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Donald Trump Presidency discussion thread III

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭MikeyTaylor


    Does Donald Trump actually make the decisions or is he just president in name? To me he's little more than a businessman.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,684 ✭✭✭FatherTed


    And here's a tweet today from The Donald threatening the freedom of the press:

    The Fake News is working overtime. Just reported that, despite the tremendous success we are having with the economy & all things else, 91% of the Network News about me is negative (Fake). Why do we work so hard in working with the media when it is corrupt? Take away credentials?

    Ah so now negative=fake...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭MikeyTaylor


    FatherTed wrote: »
    Ah so now negative=fake...

    Predictable...


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,222 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    kilns wrote: »
    So would you be happy to go into War and put your life on the line for the ego of an overly sensitive man?

    Not particularly, no. At least if it can be shown that that's the reason, in which case I would hope that my senior leadership (SecDef, SecArmy, CCdrs etc) would not pass down such orders.
    That is beside the point, however. Our job is to be prepared to fight and win the nation's wars, not to pass judgement on the merits of those wars. Military preparedness does not start or end with the particular person sitting in the oval office, it is something which needs to be conducted on an ongoing basis regardless. It should be noted that our morale problem did not start with the Obama administration, it's been coming down for quite a few years. The difference is that this is the first administration in quite a long time which has placed people in charge who are determined to reverse it.
    Big difference between defending against aggression and being the aggressors

    Not to the soldiers in action. We exist to carry out government policy by force of arms if necessary. That means we train to fight. Go watch the recent RTE show "The Recruits", how much time do they spend teaching "conflict resolution" vs "Section-in-attack"? We have a set expectation as to why we are in the military. Not meeting that expectation can both demoralize and risk lives.
    Of which of the six wars America is currently actively engaged or actively supporting are american troops "defending the state"?

    Which of the dozens in the last 70 years for that matter?

    How holistic a view do you want to take? The security of a nation and its people does not begin at its borders, under this philosophy we have had combat troops in Europe for the last 70 years. It's the same reason we ended up in Vietnam, Panama, Kuwait or Grenada. It's why we ended up in Afghanistan.
    However, the point is that whatever we end up using the military for, be it facing down the Russians in Latvia or delivering humanitarian supplies in Japan, we want to be trained and equipped to do the best job possible.
    "It doesn't matter that the commander-in-chief is mentally unstable; all that matters is that we're suitably equipped to fight the pointless wars he's idiotically dragging us towards."

    We can't control that. We can control how we perform when we are in operations, whether it is pointless or not, whether it is tomorrow or 2021. We are not Thailand or Turkey. It is not our function in the US to conduct coup d'etats or refuse lawful orders because we disagree with them. Civil control of the military is the absolute bedrock of the US military structure, and honestly, I don't think many people would prefer it any other way. So, we place trust in our civilian structure, we place trust in our senior leadership, and in the meantime, we get cracking on what is important at our level.
    The problem is that just carrying out orders is not always a defence.

    It is not, agreed. But it can be depending on what the soldier in question does or does not know. The question of "Do we attack this country" is not one which it is the place of humble line soldiers to question, that is something with which only the highest echelons have to wrestle. As long as we trust that there are sufficient checks in the system to prevent unlawful orders from filtering down to us, we have no moral or morale quandries on the matter.
    Given that your own commander in chief openly shows disdain and ignorance of the Constitution and thus, your own oath, why is morale high?

    See above commentary. We have faith that we will not be mis-used (Even if only because we have no other alternative), and we are being treated like adults again.
    That is a very disturbing post.

    Sexual violence within the US military is a major, real problem. 32% of female members have experienced assault, a multiple of that sexual harrasment. A DoD study indicated that over half of those who report sexual violence face retaliation. The idea that sexual violence doesn't impact on unit cohesion and military readiness and effectiveness is rather hard to give credence to.

    As to the idea that the motivation or origins of the war don't have an impact on soldiers... I think a few Vietnam veterans might disagree

    OK, you've apparently focused on a sort of trigger word and missed the larger context. It's not that sexual harassment isn't an important issue to address, it's that it is being addressed in a counter-productive way. We can either address it by holding commanders responsible for the climate on sexual assault in their unit, and by creating a culture of professionalism, or we can address it by mandating that every three months, soldiers sit through the same hour-long lecture. Which of these two is better suited?

