The Next American President Thread (2016)

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  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    @dalton, the debates will be interesting. The only reason I foresee Trump struggling is because they will both be required to give more in depth responses to their future plans and possible policies as they contend for the office. Here is where Trump is shaky, as whenever he's asked about policy and how he would handle things, he deflects and gives a non-answer. When the debates begin, he won't be able to bullshit or dance around the issues any more, so his puppets will have to get training him very quickly on a lot of major areas of government and its functions, as well as providing him with pertinent percentages and theories to back up his ticket's feelings on crime/violence, gun control immigration, terrorism and more, because Pence can't do everything for him.
  • edited July 2016 Posts: 7,507
    @0BradyM0Bondfanatic7

    That speaks volumes about the American presidential election doesn't it? -"The few times the leading candidate will be forced to explain actual politics is when he'll struggle". 8-| b-(

    And this is the nation which sees itself fit to police the world and teaching the values of democracy? ~X( ^#(^
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    @jobo, it's super whacky.

    Here's a rough outline of Trump's main response every time he's asked about his opinion on a big issue in America and how he could handle it, whether it's violence, gun control, terrorism and/or more:

    "You know, it's difficult. It's a very sad thing. We've got problems here. Big problems. We've had eight years with a president who hasn't solved them, but I want to fix them. I will fix them. I know the best people, I'll have the best people, we'll fix the problems. I will make America great again."

    Rinse and repeat.
  • Posts: 7,507
    But hey, at least he is 'genuine', rich, has a highly inflated opinion of himself and 'believes what he says'. That is all the reassurance you need! In fact its what actually matters, isn't it?

    ;))

  • Posts: 1,631
    Don't forget this gem:

    " Nobody knows the system better than me, which is why I alone can fix it.”

    Sounds more like a dictator than someone running to be a democratically elected president.
  • DaltonCraig007DaltonCraig007 They say, "Evil prevails when good men fail to act." What they ought to say is, "Evil prevails."
    Posts: 15,723
    @dalton, @0BradyM0Bondfanatic7 the problem with these 'catchphrases' from Trump is that they stick. Whether you agree with his quotes or not, it gets everyone talking. Everyone knows about his idea to ban muslims from entering the States, or building a wall around Mexico. I can't speak for every country, but where I live, the media only keeps us updated on Trump's insane ideas. They do paint him as a bad guy and Hillary as the ultimate President the USA will ever have, but none are reporting any ideas made from Hillary. All we get here is Trump's muslim ban and wall on the mexican border.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    All part of the reason why the RNC has felt, even the so-called "anti-Trump" Cruz speech, like one massive circle jerk, even though I guarantee a vast amount of the Republicans actually working in government are clapping and smiling just to save face while trying to unify a broken party like Papa Ryan told them to, despite their adverse feelings about the whole affair.
  • Posts: 1,631
    I absolutely agree that they stick. That's why conventional politics don't apply to him and why his rivals have yet to figure out how to attack him in a meaningful way. The catchphrases stick and all of the negative stuff seems to just slide right off of him.

    Part of it, I think, is because Clinton is so unpopular herself. This is, after all, the showdown between the two least popular presidential candidates in history. If the Democrats were offering a candidate without the baggage, without the controversies swirling around her, and who was just generally more popular with the electorate, it might be a different story.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 8,331
    One starts to wonder if a presidential system by definition starts to lean towards dictatorship. Isn't it too much power in one person? Check Putin, Erdogan. Power corrupts in a big way and few, very few can withstand that. tbh the only ones who seem to be unnafected are the Obamas. The Clintons were and you can certainly see this with Hillary. But at least, and that I admit is a tine reassurence, she's used to it having lived in the White House. I fear however for Trump in a big way. Sure most of his doings now have been show, but his ignorance and lack of knowledge make him more of a Caligula then a Marcus Aurelius.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    Hillary got a taste of the apple in the 90s, and I think she now feels owed the office express from Obama. There's a sick kind of entitlement she has towards the office that she doesn't hide very well, methinks.

