Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Public House › So if Trump wins you want to go to Canada?
- This topic has 62 replies, 12 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 5 months ago by bnw.
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May 25, 2016 at 3:52 pm #44679bnwBlocked
Nice people and great fishing too. Best lobster in the world!
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 25, 2016 at 6:01 pm #44687wvParticipantI stayed during eight years of Bush. I can handle Trump.
What is it you like BEST about trump. I’m not talking about personality
or “he stands up to the system” cliches. I mean, what actual, real,
POLICY do you like best.He’s against NAFTA and those hideous trade agreements, right? I do
like that about him. Or am i wrong about that?w
vMay 25, 2016 at 6:38 pm #44691ZooeyModeratorHe’s against NAFTA and those hideous trade agreements, right? I do
like that about him. Or am i wrong about that?w
vNo, you’re right. You do like that about him.
May 25, 2016 at 11:36 pm #44708bnwBlockedHe’s against NAFTA and those hideous trade agreements, right? I do
like that about him. Or am i wrong about that?w
vNo, you’re right. You do like that about him.
So do I. He wants trade deals that bring jobs to the US worker. He also questions giving babies the MMR vaccine. He wants to take Wall St. and hedge fund managers to task for not paying their fair share of taxes. He was against the Iraq War. He wants a dialogue with Putin and cooperation with Russia in the fight against ISIS. He wants NATO reformed to reflect the post cold war reality with members reimbursing the US for their defense costs. He wants to secure the border with Mexico to stop illegal immigration and the easy flow of illegal drugs and violence and risk of disease by building a wall that Mexico will pay for. He wants China to rein in a nuclear and near ICBM capable North Korea or face repercussions in their best market the US. He wants to appoint conservative justices to the US Supreme Court. There’s more.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 9:44 am #44745snowmanParticipantTrump wants a lot of things that sound great to have, things that sound like he is leveling the playing field for poor little old USA, but really that’s all he does. And these are things even he as president cannot do on his own or doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of actually achieving because he has no plan, no path toward doing it. He thinks he is the world’s greatest deal maker, like all he has to do is sit down with Bin Laden’s ghost and convince him to disband the ISIS because it’s a bad deal for the USA. People need to realize that Trump is all campaign and no leadership, unless people just want to vote for the guy with the best rhetoric and sloganeering. Just like had praise for Hillary five years ago and just said things out of his ass because that’s how you do business, by telling people what they want to hear, how do you trust what he is saying now?
May 26, 2016 at 10:41 am #44752bnwBlockedTrump wants a lot of things that sound great to have, things that sound like he is leveling the playing field for poor little old USA, but really that’s all he does. And these are things even he as president cannot do on his own or doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of actually achieving because he has no plan, no path toward doing it. He thinks he is the world’s greatest deal maker, like all he has to do is sit down with Bin Laden’s ghost and convince him to disband the ISIS because it’s a bad deal for the USA. People need to realize that Trump is all campaign and no leadership, unless people just want to vote for the guy with the best rhetoric and sloganeering. Just like had praise for Hillary five years ago and just said things out of his ass because that’s how you do business, by telling people what they want to hear, how do you trust what he is saying now?
Hillary has a plan? Nice. She had a plan for Benghazi too. She had a plan for Libya too. She had a plan for evading the Federal records act too. No thanks.
I trust Trump wants to get things done for working people. That alone is enough to get my vote.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by bnw.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 11:00 am #44760Billy_TParticipantI trust Trump wants to get things done for working people. That alone is enough to get my vote.
Yes. He wants to get things done for them. Like continue screwing them over, which was how he made his fortune, at least that part beyond his tens of millions in inheritance.
It is impossible for anyone to make billions without screwing over workers. Mathematically and physically impossible. If the capitalist pays his or her workers fair compensation for the surplus value they generate, there is not enough money left over for the capitalist to accrue his or her fortune. That’s just math.
Trump has absolutely no intention of helping working people. He’s never shown the slightest concern for them, and has always radically suppressed their wages. Again, that’s how he got rich beyond his original inheritance.
That said, if you listen to his speeches, really listen, there is nothing there about actual policies. It’s all word salad, all too much like Sarah Palin, who pretty much mainstreamed political world salad for the current generation. Trump’s speeches are mostly incoherent, and his fans must be projecting their own fears and dreams onto what he says, because he has never actually described what he would do in concrete terms. Just that “It will be the greatest ever,” because he’s supposedly “the greatest deal maker” blah blah blah.
