Read On: A list I never thought I'd ever have to write

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
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http://www.latimes.com/socal/glendale-news-press/opinion/tn-gnp-me-richmond-20170127-story.html

Read On: A list I never thought I'd ever have to write


I never thought I'd have to write that I sense fear from my fellow citizens when it comes to speaking out against a presidential administration. But I do.

I never thought I'd have to write that our president is the biggest and most compulsive liar that I've ever encountered in American public life. But I must.

I never thought I'd have to write that the leader of the United States has the demeanor of a middle school-aged adolescent, with mature development arrested at age 13. But it's true.

I never thought I'd have to write that my government has declared literal war against the truth, or that the president's chief spokesperson would go on television and with a straight face and present the idea of "alternative facts." But they have.

I never thought I'd have to write that my president is so insecure and consumed with the size of his support that he would personally phone the acting chief of the National Park Service to produce photographic evidence of a larger turnout at his inauguration. But he did.

I never thought I'd have to write that my president has launched a trade war with Mexico during his first week in office and generate talks of an actual war. But he has.

I never thought I'd have to write that members of President Trump's senior staff all were using a private Republican National Committee email server after having made Hillary Clinton's doing so the centerpiece of the general election campaign. But it has.

I never thought I'd have to write that the winner of the presidential campaign is loudly and persistently making dubious claims of voter fraud despite having come out on top. But he does.

I never thought I'd have to write that the proposed solution for making Mexico pay for a wall on America's southern border would be a 20% tax on all imported goods, essentially sticking American consumers with the bill. But it is.

I never thought I'd have to write that an American president this week stood in front of the hallowed CIA Memorial Wall and made a self-aggrandizing speech about his own greatness and popularity, unable to see past his own narcissistic reflection. But he did.

I never thought I'd have to write that five members of the president's inner circle, including two of his children, are registered to vote in two states. But they are.

I never thought I'd have to write that Steve Bannon, the president's chief strategist, has gone so far as to tell the New York Times, "The media should be embarrassed and humiliated and keep its mouth shut and just listen for a while. The media here is the opposition party." But he did.

I never thought I'd have to write that the leader of the once-free world could consume himself with bad-mouthing movie stars and TV shows in tweets and all but declare war on information itself. But he does.

I never thought I'd have to write that the country could be so fractured and polarized that talk of civil war would be in the air. But it is.

I never thought I'd have to write that a presidential administration has threatened to go to war with California by putting us on notice that federal funding would be withheld from sanctuary cities if they failed to cooperate with immigration agents. But it did.

I never thought I'd have to write that the New York Times now sees fit to use the words "lie" and "lies" in headlines and stories applied to a sitting president of the United States, which it didn't even do with Richard Nixon. But this past week, it did.

I never thought I'd have to write that waking up in the morning to the news — once an activity embraced with relish — so fills me with dread. But it does.

I never thought I'd have to write that going about the business of my daily life feels utterly empty and foreboding due to what appears to be the purposeful destruction of our hallowed institutions of democracy in real time. But it has.

I never thought I'd have to write that I feel helpless in the face of tyranny and autocratic rule from a man who believes himself at once omnipotent and infallible. But I do.

I never thought I'd have to write that I sense I'm a stranger in my own land. But I do.

--RAY RICHMOND
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
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Just look at these sore losers! They needed to just accept that George II is the King! Stop destroying private property and get a job!!!

Boston_Tea_Party_Currier_colored.jpg
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,452
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Not like there was an election or anything. You are totally oppressed!

Except for the fact that a foreign government interfered with the election and nearly 4 million more voted for the comparatively sane one... Yeah, sure.
 

trenchfoot

Lifer
Aug 5, 2000
15,904
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Except for the fact that a foreign government interfered with the election and nearly 4 million more voted for the comparatively sane one... Yeah, sure.

Looks like Trump is in some respects using Putin's model for "capturing the hearts and minds" of the populace via saturating the media with his mindset, his reasoning, his personal style of bullying where he is literally forcing his dogma down America's throat with the hopes of creating the same deceptive aura that he infected those gullible mid-westerners with, but on a national scale.

The protests that he's generated over his "unique style" of propagandizing the population with outrageous lies and deceptive double speak is proof positive that his agenda for spreading the "Mid-Western Mind Fvck Coup" (which seems to be loosely modeled after the GOP's Southern Strategy Agenda that turned the South red) definitely has its limits and it looks like he's really frustrated over that.

It seems to me that his style of play has run its course, now that he's exposed how "establishment" he really is and how he is the typical very wealthy asshole looking to play the system to get ever richer and it won't gain him any further support than what he scammed his way into getting to get elected.

Sure, he'll definitely continue baiting and appeasing those folks who voted for him with grand gestures and divertive chunks of red meat and table scraps with the idea in mind that they will remain loyal to him, but the more he exposes himself for the Exploiter in Chief that he is, the more difficult it will be for him to cajole and mesmerize his supporters into continuing to believe in him and his self-serving agenda.

His and the GOP's objectives for "Tax Reform" (just more tax cuts and loopholes for the wealthy) should make obvious what their primary interests are and how that pursuit of more riches for themselves will further drive the middle class into the ranks of the poor, but as well as Trump knows, it really won't matter to many of his working class supporters because they've already cast their lot into his care and "that's that".

It's already obvious that he's put his personal interests over those of the people he's supposed to serve. Hopefully, that will, in the end, lead to his demise.
 
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boomerang

Lifer
Jun 19, 2000
18,883
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Won't somebody please buy Ray Richmond a coloring book? As we know, the federal program that provided coloring books was cancelled by one of Trump's executive orders but certainly there is someone that can step in! George Soros, where are you when we need you?
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
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Trump won the election and people may not like it but crying in your beer isn't useful.

If you have Republican representatives in Congress contact them and be polite and put your concerns forward with intelligence. Right now these are the people you want to influence and no they do not all like the situation either. As for Trump, a psychologist at Johns Hopkins did what he's not supposed to and put forward an assessment that our new President has malignant narcissism so resistance is needed against him, and Congress is the battleground.

I never thought... So what? This isn't the time to dig a grave and jump in. Approach our problems with integrity and thoughtful action to overcome them.
 

Starbuck1975

Lifer
Jan 6, 2005
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I never thought I would see a President actually try to deliver on his or her campaign promises (even if I don't agree with what those promised entail)
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
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I never thought I would see a President actually try to deliver on his or her campaign promises (even if I don't agree with what those promised entail)

His campaign promise was to illegally punish legal resident Arabs from countries he has no assets in and be a size queen about his inauguration and make up "alternative facts"? I musta missed those.
 
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fskimospy

Elite Member
Mar 10, 2006
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I never thought I would see a President actually try to deliver on his or her campaign promises (even if I don't agree with what those promised entail)

Why is that a surprise? Research pretty clearly shows that presidents mostly follow through with their campaign promises.
 

fskimospy

Elite Member
Mar 10, 2006
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Obama made 533 promises and kept 48% and broke 24%. That does not strike me as following through.

You're treating all promises equally though, which isn't a good idea. He largely followed through on the big ones. Most presidents do, of both parties.
 

fskimospy

Elite Member
Mar 10, 2006
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Where did you get the idea that those were the top 5? He most definitely didn't make border enforcement a key part of his campaign, for example.

Regardless, let's look at your 5, because he followed through on basically all of them.

1. Definite follow through. He was thwarted by Congress in attempting to close it but it certainly wasn't from lack of trying.

2. I agree he didn't do this, but it wasn't a centerpiece of his campaign either.

3. He didn't run on a border security platform but he definitely increased spending, deportations, etc.

4. Definitely followed through.

5. Definitely followed through.

Really there's only one of the 5 you can say he dropped the ball on. Again, research shows that all presidents follow through.
 
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Starbuck1975

Lifer
Jan 6, 2005
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Where did you get the idea that those were the top 5? He most definitely didn't make border enforcement a key part of his campaign, for example.

Regardless, let's look at your 5, because he followed through on basically all of them.

1. Definite follow through. He was thwarted by Congress in attempting to close it but it certainly wasn't from lack of trying.

2. I agree he didn't do this, but it wasn't a centerpiece of his campaign either.

3. He didn't run on a border security platform but he definitely increased spending, deportations, etc.

4. Definitely followed through.

5. Definitely followed through.

Really there's only one of the 5 you can say he dropped the ball on. Again, research shows that all presidents follow through.
Facts and data
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/obameter/
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,410
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His campaign promise was to illegally punish legal resident Arabs from countries he has no assets in and be a size queen about his inauguration and make up "alternative facts"? I musta missed those.

Facebook ramblings.
 

werepossum

Elite Member
Jul 10, 2006
29,873
463
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Won't somebody please buy Ray Richmond a coloring book? As we know, the federal program that provided coloring books was cancelled by one of Trump's executive orders but certainly there is someone that can step in! George Soros, where are you when we need you?
lol +1

Methinks Mr. Richmond is going to need a stack of coloring books, plus a comfort animal and a safe space.
 

Starbuck1975

Lifer
Jan 6, 2005
14,698
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Haha, fair enough! Regardless he followed through on those pretty well as I said.
LOL. Yes he did and I didn't mean to derail the conversation. My point being is that most Presidents typically recognize there is a balance of legislative and judicial consideration, and those things tend to result in compromise.

Trump is going down the executive order path to check the boxes on his campaign promises. I could see how some might find that refreshing given the gridlock in government. Not sure what the end game is.
 

agent00f

Lifer
Jun 9, 2016
12,203
1,243
86
Trump won the election and people may not like it but crying in your beer isn't useful.

If you have Republican representatives in Congress contact them and be polite and put your concerns forward with intelligence. Right now these are the people you want to influence and no they do not all like the situation either. As for Trump, a psychologist at Johns Hopkins did what he's not supposed to and put forward an assessment that our new President has malignant narcissism so resistance is needed against him, and Congress is the battleground.

I never thought... So what? This isn't the time to dig a grave and jump in. Approach our problems with integrity and thoughtful action to overcome them.

You of all people should know the nature of fellow conservatives whatever Trump/Bannon decide to do.