Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#7501
Posted 2017-October-06, 18:28
Harry Truman? Bush II? Trump is just the latest cautionary tale regarding getting what you vote for. Not surprising really.
#7502
Posted 2017-October-06, 20:29
bed
#7503
Posted 2017-October-07, 06:45
Winstonm, on 2017-October-06, 11:14, said:
I had not heard of this so I went to Amazon to see what they had to say about the book
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Apparently there are 27 co-authors, each offering his/her own diagnosis. If I had 27 professionals offering 27 different diagnoses of what was wrong with me, I believe I would tell all 27 to get lost.
unbridled and extreme present hedonism., " pathological narcissism", "a lack of trust that exceeds paranoia", malignant normality (whatever that is). This is just a sample. It seems that each took a trait that they don't like and explained it as a psychological disorder. Trump has 27 different psychological disorders, is that the claim? If they had 5 more authors there would be 5 more disorders? I don't see this as helpful.
#7504
Posted 2017-October-07, 07:40
kenberg, on 2017-October-07, 06:45, said:
Apparently there are 27 co-authors, each offering his/her own diagnosis. If I had 27 professionals offering 27 different diagnoses of what was wrong with me, I believe I would tell all 27 to get lost.
unbridled and extreme present hedonism., " pathological narcissism", "a lack of trust that exceeds paranoia", malignant normality (whatever that is). This is just a sample. It seems that each took a trait that they don't like and explained it as a psychological disorder. Trump has 27 different psychological disorders, is that the claim? If they had 5 more authors there would be 5 more disorders? I don't see this as helpful.
Supply and demand. Since most of the electorate are uninterested in the issues, go for ad hom attacks to discredit Trump. Just too much demand is all...
#7505
Posted 2017-October-07, 10:36
kenberg, on 2017-October-07, 06:45, said:
Apparently there are 27 co-authors, each offering his/her own diagnosis. If I had 27 professionals offering 27 different diagnoses of what was wrong with me, I believe I would tell all 27 to get lost.
unbridled and extreme present hedonism., " pathological narcissism", "a lack of trust that exceeds paranoia", malignant normality (whatever that is). This is just a sample. It seems that each took a trait that they don't like and explained it as a psychological disorder. Trump has 27 different psychological disorders, is that the claim? If they had 5 more authors there would be 5 more disorders? I don't see this as helpful.
The specific diagnosis is not the important takeaway - it is the fact that these professionals are willing to publicly announce their beliefs that the president has a significant mental condition that makes him dangerous in his position.
#7506
Posted 2017-October-07, 16:42
Quote
This is from a WaPo article by Ashley Jardina, an assistant professor of political science at Duke University. The responses tend to track with Trump's ratings.
#7507
Posted 2017-October-08, 09:46
Winstonm, on 2017-October-07, 10:36, said:
We differ here. If 27 psychiatrists (well, some are two person articles and maybe some are psychologists rather than psychiatrists) purport to be diagnosing Trump, or anyone, and come up with 27 separate diagnoses, I think they should hold off on publication until they can get their story straight.
It's true that in general I have an aversion to people who wave a degree in my face and claim that therefore their opinion is really serious stuff while my opinion is just an uneducated guess, but this collection sounds to me to be even worse than the usual such collections. I don't think a medical degree is necessary or even particularly useful in coming to the conclusion that the presidency is not in good hands right now. They don't like Trump.I don't like Trump. I have no plans to assemble a group of mathematicians to mathematically explain what is wrong with Trump. Chaotic dynamics comes to mind, or maybe catastrophe theory, but no, I think not. Probably someone somewhere is working on such a paper. They might want to stop.
#7508
Posted 2017-October-08, 10:11
kenberg, on 2017-October-08, 09:46, said:
It's true that in general I have an aversion to people who wave a degree in my face and claim that therefore their opinion is really serious stuff while my opinion is just an uneducated guess, but this collection sounds to me to be even worse than the usual such collections. I don't think a medical degree is necessary or even particularly useful in coming to the conclusion that the presidency is not in good hands right now. They don't like Trump.I don't like Trump. I have no plans to assemble a group of mathematicians to mathematically explain what is wrong with Trump. Chaotic dynamics comes to mind, or maybe catastrophe theory, but no, I think not. Probably someone somewhere is working on such a paper. They might want to stop.
On this I plead ignorance. If this were internal medicine, 27 mds would most likely all agree; with mental disorders, I don't know if the opinions would be so consistent. Perhaps they should be.
#7509
Posted 2017-October-08, 10:57
Winstonm, on 2017-October-08, 10:11, said:
It would not be unanimous. I claim to be more or less sane, but over a lifetime I have seen, sometimes fairly close up, how these things can go. This is not to build a case against psychiatry, not at all. The human mind is a very complex thing, as we all agree. So it is difficult and nobody should get too critical of those making their best effort. As I have gooten older, I have come to learn that even inn strictly physiological matters, it's not always easy. I recently had some symptoms, I forget the details, that suggested maybe I had Lyme disease. Or maybe I didn't. It's not always clear.
