Al Franken should totally run.
I'm glad we agree. I respect Al tremendously.
If he were running against a bragging, pussy-grabbing john, the sexual misconduct allegations against Franken would seem to be negligible in comparison.
Al Franken should totally run.
I'm glad we agree. I respect Al tremendously.
To be fair, that was then, and this is now.... two years is an age in politics.
During the lead up to the 2016, a fair portion of the country (almost half) thought he might end up being good President. They hoped he might grow into the job. Now, all hope of that is lost.
According to the latest jobs data, the steadily declining unemployment rate is down to just 3.8%. But that sunny statistic belies a deeper infirmity in the labor market, Snider argues on his blog. Namely, working-age Americans have been giving up on finding jobs.
Americans need to stop obsessing over the unemployment rate (Quartz, June 7, 2018)
And the US unemployment rate is about 3.7%, the lowest rate since 1969.
And the US unemployment rate is about 3.7%, the lowest rate since 1969.
And the US unemployment rate is about 3.7%, the lowest rate since 1969.
And the US unemployment rate is about 3.7%, the lowest rate since 1969.
LinkBack in June 2015, he made this remark about the official unemployment rate (which was then 5.5%): “Our labor participation rate was the worst since 1978…. Our real unemployment is anywhere from 18 to 20%. Don’t believe the 5.6. Don’t believe it. That’s right. A lot of people out there can’t get jobs.” And in May 2016: ”You hear a 5% unemployment rate. It’s such a phony number. That number was put in for presidents and for politicians so that they look good to the people.” A month after his victory in the US presidential elections, he was still sticking to his guns: “The unemployment number, as you know, is totally fiction.”
If he were running against a bragging, pussy-grabbing john, the sexual misconduct allegations against Franken would seem to be negligible in comparison.
I love the idea of people keeping things in proper perspective, but don't think that is how it actually works in practice.
More like this:
Person A: Trump lied about A, B, C . . . X, Y, Z.
[A-Z are consequential matters of personal ethics or public policy.]
Person B: Oh yeah, well, Elizabeth Warren (sort of) lied about being Cherokee in a book of recipes.
I love the idea of people keeping things in proper perspective, but don't think that is how it actually works in practice.
More like this:
Person A: Trump lied about A, B, C . . . X, Y, Z.
[A-Z are consequential matters of personal ethics or public policy.]
Person B: Oh yeah, well, Elizabeth Warren (sort of) lied about being Cherokee in a book of recipes.
I think in this thread we finally got to the point where no one was seriously claiming that they could point to a single place where Warren lied, and yet they hated her for her dishonesty.
One was citing her usage of the common definition of elope as evidence for her dishonesty.
Yeah, proper perspective is lacking.
Or you could surmise that most if not all Liberal educators at Harvard tend to list things about themselves that may not be exactly correct. Whether they are from Kenya or a Native American etc.....God knows what other lies are currently floating about in various campus registers elsewhere. Funny how a class of educated people think they can call into existence whatever makes them look good to the cause and nobody is supposed to question it.......Almost like they consider themselves entitled Royalty or something....I'm certain there's a name for that.
Chris B.
Your claim is interesting, as a Brit who hasn't paid too much attention to internal politics around Harvard personnel, I am unfamiliar with the examples to which you are referring.
Can you please provide me with some more details?
I think in this thread we finally got to the point where no one was seriously claiming that they could point to a single place where Warren lied, and yet they hated her for her dishonesty.
One was citing her usage of the common definition of elope as evidence for her dishonesty.
Yeah, proper perspective is lacking.
Your claim is interesting, as a Brit who hasn't paid too much attention to internal politics around Harvard personnel, I am unfamiliar with the examples to which you are referring.Or you could surmise that most if not all Liberal educators at Harvard tend to list things about themselves that may not be exactly correct. Whether they are from Kenya or a Native American etc.....God knows what other lies are currently floating about in various campus registers elsewhere. Funny how a class of educated people think they can call into existence whatever makes them look good to the cause and nobody is supposed to question it.......Almost like they consider themselves entitled Royalty or something....I'm certain there's a name for that.
Chris B.
Can you please provide me with some more details?
He is pedantically correct, anyway:
surmise
verb
1. suppose that something is true without having evidence to confirm it.