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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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He jumps a lot of walls. |
Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
How come the media is always talking about Democrats may lose votes by standing up to Trump's racism, but not how Trump may lose votes by being a racist?
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
Just realized that Congresswomen Tlaib represents the parts of Detroit that have become heavily gentrified over the past years, meaning she didn't move to where white people were born, it's sort of the other way around.
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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I fully appreciate this assumes your post was not ironic. Of course it was. But the explanation offered here is worth airing nevertheless. |
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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I am not sorry. |
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Like Sebastian, most people omit the most important word of that quote. |
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There. Fixed. Stick with irony. Nobody wants to hear from the earnest, particularly when it veers into righteousness. That cadence of expression could put a speed freak to sleep. |
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Financial imbalance Thrusting it between his shoulder blades The Watusi The twist Eldorado Take this brother, may it serve you well Maybe it's nothing Aaah Maybe it's nothing What? What? Oh Maybe even then Impervious in London Could be difficult thing It's quick like rush for peace is Because it's so much It was like being naked If you became naked |
Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Franken Revisted
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Re: Franken Revisted
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Even the premise examination of the of the one accusation actually looked at is pretty flawed. Apparently none of it matters if she had questionable motivations, presented her complaint in a not entirely forthright manner and consented to similar contact during the performance. Meanwhile, the fact that Al was replaced by a competent and well-liked Dem who easily won reelection and that he would have been a giant distraction on all kinds of fronts had he not resigned are not mentioned. But sure. The Gov and Lt in Virginia have demonstrated that you can ride these things out and Al maybe could have kept being a Senator. That's not a thing that anyone who isn't Al should value. |
Re: Franken Revisted
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As for all the other accusations, I thought they dug as far as they could possibly go given the nature of the claims (some even being anonymous). One woman said he held her around the waist while she had her arm around him for a photo--what the fuck? The article was an attempt to fill in some of the blanks that the rush to judgment steamrolled over--to provide context that no one was trying to hear at the time. But whatever. It has become clear that your mind has been made up on this and that's that. Quote:
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And as Gillibrand decided to use this to build her own brand, she helped kick him out the fucking door while she introduced his bill and took credit for it? That's some dirty shit. TM |
Re: Franken Revisted
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TM |
Re: Franken Revisted
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I guess it was first (to my recollection) and the most detailed, but they're all allegations misconduct that would have needed to be investigated, and dismissing one doesn't make the others go away. Quote:
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I do not care on whit about whether Al (or any them) gets to continue to be a Senator. I do not care about what is "fair" to Al or what additional process any particular person thinks is or should have been due. The politics of it meant that Al needed to go, his colleagues told him that and he made his decision. That's it. Quote:
ETA: Or what Amanda Marcotte said: https://www.salon.com/2019/07/22/wha...ken-denialism/ |
Re: Franken Revisted
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The main one is the one with the photo. The main one is the one that kicked the whole thing off. The main one is the one which brought all the others out of the woodwork. If you're going to drag us into a world where we're having this conversation, then you need to show me all the evidence for all of the other allegations and then let's discuss those, by all means. Quote:
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So, in the Senate, members needn't be investigated for misconduct (for their own or others' protection). All that matters is whether the current political climate will allow them to stay or leave, no matter what they've done? How are you even practicing law? Do you work for Barr? Quote:
You talking out of one side of your mouth about how everyone is only focused on one allegation while spitting bullshit out of the other about how there was no need to investigate any of the allegations is monumentally ridiculous. TM |
Re: Franken Revisted
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TM |
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Re: Franken Revisted
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Among past political wrongs to cry over, my list goes somewhat like this: (1) The way Hillary Clinton was treated by the Press. (2) The way Hillary Clinton was treated by the Bernie Bros. ..... (100) The way Franken was treated. ..... (1000) The way poor Bernie Sanders was treated ..... (infinity) whatever the orange haired shitgibbon is complaining about But, really, we don't need the whining. He made his choices. |
Re: Franken Revisted
