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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#17841
Posted 2021-February-17, 09:07
#17842
Posted 2021-February-17, 11:54
One day -- it's like a miracle -- Trump will disappear too.
#17843
Posted 2021-February-17, 14:33
Winstonm, on 2021-February-16, 17:17, said:
You must be white Winston. I FYP for the rest of the population.
#17844
Posted 2021-February-17, 14:47
kenberg, on 2021-February-16, 20:26, said:
You are not thinking like a statistician Ken. Look at the premise of the study. Each of the 50 Senators for each party was asked one question. There are 9 questions so that means that each bar represents roughly 5 Senators. The variance (noise) for such a small sample size outweighs any useful data response you are likely to get. So take the results with a pinch of salt. It's a bit of fun for mass media consumption but do not think for one moment that it actually holds any mathematical relevance. Maybe Helene should apply for a job at Data for Progress; it seems like they need a new statistician there badly.
#17845
Posted 2021-February-17, 15:10
y66, on 2021-February-17, 11:54, said:
One day -- it's like a miracle -- Trump will disappear too.
This is a picture of:
A) Trump Library? B) Rush Limbaugh Memorial C) Laura Ingraham's soul? D) Sean Hannity's moral compass?
#17846
Posted 2021-February-17, 15:15
Zelandakh, on 2021-February-17, 14:47, said:
Now I really don't understand. Senators were asked? I didn't, and don't, think so.
I saw
Quote
I did not take that to mean that senators were asked, I understood "respondents" as random people who were told a story about what senators had agreed to.
Whatever the case, it all looks fishy to me (where "fish" means carp, not trout). But they were polling senators?
I skimmed it quickly and I still think the respondents are random people. The study tells random people about how many Republican senators agree to a given proposal, but the numbers are artificial, randomly chosen from 0 to 10. Then these respondents are asked if they support that proposal. I do not see that any senators were asked anything.
Anyway, we seem to agree that there is not much of value in this. I am curious if I am really misunderstanding something basic here as to who was asked what.
#17847
Posted 2021-February-17, 15:46
#17848
Posted 2021-February-17, 15:49
Winstonm, on 2021-February-17, 15:10, said:
A) Trump Library? B) Rush Limbaugh Memorial C) Laura Ingraham's soul? D) Sean Hannity's moral compass?
I think that with Limbaugh dying of smoking-related lung cancer, and Trump being tossed from the White House, we could be witnessing the start of the Decline and Fall of the Loman empire.
I think that's what happens to salesmen in the end.
As for C and D, If Ingraham has a soul she stole it from someone else, and Hannity's moral compass only points in one direction.
#17849
Posted 2021-February-17, 16:05
helene_t, on 2021-February-17, 15:46, said:
Right. And while I believe the answer is that partisanship plays a big role, I am finding the numbers very weird. There seems to be broad agreement that something is off, and so I will drop it.
#17851
Posted 2021-February-18, 01:37
Chas_P, on 2021-February-17, 20:23, said:
Just to be clear then, The reason that you are laughing your A off is not that Hannity is a schmuck, but because you think that someone else is biased?
The most amazing part of that belief is that it comes from someone who can play a mind game reasonably well (or is that an assumption?).
#17852
Posted 2021-February-18, 17:08
pilowsky, on 2021-February-18, 01:37, said:
The most amazing part of that belief is that it comes from someone who can play a mind game reasonably well (or is that an assumption?).
Pilo, just to be clear, Chas is BBF's very own racist-in-chief, with an amazing (unfortunately not unique) ability to ignore anything that might be the least critical of any of the various other racists and crazies that litter right-wing media. It is literally not worth engaging with him on any of this stuff, any more than any other internet troll. You are welcome to give it your best shot though!
#17853
Posted 2021-February-18, 18:08
Zelandakh, on 2021-February-18, 17:08, said:
Shelo, obviously .
But, as AL Rowse (AL. ROWSE, bachelor, eccentric, misanthropist, poet and, whatever his detractors may say, foremost Elizabethan scholar of his age) is alleged to have remarked:
"You have to tell people they are third-rate - how else are they to know?"
The irony of Trump and his supporters calling everyone who is smarter than them "third-rate" is not lost on me.
