The Trump Era (Jan 20, 2017 – XXXX) Political Discussion Including Foreign Impacts

bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
edited November 2016 in General Discussion Posts: 23,883
This thread is intended to discuss the upcoming Trump presidency and related matters. Areas of interest include domestic policy, foreign policy, electioneering, cabinet appointments & perspectives, media etc. etc. Additionally, perspectives from other countries, & the impacts on them of the 45th presidency are encouraged here & not discouraged. This is certainly not a thread for Americans only. All are welcome. @DarthDimi and I thought this would be a good compromise to an issue we were having elsewhere.

The rules are simple. Come and be yourself, have fun, discuss, moan, whine, gripe, post relevant links, conspiracy theories, do whatever you want. I encourage you to express yourself any way you feel comfortable. Kindly just don’t spam with things that are irrelevant to the subject, and please try not to disrespect, judge or be offensive (collectively or individually) to other members’ points of view. I realize politics can be challenging & that Trump is polarizing (he’s very much like a Bond villain to some, I recognize), but in the end we all improve when we hear competing perspectives. Haters can become lovers, I hope.

I don’t expect that this thread will be closed barring some calamity (unlike a prior one which followed the memorable campaign, & which I see as its spiritual predecessor, linked below for those who came late to the party, are interested in politics, and who may be interested in reading it), but rather, that it will continue on with perspectives and opinions during and until the end of the historic Trump presidency.

Bring forth the next four (or eight) years! If anything, they are sure to be highly entertaining. I hope we all get through it!

http://www.mi6community.com/index.php?p=/discussion/14869/the-next-american-president-thread-2016/p1
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Comments

  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    Another political thread? I hate to be the bah humbug bummer here, but do we seriously need all these politically centered threads on just the United States system and its future when we've had one created just days ago after yet another got closed for some reason?

    I know the intention for the two threads is somehow for one to remain for criticisms of the system and this one somehow just for positive thoughts (?) but I can guarantee that won't work, and as it stands right now I just don't see the point.

    Just thought I'd air my brief concerns, as I know many are in the same boat in thinking this can't go well, considering it never has or never will, especially after the election.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    @0BradyM0Bondfanatic7, I recognize your concern, and hopefully we can keep it on an even keel.

    I want to be absolutely clear. I want to hear from dissenters here. It's not for Trump lovers only. That is not the point of this thread. The thread is for anything and everything you want to discuss related to Trump and politics, including stuff you don't like. I'm not a censorship kind of guy. Also, others can discuss the impacts of Trump on their own political systems in their local countries, including UK, France, Germany, Netherlands, Canada etc.

    I only ask that personal attacks for people's political opinions be left elsewhere, where possible.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    I wish you well on this journey, and if I was of a Christian mind, maybe I'd even pray for you. I think you've got the work cut out for you, in some respects.
  • edited November 2016 Posts: 11,119
    bondjames wrote: »
    @0BradyM0Bondfanatic7, I recognize your concern, and hopefully we can keep it on an even keel.

    I want to be absolutely clear. I want to hear from dissenters here. It's not for Trump lovers only. That is not the point of this thread. The thread is for anything and everything you want to discuss related to Trump and American politics, including stuff you don't like. I'm not a censorship kind of guy.

    I only ask that personal attacks for people's political opinions be left elsewhere, where possible.

    Dear @BondJames. I am simply not sure if in this polarized environment there eventually will be a nuanced, empathic, understanding discussion about all this. On page 3 of that other political topic (I don't even know the name), I gave my entire view on all this.

    Today something cruel happened in The Netherlands, regarding a new political party and one of its frontrunners, Sylvana Simons:
    raadslid-dient-klacht-in-na-racistisch-filmpje-over-sylvana-simons.jpeg
    1110_Simons.jpg

    And in the USA Trump keeps ignoring and scolding press like NYT. Nor does he condemn these kind of videos:


    Or what about Trump's real estate properties? How....on Earth can you keep all this if you become president? A valid question, but it won't result in a proper discussion.

    In all honesty I think it's better to tone down the amount of politics on here. I am already completely saturated :-(. This polarization will never result in a good discussion in which we really highlight solutions, in which we empathize with each other. Frankly, another topic like this basically scares me.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    No problem @Gustav_Graves. I expect this thread to outlive the next few months. My hope is that it is a sounding board for discussion that people want to have (even when they are feeling bad and just need to vent) any time they want to over the next four years. I'm not intending for it to be top of mind all the time. I'll be posting to it when I have something to say and will engage folks in discussion as and when I have time.