    And every three months we had (Requirement changed to every two years about two months ago) to sit through the same hour-long lecture on suicide awareness. Equal Opportunity. We have to find room for every good idea from Anti-Terrorism Level 1 training through the Army Accident Avoidance Course to Trafficking in Persons training. As mentioned, the Regular Army are mandated to train 20 months' worth of man-hours every year. I'm a reservist, we only get 20 hours a month, on average, to train. Every quarter, we lose (Well, lost, as of this quarter they reduced the rules) half a day teaching the same stuff which has already been taught. Indeed, Decembers we don't even train, we just sit through our mandatory annual briefs in an auditorium (or aircraft hangar) so we can get the checkboxes checked.

    The pilot quoted in one of the articles about there being more paperwork to go on leave than engage in combat wasn't joking. When I was in Ft Knox, we would be given passes on weekends. Most of us drove places. We had to use the Travel Risk Planning System. (TRiPS). Here, you don't need to be logged in to use it, go look at it. https://trips.safety.army.mil/ (Select "army").

    As you can see, it's an eight-page form. Now, when I was a humble civilian in UCD, I did not need to fill out risk assessments with contingency planning in order to drive to see my girlfriend in Galway. And God help you if you have a motorcycle. As, at the time, a commander of a combat unit with 100 soldiers, it's downright insulting. (Fortunately, it has also been cancelled as of two weeks ago) .The idiocy of having to wear reflective belts on top of clothing already designed to be reflective (or better yet, wearing them in combat zones) has become a cultural reference point equal to the Huey of Vietnam or the Iwo Jima flag raising of WW2.

    Somehow the solution to every issue in the military has become bureaucracy as opposed to common sense. Instead of empowering leaders to fix identified problems, and putting some trust in soldiers, we are more and more micromanaged to address the topic-du-jour, in an organisation which by its very function is supposed to be as un-micromanaged as possible in order to be effective. If we don't empower soldiers to make their own decisions in peacetime, how are we expecting them to do so in combat?

    This is now, thankfully, being addressed. We're not saying that race relations, sexual harassment, transgender acceptance, whatever, in the army isn't important, but we are much happier simply reaffirming "Respect the rank, respect the uniform, be a f***ng professional. Now let's go into the field" instead of having repetitive briefs on each individual subject for hours. Being harassment free and reserving sufficient time to train for combat are not mutually exclusive propositions. We are seeing in this last year a focus back on warfighting instead of administration, and we're happy for it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 15,481 ✭✭✭✭Leroy42


    everlast75 wrote: »
    It appears Mueller is 7 months ahead of our timeline and what we know only now...

    Good thread of info here in terms of who his team have interviewed and when..


    https://twitter.com/aliasvaughn/status/994189600368353281?s=19

    What it shows, yeet again, is that the constant calls by Trump, the WH and his supporters that the investigation has shown nothing is completely in the blind.

    Mueller continues to generate new stories ever couple of weeks, stories that weren't even thought of before.

    SHS continues to claim that the WH is completely transparent yet we continue to get surprised.

    Given the constant surprises, I am amazed that anyone is able to make any declaration as to the possible outcome. It is clear that Mueller is working on far more than we know about.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 13,537 ✭✭✭✭briany


    Has there been a president in the whole of U.S. history as outwardly combative as Donald Trump?

    Other presidents would try to deflect on many things. Above all, it seemed of utmost importance to maintain a statesmanlike dignity.

    Donald Trump seems to say, "F*** that!" and just comes out swinging, throwing bombs and haymakers over anything and everything that angers him.
    His base seems to lap it up.

    Donald Trump, for all his failings, represents the break from politics as usual for a lot of people. Where other politicians would retract, he'll double down. He seems to make no qualms about what he's saying. He'll even openly attack members of his own party quite bitterly if they fail to get campaign promises enacted.

    If any other politician had been accused of paying off a pornstar, colluding with the Russians and belittling a Vietnam veteran, their political career would be over. They'd be a punchable punchline living in exile somewhere. Trump wasn't lying when he said he could shoot somebody and not lose any voters.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,867 ✭✭✭Christy42


    markodaly wrote: »
    Christy42 wrote: »
    Why is it about isolationism. We can't take Trump's word on it because he is a liar.