It’s truly incredible that anyone falls for his nonsense — not to mention the fact that his rhetoric is at least fascist lite.
May 26, 2016 at 2:30 pm #44772snowmanParticipantI trust Trump wants to get things done for working people. That alone is enough to get my vote.
This made me laugh out loud!
May 26, 2016 at 2:52 pm #44775wvParticipant… People need to realize that Trump is all campaign and no leadership…
… just said things out of his ass because that’s how you do business, by telling people what they want to hear…—————
Well, Reagan didnt have a plan either, and just told people what
they wanted to hear, and he got himself elected that way.So that formula can work just fine.
w
vMay 26, 2016 at 3:01 pm #44776snowmanParticipantI hope we as a nation have learned a few things over the past 35 years.
At least Ronnie didn’t get off on inciting violence through insults.
May 26, 2016 at 3:13 pm #44777bnwBlockedI trust Trump wants to get things done for working people. That alone is enough to get my vote.
This made me laugh out loud!
Because the joke is on you. Working people are fed up. Good jobs are what matters not the skin color or gender of a candidate.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 3:17 pm #44778bnwBlockedI hope we as a nation have learned a few things over the past 35 years.
At least Ronnie didn’t get off on inciting violence through insults.
We have learned a lot. One thing remains the same. That being the left riots then blames others. It gets old but brings in the votes for those that the left wants to silence.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 4:11 pm #44783snowmanParticipantI hope we as a nation have learned a few things over the past 35 years.
At least Ronnie didn’t get off on inciting violence through insults.
I trust Trump wants to get things done for working people. That alone is enough to get my vote.
This made me laugh out loud!
Because the joke is on you. Working people are fed up. Good jobs are what matters not the skin color or gender of a candidate.
I agree that working people who consider themselves republican are fed up. Fed up with their choices for the nomination so much that they vote for the loudest, angriest, political outsider on the ticket.
May 26, 2016 at 4:27 pm #44784bnwBlockedI hope we as a nation have learned a few things over the past 35 years.
At least Ronnie didn’t get off on inciting violence through insults.
I trust Trump wants to get things done for working people. That alone is enough to get my vote.
This made me laugh out loud!
Because the joke is on you. Working people are fed up. Good jobs are what matters not the skin color or gender of a candidate.
I agree that working people who consider themselves republican are fed up. Fed up with their choices for the nomination so much that they vote for the loudest, angriest, political outsider on the ticket.
The outsider that campaigns on issues of concern to working people. Trump will get the votes of a lot of working democrats too.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by bnw.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 6:45 pm #44798waterfieldParticipantStill no answer as to how Trump will bring lost jobs back to America-just that he says he will.
I’m not sure you have an understanding as to the root cause behind the lost jobs. The leading cause is currency manipulation which is the driving force behind U.S.trade deficits. What this does is artificially lower the cost of U.S. imports while raising the cost of U.S. exports. This has been going on because foreign companies led by China has been purchasing foreign assets to the tune of $1 trillion a year. Any first year student in Finance can tell you that by doing so will suppress the value of their own currencies. The result is that our businesses that depend on manufacturing will look abroad for its workforce. Maybe ending currency manipulation is in Trump’s plans and if so according to recent studies roughly 4 million jobs can be created of which 40% would be in manufacturing. But I haven’t heard anything on this subject from him or for that matter any of the candidates.
There is also the issue of fair trade laws which could prevent or at least reduce the flood of illegally dumped and subsidized imports of steel and other manufactured products.
Moreover,our own consumer demand has lessened since the onset of the great recession under the last Republican administration. That impacts the creation of jobs in a big way too. We also have a huge infrastructure shortfall. Studies have shown we could create up to 3 million jobs by investing roughly $3 trillion One small step would be to approve a multi-year extension of federal transportation funding which is currently being held up in the House of Representatives. I wonder why?
It is all quite complicated and there are no simplistic answers. Actually, there are plenty of those. I’ve read that we have lost over 5 million jobs since 2000. The primary reason for this loss is the growing trade deficits and the shortfall in demand caused by the the Great Recession. One way to stem the loss and perhaps actually create jobs is to end currency manipulation and unfair trade and begin to rebuild U.S. infrastructure-all of which would increase the demand for manufactured products and hopefully returned to lost jobs.
Now see-even a lay person (me) who only reads a few financial periodicals can at least come up with something on the question of manufacturing job loss. It shouldn’t be too difficult for a candidate to the Presidency to at least try.
