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Catfish 11-09-22 04:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2837092)
I love how foreigners think that our political parties are anything like what passes for them in Germany.
Be interesting to see what they define as "Trumpism". Bet they have absolutely no clue.

We have no party here at the moment that would really compare, but we are getting to this via the AfD.
Defining Trumpism: Fascism with an iq of 40 :D

u crank 11-09-22 04:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skybird (Post 2837089)
C'mon, you now all that better.
For Biden it makes a difference if he must seek cooperation with and must convince ten Republican congressmen - or forty.

Sorry but that is highly unlikely. Convincing GOP members of Congress would not be easy. Those Representatives are all up for election in 2 years and siding with a Democrat administration against the House GOP leadership would be political suicide. Case in point, Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, the poster kids for going against your own party. I think they are Walmart greeters somewhere. Biden and his handlers could barely convince one of their own, Sen. Joe Manchin let alone GOP Congress people.

Skybird 11-09-22 05:03 PM

Still, obviously it happens, else you would have totally deadlocked political system crisis every two years, lasting for two years. Now, with the polarization present, right this is a big problem - and still in congress and senate at least the very absolute indispensable compromises were worked out.

You cannot live without that. Compromises. Give and take.

Probably more relevant in senate, however, but still.

If it would not be true what I said, you wouldn't have a budget currently, but a lockdown on all state spendings. ;) What prevented this: inter-party cooperation to find a compromise.



Works very comparable in Germany with both chambers we have, Bundestag and Bundesrat.

u crank 11-09-22 05:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skybird (Post 2837101)
Still, obviously it happens, else you would have totally deadlocked political system crisis every two years, lasting for two years. Now, with the polarization present, right this is a big problem - and still in congress and senate at least the very absolute indispensable compromises were worked out.

You cannot live without that. Compromises. Give and take.

Probably more relevant in senate, however, but still.

If it would not be true what I said, you wouldn't have a budget currently, but a lockdown on all state spendings. ;) What prevented this: inter-party cooperation to find a compromise.

Well Sky it is one thing to agree on a budget they do it all the time. It would be a different thing if Biden wanted one of the Dems signature laws passed. When I said that Biden will have a hard time that is what I was referring to. Again I stress, the new Speaker, probably Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) will wield great power as Nancy Pelosi did. If you want a career as a politician in Washington you don't raise the ire of the Speaker of The House.

Besides, Joe is probably going to be wondering what a GOP led House might do to him. :O:

ET2SN 11-09-22 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2837092)
I love how foreigners think that our political parties are anything like what passes for them in Germany.

Be interesting to see what they define as "Trumpism". Bet they have absolutely no clue.

Ohh, I think they do. :yep:

Its the reason why most of their oldest multi-story buildings date back to the 1950's. :03:

les green01 11-09-22 06:55 PM

well wouldn't be sky if he didn't run around saying the sky falling down:03: he should become an American Citizen so he can spread his knowledge too congress and the white house:03:

Rockstar 11-09-22 06:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2837092)
I love how foreigners think that our political parties are anything like what passes for them in Germany.

True, Europeans particularly Germans use Trump to distract everyone from their own nefarious deeds. IMO the AfD and the Social Democrat Party have a shared affinity for Putin, they are to a degree birds of a feather, Germans causing trouble again in Europe. The AfD claims to be both pro Russian and pro U.S. But seems determined to undermine U.S. influence in NATO.

Whereas the left wing Social Democrat Party relies heavily on the pro Russian former East Germans for support. Their goal, if you look at Scholz’s history in politics and political associations is to dissolve NATO entirely. Answers the question why Scholz had to be prodded and publicly embarrassed before he lended assistance to Ukraine.

Look up the history of these Germans and Russians pictured below and their known associations. It’s a who’s who of Russian puppets, fascists, back stabbing criminals and pedophiles.

Most likely reason why we, namely the U.S., is having to support Ukraine now. The Left wing German Socialist Party and the pro Russian AfD spend their days calling each other communists and national socialists just like Germans did in the 30’s before Hitler came to power. But regardless when Germans get together with Putin there will be a war.