    I'm interested in the foreign perspective, particularly in Europe, because I expect that many with radical views will indeed latch onto the Trump wagon and attempt to use it as cover for their own racist opinions.

    I just found the following articles on her:
    http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2016/11/disgusting-video-circulates-showing-sylvana-simons-as-lynching-victim/

    http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2016/10/tv-football-pundit-calls-presenterpolitician-a-monkey/

    While I think laying all this at Trump's feet is unfair, he perhaps will need to make a race speech at some point in the future. Folks have been calling for it in the media.

    An issue I have personal concerns about is conflict of interest. As you note, Trump has vast business interests, and how he can legitimately keep a wall between his business and political interests is difficult to see.
  • edited November 2016 Posts: 3,564
    The Trump Era??? A little full of ourselves and Herr Drumpf aren't we? I'll happily second 0Brady's "BAH!" In this regard. Everybody else gets an "Administration" but the Orange Overlord gets an "Era." HA!
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    Just grabbing the title off last week's copy of The Economist, which I've yet to read, @BeatlesSansEarmuffs.
  • bondjames wrote: »
    While I think laying all this at Trump's feet is unfair, he perhaps will need to make a race speech at some point in the future. Folks have been calling for it in the media.

    I'm not saying this. I am not blaiming Trump directly for this. But I think we both agree that the poltical climate has been completely poisoned and polarized. In The Netherlands, in the USA, on social media, and on many occasions also in here.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    We're living in history, @BeatlesSansEarmuffs, like it or not. We'll just have to wait a while to see if it's more comparable to the potato famine or the civil rights legislation. I have my bets placed, but I won't kill the suspense for others.

    Anyway, this has(n't) been fun, but I'm out.
  • edited November 2016 Posts: 3,564
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-conflict-of-interest_us_58349547e4b09b6055ff367d?ifouefrqr1away8pvi

    Those of us who were around long enough remember how this theory ("If the President does it, it's not illegal") worked for Dick Nixon.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    bondjames wrote: »
    While I think laying all this at Trump's feet is unfair, he perhaps will need to make a race speech at some point in the future. Folks have been calling for it in the media.

    I'm not saying this. I am not blaiming Trump directly for this. But I think we both agree that the poltical climate has been completely poisoned and polarized. In The Netherlands, in the USA, on social media, and on many occasions also in here.
    Absolutely; it has been. The campaign was horribly divisive and brought tensions to the boil. However, such tensions were there beforehand. It's going to be quite a task to calm it all down and smooth it out.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-conflict-of-interest_us_58349547e4b09b6055ff367d?ifouefrqr1away8pvi

    Those of us who were around long enough remember how this theory ("If the President does it, it's not illegal") worked for Dick Nixon.
    These conflicts of interest are a big concern and something I was not happy about with Clinton either. I mentioned that in the original thread. I'm not sure how he will be able to work around this but if he's not careful, it could bring him down. Even the appearance of a conflict is an issue in my view.
  • CASINOROYALECASINOROYALE Somewhere hot
    Posts: 1,003
    Thanks @Bondjames !!
    I do think it's childish to have several people who hate Trump to constantly post negative things and to continuously bash other forum users.

    Honestly guys, Obama is still the president like it or not Trump has no power right now. Let's give him a chance before we knock him.

    Remember when Daniel Craig was cast and 90% of this forum bashed him, now a majority of Bond fans rank him second to Connery. I am not saying Trump will be the best president ever but America will most definitely change a lot in four years under him, whether good or bad let's hold off on all the disses and remarks and have valid conversations and points.

  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,687
    bondjames wrote: »
    I want to hear from dissenters here.
    Don't make me [dissent].
    You wouldn't like me when I'm [dissententing].
    ;)
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    If there's one thing that shows in this topic (and the previous one), then it is the ever growing division and polarization because of the rise of right-(and left-)wing populism in the West. Debating and discussing has never been so impossible and frightening.

    I remember four years ago in here that the situation with regard to the US presidential elections (Romney vs. Obama) was much friendlier, much more nuanced and also slightly more positive.

    All of that is gone. And I think that in this kind of political environment it is better to say "Let's agree to disagree".

    Personally, I think my view on politics, my ethical beliefs about democracy, are severely tested. And frankly, overall I think they are on the losing side.