#17855
Posted 2021-February-18, 19:01
Chas_P, on 2021-February-18, 18:52, said:
Your friend,
Charles
Sounds useful, where do I get wit certificates?
#17857
Posted 2021-February-18, 20:32
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#17858
Posted 2021-February-18, 20:34
Chas_P, on 2021-February-18, 19:31, said:
About two years ago, I stopped watching television. The main reason was a TV show called 'Gogglebox'.
It seemed that the premise of this show was that I was supposed to enjoy watching stupid people making stupid comments about "Stars" dancing or cooking or something else.
I have in the past stopped smoking. Giving up television was much easier. I didn't have to chew on the antenna for a week while my mouth tasted like an ashtray.
So, apart from learning to play Bridge and some other stuff, I occasionally sampled information from various sources.
These sources included Maddow, Hannity, Carlson (my favourite because he always looks so confused) and others from across the spectrum.
Growing up, living in, and being schooled in many countries, one thing that interested me about these commentators was their 'voice'.
Most of the time, these people are not functioning as 'Journalists' in any real sense. They don't synthesise information and 'report' it in any useful way.
Instead, they cherry-pick and present commentary in a way that results in maximum ratings (upvotes/cites/likes/ - even masterpoints - etc. all the same thing).
Despite this, it is valuable to listen to all these perspectives because otherwise, I cannot understand how some people justify their bizarre idiosyncratic thinking.
In the end, at its core, everyone wants food, shelter and the approval of others.
Some people have a world view that means that they should have more food, shelter and approval than others. In fact, they want so much of it that their 'world-view' may damage others.
I draw the line here. Trump supporters believe that they are 'entitled' to whatever they can get and that everyone that cannot compete with them should just 'suck-it-up' or die.
This Lord of the flies, Battle Royale, Hunger Games political philosophy is abhorrent to me because it means that proponents of it are 'a danger to others'.
As Prizzi said in Prizzi's Honour': "The Italian's love money more than their children, and they are very fond of their children". Trumpism is cut from this same cloth.
So if you believe any of the following - just a few examples:
- I should be entitled to carry a gun.
- Jews are 'on average' smart
- On average, black people are not as smart as other people.
- All South African Jewish women are arrogant.
Then no, I don't think your world view is acceptable.
I haven't gone through the record to determine exactly what your views on these and other matters are, and I'm not taking Sheldon's (https://twitter.com/zelandakh) word for it - even if he is a 'regular dude'.
What I can say is that anyone who doesn't laugh and cry when Kayleigh McEnany (I promise I will never lie to you) speaks is surely in need of some re-education - albeit not in a camp.
You mention Rachel Maddow specifically. I do agree that she tailors her commentary specifically for an audience to maximise ratings. I do not regard her as a news source by any stretch.
My favourite Maddow-ism was when Putin attacked the Crimea and built a Bridge connecting two landmasses.
With the aid of photos, large arrows and diagrams, Maddow pointed to the Bridge and expostulated: "And then they built a weird bridge".
Give me a break. Some of my bidding and play could happily be characterised as 'weird', but a Bridge?
During the Trump interregnum, even Seth Meyers became serious. That's how bad things were.
So no, a world-view that denies climate change, believes that a group of people are more or less capable on account of their skin colour and cleaves to irrational explanations for self-enrichment is not OK by me, either.
#17859
Posted 2021-February-18, 21:43
pilowsky, on 2021-February-18, 18:08, said:
But, as AL Rowse (AL. ROWSE, bachelor, eccentric, misanthropist, poet and, whatever his detractors may say, foremost Elizabethan scholar of his age) is alleged to have remarked:
"You have to tell people they are third-rate - how else are they to know?"
The irony of Trump and his supporters calling everyone who is smarter than them "third-rate" is not lost on me.
I had not heard of Rowse so I read the stuff on the link and then went to the Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia...iki/A._L._Rowse
I guess I won't push the envelope on Forum censorship by quoting the Wik's assessment of his Personal Attitudes.
I gather he was a smart guy. Sometimes I like smart guys, sometimes not. Intelligence is a multi-dimensional trait.
#17860
Posted 2021-February-18, 23:51
kenberg, on 2021-February-18, 21:43, said:
That's exactly what my wife says.