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Official Hillary Clinton 2016 thread (3 Viewers)

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Sure but it's only been a couple of days. DWS has resigned and won't be speaking at the convention. Tonight we get Bernie, Liz Warren and Michelle Obama. My hunch is that we won't be talking about this tomorrow. 
The FBI is investigating this and the exact same security risk which existed (exists) with Hillary's server is at issue. This is a big deal.

- eta - As usual I'm hyper-focused here, I agree with FSM's comment below, the political side of this heavy with implications.

 
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Sure but it's only been a couple of days. DWS has resigned and won't be speaking at the convention. Tonight we get Bernie, Liz Warren and Michelle Obama. My hunch is that we won't be talking about this tomorrow. 
Tim - We are going to be talking about this on the day of the election,  when Clinton is begging for support from Bernie supporters because she needs 1% more just remember if she loses she can put her finger here and say that was when it all started to unravel, Not Bengazia, not hidden email servers, not any of the others - this is an affront to all that we as the democratic party stands for fairness and equality.

 
Is it a big deal because a foreign government hacked a secure server regardless of party, or is it a big deal because ya know, "Lock Her Up"?
I'm going to adopt FSM's take here, actually he has the correct answer.

I meant big deal in the sense that the specter of who did this and why and the implications will linger. If it's big enough for the FBI to investigate it's a big deal. (eta - so no, this doesn't have LockHerUp implications, that's not what I meant).

 
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On one hand the FBI routinely investigates security breaches on government agencies servers.  The investigation is about the breach, not about the collusion revealed in the emails.

On the other hand we don't know everything that has leaked and more, potentially more harmful to the Clinton campaign, may be released in the future.  

 
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TobiasFunke said:
Might as well put my flag in the ground on this one now: I just went through the 270towin.com "toss up" map and assigned all those states to one of the candidates with a lean towards Trump based on current polling.  I gave Virginia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Colorado to Clinton based on their demographics and history, and the rest (NH, OH, NC, FL, IA, NV) I gave to Trump.  The result was a tie. 

Does this result seem like a real possibility to anyone else?  Clinton has a clear edge in those four states IMO, and the rest could easily break for Trump if Clinton doesn't get back to her steady 4-5 point lead after the conventions.

That would be total chaos in a normal year- I can't even imagine it with a Trump presidency on the line.
That would be awesome.   What a civics lesson.  

And a heck of a way for Trump to make his way into the WH.

 
TobiasFunke said:
Might as well put my flag in the ground on this one now: I just went through the 270towin.com "toss up" map and assigned all those states to one of the candidates with a lean towards Trump based on current polling.  I gave Virginia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Colorado to Clinton based on their demographics and history, and the rest (NH, OH, NC, FL, IA, NV) I gave to Trump.  The result was a tie. 

Does this result seem like a real possibility to anyone else?  Clinton has a clear edge in those four states IMO, and the rest could easily break for Trump if Clinton doesn't get back to her steady 4-5 point lead after the conventions.

That would be total chaos in a normal year- I can't even imagine it with a Trump presidency on the line.


This is another way it could happen.

But I really don't see WI & CO going for Trump.

I still say Hillary romps with 350+ EVs.

 
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Jesus Christ, she didn't face a firing squad people. She stepping down from the chair of the DNC (now that her work there is done). I'm not exactly a gambler but I'd be willing to bet a gazillion dollars there MIGHT be a place for her in the Hillary administration. And by "might", I mean absofreakinglutely/
Well that didn't take long.

 
I was wrong: Trump WILL be the next president by Jake Novak CNBC

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/01/

Trump’s not Hitler, he’s Mussolini: How GOP anti-intellectualism created a modern fascist movement in America


Fascism is about the most powerful epithet one can use -- but it fits with Donald Trump. A historian explains why


http://www.salon.com/2016/03/11/trumps_not_hitler_hes_mussolini_how_gop_anti_intellectualism_created_a_modern_fascist_movement_in_america/
Lawd hah merci.

I expect this kind of drivel from posters like Squiz and that guy on steroids. From a mod though? 

:lmao:

Salon

:lmao: :lmao:

I still love your contributions in the music threads. 

If you are mocking the Hillbots and it went over my head forgive me, I've been locked up in the joint for 3 months and my sarcasm meter is a little rusty. 

 
There's no way she's "easily confused". Anybody who watched her give 8 hours of testimony to the Benghazi committee knows she answered question after question with great detail. I can't recall another person I have watched with such knowledge at their fingertips. Whatever those emails actually revealed, the interpretation is bogus. 

 
Technically she answers the phone.... just an hour and a half after it rings. And someone else may technically answer it. Annnnnnd if it's secure call she may need to take it on her private blackberry. ... Actually on second thought call Huma, it's quicker.