So uncertainty is to be expected. It should also be acknowledged. I find it hard to imagine just ow this book was planned. 27 people sitting around saying "Who wants to do paranoia? "Ok, now we need someone to write on narcissism". To me it sounds very unprofessional.
#7510
Posted 2017-October-08, 12:34
kenberg, on 2017-October-08, 10:57, said:
So uncertainty is to be expected. It should also be acknowledged. I find it hard to imagine just ow this book was planned. 27 people sitting around saying "Who wants to do paranoia? "Ok, now we need someone to write on narcissism". To me it sounds very unprofessional.
My brother graduated magna cum laude. I, on the other hand, graduated laude how cum? Who am I to argue with a Ph.D.?
#7511
Posted 2017-October-08, 13:37
Winstonm, on 2017-October-08, 12:34, said:
Right. But that's sort of my point. I would probably win a mathematical argument. Or at least that's the way to bet it, as they say. But we recently had the cement floor of our garage repaired. I deferred to the judgment of the guy with the cement truck. We chatted about many things, his daughter was having a large outdoor wedding for example. We never got around to Trump but if we had done so neither my math skills nor his cement skills qualified either of us as a political expert. He seemed like a sensible guy who would see things my way. Or not.
Anyway, as you can probably gather, I won't be reading that book. I doubt I will be reading How the Right Lost Its Mind either, but I did like the review of it in the Washington Post:
https://www.washingt...m=.94e4e4e6b216
#7512
Posted 2017-October-08, 16:00
Al_U_Card, on 2017-October-06, 18:28, said:
Harry Truman? Bush II? Trump is just the latest cautionary tale regarding getting what you vote for. Not surprising really.
Even though I'm a Republican at this time, Harry Truman has always been one of my favorite Presidents. That's even with Harry having no use whatsoever for Republicans. He lived in a tough time and made a lot of decisions that greatly affected our country for the good. It appears history is getting more appreciative of Harry as time goes by.
But, of course, the elitists, never warmed to his very plain spoken manner and regularly denigrated him as nothing but a hack politician. He was failure in business, most notably in the haberdasher business. He eventually turned to politics and was part of a Missouri political machine. He never went to college and is I believe the last President not to do so. So you guessed it, he's been portrayed by the intelligentsia as a dumb hick politician.
The truth is a bit different. He was veteran of WWI, serving with distinction as a Captain in the Artillery and receiving some recognition for bravery in combat despite his poor sight. Although he never attended college, he was a voracious reader and, most particularly, a student of history. In the Senate, he spearheaded the committee that investigated and combatted corruption, waste, and profiteering in the War industries. He wasn't afraid to make a decision as the sign "The Buck Stops Here" on his desk in the Oval Office indicated.
What did he do? After being essentially shut out of any meaningful part in the Roosevelt administration, he took over as President when Roosevelt died and got in harness fairly quickly. His first and biggest decision was whether to use the atomic bomb on the Japanese. He recognized the dangers that the Soviet Union posed to a free and independent Europe after the Germans were defeated, something that FDR seemed oblivious to. He worked with his Secretary of State, Gen. George Marshall, to develop a plan to support the rebuilding of a devastated Europe to offset that threat. That was the Marshall Plan. He assisted in the creation of the UN and NATO. He integrated the Armed Services and reorganized them creating the US Air Force. He disbanded the WWII OSS, then reversed himself and created the CIA to provide the information necessary to counter the Soviet threat. He stood up to Communist aggression in Korea using the UN as a vehicle to foster an international response. And, he ensured civilian control of the military by sacking national hero and icon, Gen. Douglass McArthur, when his actions as Commander of the UN forces threatened to start WWIII. Not bad for a hick politician.
My favorite story about Harry Truman is from Merle Miller, who wrote a biography of Truman ("Plain Speaking") in the '70s based on a series of interviews that he had with Truman just before he died. Miller had at some point gotten into a conversation with Truman about leaders who got full of themselves as indestructible or indispensable. Truman related that this was true of Alexander the Great and that it had led to his death. He stated that Alexander had been so sure of himself that he literally drank so much alcohol one night that he poisoned himself from it. Well, Miller wanted to check out this claim so he went to the Library of Congress and sought their help in finding out how Alexander died. They referred him to a book they had in their collection. Sure enough, it confirmed what Truman had claimed. However, he noticed that only two other people had ever checked that book out. Sure enough, one of them was Harry Truman during his time in the Senate.
#7513
Posted 2017-October-08, 17:21
P.S.: The story about Alexander the Great's death is probably wrong.
https://en.wikipedia...he_Great#Causes
#7514
Posted 2017-October-08, 17:53
rmnka447, on 2017-October-08, 16:00, said:
But, of course, the elitists, never warmed to his very plain spoken manner and regularly denigrated him as nothing but a hack politician. He was failure in business, most notably in the haberdasher business. He eventually turned to politics and was part of a Missouri political machine. He never went to college and is I believe the last President not to do so. So you guessed it, he's been portrayed by the intelligentsia as a dumb hick politician.
The truth is a bit different. He was veteran of WWI, serving with distinction as a Captain in the Artillery and receiving some recognition for bravery in combat despite his poor sight. Although he never attended college, he was a voracious reader and, most particularly, a student of history. In the Senate, he spearheaded the committee that investigated and combatted corruption, waste, and profiteering in the War industries. He wasn't afraid to make a decision as the sign "The Buck Stops Here" on his desk in the Oval Office indicated.
What did he do? After being essentially shut out of any meaningful part in the Roosevelt administration, he took over as President when Roosevelt died and got in harness fairly quickly. His first and biggest decision was whether to use the atomic bomb on the Japanese. He recognized the dangers that the Soviet Union posed to a free and independent Europe after the Germans were defeated, something that FDR seemed oblivious to. He worked with his Secretary of State, Gen. George Marshall, to develop a plan to support the rebuilding of a devastated Europe to offset that threat. That was the Marshall Plan. He assisted in the creation of the UN and NATO. He integrated the Armed Services and reorganized them creating the US Air Force. He disbanded the WWII OSS, then reversed himself and created the CIA to provide the information necessary to counter the Soviet threat. He stood up to Communist aggression in Korea using the UN as a vehicle to foster an international response. And, he ensured civilian control of the military by sacking national hero and icon, Gen. Douglass McArthur, when his actions as Commander of the UN forces threatened to start WWIII. Not bad for a hick politician.
My favorite story about Harry Truman is from Merle Miller, who wrote a biography of Truman ("Plain Speaking") in the '70s based on a series of interviews that he had with Truman just before he died. Miller had at some point gotten into a conversation with Truman about leaders who got full of themselves as indestructible or indispensable. Truman related that this was true of Alexander the Great and that it had led to his death. He stated that Alexander had been so sure of himself that he literally drank so much alcohol one night that he poisoned himself from it. Well, Miller wanted to check out this claim so he went to the Library of Congress and sought their help in finding out how Alexander died. They referred him to a book they had in their collection. Sure enough, it confirmed what Truman had claimed. However, he noticed that only two other people had ever checked that book out. Sure enough, one of them was Harry Truman during his time in the Senate.
"Give 'em hell, Harry" "I'm just telling the truth and they think it's hell". I remember this, we had just boght a television, Truman was giving a speech. The old days are gone, that's a fact. I remember a reporter went to interview him a few hears afte he left office. Truman went for a walk, the reporter had a tough time keeping up. "When you go for a walk, you are supposed to move along". Or something like that.
I liked growing up in the 1940s and 50s, but that now seems to be in the distant past. It was very different.
#7515
Posted 2017-October-08, 20:42
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These are a sample of the videos put together by two black video bloggers calling themselves Williams and Kalvin Johnson, whose social media pages investigators say are part of the broad Russian campaign to influence American politics. Across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube, they purported to offer “a word of truth” to African-American audiences.
Quote
“She’s a ***** racist,” the host says over a subdued rap beat. “And this woman is a witch,” he says as a picture portrays Clinton in Wizard of Oz attire. He goes on to praise Julian Assange for releasing hacked emails. “This woman, she’s sick on her head.”
Other videos are more explicit about urging people to vote for Trump.
“This is time for change. This is why I say that let our vote go for Trump. Because this man is a businessman. He’s not a politician. We can have deal with him,” Williams says in a video published in August of 2016. “Because I don’t see him as a racist. Because any businessman cannot be a racist because when you are a racist, then your business is going down.” He then makes a black-power fist as he endorses Trump.
And Russian interference is still "fake news" according to the #^&*#grabber-in-chief.
#7517
Posted 2017-October-09, 00:46
Winstonm, on 2017-October-08, 20:42, said:
Aside from the speculation in The Daily Beast story, has there been any official confirmation of this specific Russia connection yet?
#7519
Posted 2017-October-09, 03:07
jjbrr, on 2017-October-09, 02:15, said:
Great! Can you provide links then please as google appears to be blocking me on any additional information for Williams and Kalvin Johnson. I would have expected it to be all over the major news sources for something to have been confirmed beyond the generic stuff we have had up to this point.
#7520
Posted 2017-October-09, 07:10
Zelandakh, on 2017-October-09, 03:07, said:
https://www.washingt...m=.95e2ef4cd7a1
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