logo Sign In

Politics 2: Electric Boogaloo — Page 52

This topic has been locked by a moderator.

Author
Time
 (Edited)

Look, my state is shitty even without Pence!

https://iga.in.gov/legislative/2017/bills/senate/285#document-79282dd2

A responsible public official shall, not later than fifteen
(15) minutes after first learning that a mass traffic obstruction
exists in the official’s jurisdiction, dispatch all available law
enforcement officers to the mass traffic obstruction with directions
to use any means necessary to clear the roads of the persons
unlawfully obstructing vehicular traffic

Yeah, that’s a bill to let local law enforcement have free reign over protesters that may be blocking traffic! It literally uses the phrase “by any means necessary”!

Surely that won’t be used if traffic slows down near protesters or a rally near a road to violently disperse them. Surely not!

Star Wars Revisited Wordpress

Star Wars Visual Comparisons WordPress

Author
Time

doubleofive said:

OK, Spicer just said that 14% of the votes in 2008 were illegal. FOURTEEN PERCENT.

alternative fact?

Author
Time

Hahahahaha.

http://www.newsweek.com/trump-emails-rnc-reince-priebus-white-house-server-548191

Senior Trump administration staffers including Kellyanne Conway, Jared Kushner, Sean Spicer and Steve Bannon have active accounts on a Republican National Committee email system, Newsweek has learned.

The system (rnchq.org) is the same one the George W. Bush administration was accused of using to evade transparency rules after claiming to have “lost” 22 million emails.

Making use of separate political email accounts at the White House is not illegal. In fact, they serve a purpose by allowing staff to divide political conversations (say, arranging for the president to support a congressional re-election campaign) from actual White House work. Commingling politics and state business violates the Hatch Act, which restricts many executive branch employees from engaging in political activity on government time.

But after then-candidate Donald Trump and the Republicans repeatedly called for “locking up” Hillary Clinton for handling government work with a private server while secretary of state, the new White House staff risks repeating the same mistake that dogged the Democrat’s presidential campaign. They also face a security challenge: The RNC email system, according to U.S. intelligence, was hacked during the 2016 race. “They better be careful after making such a huge ruckus over the private email over at the State Department,” says former Bush administration lawyer Richard Painter.

Author
Time

http://www.theverge.com/2017/1/25/14384958/trump-administration-censor-epa-science-political-review-gag-order

The Trump administration intends to submit scientific research conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency to political review, NPR reports. It’s a move that could pollute the EPA’s scientific integrity, and suppress science that doesn’t align with the reigning political ideology.

This new vetting process is still nebulous, Doug Ericksen, a state senator from Washington who is heading up EPA communications during the transition, told NPR in an interview. Ericksen said only that publications and presentations might be internally reviewed before they’re released.

“We’ll take a look at what’s happening so that the voice coming from the EPA is one that’s going to reflect the new administration,” Ericksen told NPR. Calling scientific results a “voice,” and requiring them to “reflect the new administration” is a chilling perversion of the scientific process.

Author
Time

Jeebus said:

doubleofive said:

This hatred or complete misunderstanding of journalism is probably the scariest part of this new world we live in now.

Why do you think there’s a mistrust of the news in the first place?

Hint:

Jetrell Fo said:

I personally believe that this whole numbers business is a waste of fucking time and journalism. There are far more important thing for this country that should be making the news.

Sure but in fairness it’s the Trump team that keeps bringing up the numbers and it’s worth reporting because it’s indicative of future issues with (alt)facts and the current administration.

Author
Time

TV’s Frink said:

[from Washington Post article]…
“It’s a huge deal, because in the end you really can’t govern, and you can’t persuade people, if you do not have a common basis of fact.”

Sadly, I don’t believe this is the case anymore. Politicians seemed to have made a discovery: that having a basis for one’s claims is utterly irrelevant. You can say whatever you want, win elections, and govern, without any common basis of fact whatsoever. What IS required today is to capture a sufficient number of people’s imagination and effectively utilize their emotions. I don’t think this is going away soon… in fact, it was discovered by advertisers in the 1940s. It just took Washington a bit of time to catch up. And the implications going forward are quite serious, quite unpredictable, and almost certainly not good.

"Close the blast doors!"
Puggo’s website | Rescuing Star Wars

Author
Time

The only thing “funny” about the riots was Richard Spencer getting punched in the face.

Author
Time
 (Edited)

You didn’t find it “funny” that those anti-Trump folks fucked up Larry King’s hired SUV?

Author
Time
 (Edited)

I avoid posting in this thread anymore because I’ve cut down drastically on my interaction on this forum in recent months due to an ever busier schedule. Plus, less emotional involvement here gets me less upset when someone does something rude or disagrees profoundly. I probably will get sucked into a conversation I shouldn’t take my time on, but I do wish to leave my thoughts on the reinstating of the global gag rule.

I figured the best way to address this was to reply to my favorite post from the opposition on this site, the post I most agree with in fact:

Tyrphanax said:

In this modern world of progress, education is the key to all things and yet we continue to defund it every chance we get, then wonder why things go wrong.

I agree with the need for more education. While I would love to live in a world where personal responsibility was the ruling factor in people’s decision-making, I know it is not, nor will it ever be. People make mistakes, and often we look for a way to give a reprieve for those mistakes. Based on that understanding, we must prevent unwanted pregnancy in order to prevent abortion.

I’ll give an example: I believe Rick Perry signed a Texas law disallowing the morning-after pill for minors without parental permission. I find this to be foolish. The morning after pill prevents fertilization, does no harm to a living, genetically unique human, and prevents pregnancy. If I want to reduce abortions, this will actually do exactly that. Women will not get pregnant, and no child will be aborted. Win-win!

People don’t have babies willy-nilly because it’s fun to have a kid.

It can be. It is hard, but many people want children, and many women love being pregnant.

People don’t have abortions willy-nilly because it’s fun to have an abortion. They do it because they don’t know better, or don’t have access to contraception, or because of accidental pregnancy/pregnancy through malicious intent.

This is true. However, the first two do not justify an abortion to me.

I once got pulled over for going 35 mph in a 25 mph zone. I could not find a sign for a long distance before, and the sign was obscured by a tree. To me, everything else on the road indicated it was likely a 35 mph zone, with a painted yellow line, sparse housing, and a nearby 35 mph zone that was similarly painted and housed. I went to fight this ticket in court, and the judge ruled against me saying, “Ignorance of the law does not justify breaking the law.” I still had to face a consequence of my decision to speed, even though I didn’t know I was speeding.

Now how many post-pubescent individuals do not know that sex leads to babies? I’m guessing a very small percentage. And even if they are ignorant of the fact or the likelihood, I don’t see a “Get out of parenthood free” card as a fair answer to the child.

For the record, I do believe rape is a justifiable reason, though not necessarily the default answer. It should be well thought out, but I do believe it should be the woman’s choice in that case.

Why we feel the need to punish people for the above and then propagate the problem by continuing to cut funding is not logical or intelligent.

The funding is the problem. I don’t like abortion, and I don’t like spending my money on it. How many people complain about American dollars going to fight wars they don’t believe in? I know it’s far more expensive to fight a war than to financially support these NGOs. I know that there is a high cost of innocent and guilty human life. I personally hate war. And I understand that at times, war is a necessary evil that hopefully will save more life in the long run than it destroys. But protesters will protest war, and they have that right. President Obama pulled out of Iraq, and in retrospect it was premature, but it was an effort to avoid spending American money on something he did not believe in. Americans who don’t believe in abortion should have the freedom to oppose it, and the president should have the right to curb abortion as much as possible.

You wanna see fewer people on welfare funded by your tax dollar having a million kids? Prevent it by education (and not abstinence-only because that’s a farce and will never work), providing contraception,…

Agreed. This saves us from spending unnecessarily on those who are most likely to get pregnant unintentionally and are least financially capable of raising a family.

…and allowing abortion.

I disagree. Killing a person while it’s legal is still killing a person in my mind. I don’t feel an inclination to round up all the welfare recipients and euthenize them. I don’t believe it is any better just because they are future welfare recipients who haven’t developed a complete nervous system yet.

Funny thing is that when you do the first two (educate and provide contraceptives), I guarantee that the third option (abortion) will fall rapidly. You wanna solve abortion with me? Then lean on the first two.

This is where you and I agree the most. How can we promote these two more? Serious question. How can I reduce elective abortions in unnecessary cases while still promoting education and contraception? I believe that there are options, but I don’t know the answers. Perhaps educating women that there truly are more options than abortion for unwanted pregnancies. There are so many families who want to adopt. There are resources for those unprepared to have children to facilitate responsible parenting. There are ways to educate the public at large and reduced social ostracism. Perhaps more education, reducing obstacles from these routes, and preventing pregnancy in the first place will save women’s and children’s lives.

