Hodad
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Double Haters’ Still Up for Grabs
Hodad replied to robosmith's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
"Lower than it could have been" in what timescale? lol Those things usually sit for a decade(s) before they are developed. Look, this isn't hard. Q. Has the net domestic production increased or decreased during Biden's time in office. A. It's increased. Dramatically. To record levels. Ergo, Biden did not reduce supply and could not have increased prices through a reduction of supply. You are very simply wrong. You're trying to make excuses for it, but they are really very silly. Just learn something and move on. -
Is this your attempt at a haiku? WTF?🤣 The truth is that fanboys like you simply don't care about morality. Sure, he's all of the things I said (and more) but you don't mind as long as you can "stick it to the other guys!" Fine for sports fans, I guess. But critiques of the government of the most powerful nation on the planet should be more thoughtful than a game of hockey. And you are not now, nor have you ever been educated or thoughtful about any of the things about which you spout off. I'd suggest you STFU, eat some delicious Timbits, drink your precious beer and leave politics to the grown ups.
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You are misinformed and you don't make a bit of logical sense. A. The prosecutor in this case is not appointed by the POTUS. These are state and district indictments. And, indeed, even in the federal indictment, the prosecutor was not appointed by the POTUS, but by the DoJ B. Is a basic instruction from a judge not to talk about (threaten, intimidate, coerce, pressure, etc.) witnesses, court staff and jurors "political theater"? Or is that one of the basic principles of the US legal system, entirely necessary to the function of justice? Is the fact that Trump refuses to follow this basic, lawful instruction an aberration, or is this how he has treated the law in every instance, i.e. acting as if laws don't apply to him?
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The Choice Republicans Face
Hodad replied to robosmith's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
If "everyone knows it" you all must be embarrassed that you can't come up with even a shred of evidence to support it. -
Double Haters’ Still Up for Grabs
Hodad replied to robosmith's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
You are spreading misinformation and/or lying. Not only has there NOT been reduced supply, domestic oil production under Biden is at record highs, higher than at any point under Trump, even. There was a production crash during the pandemic (under Trump, FYI). People stopped driving, so smaller producers went out of business and larger producers shuttered less efficient wells and platforms. Workers were laid off and went on to other things. Trump also negotiated with OPEC to reduce supply and support artificially high prices. And then, when the pandemic was over, and demand picked back up, it simply takes longer to spool up production than to shut it down. And demand (prices) have to hit stepped tipping points to justify re-staffing and restarting facilities. And the US producers were actually faster in recovering than a lot of the global players. With record domestic production, it's literally--by definition--impossible for Biden to have reduced supply and increased prices. What you folks forget about is that oil is a global commodity and our domestic gas prices aren't determined by our domestic oil production. Global demand is higher than global supply (relative to times of lower gas prices). Our domestic producers may be pulling more oil from the ground than ever before, but they are exporting it into a high-demand global market, so our domestic gas prices remain elevated. None of which has anything to do with Biden. If you want Biden to "fix it" you could ask him to ban oil exports and keep domestic glut of energy for ourselves. We'd have extremely low prices in no time. But, you know, "big government." Pick your poison. -
No, I think him being an awful human being is objectively true, and I think most people will agree, whether they like his politics or not. If you read a blinded story about someone who cheats on his wives, assaults women, steals from charities, runs scam businesses, cheats his contractors, lies constantly without hesitation, spouts recycled nazi rhetoric etc.-- nobody is going to think that is a good person. The greed, the gluttony. He really has no redeeming qualities, save for political convenience. As I've often said, nobody wants their sons to grow up to behave like Trump, nor their daughters to marry men like Trump. We try to tech them better. And, again, the idea that this is "lawfare" is absurd. Trump has actually done all the things of which he is accused. He has broken those laws, and generally behaved as if the laws should not apply to him. Hell, his team is arguing in court that the POTUS should be entirely above the law, free to break any law with impunity. Any decent person should be shocked and appalled by an idea so antithetical to American values, but the "party of law and order" is A-Okay with this guy elevating the office (and conveniently himself) above the law.
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What worries me about a Biden 2nd Term
Hodad replied to Deluge's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
One of the differences between you and I is that I don't have to parrot anyone. I'm quite capable of reading data, tracking what economists say etc. You're the sort of person who needs to look up the difference between deficit and debt, so WTF are you on the internet arguing about the state of the economy? -
I'm glad you have seen this work in a couple of instances. I think that's nice. But it's certainly not a substitute for legal protection. A negative review isn't going to undo the trauma of some poor kid denied a restroom or some motorist being denied custom at the only gas station around. These laws exist for a reason. There should be no question. The internet is also not the great equalizer you think it is though. We all imagined democratized access to information and publication would be a great thing. And in some ways it is. But it's also just made it a lot easier for crazies to validate their crazy ideas by finding like-minded people online.
