thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,570
Now he's doing his daily gas-lighting and trying to justify crippling the W.H.O.
Not only that but you also have a significant number of people who didn't vote for Trump or Clinton.
A critical election where one of the options is a racist con-artist/failed business man, and millions of voters decided he wasn't a bad enough problem to stop, so they voted 3rd party, spoiled their ballot, or didn't vote at all. (They may not have voted FOR Trump, but they didn't do much to oppose him either.)
I find it hard to find fault in Hillary's campaign since Trump, the GOP, and Putin cheated to get Trump elected.
The fact that nearly half the voters in America chose Trump says something about our society, and it isn't pretty.
Our society isn't uniform by any means, but the fact that so many people were willing to vote for Donald Trump means there is something thoroughly rotten within American society.
(That doesn't mean I think everyone who voted for Trump is a bad person, but the fact that he could win the nomination says something pretty bad about us as a people.)
The fact that insecure, rigged, hacked elections were allowed to APPOINT Trump and there was virtually no response by the systems designed to protect us from such other than mere words says something worse.
Let's not go over the edge. Nobody's found any evidence or proven any claims that any elections were hacked or rigged. What's clear is that Putin manipulated social media to influence voter opinion, and Wikileaks' email releases influenced the campaign. It's also clear that the Clinton campaign wasn't adept enough to respond effectively.
The 2016 election was complex, but I continue to believe that part of the problem was the smug tone of Clinton's "I deserve to win, I'm sure to win" campaign. A certain percentage of people voted for Trump not because they wanted him to be President, but for the same reason others voted for third parties: They wanted to cast a protest vote against the "establishment," and believed they could do so without consequences. If Clinton had gone to Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania and said "You can't sit this out! I need every vote! I need your vote!" the outcome might have been different.
I find it hard to find fault in Hillary's campaign since Trump, the GOP, and Putin cheated to get Trump elected.
That's the bottom line. Clinton got three million more popular votes than Trump. Putin didn't create the Electoral College. We did that to ourselves.It concluded that while there was no evidence that any votes were changed in actual voting machines, “Russian cyberactors were in a position to delete or change voter data” in the Illinois voter database. The committee found no evidence that they did so.
It doesn't matter what her "tone" was (whatever that means). Trump was worse in pretty much every possible way. "I'd rather vote for this racist con-artist who is such a bad businessman that he bankrupted multiple casinos just because I don't like Hillary's tone" seems like a pretty dumb argument to make.The 2016 election was complex, but I continue to believe that part of the problem was the smug tone of Clinton's "I deserve to win, I'm sure to win" campaign.
Their "protest vote" should have gone to say "we protest racist con-artists", instead of just some vague "anti-establishment". But that's just me.A certain percentage of people voted for Trump not because they wanted him to be President, but for the same reason others voted for third parties: They wanted to cast a protest vote against the "establishment," and believed they could do so without consequences.
You are right... she should have gone to Michigan, etc. It was one of the things that happened that really was her mistake.If Clinton had gone to Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania and said "You can't sit this out! I need every vote! I need your vote!" the outcome might have been different.
Nationalism has always been a feature across Europe's political spectrum but there has been a recent boom in voter support for right-wing and populist parties. Link
How quickly right-wing populism has spread globally, or at least in the countries with democratic systems, is remarkable. When this decade began, hardly any of the parties and leaders that now run the world, or appear set to, were on anyone’s radar. Now these movements are spreading quickly. Among the world’s democracies, a growing number has embraced right-wing populism, and either have governments led by populist parties, or supported by them. Link
......
And what exactly does 'tone' mean in this context? Did she come right out and say "I deserve to be president"? Its an election.. the whole point of it is to show "I'm better than my opponent".
Anyone complaining about Hillary's "tone" as the reason they supported Trump is probably just trying to slap a fig-leaf on their stupidity/racism.
.....
If this was just happening in the U.S. I would agree. Only it's not just happening in the U.S. This is from the BBC:
It's not just the U.S. and Europe, either. Right wing populists groups have gained in Australia, Brazil, India, Japan, Israel, Pakistan and Thailand.
It doesn't matter what her "tone" was (whatever that means). Trump was worse in pretty much every possible way. "I'd rather vote for this racist con-artist who is such a bad businessman that he bankrupted multiple casinos just because I don't like Hillary's tone" seems like a pretty dumb argument to make.
And what exactly does 'tone' mean in this context? Did she come right out and say "I deserve to be president"? Its an election.. the whole point of it is to show "I'm better than my opponent".
Anyone complaining about Hillary's "tone" as the reason they supported Trump is probably just trying to slap a fig-leaf on their stupidity/racism.
Their "protest vote" should have gone to say "we protest racist con-artists", instead of just some vague "anti-establishment". But that's just me.
You are right... she should have gone to Michigan, etc. It was one of the things that happened that really was her mistake.
But unless they were living in a cave for the previous year, most voters were probably already acutely aware of the policies and personal qualities of both the candidates. Voters should have recognized how damaging Trump could have been even without a personal visit from Clinton.
Except we know they did.I don't know that Trump and the GOP cheated
What exactly do you expect her to do? Use a time-machine to send Cohen back in time to warn us about the illegal Stormy Daniels payments? Use a mind-control ray to change Putin's mind about interfering in American elections?but in any case Clinton wasn't adept enough to respond
I am sure there are people who thought "She'll win, don't need to vote for her". They were foolish. Which is one of the worries many people have about the American political system. Dumb, foolish, racist voters.That doesn't change my point that some people didn't vote for her because they were sure they didn't need to.
With the replacement of IG's with loyalists, I fear Trump is going to make a power play to outright steal elections along with much of the Covid funds.