MSNBC had Kasie Hunt in the hallway asking Congressmen about the Press Conference. Every Republican said they didn't see it. Every Democrat was terrified. Draw your own conclusions from that.
That is a terrible analogy Kepler.
And yes everyone is wearing this stink. The only reason Trump had any chance was because both sides are so vitriolic. Lets not forget, the Dems could have stopped this and hundreds of thousands chose not to for reasons so dumb they actually defy logic.
The GOP is responsible for Trump being nominated, but to pretend the Libs arent at least in part responsible for his being elected and for the current disgusting level of hatred amongst the parties is Fox News level echo chamber BS.
No. Even if I believed it was a good idea (and it is so horrible an idea it sounds like something Jeff Sessions would support) the ease with which some rule like that would be abused is astounding. Just because you think they are crazy doesnt mean you can restrict their vote.
NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO...ad infinitum.
I'm about to step into my office, and therefore don't really have enough time to properly articulate out wrong Kepler is. This will suffice. To put it gently, anyone who thinks they aren't at least in part to blame for all of this needs to check their head or their ego.
I don't buy this at all. Trump lies at the feet of his voters. They are to blame. Not the non-voters, and certainly not those who voted against him.
You don't blame a rape equally on the rapist and the victim.
(If you're a Republican you blame it solely on the victim.)
holocaust (lower case h): < noun > destruction or slaughter on a mass scale, especially caused by fire or nuclear war
That we allowed him into office says poor things about who we are as American people.
When a Gopher fan and a BADger fan agree to this level, people should take pause and listen![]()
I agree with this but like I've said before, my conscience is clear. I learned from 2000 and 2004. The fact that no one else did isn't my fault or my responsibility.
To put it gently, anyone who thinks they aren't at least in part to blame for all of this needs to check their head or their ego.
You are correct but it's cold comfort. After all, it is still our problem.
Batten down the hatches and ride out the storm. That's all I can do.
"Right now there's one or two of these things. By Spring it could be all of us."
No, that's not all we can do.
We have to actively thwart them while also making sure we're ready for the next election so we can first neuter their power in Congress and then evict them from the government entirely.
To be fair: we (collectively, regardless of who we voted for) are to blame. While some of the Russia specifics were mere rumor and innuendo, pretty much everything else about Trump is something we knew for a certainty when he was just a candidate.
The inability to form an argument without childish hyperbole, the thin skinned whining, the sensationalist bravado with nothing to support it, the conspiracy theories, the eternal blame for anyone not him, the insistence that he be surrounded by sycophants, and we could go on. This is what he has been his whole life and it absolutely is who he was on the campaign trail.
We don't even need to bicker over traditional conservative v. progressive issues to come to the conclusion that this man is a spectacularly poor choice for a president.
That we allowed him into office says poor things about who we are as American people.
I think we have to agree with Exile on this.I don't buy this at all. Trump lies at the feet of his voters. They are to blame. Not the non-voters, and certainly not those who voted against him.
You don't blame a rape equally on the rapist and the victim.
(If you're a Republican you blame it solely on the victim.)
Well they are in the sense that the higher level people of the Dem party did a terrible job. And I would have to agree that the libs who didn't vote have no right to complain. But I'd place more blame on the former. I get that fear resonates more with the republican voters than libs but there's no reason the democrats couldn't have played that card better. Hey you might lose your health insurance, have to drink lead water, fascism, patriot act, minorities being attacked and giving those who do a legitimized voice etc. if you don't vote for Hillary. Instead they just acted like the election was already won by her and that the crazy old man and the rest of the deplorables on the other side of the table could just be ignored and everything would be fine. Hillary wasn't exactly an exciting candidate who was going to inspire hope and change so they needed to do a better job of showing people the doom day scenario as well as the complete incompetence that would unfold. I get that it would've been hard to imagine but still.The GOP is responsible for Trump being nominated, but to pretend the Libs arent at least in part responsible for his being elected and for the current disgusting level of hatred amongst the parties is Fox News level echo chamber BS.
I think we have to agree with Exile on this.
Last summer, Kep, you told me and others that I was responsible for Trump, even if I never supported him, even if I voted for someone else in my primary, even if I hated him. Your explanation, and that of a few others on here, was that Trump was a product of Republican policies, positions and campaign tactics from years past, and that I had to "own" him (as I recall the phrase).
From what I see out of some Bernie supporters (Susan Sarandon for example) even to this day I think they'd rather martyr themselves then actually govern.
I don't see any of that at all. If you're watching Hollywood as a sign of what's happening, I cannot help you.
I think we have to agree with Exile on this.
Last summer, Kep, you told me and others that I was responsible for Trump, even if I never supported him, even if I voted for someone else in my primary, even if I hated him. Your explanation, and that of a few others on here, was that Trump was a product of Republican policies, positions and campaign tactics from years past, and that I had to "own" him (as I recall the phrase).
I think if that is true, then EODS is right. Even if we didn't vote for him, even if we can't tolerate what he stands for, he is nevertheless a product of the U.S. election system, the tactics that have been used, the policies we've adopted. As unpalatable as it may seem, we as U.S. citizens "own" him and are at least in some small way responsible for his election.
Well I'm now dumber than I was yesterday. Bang up.