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tszirmay View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 01:30
"You know, the very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common. They don’t alter their views to fit the facts. They alter the facts to fit the views". Dr Who-1946
I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 01:35
Anywho , yesterday was a terrifying day. 

Trump actually signed an order to build the wall. The one thing no one, (including me) thought he'd do. 
OK, it needs to be funded by Congress. I wanna say the Senate votes aren't there but I don't know anymore...I'd say it's just for show and if Congress fails to get it agreed upon he can still win by saying they screwed up, but I've read he really really believes in the idea, even if just so he can build something. 

He also signed the stripping of funding for sanctuary cities and has made deportation easier. He looks to halve the # of Syrian refugees accepted, and freeze immigration from Muslim countries. 

Same day, he said Chicago needs to get its rising crime rate under control or he may "call in the Feds". While normally I'd say it's just a comment, it's time to start taking Trump seriously. Besides, the fact a US President said at all, publicly, he would do that is amazing. And to think...people were afraid Obama was gunna invade the south, martial law all that. Shockingly no concern about Trump despite saying he'd actually have the feds police Chicago. What a surprise. Just like how all the angst about Obama's exec orders seem to have been forgotten as Trump signs a new one every day. 


Scary days we live in


Edited by JJLehto - January 26 2017 at 01:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 01:42
This wall building thing mystifies me. To make that really work, is there going to be a seamless border patrol or something? Because if not, what's going to be done about ladders, trampolines, and slingshots?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 02:07
I was just thinking: the answer would be a minefield on the Mexican side of the wall.
He wouldn't, would he?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 02:11
Originally posted by npjnpj npjnpj wrote:

This wall building thing mystifies me. To make that really work, is there going to be a seamless border patrol or something? Because if not, what's going to be done about ladders, trampolines, and slingshots?
It's not the first wall ever to have been constructed to separate two groups of peoples. I suspect ex Stasi officers will be on hand to advise him how to maintain it.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 02:13
Originally posted by npjnpj npjnpj wrote:

This wall building thing mystifies me. To make that really work, is there going to be a seamless border patrol or something? Because if not, what's going to be done about ladders, trampolines, and slingshots?

Oh yeah, he pledged to increase patrolling. I forget the numbers I think 5,000 more border patrol agents and 10,000 more office agents to handle the deportations. Again, this is symbolic for now, Congress would have to OK the funding. 

Which may be interesting...the Tea Party is licking their chops, and powering up their chainsaws, eyeing the gov budget now that a Republican is in the WH. Will they sell out and support this? 
ProbablyLOL It seems Trump can cut some funding to "sanctuary cities" which would impact violence against women and drug enforcement, but he'd need Congress to OK more cuts. 
Good thing the Tea Party already wants to deny these cities that funding because they just hate government on principle. They now have a perfect vehicle! http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2017/01/25/donald-trump-sanctuary-cities-immigration/97043106/
Will they use all these savings to build Trump's great wall and beef up the border patrol? I bet so!


Edited by JJLehto - January 26 2017 at 20:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 02:19
i really, really, REALLY hope you mean chops, and not cops.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 02:55
5000 extra border patrol more doesn't sound very impressive.
You need at least three shifts, leaving about 1600 agents at any one time.
One hundred are off sick, another hundred are on vacation, and another hundred are drunk, while 30% of them are high as kites, and at least fifty of them keep knocking themselves out by walking into the wall in broad daylight, trying to reach Hogwarts.
Say we have about 1000 functioning agents left, they have to patrol a stretch of about 2000 miles. Even with the already existing border patrol agents, that doesn't sound very effective to me.


Edited by npjnpj - January 26 2017 at 03:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 03:04
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by npjnpj npjnpj wrote:

This wall building thing mystifies me. To make that really work, is there going to be a seamless border patrol or something? Because if not, what's going to be done about ladders, trampolines, and slingshots?
It's not the first wall ever to have been constructed to separate two groups of peoples. I suspect ex Stasi officers will be on hand to advise him how to maintain it.

