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  1. #1
    Mr Self Important Senior Member Beskar's Avatar
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    Default Re: Trump Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by spmetla View Post
    This is no echochamber, there's no shortage of opposing opinions. Just because most people see that an inept, unworldly, narcissist is unsuited for one of the most important political positions in the planet doesn't make it an echo-chamber...
    As @Greyblades is a fellow EU4 player and plays England a lot, I will put it this way... Trump is King Henry VI Lancaster on the 1444 Start in terms of Ruler Stats.
    Last edited by Beskar; 11-12-2017 at 19:42.
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  2. #2

    Default Re: Trump Thread

    If America is infected with HIV, Trump would be the AIDS.

    Take your retrovirals, people. Don't be full of AIDS.
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  3. #3

    Default Re: Trump Thread



    I never saw Trump talk like this before.
    Wooooo!!!

  4. #4
    Member Member Greyblades's Avatar
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    Default Re: Trump Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by spmetla View Post
    This is no echochamber, there's no shortage of opposing opinions.
    The closest thing to a dissenting opinion I have seen in months think's he's merely an asshat, you may believe it is justified but over the last few months this thread has hosted the diversity of opinion of a momentumn rally.

    As for derangement, if you're referring to our hopes that he's impeached, well that just that, a hope.
    I was referring to the person I consider the most wise person here declaring trump to be a threat to democracy. Now I have the next comparing him to AIDS.

    Hope is one thing, desperate as it may be after a year of empty grasping, gross hyperbole is another. This thread is turning into a shrine to peer pressure and confirmation bias, it is frankly a miracle noone has been so insipid as to start declaring Dubya preferable. Yet anyway.

    Quote Originally Posted by Beskar View Post
    As Greyblades is a fellow EU4 player and plays England a lot, I will put it this way... Trump is King Henry VI Lancaster on the 1444 Start in terms of Ruler Stats.
    EU4 is a game company's evaluation of 500 years of history's rulers, they include failures that make bush look like an augustus and suceess that makes FDR look a Commodus. Henry VI earned his 0/0/0 by doing whatever he was told and spending months at a time literally catatonic, not even Carlos II hapsburg or Lois XVI bourbon merited that little.

    By the standards of 1455 to 1836 Trump thus far would be in the league of Henry VIII; 3/3/4
    Last edited by Greyblades; 11-12-2017 at 20:52.
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  5. #5

    Default Re: Trump Thread

    The closest thing to a dissenting opinion that wasnt me just think's he's merely an asshat, over the last few months this thread has hosted the diversity of opinion of a momentumn rally.
    Why do you think that diversity of opinion on Trump's character or fitness has merit, rather than being a sign of moral and intellectual defect? Do you actually have anything to offer on the subject besides indistinct contrarianism and water-carrying?

    it is frankly a mircale noone has been so insipid as to start declaring Dubya preferable. Yet anyway.
    George W. Bush's tenure is one of the only things keeping Trump from claiming the title of "Worst POTUS".

    He long ago claimed "Worst Candidate", however.
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  6. #6

    Default Re: Trump Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Montmorency View Post
    Why do you think that diversity of opinion on Trump's character or fitness has merit, rather than being a sign of moral and intellectual defect? Do you actually have anything to offer on the subject besides indistinct contrarianism and water-carrying?
    There is no point Monty. He might as well be a paid Russian troll.


  7. #7
    Iron Fist Senior Member Husar's Avatar
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    Default Re: Trump Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Greyblades View Post
    The closest thing to a dissenting opinion I have seen in months think's he's merely an asshat, you may believe it is justified but over the last few months this thread has hosted the diversity of opinion of a momentumn rally.
    So what?
    Spmetla has already explained that maybe Trump is so bad that only very few people like him anymore and most of them aren't here.
    Would it make you happy if I posted dissenting opinions about how great Trump is or what do you want?

    You seem to be saying that somehow the thread is terrible because everybody in here dislikes Trump. Have you ever considered that maybe the reason this is the only thread where pretty much everyone agrees is that Trump is just terrible or can that not be the case because it does not fit your opinion?

    And if you have a differing opinion, why not provide it as Monty says? Don'te be lazy, break up the echo chamber yourself!

    What exactly is your point?
    Last edited by Husar; 11-13-2017 at 03:30.


