Another day of the GOP convention, another night of terror

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  • #49013
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Alexandra Petri

    Supposedly the theme of the second night in Cleveland was “Make America Work Again.” Those were the words displayed behind the stage. That was what was announced. But judging by the speeches, the actual theme was “Make America Salem Again.” Or, “Don’t Worry! Hillary Clinton literally worships Lucifer, but on the bright side, Donald Trump’s winery makes excellent wine and his children love him!”

    and . . .

    Not to be outdone by Christie’s fantasy mob trial of Clinton, Ben Carson announced that he had seen Goody Clinton with the devil — and, what was worse, Saul Alinsky. “Are we willing to elect as president someone who has as their role model somebody who acknowledges Lucifer?” he asked. Actually. I am not making this up. Then he got almost immediately off the stage.

    This would have been the strangest part of the evening, but then actress Kimberlin Brown started to talk about avocados.

    And that was the second night. I did not think I would conclude my recap of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland by quoting Ramsay Bolton, but then again I did not think that the evening would include references to Lucifer, a mock trial of Hillary Clinton, conducted by Chris Christie, with loud cries of “GUILTY!” and, of course, praise of Trump wines.

    But “if you think this has a happy ending,” as Ramsay Bolton said, “you haven’t been paying attention.”

    #49014
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    I can’t stand either party. But between the two, I’d say the Dems are at least “sane.” The GOP isn’t. It’s clearly psychotic. And welcomes a motley assortment of racists, homophobes, xenophobes, conspiracy nuts — Alex Jones had his own little mini-convention there — and all around sociopaths. The Dems are mostly cowardly and craven. But the Republicans are outright demented.

    They really aren’t the same, though they have the same masters.

    Two rotten choices. Truly rotten. But one is clearly worse, in my view.

    #49017
    bnw
    Blocked

    Yawn.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #49019
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Yawn.

    Bnw, you really, really need to get some sleep, as mentioned. This is the fourth time that you couldn’t muster any kind of cogent response to one of my posts, because you’re just too damn sleepy.

    It may be time for something stronger than Melatonin. Perhaps Ambien. But, remember, some people have been known to sleep walk after they take those pills. So make sure you hide your car keys.

    #49020
    Avatar photosnowman
    Participant

    fact checking the speakers at yesterday’s convention, not that anyone expects people at a convention to actually be truthful or anything…
    GOP speakers day 2 fact check

    #49021
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    fact checking the speakers at yesterday’s convention, not that anyone expects people at a convention to actually be truthful or anything…
    GOP speakers day 2 fact check

    Both parties are filled with liars. But the GOP turns it into an art form. And they nominated a serial liar, who lies to whip white America into frothing anger against black and brown people. Goddess, America is so screwed.

    #49022
    bnw
    Blocked

    Yawn.

    Bnw, you really, really need to get some sleep, as mentioned. This is the fourth time that you couldn’t muster any kind of cogent response to one of my posts, because you’re just too damn sleepy.

    It may be time for something stronger than Melatonin. Perhaps Ambien. But, remember, some people have been known to sleep walk after they take those pills. So make sure you hide your car keys.

    No more like you should stop posting on Ground Hog day since your posts are all the same. Hence the well deserved ‘Yawn’.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #49023
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Yeah, “Make America Work Again” was the stated theme, but they never got around to it. Most everybody just talked about how awful Hillary is. The audience seemed bored, and it’s hard to blame them. Mitch McConnell was uninspiring to say the least, and Ben Carson….

    So far the convention has been a fender bender, but it won’t matter unless it gets far worse.

    #49024
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Yawn.

    Bnw, you really, really need to get some sleep, as mentioned. This is the fourth time that you couldn’t muster any kind of cogent response to one of my posts, because you’re just too damn sleepy.

    It may be time for something stronger than Melatonin. Perhaps Ambien. But, remember, some people have been known to sleep walk after they take those pills. So make sure you hide your car keys.

