Question for Trump supporters

Vote Trump. He won't start a nuclear war even if he threatens one.

Vote Trump. He won't be able to get his crazy ideas past Congress.


Vote Trump. We can get rid of him if he tries to do something crazy.

Vote Trump. He doesn't really mean what he says.

Truly compelling stuff.
 
Can you possibly go for one entire post without trying to change the subject to Hillary?

This is my 19th post in the thread. It is only the 5th time that I have mentioned Hillary. So I guess the answer to your question is "yes."

I don't like her or support her either, so any partisanship you're seeing is entirely due to your own blinders.

I see. How about the irrationality I see in your insinuation that I am obsessed with Hillary and derailing the thread to discuss her when, in fact, I have not done so? Is that also due to my own blinders?

The subject is Trump's policies, and tangentially whether he is of sound enough mind to sustain and pursue those policies, and when or if he falls off the deep end, how deep in it will we find ourselves, exactly, and if all that should render him unfit for office.

Well the subject is also, tangentially, how his policies and temperament compare and contrast with Hillary's. That's a consequence of the race essentially being between those two candidates. For example, it wouldn't make much sense for me to say, "well, I like Trump's policy of making job growth his number one priority" if in fact Hillary's policy is also to make job growth her number one priority.

If you want my opinion regarding Hillary, here you go: she will not nuke Mexico. Not "gonna keep it on the table," not "I would be stunned beyond belief," not "well they probably won't go through with the order." She will not nuke Mexico. Do you know how I know? Because despite her faults, she is sane and rational. You do not need to ask a sane and rational person if they might potentially nuke a random country. They won't. It is not a subject that should need discussing, the way we apparently need to discuss it with Trump.

We only need to discuss it because Hillary supporters are trying to make an issue out of it, just as LBJ supporters did against Goldwater in 1964. Hillary supporters are also trying to make an issue out of Trump being a Manchurian candidate for Russia, which I think is ludicrous. And Trump supporters are trying to make an issue out of Hillary's health. One can generate discussion based on nothing pretty easily. The fact that a discussion exists is not, by itself, particularly compelling as far as evidence goes.
 
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His STATED POLICIES show a desire to do great harm to a great number of people. He IS an existential danger to humanity. He doesn't even try to hide it.

The harm you are talking about is enforcing our laws. Thanks for giving me a huge laugh.

I also seriously doubt you're in a position to be referring to Sunmaster as "junior".
 
Reminding the liberals hiding under their desks, our nuclear arms have always been a deterrent. It is fun seeing you under the desk though. When trump gets elected it will be good to have adults in charge again.
 
This is my 19th post in the thread. It is only the 5th time that I have mentioned Hillary. So I guess the answer to your question is "yes."
Yet you seem intent on making up the difference. Did I trigger you or something?

We only need to discuss it because Hillary supporters are trying to make an issue out of it,
No, it's worth discussing because Trump has actually said:
Matthews: "Can you tell the Middle East we'll never use nuclear weapons?"

Trump: "I would never say that, I would never take my cards off the table."

Matthews: "What about Europe?"

Trump: "I am not taking cards off the table. I'm not going to use nukes, but I'm not taking any cards off the table."
Coupled with reports that he keeps asking why he can't use nukes, and it's a real problem.

Hillary supporters are also trying to make an issue out of Trump being a Manchurian candidate for Russia, which I think is ludicrous.
His previous campaign manager resigned among allegations that he was a Russian stooge. Trump has praised Putin, Putin has praised Trump, and Trump personally owes money to Russia (though to be fair, he owes more to China). I don't think he's a Russian patsy, but that's clearly a conflict of interest which needs to be addressed.

And Trump supporters are trying to make an issue out of Hillary's health. One can generate discussion based on nothing pretty easily. The fact that a discussion exists is not, by itself, particularly compelling as far as evidence goes.
Agreed. But the fact that Trump's allegations against Clinton are clearly baseless doesn't mean allegations against Trump are equally so.
 