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  8. #8
    Coffee farmer extraordinaire Member spmetla's Avatar
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    Default Re: Trump Thread

    The closest thing to a dissenting opinion I have seen in months think's he's merely an asshat, you may believe it is justified but over the last few months this thread has hosted the diversity of opinion of a momentumn rally.
    That's largely because most people that were on the fence or supported him because of the Republican brand have seen him for what he's worth.

    He was largely elected because he was supposed to be a no nonsense business man that would use that savvy to help the economy, help the standing of the US via diplomacy and also because he was not the Clinton witch.
    He's instead undermined NATO by reducing his understanding and support to simple transnational accounting. Left the TPP which was supposed to help us check China's economic clout. He openly sides with every autocrat around, has yet to criticize Putin for anything. Looking at how his trip to Asia has gone he's made it obvious he's no negotiator or deal maker, he just wants to be courted and feel important.

    He's made it plain for all to see that he's actually not used to having to do anything. If any legislation requires more than his vocal support he doesn't seem to do anything to push for it's being passed.

    His threat to democracy is evident in his on going war with the press. Yes, they don't like him. He is however a compulsive liar and his constant contradictions, statements in the realm of fantasy, and undermining of the very people he picked to do his work for him undermine our democracy. He as a key negotiator should know how to schmooze people, instead he feuds with Mitch and Ryan, insults respectable people like Mccain making our system of checks and balances a deadlock instead.
    Additionally, his complete and utter lack of understanding of how the rule of law works in this country undermines peoples faith in that branch as well. How dare his criticize the federal courts and suggest Gitmo and a military tribunal for a terror suspect instead when the last 15 years of war have shown how ineffective Gitmo and tribunals are.

    Believe me, I'd love the POTUS to make the economy grow, use a mix of hard and soft power to ensure the stability of the world order. I actually support several of the policies he supposedly is pushing but I've yet to see infrastructure pushed, I've yet to see him be tough of China, I've yet to see sensible immigration that isn't based on religion.

    He's made it evident that the Trump brand is the most important thing to him which is terrible to me because the most important thing should be the brand of the United States which he drags through the mud almost every time he opens his mouth.


    Hope is one thing, desperate as it may be after a year of empty grasping, gross hyperbole is another. This thread is turning into a shrine to peer pressure and confirmation bias, it is frankly a miracle noone has been so insipid as to start declaring Dubya preferable. Yet anyway.
    Well if he starts two endless wars and takes a growing economy and puts it into recession then he'd get to take a seat with Dubya as well. This tax plan has me worried because it seems to hinge on rosy economic forecasts which if aren't even close to attain will massively skyrocket the debt even more (to think that George W. inherited an economy with a budget surplus and ruined it still pisses me off).

    By the standards of 1455 to 1836 Trump thus far would be in the league of Henry VIII; 3/3/4
    I think his stats are more in the realm of 2/1/1. I've seen nothing that shown him having any military or diplomatic competence, undermining our military alliance and trade agreements wouldn't point to diplomatic skill. The two is really only there from his business experience which would transfer over to EU4's administrative though looking at the amount of unfilled vacancies perhaps that should be a 1 as well. What makes you think he's got military competency? He doesn't even know where his fleets (or should I say Armadas) are sailing though that would be the diplomatic side in EU4.
    At least he's got Mattis boosting the Military (level 3), Tillerson isn't allowed to do much so he's base 1 level and Gary Cohn is competent though I personally don't like the tax plan (level 2 advisor).
    Last edited by spmetla; 11-13-2017 at 05:13.

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  9. #9
    Praefectus Fabrum Senior Member Anime BlackJack Champion, Flash Poker Champion, Word Up Champion, Shape Game Champion, Snake Shooter Champion, Fishwater Challenge Champion, Rocket Racer MX Champion, Jukebox Hero Champion, My House Is Bigger Than Your House Champion, Funky Pong Champion, Cutie Quake Champion, Fling The Cow Champion, Tiger Punch Champion, Virus Champion, Solitaire Champion, Worm Race Champion, Rope Walker Champion, Penguin Pass Champion, Skate Park Champion, Watch Out Champion, Lawn Pac Champion, Weapons Of Mass Destruction Champion, Skate Boarder Champion, Lane Bowling Champion, Bugz Champion, Makai Grand Prix 2 Champion, White Van Man Champion, Parachute Panic Champion, BlackJack Champion, Stans Ski Jumping Champion, Smaugs Treasure Champion, Sofa Longjump Champion Seamus Fermanagh's Avatar
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    Default Re: Trump Thread

    I think little of his leadership so far. He was elected to 'drain the swamp' and get things done for American business and the working class.

