President Biden and US politics catchall

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Paddington Bear
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Trapper wrote: Mon Jan 18, 2021 10:32 pm And this thread is why NPR is better than PR. It’s a shit show over there.
With very few exceptions this place is pretty calm. Rational may be pushing it but if we consider both to be virtual pubs this is a place for a fairly civilised pint, PR increasingly had two people hitting each other with stools as others dribble on the table.
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
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Paddington Bear wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 9:18 am
Trapper wrote: Mon Jan 18, 2021 10:32 pm And this thread is why NPR is better than PR. It’s a shit show over there.
With very few exceptions this place is pretty calm. Rational may be pushing it but if we consider both to be virtual pubs this is a place for a fairly civilised pint, PR increasingly had two people hitting each other with stools as others dribble on the table.
You know what they say about flies being attracted to sh*t...
penguin
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I used to enjoy the old PR Trump thread for a long time...but it just got harder and harder to find any common ground to centre a conversation around. The occasional decent debate broke out, but it became increasingly rare.
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ScarfaceClaw
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penguin wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 9:33 am I used to enjoy the old PR Trump thread for a long time...but it just got harder and harder to find any common ground to centre a conversation around. The occasional decent debate broke out, but it became increasingly rare.
It’s symptomatic of the majority of conversations these days. There is rarely any middle ground or nuanced discussion and rationale debate. You typically have two extreme ends of an argument unwilling to listen or converse with any civility. It inevitably descends into two immoveable factions lobbing insults at each other.
penguin
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ScarfaceClaw wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 9:45 am
penguin wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 9:33 am I used to enjoy the old PR Trump thread for a long time...but it just got harder and harder to find any common ground to centre a conversation around. The occasional decent debate broke out, but it became increasingly rare.
It’s symptomatic of the majority of conversations these days. There is rarely any middle ground or nuanced discussion and rationale debate. You typically have two extreme ends of an argument unwilling to listen or converse with any civility. It inevitably descends into two immoveable factions lobbing insults at each other.
I was mostly civil (I hope). I always found it hard not to insult WT though.
Biffer
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UK and USA both rapidly heading towards the tyranny of the majority.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Rinkals
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penguin wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 9:33 am I used to enjoy the old PR Trump thread for a long time...but it just got harder and harder to find any common ground to centre a conversation around. The occasional decent debate broke out, but it became increasingly rare.
This.

I do occasionally dip in to see whether rationality has reasserted itself, but I rarely find any of note.
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Blake
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Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 10:04 am UK and USA both rapidly heading towards the tyranny of the majority.
While this quote does seem, on the face of it, to be quote profound, lately I've only every seen it used when a ruling minority are acting like a bunch of cunts, and the majority have told them to cut it out. :problem:
Biffer
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Blake wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 11:55 am
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 10:04 am UK and USA both rapidly heading towards the tyranny of the majority.
While this quote does seem, on the face of it, to be quote profound, lately I've only every seen it used when a ruling minority are acting like a bunch of cunts, and the majority have told them to cut it out. :problem:
That's not really where I'm aiming it but I understand where you're coming from. It ties back to a lot of ideas from people like John Locke, the Levellers, the Founding Fathers etc. It's the acknowledgement that deprivation of individual rights doesn't just come from a despot, but can come from the mob as well (see the French Revolution). In order to protect your own rights you have to protect the rights of the smallest minorities right down to the individual who thinks differently, because when it comes down to it, society is a collection of minorities, not majorities. There is no such thing as 'the will of the people' because the people don't think with one mind.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
sockwithaticket
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The daft bint who stole Pelosi's laptop and wanted to sell it to Russia (how is that the act of a patriot?) has ben arrested, but only charged with illegal entry so far.
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Raggs
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sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:38 pm The daft bint who stole Pelosi's laptop and wanted to sell it to Russia (how is that the act of a patriot?) has ben arrested, but only charged with illegal entry so far.
Could that not be considered an act of high treason? Can't imagine the yanks don't have the death penalty for that?
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Raggs wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:44 pm
sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:38 pm The daft bint who stole Pelosi's laptop and wanted to sell it to Russia (how is that the act of a patriot?) has ben arrested, but only charged with illegal entry so far.
Could that not be considered an act of high treason? Can't imagine the yanks don't have the death penalty for that?
My, perhaps flawed, understanding is that yes, passing off any material of an elected US official even to a friendly foreign government fits the definition of treason and the death penalty is very much an available punishment for that crime.

