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Re: Yeah, I aspire to be a Globalist Cuck
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TM |
Re: Yeah, I aspire to be a Globalist Cuck
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Should I put you down as pro-stupid, anti-technocratic or can we agree that whether or not something makes for good politics often bears little relationship to whether or not it is good policy. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Some people are fucking stupid. But politics is a duel of competing visions, and when Democrats act like Republicans, they miss the chance to draw a contrast persuade on that basis. If Democrats want to persuade voters that they are less corrupt than Republicans, than they need to find ways to persuade voters that there are meaningful differences between them. I have a hard time faulting Obama for taking Cantor's money, but it's also a missed opportunity to do better. eta: Also, it's not lost on me that many Trump voters who described Hillary as corrupt were never going vote for her -- not all of those voters are there to be won. But the fact that they chose that as a line of attack is nonetheless telling. |
Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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Re: Yeah, I aspire to be a Globalist Cuck
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Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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TM |
Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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TM |
Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rv2MHatAXdk |
Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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When you actually price some of these talks with this in mind, the former Presidents often end up looking like pretty good choices. And there is a market for them, just as there is a market rate for lawyers, and they are getting market pay. Yes, it's a lot of money. But it's market and the economics easily justify it. |
Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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If you want social change you need to see minorities enter and advance at places like Goldman, and having Obama in front of the room talking to the old white guys in suits in the front tables is helpful to all the young black women in suits in the back of the room. |
Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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Re: Let's Try to Put This Stupidity to Rest
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I sit on the executive council of a diversity organization that needs a keynote speaker every year. It is absolutely vital that the keynote be well-known, dynamic, interesting, etc. We had Bryan Stevenson (who I think is probably the best speaker I've ever heard in my life) last year. We'd love to get someone like Holder or Lynch. We couldn't afford them, of course. I'd probably consider murdering someone to get Obama or Michelle, but suffice it to say if we had the money, we'd spend it. To insist that they decline these opportunities because we could easily be cast as a special interest group which could have benefited from special treatment by any of the people I listed while in office so that they would be able to land that fee once they left office is completely and utterly stupid. Guess I wasn't completely done. TM |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Again -- not trying to accuse Obama of acting like a Republican. Just regretting that he missed a chance to do something better. Quote:
But I see a different trade-off here. I'm saying that I regret that Obama didn't decide to set his own personal interests aside to do something that would have been better for Democrats. I hesitate to draw a general rule from this -- I don't think Obama should take a vow of poverty. I remain optimistic that he's going to do a lot more than just cash in. eta: But again, if there's a principle at stake, it's not on the side of Obama taking the money. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
Here I go again.
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But here's the big question: If Obama is planning on doing incredibly wonderful things, where does that stand in relation to him also earning a ton of money? When we judge him based on all he's done before he was a politician, all he did (or wanted to do) while he was in office, and whatever he does after he leaves, is it possible to come up with a picture of him based on the totality of what he's actually done? Or should we all focus on his inability to live up to this standard in which one must avoid the soft corruption behind taking speaking fees upon leaving office? That is the kind of childish analysis that our uninformed electorate needs to be disabused of. Especially since it's a bullshit smokescreen employed by Republicans to conflate actual corruption with this ridiculous perception of corruption. Quote:
The President upon leaving office is in high demand from all sorts of organizations. He can pick and choose from so many organizations that it makes no sense to say that he made decisions consciously or unconsciously based on how one or two industries might pony up once he was out of office. Hell, the fact that he will accept fees from tons of different organizations cuts against this guy's argument in that if he chose to work in one industry (as opposed to speaking to lots of different ones) it's much easier to think he may have made some decisions in office to make that happen afterward. Give this up. If you limited your argument to people like the Clintons, who commanded huge fees after leaving one office, but immediately prior to running for office, you'd have a leg to stand on--especially when she and everyone else in the world knew she was going to run again. But this "soft corruption" theory you're holding on to as it relates to Obama and speaking fees is stupid. TM |
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