ponderingturtle
Orthogonal Vector
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2006
- Messages
- 54,545
Not an alternative fact at all. Abortion is murder.
But only for now not the past 47 years to make the presidents statement true.
Not an alternative fact at all. Abortion is murder.
I don't think anyone is claiming abortion is mythical. Calling it murder, however, is just a silly opinion.
It is a disgrace that my full Cabinet is still not in place, the longest such delay in the history of our country. Obstruction by Democrats!
More "alternative facts" being suppressed by the media:
https://reason.com/blog/2017/02/07/trump-says-crime-is-at-highest-level-in
"I’d say that in a speech and everybody was surprised." Gee, why would that be?
Like "The Bowling Green Massacre", why doesn't the press report these things that aren't true or never happened?
I love how both Trump and Conway not only make these ridiculous claims, but then complain that the media doesn't cover them.
While what Trump said is clearly wrong, what he has done is to have taken something that is true and distorted it.
The original assertion, and one that he has made before, is that the increase in murder rate recently is the highest in 47 years. And that is actually true. In the very last year of the data we have, there was an uptick in the murder rate, from something like 4.5 to 4.8. And, in fact, that 0.3 increase in murder rate is the largest increase there has been in more than 45 years. Of course, that is because for 40 or so of those 45 years, the murder rate decreased, and so there haven't been a lot of years where it increased.
But the problem was, this grain of truth wasn't memorable, and he turned it in his head from "the largest increase in murder rate" to "the highest murder rate."
Actually, of all the moronic things he says, I am less likely to jump on this, assuming, of course, that he corrects himself.
THIS is the kind of thing that is a "I misremembered." I will note he did actually say it correctly in the past (during a debate, I think). This is a lot easier to understand as a mistaken statement than KellyAnne's nonsense about the Bowling Green Massacre.
I'd like to hear anyone try to defend this nonsense.
Are you ok with the President just making stuff up?
Trump doesn't back down on misstatements or lies. He doubles down on them.
I'll give it a shot. One of the appeals of Trump is that he is "plain spoken" - meaning something akin to unedited, off-the-cuff and authentically speaking his mind. This is a stark contrast to the polished rhetoric we are used to from politicians, many of whom are lawyers by training - careful when choosing their words.
What are the consequences? One is that we aren't supposed to treat Trump's missives as we would news reporting. He's expressing his feelings. When my wife remarks, "That was the worst party ever" I'm not going to do a statistical analysis of all the events we've ever attended.
I think everyone already knows this, we just don't like it. If you asked a Trump supporter, I think they'd give you a version of: "It's not what he says, it's what he means."
Sorry, he's the *********** president of the United States of America. Every thing he says matters and will be taken seriously because of the office he holds. People may think it's great that he acts like our idiot uncle, but unfortunately this idiot is the president and everything he says is going to be dissected. It comes with the job. If he doesn't like it he has options.
How about this one?
It's complete, idiotic nonsense. I mean, total, total ******** in all ways.
1. It hasn't even been three weeks. We aren't even to the point where we are on the list of the longest waits for confirmation. See this list here
https://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab...onfirmations-than-any-other-recent-president/
Obama didn't have his FIRST appointment confirmed (Robert McDonald of the VA) until 22 days into his presidency. Jeez, even St Reagan didn't have his cabinet complete until 41 days in.
Trump is just totally making **** up with nothing behind it. Unfortunately, too many people are responding with justifications for why it is taking as long as it is, instead of just calling him out on his false premise.
I'll give it a shot. One of the appeals of Trump is that he is "plain spoken" - meaning something akin to unedited, off-the-cuff and authentically speaking his mind. This is a stark contrast to the polished rhetoric we are used to from politicians, many of whom are lawyers by training - careful when choosing their words.
What are the consequences? One is that we aren't supposed to treat Trump's missives as we would news reporting. He's expressing his feelings. When my wife remarks, "That was the worst party ever" I'm not going to do a statistical analysis of all the events we've ever attended.
I think everyone already knows this, we just don't like it. If you asked a Trump supporter, I think they'd give you a version of: "It's not what he says, it's what he means."
- not what Trump was talking about
- abortion rates are lower, not higher than they used to be
and last but not least
- that's a pretty silly thing to believe
He was duly elected doing the same shtick. Arguably, it would be wrong for him to change tactics now. Requiring him to be something other than he presented - idiot uncle or not - is just wishful thinking in service of some ideal about what the president is supposed to be.
Do Ma and Pa Kettle give a hoot about Trump's misstatement during a meeting with a sheriffs' organization? Doubtful. Do they care that he's a braggart? Probably not. For good or ill, they think Trump believes the slogan "Make America Great Again" - and that slogan resonates with them.
I don't think anyone is claiming abortion is mythical. Calling it murder, however, is just a silly opinion.
Because it's wrong. Murder is a specific thing, and abortion is not that thing. You can argue that it should be murder, and I'd much rather pro-lifers do that than try to pull an end-run around the law by imposing onerous regulations meant to shut down abortion clinics, but the fact of the matter is, it is not currently murder and to insist otherwise is just a silly opinion.Sorry, how is it silly?
If the law were written differently, it would be a fact. Which is kind of my point - all this business about alternative facts boils down to social agreement. When we agree, there's no difficulty at all.
More like ignorant, with a limited vocabulary.I'll give it a shot. One of the appeals of Trump is that he is "plain spoken" - meaning something akin to unedited, off-the-cuff and authentically speaking his mind....
I'll give it a shot. One of the appeals of Trump is that he is "plain spoken" - meaning something akin to unedited, off-the-cuff and authentically speaking his mind. This is a stark contrast to the polished rhetoric we are used to from politicians, many of whom are lawyers by training - careful when choosing their words.
What are the consequences? One is that we aren't supposed to treat Trump's missives as we would news reporting. He's expressing his feelings. When my wife remarks, "That was the worst party ever" I'm not going to do a statistical analysis of all the events we've ever attended.
I think everyone already knows this, we just don't like it. If you asked a Trump supporter, I think they'd give you a version of: "It's not what he says, it's what he means."