 
There's no way she's "easily confused". Anybody who watched her give 8 hours of testimony to the Benghazi committee knows she answered question after question with great detail. I can't recall another person I have watched with such knowledge at their fingertips. Whatever those emails actually revealed, the interpretation is bogus. 
Huma says so in an email and you say it's a lie, ok. Woman can't turn on a computer.

 
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Lawd hah merci.

I expect this kind of drivel from posters like Squiz and that guy on steroids. From a mod though? 

:lmao:

Salon

:lmao: :lmao:

I still love your contributions in the music threads. 

If you are mocking the Hillbots and it went over my head forgive me, I've been locked up in the joint for 3 months and my sarcasm meter is a little rusty. 
Let me get this right - you're dismissing the opinion of the pre-eminent historian on fascism because of the website it was published on?

Also, Paxton didn't call Trump a fascist, he said Trump uses the rhetoric of fascism.

 
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1. Founded in 2008 by George Soros and Hillary Clinton’s campaign director John Pedestal.  Must be good.

2. Timmy doesn't care about Jews dying as long as you don't make a Hitler joke.

3. Timmy supported the Iran deal which most Isrealis were against. 

4. Zeus is going to smite 8 supreme court justices so we must vote Hillary.

5. NATO is the most important issue in this election bar none.

6. Everything's OK if it doesn't interfere with his cheap labor picking his veggies or indentured servants making his 4k Ultra HD TVs so he can flap to Hillary.

 
Without all the help from the DNC and the media, Hillary likely gets seriously damaged in the primaries.  Remember it was also the DNC that limited the debates this cycle (8 I believe) against the high 20s in the 2008 cycle.  The DNC knew Hillary could be badly exposed in these debates.  I think in the end they have just kicked the can a bit to the general election.  I doubt this leak is the only thing to come out.  Bloomberg reported that the Clinton Foundation email server was also compromised. I am pretty certain this story will be gaining momentum from now until the election.
You might be right. ONe of the scariest things to me though is: Who exactly is holding onto the info, and releasing it in this way?

I mean: If there's information out there that will bury Clinton, it should have been released already. Holding it until October (as one poster stated is planned) is treason IMO. It's deliberate sabotage of the election process. Releasing daming information as soon as it becomes known is not.

Can you imagine the outcry if CLinton were to be arrested in October? Then what kind of damage if it leads to a virtually un-opposed victory for trump...followed a few months later with new information that the folks who held that daming information all the time were conservative hacks determined to ensure the republicans win?

The whole thing has me so uneasy, and it should have everyone at that convention uneasy. Far better to denounce her now and ask Bernie to run in November

 
Lawd hah merci.

I expect this kind of drivel from posters like Squiz and that guy on steroids. From a mod though? 

:lmao:

Salon

:lmao: :lmao:

I still love your contributions in the music threads. 

If you are mocking the Hillbots and it went over my head forgive me, I've been locked up in the joint for 3 months and my sarcasm meter is a little rusty. 
Was their something specific in the article you disagreed with, or did you not read it because it was in Salon? 

It is somewhat ironic that you are questioning the superficiality of the article based purely on source and via a dismissive emoji critique/rebuttal. Point taken that not too many policy wonks like Jurgen Habermas* use Salon as a vehicle to disseminate their more high brow ideas. :)  

Thanks for the music thread nod. No, the post was intended un-ironically. For a while, I have become increasingly disturbed by some of the seeming parallels that the article alluded to. It can't have completely escaped your attention that NUMEROUS publications other than Salon have noted some of these parallels, and have been for quite some time (other articles including from The Washington Post and New York Times appended below). Personally, when I think of Fascism, I think of (among many other things) a strong anti-intellectual bent. Maybe his actual cognitive skills are different than what he reveals in debates, and that is just for show and a performance, as it were. But on the surface, let's just say all the myriad kindergarten level attacks on other candidates (that guy is a dum dum head!) which made the President in Idiocracy look like Abraham Lincoln in comparison were less than reassuring to me that he has what it takes to run the country and be the commander in chief. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a Clinton apologist, my stance is more coming from a lesser of two evils position. More than anything else, I'm deeply concerned that someone with the seeming attention span of a gnat and so monstrously self-absorbed is going to have control of the nuclear football codes. Literally the instant Trump looked like his campaign might have some legs and staying power, the first thing I thought of was Martin Sheen in The Dead Zone. Again, just to be clear, because I have made jokes about Trump (the coherence, cohesiveness, lucidity and intelligibility of his constellation of jumbled sound bytes and talking points is about as thin as the fake tan orange paint on his face), this is intended un-ironically.