Having read a couple of articles now, it seems they haven't recovered the laptop yet and her plan to get it to the Russkies was a little bit hairbrained - pass it on to a mate of her Russian ex who would then get it to the Russian authorities/intelligence services and pay her a share. Presumably charges will change in the event of turning up the laptop?

I don't really get how it can be so widely reported that she's the one who stole it, but there not being sufficient evidence to charge her with that.
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sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:55 pm
Raggs wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:44 pm
sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:38 pm The daft bint who stole Pelosi's laptop and wanted to sell it to Russia (how is that the act of a patriot?) has ben arrested, but only charged with illegal entry so far.
Could that not be considered an act of high treason? Can't imagine the yanks don't have the death penalty for that?
My, perhaps flawed, understanding is that yes, passing off any material of an elected US official even to a friendly foreign government fits the definition of treason and the death penalty is very much an available punishment for that crime.

Having read a couple of articles now, it seems they haven't recovered the laptop yet and her plan to get it to the Russkies was a little bit hairbrained - pass it on to a mate of her Russian ex who would then get it to the Russian authorities/intelligence services and pay her a share. Presumably charges will change in the event of turning up the laptop?

I don't really get how it can be so widely reported that she's the one who stole it, but there not being sufficient evidence to charge her with that.
They'll have charged her with something very easy to prove so they can detain her longer in order to gather evidence for more serious charges.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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Uncle fester
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Brings to mind the Coen Brothers filum Burn After Reading with the inept "heroes" trying to sell info to the Russians.
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Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:11 pm
Blake wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 11:55 am
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 10:04 am UK and USA both rapidly heading towards the tyranny of the majority.
While this quote does seem, on the face of it, to be quote profound, lately I've only every seen it used when a ruling minority are acting like a bunch of cunts, and the majority have told them to cut it out. :problem:
That's not really where I'm aiming it but I understand where you're coming from. It ties back to a lot of ideas from people like John Locke, the Levellers, the Founding Fathers etc. It's the acknowledgement that deprivation of individual rights doesn't just come from a despot, but can come from the mob as well (see the French Revolution). In order to protect your own rights you have to protect the rights of the smallest minorities right down to the individual who thinks differently, because when it comes down to it, society is a collection of minorities, not majorities. There is no such thing as 'the will of the people' because the people don't think with one mind.
In some ways they are, in some ways not. Arguably, the populist backlash against the Establishment that has fuelled the increasing division in the US and which Trump has been riding, and in the UK e.g. gave much of the impetus for Brexit, was by a (relatively large) minority that simply feels it is being overlooked and ignored by that governing Establishment (which covers most political parties). To that extent, it would represent a reaction against a tyrannous majority which must therefore exist. Of course, that the reaction is capable of happening shows the tyranny is not so strong.

On the other hand, the rise and power of identity politics causes many to complain of a tyranny of minorities over the majority.
sockwithaticket
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Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:10 pm
sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:55 pm
Raggs wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:44 pm

Could that not be considered an act of high treason? Can't imagine the yanks don't have the death penalty for that?
My, perhaps flawed, understanding is that yes, passing off any material of an elected US official even to a friendly foreign government fits the definition of treason and the death penalty is very much an available punishment for that crime.

Having read a couple of articles now, it seems they haven't recovered the laptop yet and her plan to get it to the Russkies was a little bit hairbrained - pass it on to a mate of her Russian ex who would then get it to the Russian authorities/intelligence services and pay her a share. Presumably charges will change in the event of turning up the laptop?

I don't really get how it can be so widely reported that she's the one who stole it, but there not being sufficient evidence to charge her with that.
They'll have charged her with something very easy to prove so they can detain her longer in order to gather evidence for more serious charges.
Which I get, but I'd have thought they'd be able to stick her with theft rather than just illegal entry.
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Woddy wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:25 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:11 pm
Blake wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 11:55 am

While this quote does seem, on the face of it, to be quote profound, lately I've only every seen it used when a ruling minority are acting like a bunch of cunts, and the majority have told them to cut it out. :problem:
That's not really where I'm aiming it but I understand where you're coming from. It ties back to a lot of ideas from people like John Locke, the Levellers, the Founding Fathers etc. It's the acknowledgement that deprivation of individual rights doesn't just come from a despot, but can come from the mob as well (see the French Revolution). In order to protect your own rights you have to protect the rights of the smallest minorities right down to the individual who thinks differently, because when it comes down to it, society is a collection of minorities, not majorities. There is no such thing as 'the will of the people' because the people don't think with one mind.
In some ways they are, in some ways not. Arguably, the populist backlash against the Establishment that has fuelled the increasing division in the US and which Trump has been riding, and in the UK e.g. gave much of the impetus for Brexit, was by a (relatively large) minority that simply feels it is being overlooked and ignored by that governing Establishment (which covers most political parties). To that extent, it would represent a reaction against a tyrannous majority which must therefore exist. Of course, that the reaction is capable of happening shows the tyranny is not so strong.

