Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Public House › Krystal Ball on the Ukraine thingy
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September 26, 2019 at 7:45 pm #105728wvParticipant
I tend to agree with Krystal Ball on this impeachment thing, but reasonable people can disagree, etc.
September 26, 2019 at 8:21 pm #105732Billy_TParticipantWell, of course, I’m not reasonable, but I disagree with most of her take.
;>)
First off, Trump put 400 million dollars on hold, secretly, without a stated rationale, that was already appropriated by Congress for the Ukraine. He pursues the newly elected president, to get him to invent dirt on the Bidens. On the rough summary of the phone call in question, provided by the White House — which means it’s as good as it’s going to get for them — he asks for a favor, after Zelensky talks about necessary military help. He says he needs him to talk to his personal lawyer, Giuliani, and his AG, Barr, to go after the Bidens. Quid, meet quo.
The Whistleblower’s report, backed up by the IG — a Trump appointee — says Trump administration personnel moved the word for word, electronic transcript of the call, secretly, to a special server reserved for top secret, national security issues, which is evidence of their consciousness of guilt. No one would have found out about any of this if not for the whistleblower. Oh, and he says this has been done many times when it comes to Trump’s phone calls.
Yes, it’s impeachable, and yes, it’s a smoking gun. You can’t use the office of the presidency, and taxpayer monies, to try to take down your political opponents, especially by way of foreign nationals.
As for her comment about Bush and the lack of impeachment. I agree with her take there, absolutely. The things that presidents should be impeached on — coups, torture, environmental destruction, kids in cages, mass incarceration, etc. etc. . . . the US has no history of taking that step, and we should. But that doesn’t mean that Trump’s action in this case falls short of the needed threshold. And to me, if he goes down for this, it will be a stand-in for the lack of action on bigger crimes.
Al Capone was sent to jail for tax evasion, not murder, extortion, torture, etc. etc. In the larger scheme of things, it served the country well.
September 26, 2019 at 8:24 pm #105734wvParticipantJust adding Tulsi’s view:
September 26, 2019 at 8:26 pm #105735Billy_TParticipantAlso, I watched part of the hearing this morning, and the Dems were pissing me off. I was thinking, they’re botching a major gift. Trump handed them the impeachment issue on a silver platter, and they’re screwing it up already.
How? Most everyone who asked Maguire questions concentrated on process. They seemed most upset that he had broken the statute by not sending the whistleblower report to Congress right away. And while they’re correct about this — Maguire should have done so — it was stupid, IMO, to make him the focus and not Trump. They should have read straight from the White House’s summary, over and over again, and from the whistleblower’s letter, and that would have been damning. Instead, it came across, to me, at least, that they were more upset by his screwing with the process than with Trump’s obvious abuse of power and skulduggery.
(Admittedly, the whistleblower stuff was released minutes before the hearing started, so they didn’t exactly have a lot of time to deal with it. But, still . . .)
I hope they do better in the future.
September 26, 2019 at 8:30 pm #105736Billy_TParticipantAlso, quick note on Hunter Biden. I don’t see the Dems trying to protect him. That hasn’t been their focus. And he doesn’t need any protection. Yes, it looks bad when the sons and daughters of the rich get good jobs. But that’s the nature of capitalism, and that’s the American Dream, really. As long as we have the former, we’re gonna have a virtual aristocracy. It comes with the mechanics of the system itself.
Speaking of hypocrisy, Trump making a huge deal about Biden’s son, when he was given 400 million dollars by his father, and he hired his own kids to work on the public dime?
At least Hunter Biden was being paid by a private company in the Ukraine. That didn’t come from American taxpayers, etc.
September 26, 2019 at 8:43 pm #105737Billy_TParticipantSorry for three in a row posts . . .
Anyway, again, I’m not reasonable, so . . . I think Gabbard is absolutely wrong when she says most people who read the White House summary won’t see it as a big deal. To me, I honestly can’t fathom someone reading that and NOT seeing it as a smoking gun, quid pro quo, lawless, corrupt display.
