same way we use internal combustion engines because we already have infrastructure in place for them, but it's certainly looking increasingly obsolete as the system we'd use if we had to start again from nothing. If I wanted to provide electricity for rural parts of the world I would not be thinking of coal power plants and a grid, I'd be thinking of localized production and local storage systems.
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On July 17 2017 11:00 Buckyman wrote: Re: American Coal (from several pages ago)
Given how long it takes to build coal plants, I would expect actual coal mining to take about five years to recover even if Trump rolls back ALL the Obama-era rules related to coal. On the other hand, I expect coal exports to recover sooner, largely driven by pathfinder electrification in Africa (extending a reliable grid to places that don't have it) and increased demand in India. Call it 3 years until coal mining returns to 2015 levels. That's a horrible thing to wish for. Those developing countries are hustling backwards. Japan and China did it the right way: Take the technological advancements of the West and build upon that. They can jump forward in progress and be clean about it instead of following the trial and error that happened in the developed countries.
Edit: Kwark, stop stealing my thunder!
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On July 17 2017 08:48 Leporello wrote:Show nested quote +On July 17 2017 03:43 mozoku wrote:On July 17 2017 02:44 Leporello wrote:On July 17 2017 02:01 mozoku wrote:On July 16 2017 22:12 Nevuk wrote:On July 16 2017 20:34 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 19:32 Biff The Understudy wrote:On July 16 2017 19:27 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 16:17 Biff The Understudy wrote:On July 16 2017 14:07 GreenHorizons wrote: [quote]
No one should comment on corruption and money in politics until they also acknowledge what Trump's doing isn't new, it's just more flagrant and poorly executed. I don't think Obama took a single decision that was influenced by the perspective of personnal finantial gain. It seems to be shaping literally every single move Trump is doing, including his FP. How us that not new?! If you think the Obama administration didn't do anything because of bribery ("donations") then you're horribly naive. If you think the military industrial complex didn't impact Obama's foreign policy then you're horribly naive. Maybe Obama didn't get direct personal financial gain, idk, but he sure as hell played the pay-for-power game which allows business to undemocratically control governments. And of course being ex-president he now can flagrantly use his contacts and position to earn money, which honestly is about the same, just a little smarter. I love the cynicism, but I don't think you can compare an administration ran by a billionaire who clearly is there to promote his business interest and takes a foreign policy approach directly related to where his buildings and golf course are located and the Obama administration, which was certainly "corrupt" to a certain level as this is structural to american politics but was not ran by people who had direct private financial interest in what they were doing. Obama is no billionaire, and was certainly not there primarily to make money. Or if so, he was really shit at it. It's good not to be naive and to be critical, but that's not a reason to become blind. This shit, at that level, is unprecedented. Trump is awful and by far worse than Obama. Of course. If you see what I was replying to, you'd see I wasn't contradicting that, only the idea that Obama (or indeed any major politician, at least in the US) wasn't ever corrupt. But Trump will eventually be gone. The massive structural issues which make corruption and buying votes an inherent and entirely pervasive part of American politics likely won't because the only people who could change it are those who benefit from that corruption. I actually question whether or not he will eventually be gone. So far he's been able to flagrantly ignore the rule of law, I see nothing preventing him from declaring himself winner of the next election before the votes are counted and refusing to leave the white house after his second term. Can you give any examples of Trump "flagrantly ignoring the rule of law?" He hasn't passed any legislation and his travel bans have had legal issues since their rollout. His use of executive order has been no more expansive than Obama's was (and Obama actually did expand EO usage relative to his predecessors). In addition, he's being investigated for criminal wrongdoing related to his presidency. If anything, the rule of law is slaughtering Trump I think Trump is incompetent and a pretty terrible president so far imo, but you sound like you're getting your lines from some liberal equivalent of Fox News. In general, the amount of hyperbole about Trump as a president in this thread (and the left in general) isn't that different from Fox News during the Obama era. Even attempting comparisons to other Presidents is an exercise in failure. We don't know how Fox News would've reacted if Obama fired the FBI Director, then joked about it in a private Oval Office meeting with the very people the FBI Director was investigating, while claiming, "This will help". You know, we (the media, the public, the government) are looking into the legality of various actions. But this investigation should be happening under a different President. To make a different comparison: You have a soldier. Let's put him in the ww2 era, for simplicity. That soldier is