Front Office Football Central

Front Office Football Central (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//index.php)
-   Off Topic (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//forumdisplay.php?f=6)
-   -   POTUS 2016 General Election Discussion Thread (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//showthread.php?t=91538)

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 11:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3120851)
Anyone planning on voting for Donald Trump is voting only for the "R" and (for the most part) in misogynistic fear of a powerful woman and is without question a sheep.


Not true at all.
I despise the fact that I will vote for Trump, to be honest.
But to me Hillary's history of defense is inexcusable. Benghazi will almost solely dictate my vote. Coupled with the lack of foresight that the internet/email security issue displays its a deal killer.

I fired a 25 year old making $15/hr in 06 for programing his personal blackberry to receive company emails as it was a breach of trust for the customers of my home security monitoring business. I would be the extreme hypocrit if I excused that behavior of the POTUS.

cartman 09-28-2016 11:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120868)
Dola


A few.
I mean immediately coming to mind are: Zuckerber, David Rusenko, Aaron Levie, and Jack Abraham ...though to be fair they are all in the IT space


There is also a big difference between being a CEO at a company you founded versus being hired as a CEO at an existing firm.

ISiddiqui 09-28-2016 11:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120868)
I mean immediately coming to mind are: Zuckerber, David Rusenko, Aaron Levie, and Jack Abraham ...though to be fair they are all in the IT space


IIRC, they started their own companies.

larrymcg421 09-28-2016 11:39 AM

Yes I'm all for Trump discovering his own country and becoming President of it.

Kodos 09-28-2016 12:09 PM

:D

Particularly if that country is on Mars.

Dutch 09-28-2016 12:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kodos (Post 3120877)
:D

Particularly if that country is on Mars.


Throw your people under the bus much? :)

Kodos 09-28-2016 12:12 PM

Hey, we're from Rigel VII.

Marc Vaughan 09-28-2016 12:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120870)
Not true at all.
I despise the fact that I will vote for Trump, to be honest.
But to me Hillary's history of defense is inexcusable. Benghazi will almost solely dictate my vote. Coupled with the lack of foresight that the internet/email security issue displays its a deal killer.

I fired a 25 year old making $15/hr in 06 for programing his personal blackberry to receive company emails as it was a breach of trust for the customers of my home security monitoring business. I would be the extreme hypocrit if I excused that behavior of the POTUS.


I can understand reservations about Hillary - but on the other hand to vote for someone who is proud of the fact he respects the position he's apply for so highly that he can't even be bothered to revise and study up before the big job interview for it dumbfounds me ...

If a candidate turned up for a job with your company and had no idea what it entailed or how to do it, would you consider hiring them? ...

Kodos 09-28-2016 12:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marc Vaughan (Post 3120880)

If a candidate turned up for a job with your company and had no idea what it entailed or how to do it, would you consider hiring them? ...


Is she hot?

tarcone 09-28-2016 12:41 PM

Let's see, Im sexist (or I hate women) because of how I feel about a particular woman. One woman, not all women. Just the one.

Oh wait, she is your candidate. Defend her to the death. I get it.

I forgot you all label people that don't agree with you. My bad.

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 12:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marc Vaughan (Post 3120880)
I can understand reservations about Hillary - but on the other hand to vote for someone who is proud of the fact he respects the position he's apply for so highly that he can't even be bothered to revise and study up before the big job interview for it dumbfounds me ...

If a candidate turned up for a job with your company and had no idea what it entailed or how to do it, would you consider hiring them? ...


I understand your point. I do. And no, to be honest, I would not.
Given the same scenario I wouldn't "hire" either of these 2 losers.

But in order to fully flesh out your analogy, if I was told you MUST hire one of the next two people you interview.
If person A was unprepared, knew nothing of my industry, but had a promising track record and good references.
And Person B had worked in my industry all their life. Had massively screwed up to the point that she nearly destroyed a division of another company and seemed so cavalier as to disregard the entire data security of the company and all its customers causing yet unknown damage.

Given that option....well I'd probably quit rather than work for a company that was willing to accept either, to be honest.
If it was back when I owned my company then Id just do both jobs (mine and the position I was hiring for) rather than hire a bad fit.

But forced to pick between the 2 I think both are foul, vile, deplorable characters. I can somewhat stomach Trump's foul and vile more so than Hillary's ONLY because. I think National Security is the single most important issue facing our country and I think he gets that one closer to right (though still waaaay wrong in my opinion) than she.

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 12:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kodos (Post 3120883)
Is she hot?



Makes not one iota of difference. I am married, happily, and have been for 20 years. Her physical attractiveness is immaterial to her ability to do her job.

In fact, in the work place in every position EXCEPT sales, Ive found unattractive people to be more industrious and productive than classically attractive folks.

molson 09-28-2016 12:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120884)
Let's see, Im sexist (or I hate women) because of how I feel about a particular woman. One woman, not all women. Just the one.

Oh wait, she is your candidate. Defend her to the death. I get it.

I forgot you all label people that don't agree with you. My bad.


If someone used racial slurs to describe a black man, it would be fair to ask if the race of the person had something to do with the anger. You used a sexist slur to describe her, so it's fair to wonder what your rage here is all about - especially since you've been completely unable to backup your attacks.