    Right-(and left-)wing populism are the 'new normal' ever since Brexit and Trump's election. Actually, there have been instances in some Western countries were you could see all of this coming. Think about the rise of Pim Fortuyn in The Netherlands in 2001/2002. And the populist-light "Change" slogan from Obama in 2008. But on the whole, as of 2016, populism has become unstoppable. 2016 has become a pivotal moment in Western politics.

    Just have a look at the new Reuters/Ipsos poll in France. So far it seems Marine Le Pen is sailing towards the presidency. The loss off Sarkozy in the French primaries yesterday makes it even easier for her to become president:
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/marine-le-pen-poll-election-odds-latest-french-presidential-lead-sarkozy-a7428126.html

    In The Netherlands Geert Wilders has already adopted the slogan "Let's Make The Netherlands Great Again!". In my country we have a coalition model, and everyone knows that it will become hard for Wilders' PVV to actually become Prime Minister. But the reason voters are already considering this, should be a serious wake-up call for the conservative-liberal VVD, who in the end needs to form a coalition with the PVV. Latest polls show the PVV in a nech-to-neck battle with the party currently in power, VVD:
    https://home.noties.nl/peil/

    So what can I, with my progressive, long-term, international, pragmatic views, do about these populist trends? Nothing. Completely nothing. My world view, my ideas and with it my clearly defined solutions are on the losing side. And will probably be on the losing side for years to come if we don't change our attitude.

    Will the current wave of right-wing populism bring back classic factory jobs? Will big monopilists like Facebook, Google, who favor robotic and automatic work solutions over physical workforce, become less important in The West? Will the populism stop the current globalization? Will it halt the decline of the middle class and with it the level of prosperity and welfare? I doubt it. In a way Obama was a milder version of a left-wing populist when he came to power in 2008. Now a winning, yet tiny majority dislikes him and u-turns his/her vote towards Trump.

    The West is in decline. In serious decline. Prosperity-wise, but also psychologically we're losing from countries like China and Russia. As a matter of fact, the current wave of right-(and left-)wing populism is driving China and Russia in each other's arms. And more will follow (look to The Phillipines, South-Africa, India). Whereas Trump & co. will probably try dismantle trade treaties like NAFTA, TTIP and CETA, China and Russia are already doing the exact opposite and are on the brink of creating a much more powerful free trade region, modelled after the old EU.

    Perhaps I sound negative, but I think it's merely realism. There's not much my political views can do about it to stop this trend. I want to say one important thing though, and this goes for people like @BondJames. And on that I agree with him: Regardless of our political differences, we have to fucking sell our stuff, our ideas, our solutions better to ordinary people and workers! We have to show, from left-wing beliefs to right-wing beliefs, from progressive agenda's to conservative agenda's, that we're always doing it for the people!

    And I have to grant my respect in that aspect to @BondJames. We have to explain our beliefs better to the people. We have to think at same levels as them. We have to merge much better with the worries of ordinary people who lost their jobs. We should not fear their worries, but instead embrace them. If we don't do that, my progressive political beliefs will die out, because Trump & Co. saw this all coming much earlier.
    I grabbed your post from the other thread @Gustav_Graves, because it's a very good one. I agree.

    The financial crisis and technology (Moore's Law) have laid bare the problems and limitations with unchecked capitalism & globalism. I believe Marx himself may have indicated that this is how capitalism could all end.

    Moreover, we perhaps have too many people too. When you try to bring roughly 3bn (the combined populations of China, India and Brazil) into the capitalist model and the middle class, and they are willing to work longer for less, it's bound to create significant social tension. There are vast cultural differences here. Capitalism inherently is about winners and losers. It's a Darwinistic economic model.

    Furthermore, declining birthrates in Western countries are adding to economic & productivity slowdowns, and that's further compounded by immigration of people who 'look different'. Obviously the tensions for the pre-existing homogeneous culture will be immense. Suspicions only grow further.

    Then there's the issue of urban vs. rural. Do we just invest in cities and forget about people who live in the 'burbs? Brexit and Trump were as much a reaction to that issue as anything. It was also a reaction to governments ostensibly not listening to their voters, and looking at some as 2nd class compared to others.

    How do we solve this? What's the approach? That's the big question.

    I really think a form of 'managed capitalism' is one solution. 'State' managed even. That's what countries like Singapore did so well, and that's what countries like China are emulating. A business focused model which is state run and managed. The issue here is corruption and nepotism. One has to create a model of government that's accountable. Where there are more corporate style consequences for failure. Where useless lifers and 'hangers-on' are weeded out.

