idhawkman wrote:...I'm more of the "punish the Ass and not the mass" kind of guy.
RiverDog wrote:
As a rule, I am too, but in this case, the consequences of the actions of that one "ass" are too severe and the collective benefit to the "mass" is too inconsequential.
Besides, there's no way to punish the "ass" in a case like the Eagle Creek fire. How are you going to make two teenage kids pay for $37 million in damages?
idhawkman wrote:Doesn't matter whether you can collect the full amount from them or not. How do you pay for a murder? That makes no difference as to why my liberties need to be suppressed because of the actions of someone else. It becomes a slippery slope once you establish the precedence.
RiverDog wrote:The precedence has been set a long, long time ago. I can't buy a can of spray paint at our local Home Depot unless I can prove my age. So please explain to me the difference in terms of sacrificing liberties between buying a can of Rust-oleum and buying a bottle rocket?
And in case you don't like my spray paint analogy, there's tons of other examples. Refrigerants, acids, herbicides, fertilizers, industrial chemicals, etc, things that for one reason or another, including safety and potential damage to the environment, that you cannot buy unless you have a license or a permit.
Unless we want to live in a pure anarchy, we're going to have to sacrifice some individual freedoms in the name of the collective good, and IMO it's a very, very small sacrifice to be deprived of a 10 or 15 seconds of enjoyment in firing off a bottle rocket given the huge consequences of it being mishandled by a thrill seeking teenager.
At the very least, they should not be sold to minors and they should not be sold in areas that are suceptible to wild fires.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Yeah, especially with 350 million people. Nothing destroys freedom more than a large number of people to manage. It will only get worse as the population grows. More people, less freedom. It's the endless population growth that will destroy liberty faster than anything else. People growing into each other, over each other, and all wanting to eat, drink, and survive regardless of how their decisions affect other people. We like to talk about shifting values, but ultimately population dictates so many changes because of survival needs. Glad I won't live to see America become China with a billion people. That will be a very crowded, hard to manage America. That's another reason I don't worry about China. I'm not even sure how they would feed their people if they went to war and a first world nation was cutting off their supply lines. War would be a nightmare humanity crisis for China.
RiverDog wrote:A view of Ocean Shores, WA, on the morning of July 5th:
Almost every problem we face today can be traced back to over population, but it's a topic that few want to talk about and even fewer advocate doing something about.
burrrton wrote:"A view of Ocean Shores, WA, on the morning of July 5th"
Jesus H. people.
idhawkman wrote:So why should a bunch of jerks on a beach hundreds of miles away from me infringe my liberties?
Inch by inch the freedoms we have as Americans dwindle a little each and every day, month, year, etc.
RiverDog wrote:
I don't think WA has the corner on jerks. I'm sure that Idaho has their fair share. It took scores of jerks to make that mess, and just one to start a fire.
You're talking about one tiny freedom that you get to exercise for a few seconds once or twice a year dwindling by 1/4" when the rest of the freedoms you exercise daily have dwindled by a couple hundred miles.
idhawkman wrote:The point is, no matter how slight, the rights are being eroded. I've seen socialism and control over the populace. It is not pretty.
A fascist is a follower of a political philosophy characterized by authoritarian views and a strong central government — and no tolerance for opposing opinions. Fascist traces to the Italian word fascio, meaning "group, bundle." Under fascist rule, the emphasis is on the group — the nation — with few individual rights.
idhawkman wrote:A fascist is a follower of a political philosophy characterized by authoritarian views and a strong central government — and no tolerance for opposing opinions. Fascist traces to the Italian word fascio, meaning "group, bundle." Under fascist rule, the emphasis is on the group — the nation — with few individual rights.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
Would you characterize Trump's "America First" agenda as fascist? Does he tend to want to force people to act a certain way using government power? A lot of folks see Trump as fascist. Some of the things he says are fascist. Who is the least fascist candidate out there? The Democrats tend to try to sell us on "beneficial" fascism known as socialism. I tend to vote Republican to avoid the fascist ideology espoused by the Democrats who want levels of social control that they should not have. Trump is pushing some strange ideas as far as behavior and the law is concerned. Not my favorite part of his presidency using his office to put social pressure on people to knuckle under as he does with the NFL or his attacks on a free media picking Fox over another agencies when they're all lying. It's kind of bad when the president is picking sides in social matters in a way that affects jobs and business when they're all engaged in the same behavior. Though I guess the man is siding with the people that defend him under this unprecedented level of attack on a president.
idhawkman wrote:Will this site allow us to post images from a url or do we have to upload it to a specific image site?
I figured it out. I thought this was funny.
idhawkman wrote:Here's a quote for you.
"A fascist is a follower of a political philosophy characterized by authoritarian views and a strong central government — and no tolerance for opposing opinions. Fascist traces to the Italian word fascio, meaning "group, bundle." Under fascist rule, the emphasis is on the group — the nation — with few individual rights.
https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/fascist
Aseahawkfan wrote:Would you characterize Trump's "America First" agenda as fascist? Does he tend to want to force people to act a certain way using government power? A lot of folks see Trump as fascist. Some of the things he says are fascist. Who is the least fascist candidate out there? The Democrats tend to try to sell us on "beneficial" fascism known as socialism. I tend to vote Republican to avoid the fascist ideology espoused by the Democrats who want levels of social control that they should not have. Trump is pushing some strange ideas as far as behavior and the law is concerned. Not my favorite part of his presidency using his office to put social pressure on people to knuckle under as he does with the NFL or his attacks on a free media picking Fox over another agencies when they're all lying. It's kind of bad when the president is picking sides in social matters in a way that affects jobs and business when they're all engaged in the same behavior. Though I guess the man is siding with the people that defend him under this unprecedented level of attack on a president.