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If I came to your office and said when we last hung out, you were really handsy and your partners were like, "Let's not deal with this," and told you that they would issue a press release saying the partnership has no confidence in you even though you wanted the firm to investigate, would you stay and fight? Come on. The right people can tank someone such that they are effectively denied due process. If the Democrats had said, "We're going to investigate this and if Franken deserves to be bounced at the end, rest assured we will unite to make that happen," that's one thing. But the article points how tenuous the first claim was and how ridiculous a few others were. And a lot of it had to do with one person wanting to own this issue and make a name for herself. I think that's awful. Quote:
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You guys are fucking nuts. TM |
Re: Franken Revisted
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(That shrugging, by the way, underlies a lot of what's sinking this country. People don't care about civics because govt looks like such a half-corrupt/half-incompetent slop that they expect bad behavior and bad outcomes. And the people who long ago purchased our govt view this not as a bug, but as its greatest feature. And no -- I'm not talking about Russians. I'm talking about the corporate owners of this country going several decades back before the ascension of His Orangeness.) Quote:
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That can never be said aloud because it is offensive reasoning, perhaps somewhat medeival. But if you read closely, the absence of defense to your logical argument here - and that absence is total (Adder and GGG have carved around you rather than attacked your points) - leaves us with no other conclusion than they are okay with the awful treatment Franken received because, well, MeToo is the "good" side, and guys who do what he did should be made to fear for their lives. GGG makes a good point, however, and one which I cannot dispute: Franken chose to quit rather than fight. He who goes to politics throws himself in with the worst of humanity. He can't claim he didn't assume the risk of being shivved. He can't claim he wasn't aware the job might involve him fighting for his political life. At least Franken gets a second act, and has a career (I suspect he'll emerge as a pundit). Many less fortunate entrants in the game of politics leave in prison jumpsuits on BS charges, or punctured by the likes of Ken Starr in political witch hunts. Quote:
_________ * ETA: Any after the fact assessment of the propriety of Franken's forced resignation, including his own, must be invalidated or ignored. Moral panics hold a very tenuous grip on power. To assess the mob justice inflicted on Franken applies scrutiny to the mob who sought to have him removed without process. It compels an investigation of the logic, or illogic (and perhaps blood lust) behind the movement. If that scrutiny is allowed, then removals such as Franken's may be seen as invalid and thus resisted in the future. The people invested in the moral panic and the political opportunists who capitalize on it can never allow this. (It's kind of like herd investing. Nobody wants to hear about irrational exuberance when the market's flying. If we allow that kind of talk, the market sinks.) |
Re: Franken Revisted
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Yes, there is limited capacity for this. Mine is done, really, got better things to focus on. What did you all think of the Cats trailer? |
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Take all of the allegations listed in the Salon article, in context of: (1) when they occurred; (2) how frequently they occurred; and, (3) their severity, and ask yourself: Are these worthy of forced resignation? Are these not of a nature and infrequency over an extended timeline that cries out for due process? Should Franken not be allowed to defend himself, even if his defense is, "I've made mistakes in the past, but I vow not to do so in the future? Does it not strike you at all that there is significant evidence that crime and the punishment here are disproportionate? The comparison to Biden seems apt to the extent that, had Franken's transgressions appeared today, where MeToo has matured from a moral panic/media fixation into a more circumspect societal phenomenon, he'd have been able to hold his seat. But alas, Franken had the misfortune to be targeted by Tweeden, a right wing operative, at exactly the wrong moment, when MeToo was very much a cathartic and raw movement that didn't care much about facts. And Gillibrand was operating under the supreme delusion a stuffed suit like her could become a power player in the Senate, and perhaps even President. (The New Yorker article delights me because it's the sort of story that reflects badly on Gillibrand and will keep repeating, with her every attempt to run for higher office [and she will]. She stuck the knife in herself when she stuck it in Al. And I suspect she knows it, and it pisses her off to no end, which is perfect karma.) |
Re: Franken Revisted
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Re: Franken Revisted
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Let me ask you this: What fact pattern would be necessary for you to want an inquiry to be held? If it were just this one woman and it was abundantly clear that she was making shit up? If there were two more women who came forward with stuff like, "He put his arm around my waist for a photo"? Does any of it actually matter or is it purely just a political question? Given how Democrats operate and how Republicans operate, one would think that Democrats should be more circumspect when there is evidence that Republicans are weaponizing something like #Metoo. I am as fervent a supporter of holding people to account as anyone. And I understand that, as we shift into a new way of applying that accountability that there may be some collateral damage (which, given how sexual assault has been treated in the past isn't a great tragedy). But we should want to focus on the right people and the right incidents. And if there's evidence that we aren't, that evidence should be considered, not ignored and dismissed. The article was thoughtfully written and contained a lot of information we didn't have before. If you and Adder want to plug your ears while saying "lalalalala," go ahead (although it seems that you could that without posting about how much you want to actually do so). But your focus on Franken's whining and your unwillingness to discuss any of the substance of the article is just fucking weird. TM |
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