    So far, unlike Reagan, unlike Bush41, unlike Newt and the GOP House of 1995, Trump cannot get any meaningful legislation furthering his agenda through Congress. This INCLUDES an infrastructure improvement bill that everybody wants, nobody opposes, the country needs, and which will have enough bits of pork included to make it stall-proof. Not even in committee yet. We have one relatively conservative judge added to the SCOTUS. That's it.

    The one thing Washington seems to agree on right now is the key thing is to sabotage anything useful to Trump's agenda. The GOP establishment will gladly trade lost seats in Nov18 in both houses in order to hang the loss on Trump's reputation and make it unlikely for him to repeat in 2020. The Dems agree with this whole-heartedly as well, since they have nada for meaningful national candidates at the moment and it helps them regain strength in Congress and ramp up for 2020. Trump has managed to bring bipartisanship back to DC by uniting them with the one common goal they can all believe in -- dumping Trump.

    All this having been said, Trump simply isn't the ghastly horror story his critics make him out to be. He's just another "outsider" candidate who couldn't manage the Washington game well enough to achieve much. He won't be written of as one of our worst Presidents like Bucannnan or Harding or Grant, or our most ethically challenged like Nixon and he certainly won't join the pantheon of Presidential 'heroes."

    This too shall pass.
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  10. #10

    Default Re: Trump Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh
    This INCLUDES an infrastructure improvement bill that everybody wants, nobody opposes
    The vague draft offered by the administration so far would have most functions or programs privatized, relies on the expectation that there are loads of private firms and entrepreneurs itching to build cheap and high-quality infrastructure all over the country, and holds little prospect for specific improvements or sustainable reforms. What no one opposes is the idea of an infrastructure bill - just like no one opposes the idea of a healthcare bill, or a tax reform bill, or a 'make all this awesome' bill...

    The one thing Washington seems to agree on right now is the key thing is to sabotage anything useful to Trump's agenda.
    Trump does not have a legislative agenda. It is rather Trump (and his base) who are hindering the GOP's agenda. Which is mainly a good thing, as the GOP's agenda is outrageous.

    But no one is sabotaging Trump other than the man himself, and potentially Putin.

    All this having been said, Trump simply isn't the ghastly horror story his critics make him out to be. He's just another "outsider" candidate who couldn't manage the Washington game well enough to achieve much. He won't be written of as one of our worst Presidents like Bucannnan or Harding or Grant, or our most ethically challenged like Nixon and he certainly won't join the pantheon of Presidential 'heroes."
    The first part of the conclusion retains the fault of individualizing the Trump phenomenon to the man himself, and of ignoring his administration's effect on government, civil society, and people up to this day. The second part is just insulting.

    Those you name could of course be condemned as men of their time, for abuse or diffidence towards abuse of the comman man, women, and minorities - and of course universally for ordering or continuing the destruction and rapine of indigenous peoples. But judging all against Trump without the weight of hindsight on their shoulders, we already know that they stand above Trump (I'll give you Buchanan for now, though we would need to re-assess if Trump serves a full term).

    Grant was arguably the best POTUS between Lincoln and T. Roosevelt. He managed to be the most important proponent of civil rights in the White House before at least FDR, and the biggest flaw in his Reconstruction policy was that it could not continue without his leadership. Harding was a failure due to negligence and incapacity, foisted upon the country by party elites. He was feckless but not malicious. Harding was just a better, more sensitive and reflective human being than Trump, and you don't need to set either of them against Grant to place him in standing with Marcus Aurelius.

    Virtually the whole Trump administration is built upon nepotism and the spoils system (a noted target of Grant's administration, I might add). Malgovernance in Trump's circle is not considered an acceptable side effect of corruption, but the goal in itself, and the impact is to reduce America's wealth and standing now as well as to bleed it into the future. (Whether they're on Putin's payroll or they have an intrinsic ideological stance against effective custodial government, that is what's up.) Trump's negligence and incapacity are on their face much greater than any heretofore 'standard' corruption - this is a man who couldn't be trusted to run a hotdog stand at the best of times, and his associates tend to be little better - with heaps of perfidy ladled on as well. The Trump admin may yet one-up its predecessors for brazen peculation, and if so it will be among the least of its offenses.

