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What does a TRUMP presidency look like?

Started by FunkMonk, November 08, 2016, 11:02:57 PM

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Tamas

Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:19:51 AM
I'm not advocating for violence but rather suggesting that its been a common tool throughout American history on the side of the right, so it isn't like violence at a protest can encourage that side to suddenly view that option as on the table. They never took it off.

Fair point. But this isn't about changing the methods of the far right. I agree, they have never been about anything else.

It is about not wanting to change political life and landscape to an environment that prefers their methods. The destabilisation of democracy via mob rule and violent street politics is as classic as it gets, and it never benefited liberal forces, or moderate forces of any kind. It has always been the first step in the radical left or the radical right taking over and messing a country up.


The Brain

Tampax, you sound suspiciously like someone who likes liberal democracy and rule of law. Just sayin'.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

garbon

Quote from: The Brain on August 16, 2017, 06:44:41 AM
Tampax, you sound suspiciously like someone who likes liberal democracy and rule of law. Just sayin'.

Okay, you need to stop being an idiot. You've been getting a free pass for too long.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

garbon

Quote from: Tamas on August 16, 2017, 06:39:41 AM
Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:19:51 AM
I'm not advocating for violence but rather suggesting that its been a common tool throughout American history on the side of the right, so it isn't like violence at a protest can encourage that side to suddenly view that option as on the table. They never took it off.

Fair point. But this isn't about changing the methods of the far right. I agree, they have never been about anything else.

It is about not wanting to change political life and landscape to an environment that prefers their methods. The destabilisation of democracy via mob rule and violent street politics is as classic as it gets, and it never benefited liberal forces, or moderate forces of any kind. It has always been the first step in the radical left or the radical right taking over and messing a country up.

That's fair though I'm not sure anyone is advocating a change to a preference for those methods either. I think the discussion is really around whether you can have any without changing the political culture. I think there's something to be said on the front that the right has been able to use violence for their means in the US throughout the US history without destabilising the Republic.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

The Brain

Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:47:50 AM
Quote from: The Brain on August 16, 2017, 06:44:41 AM
Tampax, you sound suspiciously like someone who likes liberal democracy and rule of law. Just sayin'.

Okay, you need to stop being an idiot. You've been getting a free pass for too long.

Once I get the faintest idea what you're talking about I'm sure I'll give some fucks.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

Eddie Teach

Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:47:50 AM
Quote from: The Brain on August 16, 2017, 06:44:41 AM
Tampax, you sound suspiciously like someone who likes liberal democracy and rule of law. Just sayin'.

Okay, you need to stop being an idiot. You've been getting a free pass for too long.

Gratuitous and frankly out of place.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

frunk

Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:19:51 AM
I'm not advocating for violence but rather suggesting that its been a common tool throughout American history on the side of the right, so it isn't like violence at a protest can encourage that side to suddenly view that option as on the table. They never took it off.

The issue isn't if the extremists think violence is ok, they'll always consider it acceptable for their cause.  In the recent past the white nationalists knew that the feds wouldn't give them any room for shenanigans, so there weren't many incidents.  Now they have a president and inner circle that they think (rightly or wrongly) is on their side.  The answer to that isn't for the left to start bashing heads, but for state and local governments to do what they can to stop them.  This recent event wasn't handled well by the police, but it could have been much worse.  As Tamas said, counter protests, great.  Nazis getting stomped by the police, good.  Violent clashes between civilians, bad.

Syt

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/15/opinion/jewish-charlottesville-anti-semitism.html

QuoteWhat Jewish Children Learned From Charlottesville

This dirty Jew remembers every penny thrown at him.

The ones thrown from above, as we waited to be picked up from the public pool in my hometown on Long Island, our yarmulkes pinned to wet hair. By then, I was big enough to feel shame for the younger kids, who knew no better than to scurry around, as our local anti-Semites laughed.

I remember walking home from synagogue at my father's side, in our suits and ties, and seeing a neighbor boy crawling on his hands and knees, surrounded by bullies, this time picking up pennies by force. I remember my father rushing in and righting the boy, and sending those kids scattering.

I remember when, at that same corner, on a different day, those budding neo-Nazis surrounded my sister, and I raced home for help. I remember my parents running back, and my father and mother (all five feet of her) confronting the parents of one of the boys, who then gave him a winking, Trumpian chiding for behavior they didn't care to condemn. Even if it's "kids with horns," they told their son, he should leave other children alone.

I'll never forget the shame of it. Nor any of the other affronts, from the swastika shaving-creamed on our front door on Halloween to the kid on his bike yelling, "Hitler should have finished you all." I remember every fistfight, every broken window, every catcall and curse. I remember them because each made me — a fifth-generation American — feel unsafe and unwelcome in my own home, just as was intended.

I could, likewise, catalog every tough-Jew story of victory in the face of hatred. My favorite still: that of my bull-necked great-grandfather who worked for the railroads, who in response to the guy on the next barstool saying that there were "too many Jews" in the place, knocked the bum out with a single punch, without getting up from his perch.

But my great-grandfather is history. My childhood is history.

I live in Brooklyn now, where my father grew up. It was here, after watching people cheer Barack Obama's victory in the streets, after gay marriage became legal nationwide and after other evolutionary steps, that I was finally able to embrace the past as the past and look at our collective present in a new light.