Don’t just defund the whole thing and shove it under the rug and pretend it doesn’t exist for inane puritanical ideological reasons. I don’t like the idea of abortion as much as anybody, but you damn well better believe that I want them available and happening in a well-funded controlled and clinical environment, and not some back alley with a rusty coathanger.

I agree, I would want them done in the safest way possible. Abortions should be available, but in my mind, only in exceptional circumstances. It is far too common, often unnecessary.

I dunno about anyone else here, but I’d rather my tax dollars go to paying for a box of condoms and an IUD for a teenage couple than go to paying them and their five kids to stay on welfare for the next fifty years. And then pay for those five kids’ twenty-five kids to stay on welfare for another fifty years. And so on. You wanna treat the disease? Treat the cause, not the symptoms.

Agreed, but again, not at the cost of life. That’s where I draw the line.

It’s the same thing in “underdeveloped” countries, too, you wanna stop spending billions in aid on these countries? Teach them to fish, so to speak. Don’t cut the “learn fishing” programs and then complain about refugees.

Christ almighty the disconnect in that “logic,” and yet it prevails nation- and world-wide.

But it’s not about actually saving lives or preventing abortions, it’s about punishing people for being people.

That is not my intent, nor that of most pro-lifers’. One could use the same rhetoric for the embryo or fetus: It’s about punishing people for being underdeveloped and unwanted people. Just like people have sex and we don’t expect them to stop just because it’s not done responsibly, we don’t expect unborn infants to stop growing just because their parents don’t want them.

To pre-empt a couple of arguments, I have a couple of more items to say:

I hate argument about personal morality. I cannot tell you how many times I’ve heard people say, “I personally am against abortion, but I cannot impose my morals on someone else.” Look, all our laws are based on morals. Removing the idea of an absolute Giver of Law and Morality, there is technically nothing that is absolutely wrong, unless we as a society define it as such. Without God, there is no commandment of “Thou shalt not kill.” We humans simply have come to believe it is wrong, and therefore legislate against it. We develop our morals based on the idea of promoting life and happiness for as many individuals as possible, and of course, I agree with this notion, but just remember that our laws are in fact based on morals that not everyone agrees with. I’m sure there are individuals who believe black slavery should be reinstituted, that Jews should be exterminated, etc. Should I say to them, “I’m pro-slavery-choice,” or “I’m pro-Holocaust-choice because though I personally am opposed to it doesn’t mean I should tell someone else how to live his or her life?” Of course not. I have the right to advocate for legislation against abortion, even if many others disagree with me. I believe it is wrong, and I believe that just because someone else doesn’t feel it is wrong, I still have the right to sway the nation to uphold what I believe is correct. How long did abolitionists fight slavery when half the nation disagreed with them on its morality? I have the right to fight abortion, even if half the nation disagrees with me.

And before anyone calls me out for being male, and therefore unqualified to make a judgment on the issue, let me then say that if you are male, you have no more right to reply. You may say, “Well, women oppose abortion, and I’m just advocating for women’s rights.” Well, while numbers tend to remain fair split, I think it a fair statement to point out that nearly as many U.S. women are pro-life as are pro-choice (I suspect if it were broken down by the “personally pro-life” vs. generally pro-choice, it would be even highter who are pro-life to some degree), and more than half of pro-life activists are women. Even when in the minority, it is still a very sizeable minority of women who oppose abortion, so calling me sexist for opposing it will do no good. Per the below Gallup link, I support 41% of American women, and the Town Hall link is even more revealing.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_pro-life_movement#Demographics
http://www.gallup.com/poll/170249/split-abortion-pro-choice-pro-life.aspx
http://townhall.com/tipsheet/guybenson/2017/01/23/marist-abortion-poll-n2275329

Final pre-emptive point: I still don’t like Donald Trump. But I agreed with Obama on many things, even though I didn’t like him (though I’d take a third Obama term over our current loser). I just happen to agree with the idea of not using American dollars to support elected, unneeded abortions, at home or abroad.

Author
Time
 (Edited)

darth_ender said:

I avoid posting in this thread anymore because I’ve cut down drastically on my interaction on this forum in recent months due to an ever busier schedule. Plus, less emotional involvement here gets me less upset when someone does something rude or disagrees profoundly. I probably will get sucked into a conversation I shouldn’t take my time on, but I do wish to leave my thoughts on the reinstating of the global gag rule.

I figured the best way to address this was to reply to my favorite post from the opposition on this site, the post I most agree with in fact:

Tyrphanax said:

In this modern world of progress, education is the key to all things and yet we continue to defund it every chance we get, then wonder why things go wrong.