<snip>

No, it's worth discussing because Trump has actually said:

I would have said the same thing. It's a perfectly reasonable and appropriate thing to say. Why take your cards off the table?

Coupled with reports that he keeps asking why he can't use nukes, and it's a real problem.

The specific words matter. Until I see them, I can't say one way or the other if it indicates a profound understanding of nuclear strategy. For now, it's triple hearsay from my point of view and has negligible value as evidence. It's certainly swamped by other evidence that he seems to value his life, his wife, the lives of his children and grandchildren, and that he cares about his reputation and legacy. That is not the kind of person who is a risk to go off-tilt and start nuclear wars.

His previous campaign manager resigned among allegations that he was a Russian stooge. Trump has praised Putin, Putin has praised Trump, and Trump personally owes money to Russia (though to be fair, he owes more to China). I don't think he's a Russian patsy, but that's clearly a conflict of interest which needs to be addressed.

He personally owes money to Russia? I doubt that highly. Do you mean to a Russian bank, or a Russian investment fund? I doubt even that's true, but so what? Owing a debt to financial institution is meaningless. The obligations are contractual. The creditor has no leverage unless the debtor is in trouble. Presumably, if Trump becomes President, he won't have anything to do with his company, so I can't see there being a conflict there.

Agreed. But the fact that Trump's allegations against Clinton are clearly baseless doesn't mean allegations against Trump are equally so.

Well, I've yet to see any evidence that is stronger than the evidence with respect to Clinton's declining health. She's had three blood clots since 1998, and she has hypothyroidism. Also, she doesn't seem to be taking the most advanced medicines for her health problems.
 
That's not a coup. I'm talking about following the rules. I only pointed out the fact (which should be obvious, but sometimes isn't) that the enforcement of rules ultimately depends on how the guys with guns interpret them.
The rules say the 25th amendment applies only when "the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office".

I cited the rule in the Constitution that allows a majority of the Cabinet to replace the President with the Vice-President. Just because you don't like that rule, or think it should only be used in cases where the President is still alive but unconscious, doesn't mean that it isn't a rule that I and the Cabinet and the guys with guns will follow and interpret differently than you do.
In other words, your alleged safeguard depends upon Trump's vice-president (presumably Mike Pence) and a majority of Trump's cabinet having so little regard for the US Constitution (as amended) that they would invoke section 4 of the 25th amendment even when the plain language of that amendment does not apply. You also assume "the guys with guns" would support this hypothetical abrogation of the US Constitution.

For the sake of argument, let's assume you're right about Mike Pence's disregard for the US Constitution, and let's assume a majority of Trump's cabinet and "the guys with guns" would go along with this unconstitutional seizure of power you prefer we not refer to as a "coup".

Would that lawless interpretation of the 25th amendment prevent Seismosaurus's scenario?

From what I've read, the President would need to have his order confirmed by the Secretary of Defence - a person who would be a Trump appointee. If the SecDef refuses, the President can fire him and his Deputy assumes the position. If he refuses to confirm the order Trump could repeat the process until he finds a SecDef willing to confirm the order.

Secretary of Defense is a cabinet position, and therefore anybody he nominates needs to be confirmed by the Senate.
On 20 October 1973, when Seismosaurus's scenario actually played out with a different member of a different president's cabinet, the 25th amendment did not prevent President Richard Nixon from firing that member of his cabinet, firing that cabinet member's deputy, and swearing in a new acting member of the cabinet who would do Nixon's bidding.

I refer you to the 25th Amendment, Section 4. It was actually used to remove President David Palmer from office during Season 2 of 24.
Perhaps you were not aware that the television show 24 was fiction.

What happened on 20 October 1973 was real. Nixon's vice-president and the other members of his cabinet were not even aware of what was happening until after Robert Bork was sworn in as an acting member of the cabinet and had done the sort of deed you claim to believe would be impossible given the requirement for Senate confirmation of cabinet members and safeguards provided by the 25th amendment.

I offered you an out by suggesting you hadn't actually read the constitutional amendment you cited.