    As for the power thing, yes, many crumble under that weight, and we've seen disastrous effects of what happens when presidents are given too much power. Woodrow Wilson's Sedition and Espionage Acts saw people thrown in jail for ten to twenty years in prison for questioning his government, the country, military, etc. vocally or in the press, leading to massive witch hunts unseen even to this day where men and women's lives and liberties were wrestled from them for their opinions. Lyndon Johnson was able to muscle Congress into handing over the control, order and finance of war to him (a result that lasted nine years), which saw him go on to lead 50,000 Americans and nearly a million South Vietnamese to their deaths oversees all on shoddy intelligence and an irrelevant conflict for the United States to involve themselves in. Nixon, Reagan, the list goes on and on of people using their position to run schemes and use their power unwisely.

    I happened upon a video of a guy talking about the 2016 political race recently, and what he said really hit me. His words were something like this: "The best person to run for president is someone who doesn't want to be president." I think that's very true when it comes to this level of power and influence, and how corruptible it can be to specific kinds of people. Only those not seeking things with greed or malevolence or prejudice and hate in their hearts can truly get out untainted, especially in politics. Why this never works however, is because the good people are unwilling to sell that big a sum of their souls to get to that stage.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 8,451
    Well, lads, one thing to look forward to (the only thing really) is at the very least watching Hillary destroy him in the debates and pummel his many areas of ignorance into a snortable pile of ash. A sect of the public and many media outlets have already treated this entire election as more of a boxing match than a bid for aiding America, and that's exactly what they'll be getting now. Insults will be waved and witch hunts signaled on both sides, network ratings will spike, the people will get their bread and circuses, and it'll feel like the Greek way never left. What a pathetic state we're in.

    Yes, that's right, keep underestimating Trump, that's worked well so far.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    Well, lads, one thing to look forward to (the only thing really) is at the very least watching Hillary destroy him in the debates and pummel his many areas of ignorance into a snortable pile of ash. A sect of the public and many media outlets have already treated this entire election as more of a boxing match than a bid for aiding America, and that's exactly what they'll be getting now. Insults will be waved and witch hunts signaled on both sides, network ratings will spike, the people will get their bread and circuses, and it'll feel like the Greek way never left. What a pathetic state we're in.

    Yes, that's right, keep underestimating Trump, that's worked well so far.

    If anything I overestimated the intelligence of a simple minded voting public charmed by a snake oil salesman who they think, for whatever reason, is vastly different in his actions and big mouth than any big Joe Washington type up at Capitol Hill.

    If I have to hear someone on Trump's ticket refer to him as the "people's champion" again, I may just choke on my own upchuck harder than he has choked on that silver spoon of his since the day he was born.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 8,451
    Well, lads, one thing to look forward to (the only thing really) is at the very least watching Hillary destroy him in the debates and pummel his many areas of ignorance into a snortable pile of ash. A sect of the public and many media outlets have already treated this entire election as more of a boxing match than a bid for aiding America, and that's exactly what they'll be getting now. Insults will be waved and witch hunts signaled on both sides, network ratings will spike, the people will get their bread and circuses, and it'll feel like the Greek way never left. What a pathetic state we're in.

    Yes, that's right, keep underestimating Trump, that's worked well so far.

    If anything I overestimated the intelligence of a simple minded voting public charmed by a snake oil salesman who they think, for whatever reason, is vastly different in his actions and big mouth than any big Joe Washington type up at Capitol Hill.

    If I have to hear someone on Trump's ticket refer to him as the "people's champion" again, I may just choke on my own upchuck harder than he has choked on that silver spoon of his since the day he was born.

    Its a shame that a few more of them don't believe in sharia law, then you might be more sympathetic.
  • Would someone please swat that mosquito, I seem to have misplaced my Flit...
  • Posts: 11,119
    In all honesty, I think the speech did what it had to do: Solidy and enthuse its base. And with 'its' I mean the 'Trumpism' wing of the GOP.

    It was a very very long speech and luckily this time he.....listened to me. No foul language, no divisive vocabulaire, no racist inuendo, no bullying and no populist chants like "Lock her up!" or "Crooked Hillary".

    This was perhaps Donald Trump at his most nuanced and most empathic. His message was very clear: "Law and order". Although he, again, didn't go into specifics or came with solutions on how to manage that.

    The overall vibe of this speech was rather dark and gloomy. As if Bruce Wayne was addressing Gotham City after Gotham suffered another terrorist attack. The weird thing however, is that many people feel like this these days. It's what made the Brexit vote succesful. Although adding a little bit more positivity could have been nice.