But just as a though experiment - are there any powerful women you respect? What would be an example of one that you wouldn't compare to a bitch you'd pass around your buddies to bang?

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 12:46 PM

at the risk of a triple dola

Quote:

Originally Posted by lighthousekeeper (Post 3120869)
out of curiosity, what's the protocol on those situations. is law enforcement automatically notified? would you be considered aiding a criminal if you didn't notify the authorities?


We use a 3rd party background check and screening company. Not sure what they do. I simply get a red light green light report and if red it states why.
In these 2 cases it said "outstanding or pending warrants for arrest"

Since our application states "do you have any outstanding or pending warrants" they are disqualified for falsifying an application not for their criminal history.

Butter 09-28-2016 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120888)
at the risk of a triple dola


Crisis averted.

molson 09-28-2016 12:53 PM

Glad I could help.

cuervo72 09-28-2016 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120885)
If person A was unprepared, knew nothing of my industry, but had a promising track record and good references.

And Person B had worked in my industry all their life. Had massively screwed up to the point that she nearly destroyed a division of another company and seemed so cavalier as to disregard the entire data security of the company and all its customers causing yet unknown damage.


Matter of opinion, but I think you're stretching things a bit here.

Neuqua 09-28-2016 12:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cuervo72 (Post 3120892)
Matter of opinion, but I think you're stretching things a bit here.


Agreed. In his particular scenario I would go with the same decision. But I don't think that's a reasonable representation of our choices we have.

Marmel 09-28-2016 01:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120870)
Benghazi will almost solely dictate my vote.


You do know this is a witch hunt that even had GOP leaders saying it was done to politically take somebody down (Hillary) and that there is no evidence she did anything wrong, or that she could have done anything more to prevent it (in all likelihood) and that similar things have happened under other presidents/secretaries? But feel free to almost solely dictate your vote on an issue you are wrong about. That is the great thing about a free election and exactly the reason Trump, a childish, sexist buffoon, has the support he does today.

Edited to add: Or maybe Hillary is the greatest criminal mastermind of all time for pulling all the shit she has pulled and never getting prosecuted for any of it.

JonInMiddleGA 09-28-2016 01:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marmel (Post 3120895)
Or maybe Hillary is the greatest criminal mastermind of all time for pulling all the shit she has pulled and never getting prosecuted for any of it.


I'd put her in the U.S. Top 10 easily enough.

BishopMVP 09-28-2016 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by clemsonfan (Post 3120840)
You're right. This race is showing sexism plain and simple. Yes, I'm a woman. And yes, I am excited about Hillary. Not just because she's a woman either. Among other things, she's smart, experienced and cares about the issues I value.

But if she were a man, a lot of people wouldn't have as big of an issue with her. Just like when someone mentioned they like Bill more. Sexism.

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3120851)
Donald Trump has absolutely zero concrete ideas on what he will do as president. Anyone planning on voting for Donald Trump is voting only for the "R" and (for the most part) in misogynistic fear of a powerful woman and is without question a sheep.

Yep, you got it. Despite the fact that almost every supporter in this thread has felt compelled to list their reservations about her, the majority of people opposing Hillary are sexist. Just liked anyone opposing Sarah Palin was doing so because of her gender and not her terrible record or general idiocy. And zero people are planning to vote for HRC due to the historic achievement of being the first female President - that's why she never mentions it on the campaign trail and her gender was never mentioned at the convention. And anyone saying they liked a proven deal maker with massive amounts of charisma who showed an ability to reach across the aisle and work with an opposition-controlled congress over someone who has shown no ability to do so must be sexist.

AENeuman 09-28-2016 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120884)
Let's see, Im sexist (or I hate women) because of how I feel about a particular woman. One woman, not all women. Just the one.

Oh wait, she is your candidate. Defend her to the death. I get it.

I forgot you all label people that don't agree with you. My bad.


Yep, i think you are. But it shouldn't matter what I think of you, I don't really know you. Thus, I also shouldn't really care about your vile opinion of someone you don't really know. And I don't really, however, my judgment comes from the improbable likelihood that she is the only female you have said gross things about.

Marc Vaughan 09-28-2016 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BishopMVP (Post 3120900)
Yep, you got it. Despite the fact that almost every supporter in this thread has felt compelled to list their reservations about her

I expect more peoples reservations are along the lines that they would have preferred a different candidate but that they like a lot of her policies, but would have preferred another candidate to choose from as a serious alternative.

Then again I'm hugely left wing and thought Sanders was somewhat further right than I'd have preferred ... so your milage may vary from mine ;)

Kodos 09-28-2016 01:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120886)
Makes not one iota of difference. I am married, happily, and have been for 20 years. Her physical attractiveness is immaterial to her ability to do her job.

In fact, in the work place in every position EXCEPT sales, Ive found unattractive people to be more industrious and productive than classically attractive folks.


Purely a joke, sir.

Kodos 09-28-2016 01:58 PM

I'd love to have Al Gore to vote for, but Hillary is the only reasonable option that we have, so I'll be voting for her. There are far worse options than Hillary out there.

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 02:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marmel (Post 3120895)
You do know this is a witch hunt that even had GOP leaders saying it was done to politically take somebody down (Hillary) and that there is no evidence she did anything wrong, or that she could have done anything more to prevent it (in all likelihood) and that similar things have happened under other presidents/secretaries? But feel free to almost solely dictate your vote on an issue you are wrong about. That is the great thing about a free election and exactly the reason Trump, a childish, sexist buffoon, has the support he does today.

