Trump: Illegal Immigrants Released to Sanctuary Cities
cberg wrote:
I'm half Norwegian, exceptionalism concerning any country is racist. Saying one country is better than another is no better than saying one country is worse than any other.
The very essence of people fleeing Central and South American counties to have a better life in the United Sates, is unequivocally stating that the United States is a better country. It's being made very clear that countries in Central and South American are worse countries, than the countries their citizens are wanting to relocate to.
If asked why there isn't a long line of Norwegian citizens seeking to relocate to the US, the answer is going to be not only is Norway a much better country than those in Central and South America so that need doesn't exist, but also that Norway in several ways can be considered a better country than the US.
cberg wrote:
I'm half Norwegian, exceptionalism concerning any country is racist. Saying one country is better than another is no better than saying one country is worse than any other.
So then there's no reason to leave.
_________________
I'm bored out of my skull, let's play a different game. Let's pay a visit down below and cast the world in flame.
EzraS wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
EzraS wrote:
So Norway is a better country than those countries in Central and South America. You make it clear how crappy those countries are and how nice Norway is, yet when Trump says the same thing, he's being racist.
Where did I compare Norway with South America??
You didn't directly. I'm talking about how you and others have described the two individually.
Those who have objected to Trump's alleged s**thole countries statement and his rapists, murderers, bad hombres statements, have gone on to say themselves how those countries are full of rapists, murderers, bad hombres.
There was the objection to Trump extolling Norway as racist, and then you yourself extolled Norway.
You know the drill as you say, you know what I am talking about.
Yeah but I'm not comparing...Trump on the other hand was making a distinction using crude language to denigrate those countries
cyberdad wrote:
EzraS wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
EzraS wrote:
So Norway is a better country than those countries in Central and South America. You make it clear how crappy those countries are and how nice Norway is, yet when Trump says the same thing, he's being racist.
Where did I compare Norway with South America??
You didn't directly. I'm talking about how you and others have described the two individually.
Those who have objected to Trump's alleged s**thole countries statement and his rapists, murderers, bad hombres statements, have gone on to say themselves how those countries are full of rapists, murderers, bad hombres.
There was the objection to Trump extolling Norway as racist, and then you yourself extolled Norway.
You know the drill as you say, you know what I am talking about.
Yeah but I'm not comparing...Trump on the other hand was making a distinction using crude language to denigrate those countries
So when pro illegal immigration people say the migrants need to leave their country because the living conditions there are appalling because of all the corruption and criminals, that's not denigrating those countries? Is it just a matter of semantics?
Drake wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
EzraS wrote:
Is it just a matter of semantics?
So no past president would ever make comments like that about American trading partners - it's highly inflammatory and undiplomatic
It is alleged and Trump denies it.
I find it highly unlikely that past presidents have not said things behind closed doors that they wouldn't want repeated.
Also of course Trump is unlike any past president. He's an elderly hardboiled businessman who had zero experience as a politician who was never politically correct and has always been outspoken.
They complain that he has no filter, but at least everyone knows what he really thinks. Although the press still finds it necessary to make stuff up about him.
cyberdad wrote:
EzraS wrote:
Is it just a matter of semantics?
So no past president would ever make comments like that about American trading partners - it's highly inflammatory and undiplomatic
Undiplomatic towards corrupt incompetent presidents who's citizens want to flee their countries? Maybe they need a US president to be blunt and hard-nosed towards them for a change.
There's nothing wrong with a person being blunt. I just don't like his international policies. He shouldn't have said those things about NATO. And he shouldn't have pulled out of the Paris agreement.
It's like the big bully lording it over everybody. He's making the United States the Big Bully more than other Presidents have done (and yes, we've been a "big bully" for a long time). He's not smart about it. He's too "schoolyard." Like people I grew up with.
cberg wrote:
I'm half Norwegian, exceptionalism concerning any country is racist. Saying one country is better than another is no better than saying one country is worse than any other.
This is an absurd statement.
The average person living in Sierra Leone can expect to live to a ripe old age of 50, makes $340 per year, has a 50-50 shot of being able to read, has no access to the internet, and has less economic freedom than the average person living in Iran.
The average person living in Norway can expect to live to 82, makes $63,000 dollars per year, has known how to read from a young age, has some of the fastest internet access in the world, and has more economic freedom than the average person living in Japan.
Would I be racist for saying it is better to live in Norway than Sierra Leone?
Would I be racist for saying Norway is a better country than Sierra Leone?
_________________
"Ignorance may be bliss, but knowledge is power."
kraftiekortie wrote:
There's nothing wrong with a person being blunt. I just don't like his international policies. He shouldn't have said those things about NATO. And he shouldn't have pulled out of the Paris agreement.