    We live in uncertain times. And like I said so many times, these times remind me a bit of the late Interbellum era (1918-1939). People vote now because they are hateful, angry, negative and fearful, not because they are positive and happy. So if Trump wins, then it's not just a testimony of how wonderful and good Trump is -because he isn't and he won't make America great again either...certainly not within 4 years-, but it's more a testimony of the times we live in.

    And to be honest, that makes me feel very sad. Very.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited July 2016 Posts: 23,883
    The speech will touch a nerve with a lot of the electorate. As I said, not what I would have done, but I'm sure many voters who thought he wasn't serious and thought he was playing around with this bid won't feel that way now.

    He has portrayed himself as tough and upset at the status quo. Genuinely so, & after weeks of ridicule. What he did is channel what he's heard on the trail for the past one year from the millions of Americans that he has been speaking to. I get that. I don't feel it because I don't live that life, but I get that many people feel that way, and he captured that feeling in the speech very well. That's what he's been doing all along.

    It was politically incorrect, tonally angry and yet consistent. The overwhelming impression I was left with is that he cares about the voter/electorate and is doing this to improve the lives of the majority of the voters. Populist, nationalist and strong. That was his job yesterday, and he delivered on that front.

    Whether this is the mood of the general electorate (as opposed to those he has met on the trail to date) remains to be seen.

    This is a very difficult speech to dismiss without looking uncaring. That is the other side's problem at present and I'm curious to see how they address it next week.

    Overall my convention rating is a solid B. Given what fiascos could have happened, including revolts and violence, it went remarkably well. I expect the Democrats to deliver an A+ convention in response.

    The speech is a B for me as well. I related to what he was saying on many levels, but I wouldn't have put it that way - then again he's much smarter than me in being able to read the electorate. I have no idea how Clinton will deliver her response to this.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 8,451
    bondjames wrote: »
    The speech will touch a nerve with a lot of the electorate. As I said, not what I would have done, but I'm sure many voters who thought he wasn't serious and thought he was playing around with this bid won't feel that way now.

    He has portrayed himself as tough and upset at the status quo. Genuinely so, & after weeks of ridicule. What he did is channel what he's heard on the trail for the past one year from the millions of Americans that he has been speaking to. I get that. I don't feel it because I don't live that life, but I get that many people feel that way, and he captured that feeling in the speech very well. That's what he's been doing all along.

    It was politically incorrect, tonally angry and yet consistent. The overwhelming impression I was left with is that he cares about the voter/electorate and is doing this to improve the lives of the majority of the voters. Populist, nationalist and strong. That was his job yesterday, and he delivered on that front.

    Whether this is the mood of the general electorate (as opposed to those he has met on the trail to date) remains to be seen.

    This is a very difficult speech to dismiss without looking uncaring. That is the other side's problem at present and I'm curious to see how they address it next week.

    Overall my convention rating is a solid B. Given what fiascos could have happened, including revolts and violence, it went remarkably well. I expect the Democrats to deliver an A+ convention in response.

    The speech is a B for me as well. I related to what he was saying on many levels, but I wouldn't have put it that way - then again he's much smarter than me in being able to read the electorate. I have no idea how Clinton will deliver her response to this.

    Very even-handed, fair analysis. =D>
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    Well, lads, one thing to look forward to (the only thing really) is at the very least watching Hillary destroy him in the debates and pummel his many areas of ignorance into a snortable pile of ash. A sect of the public and many media outlets have already treated this entire election as more of a boxing match than a bid for aiding America, and that's exactly what they'll be getting now. Insults will be waved and witch hunts signaled on both sides, network ratings will spike, the people will get their bread and circuses, and it'll feel like the Greek way never left. What a pathetic state we're in.

    Yes, that's right, keep underestimating Trump, that's worked well so far.

    If anything I overestimated the intelligence of a simple minded voting public charmed by a snake oil salesman who they think, for whatever reason, is vastly different in his actions and big mouth than any big Joe Washington type up at Capitol Hill.

    If I have to hear someone on Trump's ticket refer to him as the "people's champion" again, I may just choke on my own upchuck harder than he has choked on that silver spoon of his since the day he was born.