    No more like you should stop posting on Ground Hog day since your posts are all the same. Hence the well deserved ‘Yawn’.

    bnw,

    Don’t read them if you think they’re all the same. Problem solved. And, again, please get some sleep.

    #49025
    Avatar photosnowman
    Participant

    The real shit does not hit the fan until after both conventions have wrapped up and the campaigns can focus on negative ads against each other. All the convention theatrics with endorsements from the losers in the nomination process, trotting your family out to tell people what a great person you are, all of that is just foreplay to the real dirty business of running a campaign from August through October. The GOP will keep hammering on the “untrustworthy” and “liar” themes, but Trump is a far more unlikeable person. The Dems could run new ads on Trump as a crooked businessman, a flip-flopper on the issues, ignorant of foreign issues, someone who promotes gambling and low morals, etc… every week. It will be very ugly.

    #49026
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Yeah, “Make America Work Again” was the stated theme, but they never got around to it. Most everybody just talked about how awful Hillary is. The audience seemed bored, and it’s hard to blame them. Mitch McConnell was uninspiring to say the least, and Ben Carson….

    So far the convention has been a fender bender, but it won’t matter unless it gets far worse.

    That obsession with Alinsky is so weird. A little old man who never hurt a flea, was beloved by his neighbors for helping the poor and the downtrodden . . . and he’s among the biggest boogeymen on the right.

    Carson has a problem with Alinsky “acknowledging” Lucifer, even though he did it in the context of calling him a mythical being. Carson and the religious right, OTOH, “acknowledge” him all the time, and they actually believe he exists. Their god acknowledged him too, and cut a deal with him to torture Job — if one takes the bible literally, etc. etc.

    I am diametrically opposed to both parties, their stranglehold on the country, their monopoly — which should be subject to antitrust breakup, and would be, if they didn’t control the system . . . That said, I can’t help but see the GOP as far more odious than the odious Dems. Again, same masters. Both parties serve capitalism and empire through endless wars, coups, the expansion of the security state and economic apartheid, etc. etc. . . . . but, to me, the GOP really is worse. The far right really is worse than the center right, IMO.

    #49027
    NewMexicoRam
    Participant

    Just yesterday I spoke with a patient of mine who is a very high ranking Democratic member of our New Mexico Statehouse and will be attending the Democratic Convention next week.
    Even though I am a registered Republican (which I don’t think I ever told her that), we get along very well and have interesting and civil political discussions when she is in the office.
    Yesterday, we discussed the presidential candidates and our total disgust with both of them.
    Our nation is not at a very proud moment of history.

    #49028
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Just yesterday I spoke with a patient of mine who is a very high ranking Democratic member of our New Mexico Statehouse and will be attending the Democratic Convention next week.
    Even though I am a registered Republican (which I don’t think I ever told her that), we get along very well and have interesting and civil political discussions when she is in the office.
    Yesterday, we discussed the presidential candidates and our total disgust with both of them.
    Our nation is not at a very proud moment of history.

    Agreed. Two terrible candidates. I’ll be voting for Jill Stein, as I did in 2012.

    #49030
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Just yesterday I spoke with a patient of mine who is a very high ranking Democratic member of our New Mexico Statehouse and will be attending the Democratic Convention next week.
    Even though I am a registered Republican (which I don’t think I ever told her that), we get along very well and have interesting and civil political discussions when she is in the office.
    Yesterday, we discussed the presidential candidates and our total disgust with both of them.
    Our nation is not at a very proud moment of history.

    All the same, there are differences that matter. So I pay attention to the policy level.

    And if I may ask a personal question, are you going to vote, or refrain from voting?

    You can choose not to answer that of course!

    #49036
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    WV-Mom report. wv-mom said to me that she has
    watched almost all of the Convention of Reps,
    and this is her takeaway:

    Donald Trumps children are lovely.
    Adorable. They ‘hit a home-run’ at the convention.

    Donald Trumps super-model wife speaks five languages
    and she ‘hit a home-run’ at the convention.