    I also believe there has to be caps on executive compensation. When a CEO can make $50+m or more for a year, it's just ridiculous. There's only so much of the pie to go around. I'm sure there are excellent executives who would be willing to work for just a little less, and then there is more to go to employees. Statistics have shown that most of them don't add the shareholder value that they are paid for.
    chrisisall wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    I want to hear from dissenters here.
    Don't make me [dissent].
    You wouldn't like me when I'm [dissententing].
    ;)
    Dude, I'm serious. Come over, vent, and be your silly and usual fun self any time. I recognize that the dual thread thing is as silly as it gets, but it's the only solution we could think of. This one is for everyone.
  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,687
    bondjames wrote: »
    Dude, I'm serious. Come over, vent, and be your silly and usual fun self any time. I recognize that the dual thread thing is as silly as it gets, but it's the only solution we could think of. This one is for everyone.
    As long as we can seriously discuss stuff (& have a bit of fun along the way) it's all good.
    :)>-
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    chrisisall wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    Dude, I'm serious. Come over, vent, and be your silly and usual fun self any time. I recognize that the dual thread thing is as silly as it gets, but it's the only solution we could think of. This one is for everyone.
    As long as we can seriously discuss stuff (& have a bit of fun along the way) it's all good.
    :)>-
    That's the plan. You know what they say about the best laid ones though.
    TripAces wrote: »
    I am wondering how long it will take before the majority of those who voted for Trump to realize they'd been duped. I mean, they thought they were "draining the swamp." :))

    I think it's not funny. The Chinese and Russians have way more to laugh than 'we' do. And especially the long-term future will show that.

    One example. TTP was an initiative by the USA actually to cut down the influence of China. Hence why China was not part of TTP. What will happen now? Smaller Asian export nations like Malaysia, Vietnam and Phillippines are now driven into the arms of China. As a 'revenge' China will copy-paste the entire TTP-treaty and take the matters in their own hands.

    Then, suddenly, a much larger Asian-Pacific region feels less of a necessity to trade with the USA and instead will focus even more on China. Add Russia to that region, and I think Trump is completely underestimating every bit of global economics. And by doing so he could actually hurt the already poor white working-class people in states like Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Iowa even more.

    The very essence of 'trading' will now move from the West (North-America and Europe) to the entire Asia-Pacific region. By doing so trade figures in the USA eventually will sink....and in the long-term so does economic growth and prosperity.

    So lastly @TripAces, I wouldn't say 'they' are duped yet. But the upcoming four years we'll see some consequences of that. Anyway, there's nothing you can do about it anyway :-).
    Another good post which I borrowed from the other thread.

    Yes, TPP is a geostrategic initiative first and foremost, and an economic one secondly. I agree that it was designed to bring the South East Asian nations closer together under American hegemony and also serve as a block to China.

    So on the face of it, Trump's stated opposition to the deal seems like a huge miscalculation.

    However, I think he knows that. I believe he will try to renegotiate the deal. Canada, Australia, South Korea and Japan are involved as well (and they are unlikely to run to China to spite the US as an alternative - Abe had a good discussion with Trump over the weekend and believes that the alliance is strong), and the whole thing rests on the US as the consumer of the products (the biggest market) anyway.

    I've haven't looked into the details, but believe this is part of his negotiating tactic. Threaten to scuttle, but ultimately come up with something better for workers and jobs in the US.

    Scrapping the Iran Nuclear Deal would be a big mistake though and is a far scarier geopolitical prospect. Iran should be viewed as a distinct case of keeping one's enemies close, and that's what the Nuclear Deal, imperfect as it is, does.
  • edited November 2016 Posts: 565
    Thank you @bondjames for running this thread.

    I don't have much to say at this point, but I think there is way too much conjecture in the media right now about what Trump is (and isn't) actually going to do. Every time a new cabinet member is rumored, it's like 'OMG! This means he's going to do this or that! Well, that's not what he campaigned on! -or- That means he is going to do extreme things to this country!' I can't even go on facebook without seeing friends commenting on "news" articles that are pure conjecture. The sky isn't falling, or if you really feel like it will, it hasn't yet. Ugh!

