kenberg, on 2017-January-26, 20:21, said:
Here is the problem as I see it: Until now, people have always treated what the POTUS says as serious. They pay close attention to his exact words. If there is a slight unexpected nuance they analyze it in detail to see if it means a shift in US policy. The same is done woth other major leaders. Well, that's gone. Trump pulls something out of his ass or out of the sky or wherever, he tweets it and people say "Well, that's just the way he is, don't take him seriously". It comes at us so fast it is impossible to keep up with it. I gather i that in an interview with the Washingrton Post he was talking about health care and said that he would arrange it so that everyone would have insurance. The his various nominees for this and that explained he didn't mean that literally. Then he explained that he did.
I think it is a very bad thing for nobody to have any idea of when, if ever, they can take what he says both literally and seriously.
So I am thinking this stuff with voter fraud could be a test case. I am assuming that most Rs and most Ds in the House and in the Senate are not total morons. If they are, the game is over. So suppose that they are not. I doubt very much that they believe that there were 3 to 5 million fraudulent votes cast, unless the lower number in 3 to 5 million is just 3 rather than 3 million. I suggest pushing on them here. The choices, and I think that they can see this, are (1) fund a fake investigation, chaired by Priebus, with a conclusion known from the start, that he would have won the popular vote if not for massive fraud or (2) do an honest investigation carried out by individuals dedicated to getting the truth, whatever it is. . Doing (2) will require a lot of time and money, and it will require getting people involved who are very broadly trusted. The key identifying feature of a type (2) investigation is that nobody will be able to predict with certainty what their conclusion will be.
I am thinking that at least a fair number of Rs would gag at (1), and would see that the consequences of (2), while not known with certainty, are apt to make them look very foolish for pursuing such a waste of time and money.
I am certainly open to other options. But I think that reasonable people of any party can see that having a president spouting random BS is not good for the country. Saying that "yes we will do an investigation but it has to be a serious one rather than an indulgence in one man's fantasy" could bring people of various political views face to face with reality.
Trump is now claiming that his concern about fraud is to do with the rolls...that there are people listed who ought not to be so listed. Some are dead. Others have moved and registered elsewhere. By that latter definition, of course, his own family (Tiffany) and his closest advisor (Bannon) are guilty of voter fraud. Strangely, according to trump, every single fraudulent voter voted for Clinton.
Of course, the reality is that he has consistently stated that the fraud was at the voting booth, not in the rolls. My suspicion is that some of his advisors have finally been able to convince him that repeating the lie about actual fraud at the booth was wearing thin. They needed to give him a face-saving pivot, so as to allow his followers to fool themselves into believing that it was always about the rolls.
Note that the voter rolls are ALWAYS going to be a bit out of date, at least with current information processing.
People move. Many are inevitably going to delay doing even the most basic 'paperwork' such as getting a new drivers licence or registering to vote, and taking the step of cancelling an existing data point, that one is simply not going to use ever again, will be low on most people's list of priorities.
People die....every day and in large numbers in a country with over 300MM inhabitants. I very much doubt that the first thing done on the promuncement of death is notification of the Secretary of State, in each state, to correct the voter rolls.
Thus the system has built-in errors. The voter rolls cannot and will not ever be made accurate, and inaccuracies are not proof of fraud.
Trump, or more likely his advisors, are lying again, and will likely get away with it again, at least in terms of the conservative media, since conservative media have no investment in reality, and in fact a strong investment in promoting lies as fact.
His health care tweets will be revised similarly. Where he has clearly stated that he wants actual health care for everyone, Ryan and McConnell want only 'universal access' rather than 'universal coverage'.
Of course, there was 'universal access' before Obamacare. Everyone has the right to live in a mansion, and to have servants, and so on......it's not the fault of politicians that only they and their sponsors can afford this. The access is universal!
Oh..maybe not. At a wild guess, even universal access won't apply to murderers, rapists, and drug dealers...aka illegal immigrants.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari