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The Totally Useless, Non-Scientific BBO Opinion Poll for Current Events What?????

#341 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 08:21

 Zelandakh, on 2016-September-23, 07:50, said:

I understand that Ken. And "the one who sleeps with other guys" sounds like a reference to homosexual men. If that is not the case then please explain yourself.

I took Ken's statement as an oblique reference to reports that Trump's wife formerly worked as an escort, thereby avoiding the flak that a direct statement would elicit. FWIW, I've also heard of situations in which a married woman "sleeps with other guys."
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#342 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 08:42

 Zelandakh, on 2016-September-23, 07:50, said:

I understand that Ken. And "the one who sleeps with other guys" sounds like a reference to homosexual men. If that is not the case then please explain yourself.

I happen to be a man, and I happen to be heterosexual. As such, my lover if cheating would tend to pick other men. Hence, in the example, the actors happen to be hetero. If I heppened to be gay, then my lover would also likely sleep with other men if cheating. If we add in bi, it gets more complicated. However, in no scenario would my example plausibly be contrued as a veiled slight on gay men. If any plausible bias was present, it would be a hetero-assuming, male-first-person-assuming terminology implied in the choice of masculine actors. A more neutral zee and person rather than men, perhaps. Sloppy man-centric hetero-centric phrasing. But, not remotely anti-gay-man.

BTW, my dpelling of zee rather than ze is because I desire for older English texts to be changed. As thee and thou, perhaps zee rather than ze?
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."

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#343 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 11:36

 PassedOut, on 2016-September-23, 08:21, said:

I took Ken's statement as an oblique reference to reports that Trump's wife formerly worked as an escort, thereby avoiding the flak that a direct statement would elicit. FWIW, I've also heard of situations in which a married woman "sleeps with other guys."


wow is that a deep read. funny, but a deep read.

What I meant was that a presidential candi"date" is like picking a spouse, albeit for 4-8 years (very often the case in real marriages). both Hillary and Donald are ugly options. I expect Trump to be "freaky in bed," meaning that he will try exotic new things, some good some bad, but CHANGE. Not just laying back and letting Congress try to make me happy with the same ole same ole that no longer really gets me my jollies. Clinton, on the other hand, is most problematic because her focus seems to really be on getting others (Wall Street, donors, rich people in other countries, fellow Clintons) their jollies while pretending to still love me.



"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."

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#344 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 11:41

Ken, I'd still be curious about your reaction to this story:

 cherdano, on 2016-September-21, 05:52, said:

By the way, does it bother you at all that Trump used a quarter million of dollars from his "charity" to settle personal legal disputes? https://www.washingt...1dc7_story.html

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#345 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 12:02

 cherdano, on 2016-September-23, 11:41, said:

Ken, I'd still be curious about your reaction to this story:

Hmm, just the first part of the article mentions a couple cases where a personal penalty was waived in exchange for a donation to a charity. Perhaps a little unusual and maybe not fully honest, but sending money from a charitable foundation to actual charities doesn't seem like something to get riled up about.

They seem to be saying it is illegal, OK then it shouldn't happen, but still not super high on my list of grievances.
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#346 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 12:07

 cherdano, on 2016-September-23, 11:41, said:

Ken, I'd still be curious about your reaction to this story:




Sorry. Yes, it bothers me. That does not sound like an appropriate way to handle a charitable organization. I have no idea what the tax implications are. But, count that as a negative strike against Trump for me, regardless of what the tax concerns are.

Now, more generally, each candidate has some nice points about them and some negatives. You found one that I see as a definite negative about Trump. There are many other negatives about Donald Trump for me.



"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."

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#347 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 12:11

To Zel, I thought you might like this:

Jew eat?

Compressed phrase that means "Did you eat?" often heard as "Jew eat?" by particularly sensitive and/or peculiarly paranoid people of the Jewish persuasion, especially when asked by a goy (non-Jew). "Jew eat?" syndrome was first exposed to mass culture by Woody Allen in his Oscar-winning film "Annie Hall" (1977). Alvy Singer (Woody Allen) to his calm friend Rob (Tony Roberts):

"You know, I was having lunch with some guys from NBC, so I said, 'Did you eat yet or what?' And Tom Christie said, 'No, JEW?' Not 'Did you?'...JEW eat? JEW? You get it? JEW eat?"

-- Woody Allen, screenplay for "Annie Hall"



"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."

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#348 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 12:31

 kenrexford, on 2016-September-23, 11:36, said:

wow is that a deep read. funny, but a deep read.