May 26, 2016 at 9:23 pm #44816bnwBlockedOr the $12 TRILLION (at least $2.5 trillion spent as of 2011) the government has committed to bailing out banks from the 2008 crisis could have been spent on those same infrastructure needs. Thats money already spent that could have been used to address infrastructure needs in the US with an additional $9 trillion that could have been committed. Thats your $3 trillion four times over. Trump is the only candidate speaking to the trade deficit and the loss of manufacturing in the US. Trump also wants to tax those companies that leave the US then want to sell their product in the US.
I think I read you live in CA? I live in TN. In this part of the US the states have been hit particularly hard by the loss of manufacturing jobs since NAFTA was implemented. Even so manufacturing remains a major contributor to the economy of states in this part of the US. From http://www.epi.org/publication/the-manufacturing-footprint-and-the-importance-of-u-s-manufacturing-jobs/
In TN,
Manufacturing is 11.6% of total employment. Manufacturing GDP as a share of total GDP is 15.9%.
In CA,
Manufacturing is 8.3% of total employment. Manufacturing GDP as a share of total GDP is 10.9%.
It’s no surprise that Trump’s popularity in my part of the nation is soaring since we want the hemorrhaging of our local, state and regional economy to stop.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 9:32 pm #44817Billy_TParticipantHow would Trump stop the hemorrhaging? He has no plan. He’s never actually discussed what he would do, beyond “I make really great deals!! Trust me!!”
His followers go on nothing more than faith in a carnival huckster and rank bigot. He’s never come remotely close to telling you how he’s going to do these amazing things. None of his biggest supporters know what he would do. They’ve just read between his word salad speeches and projected their own fears and dreams on Trump.
I challenge any of them to actually say, in concrete terms, what the guy would do to make life better for American workers — or the nation in general. Playing Mussolini isn’t going to do that. Blocking Muslims from coming into the country isn’t going to do that. “Shutting down” minorities isn’t going to do that. Etc.
May 26, 2016 at 10:12 pm #44818bnwBlockedKeep up with the BS because it only makes Trump’s appeal greater at the ballot box.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 26, 2016 at 11:26 pm #44830Billy_TParticipantKeep up with the BS because it only makes Trump’s appeal greater at the ballot box.
What BS? I told the truth. Trump has never actually come out with any policies. You can’t possibly know what he would do to supposedly help workers, because he’s never told you.
If I’m wrong about that, please detail his plan.
Beyond all of that, I’ve left out the other elephant in the room. I haven’t even gotten into the fact that he is beloved by white supremacists and pathologically bigoted Americans in general, or that he talks like he’s Mussolini half the time.
It should make most people pause, the things he’s said about Muslims, Hispanics, women. But at the very least, you should be concerned that he’s never actually discussed any policy he would enact, beyond the soundbites “It will be great!! Trust me!!” and ““we’ll have so much winning, you’ll get bored with winning.”
Where is the policy, much less the specifics?
May 26, 2016 at 11:31 pm #44832bnwBlockedKeep up with the BS because it only makes Trump’s appeal greater at the ballot box.
What BS? I told the truth. Trump has never actually come out with any policies. You can’t possibly know what he would do to supposedly help workers, because he’s never told you.
If I’m wrong about that, please detail his plan.
Beyond all of that, I’ve left out the other elephant in the room. I haven’t even gotten into the fact that he is beloved by white supremacists and pathologically bigoted Americans in general, or that he talks like he’s Mussolini half the time.
It should make most people pause, the things he’s said about Muslims, Hispanics, women. But at the very least, you should be concerned that he’s never actually discussed any policy he would enact, beyond the soundbites “It will be great!! Trust me!!” and ““we’ll have so much winning, you’ll get bored with winning.”
Where is the policy, much less the specifics?
Keep it up because it is working. Just not the way you think.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 27, 2016 at 12:19 am #44836waterfieldParticipantHere’s an article from a periodical I subscribe too and have a lot of respect for-The Economist. It points out how our trade agreements have been impacted by the globalization of economy and not a result of any party politics in this country. Moreover, the article addresses how Trump’s protectionism will have a tragic impact on the very people you believe he will protect. It also provides a path to improve our job losses w/o losing the clear benefits that our free trade agreements made under both Republican and Democratic leaderships have provided. It’s worth the read.
May 27, 2016 at 12:48 am #44838Billy_TParticipantKeep it up because it is working. Just not the way you think.
