13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 03:36 pm
@snood,
Quote:
It ain’t the pronoun police, it’s the secret police.

Weighing out relative dangers, yup.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 03:45 pm
On another site where I used to be active writing political stuff, there was this one dude who, for three years, ended every post with the same sage warning to us lefties... "Durham Is Coming". After about a year of this, I suggested that maybe Durham was a premature ejaculator.
Quote:
A jury on Tuesday found Igor Danchenko — a private researcher who was a primary source for a 2016 dossier of allegations about former president Donald Trump’s ties to Russia — not guilty of lying to the FBI about where he got his information.

The verdict in federal court in Alexandria, Va., is another blow for special counsel John Durham, who has now lost both cases that have gone to trial as part of his nearly 3½-year investigation. Durham, who was asked by Attorney General William P. Barr in 2019 to review the FBI’s investigation of the Trump campaign in 2016, is sure to face renewed pressure to wrap up his work following the verdict.
Link

Durham's investigation spend $3 million in just the first year. God knows what the final tally might be.
0 Replies
 
georgeob1
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 04:21 pm
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Quote:
I do indeed find it very ironic.

I know. That was the point.

Let me ask a couple of questions. First, was the election stolen from Trump? And second, have you watched any of the Jan 6 hearings?

I that some kind of litmus test??? What is your purpose here? It appears you have some preconceived categorical prejudgments in mind, which I find to be laughably absurd.

It is quite evident that there was some chicanery in Pennsylvania where the Democrat Sec of State unilaterally extended the period for mail in voting, and in some locales denied access to ballet counting to Republican poll watchers, both in clear defiance of existing state law. Our Constitution is clear that state legislatures establish these rules, and not Governors or administrative officials. Whether this might have changed the outcome is something I don't know. The current Democrat candidate for Governor of Georgia still claims the last election was stolen from her, and does so without any real evidence.
snood
 
  3  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 04:44 pm
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Quote:
I do indeed find it very ironic.

I know. That was the point.

Let me ask a couple of questions. First, was the election stolen from Trump? And second, have you watched any of the Jan 6 hearings?


I was dubious of the chances that you'd get anything resembling straight answers. I just read his response. Man, can I call 'em, or can't I?
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 05:54 pm
@georgeob1,
Quote:
I that some kind of litmus test???

No, george. They were questions I was hoping you wouldn't avoid.
snood
 
  3  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 05:58 pm
@blatham,
Keep hope alive!
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 18 Oct, 2022 10:46 pm
@georgeob1,
georgeob1 wrote:
I that some kind of litmus test??? What is your purpose here?

Progressives ask those questions when they are (once again) unable to address facts and logic, and need to change the subject to something else.
hightor
 
  5  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 02:36 am
Quote:
In their year and a half in power, Democrats have put in place policies that are widely popular—indeed, the infrastructure projects provided for under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act are so popular that Republicans who voted against the law are nonetheless taking credit for them. Voters have long called for Medicare to be able to negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical companies (83% in favor), now made possible by the Inflation Reduction Act, which also caps certain drug expenses, including the cost of insulin. Between 80 and 90% of Americans want basic gun control laws—the Democrats just passed the first one in decades—and a majority want funding for action against climate change (65%) and relief for educational debt (55%).

Support for supplying Ukraine against Russia stands at 73%, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll taken in early October. Support for Ukraine was a bipartisan commitment that changed only after Trump had the 2016 Republican platform, which had expressed support for Ukraine, watered down.

What has not been popular in the past year and a half, in fact, what has been quite unpopular, is the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion. About 62% of Americans believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases, while only 8% believe it should be illegal in all cases, and 28% believe it should be illegal in most cases.

