Bighittz56
Footballguy
"In a debate, in response to a difficult foreign policy question, imagine a politician who answers: "That's a hard question. I don't have enough information at the moment to give you a good answer. I would need to confer with my advisers, study our intelligence -- which I'm currently not privy to -- study the expected outcomes in a number of possible scenarios, and then make a probabilistic assessment of the least bad course of action, cross our fingers, and hope for the best. But it's a difficult situation that probably doesn't have a perfect solution." Then imagine Trump's likely answer about how we're going to forcibly impose peace on the Middle East and make them pay for it, or whatever, and guess who's going to get more support.
There's simply no room in politics for people who are intellectually honest enough to admit their own limitations. Everyone has to pretend to be an expert on everything so often that they stop pretending and start believing it themselves. And that's not going to lead to good decision-making, IMO."
This is a great point, MT, but I don't think Obama qualifies in any way, shape, or form as a politician that operates in this manner.
There's simply no room in politics for people who are intellectually honest enough to admit their own limitations. Everyone has to pretend to be an expert on everything so often that they stop pretending and start believing it themselves. And that's not going to lead to good decision-making, IMO."
This is a great point, MT, but I don't think Obama qualifies in any way, shape, or form as a politician that operates in this manner.
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cool!