On the other hand, the rise and power of identity politics causes many to complain of a tyranny of minorities over the majority.
Yeah, but the point about protecting the smallest minority plays in here. The subsection of brexiteers who are rabidly anti immigration are pursuing a smaller minority to exercise their own minority view. The whole thing about protecting small minorities as the only way to protect your own minority views comes into play and they don't realise that.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Random1
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Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:31 pm
Woddy wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:25 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:11 pm

That's not really where I'm aiming it but I understand where you're coming from. It ties back to a lot of ideas from people like John Locke, the Levellers, the Founding Fathers etc. It's the acknowledgement that deprivation of individual rights doesn't just come from a despot, but can come from the mob as well (see the French Revolution). In order to protect your own rights you have to protect the rights of the smallest minorities right down to the individual who thinks differently, because when it comes down to it, society is a collection of minorities, not majorities. There is no such thing as 'the will of the people' because the people don't think with one mind.
In some ways they are, in some ways not. Arguably, the populist backlash against the Establishment that has fuelled the increasing division in the US and which Trump has been riding, and in the UK e.g. gave much of the impetus for Brexit, was by a (relatively large) minority that simply feels it is being overlooked and ignored by that governing Establishment (which covers most political parties). To that extent, it would represent a reaction against a tyrannous majority which must therefore exist. Of course, that the reaction is capable of happening shows the tyranny is not so strong.

On the other hand, the rise and power of identity politics causes many to complain of a tyranny of minorities over the majority.
Yeah, but the point about protecting the smallest minority plays in here. The subsection of brexiteers who are rabidly anti immigration are pursuing a smaller minority to exercise their own minority view. The whole thing about protecting small minorities as the only way to protect your own minority views comes into play and they don't realise that.
Biffer’s spot on for me - the individual is the level that rights matter most, as if the individual has inalienable rights, then so does any minority.

It’s one of the critical balances required to make a democracy work.
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fishfoodie
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Random1 wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:34 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:31 pm
Woddy wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:25 pm

In some ways they are, in some ways not. Arguably, the populist backlash against the Establishment that has fuelled the increasing division in the US and which Trump has been riding, and in the UK e.g. gave much of the impetus for Brexit, was by a (relatively large) minority that simply feels it is being overlooked and ignored by that governing Establishment (which covers most political parties). To that extent, it would represent a reaction against a tyrannous majority which must therefore exist. Of course, that the reaction is capable of happening shows the tyranny is not so strong.

On the other hand, the rise and power of identity politics causes many to complain of a tyranny of minorities over the majority.
Yeah, but the point about protecting the smallest minority plays in here. The subsection of brexiteers who are rabidly anti immigration are pursuing a smaller minority to exercise their own minority view. The whole thing about protecting small minorities as the only way to protect your own minority views comes into play and they don't realise that.
Biffer’s spot on for me - the individual is the level that rights matter most, as if the individual has inalienable rights, then so does any minority.

It’s one of the critical balances required to make a democracy work.
The problem is when one individual insists that their inalienable right to do x, overrides individual B's inalienable rights.

It's all very well to say that anti-vaxxers have a right not to take the vaccine; but there are always going to be people who legitimately can't be vaccinated; should they not have their rights protected ?

The US is full of contradictions like this, & they always seem to form part of the culture war; guns, racism, religion, abortion, free speech, etc, etc
Biffer
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fishfoodie wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:40 pm
Random1 wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:34 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:31 pm

Yeah, but the point about protecting the smallest minority plays in here. The subsection of brexiteers who are rabidly anti immigration are pursuing a smaller minority to exercise their own minority view. The whole thing about protecting small minorities as the only way to protect your own minority views comes into play and they don't realise that.
Biffer’s spot on for me - the individual is the level that rights matter most, as if the individual has inalienable rights, then so does any minority.