    Its a shame that a few more of them don't believe in sharia law, then you might be more sympathetic.

    Lunacy is what it is whether it comes from someone giving themself up in sacrifice to Allah, another who believes a man in the sky has a special plan for all of us, or a group supporting an orange geriatric as their presidential savior. I wouldn't support objectification, violence, tyranny or any other values expressed in a religious text or world government, as that is beyond imbecilic, yet you act like I and others would do just that to prove some hollow point of yours that I think you've lost the plot of.

    How you see me or anyone else here as a poster boy for Islam is beyond me, as none of us would ever support any kind of behavior that endangers of belittles people in any way (we're anti-Trump, aren't we). We hear stupid and short-sighted proposals and call them out for what they are, whether they involve the suggestion that we need databases for everyone worldwide who follows a specific religion, that a massive wall needs to be built to save us from scary terrorism, when most is coming from within, not without, and more. We respect human beings and believe in an innocent until proven guilty mentality, where nobody is written off out of the gate based on generalizations. What we don't do, however, is isolate and categorize a group of any sort, look at one or two bad eggs amongst them, and use them to represent the character, outlooks and beliefs of the vast majority. To do so is foolish, and disgraces and belittles those of the group that aren't the exceptions of a rule, but that represent an overwhelming majority, dwarfing those who seek to do bad.

    At this point, Trump may as well run with the campaign slogan "Ignorance is Bliss," as he and his followers sure do prove it, waving around the flags of a country many of them seem to have no true concept of, degrading immigrants everywhere when that's how we all got our start in this "great" nation. The only people that truly had ownership of this land from the beginning are the natives, not a bunch of colonialists dead set on conquest, so the sooner everyone on that ticket quits acting like the world is ours and ours alone to shape, the better off we'll all be.

    Our melting pot nation of checks and balances wasn't founded so some jackass could use his daddy's "small loan" of a million dollars to buy his way into prestige and spout his bullshit in front of a public in what has been the most loud and unsophisticated campaign I have seen unfold. And yet some want to support a man who bullies instead of debates with nuance, deflects questions instead of responding to them with knowledge, and generalizes entire peoples at the drop of a hat instead of looking at the facts and treating each person he ridicules for what they are; one of many complex and layered individuals who aren't spoken for by a few bad eggs here and there.

    Trump logic is this:

    1 ISIS bomber practicing radical Islamic beliefs= All Muslims everywhere are terrorists in the making

    1 Mexican rapes a woman while across the border in America= All Mexicans are rapists/murders that need to be pushed out

    But of course this is all coming from a man whose main response to the horrific events in Orlando (committed by a domestic shooter no less) was an I told you so. He must be expressing that hardcore compassion that liberals everywhere are just incapable of relating, if the almighty wisdom of Mendes is to be believed.


    @Mendes4Lyfe, to be as straight up as possible here, as I and others tire of being polite with you, if all your responses to us from onward are going to be nothing but empty-and if I'm perfectly honest-tired old attacks on our character as you use your crystal ball to look into the depths of our souls to who we really are, then you can quite politely let the door hit you on the way out. You add nothing to discussions here when you resort to sharing your leftist conspiracy theories and target people with easy insults, the same ad hominem tactics your Grandpa Donald has been practicing for over a year now. Was it really that easy for his rhetoric to rub off on you?

    If you leave this thread now in peace, imagine all the possibilities and good you could finally do to this community that you've tortured for so long. For one, the majority of the people in this thread sick of hearing you would suddenly feel relaxed and at ease now that a pestering child has gone out of earshot. Number two, I'm sure you have other forums to troll for easy gratification online where you can spread your gospel about your savior, the aforemetioned Grandpa Donald in relative peace, until they kick you out too, of course. And three, you could save up all the time and text characters you'd use up on here trying to call us radical sympathizers while avoiding our posts to make comments in our threads on this forum spreading your equally loony gospel about your other savior, Aidan Turner. Man, I'd love it if Aidan was an American Democrat running for president against Trump just to see your reaction; I'm sure your heart would leap out of your chest in agony at the thought of having to pick just one of them.

