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Where is the Common Ground?

Funny how "fringy" Sanders-style leftwingers like me are able to dialogue with Clintonista centrists fairly well, as well as with "never Trump" Republicans.

What do you think is going on there?

You have a mutual enemy that you think is more important than your mutual dislike of each other?

My personal view is that society's division into separate camps is more important than any of the issues we're all arguing about.
 
This was writte 2 days ago, so excuse my being late, but here we have fundamental DISagreement!

NO, not "nobody" is taking Trump's tweet seriously, nor are they MEANT to not be taken seriously. They are meant to be taken seriously by very large numbers of Americans, and tens of millions do take them seriously - agreed?

However, your post implies that Trump's tweets are, as a rule, not true, not fair, not good, or lack any other quality that frustrates their being taken seriously. I agree with you on that!

So why does the POTUS take valuable time out of his tight daily schedule to tweet stuff that sane, rational people oughtn't take seriously?
-> Because he consciously, with focus, seeks to activate the insane, irrational among Americans into his employ.

That cannot be a good thing, nor should it be ignored or downplayed. This is the very core, the stand-out characteristic of the Trump presidency: that it goes out if its way to seek, find and use the very WORST of America.

It's really simple: any acceptable President would not tweet day in day out things - hateful, petty, small, nasty things - that nobody ought to take seriously.

Well put, and I agree. For Trump it's a win-win. He gets to rile up and solidify his base while simultaneously trolling his opponents. I imagine he gets quite a bit of satisfaction from his tweets.
 
TWO Supreme Court justices. And counting.

Now my thought is that the best way to reach common ground is to come out and let the other side know that you think they are not intelligent.

Solid.
Any conservative president could have done that. That Congress and Senate cooperated was the deciding factor. Obama nominated a judge and his nomination was blocked because hew wasn't conservative.
 
I don't understand the difference between desperately wishing to be able to find a common ground on policy with conservatives, and "needing" to not be able to?

But you don't desperately wish to find common ground. That's the whole point. You desperately wish that they would change their minds to agree with you. But that isn't what finding common ground means. Your confusion on this distinction is precisely the problem.
 
But you don't desperately wish to find common ground. That's the whole point. You desperately wish that they would change their minds to agree with you. But that isn't what finding common ground means. Your confusion on this distinction is precisely the problem.

I'm willing to compromise.
 
Ziggurat, I understand that you are quite a bit to the right of me. But you don't come across as religious, so why is the Trump presidency good for you?

Are you in favour of reducing access to contraception and abortion? That is something that is likely from the Supreme Court, which I seem to understand is one of your considerations.

In regards to the Supreme court, yes, I think Trump is appointing much better judges than Clinton (or Sanders) would have. First off, while I'm not in favor out making abortion illegal, I also don't think abortion is the number one issue of concern regarding the supreme court. I think other issues are far more important. Second, access to contraception isn't under actual threat. In fact, it will probably to expand, with over-the-counter access to birth control pills likely in the future.

Trump's presidency is a mixed bag for me. The reduction in regulations is good for the economy, threats of trade war are not (but we'll see how that ultimately shakes out). I'm endlessly amused by the hypocrisy of people who complain about the rich getting tax cuts because of a general rate reduction while also bitching about the SALT deduction being reduced. His petty squabbles with certain European leaders is annoying, but I'm glad he's putting the screws on Iran. And so on.

Trump wouldn't be my first choice of president. But he won the election. And the attempt to change that by any means other than the next election are unhealthy.
 
First off, while I'm not in favor out making abortion illegal, I also don't think abortion is the number one issue of concern regarding the supreme court. I think other issues are far more important.

Such as?
 
A lot of us do. Obsessively, even.

Part of the problem is that little of the MSM from Fox to Maddow covers that sort of stuff, though. :(

I'm fine with this. If I want to know what Ben Jealous or Larry Hogan are discussing, I can read local papers, their web sites, their twitter accounts, and so forth. And I have no issue if Maddow wants to concentrate on one issue as a journalist - just as long as there are other journalists who look to other issues. That strikes me as good journalism in action.

And as much as many complain about the democrats, I still have no idea what any republican politician wants to do at the national level that's helpful to anyone who isn't rich.
 
I'm fine with this. If I want to know what Ben Jealous or Larry Hogan are discussing, I can read local papers, their web sites, their twitter accounts, and so forth. And I have no issue if Maddow wants to concentrate on one issue as a journalist - just as long as there are other journalists who look to other issues. That strikes me as good journalism in action.

And as much as many complain about the democrats, I still have no idea what any republican politician wants to do at the national level that's helpful to anyone who isn't rich.

The MSM doesn't report on policy and other important matters hardly at all. There are literally hundreds of articles/clips about Stormy Daniels for every story about the US-backed war/genocide in Yemen.

The important stuff is bad for ratings.
 
Re: empathy

We're past the point of lack of empathy by Trump and his minions and supporters. They view certain groups of people as sub-human. The child separation policy has been the worst example of this so far, and it certainly won't be the last.
 