    And when we say the problem does not begin or end with the man or his administration, it is because the GOP as well as a large swath of the electorate are complicit. If Trump were to order the arrest of the whole Congress, and key federal judges and bureaucrats, derogate civil rights on grounds of national emergency, and declare himself President for Life, perhaps a fifth of the population would cheer him on. Impeachment is only a formality, not a restoration; the collapse is in progress.

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  11. #11
    Praefectus Fabrum Senior Member Anime BlackJack Champion, Flash Poker Champion, Word Up Champion, Shape Game Champion, Snake Shooter Champion, Fishwater Challenge Champion, Rocket Racer MX Champion, Jukebox Hero Champion, My House Is Bigger Than Your House Champion, Funky Pong Champion, Cutie Quake Champion, Fling The Cow Champion, Tiger Punch Champion, Virus Champion, Solitaire Champion, Worm Race Champion, Rope Walker Champion, Penguin Pass Champion, Skate Park Champion, Watch Out Champion, Lawn Pac Champion, Weapons Of Mass Destruction Champion, Skate Boarder Champion, Lane Bowling Champion, Bugz Champion, Makai Grand Prix 2 Champion, White Van Man Champion, Parachute Panic Champion, BlackJack Champion, Stans Ski Jumping Champion, Smaugs Treasure Champion, Sofa Longjump Champion Seamus Fermanagh's Avatar
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    Default Re: Trump Thread

    You made some good points. Most of my grief with Grant is the corruption in his administration. He himself was not a part of that nor were those policies he personally directed poorly chosen, as your examples illustrate.

    We agree that Trump has no legislative agenda. I am simply appalled that nobody on the administration can get something so inherently bipartisan as the infrastructure stuff off the ground. He could have had his admin steer some decent items out there -- items that would make opposition look bad if they blocked him -- and has not done so.

    His foreign policy isn't all that coherent either. Very much reactive so far, and this despite a clear kernel of support for renegotiating trade deals which SHOULD be at least vaguely in his area of competence.


    I just cannot see "high crimes and misdemeanors" here. We have not used impeachment to overturn a national election unless it has truly reached a clearly criminal level on matters pertaining to the conduct of the office. Nixon rose to that level by personally involving himself in a cover-up of a crime perpetrated against political opponents. I do not believe we should overturn an election for lesser grounds (and the articles of impeachment against Johnson and Clinton were rightly quashed for that reason). In fact, the House's vote to impeach Clinton was stupid if they were not willing to assert that he had harried political opponents or the like (and he had not, it was all over civil matters).
    "The only way that has ever been discovered to have a lot of people cooperate together voluntarily is through the free market. And that's why it's so essential to preserving individual freedom.” -- Milton Friedman

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  12. #12

    Default Re: Trump Thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh View Post
    You made some good points. Most of my grief with Grant is the corruption in his administration. He himself was not a part of that nor were those policies he personally directed poorly chosen, as your examples illustrate.

    We agree that Trump has no legislative agenda. I am simply appalled that nobody on the administration can get something so inherently bipartisan as the infrastructure stuff off the ground. He could have had his admin steer some decent items out there -- items that would make opposition look bad if they blocked him -- and has not done so.

    His foreign policy isn't all that coherent either. Very much reactive so far, and this despite a clear kernel of support for renegotiating trade deals which SHOULD be at least vaguely in his area of competence.


    I just cannot see "high crimes and misdemeanors" here. We have not used impeachment to overturn a national election unless it has truly reached a clearly criminal level on matters pertaining to the conduct of the office. Nixon rose to that level by personally involving himself in a cover-up of a crime perpetrated against political opponents. I do not believe we should overturn an election for lesser grounds (and the articles of impeachment against Johnson and Clinton were rightly quashed for that reason). In fact, the House's vote to impeach Clinton was stupid if they were not willing to assert that he had harried political opponents or the like (and he had not, it was all over civil matters).
    Re. Grant: He made bad senior appointments in his first term and refused to directly control them, splitting the difference down the middle. Later he recognized his mistakes (admittedly he didn't quite get his White House in order) and began setting the stage for civil service reform, which finally began to reach fruition under the administration of Chester Arthur, one of Grant's allies. The opposing wing of the Republican Party made noises about reform and trumped up the corruption of Grant's administration (which pushed for affirmative action for blacks, Jews, and women in low-to-mid level appointments by the way), but these guys were plenty corrupt themselves and were more than anything interested in selling out Southern blacks to the Democrats in order to gain national prominence. I rely mostly on HW Brands' recent biography for my knowledge.