RiverDog wrote:I was agreeing with what you said until you got to your last sentence. I would argue that Richard Nixon was attacked far more savagely than Trump or any other modern day POTUS. Back then the media was almost entirely composed of Demo libs, no Fox News, no talk radio, no Twitter, nothing to help him get his POV out and no one to defend him. He was completely at the mercy of the 4th estate. Not that I'm defending any of Nixon's actions, but his situation was 10 times more forboding than anything Trump has had to deal with.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Nixon had to deal wit this level of attack prior to Watergate leading up to the election? In my lifetime, I have never seen a president vilified at every opportunity. Did they attack Nixon's children and wife the way they attack Trump's children and wife? I see all types of stories about how Melania didn't touch his hand or Ivanka was ridiculed for her tweets or Donald Jr. looked stupid saying this. You're telling me that Nixon and his entire family were attacked prior to election and after being elected as badly as Trump? I find that hard to believe.
RiverDog wrote:
I've read several biographies on Nixon, and each agreed that there were a number of attacks by the press, some of them very personal, that contributed to the paranoia he had about the press and eventually led to the actions that resulted in the Watergate cover-up and other highly illegal activities. Two events that stand out are the events that led to his Checkers speech when he was Ike's VP and his "you won't have Nixon to kick around anymore" press conference after he lost the '62 CA Gubernatorial race that caused him to drop out of politics for a time.
idhawkman wrote:You could argue that this is why the media is going after Trump in the same way. They want him out and this technique worked before on Nixon so they are trying it again. Too bad they won't be able to accomplish their goals.
RiverDog wrote:Nixon didn't have to deal with as many personal attacks, but they did attack and distort his positions and there was very little Nixon could do to defend himself. The press was quite a bit more mannered and Nixon himself wasn't the womanizer that Trump is so they didn't have the material to work with that Trump has provided. Back then,most people got their news from either the network TV (Cronkite, Huntley-Brinkley, or Howard K. Smith) or a newspaper, and those establishments were decidedly liberal. It wasn't until the early 80's, once FM radio began to take over music listening from AM, when conservative talk radio had an opening and guys like Rush Limbaugh stepped in to fill the void, later in the decade when Rupert Murdock bought 20th Century Fox and used it to create what we now know as Fox News, and more recently the internet and social media entering the political scene.
I've read several biographies on Nixon, and each agreed that there were a number of attacks by the press, some of them very personal, that contributed to the paranoia he had about the press and eventually led to the actions that resulted in the Watergate cover-up and other highly illegal activities. Two events that stand out are the events that led to his Checkers speech when he was Ike's VP and his "you won't have Nixon to kick around anymore" press conference after he lost the '62 CA Gubernatorial race that caused him to drop out of politics for a time.
The biggest differene between Nixon and Trump is that the former had no means to defend himself and no one in the press to take his side. All Trump has to do to defend himself is pick up his phone and fire off a tweet and can count on Fox and talk radio to take his side in almost any debate.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Nothing you've written has convinced me the level of attack is the same. You said nothing about the attacks on Trump's family. Perhaps the press had more class than to attack a candidate's family than it does nowadays. They have more means to attack Trump than they did Nixon. Twitter may help Trump at times (though I would argue this), but Twitter is used to attack him far more often than to aid him. He has Fox News and some conservative web sites, but just as many liberal web sites keep constant attack on him and most of the news is still liberal. Then there are the international attacks on him before and after the election.
The only argument I see on your side is that no one has made himself a bigger target for attack than Trump. Nixon from what I recall was still a politician and spoke like one. Trump just talks like he doesn't care what people think. He invites the attacks on himself and tries to use it to his advantage. He's one of the most thoughtless presidents when it comes to public speaking. He's a loose cannon on the mic. Sometimes it helps him, sometimes not. He goes out there and starts blasting, whether what he says is true or not. He's out there to rile the crowds and push his agenda. He doesn't care if it's popular or he makes friends or not. He's taking people to task and going after what he considers imbalances against the United States. This hasn't happened in my lifetime. The last president I saw that projected this kind of strength was Reagan, but he was a hell of lot more well spoken when he was taking someone to task.
RiverDog wrote:I agree that the level of attacks are more intense with Trump rather than they were with Nixon, but given that unlike Trump, Nixon couldn't respond or have anyone in the media rise up to defend him, so the net effect of those attacks was greater with Nixon.
You had to have lived through the Watergate era to understand the extent of the attacks on Nixon. I vividly remember John Chancellor of NBC News coming on national TV, interrupting regular programming, and saying that the United States was in the midst of the "most grave constitutional crisis in the history of the nation" (forgetting about the Civil War, Great Depression, etc) after Nixon fired the special prosecutor, which was his constitutional right to do so. That type of hysteria coming out of the media made you think that missles were inbound from the USSR rather than the perfectly legal act of the POTUS firing a subordinate. And it worked, as it had a resonating effect with Americans as the next day, tons of mail flooded congressmen urging them to impeach over it. Those types of extreme characterizations went unanswered, severely compromising Nixon's base, which is what did him in.
Once again, I'll add my disclaimer that I am not defending Richard Nixon or any of his actions. Both then and now, I felt he should have been run out of town and ultimately got what he deserved.
Aseahawkfan wrote:We're not talking after Watergate here though. We're talking about relentless attack before anything has been proven.
Trump has been attacked relentlessly since he started running for office. First by his own party, then by the Dems and anti-Trumpers during the election, and by what might be most of the world after his election. It's an unprecedented level of attack.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests