thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,578
https://americanindependent.com/new...-record-democrats-donald-trump-2020-election/
The democratic base is energized.
The democratic base is energized.
Circumstances beyond a superior lifeguard's control - not the fault of the lifeguard - could prevent a superior lifeguard from saving a person.If she tries her best every time and still doesn't succeed it in ever saving a drowning person, at a certain point you just stop paying her to be a lifeguard, fault or no fault, good intentions or bad.
From the link:https://americanindependent.com/new...-record-democrats-donald-trump-2020-election/
The democratic base is energized.
Trump also claimed 40,000 to 50,000 had shown up to support him, though the venue capacity was less than 12,000 people.
And right now I don't care about anything that isn't a practical difference.
However, that doesn't necessarily mean the impeachment was a mistake, for a couple of reasons:
- It may have caused Trump supporters to rally around the racist, but it also may help energize Democrats as well. (Many democrats also saw an increase in fundraising during the impeachment proceedings)
- Its hard to know how the alternative might have gone. Ok, so Trump's approval ratings ticked up by a little bit. If they didn't impeach, it may still have gone up. Or it may have stayed the same.
- It may have a secondary benefit on some of the congressional races. Senators like Collins (who was already dealing with low approval ratings) now has the stigma of her "Trump learned a lesson. He didn't? My Mistake". This may play a part in her 2020 senate race.
If I may correct your analogy, since a lifeguard who can't swim is pretty silly, he tries his best to reach you but the tide takes you too far and he can't reach you before you drown. That's Nancy Pelosi.
Would you not rather have the one who tried, just in case they succeed?
If Susan Collins is a weakling so is Nancy Pelosi. They've both had the same actual level of effect on anything Trump has done and the difference between Collin's 'Pretend I want to stop him even though I know in the end I don't" and Pelosi' "Pretend I can stop him even though I know in the end I can't" is meaningless on any practical level.
Someone once referred to Susan Collins as someone who always has to look at the menu for a half hour before always deciding to eat what Mitch McConnell is having. Nancy Pelosi is someone who looks at the menu, knows immediately what she wants, orders it, but realizes after the fact that Mitch McConnell already ordered for the whole table and she still has to eat it. But sometime she can sarcastically clap at him.
Mitch McConnell is still picking both women's meals in both metaphors. The only difference is how much they don't like it and Mitch McConnell don't care.
I'd rather have the one who tried. But why does removing me from the water require one hundred politicians to take a vote?
"RNC indicated they knew timing of upcoming WIKI releases"...pg 23.
"Sessions: Hopefully we can get the emails...Don Jr. had more contacts with Russian types..." pg 21
"Gates said, based on prior business dealings, Kushner had the best China contacts..." pg 18
It isn't right to hold it against people when they don't use a power they don't have; it is right to hold it against people when they don't use a power they do have.
And because it will come up, there are more kinds of weakness than one. Pelosi was not strong enough politically to hold Trump to more account (she's not 'weak' there by any reasonable metric), where Collins is weak personally, lacking the courage to do what is obviously morally and ethically right while also being the best thing for the country and her constituents.
Questioning Barr's 'credibility', federal judge requests unredacted Mueller Report
The Department of Justice has been ordered to turn over an unredacted copy of the Mueller report by 30 March, so a judge can assess what can be further released publicly.
The ruling of accuses the attorney general,*William Barr, of misrepresenting the findings of the report before handing it over to Congress.
The court decision is the result of a BuzzFeed News lawsuit seeling to un-redact the report, which details special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential elections.
Being an analogy to politicians, I think the silliness of a lifeguard who can't swim actually works well here. Whether you think it applies to Pelosi is a separate issue.If I may correct your analogy, since a lifeguard who can't swim is pretty silly, he tries his best to reach you but the tide takes you too far and he can't reach you before you drown. That's Nancy Pelosi.
Would you not rather have the one who tried, just in case they succeed?
I have a great idea, release it near the end of Oct.