True, the stakes aren’t as big as lying us into a war, like Bush did. Not even close. Obviously. But it’s still a blatant attempt at extortion, by a sitting president, using tax dollars dollars as the bait. It’s still in the service of Trump’s reelection effort . . . . and it includes the very real possibility that the Ukrainian president would invent dirt, and invent a DNC server, to support Trump’s crackpot conspiracy theories about where they actually ended up.
Something I think the media are missing: This isn’t just about Trump asking the Ukraine for actually existing material on the Bidens. This is open season for them to manufacture it. If anyone thinks Trump is above that, they’re . . . well, sadly naive.
Rams 99
Tampa Bay 1;>)
September 26, 2019 at 8:44 pm #105738wvParticipantTrump handed them the impeachment issue on a silver platter, and they’re screwing it up already. .
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Well we disagree on this one, comrad. The country is divided. I promise you, at least half the electorate thinks this is all bullshit. Just Dems playing politics. Rightly or wrongly those are the facts we have to deal with. On top of that we have a Rep-Senate that will not vote to impeach Trump, so any proceeding is going to fail. And the American people will get very tired of the whole thing. They will want to decide who is the next Prez, themselves. They wont want the Dem-politicians deciding things.
It just seems to me you are looking at this like a Lawyer. You are arguing ‘law’ and ‘rules’ end such.
See, I look at more like its…oh… Lord of the Flies…or Animal Farm 🙂
We both agree Trump is a vile, corrupt, dangerous, unqualified, narcissistic, lying, biosphere-killing piece of shit. But…my mom loves him. As does about half the electorate. Amerika.
w
vSeptember 26, 2019 at 8:51 pm #105739Billy_TParticipantTrump handed them the impeachment issue on a silver platter, and they’re screwing it up already. .
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Well we disagree on this one, comrad. The country is divided. I promise you, at least half the electorate thinks this is all bullshit. Just Dems playing politics. Rightly or wrongly those are the facts we have to deal with. On top of that we have a Rep-Senate that will not vote to impeach Trump, so any proceeding is going to fail. And the American people will get very tired of the whole thing. They will want to decide who is the next Prez, themselves. They wont want the Dem-politicians deciding things.
It just seems to me you are looking at this like a Lawyer. You are arguing ‘law’ and ‘rules’ end such.
See, I look at more like its…oh… Lord of the Flies…or Animal Farm 🙂
We both agree Trump is a vile, corrupt, dangerous, unqualified, narcissistic, lying, biosphere-killing piece of shit. But…my mom loves him. As does about half the electorate. Amerika.
w
vIronic, aint it? You’re the lawyer!!
;>)
In my own defense, I’m actually thinking of this in terms of morals and ethics. To be honest, “laws” are secondary to me. In fact, if Trump has shown us anything, he’s shown that our laws are far too vague about things we never thought would come up. Same with “norms and traditions.” He’s shown us that when those are ignored, there isn’t much else holding things together.
Our political system is a teetering, precarious house of cards in many ways. And, my bugaboo is that capitalism has corrupted it to the point where it’s pretty close to falling down — perhaps forever. Trump is giving it a push, and he seems to like doing it.
September 26, 2019 at 10:33 pm #105751wvParticipantIn my own defense, I’m actually thinking of this in terms of morals and ethics. To be honest, “laws” are secondary to me.
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Well, ethically and morally you are right. But ethically and morally every modern President should have been impeached, I would say 🙂
I not thinking ethically/morally. I’m just doin my own political-race-horse algebra. And i suspect Impeachment would just make Trump look like a martyr with undecideds. With Dems it wont change any votes. With Reps it wont change any votes. Its all about undecideds.
Can you imagine, there are undecided-humans out there in Amerika. Scary times. Walking Dead times.
Perhaps it doesnt make one iota of difference what the Dem-politicans do regarding impeachment. Didnt Kiergegaard say something about marriage once: “Marry, and you will regret it; don’t marry, you will also regret it; marry or don’t marry, you will regret it either way”
w
vSeptember 26, 2019 at 11:23 pm #105755wvParticipantSeptember 27, 2019 at 8:57 am #105765Billy_TParticipantPerhaps it doesnt make one iota of difference what the Dem-politicans do regarding impeachment. Didnt Kiergegaard say something about marriage once: “Marry, and you will regret it; don’t marry, you will also regret it; marry or don’t marry, you will regret it either way”
w
vKierkegaard’s famous battle within himself over marriage to Regine Olsen. Similar, I always thought, to Kafka’s battles with himself over his fiances.