    All I can say is I remember him saying he likes to be unpredictable. I think he was being honest then and we're seeing it now. Just enough to keep everyone on edge. Just enough to keep everyone comfortable. As for the actual outcomes, only time will tell, but my gut say that was always part of the plan...
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    Thanks for the kinds words @CASINOROYALE & @JamesStock!
    Remember when Daniel Craig was cast and 90% of this forum bashed him, now a majority of Bond fans rank him second to Connery. I am not saying Trump will be the best president ever but America will most definitely change a lot in four years under him, whether good or bad let's hold off on all the disses and remarks and have valid conversations and points.
    Excellent point. I agree.
    JamesStock wrote: »
    I don't have much to say at this point, but I think there is way too much conjecture in the media right now about what Trump is (and isn't) actually going to do. Every time a new cabinet member is rumored, it's like 'OMG! This means he's going to do this or that! Well, that's not what he campaigned on! -or- That means he is going to do extreme things to this country!' I can't even go on facebook without seeing friends commenting on "news" articles that are pure conjecture. The sky isn't falling, or if you really feel like it will, it hasn't yet. Ugh!

    All I can say is I remember him saying he likes to be unpredictable. I think he was being honest then and we're seeing it now. Just enough to keep everyone on edge. Just enough to keep everyone comfortable. As for the actual outcomes, only time will tell, but my gut say that was always part of the plan...
    I agree with you. I believe this is exactly what he's doing. Playing everyone along. It's a bit Reaganesque. Enemies overseas thought Reagan was the 'real mad dog'. It was an illusion. Trump definitely has to make nice with America's friends who are worried, and I'm sure he will do that over the next few months. He has already had a good meeting with Japan's leader as mentioned earlier.
    ----

    There's a wonderful quote from Salena Zito of The Atlantic which she wrote a few months back:

    "The press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally"

    The truth is probably some where in between.
    ----

    I'm including a link below to an excellent article in the Washington Post. The important quote is below and then the full article:

    "What has stood in the way of people running as an independent is that winning the presidency in a system that so clearly favors the two major parties is something of a hopeless cause. That’s a big reason former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg decided not to run several times when he seriously explored the idea.

    Trump took the elements of an independent candidacy — the lack of clear ideology, the name recognition of a national celebrity and the personal fortune needed to fund a presidential campaign — and then did what no one seemed to have thought of before. He staged a hostile takeover of an existing major party. He had the best of both worlds, an outsider candidacy with crosscutting ideological appeal and the platform of a major party to wage the general election. By the time he had finished, he had taken down two political dynasties: the Bush dynasty in the primaries and the Clinton dynasty in the general election."


    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/donald-trump-americas-first-independent-president/2016/11/19/b09e1cc6-ade2-11e6-8b45-f8e493f06fcd_story.html

  • chrisisallchrisisall Brosnan Defender Of The Realm
    Posts: 17,687
    Gods I hope this is it. I really do. *crosses fingers*
    Trump, BE the Bruce Wayne we know you can be!
  • Major_BoothroydMajor_Boothroyd Republic of Isthmus
    edited November 2016 Posts: 2,721
    JamesStock wrote: »
    Thank you @bondjames for running this thread.

    I don't have much to say at this point, but I think there is way too much conjecture in the media right now about what Trump is (and isn't) actually going to do. Every time a new cabinet member is rumored, it's like 'OMG! This means he's going to do this or that! Well, that's not what he campaigned on! -or- That means he is going to do extreme things to this country!' I can't even go on facebook without seeing friends commenting on "news" articles that are pure conjecture. The sky isn't falling, or if you really feel like it will, it hasn't yet. Ugh!

    All I can say is I remember him saying he likes to be unpredictable. I think he was being honest then and we're seeing it now. Just enough to keep everyone on edge. Just enough to keep everyone comfortable. As for the actual outcomes, only time will tell, but my gut say that was always part of the plan...

    Trump isn't a blank slate. He has visible past behaviour in business and public life for the last fifty years. He ran on election promises and has questioned both the current president's legitimacy and claimed the very system that got him elected was rigged. So either he's a liar or he will fulfil his promises that the majority of the voting public disagreed with.

    It's good that you can decipher which of his statements are true and which are not. Just as voters have cherry picked which statements they agree with of his and which of his provocative, incendiary and divisive comments they choose to ignore or tolerate. I find it amusing that people who have complained about liberal elites who don't have their best interests at heart have voted a thin-skinned capitalist elitist who will change little for the 'working class'. Ironically he'll increase spending - something the GOP are suddenly fine with - and give corporate tax breaks while still opposing the minimum wage.