constantly talking about how good and misunderstood the German and Japanese are. He even says they're better than some of these American soldiers who've served in the past. You even catch him laughing with some Germans while they make fun of some American soldiers. He even argues that Germany didn't really invade Poland. It's fake news. "Maybe Russia is in Ukraine, I don't know. Maybe Russia hacked us, I don't know". You can argue about legality, but the bottom-line is, if I were that soldier's superior, I would not order him into battle with other soldiers. I would do everything I can to keep him out of fighting with other men. He should not be there. And Donald Trump should not be Commander-in-Chief. In any other day, he'd be gone. Go back some generations, a man who has behaved similarly would not just be impeached, he'd be in much worse problems. Don't compare this to Obama -- literally none of it fits. There is no basis. Obama didn't have personal lawyers speaking for him on Sunday morning talk shows, about why we should just ignore our President's disgusting lack of loyalty, and other inappropriate behaviors. The irony here is that we started with the rule of law. Look, I agree American would be better off without Trump as president right now. It's not like Trump can't be replaced by a generic president that would do a similar (almost certainly better job) job without the potential of a catastrophic collusion with Russia to undermine our national security or something. But what basis is there to impeach him on? Impeachment requires breaking of the law. And, currently, it doesn't make sense to bring a legal case against him. The legality of what Trump has done is debatable (as xDaunt has notably pointed out), and it seems likely that stronger evidence against him will surface. When Mueller decides he has enough evidence to prosecute, Trump will face consequences. But investigations take time, and you only get one chance so you don't prosecute prematurely. Furthermore, given the huge political implications, it makes sense for Mueller to be conservative and wait until he has ironclad proof. Does that mean Trump is necessarily given the same authority as other presidents? We don't know. It's been reported that the intelligence agencies aren't sharing methods with Trump. Congress is looking to set the Russia sanction into stone. Who knows what else is going on behind the scenes along the same lines. I don't recall much hyperbole about Obama that even smells like many of the genuine claims that can be leveraged against Trump. Also remind me who started the birther nonsense? What claims can correctly be levied against Trump is irrelevant when it come to degrees of hyperbole. Moreover, this discussion should be extended to lunacy in general because Fox News does more in that area than just hyperbole. Here are some of the loony claims against Obama that I remember from the Right: "Obama is trampling the rule of law." A claim that is as valid as Nevuk's, which I'm betting most people here initially agreed with. "Obama has destroyed our global image, and it will take decades to clean this up." Another claim made earlier in this thread against Trump. Sure, Trump has probably hurt America's image, but not irrevocably by any means. Of course, there also some loony behavior that's unique to "The Resistance" but is Fox News-worthy in terms of quality: The furor over Trump's refusal to say that he would accept HRC's presidency if she won at a debate, only for the slogan at anti-Trump protests after Trump won to be: "We reject the president-elect." Demanding a recount of vote after the election because a computer science professor suggested it was theoretically possible to hack the election--despite there being zero evidence that the voting results were at all compromised. "The Resistance" movement in general, where progressives are happy to encourage (and threaten to primary) their congressmen to use the same obstructionist tactics that they spent 8 years lambasting Republicans over. There are dozens of other examples as well that I'm sure I'm missing. Don't get me wrong, what Fox News does is disgusting and probably more organized and widespread among their base. But there's a lot of loonies on the Left too, and a lot of Fox News-esque tactics are being turned a blind eye to here (and by the Left in general) as long as they're anti-Trump (i.e. agree with the liberal/progressive worldview). Specifically to the question of "what basis is there to impeach" -- the only basis required to impeach is a majority of Congress and the will of the people. That's it. You say that there is a legal basis required -- and that is factually, historically, completely incorrect. According to the first hit on a Google search on the very question, most legal experts disagree with you.
http://litigation.findlaw.com/legal-system/presidential-impeachment-the-legal-standard-and-procedure.html
Democrats aren't complaining about collusion for the optics. The guy who colluded needs to be removed. His appointees need to have their security clearances held to the same standard as anyone else and their actions since taking office need to be reviewed in light of what we now know. It's not attractive to anyone to have Trump in charge. I'd love to see Trump out, but the process for removal has to be followed just like Trump has to (unsuccessful) follow the process to try to get his agenda done. Exceptions made today are only going to set precedents that will be exploited later on by a future Trump.
Totally agree that his aides' security clearances need to be held to the same standards as everyone else though.