    Hillary’s favorite author wrote a book, and the Author
    dedicated the book to LUCIFER.

    Donald Trump is a good christian and MSNBC and CNN are vile, liberal,
    friends of Hillary.

    If Hillary becomes President of the United States of America,
    satan will celebrate and the Lord will abandon this country.

    Ok, this has been the wv-mom report on the Convention of Reps.

    sigh
    w
    v

    #49037
    bnw
    Blocked

    WV-Mom report. wv-mom said to me that she has
    watched almost all of the Convention of Reps,
    and this is her takeaway:

    Donald Trumps children are lovely.
    Adorable. They ‘hit a home-run’ at the convention.

    Donald Trumps super-model wife speaks five languages
    and she ‘hit a home-run’ at the convention.

    Hillary’s favorite author wrote a book, and the Author
    dedicated the book to LUCIFER.

    Donald Trump is a good christian and MSNBC and CNN are vile, liberal,
    friends of Hillary.

    If Hillary becomes President of the United States of America,
    satan will celebrate and the Lord will abandon this country.

    Ok, this has been the wv-mom report on the Convention of Reps.

    sigh
    w
    v

    You were adopted?

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #49048
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Two Times Mike Pence Brushed Off Science

    http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/two-times-mike-pence-brushed-off-science/

    As my boss Nate Silver wrote Thursday, most people in the U.S. don’t know much about Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, Donald Trump’s vice-presidential pick. That’s likely not the case among public health professionals, given Pence’s rather notorious recent history with public health policy.

    Take, for example, an ongoing outbreak of HIV in southern Indiana. From December 2014 to May of this year, 191 cases of HIV, nearly all linked to the injection of the painkiller Opana, were found in Scott County, a rural area near the Kentucky border. Before the outbreak, there had been numerous deaths and known risks from the increase in injection drug use in the area for several years. Pence had long been a vocal opponent of needle exchange programs, which allow drug users to trade in used syringes for sterile ones in order to stop the spread of diseases, despite evidence that they work. Such programs were banned in the state when the outbreak started.

    At the end of March last year, four months after the outbreak began, Pence declared a public health emergency, allowing needle exchanges to be opened in Scott County. Scott County Health Officer Dr. R. Kevin Rogers described the program as having “a tremendously positive and dramatic impact” and recently made a successful request to have the program extended until May 2017. At least four other counties have been allowed to start programs as well. Still, Pence hasn’t moved to lift the state ban on funding for needle exchanges and has made it clear in the past that he would veto any bill that tried to lift the ban statewide.

    Pence has also shown a deep misunderstanding of basic public health principles in the past. In 2001, he wrote an op-ed declaring that “smoking doesn’t kill.” The evidence? “Two out of three smokers does not die from a smoking related illness.” Diseases are rarely the product of one thing. With lung cancer, for example, there’s a strong genetic component. Some people who don’t smoke will get lung cancer.1 Many people who do smoke will not. Relative risk, which measures the strength of the relationship between an exposure and a health outcome (smoking and lung cancer in this instance), is a funny thing; it can’t be used to measure the risk for an individual, only a group. And at that macro level, the risk of smoking is quite clear, as this oft-cited American Cancer Society chart shows.

    Lung cancer isn’t even the most common negative health outcome from smoking. That distinction goes to vascular diseases that cause heart disease and/or stroke, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

    Pence’s home state of Indiana should be particularly concerned about tobacco: 23 percent of adults are smokers, the sixth-highest statewide rate in the United States. Fifteen percent of pregnant women smoke, nearly double the national average, and the state spent $2.93 billion in 2014 on health costs caused by cigarette smoking — more per capita than 31 other states, according to the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. Still, Indiana has a cigarette tax of just 99 cents,2 lower than 35 other states, despite a wealth of evidence showing that increasing taxes on tobacco reduces smoking rates.

    When a tobacco tax hike was proposed this year in Indiana, Pence made it clear that he was not in favor. The tax increase was subsequently taken out of the bill.