A foundational book for me as a young adult: Irrational Man, by William Barrett. Turned me on to Kierkegaard for a lifetime, as well as a host of existentialists I hadn’t read prior to that day. It’s been nearly forty years now.
September 27, 2019 at 10:00 am #105767CalParticipantI agree with Billy. That argument against impeachment makes no sense. Talking about Biden’s corruption only hurts the Democrats IF Biden is the nominee. And that party is in deep shit if that guy is the nominee.
So making a big scene about Trump’s corruption and watching the Republicans complain about Biden’s corruption only helps the Democrat’s chances against Trump.
What is Trump going to do? Talk about draining the swamp again? I can’t imagine that will work in 2020.
The Democrats are best served by talking non stop about what a mess Trump is and continuing to stoke the anger that led to taking over the House in 2018. This impeachment inquiry only helps Democrats talk about what a corrupt, con man, piece of shit Trump is. They should just continue the investigations non-stop until next year’s election.
The Republican counter argument to the impeachment hearings makes no sense and just strengthens my conviction that the impeachment process should continue. I heard someone on NPR from Newsmax (which I think is a Republican playground) talking about how the impeachment hearings prevent Congress from doing its job and making things better for Americans.
But that’s what the 2018 election was all about. Making sure Trump and the Repbulicans couldn’t continue to operate. It’s like Republicans just forget that they got their asses kicked in the mid-terms, which hardly ever happens these days.
September 28, 2019 at 2:25 pm #105846ZooeyModeratorI just got around to this thread which I’ve had in an open tab for a couple of days, and I don’t think much of Ball’s opinion.
Unless I missed something, or misunderstood something along the way, her position makes no sense to me.
Now…I did not listen to nor read Pelosi’s statement, but I haven’t seen or heard it reported anywhere else that she said that they would focus exclusively on the Ukraine issue.
I did hear that the plan was to put together, as quickly as possible, comprehensive Articles of Impeachment from the findings of six different investigations that the Democrats have been holding. That came straight from the mouth of Maxine Waters who is many things, but a misinformed bullshitter is not among them.
Furthermore, the notion that this is about protecting their “own” in Biden is preposterous.
I have no reason to doubt that Pelosi would do a great deal to support Biden’s ascension to the White House, but impeaching Trump does not fall into that realm. First of all, if this was about protecting Biden, the best move would have been to downplay, then ignore this whistle blower report, not put it directly in the red hot center of the world media spotlight. That makes zero sense. Of course, the first thing Republicans did was claim that the Real Issue is Biden, not the phone call, and this entire thing will probably make Biden’s slump in the polls even worse. No way it’s gonna help, right? So I don’t buy that at all. Secondly, nobody stakes their entire political career on a gambit to protect Hunter Biden from scrutiny. Even if what he did was illegal, and it wasn’t. It was unethical, for sure, but less unethical than the president asking foreign dignitaries to pay to stay at properties he owns. Not even close. So she’s gonna throw impeachment at Trump in order to protect Joe Biden. FFS. No. Just no.
September 28, 2019 at 2:58 pm #105849ZooeyModeratorAnd of course…you know…
What Isn’t Mentioned About the Trump-Ukraine ‘Scandal’
This article was originally published on Consortium News.
The most crucial aspects of the Trump-Ukraine “scandal,” which has led to impeachment proceedings against Donald Trump, are not being told, even by Republicans.
Trump was very likely motivated by politics if he indeed withheld military aid to Ukraine in exchange for Kiev launching an investigation into Democratic presidential frontrunner Joe Biden, though the transcript of the call released by the White House between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelinsky does not make certain such a quid-pro-quo.
But what’s not being talked about in the mainstream is the context of this story, which shows that, politics aside, Biden should indeed be investigated in both Ukraine and in the United States.