Serious question - were you in the least bit alarmed, did it give you even a moment's pause, that Trump was slow to distance himself from, let alone denounce (if he even ever did?) public, vocal support from a high profile white supremacist with ties to the KKK? Was he just being cute or coy, or is he really that ignorant ("I don't know who that person is.")? Either way, it is a pretty harsh self-inflicted indictment of his gross incompetence and absolute, complete and utter dereliction of duty to fail to disavow even a hint of those kinds of reprehensible racist associations/overtures.

The Salon article seemed to be citing another in Slate interviewing a historian of fascism, Robert Paxton. This may be it:


1) Is Donald Trump a Fascist?



Yes and no. 2/10/16


 http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/interrogation/2016/02/is_donald_trump_a_fascist_an_expert_on_fascism_weighs_in.html  

"Donald Trump’s overwhelming victory in Tuesday night’s New Hampshire primary makes him, according to both betting markets and many analysts, the favorite to win the Republican nomination. Trump has been written off as an entertainer and circus clown, but he has been tagged with another, much more serious label: fascist. Trump’s campaign has stirred bigoted feelings in the electorate and played to voters’ worst fears and prejudices. And so far, it’s working. Two-thirds of New Hampshire Republicans, according to exit polls, favored Trump’s ban on Muslim immigration.   

To discuss Trump’s rise and its historical echoes, I called Robert Paxton, a leading authority on the history of fascism. A regular contributor to the New York Review of Books and an expert on Vichy France, Paxton has written numerous books on European history. We discussed the ways in which Trump is and is not a fascist, whether Trump believes what he says, and why now, of all times, so many Americans seem to be embracing him. The conversation has been edited and condensed.


Isaac Chotiner: As a historian of fascism, what do you make of Trump’s rise?


Robert Paxton: Well, it’s astonishing and depressing because he’s totally foreign to any of the skills that are wanted in a president of the United States. What we call him is another matter. There are certainly some echoes of fascism, but there are also very profound differences.
Start with the echoes.
First of all, let me preface it by saying that I’m very, very reluctant to use the word fascism loosely, because it’s almost the most powerful epithet you can use. I guess child molester might be a little more powerful but not much.

Nazi maybe, but that’s just a version of fascism.


It’s the same thing. It’s enormously tempting. Anyway, the echoes you can deal with on two levels. First of all, there are the kinds of themes Trump uses. The use of ethnic stereotypes and exploitation of fear of foreigners is directly out of a fascist’s recipe book. “Making the country great again” sounds exactly like the fascist movements. Concern about national decline, that was one of the most prominent emotional states evoked in fascist discourse, and Trump is using that full-blast, quite illegitimately, because the country isn’t in serious decline, but he’s able to persuade them that it is. That is a fascist stroke. An aggressive foreign policy to arrest the supposed decline. That’s another one. Then, there’s a second level, which is a level of style and technique. He even looks like Mussolini in the way he sticks his lower jaw out, and also the bluster, the skill at sensing the mood of the crowd, the skillful use of media.
I read an absolutely astonishing account of Trump arriving for a political speech, somewhere out West I think, and his audience was gathered in an airplane hangar, and he landed his plane at the field and taxied up to the hangar and got out. That is exactly what they did in 1932 for Hitler’s first election victory. No one had ever seen a candidate arrive by plane before; it was absolutely dazzling, the impression given, the decisiveness of power, of authority, of modernity. I suppose it was accidental, but wow, that is an almost letter-perfect replay of a Hitler election tactic. And the capacity of Trump to enlist working-class voters against the left is exactly what Hitler and Mussolini were able to do. There are definitely echoes.
Do you think that Trump is consciously using fascist tropes, or do you think that he’s just sort of stumbled into this?

I doubt it’s conscious. I don’t think he’s a bookish man. I’m sure he’s never read a book about Hitler or Mussolini.


He’ll read your books after this interview.
Perhaps.
When people like you and me watch Trump, I think we tend to assume he is a bull####ter who doesn’t have deeply held positions and is acting to a degree.

Yeah.


 
I think a lot of people would say, Well, Hitler and Mussolini, they believed what they were doing. Fascists generally believe what they’re doing. In fascism, do you think that there was more bull#### and politicking than people assume?
Totally. One of the reasons I wrote my book was that I was so tired of people interpreting fascism as the application of a program. When you read Hitler’s program, his 21 points, when the party was founded in 1920, and when you read Mussolini’s first program in 1919, it had very little to do with what they eventually did. Mussolini, particularly, came from the left, and his first program included things like the vote for women, the abolition of a monarchy. It was more his style than the details of the program. The details of the program were constantly changing. They say whatever seems to suit the mood of the moment. Mein Kampf is taken as a model that [Hitler] carried out—well, in Mein Kampf, he wants to make peace with the British. They are full of inconsistencies, they were very opportunistic, totally opportunistic, and there was a high degree of change in their programs.
Tell me the ways in which you think Trump is not fascist.