    Isolationism would be simply leaving the deal and letting others deal with it. Instead he wants to directly attack anyone who keeps to the deal (economically).

    He has also not shown isolationist policies in Syria or North Korea. Indeed he seems far more gung ho about Syria than Clinton given the escalation of attacks and attacking when the previous administration held off.

    He has threatened north Korea with war so why are you so sure he, the obviously unstable man, will hold off?

    He also threatened to build a wall with Mexico and make them pay for it, it does not mean its going to happen.

    Politicians say stuff all the time, it does not mean it will come true.

    Remember Labour's 'our way or Frankfurts way'?
    Remember Leo's 'not one more red cent'?
    Remember Obama's 'Red line' on Syria or closing of Gitmo?

    Trump wants to project power, but he does not want a war.


    Essentially you will believe his statements you want to and not the others? I mean you believe the isolationist rhetoric but not the rest. Indeed Trump has lied plenty of times, you need to think why you believe the isolationist stuff.

    Why do you think you have an inside track into his line of thinking? Many of his closest aides don't have that.

    American actions and intentions need to be treated with suspicion at this point as I doubt even Trump nows Trump's intentions. Every excise for war needs to be shot down more and represents part of the importance of the rest of the world showing this deal can work without the US.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,222 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    briany wrote: »
    If any other politician had been accused of paying off a pornstar, colluding with the Russians and belittling a Vietnam veteran, their political career would be over. They'd be a punchable punchline living in exile somewhere. Trump wasn't lying when he said he could shoot somebody and not lose any voters.

    Sacramento Bee had an article this week asking a similar question about Gavin Newsom, the current leader in the race for California governor, Democrat.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/marcos-breton/article210409949.html
    If one of Newsom's opponents – say, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa or State Treasurer John Chiang – were bankrolled by one of the richest men in California for most of their lives, as Newsom has been by oil heir Gordon Getty, they would be answering for it every day on the campaign trail.
    ...
    If another gubernatorial candidate, Delaine Eastin, had slept with a subordinate while she was state superintendent of public instruction, and if the subordinate had gotten thousands of public dollars in a payoff not seen before or since, would the public even accept her as a candidate?
    ...
    The narrative became that Newsom was going to rehab. He let everyone believe that he was going into legitimate alcohol rehab. It was all part of the Newsom redemption tour.

    And then suddenly, as reported by Hart last month, it turned out he didn't. He went to some encounter group meetings run by one of his enablers. But real legitimate alcohol rehab? Nope.

    As Mr Breton observes, nobody cares about the actions, the sex, the payoffs, the bankrolling. They just care about party affiliation and what they might get out of him being in charge.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,165 ✭✭✭Captain Obvious


    Somehow the solution to every issue in the military has become bureaucracy as opposed to common sense. Instead of empowering leaders to fix identified problems, and putting some trust in soldiers, we are more and more micromanaged to address the topic-du-jour, in an organisation which by its very function is supposed to be as un-micromanaged as possible in order to be effective. If we don't empower soldiers to make their own decisions in peacetime, how are we expecting them to do so in combat?

    This is now, thankfully, being addressed. We're not saying that race relations, sexual harassment, transgender acceptance, whatever, in the army isn't important, but we are much happier simply reaffirming "Respect the rank, respect the uniform, be a f***ng professional. Now let's go into the field" instead of having repetitive briefs on each individual subject for hours. Being harassment free and reserving sufficient time to train for combat are not mutually exclusive propositions. We are seeing in this last year a focus back on warfighting instead of administration, and we're happy for it.

    Your approach didn't work before though. What has changed?


  • Registered Users Posts: 39,438 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    Now seeing as the three Americans who were detained in North Korea are coming back to America(which is a good thing obviously).?

    Now,let us not forget that the current president tweeted about how the previous administration failed to get the three members home. Let it be noted that two of the gentlemen held in North Korea weren't held until trump was president. So, the previous administration couldn't bring three home as there wasn't three to bring home. That tweet is still up as of this morning Irish time. My point is when trump tries to blame the previous administration, it's a lie he'll be telling.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭MikeyTaylor


    briany wrote: »
    Has there been a president in the whole of U.S. history as outwardly combative as Donald Trump?