    All that said, Pence’s track record on public health likely won’t have an effect on the election. Only 37 percent of registered voters said that health care was extremely important to determining who they would vote for this election season, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll released Friday.

    #49050
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    When I don’t pay any attention to either party, it’s pretty easy for me to hold them both in contempt, and not delve into differences. But watching a bit of the convention, reading about it, seeing the various Republicans parade their extremism, hate and ignorance in front of the world . . . . well, it’s not so easy anymore to see them as equally odious. Odious, yes. But not equally so, or for the same reasons.

    Actually, it becomes impossible for me. The level of abject stupidity, mindless adherence to hand-me-down urban legends, the frothing at the mouth desire to see others suffer greatly, the belief that there is a “real America” and a false one, and that the former is all white, all Christian . . . . again, it becomes impossible for me to claim there are no differences between the two wings of the duopoly. In short, we truly do have a lesser of two evils scenario in America, and that frustrates the hell out of me.

    Watched a bit of Maher’s special convention coverage, belatedly. This morning. Trump’s ghostwriter was on and described Trump as a sociopath again, and said that he has not read a book — other than those ghostwritten for him — in his adult life. And I also learned that he has made it extremely difficult for insiders and former insiders to ever talk about their interactions with him by forcing confidentiality agreements on them, which Tony Schwartz is now fighting.

    Donald Trump Threatens the Ghostwriter of “The Art of the Deal”

    Michael Moore was also on, along with Joy Reid and Dan Savage. Moore said he thinks Trump will win, because he’s managed to con enough of the heartland to do so. And Trump has conned them. If anyone actually believes Trump cares about working class folk, just think about how he made his fortune — on their backs, but shafting them repeatedly. He doesn’t care about you. He’s a sociopath. He cares only about himself.

    #49051
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    From the New Yorker piece:

    When Tony Schwartz, Donald Trump’s ghostwriter for his 1987 memoir “The Art of the Deal,” decided to tell the public about his concerns that Trump isn’t fit to serve as President, his main worry was that Trump, who is famously litigious, would threaten to take legal action against him. Schwartz’s premonition has proved correct.

    On Monday, July 18th, the day that this magazine published my interview with Schwartz, and hours after Schwartz appeared on “Good Morning America” to voice his concerns about Trump’s “impulsive and self-centered” character, Jason D. Greenblatt, the general counsel and vice-president of the Trump Organization, issued a threatening cease-and-desist letter to Schwartz. (You can read the full letter at the bottom of this post.)

    #49053
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    and . . .

    As McNamara notes, Greenblatt’s letter does not actually refute Schwartz’s claim that he, not Trump, wrote the book. Instead, Greenblatt writes that Trump “was the source of all of the material in the Book and the inspiration for every word in the Book,” rather than the author. Greenblatt acknowledges that Trump provided Schwartz “with the facts and facets of each of these deals in order for you to write them down.”

    On “Good Morning America,” Schwartz told host George Stephanopoulos that “The Art of the Deal” very likely contained “falsehoods” owing to the fact that Trump, in his opinion, has a strong propensity to exaggerate and lie. Greenblatt attacks Schwartz’s statement, arguing that if the book is less than accurate, then Schwartz had breached his obligations as the book’s co-author. In response, Schwartz’s lawyer notes that because Trump takes credit for providing “all of the material in the book,” if there are falsehoods they must have been provided by Trump. “Any purported failure by Mr. Schwartz to be ‘accurate in the completion of [his] duties’ would be entirely because of misleading statements by Mr. Trump,” McNamara writes.

    #49055
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    Oh, and we’ve now learned that Trump’s son may have offered the job of VP, and so much more, to John Kasich. Basically, that he could run the country for Trump:

    Trump Reportedly Tried to Convince Kasich to Be His VP by Offering Him the President’s Job

    One day this past May, Donald Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., reached out to a senior adviser to Gov. John Kasich of Ohio, who left the presidential race just a few weeks before. As a candidate, Kasich declared in March that Trump was “really not prepared to be president of the United States,” and the following month he took the highly unusual step of coordinating with his rival Senator Ted Cruz in an effort to deny Trump the nomination. But according to the Kasich adviser (who spoke only under the condition that he not be named), Donald Jr. wanted to make him an offer nonetheless: Did he have any interest in being the most powerful vice president in history?