Edited to add: Or maybe Hillary is the greatest criminal mastermind of all time for pulling all the shit she has pulled and never getting prosecuted for any of it.



We will disagree there and never find common ground. No point in furthering the discussion.

I'm too close to that situation to value your opinion.

Marmel 09-28-2016 02:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3120917)
We will disagree there and never find common ground. No point in furthering the discussion.

I'm too close to that situation to value your opinion.


I was going to say the exact same thing in my original post because I knew you spoke to somebody close to the situation or know somebody close to the situation, but I refrained. I should have known better. :lol:

tarcone 09-28-2016 03:27 PM

Powerful Women Ive respected?
Cleopatra, Joan of Arc, Sarah Palin, British PM who Im drawing a blank of her name right now, Merkel in Germany, Some local politicians you wouldnt know, Barbara Bush, Nancy Reagan. Do I need more?

HRC is a horrible, horrible person. I dont understand why you dont see it. If she was a male, Id call him an asshole or a douche bag, probably worse. Does that mean Im sexist towards men? Or is there the double standard that always exists in the land of liberal?

nol 09-28-2016 03:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120923)
Powerful Women Ive respected?
Cleopatra, Joan of Arc, Sarah Palin, British PM who Im drawing a blank of her name right now


Is this parody?

Subby 09-28-2016 03:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120923)
Powerful Women Ive respected?
Cleopatra, Joan of Arc, Sarah Palin, British PM who Im drawing a blank of her name right now, Merkel in Germany, Some local politicians you wouldnt know, Barbara Bush, Nancy Reagan.

lol way to dig deep there, buddy. :D

BishopMVP 09-28-2016 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marc Vaughan (Post 3120909)
I expect more peoples reservations are along the lines that they would have preferred a different candidate but that they like a lot of her policies, but would have preferred another candidate to choose from as a serious alternative.

So you like the message, but would prefer a different messenger? Perhaps a male one?

Now, I don't believe that about you, but that's the same leap clemsonfan and panerd (and many others) are making. Trump & especially tarcone are saying some pretty ridiculous stuff (though HRC "attacking" Trump by saying "he believes women don’t deserve equal pay unless they do as good a job as men." made my head hurt), but there are plenty of non-sexist, non-misogynistic reasons to dislike that one specific person, who yes, is a woman.

Subby 09-28-2016 03:35 PM

non sequitir alert (j/k)

The best book review you will read this year: In ‘Hitler,’ an Ascent From ‘Dunderhead’ to Demagogue

panerd 09-28-2016 03:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nol (Post 3120924)
Is this parody?


I admit I laughed out loud at the list. I feel for Tarcone because I do think the liberal posters on this board tend to pile on sometimes with a "know it all" type attitude. But he dug his own grave with the Clinton stuff and it is just getting worse with every post.

Ben E Lou 09-28-2016 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120923)
Powerful Women Ive respected?
Cleopatra, Joan of Arc, Sarah Palin, British PM who Im drawing a blank of her name right now,

Delete your account.

cartman 09-28-2016 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3120930)
Delete your account.


Never heard of her, but she sounds pretty powerful.

Subby 09-28-2016 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120923)
Powerful Women Ive respected?
Cleopatra, Joan of Arc, Sarah Palin, British PM who Im drawing a blank of her name right now, Merkel in Germany, Some local politicians you wouldnt know, Barbara Bush, Nancy Reagan. Do I need more?

You forgot Mary Magdalene and Judith Light as Angela Bower in Who's the Boss?!

Subby 09-28-2016 03:43 PM

PIVOT TIME!



ISiddiqui 09-28-2016 03:44 PM

LOL at "British PM who Im drawing a blank of her name right now". Of course, we could also ask tarcone which female British PM whose name he can't remember is he thinking about (they've had 2) ;).

Also going from Cleopatra to Joan of Arc then all the way to the last 30 years is quite funny.

larrymcg421 09-28-2016 03:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BishopMVP (Post 3120927)
So you like the message, but would prefer a different messenger? Perhaps a male one?

Now, I don't believe that about you, but that's the same leap clemsonfan and panerd (and many others) are making. Trump & especially tarcone are saying some pretty ridiculous stuff (though HRC "attacking" Trump by saying "he believes women don’t deserve equal pay unless they do as good a job as men." made my head hurt), but there are plenty of non-sexist, non-misogynistic reasons to dislike that one specific person, who yes, is a woman.


You're leaving out some steps in that leap. Tarcone's specific comments make me suspect that about him, especially the one where Hillary can't be trusted, but Bill is a good dude. I do not think all people who have a problem with Hillary are sexist and I don't think anyone else here has claimed that.

larrymcg421 09-28-2016 03:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Subby (Post 3120933)
You forgot Mary Magdalene and Judith Light as Angela Bower in Who's the Boss?!


I'm sure she loses points with him for being on Transparent. (Judith, not Mary.)

cuervo72 09-28-2016 04:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Subby (Post 3120933)
You forgot Mary Magdalene and Judith Light as Angela Bower in Who's the Boss?!


Xena Warrior Princess.

No wait - she may have been a lesbian.

