Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#22181
Posted 2025-February-01, 00:05
#22182
Posted 2025-February-04, 10:54
#22183
Posted 2025-February-04, 15:26
"...amidst rocket fuel and relentless ambition, he interned, absorbing the ethos of innovation like a sponge in zero gravity."
Out of interest, does a sponge absorb ethos better or worse in zero gravity?
#22184
Posted 2025-February-06, 16:30
#22185
Posted 2025-February-07, 04:24
Apparently war and ethnic cleansing is just a real estate development project for the Trump family
Let's give one of the little ones a cruelly destroyed place full of unwanted people to be disposed of first
While not wnting to disrepesct any assistance by allies to deal with the Nazis in Europe maybe the overkill was real estate too
Send a million or so Palestinians from their flattened city to some out of the way new town a long way from home and build Mar el Lago two on the sunny shores of the Mediterranean. Land of the setting sun perhaps.
Some of us have always put a lot of respect and trust in the USA and what they stand for
How is Ukraine going. Biden or Trump enterprises got their plans drawn up already
I still have trust and hope in the people and institutions of the USA
Edit. Funny how often forums go offline for a while after I post. Hope I don't cause consternation with free speech. There is a thing called rhetoric too. Maybe BBO lawyers need to be consulted occasionally
Edit 2 I remember reading an alternative interpretation of Capitalism sowing the seeds of its own destruction. Its cyclical. But look at the endless possibly contrived conflict and cruelty that goes with it
Edit 3 world war two was just a load of stories and myths to my generation. Now we see the truth of that evil being repeated
#22186
Posted 2025-February-10, 05:14
If you won't give it to me I'm going to buy it or take it
It belongs to me
I wants it. My precious
No surprise that POTUS has an estate in Scotland
For some reason he appeals to poor workers
Just like driving people off their terrible islands. Such terrible hard places to live. But seemingly attractive to the wealthy and tourists
Maybe the world always did work this way but to see it all out there
You don't do what I say or give me what I want. I have the power to destroy you until you do what I say
A bit different from the USA we thought we knew and trusted. Helping people out
According to a recent headline in the Scotland Herald poor Sir Keir is the wrong man at the wrong time. What does that make POTUS
#22187
Posted 2025-February-12, 12:23
benellis58, on 2025-February-01, 00:05, said:
Not only did we elect him, but now 53% think he's doing a good job letting Musk and his DOGE minions run roughshod over all the agencies and rounding up undocumented immigrants.
None of this is making any dent in supermarket prices, which is supposedly what they elected him to do. But I guess renaming the Gulf of Mexico is an OK substitute, right?
#22188
Posted 2025-February-12, 21:13
At this moment, how certain are you that you will vote for the Democratic Presidential Candidate in Year 2040 (whoever that candidate may be)?
This is a variant of a question posed by a friend of mine recently on our WhatsApp group (he was talking about a different country & a different/shorter time horizon).
#22189
Posted 2025-February-12, 21:33
(*) Yes, I know that the orthographic reform came after the Mexican-American War. Don't care, it's how the old spelling was pronounced too (viz. my Axixic t-shirt).
#22190
Posted Yesterday, 09:25
shyams, on 2025-February-12, 21:13, said:
At this moment, how certain are you that you will vote for the Democratic Presidential Candidate in Year 2040 (whoever that candidate may be)?
This is a variant of a question posed by a friend of mine recently on our WhatsApp group (he was talking about a different country & a different/shorter time horizon).
In 2040 I will be 101 so let's not place a large bet on me being around. Both parties have changed a lot. I voted for JFK in 1960 and I was a 13-year-old supporter of Adlai Stevenson in 1952, although in 1956 I was more inclined toward Eisenhower. And yes, I voted for Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. I can't say I was wildly enthususiastic about any of these last three, I liked Biden the best of the three, and I guess the voters agreed since he is the one who won. I could, and perhaps in 2040 would, vote for a Republican. I hope the country has better choices in the future, compared to our recent options. Something has gone very wrong if Trump can be nominated, let alone elected.
#22191
Posted Yesterday, 14:55
kenberg, on 2025-February-13, 09:25, said:
Honestly, I'm not at all confident that in 2040 there will be a United States of America.
Here is a low but significant probability way the US could fall apart over the next year - add in all the possibilities over the next 15 years and all those low probabilities could amount to something:
The administration continues to ignore the court order requiring them to pay out federal grants. As a remedy, the court sets up a special fund to pay the grants, allowing entities to pay taxes to that fund rather than the IRS. (Ultimately, it's courts that enforce tax laws, so the administration can't get around this.) Tax receipts drop precipitously, and everyone agrees a national divorce is better than a default on the debt.
#22192
Posted Yesterday, 16:45
And it's not just funding. From NY Times (paywalled):
Quote
Do these people give no thought to the immediate ramifications of their actions?
#22193
Posted Yesterday, 17:32
barmar, on 2025-February-13, 16:45, said:
A well-known quote:
If the car industry had developed like the computer industry, the car today would cost $100, get 1000 miles to the gallon, and blow up once a year, killing everyone inside.
People don't think about the consequences of their actions, especially if they're not completely predictable, not intended, and happen to other people whom you don't particularly care about. Also if most of your life has been like a computer game where you can always reload your previous save file, maybe minus a small percentage of your wealth.
#22194
Posted Yesterday, 19:36
barmar, on 2025-February-13, 16:45, said:
No, they learned ethics here: https://neal.fun/abs...olley-problems/
#22195
Posted Today, 08:06
barmar, on 2025-February-13, 16:45, said:
And it's not just funding. From NY Times (paywalled):
Do these people give no thought to the immediate ramifications of their actions?
Much of what is happening is bizarre but yes, I agree that abrubtly cutting ooff jobs, funding, research etc is horrid. There is no notification and there is no certainty either. Tragedy compounded by chaos.
I was listening to a discussion of the views of those who often voted D in the past but now voted for Trump They seem to be saying that there is movement and movement is good. I say that is glib. Change can be good, thought out, planned change, but that is not what is happening.
The two possibilities as I see it:
1. I am a total moron who understands nothing
2. There are a large number of Republicans in positions of leadership who are total cowards.
#22196
Posted Today, 09:14
We're "moving fast and breaking things", and the relevant userbase is 400 million that live in the US and at least that many that "sneeze when the US gets a cold".
Good luck, and cui bono? But other references from Roma (of that period or later) may be surprisingly relevant in the near future.
#22197
Posted Today, 12:17
Yes, Republican leaders are cowards, but understandably so. The thugs that Trump pardoned are at large and so are the yet-to-be thugs calculating reasonably that Trump will take care of them if they act violently in his behalf. So now those who oppose Trump get swamped with threatening calls -- and any lawyer in the Justice Department with integrity has been or will be fired.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
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