I think there are some powerful differences. To start with, in the area of programs, the fascists offer themselves as a remedy for aggressive individualism, which they believed was the source of the defeat of Germany in World War I, and the decline of Italy, the failure of Italy. World War I, the perceived national decline, they blamed on individualism and their solution was to subject the individual to the interests of the community. Trump, and the Republicans generally, and indeed a great swath of American society have celebrated individualism to the absolute total extreme. Trump’s idea and the Republican plan is to lift the burden of regulation from businesses.


That’s fascinating. Anything else?
The other differences are the circumstances in which we live. Germany had been defeated catastrophically in war. Following which was the depression, which was almost as bad in Germany as it was here. Italy was on the brink of civil war in 1919. There were massive occupations of land by frustrated peasants. The actual problems those countries addressed have no parallel to today. We have serious problems, but there’s no objective conditions that come anywhere near the seriousness of what those countries were facing. There was a groundswell of reaction against the existing constitutions and existing regimes. That’s trumped up here; accidental pun, sorry.
Do you think there’s something about this moment in America that makes the country vulnerable to someone like Trump? Because as you noted, it’s hard to say that America is really in a horrible place.
No, this country has the strongest economy in the world and is still the strongest military power in the world without any close rival. The trends The trends are not downward unless you were offended by the presence of a black man in the White House.


There are only millions of Americans that fit into that category.
I’m afraid so. The argument is very clear. Like the argument of Hitler and Mussolini that the existing government is weak, and therefore, we must have a government that is appropriate to the grandeur of America. The portrayal of Obama as weak, which is astonishing considering the degree to which Obama has used military power.
Nevertheless, a lot of people are left behind in the recovery. Poorly educated white males are left behind, and the country is not better for them, and there are enough of those people to make a huge difference. I don’t think there are enough of those people to elect a president, but they can make a powerful movement.
Again, I’m obviously not comparing Trump to Hitler as a person, but watching the “moderate” Republicans tear each other apart over the last few weeks and then split the vote five ways in New Hampshire last night, I thought of the 1932 election in Germany, with everyone kind of thinking, depending on their interests, that there were bigger threats than Hitler and not focusing on him until it was too late.

Yes, absolutely. It was a conscious choice in both countries to consider the socialists and the communists a much greater threat than the Nazis and fascists, and there was a conscious decision by the conservatives who were still holding the machinery of power to bring the fascists and the Nazis into the system in order to better fight the left. That particular dynamic is of course completely absent now. There was a conscious choice in Germany at the end of 1932 to use Hitler’s mass following to smash social democracy in Germany. The same strategic [choice] was made in Italy. I don’t see any of that dynamic. The old guard is against Trump. They’re not trying to use him, although, they may shift, they may decide that if Trump continues to be successful that he could be useful."


2) This is how fascism comes to America The Washington Post 5/18/16


Robert Kagan is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a contributing columnist for The Post.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/this-is-how-fascism-comes-to-america/2016/05/17/c4e32c58-1c47-11e6-8c7b-6931e66333e7_story.html

"What he offers is an attitude, an aura of crude strength and machismo, a boasting disrespect for the niceties of the democratic culture that he claims, and his followers believe, has produced national weakness and incompetence. His incoherent and contradictory utterances have one thing in common: They provoke and play on feelings of resentment and disdain, intermingled with bits of fear, hatred and anger. His public discourse consists of attacking or ridiculing a wide range of “others” — Muslims, Hispanics, women, Chinese, Mexicans, Europeans, Arabs, immigrants, refugees — whom he depicts either as threats or as objects of derision. His program, such as it is, consists chiefly of promises to get tough with foreigners and people of nonwhite complexion. He will deport them, bar them, get them to knuckle under, make them pay up or make them shut up."

"Republican politicians marvel at how he has “tapped into” a hitherto unknown swath of the voting public. But what he has tapped into is what the founders most feared when they established the democratic republic: the popular passions unleashed, the “mobocracy.” Conservatives have been warning for decades about government suffocating liberty. But here is the other threat to liberty that Alexis de Tocqueville and the ancient philosophers warned about: that the people in a democracy, excited, angry and unconstrained, might run roughshod over even the institutions created to preserve their freedoms. As Alexander Hamilton watched the French Revolution unfold, he feared in America what he saw play out in France — that the unleashing of popular passions would lead not to greater democracy but to the arrival of a tyrant, riding to power on the shoulders of the people.

