13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
BillW
 
  2  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 12:29 am
@tsarstepan,
.....and, the rest of the "Republican" Primaries!
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  5  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 03:36 am
@Glennn,
Glennn wrote:

TRANSLATION:


I'm writing in English, and so are you(ish.)

Therefore the word you're looking for is INTERPRETATION.

And yours is wrong.
Frank Apisa
 
  5  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 04:18 am
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Jury Orders Trump to Pay Carroll $83.3 Million for Years of Defamation NYT



Apparently the jury decided that such a large sum was necessary to finally get Trump to stop defaming Carroll...and perhaps it will work. One would think he is smart enough to shut the hell up by now. But he always manages to surprise.

He has to put up a bond for the full amount in order to appeal the decision.
Gonna be a tough year for The Donald!
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  5  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 04:19 am
@tsarstepan,
tsarstepan wrote:

blatham wrote:

Jury Orders Trump to Pay Carroll $83.3 Million for Years of Defamation NYT

Laughing Laughing What a most excellent way to enter the weekend! Laughing Laughing


EXCELLENT, indeed.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  5  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 05:30 am
Quote:
This afternoon a jury of nine Americans deliberated for less than three hours before it ordered former president Trump to pay writer E. Jean Carroll $83.3 million for defaming her after she accused him in 2019 of raping her in the 1990s. In May 2023 a jury found Trump liable for sexually abusing Carroll in an assault the judge said is commonly known as rape, and for defaming her. That jury awarded Carroll $5 million.

Despite the jury’s 2023 verdict, Trump has continued to attack Carroll. Indeed, he repeatedly attacked her on social media posts even during this month’s trial. Today’s jury found that Trump acted with malice and awarded Carroll $65 million in punitive damages, $11 million in compensatory damages for a reputation repair program, and $7.3 million in compensatory damages outside of the reputation program.

Trump immediately called the jury verdict “Absolutely ridiculous!” and said he would appeal.
“THIS IS NOT AMERICA!” he posted on social media.

Conservative lawyer George Conway responded. “Not so. The United States of America is about the rule of law, something you couldn’t care less about. Today nine ordinary citizens upheld the rules of law. You have no right to maliciously defame anyone, let alone a woman you raped. In America, we call this justice.”

In June 2023 the court required Trump to move $5.5 million to a bank account controlled by the court to cover the jury’s judgment while he appeals it. For this larger verdict, Trump could do the same thing: pay $83.3 million to the court to hold while he appeals, or try to get a bond, which would require a deposit and collateral and would also incur fees and interest. Any bank willing to lend him that money would likely take into consideration that he has other major financial vulnerabilities and charge him accordingly.

This was not, actually, the case that looked like it would incur staggering costs. More threatening is the other case currently underway in Manhattan, where New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron is considering appropriate penalties for the frauds that Trump, the Trump Organization, the two older Trump sons, and two employees committed in their business dealings. New York attorney general Letitia James, who brought the case, has asked Engoron to impose a $370 million penalty, as well as a prohibition on the Trump Organization from doing business in New York.

Judge Engoron has said he hopes to have a decision by the end of the month.

Former president Trump is under pressure on a number of fronts. As legal analyst Joyce White Vance pointed out tonight in Civil Discourse, two separate juries have now found that Trump acted with malice, and it is becoming harder for him to argue that so many people—two entirely different juries, prosecutors, and so on—are unfairly targeting him. Vance speculates that this latest judgment might hurt his political support. “How do you explain to your kids that you’re going to give your vote in the presidential race to a man who forced his fingers into a woman’s vagina and then lied about it and about her, and exposed her to public ridicule and harm?” she asked.

On the political front, much to his apparent frustration, Trump has not been able to bully former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley out of the race for the Republican nomination, and she is needling him about his mental deterioration. The Republican National Committee has been considering simply deciding Trump is the nominee rather than letting the process play out. The Haley camp responded to that idea with a statement saying that if Ronna McDaniel, the RNC chair, “wants to be helpful she can organize a debate in South Carolina, unless she’s also worried that Trump can’t handle being on the stage for 90 minutes with Nikki Haley.” Ouch.