    Other presidents would try to deflect on many things. Above all, it seemed of utmost importance to maintain a statesmanlike dignity.

    Donald Trump seems to say, "F*** that!" and just comes out swinging, throwing bombs and haymakers over anything and everything that angers him.
    His base seems to lap it up.

    Donald Trump, for all his failings, represents the break from politics as usual for a lot of people. Where other politicians would retract, he'll double down. He seems to make no qualms about what he's saying. He'll even openly attack members of his own party quite bitterly if they fail to get campaign promises enacted.

    If any other politician had been accused of paying off a pornstar, colluding with the Russians and belittling a Vietnam veteran, their political career would be over. They'd be a punchable punchline living in exile somewhere. Trump wasn't lying when he said he could shoot somebody and not lose any voters.
    I don't think there has. Not to mention he has zero prior political experience.


  • Registered Users Posts: 18,975 ✭✭✭✭everlast75


    Itssoeasy wrote: »
    Now seeing as the three Americans who were detained in North Korea are coming back to America(which is a good thing obviously).?

    Now,let us not forget that the current president tweeted about how the previous administration failed to get the three members home. Let it be noted that two of the gentlemen held in North Korea weren't held until trump was president. So, the previous administration couldn't bring three home as there wasn't three to bring home. That tweet is still up as of this morning Irish time. My point is when trump tries to blame the previous administration, it's a lie he'll be telling.

    If his lips are a-moving, its a lie he'll be telling..


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,222 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    Your approach didn't work before though. What has changed?

    There wasn't any emphasis on it. Before, there was neither accountability nor any particular awareness on the subjects, briefs or no briefs.


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,234 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    markodaly wrote: »
    Oh FFS, always with the hysteria.

    2 million Civilians died in the US war of aggression in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. At least 180k civilians died in the most recent US war in Iraq to give only 2 examples

    Stupid ill advised wars of aggression kill a lot of people.

    If I was a soldier, I would hope that my commanders wouldn't engage in any warfare that wasn't absolutely necessary


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,759 ✭✭✭jobbridge4life



    OK, you've apparently focused on a sort of trigger word and missed the larger context. It's not that sexual harassment isn't an important issue to address, it's that it is being addressed in a counter-productive way. We can either address it by holding commanders responsible for the climate on sexual assault in their unit, and by creating a culture of professionalism, or we can address it by mandating that every three months, soldiers sit through the same hour-long lecture. Which of these two is better suited?

    And every three months we had (Requirement changed to every two years about two months ago) to sit through the same hour-long lecture on suicide awareness. Equal Opportunity. We have to find room for every good idea from Anti-Terrorism Level 1 training through the Army Accident Avoidance Course to Trafficking in Persons training. As mentioned, the Regular Army are mandated to train 20 months' worth of man-hours every year. I'm a reservist, we only get 20 hours a month, on average, to train. Every quarter, we lose (Well, lost, as of this quarter they reduced the rules) half a day teaching the same stuff which has already been taught. Indeed, Decembers we don't even train, we just sit through our mandatory annual briefs in an auditorium (or aircraft hangar) so we can get the checkboxes checked.

    The pilot quoted in one of the articles about there being more paperwork to go on leave than engage in combat wasn't joking. When I was in Ft Knox, we would be given passes on weekends. Most of us drove places. We had to use the Travel Risk Planning System. (TRiPS). Here, you don't need to be logged in to use it, go look at it. https://trips.safety.army.mil/ (Select "army").

    As you can see, it's an eight-page form. Now, when I was a humble civilian in UCD, I did not need to fill out risk assessments with contingency planning in order to drive to see my girlfriend in Galway. And God help you if you have a motorcycle. As, at the time, a commander of a combat unit with 100 soldiers, it's downright insulting. (Fortunately, it has also been cancelled as of two weeks ago) .The idiocy of having to wear reflective belts on top of clothing already designed to be reflective (or better yet, wearing them in combat zones) has become a cultural reference point equal to the Huey of Vietnam or the Iwo Jima flag raising of WW2.