Is it really not even 30 years since the words "Mr Gorbachev tear down that wall" were said?  What an incredible reversal!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 03:41
The Berlin wall was only that effective because on the eastern side it was festooned with guard towers manned by soldiers with shoot-to-kill orders.
I'm sure Trump wants his wall to be effective. The mind boggles.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 09:41
Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Well, I've grown pretty weary of the P word to be honest. The masses? I can't vouch for them, all I know is I never thought I was really a populist. The economics I espouse are, through my eyes, based on evidence, history, and realistic thought processes/analysis.


I don't mean to indict you personally, or specifically attack (most) liberal economists. Honestly, we're all (sans maybe Trump voters) on more or less the same page. Since you posted him before, Mark Blyth will rail on austerity at a specific time, but not against austerity generally -- eventually, you do have to clean up the books. The fault of present neoliberals has been to forsake the democracy half of the agreement; most people will agree to that at this point. The government bailed out rich failures, greased the palms of the wealthy with quantitative easing, and the poor have had to foot the bill. That we're even discussing this is a testament to that failure. I just don't think that we should really entertain our economic demons as a result.

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

No matter the point, people say "populism" and it's like the new "socialism!" a generic shut down that dismisses specific discussion for some larger vague idea.

That can be a problem, but it's also very hard to avoid. Populism is like monopolistic anti-competition. It's the end result of a system gone haywire, losing its beneficial aspects (free exchange of ideas, protection of common interests, and rule of law) but magnifying the internal mechanism that implements these benefits. I've seen a few people try to defend monopolist behaviors, but they're usually fringe elements. At least socialists are concerned with actual governance.

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

While you are correct in what you say, opinions do change. Also people can be wrong. Just because the accepted standard for Democrats has been neoliberalism, would you grant its possible this is not the best viewpoint?


Oh, absolutely. I come from a science background. No facts are set in stone; nothing you think you know is absolutely certain. Continual improvement is also a driver of my own personal policy preferences: I favor mandatory sunset clauses on legislation to ensure that we don't write it once and sit on its many flaws for decades to come.

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Final note on all that. 538 is the top tier of statistics, not sure if you'd agree, and they ended up being the closest in terms of Trump's chance of victory it turns out. Anyway, their county by county analysis showed counties with weak growth since 2012, higher unemployment, lower wages and high # of outsourcable/replacable jobs favored Trump. http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/trump-was-stronger-where-the-economy-is-weaker/ More so, many swung to Trump including in blue states. It seems clear to me that economics was a factor in Trump voters in the North (which is what matters, the usual red states would've gone red anyway).


I would like to emphasize that the trouble is that many of the measures there are subject to quite a lot of bias, and the underlying causes aren't really clear. The article makes this argument as well by noting the correlation between free-trade-elite Romney's success and Trump's success. Confounding variables here are very prominent and very hard to remove, as the article mentions. Those areas are most subject to polarization, with older white people making up more of the population and educated people being more scarce. It's an interesting tidbit, but not really all that useful on its own: it may have influenced them (perhaps imperceptibly to them), I find it somewhat unlikely that it is a core driving force behind Trump voters, at least not in an impactful way-- not offsetting the city voters who do the opposite, that is.

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

What needs to be done is invest in our country directly, including job creation, raise living standards, and have policies to counter the march of globalization. Also make health care and education more affordable, strengthen social security and yes, come up with trade deals that aren't terrible. Maybe negotiations should be more open and inclusive?
I don't feel its populism though, just necessity and realistic.

Any plan pushing jobs as a solution will automatically fail. Nothing a government can do in the age of automation can ensure employment. Anything you do can be automated given enough time and engineering skill. It may not be today, or tomorrow, or 20 years from now, but eventually, the machines will come for your job. If we cannot communicate that to the public and large and address its consequences, the idle masses are going to put down the shovel and take up arms.

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Quick follow up to all that Gamemako. I do notice an inconsistency. Talk of globalization and all but then "winning" and containing China. I thought the intention of markets, global trade, of neoliberalism was to just let the pieces fall as they will? Trade isn't between countries, we're taught in class, but producers and consumers and we should let the allocations sort themselves out and not let politics get in the way.