We know from the leaked, early 2014 telephone conversation between Victoria Nuland, then assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, and Geoffrey Pyatt, then U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, that then Vice President Biden played a role in “midwifing” the U.S.-backed overthrow of an elected Ukrainian government soon after that conversation.
That’s the biggest crime in this story that isn’t being told. The illegal overthrow of a sovereign government.
As booty from the coup, the sitting vice president’s son, Hunter Biden, soon got a seat on the board of Ukraine’s biggest gas producer, Burisma Holdings. This can only be seen as a transparently neocolonial maneuver to take over a country and install one’s own people. But Biden’s son wasn’t the only one.
A family friend of then Secretary of State John Kerry also joined Burisma’s board. U.S. agricultural giant Monsanto got a Ukrainian contract soon after the overthrow. And the first, post-coup Ukrainian finance minister was an American citizen, a former State Department official, who was given Ukrainian citizenship the day before she took up the post.
After a Ukrainian prosecutor began looking into possible corruption at Burisma, Biden openly admitted at a conference last year that as vice president he withheld a $1 billion credit line to Ukraine until the government fired the prosecutor. As Biden says himself, it took only six hours for it to happen.
Exactly what Biden boasted of doing is what the Democrats are now accusing Trump of doing, and it isn’t clear if Trump got what he wanted as Biden did.
Threats, Bribes and Blackmail
That leads to another major part of this story not being told: the routine way the U.S. government conducts foreign policy: with bribes, threats and blackmail.
Trump may have withheld military aid to seek a probe into Biden, but it is hypocritically being framed by Democrats as an abuse of power out of the ordinary. But it is very much ordinary.
Examples abound. The threat of withholding foreign aid was wielded against nations on the UN Security Council in 1991 when the U.S. sought authorization for the First Gulf War. Yemen had the temerity to vote against. A member of the U.S. delegation told Yemen’s ambassador: “That’s the most expensive vote you ever cast.” The U.S. then cut $70 million in foreign aid to the Middle East’s poorest nation, and Saudi Arabia repatriated about a million Yemeni workers.
The same thing happened before the Second Gulf War in 2003, as revealed by whistleblower Katharine Gun (who will appear Friday night on CN Live!). Gun leaked an NSA memo that showed the U.S. sought help from its British counterpart in signals intelligence to spy on the missions of Security Council members to get “leverage” over them to influence their vote to authorize the invasion of Iraq.
In 2001 the U.S. threatened the end of military and foreign aid if nations did not conclude bilateral agreements granting immunity to U.S. troops before the International Criminal Court.
More recently, the U.S. used its muscle against Ecuador, including dangling a $10 billion IMF loan, in exchange for the expulsion of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange from its London embassy.
This is how the U.S. conducts “diplomacy.”
As former UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros Ghali wrote:
“Coming from a developing country, I was trained extensively in international law and diplomacy and mistakenly assumed that the great powers, especially the United States, also trained their representatives in diplomacy and accepted the value of it. But the Roman Empire had no need for diplomacy. Nor does the United States. Diplomacy is perceived by an imperial power as a waste of time and prestige and a sign of weakness.”
This fundamental corruption of U.S. foreign policy, which includes overthrowing elected governments, is matched only by the corruption of a political system that exalts partisan political power above all else. Exposing this deep-seated and longstanding corruption should take precedence over scoring partisan scalps, whether Biden’s or Trump’s.
September 28, 2019 at 4:20 pm #105851Billy_TParticipantThe Ukraine is similar to Syria, in the sense that it’s difficult to know which reports to trust. To oversimplify: there is a Russian narrative and a US narrative . . . Obviously a host of others outside those camps have their own take.
Trump and his followers are supporting the Russian narrative, basically, knowingly or not. It says Russia is the good guy, trying its best to return the Ukraine to a democratic, corruption-free state, which the US forced on it. The US narrative is roughly the opposite. It says the US (with NATO support) worked to get rid of the Russian-backed, alt-fascist, highly corrupt government previously in place.
In one, the Bidens are opportunists/bad guys, who took advantage of US/bad guy geopolitics. The other says that Joe Biden actually helped remove a corrupt prosecutor, at the behest of the US and its NATO allies. In that narrative, the corrupt prosecutor wasn’t doing enough to root out corruption, and held off on investigating Burisma (Hunter’s employer).