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I have been there. I have lived there. It's not hyperbolic. You could pick up the phone and randomly dial any number in that town, and any adult who answered the phone (from whichever side) would know exactly what you're talking about. One decent person's "reputational risk" is a deplorable person's mark of quality. 100 years of " reputational risk" didn't solve the issue, but the Civil Rights Act did. Protective legislation did. And at any rate, demonstrably successful legislation and the resulting civil cases are in no way exclusive of reputational risk. It's a certainty that the cake shop was review bombed by people on both sides of the issue. Ultimately, we've had 50+ years of protecting minority access to places of public accommodation and it's worked. The difference is night and day for minority groups trying to live and function in this country. We can look from the past to the present and see how dramatic the change has been.
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But the examples are not hyperbolic. That was just real life in the US before the civil rights act. Those examples are exactly why the law was passed, and why such cases still matter. 🤷♂️ Funny that you mention Idaho, I actually had a different, larger Idaho town in mind. Moscow, ID is home to the University of Idaho (and not much else of note). It's a population of about 25,000. But it's been targeted for takeover by an insane ultraconservative church/cult. This has been brewing for many years, and they've actually made an alarming amount of progress toward their goal and have a massively outsized presence, having executed coordinated takeovers of many local businesses and commercial spaces. It's a problem already, but without legal protection, what is life going to be like for minorities in this town as the takeover continues?
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In my view, they shouldn't have to do that, but I don't think the indignity of it is the whole--or even most--of the point. Remember that the laws of this country are not written in a vacuum. We made equal access laws for businesses of public accommodation because we have a very real and vivid history of extreme exclusion, and there's not always an alternative. Before we had these laws, the exclusion was so extreme that it often made minorities into de facto 2nd class citizens. And still, today America is peppered with small towns where there are only a few businesses of any kind and they may all be owned by a handful of families or aligned to single church, etc. Should they be able to exclude minorities for the fact of being minorities? Should they be able to exclude minorities to the degree that those minorities are effectively unable to live in that town? To buy groceries? To buy gas? Or to flip it from the general to the specific, should the only gas station for the next 60 miles be able to refuse service to a gay person? Should they be able to refuse black children access to the bathroom? What kind of country do we want this to be? We can't make everyone be kind and accepting or friendly, but we can make sure that everyone has a right to exist and function in society. And that's why people bring cases like this. It's not because they couldn't have gotten a cake elsewhere. It's because they shouldn't have to--so that everyone else shouldn't have to, because that's not always an option.
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The Trumpification of the Supreme Court
Hodad replied to robosmith's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
The "problem" you mention is fictional nonsense. The falsest of false equivalences. A lot of people in Washington have mishandled classified documents. The difference is that when they discover them in a briefcase or office box, they turn them right back over to the authorities. That's how it's always gone, so nobody gets prosecuted. And, of course, that's what Clinton and Biden did. Traditionally, the only people who have been prosecuted are those who have clearly taken them with intent. Trump didn't just accidentally mishandle them. He took them. He lied about having them. He claimed he had a right to take them. And he refused to return them. Surely, even a rabid partisan can see the difference in Trump's behavior? -
The Choice Republicans Face
Hodad replied to robosmith's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
Sigh. A. The former intelligence officials didn't say it was Russian disinformation, they said it bore the hallmarks of Russian disinformation--warning the public not to buy into it immediately. Which is, frankly, good advice for something crazy like the laptop info with such a sketchy provenance. Remember that even the NY Post authors who wrote the story thought it was too sketchy and refused to put their names (their reputations) on it. That's how unvetted it was. B. Those ex-officials were not in the FBI. They were retired. And, as far as I can discern, not a single one of them was retired from the FBI. So there is no connection to the FBI at all. Let alone to "the Democrats." The FBI also being run by Republicans--Trump appointees, no less. You're just throwing crazy conspiracy accusations at the wall. C. And even if your nonsensical conspiracy theory were true, which if very clearly isn't, judging it cheating would put you in the position of judging that the FBI interfered to help Trump win office in the first place with Comey's October Surprise. -
