Jay wrote:
piranha, see above. Fascists love each other.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Bloomberg was a great mayor. He ran that city like a machine.
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Jay wrote:
piranha, see above. Fascists love each other.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Bloomberg was a great mayor. He ran that city like a machine.
http://money.cnn.com/2016/01/26/media/d … index.htmlDonald Trump will "definitely" skip Thursday's GOP debate due to a deepening fight with the Fox News Channel, according to his campaign manager Corey Lewandowski.
"It's not under negotiation," Lewandowski told reporters Tuesday evening.
Instead of attending the debate, "We'll have an event here in Iowa, with potentially another network, to raise money for wounded warriors," he said. "And Fox will go from probably having 24 million viewers to about 2 million."
Lewandowski ruled out Trump's participation just a few minutes after Trump himself said he would "most likely" hold a competing event in Iowa during the debate.
It doesn't hurt that his potential opponents are Clinton and sanders. Christ what a shitty choice to make.Ty wrote:
I actually think democracy may end up saving the Republicans from a lot of damage. I don't think they've ever wanted Trump to be their nominee and I think it would be a disaster for them if he was but they haven't had the ability to stop him, (or the disproportionate self-fuelling media attention that naturally responds to a perpetual attention machine like Trump.) Their saving grace is that Republican voters still want to nominate a candidate who, along with representing their partisan traditions, (does Trump? Not sure,) is credible and electable. Donald Trump is not. In fact in terms of "electable" he would enter the race with the lowest favourability rating of any major party candidate. Democrats and independents seem to agree on how much they dislike him which isn't a good starting point.
I think everyone's learned enough now not to underestimate Trump but I think he's due a heavy landing. Though you never know, if the first few states look to be going his way others on the rational side of things may be more inclined to think "well fuck it, let's see where this crazy train goes" - which would make a much better slogan than "Make America Great Again".
It will certainly be the most interesting election at least in my lifetime if that were to happen. He somehow hadn't been laughed out of the race at any number of the ridiculous things he's said. A Trump v. Clinton race might be the most disdainful pair of nominees ever put up against one another, I don't see either of them as president helping with the intractable partisan gridlock we've seen since Obama took office.Ty wrote:
I actually think democracy may end up saving the Republicans from a lot of damage. I don't think they've ever wanted Trump to be their nominee and I think it would be a disaster for them if he was but they haven't had the ability to stop him, (or the disproportionate self-fuelling media attention that naturally responds to a perpetual attention machine like Trump.) Their saving grace is that Republican voters still want to nominate a candidate who, along with representing their partisan traditions, (does Trump? Not sure,) is credible and electable. Donald Trump is not. In fact in terms of "electable" he would enter the race with the lowest favourability rating of any major party candidate. Democrats and independents seem to agree on how much they dislike him which isn't a good starting point.
I think everyone's learned enough now not to underestimate Trump but I think he's due a heavy landing. Though you never know, if the first few states look to be going his way others on the rational side of things may be more inclined to think "well fuck it, let's see where this crazy train goes" - which would make a much better slogan than "Make America Great Again".
I remember a video of a little kid tearing up a Dollar Store without a care in the world, knocking over displays and throwing products at other customers. But at least he was doing what he wanted.pirana6 wrote:
I admire trump for doing what he wants and not pandering to whatever 51% of the people (or large corporations) want. I just wish what he wanted was the least bit sane or non-racist.
2deep4meunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Dollar Store = US political infrastructure
Nice misquote.pirana6 wrote:
2deep4meunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Dollar Store = US political infrastructure
Last edited by pirana6 (2016-01-27 18:09:38)
We know how half of America thinks right now.Jay wrote:
I don't think for a second that he believes most of the shit he says. He's not beholden to donors, no, which allows him to be a pure populist. He threw a bunch of shit at the wall when he started this and he just went with what got a response. If he wins the nomination I expect him to change tack and throw a new pile at the wall to see what resonates with a more general audience. If we reach that level I think we'll get a nice understanding of what the average American thinks and values.
We're looking into the future.uziq wrote:
since when did it become admirable in politics to have dumb opinions and be without reflection? i mean, i get it that people are dissatisfied with the slick corporate/PR machine. but when did having crass opinions and being a bigot become a sign of valour? democracy was always meant to tame the pig-headed element, not unleash it in full righteous fury.
Republicans are only about 25% of the population and he has half their votes. Hardly a national majority.Dilbert_X wrote:
We know how half of America thinks right now.Jay wrote:
I don't think for a second that he believes most of the shit he says. He's not beholden to donors, no, which allows him to be a pure populist. He threw a bunch of shit at the wall when he started this and he just went with what got a response. If he wins the nomination I expect him to change tack and throw a new pile at the wall to see what resonates with a more general audience. If we reach that level I think we'll get a nice understanding of what the average American thinks and values.We're looking into the future.uziq wrote:
since when did it become admirable in politics to have dumb opinions and be without reflection? i mean, i get it that people are dissatisfied with the slick corporate/PR machine. but when did having crass opinions and being a bigot become a sign of valour? democracy was always meant to tame the pig-headed element, not unleash it in full righteous fury.
Please, walk me through it. You've more or less acknowledged that Trump spouts batshit pandering to batshit supporters, but respect him anyway for "breaking the mold" and "doing what he wants." That's just confusing to me, and I've encountered this far too often as the go-to conservative defense of Trump. When confronted with the bullet points of the Trump insanity, eyes glaze and they declare respect for him for doing what he wants like it suddenly finalizes the argument in their favor.pirana6 wrote:
No, that's not what I think at all. And unlike other members here I'm not going to talk in circles for 3 pages about this pointless topic. Either you understand what I'm trying to say or you don't, and frankly I don't care either way.