Hunter Biden doesn’t look so good in either narrative, but much worse in the Russian-backed one. His father looks much better in one than the other, but by no means angelic in either.
September 28, 2019 at 9:18 pm #105867wvParticipant“…Trump may have withheld military aid to seek a probe into Biden, but it is hypocritically being framed by Democrats as an abuse of power out of the ordinary. But it is very much ordinary…”
=====================Well, I just dont get yall’s take on impeachment. Cuz if you agree with that quote up there, from the article up there, I just dont see how you can think Dems voting yes on Impeachment, and Reps voting no on Impeachment leads to…anything. I just dont see how any of it changes anything in today’s political landscape.
I mean read that quote slowly. Let the consequences of it sink in.
w
vSeptember 28, 2019 at 9:31 pm #105869Billy_TParticipant“…Trump may have withheld military aid to seek a probe into Biden, but it is hypocritically being framed by Democrats as an abuse of power out of the ordinary. But it is very much ordinary…”
=====================Well, I just dont get yall’s take on impeachment. Cuz if you agree with that quote up there, from the article up there, I just dont see how you can think Dems voting yes on Impeachment, and Reps voting no on Impeachment leads to…anything. I just dont see how any of it changes anything in today’s political landscape.
I mean read that quote slowly. Let the consequences of it sink in.
w
vThis is just me, WV:
I don’t accept that quote as logical or right. I don’t think it’s a valid conclusion, given the premise. First off, it’s simply not the norm for a sitting president to use taxpayer dollars as bait, threat, carrot and stick to go after political opponents in the upcoming election. Second, the Dems aren’t responsible, now, today, for what other administrations have done in the past. Each new Congress, each new Executive branch, each new Judiciary, is responsible for their own actions, not those of others in prior times. I don’t believe in “sins of the fathers” other than in the sense that we should learn from them, show humility because of them, and work hard never to repeat them.
But “hypocrisy”? Naww. The Dems gets to focus entirely on Trump’s actions in the here and now, and they should not, ever, not ever, not even remotely, feel afraid to do so simply because previous regimes have acted in bad faith or worse. This is now. That was then.
Just my take.
September 28, 2019 at 9:37 pm #105871Billy_TParticipantOh, and another key for me?
If the shoe were on the other foot, we all know the GOP wouldn’t hesitate for one second about impeachment. In fact, they would have done the impeachment thing two years sooner, and for far less.
Think about the eight plus investigations into Benghazi. And that was actually a national tragedy, with no hints of foul play by the Obama administration. None. No Dem stood to benefit from any of that. There was no possibility of personal gain for Obama or anyone in his administration. No political opponent was attacked by a Dem. But the GOP went ballistic and stayed on the offensive for years. Same with the emails, and Fast and Furious, and the IRS, etc. etc.
Compare and contrast the two parties. The GOP consistently goes for the jugular. The Dems consistently hesitate and wimp out. They’re finally, it seems, going to stand up to a tyrant. And, to me, I wouldn’t care if they got him on jay-walking. Again, think Al Capone. By any means (legal and) necessary.
September 28, 2019 at 9:56 pm #105875nittany ramModeratorI understand why some people don’t see the point of impeaching Trump when there’s little chance of him being removed from office.
Polls show that less than half of the country wants him to be impeached. The same was true for Clinton’s impeachment and it backfired on the Republicans. His approval rating shot up to 60% as a result. Impeachment could be the best thing that could happen to Trump.
September 28, 2019 at 10:09 pm #105877wvParticipantFirst off, it’s simply not the norm for a sitting president to use taxpayer dollars as bait, threat, carrot and stick to go after political opponents in the upcoming election. Second….
Just my take.=====================
Ok, no big thing. We just disagree on that. I think LBJ would do that kind of thing without giving it a second thot. Kennedy. Nixon. Reagan. Yeah, I think they all do it, regularly. Cant prove it though.
At any rate, I have no emotional investment in the impeachment thing. Maybe it would do some good, I dunno. But I think its just as likely it will backfire.
w
vSeptember 28, 2019 at 10:15 pm #105878wvParticipantI understand why some people don’t see the point of impeaching Trump when there’s little chance of him being removed from office.