Since June, when the Supreme Court handed down the Dobbs decision, the news has reported multiple cases of raped children unable to obtain abortions in their home states, girls and women unable to obtain medications to treat long-term illnesses because those drugs can also induce abortion, women diagnosed with cancer who cannot get treatment, women whose fetuses have conditions incompatible with life and who cannot terminate the pregnancy, and women whose health is at risk as they are unable to obtain the healthcare they need as they are miscarrying—all of this just as abortion rights advocates warned would happen if the court overturned Roe v. Wade. Since the Dobbs decision, Democrats have outperformed expectations in four special House elections and one state referendum.

The popularity of the Democrats’ agenda and the unpopularity of their own appear to have pushed the Republicans to go for broke, courting their base by demanding the utter destruction of Democrats’ policies and the reinstatement of their own.

Since the 1980s, Republican leaders have embraced the idea that cutting taxes and concentrating wealth at the top of the economy will spark economic growth, although “supply side” economics has never produced as promised. They insist the programs Biden and the Democrats back are “socialism,” and their base agrees. Their base also hates abortion rights.

To sidestep the gulf between their base and the majority of voters, Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) declined to announce any sort of an agenda before the midterm elections, telling donors that party leaders would just attack the Democrats.

There have been signs, though, of what the Republicans will do if they regain control of one or both of the houses of Congress, and top of the list was cutting the programs at the heart of our social welfare system: Social Security and Medicare. Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) called for sunsetting all laws every five years and repassing them; Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) called for making Social Security and Medicare part of the discretionary budget, meaning their funding would have to be reapproved every year.

Republicans have also said they would pass a law to make the 2017 Trump tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations permanent, a move economists say would increase inflation. “The trick is to put the president in a position of either getting defeated in 2024 or signing your stuff into law,” former House speaker Newt Gingrich told Jeff Stein of the Washington Post. “Republicans will make it a priority to continue the Trump tax cuts, because it puts the Democrats in a position of being for tax increases and against economic growth.”

Recently, though, Republicans have been much clearer, warning that they will refuse to raise the debt ceiling in order to force Biden to agree to their demands to “reform” Social Security and Medicare by raising the age of eligibility and means testing. (Democrats have said they would stabilize the programs with higher taxes on the wealthy.)

This is a huge deal. While Trump has urged MAGA Republicans in the past to use the threat of the debt ceiling to get concessions, responsible Republicans have refused to play chicken with the global financial markets and with our own financial future, for defaulting even for a matter of hours will wash away our financial might. Raising the debt ceiling is not a future blank check, it enables the U.S. to meet bills it has already incurred, and refusing to do so will throw the U.S. into a catastrophic default. Congress has raised the debt ceiling repeatedly in the past forty years, but Republicans have apparently come around to Trump’s position that playing to their base is worth taking the U.S. hostage.

Republicans are also signaling a change in U.S. support for Ukraine. Although current Republican leaders have supported aid to Ukraine, House minority leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) suggested today that if the Republicans regain the majority thanks to more MAGA candidates, they will oppose giving more aid to Ukraine in the war with Russia. Putin has just launched the largest wave of airstrikes against Ukraine since the early days of the war, hitting civilian areas with the plan to cut off gas and electricity before the winter.

And, of course, after the Supreme Court justified striking down Roe v. Wade by saying abortion should be a state decision, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) introduced a bill to ban abortion nationally. (Today, Biden pledged to push a law protecting abortion rights if voters return the few more lawmakers Democrats need to accomplish that.)

Republicans have sold their unpopular program in part by maintaining a narrative vision of the world that tells MAGA supporters what they want to hear. Since the beginning of Trump’s term, a key part of that narrative has been that the FBI investigation of the ties between the 2016 Trump campaign and Russian operatives was a witch hunt. In April 2019, Trump's attorney general William Barr tapped U.S. attorney John Durham to discredit that investigation.

Journalist and professor Bill Grueskin collected the headlines from the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page for the past year. They read: “Durham Cracks the Russia Case,” “Durham Delivers on Russiagate,” “John Durham Shows How the FBI Lets Its Informants Mislead It,” and so on.

