Swammerdami
Squadron Leader
I honestly have no idea what you're talking about. How does any of that follow from the post you're responding to?
Where do I start?? Do you think zero equals sixty-five?

I honestly have no idea what you're talking about. How does any of that follow from the post you're responding to?
Well, no. Nor did I say as such.I honestly have no idea what you're talking about. How does any of that follow from the post you're responding to?
Where do I start?? Do you think zero equals sixty-five?
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Hitler? Mahatma Gandhi? What the F**k's the difference?
Well, no. Nor did I say as such.Where do I start?? Do you think zero equals sixty-five?
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I completely believe it. It's exactly the kind of clueless middle management horseshit I would expect from the Trump maladministration.I do not believe this ridiculous excuse Hegpeth has given for the Tuesday meeting of the top brass. I think it is just a cover story and that the real reasons for this meeting are more ominous.
in 1876 James Russell Lowel said:What fills me with doubt and dismay is the degradation of the moral tone. Is it or is it not a result of Democracy? Is ours a 'government of the people by the people for the people,' or a Kakistocracy rather, for the benefit of knaves at the cost of fools?
I do not believe this ridiculous excuse Hegpeth has given for the Tuesday meeting of the top brass. I think it is just a cover story and that the real reasons for this meeting are more ominous. We will soon see.
President Trump is alleging "triple sabotage" of his speech at the U.N. General Assembly, demanding an investigation into back-to-back mishaps with an escalator, a teleprompter and a sound system — for which the U.N. is at least partially blaming the White House.
"A REAL DISGRACE took place at the United Nations yesterday — Not one, not two, but three very sinister events!" Trump wrote in a Wednesday Truth Social post. "This wasn't a coincidence, this was triple sabotage at the UN. They ought to be ashamed of themselves … No wonder the United Nations hasn't been able to do the job that they were put in existence to do."
Trump visited the U.N.'s headquarters in New York City on Tuesday to speak to a room of world leaders. The trouble began pretty much the moment he stepped on the escalator, just behind first lady Melania Trump.
The escalator stopped abruptly mere seconds into their ride, leaving the couple briefly stranded. Video of the incident, which some are calling "Escalatorgate," shows them walking up the rest of the stairs while holding onto the handrails.
A short while later, as Trump took the podium to begin his remarks, he observed that his teleprompter wasn't working. He said he didn't mind, adding that "I can only say that whoever's operating this teleprompter is in big trouble," which drew laughs from the crowd.
The comparison to France gives some reason for us to be hopeful. Aren't we due some Thermidorian response to Trump's excesses, some sort of backlash from the people? As happened in, France in response to the Terror? A rejection of that excess?Is there any precedent for today's U.S. government? France during the Reign of Terror qualifies, but what else? Even Hitler didn't surround himself with the very stupidest drunks and crooks he could find the way Trump has done. And of course Hitler was a vigorous and intelligent man who had deep "moral" motives compared with the doddering and narcissistic brat infesting our Oval Office.
I suppose the guiding political "philosophy" of the MAGA movement can be described as a hybrid of kleptocracy, idiocracy, and demonocracy, but the single word kakistocracy may sum up our new form of government, at least using Wikipedia's definition:
Kakistocracy is government by the worst, least qualified, or most unscrupulous people.
in 1876 James Russell Lowel said:What fills me with doubt and dismay is the degradation of the moral tone. Is it or is it not a result of Democracy? Is ours a 'government of the people by the people for the people,' or a Kakistocracy rather, for the benefit of knaves at the cost of fools?
I do not believe this ridiculous excuse Hegpeth has given for the Tuesday meeting of the top brass. I think it is just a cover story and that the real reasons for this meeting are more ominous. We will soon see.
Hegseth may trot out a new arm salute "Hail to Trump the Beloved" and fire all the generals whose arm extension doesn't pass muster. It won't be quite this blatant, but something along this line won't surprise me.