Trump’s congressional allies’ attacks on President Biden took another hit today after a business associate of Hunter Biden said in sworn testimony yesterday that President Biden “was never involved” in any of their business dealings.

John Robinson Walker said: “In business, the opportunities we pursued together were varied, valid, well-founded, and well within the bounds of legitimate business activities. To be clear, President Biden—while in office or as a private citizen—was never involved in any of the business activities we pursued…. “Any statement to the contrary is simply false…. Hunter made sure there was always a clear boundary between any business and his father. Always. And as his partner, I always understood and respected that boundary.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s attempts to destroy the bipartisan border deal, in which Democrats appear to have been willing to give away more than the Republicans out of desperate determination to fund Ukraine, are being called out for cynical politics. The news is awash today with stories condemning the Republicans for caving to the demands of a man who is, at least for now, a private citizen and who is putting his own election over the interests of the American people as he tries to keep the issue of immigration alive to exploit in the 2024 campaign.

Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) told his colleagues: “I didn’t come here to have the president as a boss or a candidate as a boss. I came here to pass good, solid policy…. It is immoral for me to think you looked the other way because you think this is the linchpin for President Trump to win.” Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) told Sahil Kapur and Frank Thorp V of NBC News, “I think it’s crap…. We need to get that deal done to secure the border. If they want to keep it as a campaign issue, I think they need to resign from the damn Senate.”

But while Trump is apparently telling Republicans he will “fix” the border if he gets back into the White House, Greg Sargent noted yesterday in The New Republic that when Trump was in office, “[h]e too released a lot of migrants into the interior, and he couldn’t pass his immigration agenda even with unified GOP control.” And, of course, he never got Mexico to pay for his wall, as he repeatedly claimed he would, while President Joe Biden, in contrast, got Mexico to invest $1.5 billion in “smart” border technology and to beef up its own border security.

The White House has refused to abandon negotiations even as Trump trashed them. In a statement today, Biden said that negotiators have been “[w]orking around the clock, through the holidays, and over weekends,” to craft a bipartisan deal on the border, and he called out Republicans who are now trying to scuttle the bill.

“What’s been negotiated would—if passed into law—be the toughest and fairest set of reforms to secure the border we’ve ever had in our country,” he said. “It would give me, as President, a new emergency authority to shut down the border when it becomes overwhelmed. And if given that authority, I would use it the day I sign the bill into law.

“Further, Congress needs to finally provide the funding I requested in October to secure the border. This includes an additional 1,300 border patrol agents, 375 immigration judges, 1,600 asylum officers, and over 100 cutting-edge inspection machines to help detect and stop fentanyl at our southwest border. Securing the border through these negotiations is a win for America. For everyone who is demanding tougher border control, this is the way to do it. If you’re serious about the border crisis, pass a bipartisan bill and I will sign it.”

Biden seems to be signaling that if the Republicans kill this measure, they will own the border issue, but he is not the only one making that argument. Yesterday the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board, which slants toward the right, wrote: “[G]iving up on a border security bill would be a self-inflicted GOP wound. President Biden would claim, with cause, that Republicans want border chaos as an election issue rather than solving the problem. Voter anger may over time move from Mr. Biden to the GOP, and the public will have a point. Cynical is the only word that fits Republicans panning a border deal whose details aren’t even known.”

The Wall Street Journal editorial board went further, articulating what Republicans are signing up for if they continue to prevent funding for Ukraine. Recalling the horrific images of the April 1975 fall of Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam, to North Vietnamese forces, when desperate evacuees fought their way to helicopters, the board asked: “Do Republicans want to sponsor the 2024 equivalent of Saigon 1975?”

hcr
0 Replies
 
Glennn
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 06:14 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
Therefore the word you're looking for is INTERPRETATION.

Actually, PARAPHRASE is the word you're looking for.

Quote: Oh, then what's he giggling about, since you're--you guessed it--answering for another.

Quote: Some things you're going to have to work out for yourself.

To paraphrase: I don't really know, so I'll just pretend I do and leave it at that.

An accurate paraphrase.
izzythepush
 
  5  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 06:24 am
@Glennn,
You really have no understanding of the English Language.

If I were to paraphrase Bob's post it would be, "Ha ha,"

Paraphrasing my comment would be "Do it yourself."

That's what paraphrasing is, retelling a text in an abridged form.