    Somehow the solution to every issue in the military has become bureaucracy as opposed to common sense. Instead of empowering leaders to fix identified problems, and putting some trust in soldiers, we are more and more micromanaged to address the topic-du-jour, in an organisation which by its very function is supposed to be as un-micromanaged as possible in order to be effective. If we don't empower soldiers to make their own decisions in peacetime, how are we expecting them to do so in combat?

    This is now, thankfully, being addressed. We're not saying that race relations, sexual harassment, transgender acceptance, whatever, in the army isn't important, but we are much happier simply reaffirming "Respect the rank, respect the uniform, be a f***ng professional. Now let's go into the field" instead of having repetitive briefs on each individual subject for hours. Being harassment free and reserving sufficient time to train for combat are not mutually exclusive propositions. We are seeing in this last year a focus back on warfighting instead of administration, and we're happy for it.

    Cheers for the little 'trigger' dig Manic, but no as much as you might like to write me off as some SJW, I get and accept that a military force exists for the purpose of killing. Rather than for some alleged PC motivation, I focused on the sexual violence aspect because it is was the sole training course you named in a mocking way, and because sexual violence is a plague on the United States military.

    'We can either address it by holding commanders responsible for the climate on sexual assault in their unit, and by creating a culture of professionalism, or we can address it by mandating that every three months, soldiers sit through the same hour-long lecture. Which of these two is better suited?'

    What went before clearly, demonstrably, by the DoD's own investigations did not work Manic. Holding Commanders responsible is a fine idea, did and does it happen though? Sexual violence is rampant amongst your fellow officers, your suggestion amounts to 'deal with it'. With respect, they haven't been able and/or willing to do so. If they were, countless men and women wouldn't be dealing with the incredible levels of sexual assault that pervades your organisation and is perpetrated by your comrades in arms.

    I truly support your value system, "Respect the rank, respect the uniform, be a f***ng professional". The problem is Manic that what went before utterly failed to achieve it. What is the source of your confidence that eliminating training courses will achieve this? It never has before.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭MikeyTaylor


    If I was asked "who is the President of the United States?" I would still say Obama. At least he was a real, actual politician.


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,791 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    At least he was a real, actual politician.

    At least he was sane.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 16,222 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manic Moran


    Cheers for the little 'trigger' dig Manic,

    Wasn't meant as a dig per se, if you took it as such I apologise. I do note that of all the issues mentioned, and it's not as if we don't have a suicide problem, etc, you (and others) all zeroed in on sexual harassment for some reason.

    There is no source of confidence that briefs work either. We know for a fact that they take up training hours and that they royally irritate the hell out of troops, so if there is or is not a benefit on the matter of the various subjects being taught, they certainly have a negative effect on training and morale. The running joke was that all the suicide awareness briefs were driving us to suicide.

    However, unlike, say, 20 years ago, we are now aware as an organisational culture that there is a significant harassment issue, suicide issue, PII issue, phishing issue, and whatever else. Besides, it's not that all such training is being removed entirely, we still have our mandatory SHARP and ACE which has to be done, for example, but it's a far more reasonable once-every-two-years instead of the 'once every three months' which got slapped on us when it was a political hot button. We have never really had a period of time when these things were both an active consideration and when briefs didn't keep getting added on, and there are more factors to be concerned about than we can reasonably schedule into formalised training. Thus, let commanders run their units and schedule their training as they see fit, with the understanding that these are factors which are being evaluated. Speaking of, I only get space for a few lines in the annual officer's evaluation report. Last I checked, one of them had to state "Supports the Army SHARP program". More important than expanding on leadership or tactical capabilities, apparently.

    As the pilot said, how many times do we need formal training (with a certificate to be printed out upon completion and turned into the unit training NCO) to not put a random CD into a government computer?


  • Registered Users Posts: 39,438 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    NBC news is reporting that Michael cohen was "promising access" to the trump administration according to a drug company official.


  • Registered Users Posts: 39,438 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    John McCain has confirmed in his new book that he was the person who gave the Steele dossier to James comey.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 18,975 ✭✭✭✭everlast75


    Nunes and another invited to meeting on Thursday in order to avoid causing trouble for sessions. I thought the rep investigations were over? I thought Nunes recused himself?

    https://twitter.com/mkraju/status/994318826404708353?s=19

    Maybe it's a good idea. If they are the only 2 with access to the info and it leaks then...