Anyone who could possibly be bothered at all by criticism directed Trump’s way is already going to support him. Those who believe he shouldn’t be criticized are already supporting him. Those who want to defend him against criticism are already supporting him. Nothing we say here — or in any online forum — is going to change anyone’s vote, one way or another.
Again, can you describe his plans for the American economy? How, specifically, would he bring jobs back? How, specifically, would he help those workers in Tennessee and elsewhere? Through what policy? Through what enacted mechanism?
May 27, 2016 at 1:18 am #44839znModeratorThis board has done us proud by avoiding the kind of terrible antagomism we saw ruin its grand-father board, the old huddle political discussion forum.
Political discussions are passionate, but this time around we have said that the same discussion rules apply here as on the Rams board.
So far, in almost 2 years, that has been working.
I saw some things that MIGHT, if we were to get over-sensitive about it, get taken as almost verging on nearly going there (into antagonistic language). But so far, not really…no lines crossed.
So far so good.
It is actually something to be proud if. The candidates themselves haven’t been as good as we have.
May 27, 2016 at 8:33 am #44840bnwBlockedHere’s an article from a periodical I subscribe too and have a lot of respect for-The Economist. It points out how our trade agreements have been impacted by the globalization of economy and not a result of any party politics in this country. Moreover, the article addresses how Trump’s protectionism will have a tragic impact on the very people you believe he will protect. It also provides a path to improve our job losses w/o losing the clear benefits that our free trade agreements made under both Republican and Democratic leaderships have provided. It’s worth the read.
The Economist and its ilk have had 20 years and all flyover country has experienced is job loss, decimation of tax base and empty techno-wonk politispeak promises every election cycle. We’ve had enough. The days of being able to sashay your ass to election via that D or R after your name are dwindling fast. Same goes for listening to the same expert crowd who have been enriching themselves via trade policies at the expense of those of us in flyover country. Tariffs are written into the US Constitution and its about time that power is exerted again. Look around the gravy train of the US dollar as the worlds reserve currency is fast coming to an end. We have no choice but to rebuild consumer products manufacturing here in the US.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 27, 2016 at 8:51 am #44841bnwBlockedKeep it up because it is working. Just not the way you think.
Anyone who could possibly be bothered at all by criticism directed Trump’s way is already going to support him. Those who believe he shouldn’t be criticized are already supporting him. Those who want to defend him against criticism are already supporting him. Nothing we say here — or in any online forum — is going to change anyone’s vote, one way or another.
Again, can you describe his plans for the American economy? How, specifically, would he bring jobs back? How, specifically, would he help those workers in Tennessee and elsewhere? Through what policy? Through what enacted mechanism?
And yet his crowds get larger and vote total increases. Already setting the GOP record for votes with 5 states remaining including CA. The crossover effect is real. The democrat defection in the general election will be staggering. Same for independents. The people but especially working people are fed up.
Clinton is the same ol same ol with a vagina. Nothing really new. Totally malleable depending upon the latest poll or focus group. Her time has passed. She should have fought Obama in ’08 but became hostage to political correctness and greedily chewed that bone thrown her way of being Sec. of State.
In my mind Bernie is the biggest loser in this election. He refused to go after Clinton, especially in the debates for far too long in the campaign. The votes were there for him since the dissatisfaction within the democrat party is as great as in the GOP. He will close out the primary kicking Clinton’s butt with his only hope that she is indicted for the obvious blatant crimes she willingly committed that he brushed off as no big deal. Her being indicted is his only chance for the nomination but Biden will get the nod before Bernie. Thus Bernie too will fail due to political correctness.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 27, 2016 at 11:05 am #44861Billy_TParticipantbnw,
I agree that Clinton is a terrible candidate. I don’t want her in the White House or anywhere near it. Nor do I want Bill there. But Trump is worse. Cuz he’ll give us the same rotten, neoliberal economics, with the added irrational bigotry. Clinton is basically a Republican without the bigotry. At least professed.
Remember, even if Trump is this great populist savior — he’s not. He built his fortune beyond his massive inheritance by crushing the average Joe and Jame. If he’s this great populist savior, he still needs to deal with the Republican Congress with zero intention of letting him go protectionist, or help the working guy, or any of the things you say he will do. Ironically, if he really does focus on helping the working Joe or Jane, he’s likely to get far more help from Dems than from his own party, though they, too, love the status quo — with a few exceptions like Warren and Brown.