    I'd love to be proven wrong...but then again...I always thought Craig was a great choice for Bond.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    chrisisall wrote: »
    Gods I hope this is it. I really do. *crosses fingers*
    Trump, BE the Bruce Wayne we know you can be!
    One can only hope. Time will tell and I think the Treasury Secretary and Secretary of State posts will be critical picks.

    If it's Giuliani for the latter, then I think we are in for Ra's al Ghul and not Wayne sadly. I have a distinct feeling it won't be Romney. I think Trump just spoke with him to get his world view and he's been doing that with a lot of folks including Kissinger, who was reasonably positive about his conversation with Trump. I heard a rumour somewhere that Petraeus is under consideration for something but not sure what.
    Ironically he'll increase spending - something the GOP are suddenly fine with - and give corporate tax breaks while still opposing the minimum wage.
    This infrastructure program is going to be difficult to get through Congress. I think he will only be able to get it if they get tax reform and their tax cuts in return. No doubt there is going to be a huge hole blown in the deficit soon. However, these initiatives are likely to turbo boost the economy in the short term. Keynesian spending tends to work. It either has to come domestically or it will come in the form of some war spending which I'm against. The easy money approach is out of gas and interest rates have to go up (but not too fast) to curb speculative excesses and in order for the economy to be on a more balanced footing.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    I was at a Real Estate Seminar (of all things) two days back at which Paul Begala (CNN commentator, long time Clinton advisor along with James Carville, and Priorities USA Action Super PAC advisor) was a speaker at the event.

    It was a quick talk before he had to leave, but I had a chance to ask him a few questions as he was at the podium. Most of this is known already but it was helpful to get it from him.

    1. He believes fundamentally that Clinton lost because she didn't talk enough about the economy. He said he was particularly upset about that since he and Carville are the ones who came up with "it's the economy stupid!" during Clinton's 1992 campaign. He also lambasted the fact that she did 80 (or so) focus groups to determine her campaign slogan: "Stonger Together". Begala sais that America is not 'stronger together' at the moment. It is divided. Her slogan did not reflect reality. He also said that she didn't really have a cohesive message.

    2. She was seen as the status quo candidate in a time of change. He indicated that the country has been moving in the Republican direction for some time....at Governorship and congressional level and districts. He suggested that despite this, since a Democrat was in charge of the White House (he means Obama), the Republican candidate was automatically seen as the change candidate. When I questioned him, he conceded that Trump was also seen as much more of a change than any other traditional Republican since he was an outsider.

    3. He said that many of the commentators and pundits were too distracted by Trump's (he called him the big Orange Typhoon) bombast and rhetoric, and didn't realize that his fundamental message of economic renewal for the middle class and the forgotten had been resonating.

    4. He was asked about why the polls missed what was happening. He indicated that they missed the 'denominator'. He meant the 'turnout'. Trump was able to pretty much hold onto Romney's vote total but got the mix right and in the right places. Clinton lost far more Obama votes, and particularly in the rust belt. However, I think he said that Clinton got more votes than any other white candidate who's run for president (not sure if I heard that right). He also said that the polls did tighten considerably on the last weekend and they could see that the pendulum was swinging towards Trump.

    5. He also said that he missed that Trump wasn't really a developer any more. He was a media star, and understood media much better than anyone realized.

    He said that he hasn't spoken with Hillary since the election loss but he has spoken with Bill, who has come to terms with the loss.

    Sorry about the quality of the photo. My phone wasn't able to focus properly.

    l2WzCyC.jpg
  • stagstag In the thick of it!
    Posts: 1,053
    I don't have time at the moment to illustrate my points but as far as the UK is concerned the path to Brexit was first trodden during the reign of Tony 'Phoney' Blair. By consistently ignoring the wishes of the the silent majority, not only ignoring but going directly against the wishes of that same silent majority. It was deemed far better to keep people in check by calling them racists or xenophobes. However a lid could not be kept on the situation. The fires of discontent were fueled throughout Blair's, Browns and Cameron's premierships culminating in the result we saw in June when the people were finally given their say.