Wonder Woman.

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 04:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 3120936)
I do not think all people who have a problem with Hillary are sexist and I don't think anyone else here has claimed that.


In fact...

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3120851)
Anyone planning on voting for Donald Trump is voting only for the "R" and (for the most part) in misogynistic fear of a powerful woman and is without question a sheep.


CU Tiger 09-28-2016 04:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marmel (Post 3120919)
I was going to say the exact same thing in my original post because I knew you spoke to somebody close to the situation or know somebody close to the situation, but I refrained. I should have known better. :lol:


I'm not sure where that's coming from. My "closeness" comment should probably have been better stated as emotional attachment.

BishopMVP 09-28-2016 04:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 3120936)
You're leaving out some steps in that leap. Tarcone's specific comments make me suspect that about him, especially the one where Hillary can't be trusted, but Bill is a good dude. I do not think all people who have a problem with Hillary are sexist and I don't think anyone else here has claimed that.

Quote:

Originally Posted by clemsonfan (Post 3120840)
You're right. This race is showing sexism plain and simple. Yes, I'm a woman. And yes, I am excited about Hillary. Not just because she's a woman either. Among other things, she's smart, experienced and cares about the issues I value.

But if she were a man, a lot of people wouldn't have as big of an issue with her. Just like when someone mentioned they like Bill more. Sexism.

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3120851)
Donald Trump has absolutely zero concrete ideas on what he will do as president. Anyone planning on voting for Donald Trump is voting only for the "R" and (for the most part) in misogynistic fear of a powerful woman and is without question a sheep.

tarcone deserves everything he's hearing. (Though that list is epic!) But those were the posts I quoted. YMMV.

larrymcg421 09-28-2016 04:44 PM

I missed panerd's post, but clemsonfan just says "a lot", which I don't think is as strong as you're making it out to be.

miked 09-28-2016 04:49 PM

I have now seen somebody put Joan of Arc and Sarah Palin in the same category and it was not burned at the stake. Epic.

panerd 09-28-2016 04:57 PM

I have been brought up several times and I will definitely stick with my assertion that a majority of Trump supporters hold sexist views of Clinton. The fact that "bitch" seems to be connected to almost any criticism I read or hear (outside of major news where they want to say it but can't) shows she is definitely being held to a different standard and at least in some part because she's a woman. (She's no Joan of Arc but still :) ). And I'm a Johnson supporter so I feel like I have no vested interest in caring that much about Hillary except for making an observation that seems clear to me.

JonInMiddleGA 09-28-2016 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3120955)
The fact that "bitch" seems to be connected to almost any criticism I read or hear (outside of major news where they want to say it but can't)


It's a word the describes behavior/attitude/deportment, certainly highly connected with gender but at the same time I've called Obama a bitch more than once.

I mean, m.f. is kinda gender specific too ... not technically mutually exclusive I suppose but certainly more common (and more apt) to apply to a single-gender.

At the end of the day this rings like nothing more than a combination of misdirection about the utterly vile characters in question & having too much time on one's hands if they're worried about the word choice instead of the despicable acts of the person/people in question.

And perhaps the true bottom line is that if you don't want to be called a bitch (or a m.f.'er by the same token), don't be one.

SackAttack 09-28-2016 05:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Subby (Post 3120934)
PIVOT TIME!




wow. they think the campaign is hurting the family business. That's, uh...

Hey, kids? There's a reason most candidates put their business interests in a trust when they run for office or, y'know, at least have some kind of firewall between public and private life so that "running for President" doesn't turn into "buy my steaks. I sell the best steaks."

SackAttack 09-28-2016 05:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JonInMiddleGA (Post 3120956)
And perhaps the true bottom line is that if you don't want to be called a bitch (or a m.f.'er by the same token), don't be one.


My takeaway here is that Jon is entirely comfortable with being called a motherfucker. :D

tarcone 09-28-2016 05:31 PM

Thank you for the kudos for my list. I worked extra hard on it. Just for you Liberals.

I guess because you guys are making fun of my list you are actually making fun of women, therefore, you are sexist or maybe even misogynists.

See how I did that? You sexist liberals, making fun of women. Shame, oh shame.

Logan 09-28-2016 05:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SackAttack (Post 3120957)
wow. they think the campaign is hurting the family business. That's, uh...

Hey, kids? There's a reason most candidates put their business interests in a trust when they run for office or, y'know, at least have some kind of firewall between public and private life so that "running for President" doesn't turn into "buy my steaks. I sell the best steaks."


From the John Oliver segment I saw, I don't think Jr understands anything about the blind trust thing.

CU Tiger 09-28-2016 05:35 PM

When one finds oneself in a deep hole the first appropriate course of action is to stop digging.

ISiddiqui 09-28-2016 05:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120961)
Thank you for the kudos for my list. I worked extra hard on it. Just for you Liberals.

I guess because you guys are making fun of my list you are actually making fun of women, therefore, you are sexist or maybe even misogynists.

See how I did that? You sexist liberals, making fun of women. Shame, oh shame.


You are incredibly stupid, aren't you?

JonInMiddleGA 09-28-2016 05:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SackAttack (Post 3120959)
My takeaway here is that Jon is entirely comfortable with being called a motherfucker. :D


Depends on the situation ... but at no point would I think it was a gender-related criticism. Not in my wildest imagination would such foolishness cross my mind.

tarcone 09-28-2016 05:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3120966)
You are incredibly stupid, aren't you?