Polls show that less than half of the country wants him to be impeached. The same was true for Clinton’s impeachment and it backfired on the Republicans. His approval rating shot up to 60% as a result. Impeachment could be the best thing that could happen to Trump.
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Well, I cant imagine it changing one single solitary person’s mind about the situation. Thats the thing for me. People on Planet-MSNBC will cheer and people on Planet-Fox will jeer, and how will it change….anything?
The ‘symbolism’ wont mean anything except to the people who ‘already’ think he’s the devil. To the rest of the Nation it will just look like Dem-bullshit.
Just feels like taking a case to trial where you KNOW its gonna be a hung jury. What is the point? Ya know 🙂
I dunno. I should shut up. Maybe my algebra is way off. Maybe I’m too influenced by all them rightwingers around me. They still blame Bill Clinton for everything 🙂
w
vSeptember 28, 2019 at 10:16 pm #105879Billy_TParticipantI understand why some people don’t see the point of impeaching Trump when there’s little chance of him being removed from office.
Polls show that less than half of the country wants him to be impeached. The same was true for Clinton’s impeachment and it backfired on the Republicans. His approval rating shot up to 60% as a result. Impeachment could be the best thing that could happen to Trump.
Another way to look at it, Nittany:
Impeachment may well curb his worst impulses, which include using the power of his office to smear his opponents and try to put them in jail. Note the recent disclosure of the war against Obama state department officials and yet another investigation of Clinton and her email/server. They’ve retroactively classified relevant information, thus threatening dozens if not hundreds of former civil servants with jail time. This is 1984 stuff, and it will only get worse if Trump is set free and feels no restraints.
Remember, he made that call to Ukraine just a day after Mueller’s testimony landed with a thud in Congress, which Trump took as releasing him from further worries.
As for the effects of impeachment on Clinton and the Republicans. Did they really pay a price? They won the next election for the White House, and had majority control of Congress for most of the next eight years. I don’t see it as backfiring on the GOP at all.
September 28, 2019 at 10:27 pm #105880Billy_TParticipantI understand why some people don’t see the point of impeaching Trump when there’s little chance of him being removed from office.
Polls show that less than half of the country wants him to be impeached. The same was true for Clinton’s impeachment and it backfired on the Republicans. His approval rating shot up to 60% as a result. Impeachment could be the best thing that could happen to Trump.
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Well, I cant imagine it changing one single solitary person’s mind about the situation. Thats the thing for me. People on Planet-MSNBC will cheer and people on Planet-Fox will jeer, and how will it change….anything?
The ‘symbolism’ wont mean anything except to the people who ‘already’ think he’s the devil. To the rest of the Nation it will just look like Dem-bullshit.
I dunno. I should shut up. Maybe my algebra is way off. Maybe I’m too influenced by all them rightwingers around me. They still blame Bill Clinton for everything 🙂
w
vJudging from the most recent polls, it looks like Americans have already changed their minds a bit. We’ve gone from a minority to a majority in favor of impeachment, and in one poll the question included “removal.”
Personally, I think the process will change minds. Not just centrist and conservative fence sitters. I have a feeling more than a few of our fellow leftists will reconsider things as well. Enough stuff has already come out to make it pretty obvious that Trump and his administration aren’t your run of the mill public trust abusers, and they’re a far bigger threat to the biosphere than previous regimes. They’re in another league, entirely, in fact. I mean, when has the EPA gone after a state (California) for having higher anti-pollution standards than the Feds? When has the Interior department given away two million recently protected acres to fossil fuel giants? Obama just protected them a few years ago, and now that’s all been reversed.
Trump is a tyrant and a danger to all of us. He needs to go. At worst, impeachment, even if it fails in the Senate, should act as a restraint of sorts on his worst impulses until he loses in 2020.
To me, it’s worth it just for that alone.
September 28, 2019 at 11:11 pm #105894nittany ramModeratorThey’re in another league, entirely, in fact. I mean, when has the EPA gone after a state (California) for having higher anti-pollution standards than the Feds? When has the Interior department given away two million recently protected acres to fossil fuel giants? Obama just protected them a few years ago, and now that’s all been reversed.