But that’s not how it panned out. Durham ultimately indicted three men. One pleaded guilty to altering an email in a different case; he got probation. Durham accused another of lying to the FBI; a jury acquitted him. Durham indicted a third, Igor Danchenko, for lying to the FBI; today a jury acquitted him as well. Durham used the trial to rail against the FBI, but his inability to win a conviction after more than three years of work undermines the MAGA narrative that Durham was going to find the goods to pin a witch hunt on bad FBI agents and acquit Trump once and for all.

A new audiobook from veteran journalist Bob Woodward tore down another MAGA story today when it revealed an audiotape of Trump calling the letters he wrote to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “top secret” in January 2021. Clearly, he knew they were classified, despite his claims now that he didn’t take anything special. Further, he let Woodward see and transcribe the classified documents.

Will the puncturing of these narratives matter? At some level, no; they are about mythmaking and social identity. Today, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) celebrated her visit to the Wilder Monument at the Chickamauga (she misspelled it) battlefield in Georgia. She identified the monument as honoring Confederate soldiers and boasted that she “will always defend our nation’s history.” But, in fact, the Wilder Brigade, also known as the Lightning Brigade, was not Confederate; it was from the United States.

The point, though, was likely not accuracy: it was to “own” the “Libs” by celebrating the Confederacy.

Will reinforcing that identity for the Republican base be enough for the party to win the midterms? It’s anyone’s guess. But today, the first day of early voting in Georgia smashed the state’s previous record for first-day votes cast in a midterm election. In 2018 the first day of voting brought in 71,000 voters. Today that number hit more than 130,000.

hcr
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  2  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 07:06 am
@georgeob1,
georgeob1 wrote:

I took a look back at this once interesting scene and find this thread appearing to have become a bit monotone - a lack of differing perspectives appears to be a cause. Here's some material that may refresh it all.

We're just three weeks from the Midterm election, which increasingly appears likely to result in Republican control of both houses of Congress and large setbacks for Dems on state elections as well.

No surprise considering the sorry state of our economy - continuing high inflation, deepening recession, falling stock prices, continuing supply chain issues - all underlaid by the accumulating side effects of our still decreasing petroleum production and the reduced availability of basic chemical core products derived from it, including ammonia & fertilizer. Declines in basic grain crop yields are increasingly evident, which will continue adding to inflationary pressures on food products of all kinds.

Evidence of Biden's accelerating mental decline is accumulating - though he was always a dim light and doesn't have much farther to fall. In an increasingly dangerous world, with the seeds of dangerous conflict arising in both East and West, he continues to reduce our strategic reserves of petroleum, to achieve only laughably ephemeral, short-term reductions in the rate of increase of fuel prices , and continues to supply weapons and ammunition to Ukraine, but without any action so far to to replenish them. He has become a sadly comic figure both domestically and on the world stage, and the adverse consequences on our country are growing fast.

The ongoing human tragedy at our "secure" southern border worsens every day. We have already diverted scarce resources from policing the smuggling of drugs, particularly fentanyl (now a leading cause of deaths among young adults and others) to attend the now hundreds of thousands of immigrants accumulating at border processing centers. Now Sec. Mayorkas (a rather pathetic liar) has even put out a call throughout government for volunteers to help clean up the mess he and our Idiot President have created. All this and so far without ANY discernable action to identify or act on our esteemed VPs' "root causes".

While Iranians are rioting to restore some personal freedom and liberty from their authoritarian government, our breathtakingly stupid President is slavishly pushing for an agreement with that government that will both aid in its development of nuclear weapons and reverse the gains of previous years in achieving some peace in the Middle East and Gulf regions.

It increasingly appears that people here, Black, White & Latino are waking up to the failures of the increasingly authoritarian far left wing elements that now dominate the Democrat Party, and that a hopefully lasting rejection of it all will soon follow.