Well, I had read it, and I did know that. I also know that such words are as meaningless as the words "high crimes and misdemeanors" in the part of the Constitution governing impeachment. Impeachment is a political act, and is therefore subjective. So is invocation of Section 4 of the 25th Amendment. All that matters in the end is what the guys with guns, i.e. the Secret Service, in the most immediate case, will do.
In other words, your alleged safeguard depends upon the willingness of Trump's vice president and his cabinet to disregard the plain language of the 25th amendment to the US Constitution, the willingness of "the guys with guns" to go along with that, and also depends upon those people becoming aware of what was happening in time to carry out what amounts to an unconstitutional coup before any lasting damage could be done.

Based on the historical events of 20 October 1973, we know a president can implement Seismosaurus's scenario before his vice president and principled cabinet members would have time to "transmit to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office" as required by the 25th amendment.

Although I seldom bother to correct sunmaster14's mistakes, I was amused by his apparent ignorance of the fact that the scenario whose possibility he was denying had already happened. I'd like to say I had no idea he would compound his error by citing an irrelevant amendment to the US Constitution, but I can't say I was entirely surprised by that either.

I like the gratuitous swipe at me. It doesn't really fit in with the spirit of this thread, but I guess it's kind of par for the course for liberals here.
Our disagreement here is not a matter of liberal versus conservative. It's a matter of US law and history versus television fiction (24) and your apparent belief that Trump's vice president and a majority of his cabinet would be sure to learn of Trump's shenanigans in time to convince "guys with guns" to support an unconstitutional seizure of power.

To be fair, I am quite willing to believe your evident faith in Mike Pence's readiness to disregard the US Constitution and its amendments is one of the stronger reasons you can give for supporting Donald Trump in this election.
 
I would have said the same thing. It's a perfectly reasonable and appropriate thing to say. Why take your cards off the table?
Because sane and rational people do not have that card on the table in the first place. You don't nuke countries. The fact that we're even having this discussion says a lot more than the discussion itself possibly could. Kinda like the coup thing.

Trump 2016: do we really need to talk about that? Yeah, okay, I guess we do.

Here's the video. Watch Chris Matthews's incredulous expression. That is the appropriate level of incredulity.
http://www.msnbc.com/hardball/watch/donald-trump-won-t-take-nukes-off-the-table-655471171934

Well, I've yet to see any evidence that is stronger than the evidence with respect to Clinton's declining health. She's had three blood clots since 1998, and she has hypothyroidism. Also, she doesn't seem to be taking the most advanced medicines for her health problems.
You just said the accusation was "based on nothing." In your last post. Yet you know her medical history down to having an opinion of the drugs she's on? Okay, first off, creepy, but also, is there anything you won't compromise to come to the momentary defense of your party's chosen candidate?
 
The harm you are talking about is enforcing our laws. Thanks for giving me a huge laugh.

I also seriously doubt you're in a position to be referring to Sunmaster as "junior".

Sorry kiddo, I prefer my enforcement to not include genocide or a humanitarian crisis.

Those that enjoy that sort of thing should jump off the nearest tall structure.
 
Reminding the liberals hiding under their desks, our nuclear arms have always been a deterrent. It is fun seeing you under the desk though. When trump gets elected it will be good to have adults in charge again.

We're Not the ones scared of everything, sparky.
 
Would that lawless interpretation of the 25th amendment prevent Seismosaurus's scenario?

I believe that the facts are worse, because Seismosaurus is just wrong. No one has to sign off on the nuclear weapons order but the president himself. There is no need for the Secretary of Defense to approve the order.
 
While I cannot answer the question for myself since I am not a Trump supporter, a coworker/drinking buddy of mine who enthusiastically supports Trump gave a reason that was neither incoherent nor racist. He supports Trump's plan to limit the immigration of Muslims, especially Muslim refugees. He's not indifferent to the plight of the refugees, he just fears that they could include ISIS infiltrators that could be difficult to detect in any vetting process. He also worries that the genuine refugees, many of them being angry young males whose whole lives have just been turned upside-down, could be ripe prospects for radicalization after they arrive.
 