This is where Trump sets himself apart. On stuff like foreign policy, he’s not that much different than his predecessors. On economic policies, he follows the same neoliberal playbook that’s been used by every dem and rep since Reagan. It’s like McVay’s offense…same personnel grouping every play but with different formations so it ‘feels’ like something new.
But nobody, not even the most conservative Republicans would have gone after The Clean Air and Clean Water Acts.
They would have liked to, but they wouldn’t have had the hubris to do it. They wouldn’t have dared to declaw the EPA to this extent, or silence EPA and CDC scientists.
He won’t be the last president to try and take away a woman’s right to agency over her own body or deport brown skinned people who are simply looking for a better life, but I pray to Cthulhu he’s the last president to invite destruction of the last few pristine areas on earth by opening it up to his fossil fuel overlords.
September 28, 2019 at 11:22 pm #105896znModeratorHe won’t be the last president to try and take away a woman’s right to agency over her own body or deport brown skinned people who are simply looking for a better life, but I pray to Cthulhu he’s the last president to invite destruction of the last few pristine areas on earth by opening it up to his fossil fuel overlords.
Damm that was articulate. Nicely put.
September 29, 2019 at 8:15 am #105901wvParticipantHe won’t be the last president to try and take away a woman’s right to agency over her own body or deport brown skinned people who are simply looking for a better life, but I pray to Cthulhu he’s the last president to invite destruction of the last few pristine areas on earth by opening it up to his fossil fuel overlords.
Damm that was articulate. Nicely put.
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Um….except that Trump works FOR Cthulhu.
w
v
September 29, 2019 at 11:15 am #105910ZooeyModeratorSo I have a slightly different take on the value of impeachment.
I completely understand (and agree with) wv’s fatalistic perspective that it doesn’t matter because it won’t change the system, and it’s quite possibly too late to do any good even we could change the system. And I understand Nittany and wv’s skepticism about this changing anybody’s mind. It won’t, at least in the sense that people aren’t going to change their party affiliation as a result. Ya know, Max Boot, and George Will, and Bill Kristol, and all those other famous assholes have repudiated Trump, but they aren’t exactly cancelling their subscriptions to National Review and subscribing to Current Affairs instead.
But as Billy pointed out, the support for impeachment has already risen. Historically, support for Nixon’s impeachment rose after the hearings began as well (and, in fact, the support for Nixon’s impeachment began with lower support than this impeachment proceeding started with).
Clinton’s situation was different, I think, because Clinton’s impeachment was a tempest in a teapot. The guy had sex with a consenting adult outside of marriage, and lied about it. It was probably abusive in a # MeToo sense, and Clinton is a pig. And he lied under oath. But I think most observers believed that the impeachment was unwarranted. Lying about having sex, even while under oath, is just not a threat to the State, especially when stacked up next to Nixon’s misdeeds.
Trump’s misdeeds exceed Nixon’s, and there is no question that they are far more damaging to the country, and far more deserving of impeachment than Clinton’s crime. I think you undersell the American public – which IS largely uninformed and apathetic about politics, etc. – if you think that distinction is lost on everybody. When the case is laid out, piece-by-piece, people are going to recognize the shape of Trump’s presidency, and understand that he has committed multiple impeachable offenses beyond the ordinary, and that he deserves reprimand. There are numerous actions that deserve impeachment in and of themselves, and the heft of the Articles will be damning. The situation is so bad, in fact, that privately a significant number of Republicans wish he was never born, or that the Kanamits would take him to visit their home planet.
The Senate probably will not convict him, but we are a long way from that vote hitting the floor. Given their history of party discipline, it would seem unlikely. But according to Jeff Flake, if the vote were held privately, Trump would be convicted. It is important to note that the GOP is a House Divided, in spite of their ability to stick together publicly…so far. So what’s stopping them from turning on Trump? Fear of voter reprisal. Well…a lot is going to happen between now and the time the Senate takes this up, and the circumstances of each senator are different, and the public’s attitude will take some turns between now and then. Still…it would take nearly half of the Republicans in the Senate to convict him. So if actually removing Trump from office is the standard for making this worthwhile, then…yeah…probably not happening.
But this is really more about the effect Impeachment has on the voters than it is about when Trump leaves office. And here is where Impeachment has value.
If the Democrats make a good case for Impeachment (and I don’t know how they can screw this up, honestly, even as ineffectual as they are in some respects. Donald Trump has been on a crime spree in broad daylight, and the evidence is overwhelming)…if they make a good case, voters WILL take it out on the GOP in 2020. If Trump is repudiated formally, especially if some Republicans break ranks to condemn him, it will demoralize the party, even many of the orcs. And demoralized orcs are less likely to vote. Furthermore, impeaching Trump will excite voters on the left, and increase their turnout in 2020.
And that matters a great deal. I believe that the district lines are redrawn after the 2020 elections, and that affects representation for the next decade. The more Democrats that get elected in 2020, the more the GOP will be marginalized. And that is important. These people want to stack the court with Ayn Rands, ban abortion, take away Medicare and Social Security, roll back environmental regulations, further undercut public education, take away pensions, food stamps, health insurance, safety protections…the whole thing. They have got to be weakened and outnumbered as much as possible. It won’t save the planet, but it will make a big difference in the quality of lives of millions of people.
Finally…and this may be the most important aspect of this so far…this Ukraine story, and the Impeachment hearings, have ALREADY created fractures within the right wing propaganda machine. FOX News has already had some fractures, and they are reportedly debating a Donald Trump exit strategy. That is gigantic. If there is any disarray in the mouthpieces, that will create disarray in the party. The value of that would be significant.
This will also demoralize the nazis. Impeaching Trump will lead to a surge in rhetoric, and maybe even violence from the orcs, but a successful Impeachment – especially if a clear majority of Americans support it along with some GOP politicians – will reduce their confidence and resolve. For all their big talk of a popular uprising and launch of the Race Wars, the nazis have historically largely sat on their asses waiting for somebody else to start it, so they can join. If their dream guy fails to lead them, they are going to be left standing there all dressed up for Halloween, and no party to go to.
Impeachment will not change the system, and it won’t change the political loyalties of Americans.
But it could shift the balance of power with significant consequences for the lives of millions of people.
September 29, 2019 at 11:17 am #105911Billy_TParticipantApparently, I’ve been wrong is calling Ukraine “the” Ukraine. Didn’t know that. It’s just “Ukraine.”
(For those who have troubles accessing WaPo articles, just clear your cookies, cache and history first. I use a browser, Firefox, that lets you set that and forget it. It clears all of that out when you close it.)
September 29, 2019 at 11:30 am #105912Billy_TParticipantExcellent post, Zooey.
I favor impeachment, as mentioned already. In fact, I was for it long before this call came out. I think the Dems should have begun the inquiry on Day One, after they took the majority. But they were too afraid to be aggressive and actually fight tyranny. It seems that now, with this call, and the whistleblower report, they just have no other choice.
Trump has committed more than enough to do this, from kids in cages, to moving funds appropriated for schools to build his racist wall instead, to his unprecedented roll backs of our already too weak environmental standards, etc. etc. He’s also broken the law several times via emoluments and obstruction of justice. Even though Mueller’s sad, awkward testimony basically ended that stream of inquiry, his report is clear about Trump’s lies and obstruction. At least ten examples of his and his administration’s breaking the law concerning that.
The list is endless of his abuses of power, his cabinet’s grifting, his own self-dealing, his nepotism, his wheeling and dealing to enrich himself and his kids, etc. etc.
America has actually never dealt with such breadth of corruption before. Yes, we have a history of shady politics and shady politicians that rivals the worst of the worst around the world. But Trump is sui generis when it comes to this, and no president, at least in the last 100 years, has been so brazen in enriching himself while in office. Others have at least had the decency to wait until they left.
;>)
Trump, if he stays out of jail, will do both, which will be a first in our history. Slashing his own taxes, using taxpayer dollars to cash in now, and then the usual book deals and speeches and media plans once he’s out, etc.
It’s time to take a stand against this, regardless of outcome.
September 29, 2019 at 9:18 pm #105945wvParticipant -
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