It’s one of the critical balances required to make a democracy work.
The problem is when one individual insists that their inalienable right to do x, overrides individual B's inalienable rights.

It's all very well to say that anti-vaxxers have a right not to take the vaccine; but there are always going to be people who legitimately can't be vaccinated; should they not have their rights protected ?

The US is full of contradictions like this, & they always seem to form part of the culture war; guns, racism, religion, abortion, free speech, etc, etc
Again, look to John Locke. He took the view the individual liberty must be protected, but it could and should be violated in order to secure the life, health, liberty or possessions of people in general.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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fishfoodie
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Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:58 pm
fishfoodie wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:40 pm
Random1 wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:34 pm

Biffer’s spot on for me - the individual is the level that rights matter most, as if the individual has inalienable rights, then so does any minority.

It’s one of the critical balances required to make a democracy work.
The problem is when one individual insists that their inalienable right to do x, overrides individual B's inalienable rights.

It's all very well to say that anti-vaxxers have a right not to take the vaccine; but there are always going to be people who legitimately can't be vaccinated; should they not have their rights protected ?

The US is full of contradictions like this, & they always seem to form part of the culture war; guns, racism, religion, abortion, free speech, etc, etc
Again, look to John Locke. He took the view the individual liberty must be protected, but it could and should be violated in order to secure the life, health, liberty or possessions of people in general.
Exactly; but now try explaining that to the Gun nuts; that their right to bear arms doesn't mean they shouldn't have to pass a background check, so that the rest of society of protected from loons who want to buy semi-autos at gun shows
Rinkals
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I notice that McConnell has explicitly stated that Trump fed the rioters lies and provoked them.

https://apnews.com/article/biden-inaugu ... _medium=AP
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Blake
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Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:11 pm
Blake wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 11:55 am
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 10:04 am UK and USA both rapidly heading towards the tyranny of the majority.
While this quote does seem, on the face of it, to be quote profound, lately I've only every seen it used when a ruling minority are acting like a bunch of cunts, and the majority have told them to cut it out. :problem:
That's not really where I'm aiming it but I understand where you're coming from. It ties back to a lot of ideas from people like John Locke, the Levellers, the Founding Fathers etc. It's the acknowledgement that deprivation of individual rights doesn't just come from a despot, but can come from the mob as well (see the French Revolution). In order to protect your own rights you have to protect the rights of the smallest minorities right down to the individual who thinks differently, because when it comes down to it, society is a collection of minorities, not majorities. There is no such thing as 'the will of the people' because the people don't think with one mind.
Very well put and agree completely. When applied in that sense it’s hard to argue with it.

But unfortunately that is not what is happening, and in most cases it’s used in bad faith by “minorities” trying to justify their bigotry, intolerance and phobias.
Random1
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fishfoodie wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:40 pm
Random1 wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:34 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:31 pm

Yeah, but the point about protecting the smallest minority plays in here. The subsection of brexiteers who are rabidly anti immigration are pursuing a smaller minority to exercise their own minority view. The whole thing about protecting small minorities as the only way to protect your own minority views comes into play and they don't realise that.
Biffer’s spot on for me - the individual is the level that rights matter most, as if the individual has inalienable rights, then so does any minority.

It’s one of the critical balances required to make a democracy work.
The problem is when one individual insists that their inalienable right to do x, overrides individual B's inalienable rights.

It's all very well to say that anti-vaxxers have a right not to take the vaccine; but there are always going to be people who legitimately can't be vaccinated; should they not have their rights protected ?

The US is full of contradictions like this, & they always seem to form part of the culture war; guns, racism, religion, abortion, free speech, etc, etc

There’ll always be a balance of competing rights, and generally it’ll fall down on the side of; you can’t force people to do something without an act of parliament or equivalent. Even with statute, there’ll be gay cakes and religion to argue about.
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PlanetGlyndwr
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Biden is going to be Obama era again after the covid fallout has been dealt with.

Obama telling Bernie that Biden has started incorporating more leftist ideas is bs.

Neoliberalism is beyond trash i would trade listening to The Big Day on repeat until my last breath for it to be eradicated.

Biden and Harris trying to parade as upstanding citizens is sickening they are about as pure as a Harvey Weinstein Fap.

US are too cowardly to be anti-imperialist and lift citizens out of poverty and to promote and equal landscape for all.
Rinkals
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Ah.