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On July 17 2017 11:09 mozoku wrote:Show nested quote +On July 17 2017 08:48 Leporello wrote:On July 17 2017 03:43 mozoku wrote:On July 17 2017 02:44 Leporello wrote:On July 17 2017 02:01 mozoku wrote:On July 16 2017 22:12 Nevuk wrote:On July 16 2017 20:34 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 19:32 Biff The Understudy wrote:On July 16 2017 19:27 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 16:17 Biff The Understudy wrote: [quote] I don't think Obama took a single decision that was influenced by the perspective of personnal finantial gain. It seems to be shaping literally every single move Trump is doing, including his FP. How us that not new?! If you think the Obama administration didn't do anything because of bribery ("donations") then you're horribly naive. If you think the military industrial complex didn't impact Obama's foreign policy then you're horribly naive. Maybe Obama didn't get direct personal financial gain, idk, but he sure as hell played the pay-for-power game which allows business to undemocratically control governments. And of course being ex-president he now can flagrantly use his contacts and position to earn money, which honestly is about the same, just a little smarter. I love the cynicism, but I don't think you can compare an administration ran by a billionaire who clearly is there to promote his business interest and takes a foreign policy approach directly related to where his buildings and golf course are located and the Obama administration, which was certainly "corrupt" to a certain level as this is structural to american politics but was not ran by people who had direct private financial interest in what they were doing. Obama is no billionaire, and was certainly not there primarily to make money. Or if so, he was really shit at it. It's good not to be naive and to be critical, but that's not a reason to become blind. This shit, at that level, is unprecedented. Trump is awful and by far worse than Obama. Of course. If you see what I was replying to, you'd see I wasn't contradicting that, only the idea that Obama (or indeed any major politician, at least in the US) wasn't ever corrupt. But Trump will eventually be gone. The massive structural issues which make corruption and buying votes an inherent and entirely pervasive part of American politics likely won't because the only people who could change it are those who benefit from that corruption. I actually question whether or not he will eventually be gone. So far he's been able to flagrantly ignore the rule of law, I see nothing preventing him from declaring himself winner of the next election before the votes are counted and refusing to leave the white house after his second term. Can you give any examples of Trump "flagrantly ignoring the rule of law?" He hasn't passed any legislation and his travel bans have had legal issues since their rollout. His use of executive order has been no more expansive than Obama's was (and Obama actually did expand EO usage relative to his predecessors). In addition, he's being investigated for criminal wrongdoing related to his presidency. If anything, the rule of law is slaughtering Trump I think Trump is incompetent and a pretty terrible president so far imo, but you sound like you're getting your lines from some liberal equivalent of Fox News. In general, the amount of hyperbole about Trump as a president in this thread (and the left in general) isn't that different from Fox News during the Obama era. Even attempting comparisons to other Presidents is an exercise in failure. We don't know how Fox News would've reacted if Obama fired the FBI Director, then joked about it in a private Oval Office meeting with the very people the FBI Director was investigating, while claiming, "This will help". You know, we (the media, the public, the government) are looking into the legality of various actions. But this investigation should be happening under a different President. To make a different comparison: You have a soldier. Let's put him in the ww2 era, for simplicity. That soldier is constantly talking about how good and misunderstood the German and Japanese are. He even says they're better than some of these American soldiers who've served in the past. You even catch him laughing with some Germans while they make fun of some American soldiers. He even argues that Germany didn't really invade Poland. It's fake news. "Maybe Russia is in Ukraine, I don't know. Maybe Russia hacked us, I don't know". You can argue about legality, but the bottom-line is, if I were that soldier's superior, I would not order him into battle with other soldiers. I would do everything I can to keep him out of fighting with other men. He should not be there. And Donald Trump should not be Commander-in-Chief. In any other day, he'd be gone. Go back some generations, a man who has behaved similarly would not just be impeached, he'd be in much worse problems. Don't compare this to Obama -- literally none of it fits. There is no basis. Obama didn't have personal lawyers speaking for him on Sunday morning talk shows, about why we should just ignore our President's disgusting lack of loyalty, and other inappropriate behaviors. The irony here is that we started with the rule of law. Look, I agree American would be better off without Trump as president right now. It's not like Trump can't be replaced by a generic president that would do a similar (almost certainly better job) job without the potential of a catastrophic collusion with Russia to undermine our national security or something. But what basis is there to impeach him on? Impeachment requires breaking of the law. And, currently, it doesn't make sense to bring a legal case against him. The legality of what Trump has done is debatable (as xDaunt has notably