It's like the big bully lording it over everybody. He's making the United States the Big Bully more than other Presidents have done (and yes, we've been a "big bully" for a long time). He's not smart about it. He's too "schoolyard." Like people I grew up with.
It's like the big bully lording it over everybody. He's making the United States the Big Bully more than other Presidents have done (and yes, we've been a "big bully" for a long time). He's not smart about it. He's too "schoolyard." Like people I grew up with.
I'm not saying I approve of his tactics, but I figure why not try to see a potentially positive aspect. I figure it's not going to do me any good to be pissed off all the time. And I never expected him to act like other presidents because he's nothing like any of them background wise. The closest might be Ronald Reagan who was a former actor, but he was also a governor before he became president.
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Trump Is Hell-Bent on ‘Owning the Libs’ by Jonah Goldberg for the National Review
Quote:
President Trump is looking into giving a free trip to San Francisco, New Orleans, or other great American cities to tens of thousands of refugees from Central America. All so he can own the libs.
“Owning the libs” is one of those phrases to have emerged over the past few years that vacillates between earnestness and irony. For people who use it earnestly, it means to do something, usually symbolic and petty, that infuriates liberals out of proportion to the deed to make fools of them. For instance, wearing a MAGA hat to a feminist poetry reading at a co-op bookstore in Berkeley. It’s a form of taking the culture war to the enemy.
The ironic form of the phrase is to engage in unwitting self-sabotage while making a political point. When pro-Trump Internet troll and conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec (now a “correspondent” at One America News) had his wedding rehearsal dinner catered by Papa John’s Pizza — then unpopular with the libs — that was some righteous lib-ownage. Hence one Twitter user’s response to Posobiec catering choices: “Eating horrible pizza at my wedding to own the libs.”
Much of Trump’s populist appeal stems from his willingness to go out of his way to own the libs.
Give the president credit: He is a kind of savant at the genre, particularly in his preferred métier of Twitter. Tweeting footage of the 9/11 attacks while criticizing Representative Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.) last week is a good example, but his Colin Kaepernick tweets and calls to revoke media broadcast licenses are part of the canon. His defenders think this stuff is brilliant because it keeps the base riled up and, allegedly, produces gallons of delicious liberal tears. When you point out that such tweets offend more voters than they attract, “Shut up,” they explain.
Stemming illegal (and sometimes legal) immigration is the president’s signature issue. Moving the thousands of refugees currently in detention to sanctuary cities is literally achieving the opposite of his goal.
Moreover, the reason there’s a refugee crisis at the border is that desperate Central Americans believe this is their now-or-never moment to get asylum in the United States. What will happen when video of buses depositing refugees in Colorado, Vermont, or Oregon is broadcast across South America?
Trump keeps asserting that these refugees are an army of invading murderers, rapists, and drug dealers — and apparently, he thinks most Americans believe him. So of course, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other San Francisco liberals must be terrified that the president has called their bluff.
The thing is, most immigrants who are in the United States illegally end up going to these very localities. Sixty percent of them reside in just 20 metro areas, most of which have adopted sanctuary policies and limited their cooperation with immigration enforcement. In other words, Trump is proposing fulfilling the final leg of the travel plans of every caravan working its way through Mexico.
During the 2016 campaign, Trump made Kate Steinle, the San Francisco woman who was tragically shot and killed by a man who’d been previously deported five times, into a martyr for his cause. Trump’s logic suggests we need more Kate Steinles to own the libs.
Trump’s trolling could pay off if some Democrats — say, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York — call on Pelosi and Congress to take the president up on his offer. Then, Trump could say, “See! The Democrats really do want open borders!”
That such a scenario is not unimaginable is further proof that our politics can always get dumber.
“Owning the libs” is one of those phrases to have emerged over the past few years that vacillates between earnestness and irony. For people who use it earnestly, it means to do something, usually symbolic and petty, that infuriates liberals out of proportion to the deed to make fools of them. For instance, wearing a MAGA hat to a feminist poetry reading at a co-op bookstore in Berkeley. It’s a form of taking the culture war to the enemy.
The ironic form of the phrase is to engage in unwitting self-sabotage while making a political point. When pro-Trump Internet troll and conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec (now a “correspondent” at One America News) had his wedding rehearsal dinner catered by Papa John’s Pizza — then unpopular with the libs — that was some righteous lib-ownage. Hence one Twitter user’s response to Posobiec catering choices: “Eating horrible pizza at my wedding to own the libs.”
Much of Trump’s populist appeal stems from his willingness to go out of his way to own the libs.