Nope. just highlighting the stupidity of you liberals. "Oh, you dont think like I do, you must be racist, sexist, etc, etc."

See the stupidity? No, you probably don't. And 8 years of HRC sinks the country. But it will be all roses and puppies. I know. I know.

digamma 09-28-2016 05:51 PM

Jon we get what you are saying, but the use here was clearly sex/gender related.

molson 09-28-2016 05:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120961)

I guess because you guys are making fun of my list you are actually making fun of women, therefore, you are sexist or maybe even misogynists.



If anybody here compares Sarah Palin to a woman they pass around their friends to bang, I would wonder about their attitudes towards women generally.

And I think Palin did get a little of that. There's obviously plenty to criticize there, but I thought a lot of it also crossed a sexism line. Casual sexism is a lot more tolerated in our country than casual racism is.

tarcone 09-28-2016 05:55 PM

I know, right? I just saw a commercial where a dude yelled "Bring in the Winches!"
Boycott that product.

molson 09-28-2016 05:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120972)
And 8 years of HRC sinks the country.


I get not agreeing with her policies, but I feel like you're speaking to a bigger fear here. What do you think will happen? Not that she'll support moderately liberal policies and shit like that, I mean what terrible things is the worst politician ever like her capable of? Why are you so vague about this? (Edit: Didn't you say earlier that Clinton as president would be more of the "status quo"....I think that's probably true, but you also seem to be arguing that something dramatically new and devastating will come from a Clinton presidency.)

ISiddiqui 09-28-2016 06:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by molson (Post 3120974)
And I think Palin did get a little of that. There's obviously plenty to criticize there, but I thought a lot of it also crossed a sexism line. Casual sexism is a lot more tolerated in our country than casual racism is.


Palin definitely got sexist attacks. There is no doubt about that. Lots of comments about being a "bimbo" that were beyond the pale.

larrymcg421 09-28-2016 06:06 PM

Palin is probably one of my least favorite politicians ever, but she definitely got sexist attacks. The most irritating were the questions about whether a mother of 5 should be running for VP.

Neuqua 09-28-2016 06:07 PM

Funny (ironic?) thing about this thread is now tarcone's responses are reminding me of how Trump always reacted when he was pushed back on in the primaries.

JonInMiddleGA 09-28-2016 06:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by digamma (Post 3120973)
Jon we get what you are saying, but the use here was clearly sex/gender related.


I thought this was a general, not specific, compliant about the use of the word.
Or at least, that was what I was responding to.

specifically
Quote:

The fact that "bitch" seems to be connected to almost any criticism I read or hear

That's probably the nicest single word description of her that's justifiable afaic. And way more concise than demonic spawn from the basement of hell.

tarcone 09-28-2016 06:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by molson (Post 3120976)
I get not agreeing with her policies, but I feel like you're speaking to a bigger fear here. What do you think will happen? Not that she'll support moderately liberal policies and shit like that, I mean what terrible things is the worst politician ever like her capable of? Why are you so vague about this?


I Think she gives us more trade deals that force allow companies to move out of country thus forcing more people on the government dime.

I think she will be viewed as a weak leader, militarily, in the world. And she will continue the weak foreign policy our current President has produced. I believe when this happens there will be more terrorism in the country. And US forces in places that are no-win.

I think she will make this country even more divided than it already is. I think she will tear it apart. And wont give a shit about doing it.

These are a few of the things I think will happen. maybe Im wrong. Maybe she will be the greatest President in history. And there will be monuments built to her. And mountains will bear her face.

But I think she makes this country even worse off than it is. And I know, you think Obama is the greatest thing since sliced bread and he did a miracle in his 8 years. But I disagree.

Plus, I cannot stand her as a person. Never have liked her. Never will. Even if she came to my house and said "Here is a lifetime of free money and you dont have to pay taxes ever again." I would take it, but still not like her.

RainMaker 09-28-2016 06:15 PM

Palin definitely got sexist attacks. There are elements of the left that are sexist and racist. I mean this is a side of the political spectrum that goes out of their way to prop up Islam, the most oppressive religions in the world when it comes to the treatment of women.

I started the sexist talk and I wasn't calling tarcone a sexist. I was just saying that the right has a large contingent that dislikes women having power or freewill. The Pro-Life movement is an example of this.

RainMaker 09-28-2016 06:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 3120984)
I Think she gives us more trade deals that force allow companies to move out of country thus forcing more people on the government dime.


You do realize we've had like 6 straight years of job growth in the country? The unemployment rate has gone from 10 down to 5? That under Bill the unemployment rate also dropped dramatically and fell to one of the lowest levels the country has ever seen?

Like I understand if you want to argue that H1B visas are driving down salaries. But I don't understand the talk of losing jobs when the opposite has been happening for some time. And you can't force companies to stay here, we aren't the old USSR.

SackAttack 09-28-2016 06:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3120988)
You do realize we've had like 6 straight years of job growth in the country? The unemployment rate has gone from 10 down to 5? That under Bill the unemployment rate also dropped dramatically and fell to one of the lowest levels the country has ever seen?