This is why NATO is still around, it’s mission as outlined by Hasting Ismay can never change.

https://www.offlinepost.gr/wp-conten...tsxvpuo97v.jpg

https://worldbulletin.dunyabulteni.n...er-reuters.jpg


Place obligatory smiley here -> :D

August 11-09-22 07:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ET2SN (Post 2837104)
Ohh, I think they do. :yep:

Its the reason why most of their oldest multi-story buildings date back to the 1950's. :03:


Thank you. It proves my point. We're not a collection of relatively small minded quarrelsome nations with separate languages and cultures who have been at war with each other with hardly a break since Roman times and pretending we are anything like you is going to be wrong every time.

Europeans have been gleefully prognosticating our imminent doom ever since our country was created. You haven't been right yet, not in over two centuries. I don't expect the current speculation will be any more accurate.

August 11-09-22 07:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Catfish (Post 2837095)
Defining Trumpism: Fascism with an iq of 40 :D

Really? Care to show me where are Trumps Brownshirts? Where are the Jewish pogroms, the Concentration camps, the wars of territiorial expansion, ANYTHING the real facists actually did?

It's a false comparison and you know it.


It also violates the Godwins law you people like to cite. Guess you and Skybird loose right?

Otto Harkaman 11-09-22 07:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2837116)
Really? Care to show me where are Trumps Brownshirts? Where are the Jewish pogroms, the Concentration camps, the wars of territiorial expansion, ANYTHING the real facists actually did?

It's a false comparison and you know it.


It also violates the Godwins law you people like to cite. Guess you and Skybird loose right?


https://images.wsj.net/im-282244/?width=860&height=573


https://s.abcnews.com/images/US/hate..._16x9_1600.jpg


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D-8qPWvX...g&name=900x900


https://media.newyorker.com/photos/6...a'swar.jpg


Oh oops that is Biden Fascism

Rockstar 11-09-22 08:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Otto Harkaman (Post 2837118)

Oh oops that is Biden Fascism


You really should read some George Orwell and the meaning of fascism.

Quote:

Of all the unanswered questions of our time, perhaps the most important is: ‘What is Fascism?’

One of the social survey organizations in America recently asked this question of a hundred different people, and got answers ranging from ‘pure democracy’ to ‘pure diabolism’. In this country if you ask the average thinking person to define Fascism, he usually answers by pointing to the German and Italian régimes. But this is very unsatisfactory, because even the major Fascist states differ from one another a good deal in structure and ideology.

It is not easy, for instance, to fit Germany and Japan into the same framework, and it is even harder with some of the small states which are describable as Fascist. It is usually assumed, for instance, that Fascism is inherently warlike, that it thrives in an atmosphere of war hysteria and can only solve its economic problems by means of war preparation or foreign conquests. But clearly this is not true of, say, Portugal or the various South American dictatorships. Or again, antisemitism is supposed to be one of the distinguishing marks of Fascism; but some Fascist movements are not antisemitic. Learned controversies, reverberating for years on end in American magazines, have not even been able to determine whether or not Fascism is a form of capitalism. But still, when we apply the term ‘Fascism’ to Germany or Japan or Mussolini’s Italy, we know broadly what we mean. It is in internal politics that this word has lost the last vestige of meaning. For if you examine the press you will find that there is almost no set of people — certainly no political party or organized body of any kind — which has not been denounced as Fascist during the past ten years. Here I am not speaking of the verbal use of the term ‘Fascist’. I am speaking of what I have seen in print. I have seen the words ‘Fascist in sympathy’, or ‘of Fascist tendency’, or just plain ‘Fascist’, applied in all seriousness to the following bodies of people:

Conservatives: All Conservatives, appeasers or anti-appeasers, are held to be subjectively pro-Fascist. British rule in India and the Colonies is held to be indistinguishable from Nazism. Organizations of what one might call a patriotic and traditional type are labelled crypto-Fascist or ‘Fascist-minded’. Examples are the Boy Scouts, the Metropolitan Police, M.I.5, the British Legion. Key phrase: ‘The public schools are breeding-grounds of Fascism’.

Socialists: Defenders of old-style capitalism (example, Sir Ernest Benn) maintain that Socialism and Fascism are the same thing. Some Catholic journalists maintain that Socialists have been the principal collaborators in the Nazi-occupied countries. The same accusation is made from a different angle by the Communist party during its ultra-Left phases. In the period 1930-35 the Daily Worker habitually referred to the Labour Party as the Labour Fascists. This is echoed by other Left extremists such as Anarchists. Some Indian Nationalists consider the British trade unions to be Fascist organizations.