    With no due respect.
  • Posts: 315
    @Mendes4Lyfe Your Grandpa Donald rubs you?

    perfect_creature_meme_ouch_by_juliaboon-d6orv00.jpg
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited July 2016 Posts: 23,883
    Its a shame that a few more of them don't believe in sharia law, then you might be more sympathetic.
    It's not so much of a concern in the US as of now, but the spread of Sharia law in some parts of Europe (particularly in the UK) is troubling to me.

    There is a school of thought, as you know, that it is inherently incompatible with a secular society. Can the two be reconciled? Is a more moderate interpretation of its strictest teachings possible in time? Which takes precedence to a practicing Muslim? These are important questions imho.

    Fortunately, as mentioned, it's not a problem in the US unlike ostensibly in the UK. However, if it becomes more controversial in Europe over the next four years, the spillover impacts to the US will be noted by politicians.
  • Mendes4LyfeMendes4Lyfe The long road ahead
    Posts: 8,451
    Well, lads, one thing to look forward to (the only thing really) is at the very least watching Hillary destroy him in the debates and pummel his many areas of ignorance into a snortable pile of ash. A sect of the public and many media outlets have already treated this entire election as more of a boxing match than a bid for aiding America, and that's exactly what they'll be getting now. Insults will be waved and witch hunts signaled on both sides, network ratings will spike, the people will get their bread and circuses, and it'll feel like the Greek way never left. What a pathetic state we're in.

    Yes, that's right, keep underestimating Trump, that's worked well so far.

    If anything I overestimated the intelligence of a simple minded voting public charmed by a snake oil salesman who they think, for whatever reason, is vastly different in his actions and big mouth than any big Joe Washington type up at Capitol Hill.

    If I have to hear someone on Trump's ticket refer to him as the "people's champion" again, I may just choke on my own upchuck harder than he has choked on that silver spoon of his since the day he was born.

    Its a shame that a few more of them don't believe in sharia law, then you might be more sympathetic.

    Lunacy is what it is whether it comes from someone giving themself up in sacrifice to Allah, another who believes a man in the sky has a special plan for all of us, or a group supporting an orange geriatric as their presidential savior. I wouldn't support objectification, violence, tyranny or any other values expressed in a religious text or world government, as that is beyond imbecilic, yet you act like I and others would do just that to prove some hollow point of yours that I think you've lost the plot of.

    How you see me or anyone else here as a poster boy for Islam is beyond me, as none of us would ever support any kind of behavior that endangers of belittles people in any way (we're anti-Trump, aren't we). We hear stupid and short-sighted proposals and call them out for what they are, whether they involve the suggestion that we need databases for everyone worldwide who follows a specific religion, that a massive wall needs to be built to save us from scary terrorism, when most is coming from within, not without, and more. We respect human beings and believe in an innocent until proven guilty mentality, where nobody is written off out of the gate based on generalizations. What we don't do, however, is isolate and categorize a group of any sort, look at one or two bad eggs amongst them, and use them to represent the character, outlooks and beliefs of the vast majority. To do so is foolish, and disgraces and belittles those of the group that aren't the exceptions of a rule, but that represent an overwhelming majority, dwarfing those who seek to do bad.

    At this point, Trump may as well run with the campaign slogan "Ignorance is Bliss," as he and his followers sure do prove it, waving around the flags of a country many of them seem to have no true concept of, degrading immigrants everywhere when that's how we all got our start in this "great" nation. The only people that truly had ownership of this land from the beginning are the natives, not a bunch of colonialists dead set on conquest, so the sooner everyone on that ticket quits acting like the world is ours and ours alone to shape, the better off we'll all be.

    Our melting pot nation of checks and balances wasn't founded so some jackass could use his daddy's "small loan" of a million dollars to buy his way into prestige and spout his bullshit in front of a public in what has been the most loud and unsophisticated campaign I have seen unfold. And yet some want to support a man who bullies instead of debates with nuance, deflects questions instead of responding to them with knowledge, and generalizes entire peoples at the drop of a hat instead of looking at the facts and treating each person he ridicules for what they are; one of many complex and layered individuals who aren't spoken for by a few bad eggs here and there.