While I cannot answer the question for myself since I am not a Trump supporter, a coworker/drinking buddy of mine who enthusiastically supports Trump gave a reason that was neither incoherent nor racist. He supports Trump's plan to limit the immigration of Muslims, especially Muslim refugees. He's not indifferent to the plight of the refugees, he just fears that they could include ISIS infiltrators that could be difficult to detect in any vetting process. He also worries that the genuine refugees, many of them being angry young males whose whole lives have just been turned upside-down, could be ripe prospects for radicalization after they arrive.


I would add that it's odd that the majority are young males. Seems a bit strange and would get any thinking persons attention.
 
<snip repetitious argument that I have already rebutted>

On 20 October 1973, when Seismosaurus's scenario actually played out with a different member of a different president's cabinet, the 25th amendment did not prevent President Richard Nixon from firing that member of his cabinet, firing that cabinet member's deputy, and swearing in a new acting member of the cabinet who would do Nixon's bidding.

Why are you comparing asking an attorney general to fire a special prosecutor to launching nuclear weapons? The analogy is completely absurd. Nobody really cared enough to intervene with Nixon's firing of his attorney general because it simply wasn't that big a deal. I've already explained this, but you seem very resistant to counterarguments.

Perhaps you were not aware that the television show 24 was fiction.

If I send you $5, will you purchase a sense of humor? Yes, 24 is fiction. It does, however, illustrate how the 25th Amendment might be invoked. It can happen very quickly, and I have no doubt that a President going half-cocked and seriously considering first use of nuclear weapons would have everybody in the Cabinet paying close attention.

<snip superfluous and redundant repetition>

I offered you an out by suggesting you hadn't actually read the constitutional amendment you cited.

I don't need an out. I certainly don't need to be provided one by someone who can't think up anything new to say but keeps repeating the same weak argument.

<snip repetitive and superfluous redundancy>

Our disagreement here is not a matter of liberal versus conservative. It's a matter of US law and history versus television fiction (24) and your apparent belief that Trump's vice president and a majority of his cabinet would be sure to learn of Trump's shenanigans in time to convince "guys with guns" to support an unconstitutional seizure of power.

It is a matter of liberal versus conservative because I think if the shoe were on the other foot, you would think worries about a Democratic candidate being too risky to have control of the "button" would be silly.

To be fair, I am quite willing to believe your evident faith in Mike Pence's readiness to disregard the US Constitution and its amendments is one of the stronger reasons you can give for supporting Donald Trump in this election.

That's being fair? I'd say it was rather uncivil, but I'm not sure you know what civility is.
 
Because sane and rational people do not have that card on the table in the first place. You don't nuke countries.

The context you refer to is nuking ISIS. Why say anything on the matter? Would you and Chris Matthews have gotten all up-in-arms if Trump had simply said "No comment." Or, "I'm not going to talk about that." It's really all equivalent.

The fact that we're even having this discussion says a lot more than the discussion itself possibly could. Kinda like the coup thing.

No it doesn't. It's manufactured, like a lot of controversies that spring out of Democratic partisans (read journalists) interviewing Republican candidates. Chris Matthews was asking off-the-wall "gotcha" questions to stir up controversy. Like when Stephanopoulos asked Mitt Romney a question about whether states have the Constitutional right to ban contraception.

Trump 2016: do we really need to talk about that? Yeah, okay, I guess we do.

Here's the video. Watch Chris Matthews's incredulous expression. That is the appropriate level of incredulity.
http://www.msnbc.com/hardball/watch/donald-trump-won-t-take-nukes-off-the-table-655471171934

Nope. I think Trump's answer was perfectly fine.

You just said the accusation was "based on nothing." In your last post. Yet you know her medical history down to having an opinion of the drugs she's on? Okay, first off, creepy, but also, is there anything you won't compromise to come to the momentary defense of your party's chosen candidate?

Why creepy? I read Drew Pinsky's analysis of her medical records, checked up with Google, and found it to be reasonable. I only said what he did.
 

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