This phenomenon has arisen in other democratic and quasi-democratic countries over the past century, and it has generally been called “fascism.” Fascist movements, too, had no coherent ideology, no clear set of prescriptions for what ailed society. “National socialism” was a bundle of contradictions, united chiefly by what, and who, it opposed; fascism in Italy was anti-liberal, anti-democratic, anti-Marxist, anti-capitalist and anti-clerical. Successful fascism was not about policies but about the strongman, the leader (Il Duce, Der Führer), in whom could be entrusted the fate of the nation. Whatever the problem, he could fix it. Whatever the threat, internal or external, he could vanquish it, and it was unnecessary for him to explain how. Today, there is Putinism, which also has nothing to do with belief or policy but is about the tough man who single-handedly defends his people against all threats, foreign and domestic."

3) Rise of Donald Trump Tracks Growing Debate Over Global Fascism The New York Times 5/28/16 (many quotes, examples and instances other than what I have highlighted from the below article take pains to make distinctions between the Trump juggernaut/phenomenon and how historians commonly define fascism - I would at least characterize it as suggestive of more nuance than Trump's typical, "He's a dummy head." refrains. :)  

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/29/world/europe/rise-of-donald-trump-tracks-growing-debate-over-global-fascism.html?_r=0

"Fascist comparisons are not new in American politics. A Google search of “Barack Obama and Nazi” or “George W. Bush and Nazi” produces many images of the last two presidents as swastika-waving fascists. But with Mr. Trump, such comparisons have gone beyond the fringe and entered mainstream conversation both in the United States and abroad.



President Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico criticized Mr. Trump’s plans to build a wall on the border and to bar Muslims from entering the United States. “That’s the way Mussolini arrived and the way Hitler arrived,” he said. The actor George Clooney called Mr. Trump “a xenophobic fascist.” Louis C. K., the comic, said, “The guy is Hitler.” Eva Schloss, the 87-year-old stepsister of Anne Frank, said Trump “is acting like another Hitler by inciting racism.” It got to the point that his wife, Melania Trump, was prompted to say, “He’s not Hitler.”


Mr. Trump has provided plenty of ammunition for critics. He was slow to denounce the white supremacist David Duke and talked approvingly of beating up protesters. He has praised Mr. Putin and promised to be friends. He would not condemn supporters who launched anti-Semitic blasts at journalists. At one point, Mr. Trump retweeted a Mussolini quote: “It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep.”
 
Asked by Chuck Todd on the NBC program “Meet the Press” about the retweet, Mr. Trump brushed off the quote’s origin. “I know who said it,” he said. “But what difference does it make whether it’s Mussolini or somebody else?”
“Do you want to be associated with a fascist?” Mr. Todd asked.

“No,” Mr. Trump answered, “I want to be associated with interesting quotes.” He added: “And certainly, hey, it got your attention, didn’t it?” 

4) Germany confronts it's history 5/11/15, quotes the last work of Ernst Cassirer (a towering intellectual figure in the first half of the 20th century, best exemplified by the three volumes of The Philosophy Of Symbolic Forms and the one volume popularization Essay On Man, which reveals how man's increasingly sophisticated use of symbol systems to better understand himself and his place in the universe [[from the cave paintings of Lascaux through Socrates/Plato to Einstein]] is somewhat akin to the characters in a relief by the modern sculptor Rodin of "The Thinker" fame struggling to emerge from their underlying statuary matrix and material substratum) before his death, The Myth of the State, written in the wake of the then-recent Nazi abomination and tragedy, about how the State, as much as we would like to think so in a given generation, is never a given for perpetuity, and the protection of it's principles must constantly be renewed by a COLLECTIVE appreciation and understanding of how delicate and precarious it's stability is, and how easily the powerful forces of unleashed irrationality can dismantle it.     

http://blog.camera.org/archives/2015/05/germany_confronts_its_history_1.html

The past week witnessed commemorations of the defeat of Nazi Germany 70 years ago. The German legislature, the Bundestag, featured an address by eminent historian, professor doctor Heinrich August Winkler, Chairman of the Department of History at Humboldt University in Berlin. Winkler pulled no punches in his sweeping assessment of German responsibility for the cataclysmic war. But equally important his measured words are a warning to all generations.

Quoting philosopher Ernst Cassirer, Winkler describes Hitler's political ascendance as the "triumph of myth over reason." Viewing the xenophobia and outbreak of anti-Semitism in the world today, Winkler concludes, "Cassirer's words still have relevance today." He warns,


"In politics we are always living on volcanic soil. You must be prepared for abrupt convulsions and eruptions. In those critical moments of man's social life, the directions of forces that resist the rise of old mythical conceptions are no longer sure of themselves. In these moments the time for myths has come again. The myth never really disappeared... lurking in the dark, waiting for its hour... this hour comes as soon as the other binding forces of man's social life... lose their sense and are no longer able to combat the demonic, mythical power."