Communists: A considerable school of thought (examples, Rauschning, Peter Drucker, James Burnham, F. A. Voigt) refuses to recognize a difference between the Nazi and Soviet régimes, and holds that all Fascists and Communists are aiming at approximately the same thing and are even to some extent the same people. Leaders in The Times (pre-war) have referred to the U.S.S.R. as a ‘Fascist country’. Again from a different angle this is echoed by Anarchists and Trotskyists.

Trotskyists: Communists charge the Trotskyists proper, i.e. Trotsky’s own organization, with being a crypto-Fascist organization in Nazi pay. This was widely believed on the Left during the Popular Front period. In their ultra-Right phases the Communists tend to apply the same accusation to all factions to the Left of themselves, e.g. Common Wealth or the I.L.P.

Catholics: Outside its own ranks, the Catholic Church is almost universally regarded as pro-Fascist, both objectively and subjectively;

War resisters: Pacifists and others who are anti-war are frequently accused not only of making things easier for the Axis, but of becoming tinged with pro-Fascist feeling.

Supporters of the war: War resisters usually base their case on the claim that British imperialism is worse than Nazism, and tend to apply the term ‘Fascist’ to anyone who wishes for a military victory. The supporters of the People’s Convention came near to claiming that willingness to resist a Nazi invasion was a sign of Fascist sympathies. The Home Guard was denounced as a Fascist organization as soon as it appeared. In addition, the whole of the Left tends to equate militarism with Fascism. Politically conscious private soldiers nearly always refer to their officers as ‘Fascist-minded’ or ‘natural Fascists’. Battle-schools, spit and polish, saluting of officers are all considered conducive to Fascism. Before the war, joining the Territorials was regarded as a sign of Fascist tendencies. Conscription and a professional army are both denounced as Fascist phenomena.

Nationalists: Nationalism is universally regarded as inherently Fascist, but this is held only to apply to such national movements as the speaker happens to disapprove of. Arab nationalism, Polish nationalism, Finnish nationalism, the Indian Congress Party, the Muslim League, Zionism, and the I.R.A. are all described as Fascist but not by the same people.

* * *

It will be seen that, as used, the word ‘Fascism’ is almost entirely meaningless. In conversation, of course, it is used even more wildly than in print. I have heard it applied to farmers, shopkeepers, Social Credit, corporal punishment, fox-hunting, bull-fighting, the 1922 Committee, the 1941 Committee, Kipling, Gandhi, Chiang Kai-Shek, homosexuality, Priestley’s broadcasts, Youth Hostels, astrology, women, dogs and I do not know what else.

Yet underneath all this mess there does lie a kind of buried meaning. To begin with, it is clear that there are very great differences, some of them easy to point out and not easy to explain away, between the régimes called Fascist and those called democratic. Secondly, if ‘Fascist’ means ‘in sympathy with Hitler’, some of the accusations I have listed above are obviously very much more justified than others. Thirdly, even the people who recklessly fling the word ‘Fascist’ in every direction attach at any rate an emotional significance to it. By ‘Fascism’ they mean, roughly speaking, something cruel, unscrupulous, arrogant, obscurantist, anti-liberal and anti-working-class. Except for the relatively small number of Fascist sympathizers, almost any English person would accept ‘bully’ as a synonym for ‘Fascist’. That is about as near to a definition as this much-abused word has come.

But Fascism is also a political and economic system. Why, then, cannot we have a clear and generally accepted definition of it? Alas! we shall not get one — not yet, anyway. To say why would take too long, but basically it is because it is impossible to define Fascism satisfactorily without making admissions which neither the Fascists themselves, nor the Conservatives, nor Socialists of any colour, are willing to make. All one can do for the moment is to use the word with a certain amount of circumspection and not, as is usually done, degrade it to the level of a swearword.”

Isn’t that the truth?

Otto Harkaman 11-09-22 08:33 PM

just a word of derision not blocked by spell check :up:

Rockstar 11-09-22 08:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Otto Harkaman (Post 2837122)
just a word of derision not blocked by spell check :up:

That about sums it up, especially when it’s used here. ;)

Rockstar 11-09-22 08:51 PM

Did anyone pay attention to the news as far back as June? Democrats were expecting a wave too, didn’t happen though. Just like Republican one didn’t. But they both got a reaction.

Otto Harkaman 11-09-22 08:55 PM

we are just muddling along


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