In many ways I think it's completely irrelevant what Trump does. He's an awful human being, and that won't change one way or the other based on a trip to Rikers for contempt of court. (As much as I'd love to see it.) Probably what's more important is what Trump's supporters make of the situation. They've spent months convincing themselves that he's the victim of some legal witch hunt, that he's being persecuted, when in fact his crimes are pretty plain to see. But here, in this case we have an almost scientific experiment. Isolated from politics and even from the gorpy facts of a criminal indictment, we have a judge issuing a plain as day instruction. And it's incredibly basic: don't make public statements about witnesses, jurors, court staff and their families. This is standard stuff for reasons that everyone understands. The judge has been clear about it. Trump was warned multiple times and continued to violate. He's been fined multiple times, and continues to violate. And the judge is begging him to stop, so that he doesn't have to put a past and potentially future president in jail. But the question for Trump supporters, who can see the clear and repeated violations of a simple court order taking place, whether they will finally hold Trump responsible for his own dumb actions, or whether they will try to blame the court for trying to enforce a basic point of law. It's a lot like dealing with a toddler. They will push boundaries until they trigger the ultimatum. As Trump seems likely to do. Will his supporters finally acknowledge that the toddler was at fault for willfully violating a plain, simple and fair directive? Or, like the toddler, will they blame the authority figure for imposing consequences. Should be illuminating either way--but I have my guesses. lol
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There's an insane entitlement mentality to this whole "pro-life" perspective. You frame this entire argument around what you think and what you want. Specifically what you want a woman to do with her body. It's an inescapable fact that by trying to legislate your view and your wishes, you are actively trampling on the physical sovereignty, autonomy and rights of women. It should be a woman's choice. You want to strip away that choice and legislate your feelings, and force that onto women. It's 100% and anti-choice movement. Once again, you have zero consideration for the woman--the actual born person and citizen. You're so damn busy arguing that nothing changes with regard to the fetus (despite becoming a physically separate entity, FFS) that you hand-wave away the impact of birthing on the women actually doing the birthing. The misogyny is off the charts. These are people--actual people--and you do not get to dismiss their investment and their choice in this process. Once again, you completely and utterly discount the entire view of the women. Mental health is not a matter of convenience. Physical health is not a matter of convenience. The woman's philosophy and beliefs are not a matter of convenience. This entire post from you could be summarized as "Women aren't relevant in this process or this conversation. They are just incubators who should STFU and do their job." Nooooope. The pro-life movement is not about life sometimes, or life in certain circumstances. You've been droning on and on about what the "pro-life" flag represents, so I assumed you would know what it is you're describing. international pro-life flag will wildly help the movement in its already-unified aim: ending abortion. Not reducing abortion. Not abortion sometimes. ENDING abortion. And the logical point that you fail to understand about that statistic is that many people who find abortion "morally wrong" aren't interested in legislating their morals onto other people. There are people who think that drinking, smoking, gambling, lying--or whatever else--is morally wrong. Do you know how they respond? They don't DO the thing. Have your morals. Just stop trying to force other people to live by them. Grandma is a person. Hurting other people is (usually) wrong. It's an action that harms another, so it is illegal. A fetus is not a person. There is no science to support the idea that a fetus is a person. The idea that a fetus is a person (despite lacking all or most aspects of personhood, depending on the developmental stage) comes from a religious perspective and the notion of souls. So yes, it's a movement based entirely on religious dogma. And again, even if we were to stipulate for the sake of argument that a fetus is a person, there is no argument to make for why this person should be granted ownership of a woman's body, blood and tissue.
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What worries me about a Biden 2nd Term
Hodad replied to Deluge's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
Look, I know you're not capable of looking at data, but even you should be able to understand the difference between being the president-elect and the president. The overall health of the economy is a composite of many different metrics. Presidents generally have little control over them in the short term. They can do things to nudge a bit, but the fundamentals take longer to turn than 3 years. The truth is that Trump did nothing to change the upward trajectory of the Obama economy. The metrics trended almost exactly as they had been. And yes, the economy did fall apart on his watch, but aside from his early overspending and mismanagement of the pandemic response, it's not his fault it fell apart on his watch. But it did, and THAT was an economy in shambles. It's also a fact that by almost every metric, the Biden economy is robust. And, this too is mostly the rebound. The rebound wasn't inevitable, BTW, the Trump and Biden stimulus packages successfully staved off a disastrous depression. Biden actually has made some great long-term economic moves. The CHIPS act and IRA (not really aimed at inflation) include the kind of fundamental economy building that we haven't had in a long time. But it's meat, not sugar. It's only starting to land with things like the TSMC plants in Arizona. I don't know who you are parroting, but you sound like a buffoon when you describe it as "in shambles." Look at the metrics. Read a real paper. Listen to the Fed announcements. Email an economist at your local university. Do SOMETHING to put some actual information in your head. -