  • Registered Users Posts: 39,438 ✭✭✭✭Itssoeasy


    Also the press briefing at the WH has become utterly pointless it seems. It's seems to be either "I've not had that conversation with the president" " not that I'm aware" and "I'd refer you to outside counsel" or the real belter for a WH press secretary "I don't know the details"

    I mean she might as well take recordings of herself saying those phrases and just press a button and play them when asked a question. It'd save her voice and her time.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,893 ✭✭✭Cheerful Spring


    Early reports but their reports of fighting between Iranians and the Isreali army near the Golan Heights. Iranians are firing missiles into Israel from Syria.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,893 ✭✭✭Cheerful Spring




  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,893 ✭✭✭Cheerful Spring




  • Registered Users Posts: 13,949 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    Leroy42 wrote: »
    There is no doubt that that was a low point of the Obama years, he was unwise to make the statement when he couldn't back it up. But Trump has done little extra. A few missiles didn't change anything. So one could say that Trump did the exact same, threatened a lot but back up with very little.

    What he did is follow up on what he said. He was explicit in his rhetoric about the use of chemical weapons and followed it up with actions, backed by an international force. A big difference to what his predecessor did.


    I'm not thinking in any such way. What other options?

    Israel doing the dirty work in terms of air strikes. Saudi continuing its fight via proxy. Never mind the more covert stuff.

    In other words, we wont be seeing a half a million American troops in Iran anytime soon. It is just not going to happen.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,893 ✭✭✭Cheerful Spring


    Israelis heavily attacking Syrian Army now in Al-Quneitra province. Syrian Army responded by firing missiles at an Israeli base

    #Israeli Airforce now over #Lebanon. #Syria's air defense system has engaged several targets over #Damascus, early reports suggest they are cruise missiles.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,949 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    Christy42 wrote: »
    Essentially you will believe his statements you want to and not the others? I mean you believe the isolationist rhetoric but not the rest. Indeed Trump has lied plenty of times, you need to think why you believe the isolationist stuff.

    Because he is a populist and his base, the working class blue collar Americans are sick of having to fight these stupid wars of the past. He is not Bush.

    He has been consistent in all this. Even the Alt-Right are anti foreign interventions. What they actually want are all the troops to be brought home and protect their own border with Mexico and to hell with the rest of the world. That is their line of thinking. Its flawed of course but there is more nuance here.

    Its better to have some sort of rational, or we could go all out Helen Lovejoy and proclaim that WWIII is upon us, but then that would make one look like an hysterical idiot.

    Also, remember. Congress are the people who has to declare war, not the POTUS. But I suppose that is lost on the Kool-Aid drinkers.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,893 ✭✭✭Cheerful Spring


    IDF confirms missiles fired at Israeli targets. Heavy fighting still ongoing.

    IDF defence systems identified approximately 20 rockets that the Iranian Quds forces launched at IDF forward posts on the Golan Heights


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  • Registered Users Posts: 7,867 ✭✭✭Christy42


    markodaly wrote: »
    Christy42 wrote: »
    Essentially you will believe his statements you want to and not the others? I mean you believe the isolationist rhetoric but not the rest. Indeed Trump has lied plenty of times, you need to think why you believe the isolationist stuff.

    Because he is a populist and his base, the working class blue collar Americans are sick of having to fight these stupid wars of the past. He is not Bush.

    He has been consistent in all this. Even the Alt-Right are anti foreign interventions. What they actually want are all the troops to be brought home and protect their own border with Mexico and to hell with the rest of the world. That is their line of thinking. Its flawed of course but there is more nuance here.

    Its better to have some sort of rational, or we could go all out Helen Lovejoy and proclaim that WWIII is upon us, but then that would make one look like an hysterical idiot.

    Also, remember. Congress are the people who has to declare war, not the POTUS. But I suppose that is lost on the Kool-Aid drinkers.

    Except when he hires those in favour of war. Or when he increases drone strikes abroad. Or when he follows through on strikes against Syria. As you say he did promise them if chemical weapons were used. If north Korea did keep developing missiles PR launched them closer to US bases would he have followed through on the fire and fury promised?

    Why keep the Syrian promise and not the North Korean. Can't have it both ways.


This discussion has been closed.
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