Short answer: That only works if we're all free from all legal and coercive burdens. We aren't, and China as the world's dominant power just makes them the legal and coercive force that burdens us all. Remember: they didn't build islands in the ocean as a trade hub.

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Trump actually signed an order to build the wall. The one thing no one, (including me) thought he'd do.


Obama signed an order on January 22, 2009 to close Guantanamo Bay. It's still open. Trump also signed an order to review and push the Keystone XL pipeline, that doesn't actually exist (not even real plans for it), and to push the Dakota Access pipeline, which he doesn't have the power to affect in any meaningful way. The Muslim certain terrorist state immigration ban? Maybe more realistic: he will be sued over it and probably lose, but he can enact it. Either way, he can sign virtually any order he wants, he just can't make it actually happen.

Originally posted by tszirmay tszirmay wrote:

"You know, the very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common. They don’t alter their views to fit the facts. They alter the facts to fit the views". Dr Who-1946


That is likely a cynical mutation of a line from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes: "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts."


Edited by Gamemako - January 26 2017 at 09:45
Hail Eris!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 10:13
it is certainly not the first time someone builds a wall to separate people. but it is the first time the builder expects the people he wants to separate from to pay for it. the Mexican president rightly flipped Trump the bird. the question is: what will Trump do to make the Mexicans pay? perhaps a little invasion into Mexico? he may find the erected wall to be in the way for that


Edited by BaldJean - January 26 2017 at 10:13


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 11:08


LOL
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 11:12
what I consider to be worse than Trump wanting to build the wall is that he openly embraces torture. no civilized country should use torture.

to quote from Wikipedia: "Waterboarding can cause extreme pain, dry drowning, damage to lungs, brain damage from oxygen deprivation, other physical injuries including broken bones due to struggling against restraints, lasting psychological damage, and death

Edited by BaldJean - January 26 2017 at 11:28


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 11:35

Oh I wouldn't worry about that. The Guantanamo torture victims are quite safe. They have people with defibrillators standing by to resuscitate them once  their bodily functions have stopped, so they can start again five minutes later.

Storm in a teacup, storm in a teacup.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 11:56
Originally posted by npjnpj npjnpj wrote:

The Berlin wall was only that effective because on the eastern side it was festooned with guard towers manned by soldiers with shoot-to-kill orders.
I'm sure Trump wants his wall to be effective. The mind boggles.

The Berlin Wall was meant to prevent people leaving while here its about preventing people to enter. No wall is foolproof , even the one visible from outer space that China built way back when. 
I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 11:59
Originally posted by tszirmay tszirmay wrote:

Originally posted by npjnpj npjnpj wrote:

The Berlin wall was only that effective because on the eastern side it was festooned with guard towers manned by soldiers with shoot-to-kill orders.
I'm sure Trump wants his wall to be effective. The mind boggles.

The Berlin Wall was meant to prevent people leaving while here its about preventing people to enter. No wall is foolproof , even the one visible from outer space that China built way back when. 

it depends on how you look at it. it will be built to stop people leaving Mexico


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 12:19
Berlin Wall: around 91 miles long - a big part of it in a city wuth streets and easy-to-check buildings and end points 

"Needed US-Mexico wall": around 1900 miles mostly in the middle of nowhere 




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 12:30
Build 20 billion dollar wall? Check. Repeal Obama care? Check. Cut taxes on middle class Ameicans and American business? Check. Put billions back into defence funding? Check.

Reduce 230 trillion dollar debt? Opps. I thought we forgot something.
This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2017 at 13:03
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Berlin Wall: around 91 miles long - a big part of it in a city wuth streets and easy-to-check buildings and end points 

"Needed US-Mexico wall": around 1900 miles mostly in the middle of nowhere 




Actually, though its called Berlin Wall, the entire GDR was physically delineated by fences, towers and ditches, separating the East German state from its West German counterpart. 
I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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