* Jurgen Habermas



http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/habermas/



 
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I was wrong: Trump WILL be the next president by Jake Novak CNBC

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/01/

Trump’s not Hitler, he’s Mussolini: How GOP anti-intellectualism created a modern fascist movement in America


Fascism is about the most powerful epithet one can use -- but it fits with Donald Trump. A historian explains why


http://www.salon.com/2016/03/11/trumps_not_hitler_hes_mussolini_how_gop_anti_intellectualism_created_a_modern_fascist_movement_in_america/
Omg omg a fascist. Government who w rks hand in hand with corporations.

Hell if this fascist gets elected he will probably make a law where you have to buy one of those corporations products.

We will not stand for this in America!

 
You might be right. ONe of the scariest things to me though is: Who exactly is holding onto the info, and releasing it in this way?

I mean: If there's information out there that will bury Clinton, it should have been released already. Holding it until October (as one poster stated is planned) is treason IMO. It's deliberate sabotage of the election process. Releasing daming information as soon as it becomes known is not.

Can you imagine the outcry if CLinton were to be arrested in October? Then what kind of damage if it leads to a virtually un-opposed victory for trump...followed a few months later with new information that the folks who held that daming information all the time were conservative hacks determined to ensure the republicans win?

The whole thing has me so uneasy, and it should have everyone at that convention uneasy. Far better to denounce her now and ask Bernie to run in November
Not treason.

 
Omg omg a fascist. Government who w rks hand in hand with corporations.

Hell if this fascist gets elected he will probably make a law where you have to buy one of those corporations products.

We will not stand for this in America!
'Corporatism' is a word that gets thrown around a lot but yeah actually this is it an entirely bad point IMO.

 
Omg omg a fascist. Government who w rks hand in hand with corporations.

Hell if this fascist gets elected he will probably make a law where you have to buy one of those corporations products.

We will not stand for this in America!
Maybe we can stop truncheon and jackboot manufacturing from being outsourced to China?

Beating implements FOR Americans, BY Americans!

 
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I was wrong: Trump WILL be the next president by Jake Novak CNBC

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/01/

Trump’s not Hitler, he’s Mussolini: How GOP anti-intellectualism created a modern fascist movement in America


Fascism is about the most powerful epithet one can use -- but it fits with Donald Trump. A historian explains why


http://www.salon.com/2016/03/11/trumps_not_hitler_hes_mussolini_how_gop_anti_intellectualism_created_a_modern_fascist_movement_in_america/
I have to tell you I'm really interested in this aspect of things. I'm not so sure others are. I'd say it belongs in the Trump thread but when it was raised there a few months things were so irrational and so heated there were bannings and locks. I think some of that has calmed down.

If you're interested in this you should look at Umberto Eco's piece on proto fascism from maybe the 90s, it was directed at Berlusconi but I think it really is quintessential because Eco was there for both eras.

I agree with the conclusions here, Trump's not fascist but he does use certain methods which are reminiscent. I think Franco and Peron and even Chavez are relevant too. All fascism is populist but not all populism is fascist. Having said that, I think if Leni Riefenstahl was around she'd be Trump's videographer, assuming the cheapskate would shell out for her. Trump's latest ad is a good example, people cheering and applauding. Seems vacuous? No that's the point.

eta - I disagree that Trump wins though, it's worth remembering Hitler got just 33% of the vote.

 
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One important point about fascism though - it absolutely requires a vacuum to rise. If people are worried about fascistic tendencies and trends, I'd say look first at the environment in which government is so mistrusted and the *choice made by the DNC to run a nominee who is a walking, talking billboard for government misfeasance, malfeasance and popular distrust. The DNC runs a candidate with a trust/honesty rating under 30 and people ask well gosh why is this guy railing about things being rigged and lying leaders getting so much traction. 

 
Bob, thanks for replying, and for not banning me for questioning the PC/liberal narrative. 

I'm off to sleep now, but I'll read and respond later. I am interested to see your thoughts on the topic. 

 
I have to tell you I'm really interested in this aspect of things. I'm not so sure others are. I'd say it belongs in the Trump thread but when it was raised there a few months things were so irrational and so heated there were bannings and locks. I think some of that has calmed down.

If you're interested in this you should look at Umberto Eco's piece on proto fascism from maybe the 90s, it was directed at Berlusconi but I think it really is quintessential because Eco was there for both eras.