pointed out), and it seems likely that stronger evidence against him will surface. When Mueller decides he has enough evidence to prosecute, Trump will face consequences. But investigations take time, and you only get one chance so you don't prosecute prematurely. Furthermore, given the huge political implications, it makes sense for Mueller to be conservative and wait until he has ironclad proof. Does that mean Trump is necessarily given the same authority as other presidents? We don't know. It's been reported that the intelligence agencies aren't sharing methods with Trump. Congress is looking to set the Russia sanction into stone. Who knows what else is going on behind the scenes along the same lines. I don't recall much hyperbole about Obama that even smells like many of the genuine claims that can be leveraged against Trump. Also remind me who started the birther nonsense? What claims can correctly be levied against Trump is irrelevant when it come to degrees of hyperbole. Moreover, this discussion should be extended to lunacy in general because Fox News does more in that area than just hyperbole. Here are some of the loony claims against Obama that I remember from the Right: "Obama is trampling the rule of law." A claim that is as valid as Nevuk's, which I'm betting most people here initially agreed with. "Obama has destroyed our global image, and it will take decades to clean this up." Another claim made earlier in this thread against Trump. Sure, Trump has probably hurt America's image, but not irrevocably by any means. Of course, there also some loony behavior that's unique to "The Resistance" but is Fox News-worthy in terms of quality: The furor over Trump's refusal to say that he would accept HRC's presidency if she won at a debate, only for the slogan at anti-Trump protests after Trump won to be: "We reject the president-elect." Demanding a recount of vote after the election because a computer science professor suggested it was theoretically possible to hack the election--despite there being zero evidence that the voting results were at all compromised. "The Resistance" movement in general, where progressives are happy to encourage (and threaten to primary) their congressmen to use the same obstructionist tactics that they spent 8 years lambasting Republicans over. There are dozens of other examples as well that I'm sure I'm missing. Don't get me wrong, what Fox News does is disgusting and probably more organized and widespread among their base. But there's a lot of loonies on the Left too, and a lot of Fox News-esque tactics are being turned a blind eye to here (and by the Left in general) as long as they're anti-Trump (i.e. agree with the liberal/progressive worldview). Specifically to the question of "what basis is there to impeach" -- the only basis required to impeach is a majority of Congress and the will of the people. That's it. You say that there is a legal basis required -- and that is factually, historically, completely incorrect. According to the first hit on a Google search on the very question, most legal experts disagree with you. http://litigation.findlaw.com/legal-system/presidential-impeachment-the-legal-standard-and-procedure.html This is what I'm looking at from reading your link:
Relating to the President's Official Duties
The fourth view is that an indictable crime is not required, but that the impeachable act or acts done by the President must in some way relate to his official duties. The bad act may or may not be a crime but it would be more serious than simply "maladministration." This view is buttressed in part by an analysis of the entire phrase "high crimes or misdemeanors" which seems to be a term of art speaking to a political connection for the bad act or acts. In order to impeach it would not be necessary for the act to be a crime, but not all crimes would be impeachable offenses.
Some hold the opinion that Congress could pass laws by declaring what constitutes "high crimes and misdemeanors" which would, in effect, be a list of impeachable offenses. That has never happened. I'd dare to say we have that now.
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On July 17 2017 11:09 mozoku wrote:Show nested quote +On July 17 2017 08:48 Leporello wrote:On July 17 2017 03:43 mozoku wrote:On July 17 2017 02:44 Leporello wrote:On July 17 2017 02:01 mozoku wrote:On July 16 2017 22:12 Nevuk wrote:On July 16 2017 20:34 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 19:32 Biff The Understudy wrote:On July 16 2017 19:27 FuzzyJAM wrote:On July 16 2017 16:17 Biff The Understudy wrote: [quote] I don't think Obama took a single decision that was influenced by the perspective of personnal finantial gain. It seems to be shaping literally every single move Trump is doing, including his FP. How us that not new?! If you think the Obama administration didn't do anything because of bribery ("donations") then you're horribly naive. If you think the military industrial complex didn't impact Obama's foreign policy then you're horribly naive. Maybe Obama didn't get direct personal financial gain, idk, but he sure as hell played the pay-for-power game which allows business to undemocratically control governments. And of course being ex-president he now can flagrantly use his contacts and position to earn money, which honestly is about the same, just a little smarter. I love the cynicism, but I don't think you can compare an administration ran by a billionaire who clearly is there to promote his business interest and takes a foreign policy approach directly related to where his buildings and golf course are located and the Obama administration, which was certainly "corrupt" to a certain level as this is structural to american politics but was not ran by people who had direct private financial interest in what they were doing. Obama is no