Noted. I will try not to underestimate the stupidity of your mother.
More seriously, does this motherly advice mean there's a risk you're underestimating the stupidity of the Democrats who are pushing for impeachment?
"Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that."
- George Carlin
It takes a special kind of stupid to argue that impeachment lies outside the system of checks and balances put in place by The Constitution of the United States, and it takes a doubly special variety of stupid to argue that one possible result of impeachment, namely conviction in the US Senate, should count as improper overturning of an election in a way that runs counter to the processes countenanced by constitutional law.
I need to qualify that a bit, however. It is certainly true that some few individuals may possess sufficient natural stupidity of the ordinary kind to fall for the stupid hypothetical arguments I described within the previous paragraph. Having seen the Kimmel show interviews cited elsewhere, possibly within this very thread, I must admit that possibility.
In most cases, however, the stupid (but hypothetical!) arguments outlined above are argued not by the naturally stupid, but by individuals who have more or less consciously donned an extraordinary form of stupidity. That special form of stupidity, which I will call willful stupidity, can far exceed the natural limits of ordinary stupidity. A degree of natural stupidity that would lead one to make the (hypothetical!) arguments outlined above would be so disabling that persons who possess those special abilities would not be able to post to Internet fora, and we would know of that degree of natural stupidity only through televised interviews and the Darwin awards.
This forum prohibits insulting individual members directly, but people frequently get around this limitation by simply insulting large groups to which other members belong. This may keep posts within the membership agreement, but the fact that it's still insulting to those members remains.
Throughout the rest of this post, I will explain why none of the above can or should be construed as insulting members of this forum. In particular, I will explain how the hypothetical arguments I characterized as stupid are quite different from actual arguments made by one of my fellow contributors to this thread.
Opposing the president within the framework of checks and balances that comprises our system of government is not overturning an election. Removing an elected official from office is overturning an election. That's my logic. By this logic, removing the president from office is overturning the election.
I have highlighted the most important word of that excerpt. Let's note that, if we adopt the usual meaning of the word "logic", that excerpt implies that impeachment followed by conviction cannot be construed as "removing an elected official from office" or as "removing the president from office":
- "Removing an elected official from office is overturning an election."
- "Opposing the president within the framework of checks and balances that comprises our system of government is not overturning an election."
- Impeachment and conviction clearly lies within the framework of checks and balances that are part of our system of government.
- Therefore opposing the president via impeachment and conviction is not overturning an election.
- Therefore (according to the first quotation in this list) opposing the president via impeachment cannot be construed as overturning an election or removing an elected official from office.
That reasoning, however, is justified only by the ordinary usage of the word "logic". The person who used the word "logic" in the quoted excerpt subsequently told us he or she was not using the word "logic" to mean anything that approximates the normal usage of that word:
Your logic is not my logic. The logic Joe was critiquing was also not my logic. I just want to make sure we're clear on those two points.
Consistent reasoning from axioms is not an error. The only error TM is arguing is that I've chosen the wrong axioms. This isn't actually an error.
In a subsequent post,
theprestige appeared to clarify that he was using the word "axioms" as a synonym for "beliefs" or "terminology" (depending on which of his/her posts you choose to believe).
Furthermore,
theprestige and
Ziggurat have explained to us that they are just using different definitions for words such as "logic":
Oh, FFS. This isn't even an issue of logic or reality. It's really an issue of definitions.
The axiom is a definition. It's terminology.
It's pointless to say he's wrong, because he isn't. He's just using a different definition than you.
No. I'm the one who's saying it's about definitions not facts. You object to his definition because of the framing that his definition creates. And that's a legitimate reason to object to it. But that doesn't make it a dispute about facts.
Try not to get bogged down in pointless bickering about terminology.
So none of that involved any kind of dispute about facts, only pointless bickering about terminology. The pointlessness was obvious, I think, but I myself did not understand that the argument being made was unrelated to facts until I saw the clarifications offered later by
theprestige and
Ziggurat.
The constitution specifically provides for impeachment. You will have to take up your argument with the constitution.
I have no argument with the constitution. Quite the opposite. If you read on, you'll come to the post where I make this clear to someone else who had a similar misunderstanding.
But you'll have to read back, to find my actual argument. You already overshot it.
And so, having read the transcript so to speak, it has become clear that
theprestige's argument was "perfect" once you understand that he or she is using his or her idiosyncratic terminology instead of the meanings customarily attached to words such as "logic".