Is this another "I'm not a Trump supporter, but Biden is worse or just as bad"?

I don't think Biden is the absolute best option, but, of the twenty-odd who put their hat in the ring, I'd say he was the most electable. Which, in retrospect and bearing in mind that Trump got over 74 million votes, was more important than fielding the perfect candidate, even if it was Bernie.

Frankly, Spongebob Squarepants would have made a better President than Trump, so it's less about perfection and more about who can get the vote.
Biffer
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Rinkals wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 6:57 pm Ah.

Is this another "I'm not a Trump supporter, but Biden is worse or just as bad"?

I don't think Biden is the absolute best option, but, of the twenty-odd who put their hat in the ring, I'd say he was the most electable. Which, in retrospect and bearing in mind that Trump got over 74 million votes, was more important than fielding the perfect candidate, even if it was Bernie.

Frankly, Spongebob Squarepants would have made a better President than Trump, so it's less about perfection and more about who can get the vote.
Yeah, but it’s essential they do enough for another democratic victory next time up. Otherwise we might end up with someone as lunatic as Trump but with some competence, like Hawley.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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Hugo
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PlanetGlyndwr wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 6:34 pm Biden is going to be Obama era again after the covid fallout has been dealt with.

Obama telling Bernie that Biden has started incorporating more leftist ideas is bs.

Neoliberalism is beyond trash i would trade listening to The Big Day on repeat until my last breath for it to be eradicated.

Biden and Harris trying to parade as upstanding citizens is sickening they are about as pure as a Harvey Weinstein Fap.

US are too cowardly to be anti-imperialist and lift citizens out of poverty and to promote and equal landscape for all.
The US spends $900 billion per annum on its military to have bases in all four corners of the earth but does not have the will or wherewithal to get ts own citizens universal, affordable healthcare. I've read that healthcare costs are one of the single biggest causes of bankruptcies in the country.

I wish we could just be spared the lectures.
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fishfoodie
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Well this just brightened my day up no end



:grin: :grin: :grin: :grin: :clap: :clap: :clap:
Biffer
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Woddy wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 1:25 pm
Biffer wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 12:11 pm
Blake wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 11:55 am

While this quote does seem, on the face of it, to be quote profound, lately I've only every seen it used when a ruling minority are acting like a bunch of cunts, and the majority have told them to cut it out. :problem:
That's not really where I'm aiming it but I understand where you're coming from. It ties back to a lot of ideas from people like John Locke, the Levellers, the Founding Fathers etc. It's the acknowledgement that deprivation of individual rights doesn't just come from a despot, but can come from the mob as well (see the French Revolution). In order to protect your own rights you have to protect the rights of the smallest minorities right down to the individual who thinks differently, because when it comes down to it, society is a collection of minorities, not majorities. There is no such thing as 'the will of the people' because the people don't think with one mind.
In some ways they are, in some ways not. Arguably, the populist backlash against the Establishment that has fuelled the increasing division in the US and which Trump has been riding, and in the UK e.g. gave much of the impetus for Brexit, was by a (relatively large) minority that simply feels it is being overlooked and ignored by that governing Establishment (which covers most political parties). To that extent, it would represent a reaction against a tyrannous majority which must therefore exist. Of course, that the reaction is capable of happening shows the tyranny is not so strong.

On the other hand, the rise and power of identity politics causes many to complain of a tyranny of minorities over the majority.
It’s also worth pointing out than John Stuart Mill (and Harriet Taylor) realised, over 150 years ago, that the will of the people would / could be recognised as the will of either the most numerous OR the most active and it was this that they called the tyranny of the majority. So majority is a bit of a misnomer in those terms, but it’s a shorthand which includes what you’ve described.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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Uncle fester
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The responses... :sick:
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Saint
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Uncle fester wrote: Tue Jan 19, 2021 11:03 pm

The responses... :sick:
It's probably fair to say that there's never been a VP more despised by more people. The left see him as an enabler, the right as a traitor. For someone so ineffectual, it's a serious achievement
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fishfoodie
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On the pardon stuff for the scumbags who tried murdering a bunch of elected officials...

I think the FBI, & DoJ are staging a bit of a fightback against the orange turd.

They've seen his willingness to pardon scum; & they know that he'd be perfectly happy to continue this; in the name of helping, "good people"; so even though, they have some very clear cases for offenses outside of trespass, or criminal damage; those are the ones they've charged them with.