Meanwhile Walter continues to fret about Q'anon (whatever that is) and the supposed rise of Fascism in Italy, and Hightor continues his pedantic instruction and pasting of editorial pieces he likes. The irony that attends the strange tendency of today's "Liberals" to project their own authoritarian failings on their opponents is fast becoming evident to all.


George, did you truly miss the irony of your comments here?

Truly?
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 09:16 am
@Frank Apisa,
Quote:
George, did you truly miss the irony of your comments here?

Truly?

In truth, I find this all quite depressing. There are surely parallel universes where george and I are buddies. But this george in this universe has forfeited most of my affinity through abandoning his intellectual integrity and his personal and civic morality in support of a party which has abandoned its honesty, integrity and morality in its quest for power. Trump held high and Liz Cheney cast out. I'm sorry, george. I really am.
hightor
 
  6  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 10:07 am
@blatham,
Quote:
In truth, I find this all quite depressing.

Me too. I used to get along great with georgeob when he posted here more regularly. But since he's started with these hit and run attacks he's just an irritant. "Hi everyone. Biden's senile. Harris is a failure. The Democrat Party's corrupt. Drill baby, drill. Toodle-loo."
Frank Apisa
 
  4  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 10:44 am
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Quote:
George, did you truly miss the irony of your comments here?

Truly?

In truth, I find this all quite depressing. There are surely parallel universes where george and I are buddies. But this george in this universe has forfeited most of my affinity through abandoning his intellectual integrity and his personal and civic morality in support of a party which has abandoned its honesty, integrity and morality in its quest for power. Trump held high and Liz Cheney cast out. I'm sorry, george. I really am.


Couldn't have said it better, Bernie.

During our talks at dinners, both of us have regularly mentioned George as someone with whom we are in substantial disagreement...BUT that we feel affection and respect for him. He always seemed like an intelligent, informed, reasonable advocate for "the other side." But lately, especially in this last post, he seems to have fallen off a cliff. The post was irony from beginning to the end. (I posted my comment before reading your reply and Hightor's. Obviously we all came to the same conclusion...pure irony.)

How can someone of George's quality not see it?

I honestly do not understand.

Woe for America (and by extension for everyone else) if this mindset is so pervasive, that Republicans win the House and Senate next month. If that happens, the world is in for a shitload of trouble.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -3  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 11:33 am
@hightor,
hightor wrote:
Me too. I used to get along great with georgeob when he posted here more regularly. But since he's started with these hit and run attacks he's just an irritant. "Hi everyone. Biden's senile. Harris is a failure. The Democrat Party's corrupt. Drill baby, drill. Toodle-loo."

If you want intelligent people to take this site seriously, you need to make it worth taking seriously.
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 01:29 pm
@oralloy,
How can we take seriously someone 6 who had maintained for years that the gun violene debate is really about pistol grips.
Below viewing threshold (view)
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 01:41 pm
@oralloy,
I an. I do. Pistol grips gave always been and eemain solely your stupid schtick aline.
oralloy
 
  -4  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 01:47 pm
@MontereyJack,
No. You don't. Your perpetual denials of reality mean you are not a serious debater.

There is no point to having an involved discussion with you when you react to facts and evidence by insisting that reality isn't true.

But I do commend you for not stooping to the level of name-calling like so many others here do.
MontereyJack
 
  2  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 07:46 pm
@oralloy,
what you call reality is merely your projection of your own biases on a universe that has no congruence with them.
oralloy
 
  -3  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 08:34 pm
@MontereyJack,
Wrong. Reality is reality.

And since you respond to evidence by denying the existence of reality, there is no point in holding an in-depth discussion with you.
0 Replies
 
glitterbag
 
  2  
Reply Wed 19 Oct, 2022 11:19 pm
@Builder,
Builder wrote:

A dry sponge has zeal?

What an odd analogy.

Praise isn't any indicator of valued opinion.

Sycophantic adulation is more the correct descriptor.


I love your posts, you make me laugh out loud!!!!!
 

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