I agree with the conclusions here, Trump's not fascist but he does use certain methods which are reminiscent. I think Franco and Peron and even Chavez are relevant too. All fascism is populist but not all populism is fascist. Having said that, I think if Leni Riefenstahl was around she'd be Trump's videographer, assuming the cheapskate would shell out for her. Trump's latest ad is a good example, people cheering and applauding. Seems vacuous? No that's the point.

eta - I disagree that Trump wins though, it's worth remembering Hitler got just 33% of the vote.
Sorry for the redundant formatting.

Likewise, yeah, I wasn't sure where to post this, but figured it would be less of a pitchfork and torch magnet in here. :)  Thanks for the rec, the only Eco I have is the novel Foucault's Pendulum. I highly recommend the aforementioned Myth of the State by Cassirer (though not exactly casual summer reading).

Like you, I find the parallels can be suggestive, but it would be a disservice to understanding (if only to better refute them) to take them too literally. The above NYTimes article linked again below makes this point several ways (I did find it instructive that the mural heading the article comes from Lithuania and not the US).    

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/29/world/europe/rise-of-donald-trump-tracks-growing-debate-over-global-fascism.html?_r=0

"...Mr. Paxton, the fascism scholar, said he saw similarities and differences in Mr. Trump. His message about an America in decline and his us-against-them pronouncements about immigrants and outsiders echo Europe in the 1930s, Mr. Paxton said. On the other hand, he said, Mr. Trump has hardly created uniformed, violent youth groups. Moreover, fascists believe in strong state control, not get-government-off-your-back individualism and deregulation.


Others caution against comparisons. “I read Kagan’s piece, of course,” said Volker Perthes, the director of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, in Berlin. “All the phenomena he describes are raising concerns, but I would still not call Trump or his campaign fascist. Maybe with German and European history in mind, we are a bit more cautious than others in using the label ‘fascism.’”


Mr. Perthes said real fascism requires two more elements — an outright rejection of democracy and a harsher definition of order. Jobbik, the ultraright party in Hungary, would fall into this category, he said, but Norbert Hofer, the far-right candidate who narrowly lost the Austrian presidential vote, and Mr. Trump would not.
 
Charles Grant, the director of the Center for European Reform, in London, distinguished between far-right nationalist parties like Marine Le Pen’s National Front in France and actual fascism.
 
“Historically, it means the demonization of minorities within a society to the extent that they feel insecure,” he said. “It means encouraging the use of violence against critics. It means a bellicose foreign policy that may lead to war, to excite a nationalist feeling. It takes xenophobia to extremes. And it is contemptuous of a rules-based liberal order.”
 
The debate about terminology may ignore the seriousness of the conditions that gave rise to Mr. Trump and his European counterparts. The New York real estate developer has tapped into a deep discontent in a country where many feel left behind while Wall Street banks get bailouts, newcomers take jobs, terrorists threaten innocents and China rises economically at America’s expense.
 
“It seems to me in developed and semideveloped countries there is emerging a new kind of politics for which maybe the best taxonomic category would be right-wing populist nationalism,” said Stanley Payne, a professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “We are seeing a new kind of phenomenon which is different from what you had” in the 20th century.
Roger Eatwell, a professor at the University of Bath, in England, calls it “illiberal democracy,” a form of government that keeps the trappings of democracy without the reality.

“Elections are seen as important to legitimizing regimes,” he said, but instead of imposing one-party rule, as in the past, today’s authoritarians “use a variety of devices to control and/or manipulate the media, intimidate opponents” and so on.

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Either way, it has found pockets of support on both sides of the Atlantic. Lilia Shevtsova, a political analyst in Moscow, said neo-fascism in liberal societies in the West stems from crisis or dysfunction while in illiberal countries like Russia and Turkey it reflects an attempt to fill the void left by the failure of Western notions to catch on.


The problem, she added, is that “the Western political leadership at the moment is too weak to fight the tide.”

* If Leni Riefenstahl was still around, would the 2.0 Trump version be called Triumph of the Ego (or the Dollar, or perhaps most apt and fitting, the Donald)? :)  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r496UPraKvk

I'm just appalled by the combo of vapid, inane jargon ("We need brain!") with mechanical, reflexive self-aggrandizement ("I know words, I have the best words!"). Supposedly he has been pegged as speaking with a fourth grade vocabulary, but that seems generous. I'm probably painting this too simplistically, but FOR ME it is scary to think of someone with the stock response to any criticism with the equivalent of "He's a dummy head!" to have his finger on the nuclear button. But maybe that's just me.

 
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If she actually came out and said these things I'd probably be working for her campaign.  