So we know they could have charged these scumbags with murder, or GBH, or espionage charges, or any number of serious offenses; but instead they've been content to charge them with holding charges; enough to get them extradited; & keep them detained; but nothing more; why ?

I think it's a two track tactic; they deny them the full scope of the linked charges; & they deny them the specific charges against each individual.

So will the FBI charge a certain newly elected GOP Congress woman with conspiracy to kidnap ? If that theoretical Congress woman were to accept that pardon; she would be run out of town on a rail; & the GOP would have one hell of a fight to keep the seat.

What would happen if there was a blanket pardon given to all those so far charged; how would the base; & the broader GOP react; if the murderers of the DC Police Officer were pardoned ?; or a woman who intended to sell Pelosi's laptop to Russia ? If nothing else; the LEO loyalty to the GOP would be destroyed for a decade; & they know all the secrets !

The only asset that diaper donny has, is his base; & if he lets all those scumbags go to jail; or chooses the scumbags over LEO's; then that base gets smaller.

He won't do a damn thing for them; after lying to them, & then winding them up, & pointing them at Capitol Hill.
Rinkals
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fishfoodie wrote: Wed Jan 20, 2021 12:02 am On the pardon stuff for the scumbags who tried murdering a bunch of elected officials...

I think the FBI, & DoJ are staging a bit of a fightback against the orange turd.

They've seen his willingness to pardon scum; & they know that he'd be perfectly happy to continue this; in the name of helping, "good people"; so even though, they have some very clear cases for offenses outside of trespass, or criminal damage; those are the ones they've charged them with.

So we know they could have charged these scumbags with murder, or GBH, or espionage charges, or any number of serious offenses; but instead they've been content to charge them with holding charges; enough to get them extradited; & keep them detained; but nothing more; why ?

I think it's a two track tactic; they deny them the full scope of the linked charges; & they deny them the specific charges against each individual.

So will the FBI charge a certain newly elected GOP Congress woman with conspiracy to kidnap ? If that theoretical Congress woman were to accept that pardon; she would be run out of town on a rail; & the GOP would have one hell of a fight to keep the seat.

What would happen if there was a blanket pardon given to all those so far charged; how would the base; & the broader GOP react; if the murderers of the DC Police Officer were pardoned ?; or a woman who intended to sell Pelosi's laptop to Russia ? If nothing else; the LEO loyalty to the GOP would be destroyed for a decade; & they know all the secrets !

The only asset that diaper donny has, is his base; & if he lets all those scumbags go to jail; or chooses the scumbags over LEO's; then that base gets smaller.

He won't do a damn thing for them; after lying to them, & then winding them up, & pointing them at Capitol Hill.
For someone with a track record of throwing his enablers under a bus once they cease to be useful to him, I really can't see a pardon being granted to them, especially as they failed in their objectives and granting such would probably imply that he instigated the raid.

What I'd like to see is an FBI sting whereby Trump is caught on tape discussing the insurrection and his disappointment thereof. Actually, it really wouldn't surprise me to learn that such a tape exists already.
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Kiwias
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I heard a rumour that he has indeed pardoned Bannon but can't find confirmation.
Sinkers
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Kiwias wrote: Wed Jan 20, 2021 6:10 am I heard a rumour that he has indeed pardoned Bannon but can't find confirmation.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55729221
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Kiwias
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Sinkers wrote: Wed Jan 20, 2021 6:19 am
Kiwias wrote: Wed Jan 20, 2021 6:10 am I heard a rumour that he has indeed pardoned Bannon but can't find confirmation.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55729221
If he has done nothing wrong as he claims, why did he beg Trump for a pardon?
stemoc
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bannon is very aware of what Russia dd during 2016 elections.. pardon will keep trump out of jail
Biffer
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stemoc wrote: Wed Jan 20, 2021 6:35 am bannon is very aware of what Russia dd during 2016 elections.. pardon will keep trump out of jail
A pardon means you accept your guilt and removes your right to silence. If Bannon is pardoned hell have to help with any inquiry related to his pardon. I don't think Trump understands that.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
Sinkers
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I know this is a rabbit hole - but if he hasn’t been convicted yet, what has he been pardoned for doing exactly? Is it specified anywhere in the process?

If it’s the wall campaign fraud thingy, admitting guilt could open him up for state level charges (state where the fund registered for example) or civil charges from those who’s cash was embezzled?
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