If you actually read my posts before responding to them, you'd already know that I fervently oppose Trump and his fascist project. But the idea that all strategies of countering fascism are equally good or equally effective is wrong. Weakening democratic institutions in order to gain an edge on Trump may advance a single short-term interest, but the long-term cost is serious, and ultimately makes us more vulnerable for a slip into fascist government, and indeed will be give a direct benefit to Trump himself in the 2028 "election" if he needs it. Trump is not the first would-be-dictator to occupy the White House, and he will not be the last. Giving up rights we cannot easily win back just to briefly inconvenience him is not a good trade. Trump is not actually a great leader, but he is a good hype man, and excels at provoking opponents into rash or stupid actions that ultimately benefit his faction and his investors. If you wish to be his enemy, you need to have a backbone, and notice when you're being played. If this action is, as you say, strategically useless, then it is not worth the collective cost.Hitler? Mahatma Gandhi? What the F**k's the difference?
Newsome's proposed gerrrymandering may be strategically useless but I applaud all opposition to fascism.
For Brigid's sake, Swammerdammi. Read before posting. I have never, not in my entire posting career, and certainly not anywhere in this thread said anything remotely supportive of fascism, nor do I oppose anti-fascism. You're the one trying to push me to give up on established law because a powerful leader and his $27 million advertising blitz say it's the right thing to do. Sound familiar? Ever read a history book? The anti-fascists aren't generally then ones saying, "let's set democracy aside while we deal with this Temporary Emergency that never seems to end".At this point the "same-same" mentality when comparing the Trumpists destroying American democracy with those opposing the fascist take-over shows complete ignorance of history, and total lack of common-sense.
Gandhi had better hair, and never committed genocide directly. Are you being fucking serious, here?@Politesse : Do you even see a difference between Hitler and Gandhi?
You're giving me a word salad of bullshit made up probabilities, Hitler, and Ghandi that have nothing to do with the topic at hand, and you're complaining that I'm babbling? Your posts don't even follow themselves logically, and they certainly don't logically follow mine. If you want to elevate the tenor of the argument, how about addressing any of the actual, tangible arguments that I made?So your intent is a word-by-word babbling of useless incomplete sentences posing as surrejoinders and sur-surrejoinders, ad infinitum?
Dr. Donald Trump gives advice.
Remember, nothing bad can happen, it can only good happen.
If you actually read my posts before responding to them,Newsome's proposed gerrrymandering may be strategically useless but I applaud all opposition to fascism.
you'd already know that I fervently oppose Trump and his fascist project.
But the idea that all strategies of countering fascism are equally good or equally effective is wrong. Weakening democratic institutions in order to gain an edge on Trump may advance a single short-term interest, but the long-term cost is serious, and ultimately makes us more vulnerable for a slip into fascist government, and indeed will be give a direct benefit to Trump himself in the 2028 "election" if he needs it.
Trump is not the first would-be-dictator to occupy the White House, and he will not be the last.
And I continue to maintain that. All of the reasons they cite as justification now - it's an emergency, we need the power, Trump is a unique evil, Texas started it but we have to finish it, it's temporary until we win back all the branches of government someday, etc - will be just as true in 2030 as they are now, if not more so. They will extend the "temporary" law and make it effectively a permanent law. Which, because the law words things so anemically, probably won't even need another ballot proposition to accomplish.The Proposition explicitly calls for the Commission to resume its normal duties in 2031. But you claimed that the chance that the Democrats would follow their own law and do this was ZERO! (Will you need a cite that that is what you wrote?)
Of those who actually held the office, Roosevelt and Nixon have come the closest to otherthrowing or simply ignoring the democratic process. The latter more so, the more I learn about the Nixon presidency, the more I feel that the largely coincidental scandal and impeachment preserved our Constitutional government more effectively than any Supreme Court case of the same era. It's harder to assess some of the other earlier close calls, because our Constitutional safeguards were much stronger and the White House much more limited before the World Wars. Trump's hero Andrew Jackson surely would have ruled this country as an autocrat, but the idea would have been risible at the time.Trump is not the first would-be-dictator to occupy the White House, and he will not be the last.
Interesting. What prior President was comparable?
I do not agree that the efficacy of a strategy should be considered irrelevant to morality. But if we're solely talking morality, I also see gerrymandering as a moral wrong in and of itself. I was proud when California voted to take a clear and unequivocal stand against it, making national history, and I'm dismayed to be asked to abandon our principles so soon after we declared them.Two errors here:
(1) We agree that the California plan may fail STRATEGICALLY, the debate is about morality.
(2) You grossly underestimate the extent to which U.S.G. has already been corrupted and usurped. It's like you're on the Titanic while it's sinking and you're spending your energy writing a letter to British White Star Line to recommend a change in life-boat configuration for the next voyage.