billionaire, and was certainly not there primarily to make money. Or if so, he was really shit at it. It's good not to be naive and to be critical, but that's not a reason to become blind. This shit, at that level, is unprecedented. Trump is awful and by far worse than Obama. Of course. If you see what I was replying to, you'd see I wasn't contradicting that, only the idea that Obama (or indeed any major politician, at least in the US) wasn't ever corrupt. But Trump will eventually be gone. The massive structural issues which make corruption and buying votes an inherent and entirely pervasive part of American politics likely won't because the only people who could change it are those who benefit from that corruption. I actually question whether or not he will eventually be gone. So far he's been able to flagrantly ignore the rule of law, I see nothing preventing him from declaring himself winner of the next election before the votes are counted and refusing to leave the white house after his second term. Can you give any examples of Trump "flagrantly ignoring the rule of law?" He hasn't passed any legislation and his travel bans have had legal issues since their rollout. His use of executive order has been no more expansive than Obama's was (and Obama actually did expand EO usage relative to his predecessors). In addition, he's being investigated for criminal wrongdoing related to his presidency. If anything, the rule of law is slaughtering Trump I think Trump is incompetent and a pretty terrible president so far imo, but you sound like you're getting your lines from some liberal equivalent of Fox News. In general, the amount of hyperbole about Trump as a president in this thread (and the left in general) isn't that different from Fox News during the Obama era. Even attempting comparisons to other Presidents is an exercise in failure. We don't know how Fox News would've reacted if Obama fired the FBI Director, then joked about it in a private Oval Office meeting with the very people the FBI Director was investigating, while claiming, "This will help". You know, we (the media, the public, the government) are looking into the legality of various actions. But this investigation should be happening under a different President. To make a different comparison: You have a soldier. Let's put him in the ww2 era, for simplicity. That soldier is constantly talking about how good and misunderstood the German and Japanese are. He even says they're better than some of these American soldiers who've served in the past. You even catch him laughing with some Germans while they make fun of some American soldiers. He even argues that Germany didn't really invade Poland. It's fake news. "Maybe Russia is in Ukraine, I don't know. Maybe Russia hacked us, I don't know". You can argue about legality, but the bottom-line is, if I were that soldier's superior, I would not order him into battle with other soldiers. I would do everything I can to keep him out of fighting with other men. He should not be there. And Donald Trump should not be Commander-in-Chief. In any other day, he'd be gone. Go back some generations, a man who has behaved similarly would not just be impeached, he'd be in much worse problems. Don't compare this to Obama -- literally none of it fits. There is no basis. Obama didn't have personal lawyers speaking for him on Sunday morning talk shows, about why we should just ignore our President's disgusting lack of loyalty, and other inappropriate behaviors. The irony here is that we started with the rule of law. Look, I agree American would be better off without Trump as president right now. It's not like Trump can't be replaced by a generic president that would do a similar (almost certainly better job) job without the potential of a catastrophic collusion with Russia to undermine our national security or something. But what basis is there to impeach him on? Impeachment requires breaking of the law. And, currently, it doesn't make sense to bring a legal case against him. The legality of what Trump has done is debatable (as xDaunt has notably pointed out), and it seems likely that stronger evidence against him will surface. When Mueller decides he has enough evidence to prosecute, Trump will face consequences. But investigations take time, and you only get one chance so you don't prosecute prematurely. Furthermore, given the huge political implications, it makes sense for Mueller to be conservative and wait until he has ironclad proof. Does that mean Trump is necessarily given the same authority as other presidents? We don't know. It's been reported that the intelligence agencies aren't sharing methods with Trump. Congress is looking to set the Russia sanction into stone. Who knows what else is going on behind the scenes along the same lines. I don't recall much hyperbole about Obama that even smells like many of the genuine claims that can be leveraged against Trump. Also remind me who started the birther nonsense? What claims can correctly be levied against Trump is irrelevant when it come to degrees of hyperbole. Moreover, this discussion should be extended to lunacy in general because Fox News does more in that area than just hyperbole. Here are some of the loony claims against Obama that I remember from the Right: "Obama is trampling the rule of law." A claim that is as valid as Nevuk's, which I'm betting most people here initially agreed with. "Obama has destroyed our global image, and it will take decades to clean this up." Another claim made earlier in this thread against Trump. Sure, Trump has probably hurt America's image, but not irrevocably by any means. Of course, there also some loony behavior that's unique to "The Resistance" but is Fox News-worthy in terms of quality: The furor over Trump's refusal to say that he would accept HRC's presidency if she won at a debate, only for the slogan at anti-Trump protests after Trump won to be: "We reject the president-elect." Demanding a recount of vote after the election because a computer science professor suggested it was theoretically possible to hack the election--despite there being zero evidence that the voting results were at all compromised. "The Resistance" movement in general, where progressives are happy to encourage (and threaten to primary) their congressmen to use the same obstructionist tactics that they spent 8 years lambasting Republicans over. There are dozens of other examples as well that I'm sure I'm missing. Don't get me wrong, what Fox News does is disgusting and probably more organized and widespread among their base. But there's a lot of loonies on the Left too, and a lot of Fox News-esque tactics are being turned a blind eye to here (and by the Left in general) as long as they're anti-Trump (i.e. agree with the liberal/progressive worldview). Specifically to the question of "what basis is there to impeach" -- the only basis required to impeach is a majority of Congress and the will of the people. That's it. You say that there is a legal basis required -- and that is factually, historically, completely incorrect. According to the first hit on a Google search on the very question, most legal experts disagree with you. http://litigation.findlaw.com/legal-system/presidential-impeachment-the-legal-standard-and-procedure.html The opinion of legal experts is well and good, but should Congress believe that it is up to them to initiate impeachment proceedings, then that is their charge. And given basic human self-interest, Congresspeople are given to hold that exact view. It will be they who decide to start impeachment proceedings, should they happen at all.
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United States41117 Posts
Donald Trump’s tax reform plans would, if enacted, increase the gap between rich and poor Americans and see the US slip below Greece on a new global index of inequality.
According to the Commitment to Reducing Inequality (CRI) index, developed by researchers at Oxfam and Development Finance International, the US already distinguishes itself among wealthy countries by doing “very badly” at addressing inequality.
But it would fall a further six places from its ranking of 23rd overall if Trump’s tax reform effort is successful, with the US’s specific rating on tax policies plummeting 33 places from 26th to 59th – just below Peru, Chile and Sri Lanka.
“When you already have countries like Portugal and Slovenia ranking higher than the United States on the overall index, we think that’s a concern considering the wealth of the US,” Paul O’Brien, Oxfam America’s vice-president for policy and campaigns, told the Guardian.
If the White House passes its budget, which would slash social service spending and could leave millions of Americans without health insurance, the US would fall behind Greece, which is crippled by a debt crisis; Spain, which for 10 months in 2016 did not have a government; and Argentina, which has been plagued by high inflation, according to the report.
O’Brien said global understanding of inequality has grown significantly in the past decade, but this awareness has not led to the creation of pervasive government policies. Compilers of the index spent a year looking at policies around taxation, social service spending and labor in 152 countries.
“The reason we did this comparative index,” O’Brien said, “is in large part to challenge policymakers like President Trump to look to other economies and other societies, to give people smarter ways to give everyone an opportunity to lift themselves from poverty.”
The US performance on the index is strikingly bad compared to other wealthy countries, including the 35 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). These countries account for 63% of the world GDP. The US is ranked 21st among them in the inequality index, despite being the wealthiest country in the history of the world.
Threaded through the new report are stark facts that explain some of the ways the US has earned its low ranking. In 2012, 43.3% of corporations in the US paid no federal income tax. US employers are required to provide zero days of paid maternity leave, while Sweden offers 480 days. The US federal minimum wage of $7.25 is well below the $10.60 an hour needed for a family of four to stay above the federal poverty line.
The report makes clear that inequality in the US could get worse if efforts to reform tax and repeal the Affordable Care Act are successful. If, instead, Trump decided to attack inequality in the US, O’Brien said he would need to create a more progressive tax system that lessens the burden on the poorest people, improve labor laws, and “ensure that investments in healthcare, education and social protection gave all Americans an equal shot at the American dream”.
The index does not assess laws that prevent inequality, rather focusing on policies that help redistribute wealth. The report identifies successful efforts to turn around inequality in countries including Namibia, where secondary education is free to all.
The index also emphasizes that the top performing countries, including Sweden, Belgium and Denmark, have room for improvement and that the success they have had could be reversed through legislative attempts to weaken laws that protect the poorest members of society.
“For most rich countries,” the report says, “the main body of policies measured by the index was introduced in a different period of history, when significant action in these areas was broadly accepted as the right thing to do and paid dividends in terms of social and economic progress.
“Today, in many countries, political support for these measures has eroded.”
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