Secular now, I watch the younger religious Jews in awe. They don't slip their yarmulkes into their pockets out of fear. It hit me at, of all places, a Nets game. I was amazed by all the yarmulkes in the crowd, and the boys beneath them eating hot dogs from — who would have believed it — kosher concession stands.

In a New York sports tradition, one of them was mouthing off at anyone and everyone who was rooting for the visiting team. I watched him razzing people, opening his mouth without thinking he'd be beaten to a pulp for drawing attention to himself. But no one said a single non-basketball-related, Jew-hating word.

I can't tell you how much pride I took in that moment, the same syrupy pride I take when sitting on a subway car where no two faces, no two histories, seem alike, and feeling nothing but minding-our-own-business good will I felt the same watching all our children in the park, knowing that they must recognize difference but see nothing in it to fear. How great it must be, I thought, to grow up in that America, a place still flawed but striving to do better.

I understood that, in my 40s, I was already part of history. That certain things I knew didn't need to be known anymore.

And yet, in seven months of this presidency, in one single day in Charlottesville, Va., all of that is lost. A generation, and so much more, stolen away. There is the trauma of those assaulted by Nazis on American soil and the tragedy that is Heather Heyer's murder that belongs to her and her family alone. And then there is what all the rest of us share — the pain and violence and the lessons we draw from them. Because the children who witness a day like that, and a president like this, will not forget the fear and disrespect tailored to the black child, the Muslim child, the Jewish child.

They will not forget the assault rifles that this government puts in these violent men's hands, nor the chants that black lives don't matter and that the Jews will not replace them — just as I will never not hear what that kid on the bike screamed or stop seeing my father helping a boy, crawling for pennies, off his knees.

While harking back to my pious, head-covered days, I am reminded of a notion that our rabbis taught us: The theft of time is a crime like any other. Back then it was about interrupting class — one minute wasted was a minute of learning lost. But multiply that minute by everyone in the room, and it became 15, 20 minutes, half an hour's worth of knowledge that none of us could ever get back.

Saturday in Charlottesville was just one day, but think of that one day multiplied by all of us, across this great country. Think of the size of that setback, the assault on empathy, the divisiveness and tiki-torched terror multiplied by every single citizen of this nation. It may as well be millions of years of dignity, of civility, of progress lost.

Just from that one day.
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.
—Stephen Jay Gould

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

viper37

Quote from: Valmy on August 15, 2017, 08:44:05 PM
Austin? Dammit I had plans this weekend well wish me luck.
Stock up on canned food and bottled water. ;)
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

viper37

Quote from: CountDeMoney on August 15, 2017, 09:06:36 PM

But I'm supposed to blame illegals, blacks and trade agreements.  Or something.
Silly.  We all now it's because of rich people, white men and trade agreements.  And Jews.  They get screwed both ways, the hard left and hard right loathe them both equally.  They must be doing something right. ;)
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

viper37

Quote from: Oexmelin on August 15, 2017, 09:39:11 PM
Quote from: Jacob on August 15, 2017, 08:52:53 PM
Anyhow, are you sure that's not your vivid imagination? If we ignore them they'll probably go away. Besides the Communists are just as bad, right?

Yeah, it's hard to choose where to counter, with all the Communist rallies taking place at the same time.
If you're missing on all the action, you could subscribe there: http://quebecsolidaire.net/
they may hold a rally next time you're in the neighbourhood :)
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

The Brain

AFAIK there has been a significant increase of antisemitism among Swedes the past decades.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

viper37

Quote from: frunk on August 15, 2017, 11:34:31 PM
I don't agree with the false equivalency, but I think there is a fair point that the condoning of vigilantism in the service of stopping Nazis is a pretty dangerous road to go down.  Once you open the door to approving of non-Governmental actors being allowed to exercise violence, however noble the intentions, I think it will only serve to push people towards the extremes.  That's all terrorists, Nazis and other extremists want, the eroding of government and the rule of law so that they can be the "saviors" of a crumbling society.
I totally agree with you.  All extremists must be watched.
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

garbon

Quote from: The Brain on August 16, 2017, 06:53:42 AM
Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:47:50 AM
Quote from: The Brain on August 16, 2017, 06:44:41 AM
Tampax, you sound suspiciously like someone who likes liberal democracy and rule of law. Just sayin'.

Okay, you need to stop being an idiot. You've been getting a free pass for too long.

Once I get the faintest idea what you're talking about I'm sure I'll give some fucks.

Then don't post on a topic if you can't figure it out, dear. :hug:
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

garbon

Quote from: Eddie Teach on August 16, 2017, 06:55:20 AM
Quote from: garbon on August 16, 2017, 06:47:50 AM
Quote from: The Brain on August 16, 2017, 06:44:41 AM
Tampax, you sound suspiciously like someone who likes liberal democracy and rule of law. Just sayin'.

Okay, you need to stop being an idiot. You've been getting a free pass for too long.

Gratuitous and frankly out of place.

I don't think so. He's been skirting around with some racist and sexist notions as of late. And yes, he's lovable and funny so doesn't matter as much as we rarely need to take his points seriously but enough is enough.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.