It's also something we tell kids to avoid doing in exams because it doesn't get any marks.

You could not understand what Bob was laughing at so you asked me.

I wouldn't tell you, because you won't learn how to communicate accurately if someone else is giving you the answers.

You then incorrectly misinterpreted what I said and compounded that error by incorrectly calling it translation.

You would not pass GCSE English, an examination 16 year olds take over here.

I know because I mark them.
Glennn
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 07:08 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
Paraphrasing my comment would be "Do it yourself."

Not if you have no idea why he was giggling; and you don't.

That' why my paraphrase is accurate.
Quote:
If I were to paraphrase Bob's post it would be, "Ha ha,"

Sorry, but that's what he said. Do you know what paraphrase means?
Quote:
That's what paraphrasing is, retelling a text in an abridged form.

You sure about that comma? Perhaps a semicolon. Or, drop the first two words and remove the comma. That's what I'd have done. That's what any 16 year old student would do.
Quote:

I wouldn't tell you, because you won't learn how to communicate accurately if someone else is giving you the answers.

You sure about that comma? No you are not.
Quote:

It's also something we tell kids to avoid doing in exams because it doesn't get any marks.

I'd worry more about what they're picking up from you regarding commas!
Quote:
You would not pass GCSE English, an examination 16 year olds take over here.

Must have been no questions concerning the proper use of commas, eh?
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 07:34 am
@Region Philbis,
She's already gotten somewhere around $4M for her work on the Carol cases.

She's been paid.
izzythepush
 
  4  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 07:35 am
@Glennn,
He was laughing at you.

That's what's known as bleeding obvious.

Only you find it to be a puzzle wrapped up in an enigma etc.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 07:37 am
What Melania realized today

At the rate this is going, Melania is going to have to marry E. Jean Caroll to get any of Donald's money.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 07:41 am
@Glennn,
The comma is fine.

You don't get English.

Here's a rule of thumb about the semicolon.

It can be used in place of a full stop. That means both parts of the sentence, either side of the semi colon, should be sentences in their own right.

"Retelling a text in an abridged form," is a sentence fragment, it does not make sense on its own.

Any more of this and I'll have to start charging you.
Glennn
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 08:27 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
The comma is fine.

From you:

"I wouldn't tell you, because you won't learn how to communicate accurately if someone else is giving you the answers."

Please tell me that you do not teach children that kind of misuse of the comma.
izzythepush
 
  4  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 08:37 am
@Glennn,
Now it's a different comma, which is also fine.

You are a complete muppet
Glennn
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 09:29 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
"I wouldn't tell you, because you won't learn how to communicate accurately if someone else is giving you the answers."

I'm curious as to how you would explain to your students why the comma is necessary.

When to Skip the Comma


Omit the comma when the 'because' clause is essential to the core meaning of the sentence.

Example 1: I didn’t eat the cake because I am allergic to nuts. (The reason for not eating the cake is essential here. Without it, the meaning is incomplete.)
_______________________________________________________________________________________________

Kinda like you saying, "I wouldn't tell you, because you won't learn how to communicate accurately if someone else is giving you the answers" huh?
izzythepush
 
  3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 09:32 am
@Glennn,
It's not mandatory, it's fine where it is.

It gives it a pause.

izzythepush
 
  3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 09:43 am
@Glennn,
Glennn wrote:

I'm curious as to how you would explain to your students why the comma is necessary.


I never said it was necessary, it's a case of writing style.

In that case I would tell my students not to bother either way.

It's a question of style and it's unlikely to cause much bother in real life.

Only if they're talking to an anally retentive monomaniac desperately grasping at straws after screwing up royally over the semi colon and basic word meaning.


0 Replies
 
Glennn
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 09:54 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
It's not mandatory, it's fine where it is.

A semicolon instead of a comma would have been correct. Those are independent clauses.

If you have two sentences that are related to each other, you CAN connect them with a comma AND a coordinating conjunction—for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so—but not a comma alone.

Is that clear?
izzythepush
 
  3  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 10:02 am
@Glennn,
I'm done with you now.
Glennn
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 27 Jan, 2024 10:04 am
@izzythepush,
That's a reaction, and not a response. However, it is a correct statement.
 

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