    Trump logic is this:

    1 ISIS bomber practicing radical Islamic beliefs= All Muslims everywhere are terrorists in the making

    1 Mexican rapes a woman while across the border in America= All Mexicans are rapists/murders that need to be pushed out

    But of course this is all coming from a man whose main response to the horrific events in Orlando (committed by a domestic shooter no less) was an I told you so. He must be expressing that hardcore compassion that liberals everywhere are just incapable of relating, if the almighty wisdom of Mendes is to be believed.


    @Mendes4Lyfe, to be as straight up as possible here, as I and others tire of being polite with you, if all your responses to us from onward are going to be nothing but empty-and if I'm perfectly honest-tired old attacks on our character as you use your crystal ball to look into the depths of our souls to who we really are, then you can quite politely let the door hit you on the way out. You add nothing to discussions here when you resort to sharing your leftist conspiracy theories and target people with easy insults, the same ad hominem tactics your Grandpa Donald has been practicing for over a year now. Was it really that easy for his rhetoric to rub off on you?

    If you leave this thread now in peace, imagine all the possibilities and good you could finally do to this community that you've tortured for so long. For one, the majority of the people in this thread sick of hearing you would suddenly feel relaxed and at ease now that a pestering child has gone out of earshot. Number two, I'm sure you have other forums to troll for easy gratification online where you can spread your gospel about your savior, the aforemetioned Grandpa Donald in relative peace, until they kick you out too, of course. And three, you could save up all the time and text characters you'd use up on here trying to call us radical sympathizers while avoiding our posts to make comments in our threads on this forum spreading your equally loony gospel about your other savior, Aidan Turner. Man, I'd love it if Aidan was an American Democrat running for president against Trump just to see your reaction; I'm sure your heart would leap out of your chest in agony at the thought of having to pick just one of them.

    With no due respect.

    Okay, so instead of simply ignoring my posts, you decide to write essay telling me how tiresome am I. You have two opinions here:

    1. Grow a thicker skin and learn how to cope with opposing opinions.

    2. Stop posting and go sit in a safe space somewhere.

    Besides that you're shit out of luck, I'm afraid.
  • Posts: 11,119
    One starts to wonder if a presidential system by definition starts to lean towards dictatorship. Isn't it too much power in one person? Check Putin, Erdogan. Power corrupts in a big way and few, very few can withstand that. tbh the only ones who seem to be unnafected are the Obamas. The Clintons were and you can certainly see this with Hillary. But at least, and that I admit is a tine reassurence, she's used to it having lived in the White House. I fear however for Trump in a big way. Sure most of his doings now have been show, but his ignorance and lack of knowledge make him more of a Caligula then a Marcus Aurelius.

    I think to answer your first question, if a presidential system leans towards dictatorship, you first have to understand the separation of powers (In Latin: The 'Trias Politica': https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Separation_of_powers ). And obviously you know all about it.

    Then you have to understand the variations of 'true' democracies. The UK and the USA more or less have a 'winner takes all' democracy, ruled mostly by two establishment parties. It doesn't matter too much if one is the constitutional monarchy (UK) and the other the republic/presidential system (USA).

    Also you have the more 'direct democracy', like in The Netherlands and Finland. Where every party has a chance to get in the parliament. A 'multy party system', where in the end a coalition of two or more parties need to be formed. Also here it doesn't matter too much if one is a constitutional monarchy (Netherlands) or a republic (Finland).


    The biggest strength of a democracy is also it's biggest flaw: The voter decides. And once a country is enjoying great prosperity and relatively social tranquility, democracy can thrive and mostly chooses more intellectual people to the big office (Prime Minister, Bundeskanzler, President). But that changes if countries are enduring severe dcline of prosperity, a ruthless destruction of the middle class and big social unrest. Then the 'people' will most definetely choose a person who is less 'intellectual' and more 'populist. Then they choose predominantly a 'speaker of the people', and with it all his/her characteristic tendencies (ignorance, lack of knowledge and substance, certain narcist traits)

    The latter is what we see happening in the Western world. From Netherlands to USA, from Greece to the UK, from France to Austria........voters are angry, short-tempered, fail to be patient or look at long-term prospects, are fearful, quite often full of hate.

    That's what's happening now. And then the 'Trias Politica', the 'Separation Of Powers' gets weaker too. Because two of the three branches of power, the legislative power (parliament, congress, senate) and the governing/executive power (president, chancellor, prime minister) are dependent on the will of the people. Whereas the last power, the judiciary power (lower courts, high courts, supreme courts), are not directly chosen by the people.