Like I understand if you want to argue that H1B visas are driving down salaries. But I don't understand the talk of losing jobs when the opposite has been happening for some time. And you can't force companies to stay here, we aren't the old USSR.


I do think H1B's are prone to abuse and that we need to revise the standards there.

The irony with offshoring is that part of the appeal is that the countries these companies move to, they do so because they can pay literally pennies on the dollar compared with American workers.

And many (most?) of those who object to global trade "taking American jobs" are probably ALSO folks who think that we shouldn't be sending aid to other countries, but rather focusing all of our efforts domestically.

Which...if you can help raise the standard of living in other countries, it's going to be less attractive for Widget Company, Inc. to move their business overseas when they're just going to have to ship the products they'd be producing at essentially the same cost right back across the Pacific (or Atlantic) Ocean.

But trade nationalists don't connect those dots much of the time.

Like, I have issues with the Trans-Pacific Partnership. I'm wary of anything that allows corporations to essentially undermine the sovereignty of any nation's laws for their own benefit. But global trade, by itself, is just one piece of the puzzle. Offshoring doesn't happen in a vacuum. It happens because the company in question sees an opportunity to pay subsistence wages that are much lower than what the American equivalent would be, and the executives running the company get a bonus for slashing those costs.

So the way you attack that is to address global standards of living. If a company doesn't realize significant savings from going overseas, they're going to keep their business centralized.

larrymcg421 09-28-2016 06:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3120985)
I mean this is a side of the political spectrum that goes out of their way to prop up Islam, the most oppressive religions in the world when it comes to the treatment of women.


Nope.

mckerney 09-28-2016 09:37 PM




Trump illegally did business in Cuba during the embargo, which probably makes him smart or something.

larrymcg421 09-29-2016 12:04 AM

Oooooof.

Gary Johnson struggles to name a world leader he respects

RainMaker 09-29-2016 12:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mckerney (Post 3121013)



Trump illegally did business in Cuba during the embargo, which probably makes him smart or something.


Executives for his organization were travelling to Cuba over the last few years scouting golf course locations. Something that is also illegal.

Not sure any of this matters though. Trump can say one thing and do the complete opposite. Doesn't seem to matter what the issue or policy is, the cult of personality is what drives his supporters.

RainMaker 09-29-2016 12:45 AM

I do think it's funny that Republicans are desperately trying to portray Trump as opposing the Iraq war that they wanted. And now will likely defend his position on doing business on Cuba despite being hardliners for decades.

To support Donald Trump, Republicans have to be Democrats!

JPhillips 09-29-2016 07:59 AM

tarcone is right!

hillary-sending-hand-signals-moderator-holt/

flere-imsaho 09-29-2016 08:27 AM

Post-debate there's been a lot of people coming out of the woodwork with stories about how Trump failed to pay them as suppliers or contractors. Interestingly, this is also the way Trump (a guy who supports bankruptcy as a legitimate & positive business decision) plans to handle the debt.

Well, to be specific, he's noted two ways to handle the debt:

1. Print more money.
2. "Cut a deal" where the government renegs on part of the debt.

On the second, this is usually backed up by talk of how the Chinese own so much of our debt, so it's (ostensibly) OK. But who actually owns most of U.S. debt?

Oh, that's U.S. taxpayers, states & municipalities: Who owns America's debt? - May. 10, 2016

So, applaud him for consistency, Trump's economic plan is the same as the plan he uses for his construction businesses, which failed so consistently that he's basically out of that industry (limited to licensing his name to hotels at this point):

1. Borrow to the point of insane leverage.
2. Don't pay the small guys, litigate with the big guys until they settle.
3. Declare bankruptcy if necessary.
4. Repeat.

Thus, if in office:

1. Borrow to the point of insane leverage.
2. Cut taxes on the rich while also embarking on huge infrastructure projects (and/or The Wall)
3. Print money, thereby devaluing currency and, subsequently, citizens' savings and/or:
4. Default on U.S. debt, thereby erasing savings for many citizens, municipalities, states, etc....

Good times.

Kodos 09-29-2016 09:06 AM

He is the hero we need in these desperate times.

CraigSca 09-29-2016 09:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flere-imsaho (Post 3121035)



1. Borrow to the point of insane leverage.
2. Don't pay the small guys, litigate with the big guys until they settle.
3. Declare bankruptcy if necessary.
4. Repeat.

Good times.


I've always wondered this - how does one continually borrow to the point of insane leverage, declare bankruptcy and then do it over and over? Who is lending the money?

digamma 09-29-2016 09:58 AM

Lenders are whores looking for their next trick. It's a dirty secret but true.

panerd 09-29-2016 09:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flere-imsaho (Post 3121035)
Post-debate there's been a lot of people coming out of the woodwork with stories about how Trump failed to pay them as suppliers or contractors. Interestingly, this is also the way Trump (a guy who supports bankruptcy as a legitimate & positive business decision) plans to handle the debt.

Well, to be specific, he's noted two ways to handle the debt:

1. Print more money.
2. "Cut a deal" where the government renegs on part of the debt.

On the second, this is usually backed up by talk of how the Chinese own so much of our debt, so it's (ostensibly) OK. But who actually owns most of U.S. debt?