Ah, I guess I was thrown off because just before that you were discussing spouses, and just after that you mentioned Heidi Cruz. Thought maybe you'd heard something on the grapevine about Ted's wife, in contrast with Donald's...
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#349 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 14:11

 kenrexford, on 2016-September-23, 11:36, said:

wow is that a deep read. funny, but a deep read.

What I meant was that a presidential candi"date" is like picking a spouse, albeit for 4-8 years (very often the case in real marriages). both Hillary and Donald are ugly options. I expect Trump to be "freaky in bed," meaning that he will try exotic new things, some good some bad, but CHANGE. Not just laying back and letting Congress try to make me happy with the same ole same ole that no longer really gets me my jollies. Clinton, on the other hand, is most problematic because her focus seems to really be on getting others (Wall Street, donors, rich people in other countries, fellow Clintons) their jollies while pretending to still love me.


Exactly the thinking that allows a con man to practice his art - Oh, yes we've got trouble. Right here in River City.
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#350 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 17:08

 kenrexford, on 2016-September-23, 11:36, said:

wow is that a deep read. funny, but a deep read.

What I meant was that a presidential candi"date" is like picking a spouse, albeit for 4-8 years (very often the case in real marriages). both Hillary and Donald are ugly options. I expect Trump to be "freaky in bed," meaning that he will try exotic new things, some good some bad, but CHANGE. Not just laying back and letting Congress try to make me happy with the same ole same ole that no longer really gets me my jollies. Clinton, on the other hand, is most problematic because her focus seems to really be on getting others (Wall Street, donors, rich people in other countries, fellow Clintons) their jollies while pretending to still love me.

Ken, we are talking about government here, not about who is the most fun on a reality TV show.

Rik
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#351 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-23, 19:17

 Trinidad, on 2016-September-23, 17:08, said:

Ken, we are talking about government here, not about who is the most fun on a reality TV show.

Rik

Obviously. And you have a point. However not real impressed with the status quo "serious" government. Not many are. The only practical way to get to the Republican nomination process was to be wildly different. The only way to take on Hillary Clinton is about the same. That does not necessarily translate into actual governing. We they find out.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."

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#352 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2016-September-24, 18:54

The NYT compiled a list of the "on the record" lies Trump told over the last seven days

http://www.nytimes.c...v=top-news&_r=0
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#353 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-25, 10:27

A couple of pages back I asked, in keeping with the Poll idea of the thread, if anyone was still undecided in Trump/Clinton and, if so, what they were waiting for. In the country at large, apparently there are still people making up their minds or else re-thinking their decision. For example see . Click on registered/ likely for a clearer view.

So. Where are we headed?

I'll phrase a question for the candidates.

It is natural that Assad wishes to regain control in Syria. Russia appears to be backing his effort. The NYT quoted an official describing the latest Russian-Syrian effort in Aleppo as Dresdenesque. Having run out of hospitals to bomb, they are bombing the water supply.
Please describe the response that you recommend.

Another:

Recently Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf went before the Senate. He began with a statement accepting responsibility and then, under questioning, made it clear that he accepts no responsibility whatsoever. What is a Wells Fargo, he might as well have asked.
Please describe what should be done. For example, would you recommend waterboarding?


Of course I imagine the questions will be more along the lines of
Mr. Trump: The Times ran a story last May in which a woman said that, when she was a 26 year old model and you were 44, you asked her to change into a bikini at a pool party. Do you deny this?
Secretary Clinton: Do you feel that this disqualifies Mr. Trump for the presidency?

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#354 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2016-September-25, 10:56

 kenberg, on 2016-September-25, 10:27, said:

Having run out of hospitals to bomb, they are bombing the water supply.
Please describe the response that you recommend.

What about sponsoring the Saudi bombing of hospitals in Yemen, just to divert attention?
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#355 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2016-September-25, 15:29

Here's a similar analysis by Politico

http://www.politico....eck-week-214287

Quote

After he lied on Sept. 16 that he was not the person responsible for the birtherism campaign to delegitimize Barack Obama’s presidency, POLITICO chose to spend a week fact-checking Trump. We fact-checked Hillary Clinton over the same time.
Story Continued Below
We subjected every statement made by both the Republican and Democratic candidates — in speeches, in interviews and on Twitter — to our magazine’s rigorous fact-checking process. The conclusion is inescapable: Trump’s mishandling of facts and propensity for exaggeration so greatly exceed Clinton’s as to make the comparison almost ludicrous.
Though few statements match the audacity of his statement about his role in questioning Obama’s citizenship, Trump has built a cottage industry around stretching the truth. According to POLITICO’s five-day analysis, Trump averaged about one falsehood every three minutes and 15 seconds over nearly five hours of remarks.
In raw numbers, that’s 87 erroneous statements in five days.