Language in this article is very NSFW
This is one of those imaginings where a supporter pretends Hillary is something she's not? Tim might have written this piece a hundred times in this thread himself.

Right at the top about the cookies - Jerry Brown questioned Hillary's role in whitewater, where she represented a bank seeking an illegal loan in front of regulators appointed by her husband. And the bank got that loan and ultimately failed. Hillary's response? Jerry Brown is a mysoginist. And that's pretty much been Hillary's career.

 
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Hillary giving Debbie a job on her campaign, on the same day she disgracefully steps down, has to be one of the most stupid things I have ever witnessed in politics. 

 
Hillary giving Debbie a job on her campaign, on the same day she disgracefully steps down, has to be one of the most stupid things I have ever witnessed in politics. 
Hillary's sycophants don't care.  They never care.  She could murder a child in broad daylight and they wouldn't care.

 
One important point about fascism though - it absolutely requires a vacuum to rise. If people are worried about fascistic tendencies and trends, I'd say look first at the environment in which government is so mistrusted and the *choice made by the DNC to run a nominee who is a walking, talking billboard for government misfeasance, malfeasance and popular distrust. The DNC runs a candidate with a trust/honesty rating under 30 and people ask well gosh why is this guy railing about things being rigged and lying leaders getting so much traction. 
Good point. One of the most frightening aspects of the Trump phenomena (and attendant xenophobia, when imo what is needed is more of a grasp of systemic, global forces and not narrowly insular parochialism and provincialism) is that he has clearly found an audience and appetite for which this sort of bully pulpit scare tactics resonates profoundly. Perhaps much like Peter Finch did in Network (but with more ominous motivations and potential repercussions).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WINDtlPXmmE

Also reminds me a bit of Peter Sellers in Being There (being educated solely by TV must have some deeper symbolism for the latter 20th century and millennial generation communication theorist Marshall McLuhan alluded to), IF he was a loudly aggressive narcissist

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYeVQzTVyLk

But you are right. From my perspective, if others vote for the admittedly slick Clinton machine, it represents a vote AGAINST the dangerously buffoonish alternative. And for a lot of people, a vote for Trump is a vote AGAINST Clinton. Perhaps it is always this way - a vote for the democrat is usually and generally as much a vote AGAINST the republican candidate as anything else (though that might be diminishing an increasing centrist/independent strain in US politics fed up with extremism and the impotence of recent partisan apparatus and mechanics to compromise or come together to solve problems deeper, more critical and universal than can be addressed by a divided body politic), but it seems more pronounced this time. And in a campaign largely void of principles but mainly negative (I mean, more than business as usual for politics), what else could we expect but a cult of personality expression and manifestation of this lowest common denominator.    

* Does anybody think he really wants to help the country? Is this just a grand scheme to raise ratings for the Celebrity Apprentice franchise and prospective Politician-based spinoff series?    

 
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Not treason.
BY definition? Maybe not.

But to intentionally sabotage a presidential election by intentionally with-holding information?

Yeah...sorry...might not be treason by definition but I'd call that low life and treasonous. If they have the info it should have already been shared, regardless of political bent

 
Good point. One of the most frightening aspects of the Trump phenomena (and attendant xenophobia, when imo what is needed is more of a grasp of systemic, global forces and not narrowly insular parochialism and provincialism) is that he has clearly found an audience and appetite for this sort of thing. Perhaps much like Peter Finch did in Network (but with more ominous motivations and potential repercussions).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WINDtlPXmmE

Also reminds me a bit of Peter Sellers in Being There (being educated solely by TV must have some deeper symbolism for the latter 20th century and millennial generation communication theorist Marshall McLuhan alluded to), IF he was a loudly aggressive narcissist

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYeVQzTVyLk

But you are right. From my perspective, if others vote for the admittedly slick Clinton machine, it represents a vote AGAINST the dangerously buffoonish alternative. And for a lot of people, a vote for Trump is a vote AGAINST Clinton. Perhaps it is always this way - a vote for the democrat is usually and generally as much a vote AGAINST the republican candidate as anything else (though that might be diminishing an increasing centrist/independent strain in US politics fed up with extremism and the impotence of recent partisan apparatus and mechanics to compromise or come together to solve problems deeper, more critical and universal than can be addressed by a divided body politic), but it seems more pronounced this time. And in a campaign largely void of principles but mainly negative (I mean, more than business as usual for politics), what else could we expect but a cult of personality expression and manifestation of this lowest common denominator.    

* Does anybody think he really wants to help the country? Is this just a grand scheme to raise ratings for the Celebrity Apprentice franchise and prospective Politician-based spinoff series?    
I think he wants to help the country more than Clinton.  I think Bernie wanted to help the country far more than both of them combined.

 
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