    Mark my words - exactly because of that same disregard for the voter - we will see repeat performances in France, Germany and Holland. The establishment can't learn to listen, they and their acolytes know only how to slander.
  • edited November 2016 Posts: 11,119
    This topic still isn't about Trump's policy agenda. And as long as we keep blamefingering in here, I am out. Where's the forward-looking attitude? Where's the long-term vision in all of this? What should Trump do? Where's the positivity? So far, there's not much of that happening in here......and then I will be off. I'm tired.....sick and tired that we simply can't talk about the issues anymore. Even now, when the campaign is all over, people get stuck in the good old 'who dunnit' narrative.

    And I tell you, this kind of narrative is what eventually will destroy Western prosperity. It has become like a 'psychological disease' in the mindsets of western people. Making America Great Again? Then fff-ing talk about HOW to make it great, instead of using this cheap, and at times untrue, slogan for blamefingering.

    And again, I still don't know in which of these two topics I should post. It's all confusing. Similar discussions now get separated without any good reason. The meandering of this is tiresome. And where are the moderators? I think they are tired too.
  • stagstag In the thick of it!
    Posts: 1,053
    Gustav, with all due respect this is exactly the attitude that has led to Brexit and Trump. that the liberals cannot apportion blame to themselves for their failure to address issues which actually matter to real people.

    You need to look back before you can look forward because you won't mend anything unless you understand how it got broke in the first place.

  • stag wrote: »
    Gustav, with all due respect this is exactly the attitude that has led to Brexit and Trump. that the liberals cannot apportion blame to themselves for their failure to address issues which actually matter to real people.

    You need to look back before you can look forward because you won't mend anything unless you understand how it got broke in the first place.

    I think the reason Brexit and Trump happened, is way more extensive and complex than just one simple -and again, that's what I can read- bit of fingerpointing. I think in some of my previous comments I admitted intensively what's wrong with the establishment and elite. If there's one person who points the finger at his own beliefs and the attitude of those people I support, then it's me @stag. Me.

    But reading your response only confirms that it will be very hard to talk about the issues, about certain facts of the global economy and about clearly defined policies in this topic. I hoped that could happen. But I'm afraid that the environment in here and out there is too heated, too sensitive and too polarized to actually have a dispassionate discussion about the issues.

    Hence why I will most likely stay away from this topic (and others as well).
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited November 2016 Posts: 23,883
    @stag, thanks for your comments on the UK situation.

    As a former resident, I'm curious about your thoughts on how things changed under Blair, Brown and Cameron. When I left London John Major was in charge. I was also there during some of the Thatcher years as a youngster (but too young to remember much). I know that Blair adopted a 'third way' in order to win the 1997 election, which essentially co-opted a lot of the conservative business friendly concepts & ideals in lieu of Labour's original focus on the 'working class' and 'left wing values', but with a stated commitment to social justice. This was seen as necessary to get Labour back into power after years in the wilderness under Neil Kinnock (for non UK folks, he was Labour opposition leader from 1983 until 1992). Hence the term 'New Labour'.

    This was in many ways based on the 'New Democrats' concept espoused by Clinton (Bill). who also similarly saw this as a way to reverse numerous Democratic election losses in the 70s and 80's, and one relatively uninspiring presidency (Carter's).

    Did this approach essentially sell out the middle class? That is something worth discussing. It can be argued (I suppose) that with less real representation in the respective governments, their relative power declined, as did that of the labour unions, both at the expense of corporations and financiers.

    Moreover, financial deregulation, which was initiated first during the Thatcher & Reagan years and later continued during the Clinton and Blair years may have contributed to their current plight. For a time the issues were masked by the 'peace dividend' that occurred after the Soviet Union's collapse in the early 90's & the resulting prosperity that followed. However, now that we are in a more competitive and interlocked global trading environment (with a rising China in the WTO, India etc. etc.), the perils of this approach are laid bare for all to see.

    This seems to have culminated in a working class left rebellion of sorts, with Jeremy Corbyn (UK labour leader) and Bernie Sanders/Elizabeth Warren (de facto leaders of the Democratic Party in the US until someone new comes along) as the peoples' choices from the left. This passionate lot haven't been enough to 'win' an election in the respective countries, but they are certainly very vocal & can influence the policy agenda.

    ----

    @Gustav_Graves, you're correct that placing blame is not a solution. However, I agree with stag that it's necessary to truly understand the problem compassionately, as that will serve as a basis for sustainable solutions. As I mentioned in the old thread, Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump both identified the same problems. Those problems are real - they are not imagined. Their solutions for dealing with the issues are quite different, and I prefer some (but not all) of Trump's approach as I am business focused. Having said that, I'm not an extremist and believe that social safety nets must be relatively robust, but not so much that they become dependencies.