I agree with the need for more education. While I would love to live in a world where personal responsibility was the ruling factor in people’s decision-making, I know it is not, nor will it ever be. People make mistakes, and often we look for a way to give a reprieve for those mistakes. Based on that understanding, we must prevent unwanted pregnancy in order to prevent abortion.

I’ll give an example: I believe Rick Perry signed a Texas law disallowing the morning-after pill for minors without parental permission. I find this to be foolish. The morning after pill prevents fertilization, does no harm to a living, genetically unique human, and prevents pregnancy. If I want to reduce abortions, this will actually do exactly that. Women will not get pregnant, and no child will be aborted. Win-win!

People don’t have babies willy-nilly because it’s fun to have a kid.

It can be. It is hard, but many people want children, and many women love being pregnant.

People don’t have abortions willy-nilly because it’s fun to have an abortion. They do it because they don’t know better, or don’t have access to contraception, or because of accidental pregnancy/pregnancy through malicious intent.

This is true. However, the first two do not justify an abortion to me.

I once got pulled over for going 35 mph in a 25 mph zone. I could not find a sign for a long distance before, and the sign was obscured by a tree. To me, everything else on the road indicated it was likely a 35 mph zone, with a painted yellow line, sparse housing, and a nearby 35 mph zone that was similarly painted and housed. I went to fight this ticket in court, and the judge ruled against me saying, “Ignorance of the law does not justify breaking the law.” I still had to face a consequence of my decision to speed, even though I didn’t know I was speeding.

Now how many post-pubescent individuals do not know that sex leads to babies? I’m guessing a very small percentage. And even if they are ignorant of the fact or the likelihood, I don’t see a “Get out of parenthood free” card as a fair answer to the child.

For the record, I do believe rape is a justifiable reason, though not necessarily the default answer. It should be well thought out, but I do believe it should be the woman’s choice in that case.

Why we feel the need to punish people for the above and then propagate the problem by continuing to cut funding is not logical or intelligent.

The funding is the problem. I don’t like abortion, and I don’t like spending my money on it. How many people complain about American dollars going to fight wars they don’t believe in? I know it’s far more expensive to fight a war than to financially support these NGOs. I know that there is a high cost of innocent and guilty human life. I personally hate war. And I understand that at times, war is a necessary evil that hopefully will save more life in the long run than it destroys. But protesters will protest war, and they have that right. President Obama pulled out of Iraq, and in retrospect it was premature, but it was an effort to avoid spending American money on something he did not believe in. Americans who don’t believe in abortion should have the freedom to oppose it, and the president should have the right to curb abortion as much as possible.

You wanna see fewer people on welfare funded by your tax dollar having a million kids? Prevent it by education (and not abstinence-only because that’s a farce and will never work), providing contraception,…

Agreed. This saves us from spending unnecessarily on those who are most likely to get pregnant unintentionally and are least financially capable of raising a family.

…and allowing abortion.

I disagree. Killing a person while it’s legal is still killing a person in my mind. I don’t feel an inclination to round up all the welfare recipients and euthenize them. I don’t believe it is any better just because they are future welfare recipients who haven’t developed a complete nervous system yet.

Funny thing is that when you do the first two (educate and provide contraceptives), I guarantee that the third option (abortion) will fall rapidly. You wanna solve abortion with me? Then lean on the first two.

This is where you and I agree the most. How can we promote these two more? Serious question. How can I reduce elective abortions in unnecessary cases while still promoting education and contraception? I believe that there are options, but I don’t know the answers. Perhaps educating women that there truly are more options than abortion for unwanted pregnancies. There are so many families who want to adopt. There are resources for those unprepared to have children to facilitate responsible parenting. There are ways to educate the public at large and reduced social ostracism. Perhaps more education, reducing obstacles from these routes, and preventing pregnancy in the first place will save women’s and children’s lives.

Don’t just defund the whole thing and shove it under the rug and pretend it doesn’t exist for inane puritanical ideological reasons. I don’t like the idea of abortion as much as anybody, but you damn well better believe that I want them available and happening in a well-funded controlled and clinical environment, and not some back alley with a rusty coathanger.

I agree, I would want them done in the safest way possible. Abortions should be available, but in my mind, only in exceptional circumstances. It is far too common, often unnecessary.

I dunno about anyone else here, but I’d rather my tax dollars go to paying for a box of condoms and an IUD for a teenage couple than go to paying them and their five kids to stay on welfare for the next fifty years. And then pay for those five kids’ twenty-five kids to stay on welfare for another fifty years. And so on. You wanna treat the disease? Treat the cause, not the symptoms.

Agreed, but again, not at the cost of life. That’s where I draw the line.

It’s the same thing in “underdeveloped” countries, too, you wanna stop spending billions in aid on these countries? Teach them to fish, so to speak. Don’t cut the “learn fishing” programs and then complain about refugees. Christ almighty the disconnect in that “logic,” and yet it prevails nation- and world-wide.

But it’s not about actually saving lives or preventing abortions, it’s about punishing people for being people.

That is not my intent, nor that of most pro-lifers’. One could use the same rhetoric for the embryo or fetus: It’s about punishing people for being underdeveloped and unwanted people. Just like people have sex and we don’t expect them to stop just because it’s not done responsibly, we don’t expect unborn infants to stop growing just because their parents don’t want them.

To pre-empt a couple of arguments, I have a couple of more items to say:

I hate argument about personal morality. I cannot tell you how many times I’ve heard people say, “I personally am against abortion, but I cannot impose my morals on someone else.” Look, all our laws are based on morals. Removing the idea of an absolute Giver of Law and Morality, there is technically nothing that is absolutely wrong, unless we as a society define it as such. Without God, there is no commandment of “Thou shalt not kill.” We humans simply have come to believe it is wrong, and therefore legislate against it. We develop our morals based on the idea of promoting life and happiness for as many individuals as possible, and of course, I agree with this notion, but just remember that our laws are in fact based on morals that not everyone agrees with. I’m sure there are individuals who believe black slavery should be reinstituted, that Jews should be exterminated, etc. Should I say to them, “I’m pro-slavery-choice,” or “I’m pro-Holocaust-choice because though I personally am opposed to it doesn’t mean I should tell someone else how to live his or her life?” Of course not. I have the right to advocate for legislation against abortion, even if many others disagree with me. I believe it is wrong, and I believe that just because someone else doesn’t feel it is wrong, I still have the right to sway the nation to uphold what I believe is correct. How long did abolitionists fight slavery when half the nation disagreed with them on its morality? I have the right to fight abortion, even if half the nation disagrees with me.

And before anyone calls me out for being male, and therefore unqualified to make a judgment on the issue, let me then say that if you are male, you have no more right to reply. You may say, “Well, women oppose abortion, and I’m just advocating for women’s rights.” Well, while numbers tend to remain fair split, I think it a fair statement to point out that nearly as many U.S. women are pro-life as are pro-choice (I suspect if it were broken down by the “personally pro-life” vs. generally pro-choice, it would be even highter who are pro-life to some degree), and more than half of pro-life activists are women. Even when in the minority, it is still a very sizeable minority of women who oppose abortion, so calling me sexist for opposing it will do no good. Per the below Gallup link, I support 41% of American women, and the Town Hall link is even more revealing.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_pro-life_movement#Demographics
http://www.gallup.com/poll/170249/split-abortion-pro-choice-pro-life.aspx
http://townhall.com/tipsheet/guybenson/2017/01/23/marist-abortion-poll-n2275329

Final pre-emptive point: I still don’t like Donald Trump. But I agreed with Obama on many things, even though I didn’t like him (though I’d take a third Obama term over our current loser). I just happen to agree with the idea of not using American dollars to support elected, unneeded abortions, at home or abroad.

This really helped me put my thoughts in to perspective on the matter and to be honest, I did not find anything in your post, to disagree with.

Thank you for sharing such detailed thoughts with us.

Author
Time

I love this!

“First feel fear, then get angry. Then go with your life into the fight.” - Bill Mollison

Author
Time

But Congress would have to approve funding for the structure, which is estimated to cost billions of dollars.

If they approve it, they’ve clearly lost their minds (and their small-government conservative values).

Author
Time

While I oppose illegal immigration, this is a stupid idea. I’m not for destroying the local ecology to keep out those crossing illegally. Shirley (sic), there’s a better way to do it.

Author
Time

Jetrell Fo said:

You didn’t find it “funny” that those anti-Trump folks fucked up Larry King’s hired SUV?

No, why would I? I literally just said the only funny thing was that Nazi getting sucker punched.

Author
Time

On the matter of abortions and birth control, in my mind it will never not be a matter of women’s rights. It’s very simple. You can say people shouldn’t fuck around in the first place or they deserve the consequences, but at the end of the day it is only the woman that has to deal with those consequences. The men get off scot free, if they want. So why shouldn’t the women too?

(not to mention an abortion is not actually “scot free” and is quite an ordeal in many ways)

As to whether it is immoral or not, this is a case where there’s no where to go but to say agree to disagree.