    I think, used properly, impeachment (of the POTUS, not sure what the stats are for other offices) could stand to be more frequent than it has been. Clinton's missteps over Lewinsky were technically impeachable - it's just that they weren't (IMO) worth impeaching over.

    I used the words "negligence, incapacity, perfidy" because these are the (dis)qualifying factors James Madison perceived during the Constitutional Convention.

    Mr. MADISON thought it indispensable that some provision should be made for defending the Community agst. the incapacity, negligence or perfidy of the chief Magistrate. The limitation of the period of his service, was not a sufficient security. He might lose his capacity after his appointment. He might pervert his administration into a scheme of peculation or oppression. He might betray his trust to foreign powers. The case of the Executive Magistracy was very distinguishable, from that of the Legislature or of any other public body, holding offices of limited duration. It could not be presumed that all or even a majority of the members of an Assembly would either lose their capacity for discharging, or be bribed to betray, their trust. Besides the restraints of their personal integrity & honor, the difficulty of acting in concert for purposes of corruption was a security to the public. And if one or a few members only should be seduced, the soundness of the remaining members, would maintain the integrity and fidelity of the body. In the case of the Executive Magistracy which was to be administered by a single man, loss of capacity or corruption was more within the compass of probable events, and either of them might be fatal to the Republic.
    This goes beyond literal crimes, and aside from the natural susceptibility to impeachment Trump carries by virtue of being unfit the second he took his oath, specific actions taken in sum over the course of the term so far constitute impeachable offenses (by no means exhaustive or directly related to Russia): from the diffuse like constant uninhibited lying on matters large and small; verbal attacks on the press, courts and other institutions; potential self/family enrichment or emoluments clause violations; to the systematic like advancing unqualified candidates on basis of personal loyalty; withholding candidates from offices without justification or reorganization; (as of now wholly speculative, or at least nascent) use of federal powers in voting oversight, on false pretenses of widespread fraud, to suppress the votes of political enemies; to the singular and autocratic like (apparently) firing an FBI director with intent to obstruct investigations into himself and associates; pardoning (and making a public show of it) a political ally, convicted of both criminal and civil contempt of court, before sentencing, appeal for clemency, and review of appeal (Frank Bowman at the previously-linked site impeachableoffenses.net argues that in our history of executive pardons only Bill Clinton's last-minute pardon of Marc Rich comes even close in impropriety, and moreover the pardon of Marc Rich may also have been an impeachable offense); interfering with or indicating intent to interfere with the special counsel's investigation, such as publicly airing desire to fire the special counsel, or mooted replacement of the recused Attorney General to effect said firing, corroborated by other (now recent) statements expressing a desire to directly control the investigations of the Justice Department and FBI toward partisan ends.

    ...

    Importantly, these fall into the three categories of bad behavior Madison listed, not being mere political disagreements, mistakes, or even plain bad policy. It's at the level of, "so far not a single member of the Trump administration has been found to be secretly working for the United States".

    Finally, if we argue that Trump cannot be guilty of or accountable for any of the above or anything else not listed because he is simply too mentally incompetent or impaired - in such a case we cannot permit a mental incompetent to remain in office, and either impeachment or the 25th Amendment's provisions must be applied. So I think this is cornered.


    It's critical that, of the five articles of impeachment put forward in the House Judiciary Committee at eve of Nixon's tenure, three were passed (with some difficulty; contemporary Republicans will be much more recalcitrant), and the second concerned "Abuse of Power". One clause was as follows:

    In disregard of the rule of law, he knowingly misused the executive power by interfering with agencies of the executive branch, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Criminal Division, and the Office of Watergate Special Prosecution Force, of the Department of Justice, and the Central Intelligence Agency, in violation of his duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed.
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