    And lately, the legislative and executive power seem to be fighting constantly, as if they are in a state of flux because the people are so......radical and unpredictable. So time and time again you get gridlocks, both in a 2-party-system (USA) but also in a multi-party-system (Netherlands) were forming a coalition becomes sheer impossible.

    And then, sooner or loter, the people say 'enough is enough' and then they overwhelmingly give a huge majority to one party in both senate and/or congress. And on top of that they choose a prime minister or president that's from the same party as well. And then, if that prime minister, chancellor or president becomes an unpredictable, unstable, reckless and Caligula-esque element, there is a chance the democracy will be destroyed be the very essence of it.


    By the way......don't think that dictatorships are that stable either. There it's quite simple really. If the dictator can't bring prosperity and welfare either, then eventually they will revolt. In Russia there's relatively social tranquility. Despote the antique state of the Russian economy and financial systems, they are much better than under Soviet rule. Russian citizens have problems there.....but not as big as under Stalin. Then even dictatorships or other autocratic styles can survive as long as democracies. The big difference however is the matter of civil liberties like freedom of press.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    edited July 2016 Posts: 28,694
    @Mendes4Lyfe, I'd be just overjoyed to respond to your golden posts, but the issues are these (we're doing lists now, I see):

    1. You haven't posted anything beyond a small, pointless sentence for a while.

    2. What you do post is either an empty compliment, the equivalent of a "good job" to a person's long researched dissertation or (us academics hate that)...

    3. A sorry attempt at cleverness/intelligence/whatever it is you think you have on someone who doesn't conform to that perfect, anti-lefty dream world of yours, or...

    4. Some conspiracy theory involving liberals and how they're all demon warriors of Satan that attack all that is valued in the world, including to but not limited to kicking sand in the eyes of newborns, strangling senior citizens with their breathing apparatuses, and burning bibles and copies of the Constitution in a fire to roast marshmallows.


    I also have some final advice to share with you that an unwise man person colleague child once told me:

    1. Grow a thicker skin and learn how to cope with opposing opinions.

    2. Stop posting and go sit in a safe space somewhere.


    Besides that you're shit out of luck, I'm afraid.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    People are displeased with the effects of globalization. Only fascist corporations stand to benefit from it, and people are finally beginning to realize it.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    I noticed CNN seemed not to spend as much time on the Trump acceptance speech this morning as they did on Melania's on Tuesday. That tells me something.
  • Posts: 315
    bondjames wrote: »
    I noticed CNN seemed not to spend as much time on the Trump acceptance speech this morning as they did on Melania's on Tuesday. That tells me something.

    34A2EF2000000578-3610965-image-m-25_1464272989378.jpg

  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    That's a decent derrière and those are strong arms too. The plane's not bad either.

    Nice boots.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    edited July 2016 Posts: 28,694
    Wait, what did Republicans say about Michelle's arms? I must have missed this little witch hunt in the past eight years.

    Melania fascinates me. I'm curious how much yearly income she makes having to touch Donald and act his arm candy all hours of the day, and if she will have to write "Property of Donald Trump for XXX years" on her resume when seeking future employment after this ship sinks.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 41,011
    Wait, what did Republicans say about Michelle's arms? I must have missed this little witch hunt in the past eight years.

    Melania fascinates me. I'm curious how much yearly income she makes having to touch Donald and act his arm candy all hours of the day, and if she will have to write "Property of Donald Trump for XXX years" on her resume when seeking future employment after this ship sinks.

    I don't know how much, but I bet you this: it's not enough. It's nowhere near enough.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    Wait, what did Republicans say about Michelle's arms? I must have missed this little witch hunt in the past eight years.

    Melania fascinates me. I'm curious how much yearly income she makes having to touch Donald and act his arm candy all hours of the day, and if she will have to write "Property of Donald Trump for XXX years" on her resume when seeking future employment after this ship sinks.

    I don't know how much, but I bet you this: it's not enough. It's nowhere near enough.

    @Creasy47, it's a good thing she's there, though. Poor Ivanka might have had to fill in otherwise, if Trump really meant that he'd date her (if she wasn't his kid). :-&
This discussion has been closed.