Oh, that's U.S. taxpayers, states & municipalities: Who owns America's debt? - May. 10, 2016

So, applaud him for consistency, Trump's economic plan is the same as the plan he uses for his construction businesses, which failed so consistently that he's basically out of that industry (limited to licensing his name to hotels at this point):

1. Borrow to the point of insane leverage.
2. Don't pay the small guys, litigate with the big guys until they settle.
3. Declare bankruptcy if necessary.
4. Repeat.

Thus, if in office:

1. Borrow to the point of insane leverage.
2. Cut taxes on the rich while also embarking on huge infrastructure projects (and/or The Wall)
3. Print money, thereby devaluing currency and, subsequently, citizens' savings and/or:
4. Default on U.S. debt, thereby erasing savings for many citizens, municipalities, states, etc....

Good times.


Wait. What? Which political party of the past 20 years has used anything but strategy #1? Not saying it's good that Trump will us it as well but wondering where you were during the Obama/Bush years?

Ben E Lou 09-29-2016 10:07 AM

Being black, being known to have a conservative interpretation of the Bible, and being unapologetic about voting third party can be, uh, "interesting" in this election cycle. It really seems to come down to people assuming that their party of preference is entitled to my vote. My friends on the left can't seem to stop bitching at me with that tired line that a vote for a third party is a vote for Trump, while my friends on the right can't seem to stop bitching at me with that tired line that a vote for a third party is a vote for Clinton. Guess what, nimrods? You/your party own neither me nor my vote.

Side note: *I* now live in a state that might actually be a difference-maker, so to some degree I get why someone might be trying to influence me one way or another. But when I observe you Georgia and South Carolina people on social media clutching at your pearls because a fellow GA/SC resident voting third party, I can't help but laugh at you.

Ryche 09-29-2016 10:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CraigSca (Post 3121042)
I've always wondered this - how does one continually borrow to the point of insane leverage, declare bankruptcy and then do it over and over? Who is lending the money?


That's actually one of the big questions. I've read that he has trouble getting anyone in the US to give him loans, so he's having to depend on Russian and Chinese banks.

Ben E Lou 09-29-2016 10:36 AM

People really do this?????

http://www.hannity.com/articles/elec...when-15155458/

Kodos 09-29-2016 10:47 AM

That's pretty funny.

ISiddiqui 09-29-2016 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mckerney (Post 3121013)



Trump illegally did business in Cuba during the embargo, which probably makes him smart or something.


Smart enough to lose Florida ;).

flere-imsaho 09-29-2016 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3121044)
Wait. What? Which political party of the past 20 years has used anything but strategy #1? Not saying it's good that Trump will us it as well but wondering where you were during the Obama/Bush years?


The kind of leverage ratios Trump uses in his business dwarf those of government borrowing (if we use GDP to total debt as a base measure). If he plans to import his business practices to running the government, the free spending of Reagan, Bush II and Obama (the latter in response to the Great Recession) will seem like a distant, happy memory.

panerd 09-29-2016 10:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 3121020)


Thinking about changing my vote to Darrell Castle (or possibly Clinton). The Libertarian Party has their greatest opportunity in their history against two clowns and they send this flub machine out there. I guess back in 2012 I just didn't get enough coverage of Johnson to see how bad of a speaker he is but he's bad. I think if he got into the debates his poll numbers might actually go down. On top of that they have William Weld as the VP candidate. Now I am not one of those Libertarians who would prefer anarchy in a dream scenario but Weld actually answers a lot of questions with bigger government answers. If anything the Libertarian VP candidate should at least be for smaller federal government. Castle seems to ride heavily on the religion stuff which I don't care for but seems devoted to small government issues like the Libertarians used to preach.

* So vote L to try and get 5% and not have to mess with ballot access.
* Vote D because Trump is an awful candidate
* Or vote C because he actually shares my views more than the others
* Stay home

QuikSand 09-29-2016 11:15 AM

Something that we are clearly seeing in this election -- it's really, really hard to run for President in any serious way. We set expectations at an absurdly high level - and invest very little in positive feelings about accomplishments, relative to perceived mistakes and missteps.

I don't think Gary Johnson is a dope. But as a guy who didn't have to go through the sort of deep vetting that a primary/caucus process offers, he's suddenly getting even this small degree of legitimate attention, and he's basically showing his ass. Not that he's actually terrible -- but that he's unpolished, unrestrained, and untrained. And in the bright lights of a serious campaign, all that will surely come to the fore, and (I guess) correctly so.

Lots of voters are wringing their hands with cries of "why don't any good people run?" this cycle. I wonder if the answer is that we hold candidates up to such rigor with deep scrutiny of every statement and position even offered, we prod at them throughout a 24 hour news cycle, and we pick apart every business dealing or unconventional experience... to the point where almost nobody could come through it without looking bad in some ways. And bad really sticks. Much more than good.

Makes me think that Obama, as a generally inexperienced candidate 8 years ago, might have fit the profile. He managed to leverage a Senate vote against the war, and just a thin resume, along with a gift as a speaker/presenter into a comfortable win. All that while people attacked him vaguely for being underqualified. Maybe if he had been in the Senate for 12 more years and had a much longer list of votes and public statements, he would have looked like another deeply flawed candidate to many of the people who liked him in 2008. Despite being far more "qualified" by a traditional measure.

ISiddiqui 09-29-2016 11:19 AM

I hear you, but not being able to name a single foreign leader is BAD... like, I'd be a bit like WTF if one of my friends couldn't do that.

cartman 09-29-2016 11:37 AM

There was quite a bit of discussion back in 2008 about the track record for Senators being a millstone for running for POTUS. Prior to 2008, the last time a sitting Senator ran and won was Kennedy in 1960, and prior to that it was Warren G. Harding. Nixon had been a Senator, but he had his two terms as VP before running for President.

Logan 09-29-2016 11:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by QuikSand (Post 3121056)
Something that we are clearly seeing in this election -- it's really, really hard to run for President in any serious way. We set expectations at an absurdly high level - and invest very little in positive feelings about accomplishments, relative to perceived mistakes and missteps.


Not to mention...the job kind of sucks if "most powerful person in the world" isn't an enormous selling point to you.

JonInMiddleGA 09-29-2016 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Logan (Post 3121063)
Not to mention...the job kind of sucks if "most powerful person in the world" isn't an enormous selling point to you.


This isn't a bad observation. Not even by half.

Hell, I may even quote it elsewhere I like it so much.

ISiddiqui 09-29-2016 12:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lighthousekeeper (Post 3121061)
It hearkens back to Palin's inability to name a newspaper: it's more about the inability to gracefully pivot out of a question you can't answer that makes you appear so unfit for the job.


Partially, yes. But also partially, you should know ONE and the fact you don't means that for Palin, you don't read any newspapers, and for Johnson, you don't pay attention to foreign news at all. If you did, you'd be able to sputter out someone. Weld was able to name Merkel after thinking for a second. As long as you don't say Putin, you are basically golden on that question.

Kodos 09-29-2016 12:16 PM

For tarcone:

Stop Pretending You Don't Know Why People Hate Hillary Clinton | Huffington Post

BishopMVP 09-29-2016 12:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3121052)
Thinking about changing my vote to Darrell Castle (or possibly Clinton). The Libertarian Party has their greatest opportunity in their history against two clowns and they send this flub machine out there. I guess back in 2012 I just didn't get enough coverage of Johnson to see how bad of a speaker he is but he's bad. I think if he got into the debates his poll numbers might actually go down. On top of that they have William Weld as the VP candidate. Now I am not one of those Libertarians who would prefer anarchy in a dream scenario but Weld actually answers a lot of questions with bigger government answers. If anything the Libertarian VP candidate should at least be for smaller federal government. Castle seems to ride heavily on the religion stuff which I don't care for but seems devoted to small government issues like the Libertarians used to preach.

* So vote L to try and get 5% and not have to mess with ballot access.
* Vote D because Trump is an awful candidate
* Or vote C because he actually shares my views more than the others
* Stay home

I'll be sticking with the L route despite Johnson's huge flaws. I look at it like I'm not voting for him, I'm voting for the possibility of a 3rd party along it's stated goals in 4 or 20 years when Johnson will be a distant memory (or more likely, forcing the Republican party to tack that way a little bit).

larrymcg421 09-29-2016 12:30 PM

A third party won't (and shouldn't) happen until we revamp our electoral system to force someone to win with at least 50% of the vote.

CrescentMoonie 09-29-2016 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 3121076)
A third party won't (and shouldn't) happen until we revamp our electoral system to force someone to win with at least 50% of the vote.


I'm not getting the logic behind that at all. Wouldn't a 50% requirement cause even more consolidation with the established parties due to their infrastructure advantages?

molson 09-29-2016 12:34 PM

I'd love to see more (or any) legitimate third party candidates, but when I look at the list of those who made my state ballot, and in some cases, researched who these people were - nobody is as close to as qualified as Hillary Clinton. My own voting philosophy is that I always want to vote who I think will be best at the job. I don't want to vote strategically, or in protest, or to support some cause. In the same way, I'd never avoid voting for a qualified third-party or independent candidate because I didn't want to "throw away my vote". For me personally, I'm throwing away my vote if I do anything other than voting for the person who I feel is best for the job.

JonInMiddleGA 09-29-2016 12:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrescentMoonie (Post 3121077)
I'm not getting the logic behind that at all.


Upon further review, I think I'm with you.

Ben E Lou 09-29-2016 12:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrescentMoonie (Post 3121077)
I'm not getting the logic behind that at all. Wouldn't a 50% requirement cause even more consolidation with the established parties due to their infrastructure advantages?

It's hard to predict how people would react, but one hand, I would *think* that in a run-off situation, Johnson and Stein would get more attention/votes this year, because at least *some* of the "a vote for third party is a vote for {insert candidate you hate}" types might pick the candidate that they like the best in round 1, knowing that they'd have the run-off (or auto run-off) option to pick the "safe" candidate.

On the other hand, given how many people from all places on the political spectrum I've seen claim that Trump won "a majority"of Republican primary votes--even when pressed with, "no, he won around 40%"--it's quite possible that much of the populous is just too stupid to react correctly to such a change.

larrymcg421 09-29-2016 12:43 PM

More people would be willing to vote third party if they weren't worried about the spoiler effect. For example:

Under our system if it's (R) 45, (D) 40, (G) 15, then the (R) wins.
In the alternate setup, they would have to go to a runoff. (Or that could be an instant runoff like some places do).

I'm much more willing to vote third party if it's not going to help the Republican win.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:31 PM.

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.