In short, if you see Trump as an idealist, one who will fight for the “common man,” hopefully you see that his own party will stand in his way. At least. And then you have the entire establishment wing of the Dems to block him as well. Again, they’re basically Republicans without the professed bigotry.
May 27, 2016 at 11:32 am #44865bnwBlockedbnw,
I agree that Clinton is a terrible candidate. I don’t want her in the White House or anywhere near it. Nor do I want Bill there. But Trump is worse. Cuz he’ll give us the same rotten, neoliberal economics, with the added irrational bigotry. Clinton is basically a Republican without the bigotry. At least professed.
Remember, even if Trump is this great populist savior — he’s not. He built his fortune beyond his massive inheritance by crushing the average Joe and Jame. If he’s this great populist savior, he still needs to deal with the Republican Congress with zero intention of letting him go protectionist, or help the working guy, or any of the things you say he will do. Ironically, if he really does focus on helping the working Joe or Jane, he’s likely to get far more help from Dems than from his own party, though they, too, love the status quo — with a few exceptions like Warren and Brown.
In short, if you see Trump as an idealist, one who will fight for the “common man,” hopefully you see that his own party will stand in his way. At least. And then you have the entire establishment wing of the Dems to block him as well. Again, they’re basically Republicans without the professed bigotry.
You’re missing the big picture. The GOP is evolving. Trump isn’t an idiot. He knows the establishment will try to the very end to stick a knife in his back. He will work hard as president to get his slate of candidates elected. The man’s ego won’t let him stop at being a president. He wants demonstrable success that grows HIS party and has the people listing him among the best presidents. He’s going to break so many eggs for that omelet it will be something to behold. K street knows it won’t be business as usual and their fear is reflected by the establishment of both parties. It is long overdue.
The democrat party is evolving too. Trump even taps into a large amount of that dissatisfaction.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 27, 2016 at 11:50 am #44867waterfieldParticipantFirst of all that periodical is very even handed-as it has been for years and years. It essentially is the Christian Science Monitor of the economic world. It is not a political rag.
Your idea that tariffs are the answer simply does not recognize its impact on the purchasing power of the American consumer especially those with limited income. All that will do is make consumer goods far more expensive than what they already are. When that happens demand goes down and when demand goes down we start down the recession road with even more job loss.
There are no easy answers to this such as : Well use the tariff machinery. That’s merely simplicity for the simple minded. The answers lie in global agreements whether they be in “fair” trade solutions and currency discussions with China.
Trump’s goals -much like Sanders-are laudatory but you must have actual doable plans to get into the end-zone.
May 27, 2016 at 12:08 pm #44869bnwBlockedFirst of all that periodical is very even handed-as it has been for years and years. It essentially is the Christian Science Monitor of the economic world. It is not a political rag.
Your idea that tariffs are the answer simply does not recognize its impact on the purchasing power of the American consumer especially those with limited income. All that will do is make consumer goods far more expensive than what they already are. When that happens demand goes down and when demand goes down we start down the recession road with even more job loss.
There are no easy answers to this such as : Well use the tariff machinery. That’s merely simplicity for the simple minded. The answers lie in global agreements whether they be in “fair” trade solutions and currency discussions with China.
Trump’s goals -much like Sanders-are laudatory but you must have actual doable plans to get into the end-zone.
Its ideology of free trade doesn’t work for the american worker. Tariffs will cut into the profits of those companies wanting to dump goods made offshore while protecting american jobs. The Economist never looks past the next quarter’s profits whereas losing manufacturing jobs has a horrific effect to the communities effected due to the loss of the multiplier effect. Here we live it every day. Trump wants the best negotiators for trade deals not the daughter of a former president whose only qualification is she’s the daughter of a former president. That isn’t simplistic. Its realistic. Its indicative of someone wanting to succeed for the american worker. I find it sad the US worker is not a priority of yours.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by bnw.
The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.
Sprinkles are for winners.
May 27, 2016 at 1:11 pm #44875waterfieldParticipant“I find it sad the US worker is not a priority of yours.”
What’s truly “sad” is that very accusation. Everything I’ve written should indicate to the objective reader that I’m concerned about the present state of the global economy and its impact on manufacturing jobs in this country. You may disagree with my analysis and the causation and remedies but don’t ever tell me I’m not concerned about the US worker-OK ? How about starting from an “adult” level-namely we are both concerned but have disagreements as to the root causes and how to fix the problem.
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