The MSM doesn't report on policy and other important matters hardly at all. There are literally hundreds of articles/clips about Stormy Daniels for every story about the US-backed war/genocide in Yemen.

The important stuff is bad for ratings.

As much as i would like to, I don't blame the MSM as much as i do the public in general. They are only giving the public what it demands. They are reponding to ratings.

We're junkies, seeking out the news. Most people are oblivious.
 
In regards to the Supreme court, yes, I think Trump is appointing much better judges than Clinton (or Sanders) would have. First off, while I'm not in favor out making abortion illegal, I also don't think abortion is the number one issue of concern regarding the supreme court. I think other issues are far more important. Second, access to contraception isn't under actual threat. In fact, it will probably to expand, with over-the-counter access to birth control pills likely in the future.
Trump's presidency is a mixed bag for me. The reduction in regulations is good for the economy, threats of trade war are not (but we'll see how that ultimately shakes out). I'm endlessly amused by the hypocrisy of people who complain about the rich getting tax cuts because of a general rate reduction while also bitching about the SALT deduction being reduced. His petty squabbles with certain European leaders is annoying, but I'm glad he's putting the screws on Iran. And so on.

Trump wouldn't be my first choice of president. But he won the election. And the attempt to change that by any means other than the next election are unhealthy.



I don't know the specific details, but I'd argue that reducing the funding to Planned Parenthood and allowing employers to excuse birth control from health insurance, would suggest the opposite.

Aren't you concerned with Putin's obvious glee at Trump? And the response to Russian expansionism?

Or Trump's seeming disdain for the constitution whenever it constrains the power of the President?
 
As much as i would like to, I don't blame the MSM as much as i do the public in general. They are only giving the public what it demands. They are reponding to ratings.

We're junkies, seeking out the news. Most people are oblivious.

See, I think if CNN reported on stuff like this:

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...romoting-war-crimes-yemen-saudi-bombing-obama

https://www.axios.com/report-bomb-t...ade-3f52ec89-7422-41df-bcd0-160546abf90a.html

People would watch.

It's the the corporate sponsors who would disapprove.
 
I don't know the specific details, but I'd argue that reducing the funding to Planned Parenthood and allowing employers to excuse birth control from health insurance, would suggest the opposite.

Birth control isn't hard to get even without Planned Parenthood, and Planned Parenthood isn't about to go away even if government funding gets cut. And I suspect you might be talking about the Hobby Lobby case, but
1) Hobby Lobby provides birth control coverage. It's only a few forms of birth control that they don't want to cover. Employees can get these forms themselves easily enough.
2) The ruling doesn't apply to most employers.

Aren't you concerned with Putin's obvious glee at Trump? And the response to Russian expansionism?

I'm concerned about Russia, though I think Putin's glee is mostly intended to egg on Democrats. That's why I'm glad to see an expansion of US petroleum production, something Obama tried to hamstring. I'm also glad to see we're selling weapons to Ukraine, something Obama also refused to do. And I'm happy to see Poland buying a bunch of Patriot missiles from us, another deal which is upsetting the Russians.

Trump isn't acting like a friend of Russia, even if he sounds like it.

Or Trump's seeming disdain for the constitution whenever it constrains the power of the President?

I keep hearing this accusation, but it hasn't really panned out that way in practice. I see no more overreach from Trump than there was from Obama.
 
I didn't say it was useless, I said it was overrated. These are very different claims. And all you can offer in response is that straw man plus an appeal to emotion.



After your little rant about how I don't have any empathy and want to live in a poo-slinging society, this claim that it's just Republicans who can't accept a middle ground is more than a touch ironic.

Oh, and it's RINO, not RHINO.

Oh, I don't know. RHINO these days seems a little apropos. Republican Hitlerite in Name Only has a certain applicability given the racist and Fascistic leanings of the GOP.
 
When it comes to so much suffering and death in the US, and the policies advocated by the left vs the right, yes, I wish the rightwingers would agree with us that tens of thousands of people in America dying from lack of healthcare yearly (for example) is not okay and agree to go along with literally ANY of the policies which would alleviate it.

Or agree that having the highest level of child poverty in the developed world is not acceptable, and agree with any of the policies which would help alleviate it.

But instead, all we can get is that "Oh, that sucks, but there's no point in dwelling upon it because empathy is overrated and it's too bad there's nothing which can be done, because such is the nature of freedom" crap.

Well, both the highest level of poverty and the largest number of people in poverty are in the most left-wing state in the country -- California. So, the left certainly isn't going to solve they problem, being as how they are the problem. We must look elsewhere.
 
Well, both the highest level of poverty and the largest number of people in poverty are in the most left-wing state in the country -- California. So, the left certainly isn't going to solve they problem, being as how they are the problem. We must look elsewhere.

That simple correlation really doesn't imply what you think it implies. The social sciences are extremely complex and trying to tease out causative influences is going to take more than "both the highest level of poverty and the largest number of people in poverty are in the most left-wing state in the country".

To take that fact and conclude that the left is the problem is very poor reasoning. There may be other reasons that led you to that conclusion, but if so you ought to share them with the rest of us.
 

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