    When Kasich’s adviser asked how this would be the case, Donald Jr. explained that his father’s vice president would be in charge of domestic and foreign policy.

    Then what, the adviser asked, would Trump be in charge of?

    “Making America great again” was the casual reply.

    #49125
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    off the net from Ronald Schmidt, <political scientist who posts on Facebook

    The damage done to the country by a Trump presidency has already started. His campaign exhorted Americans to racial violence, rabid misogyny, and self-pitying xenophobia; his speech last night told his supporters that they are right to have embraced those messages because their lives and their nation are in danger … and then he offered a solution. Not the solution of American ideals, or of solidarity with each other, or even of faith (which are the solutions offered by the campaign speeches throughout our history that we still remember). The solution he offered was himself, that he will be our voice, that he will “fix it.” This radical, militant, fascism has already done damage to the nation and to the lives of real people; the general campaign will make it worse. The cost of his election would be far greater. “Trump is telling his followers their racist gut instincts are right — and are the only thing that can save them. Donald Trump went to great lengths tonight to tie together ‘mass immigration, mass lawlessness,” and crime. He said this to a supporter base that often, cognitively, conflates ‘illegal immigrants’ with ‘immigrants,’ and ‘immigrants’ with ‘Latinos.’ He said this to supporters who sometimes feel they “just know” when someone else waiting in line at the employment office is ‘illegal.’ He told them they were right to feel overwhelmed and they were right to be afraid, and that if they weren’t careful they could be killed. By the same token, he told his audience of mostly white Americans — mainly living in racially segregated, low-crime suburban neighborhoods — that they should be extremely worried about being victimized by crime. The danger posed by Trump supporters going about their business armed with weaponized white fear is more Renisha McBrides and more Tamir Rices. It has a cost in nonwhite bodies and lives.” http://www.vox.com/2016/7/22/12254212/trump-rnc-speech-racist?utm_campaign=vox&utm_content=entry&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook

    #49133
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Ronald Schmidt

    The damage done to the country by a Trump presidency has already started. His campaign exhorted Americans to racial violence, rabid misogyny, and self-pitying xenophobia; his speech last night told his supporters that they are right to have embraced those messages because their lives and their nation are in danger … and then he offered a solution. Not the solution of American ideals, or of solidarity with each other, or even of faith (which are the solutions offered by the campaign speeches throughout our history that we still remember). The solution he offered was himself, that he will be our voice, that he will “fix it.” This radical, militant, fascism has already done damage to the nation and to the lives of real people; the general campaign will make it worse. The cost of his election would be far greater. “Trump is telling his followers their racist gut instincts are right — and are the only thing that can save them. Donald Trump went to great lengths tonight to tie together ‘mass immigration, mass lawlessness,” and crime. He said this to a supporter base that often, cognitively, conflates ‘illegal immigrants’ with ‘immigrants,’ and ‘immigrants’ with ‘Latinos.’ He said this to supporters who sometimes feel they “just know” when someone else waiting in line at the employment office is ‘illegal.’ He told them they were right to feel overwhelmed and they were right to be afraid, and that if they weren’t careful they could be killed. By the same token, he told his audience of mostly white Americans — mainly living in racially segregated, low-crime suburban neighborhoods — that they should be extremely worried about being victimized by crime. The danger posed by Trump supporters going about their business armed with weaponized white fear is more Renisha McBrides and more Tamir Rices. It has a cost in nonwhite bodies and lives.” http://www.vox.com/2016/7/22/12254212/trump-rnc-speech-racist?utm_campaign=vox&utm_content=entry&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook

    ————–

    Sigh. Yes, crooked-Donald is Frankenstein. And crooked-Hillary is Dracula.