Give the president credit: He is a kind of savant at the genre, particularly in his preferred métier of Twitter. Tweeting footage of the 9/11 attacks while criticizing Representative Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.) last week is a good example, but his Colin Kaepernick tweets and calls to revoke media broadcast licenses are part of the canon. His defenders think this stuff is brilliant because it keeps the base riled up and, allegedly, produces gallons of delicious liberal tears. When you point out that such tweets offend more voters than they attract, “Shut up,” they explain.
Stemming illegal (and sometimes legal) immigration is the president’s signature issue. Moving the thousands of refugees currently in detention to sanctuary cities is literally achieving the opposite of his goal.
Moreover, the reason there’s a refugee crisis at the border is that desperate Central Americans believe this is their now-or-never moment to get asylum in the United States. What will happen when video of buses depositing refugees in Colorado, Vermont, or Oregon is broadcast across South America?
Trump keeps asserting that these refugees are an army of invading murderers, rapists, and drug dealers — and apparently, he thinks most Americans believe him. So of course, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other San Francisco liberals must be terrified that the president has called their bluff.
The thing is, most immigrants who are in the United States illegally end up going to these very localities. Sixty percent of them reside in just 20 metro areas, most of which have adopted sanctuary policies and limited their cooperation with immigration enforcement. In other words, Trump is proposing fulfilling the final leg of the travel plans of every caravan working its way through Mexico.
During the 2016 campaign, Trump made Kate Steinle, the San Francisco woman who was tragically shot and killed by a man who’d been previously deported five times, into a martyr for his cause. Trump’s logic suggests we need more Kate Steinles to own the libs.
Trump’s trolling could pay off if some Democrats — say, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York — call on Pelosi and Congress to take the president up on his offer. Then, Trump could say, “See! The Democrats really do want open borders!”
That such a scenario is not unimaginable is further proof that our politics can always get dumber.
Bolding mine
_________________
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DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
It is Autism Acceptance Month
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
kraftiekortie wrote:
There's nothing wrong with a person being blunt. I just don't like his international policies. He shouldn't have said those things about NATO. And he shouldn't have pulled out of the Paris agreement.
It's like the big bully lording it over everybody. He's making the United States the Big Bully more than other Presidents have done (and yes, we've been a "big bully" for a long time). He's not smart about it. He's too "schoolyard." Like people I grew up with.
It's like the big bully lording it over everybody. He's making the United States the Big Bully more than other Presidents have done (and yes, we've been a "big bully" for a long time). He's not smart about it. He's too "schoolyard." Like people I grew up with.
Nation needs to pull their weight instead of using the USA. Now they’re starting to pull their weight. So I see nothing wrong with it.
He’s way better international policies then Obama .
The Paris agreement was a scam that would hurt only the USA while other nations continue to pollute the earth and get richer.
_________________
There is no place for me in the world. I'm going into the wilderness, probably to die
Antrax wrote:
Would I be racist for saying it is better to live in Norway than Sierra Leone?
Would I be racist for saying Norway is a better country than Sierra Leone?
Would I be racist for saying Norway is a better country than Sierra Leone?
But that's not what Trump said...
he said..“Why are we having all these people from s**thole countries come here?” the president said, according to the Post, citing people briefed on the meeting. The Post said Trump was referring to Haiti, El Salvador and African countries.
He was making a qualitative judgement about the people not the country
cyberdad wrote:
Antrax wrote:
Would I be racist for saying it is better to live in Norway than Sierra Leone?
Would I be racist for saying Norway is a better country than Sierra Leone?
Would I be racist for saying Norway is a better country than Sierra Leone?
But that's not what Trump said...
he said..“Why are we having all these people from s**thole countries come here?” the president said, according to the Post, citing people briefed on the meeting. The Post said Trump was referring to Haiti, El Salvador and African countries.
He was making a qualitative judgement about the people not the country
What other than the people would make those places s**tholes?
EzraS wrote:
What other than the people would make those places s**tholes?
Poor management and inertia, or a lack of natural resources. Norway is successful for a lot of reasons, but one of the biggest is that they have a lot of oil relative to their population. North Sea Oil made Norway rich.
The problem is not that the people in Haiti, El Salvador and African countries are somehow "inferior." Many people if transplanted from Haiti, El Salvador, or African countries to the U.S. would learn to live prosperous lives here. The problem is two-fold:
1) Having grown up in third world countries new immigrants lack the necessary knowledge and skills to immediately succeed in a developed country like the U.S. It takes immigrants time to fully adopt the knowledge and skills that make a country they immigrated to successful in the first place.
2) The combined population of Haiti, El Salvador, and Africa is 1.2 billion people. If just 10% wanted to come to the U.S. that would represent a 36% increase in the U.S. population and break every public system we have in place. The U.S. cannot accommodate every person who could have a better life in the U.S.
_________________
"Ignorance may be bliss, but knowledge is power."
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