    I'm interested in the economies of Germany and the Scandinavian countries, and Switzerland. I think a lot can be learned by understanding how these countries in particular have delivered reasonably high and growing standards of living, competitiveness and prosperity while also maintaining a reasonable social net. I realize that they are far less populous than the USA, and also far more homogeneous / less diverse, but I am sure lessons can be gleaned.

    ----
    Appointments:

    Trump has apparently named Betsy DeVos as Education Secretary. Jeb Bush and Bill Krystol of the Weekly Standard have approved of this pick.

    She claims to be anti-Common Core (which is a program to standardize K-12 level education standards in mathematics/english/arts etc.), although some on the far right (who oppose that program) don't think she truly is. Those on the left think she will decimate public school funding and increase funding for religious schools.

    http://betsydevos.com/qa/

    http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/23/politics/betsy-devos-picked-for-education-secretary/

    http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/campaign-k-12/2016/11/betsy_devos_education_secretary_five_things_to_know.html

    There has been some pushback from states on Common Core. I'm not all that familiar with all of the concepts around it, but these are interesting articles I've read on it.

    http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/28_02/28_02_karp.shtml

    http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-the-biggest-problem-with-common-core-2014-7

    DeVos also claims to be in favour of Charter schools and private voucher programs, as well as letting states set their own standards.
    ----

    Trump has also named Nikki Haley, the popular and respected Governor of South Carolina, as UN Secretary, replacing Samantha Power. She is the daughter of Indian immigrants and a rising party star.

    http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/23/politics/nikki-haley-picked-for-un-ambassador/

    Haley doesn't have foreign policy experience, but is considered by many to be a smart and symbolic pick. She delivered the Republican response/rebuttal to Obama's 2016 State of the Union address and was instrumental in getting the Confederate Flag removed from statehouse grounds in South Carolina after last year's slaying of a prominent minister and eight parishioners at a historic African American church in Charleston. Senator Lindsey Graham has approved.
    ----

    Trump has asked Dr. Ben Carson to be the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and Carson is reportedly going to accept the job. As many know, Carson ran against Trump during the primaries, and was, for a short time, leading in the polls. Carson came from a poor background in Detroit, and became a prominent and highly accomplished pediatric neurosurgeon, known for cutting edge procedures. Some of his achievements include performing the first and only successful separation of Siamese twins joined at the back of the head, pioneering the first successful neurosurgical procedure on a fetus inside the womb, performing the first completely successful separation of type-2 vertical craniopagus twins, developing new methods to treat brain-stem tumors and reviving hemispherectomy techniques for controlling seizures

    Carson, if he accepts, will be the first African American member of Trump's cabinet.

    http://www.cnbc.com/2016/11/23/ben-carson-hints-he-has-accepted-a-post-in-trump-administration.html

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/22/us/politics/donald-trump-close-to-picking-ben-carson-as-housing-secretary.html
    ----

    All of the above picks will require Senate approval.
  • CASINOROYALECASINOROYALE Somewhere hot
    Posts: 1,003
    Some interesting info I learned from some buddies who work the polls where I live! (Austin,Tx).

    Believe it or not, most of Texas is obviously republican but Austin is mainly democratic and I would say 80% of the Austin crowd voted for Clinton.

    Some friends of mine said that most people are so stupid that they literally go in and just vote for Clinton.

    A lot of people will skip all the local voting and only vote for the presidential candidate. The popular vote does absolutely nothing. We elect the people who vote for the president. The republicans won the house and senate so obviously all the republicans went out and voted straight party...

    I know a bunch of miniorites from high school who posted that they only voted for a presidential candidate and didn't understand the point of voting for anyone else or the fact that the popular vote doesn't elect the president LOL.

    Bottom line is, a lot of people are uneducated. Trump won. Deal wth it.



    Now with policies, to be on subject.
    I really wonder what impact it will have on America when he actually deports illegals who are criminals. I mean I doubt we will see obvious change, it's going to be a few years and it really depends how many get deported. It's really going to be a small amount considering the local police could care less about illegals... My dad owns a roofing company and the old company he was employed at was about 90% Mexico. A majority of them spoke decent English and joked about how they have fake IDs and how easy it was to not get caught. We will see.....
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    What is Trump s stance on microchipping the herd?
This discussion has been closed.