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#356 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-25, 19:53

On this sort of note, see
https://www.washingt...omepage%2Fstory

Possibly the most demanding job in the Trump campaign is defending Trump's remarks without sounding like a blithering idiot.
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#357 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2016-September-26, 06:02

So then, once DT is elected, it will be an improvement over the current situation.... :ph34r:
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#358 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-26, 06:15

 hrothgar, on 2016-September-25, 15:29, said:

Here's a similar analysis by Politico

http://www.politico....eck-week-214287




This is the kind of "fact checking" that causes many people to roll their eyes.

For example, consider the first 12:

1. "Manufacturing" is a large concept. There is a difference between manufacturing generally and product-specific manufacturing. If the green widget industry is doing well but the red widget industry is getting hammered, then buying red widgets overseas because of manufacturing being gone is not inconsistent with green widget manufacturing booming. The "fact check" is too general.

2. A citation to a source with "questioned methodology" is not false. It is debatable. A debatable point is not false simply because you side with one perspective.

3. A win-loss ratio of, say, 50-50 does not prove that the WTO is fair if the win-loss ration should be 75-25.

4. A gain of 3 million jobs is not a NET gain if the loss is, say, 10 million jobs. For example, if 3 million importing jobs replace 10 million manufacturing jobs, there is no gain. The numbers provided as a "fact check" do not answer that question.

5-6. The fact that the "vast majority" of tax increases are on the rich does not mean that there are not substantial tax increases on the poor.

7. It is not a false statement to opine that HRC is full of crap with her latest claims. It is opinion, and probably valid.

8. The unemployment rate is bogus. Everyone knows this. Labor participation rate is more accurate.

9. Sure, overstated by a bit, but still frightening.

10. This is a matter of degree. In my opinion, Politico is more wrong than Trump on this point. Average wages includes rich people making WAY more than before, as an aside.

11. "doing nothing" usually means "doing nothing meaningful."

12. Being optimistic is not a lie.

When your first 12 fact checks are filled with this sort of analysis, I am not impressed. I do not see the same sort of picky, opinion-based analysis as to HRC's supposed truthfulness.



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#359 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-September-26, 06:48

The funniest part about all of this can be Illustrated in the example of fact checking Trump on the issue of wages. Trump supposedly is telling a lie in that regard. HRC however is not cited as telling a lie in that regard. However Hillary has said that American workers have not had a raise in so many years. When they are both saying the same thing but Trump is lying and Hillary is telling the truth with the exact same point then the fact checking is bogus.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."

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#360 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-26, 07:23

Some of these statements could be looked at with an open mind. I'll take number 10.

Trump: "We're keeping jobs, they're bad jobs. We're losing our good jobs."
I would call it simplistic rather than a lie.

Politico: "The average hourly wage for American workers was $23.06 five years ago in August 2011; last month it was $25.73. The relatively slow pace of wage increases is a frequent criticism of the economy under Obama — and it's spread unevenly across the workforce — but it's not the broad collapse of good jobs that Trump is portraying."

Also simplistic.

$25 per hour is 50K per year for a 40 hour week with two weeks unpaid vacation. So assume 50K a year. How should we look at this figure? As it happens, I filed the income tax statement for my father in the 1950s so I can tell you that his income was about 5K per year in 1955. I went to the CPI inflation calculator at http://data.bls.gov/...1955&year2=2016 and found that 5K in 1955 translates to a little under 45K in 2016. So 50K is not that much of a gain compared with what I thought of as working middle class, but not a loss either, and 1955 was considered a good time for the working man. My mother did not have a job, we owned our home, in 1953 we bought a new Chevrolet and paid cash. I went to a decent school. Life was reasonably stable.

KenR points out, and I also noticed it right away, that this $25.73 per hour is an average. This could be a problem for making any good use of this figure, depending a bit on who is included. Lawyers charge by billable hours. So do consultants. There are a lot of people making significantly less than this average. [An aside, I seem to recall someone running for office who promised that if he is elected everyone would have a job that pays more than the national average.] Averages can definitely hide problems.

It seems to me that lots of kids are growing up today in considerably worse circumstances than I did. I enjoyed my childhood, I would like kids today to enjoy their childhood. Many of them are pretty much raising themselves. Exactly how this happens is not totally clear to me. Some of the oversimplification that we hear drives me a bit nuts.

Bottom line: I am hoping for, but not really expecting, something better than:
"Our jobs suck."
"You lie."
Ken
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