    And American doesnt have to vote for either one.

    But Americans dont want to “waste their votes” so
    they will vote for a monster.

    No-one is twisting their voting-arms.

    w
    v

    #49141
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    But Americans dont want to “waste their votes” so
    they will vote for a monster.

    No-one is twisting their voting-arms.

    I will vote for Hillary because Trump is significantly worse and by a wide margin.

    I will then join the “third party alternative” and/or “reform the dems” thing the day after the election.

    That’s just me listing my vote. Not arguing. If I can’t talk anyone else into it, so be it.

    If I catch flak for it here, so be that too.

    #49142
    bnw
    Blocked

    But Americans dont want to “waste their votes” so
    they will vote for a monster.

    No-one is twisting their voting-arms.

    I will vote for Hillary because Trump is significantly worse and by a wide margin.

    I will then join the “third party alternative” and/or “reform the dems” thing the day after the election.

    That’s just me listing my vote. Not arguing. If I can’t talk anyone else into it, so be it.

    If I catch flak for it here, so be that too.

    Hildabeast is a crook so Trump is much better. I will vote for Trump.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #49146
    Avatar photoBilly_T
    Participant

    But Americans dont want to “waste their votes” so
    they will vote for a monster.

    No-one is twisting their voting-arms.

    I will vote for Hillary because Trump is significantly worse and by a wide margin.

    I will then join the “third party alternative” and/or “reform the dems” thing the day after the election.

    That’s just me listing my vote. Not arguing. If I can’t talk anyone else into it, so be it.

    If I catch flak for it here, so be that too.

    Hildabeast is a crook so Trump is much better. I will vote for Trump.

    If being a “crook” is a deal-breaker for you, bnw, then you shouldn’t be voting for Trump. He made tens of millions ripping off students at Trump University, tens of millions ripping off business partners in his many bankruptcies, tens of millions from taxpayers playing the debt game. He’s currently fighting thousands of lawsuits for his crooked business practices. And if elected, he’ll pocket additional tens of millions, personally, from slashing the top tax rate and ending the estate tax. The latter, btw, impacts just 0.2% of the country. The richest 0.2%. More than 99.8% of the country won’t see any “tax relief” from the end of the estate tax, but government programs will take a hit so the rich can get richer.

    Oh, and Mr “fair trade” outsources labor for his manufacturing companies. And, he’s a serial liar.

    I understand not wanting to vote for Clinton. I won’t either. But voting for Trump makes zero sense, given your criteria.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 4 months ago by Avatar photoBilly_T.
    #49148
    bnw
    Blocked

    But Americans dont want to “waste their votes” so
    they will vote for a monster.

    No-one is twisting their voting-arms.

    I will vote for Hillary because Trump is significantly worse and by a wide margin.

    I will then join the “third party alternative” and/or “reform the dems” thing the day after the election.

    That’s just me listing my vote. Not arguing. If I can’t talk anyone else into it, so be it.

    If I catch flak for it here, so be that too.

    Hildabeast is a crook so Trump is much better. I will vote for Trump.

    If being a “crook” is a deal-breaker for you, bnw, then you shouldn’t be voting for Trump. He made tens of millions ripping off students at Trump University, tens of millions ripping off business partners in his many bankruptcies, tens of millions from taxpayers playing the debt game. He’s currently fighting thousands of lawsuits for his crooked business practices. And if elected, he’ll pocket additional tens of millions, personally, from slashing the top tax rate and ending the estate tax. The latter, btw, impacts just 0.2% of the country. The richest 0.2%. More than 99.8% of the country won’t see any “tax relief” from the end of the estate tax, but government programs will take a hit so the rich can get richer.

    Oh, and Mr “fair trade” outsources labor for his manufacturing companies. And, he’s a serial liar.

    I understand not wanting to vote for Clinton. I won’t either. But voting for Trump makes zero sense, given your criteria.

    Hildabeast is a crook who has profited from influence peddling throughout her so called public service. I will vote for Trump.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

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