You're playing a very poor game of semantics. As illustrated, "pro-life" doesn't have anything at all to do with life, writ large. It very simply means that we should outlaw abortion, robbing women of the choice whether to suffer a pregnancy or terminate it. Which brings us back to WHY the pro-life flag is indeed antagonistic. It's not a simple uplifting message. It's a position asserting dominance over have the population and meaningfully impacting their rights and lives. Stop pretending that it's anything other than that. You just look silly. Spoken like someone who's never given birth. Only a callous man could hand-wave away the birth process as inconsequential. The fetus is connected to, dependent on and literally inside a specific person. If you don't think that's a difference--a number of VERY obvious differences--from a born person I don't know what to tell you. What? That's not a contingent condition. It's not a person because it's not a person. It lacks aspects of personhood identified by any philosophical tradition (there are lists). Separate from that it is definitely not a citizen. Yet you would assign the fetus a special set of rights beyond those of a known person and legal citizen. It's a ridiculous, misogynistic nonsense. A) It's very rarely a matter of convenience B. It's none of your business where, when or why a woman terminates a pregnancy. It's her body, and her choice. It's not entering the building that makes one religious. Gallup: Those with no religious identity are much more accepting of abortion; only 5% of this group say abortion should be illegal in all circumstances, and only 21% say abortion is morally wrong. ^^There you go. 5% of the non-religious are "pro-life" This is ridiculous. It's like "debating" the color of the sky. The pro-life movement is based in religion and driven almost entirely by Catholics and evangelicals. The sky is blue. There is no debate or controversy. You don't need to pretend that the pro-life movement isn't fueled by religious dogma. If that embarrasses you, perhaps reconsider your position.
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No, funding public schools is not negotiable. If people want to send their kids elsewhere, that's fine, but we can't defund and destroy our education system, which is one of our great social and economic differentiators. In the same way that you can't opt out of funding roads and utilities because you don't use them. And the fact that you don't directly use them doesn't mean you don't benefit from them. I don't think there's anything magical about it. Fetuses on one side, babies on the other. And I certainly believe in a legal birth canal. Text. Section 1, Clause 1, of the Fourteenth Amendment, reads: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside Stop trying to give a non-person, non-citizen legal rights superior to those of born persons and citizens. Great, glad that the cohort includes women and men and humans. Now to reiterate, overwhelmingly religious. Every sperm is beautiful. Let's not pretend like that's not the primary impetus.
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Lol. Apparently shame is not a feeling in your repitoir. Anyone who can defend that level of corruption is clearly hopeless. I know you have a knee-jerk reaction to defend "your team" but only you can decide if this crooked judge is worth your integrity. When someone loans you a quarter of a million dollars and then forgives the loan, they are "handing" you a quarter of a million dollars. The Clarence Thomas story started badly and end badly. He threatened to quit if he didn't get a raise, so the booster club took care of him. Greed and corruption. That's his legacy now.
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Why Isn't Joe fighting?
Hodad replied to gatomontes99's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
Well sure, the administration. And economists. Oh, and the federal reserve. People invested in stocks. People who own homes. People who read the news. But other than that, what have the Romans ever done for us? -
Why are we regressing to the 1960s?
Hodad replied to gatomontes99's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
It's really gross. Most Jews are Democrats to begin with. Rather than imagining that college students suddenly hate Jews, perhaps it's worth considering that their consciences are shocked and appalled at the idea of 13,000 Palestinian children killed? Can you even imagine what a massive pile of bodies that would be? Like a small mountain. I mean, they're just children, with tiny little bodies,so a somewhat smaller pile, but still. I think "conservatives" will judge these students for their empathy, because the judgers lack it altogether. -
Oops...Racist Libbies Get What They Deserve.
Hodad replied to Nationalist's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
I'd even say they aren't necessarily bad people, but they did screw up and they should be punished. I don't think anyone denies that there were flashes of violence and significant property damage in the BLM-spawned riots. But most of those events were protests, legitimate protests, rather than riots. A very small minority turned destructive. Rioters in those instances should be punished as well, but I certainly understand differently and empathize differently with a victim group growing fed up and lashing out than I do with elective political violence. -
Nope, that's exactly one of the things that happened. One of Clarence's good pals bought him a quarter-million-dollar "motor coach" attached to a loan--the originating amount of the loan was then forgiven. Here you go, $250K, good buddy!" Or the other "friend" who paid 6 figures worth of private school tuition for Thomas' nephew. The lavish cruises and vacations were really the tip of the iceberg. You could watch the video (which is fun) or read any of the investigative journalism (not as fun) on the topic. Propublica has good coverage. Oh, and don't forget the interlock with his wife's business. You might not mind, but the fact that Thomas has used his office and influence to greatly enrich himself is repugnant, and an embarrassment to the court. We're miles beyond the "appearance of impropriety" here. But they are comfortable miles in a plush-ass free motorcoach!
