I missed the brilliance of this.






Moderator: Dux
That's a copy of Obama's Kenyan birth certificate.bennyonesix wrote: ↑Fri Oct 20, 2017 4:03 am You cunts know he has a laminated copy of some 50 year old IQ test waiting, right?
Turdacious wrote: ↑Sat Jul 29, 2017 12:48 pm Former Chief of the same PD that the POTUS spoke to the other day.http://www.nbcnewyork.com/investigation ... 85864.htmlJames Burke, the disgraced Suffolk County police chief sentenced to prison after being convicted of orchestrating a department cover-up, was released from solitary confinement, where he was placed about two weeks ago after Oxycodone pills were found in his prison cell, sources tell News 4.
Burke was in solitary confinement for the past 16 days, the sources said. During that time he was only allowed to leave his cell one hour a day.
Burke is serving a 46-month sentence after he was convicted last year in the beating of a handcuffed man who stole embarrassing items from the chief's SUV [...]
Burke was convicted in February 2016 of orchestrating a department cover-up after beating a handcuffed man for stealing embarrassing items from his SUV. He pummeled the heroin addict who had taken his gun belt, ammunition, a box of cigars and a bag containing sex toys and pornography, prosecutors said.
Thou shalt not steal the police chief's bag full of dicks.
http://nypost.com/2017/10/26/da-resigns ... n-coverup/Suffolk County DA Thomas Spota announced Thursday that he is retiring — just a day after pleading not guilty in a police-brutality coverup involving a former top cop’s stolen sex toys and porn stash [...]
In December 2012, the police chief’s car was broken into and the bag stolen by Christopher Loeb, a petty thief with a $100-a-day heroin habit, according to federal prosecutors. Loeb was arrested, shackled to a precinct-house floor and interrogated personally by the police chief, a Spota protege. During the interrogation, Loeb taunted the police chief in front of other detectives, citing the duffel bag contents and calling him a “pervert.” Burke “went out of control,” prosecutors said, savagely beating the shackled prisoner and threatening him with death [...]
And according to the indictment unsealed Wednesday, Spota and his anti-corruption bureau chief, Christopher McPartland, repeatedly conspired with Burke to thwart the feds’ investigation.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story ... ump-215761“The Russians succeeded, I believe, beyond their wildest expectations. Their first objective in the election was to sow discontent, discord and disruption in our political life, and they have succeeded to a fare-thee-well. They have accelerated, amplified the polarization and the divisiveness in this country, and they’ve undermined our democratic system. They wanted to create doubt in the minds of the public about our government and about our system, and they succeeded to a fare-thee-well.”
“They’ve been emboldened,” he added, “and they will continue to do this.”
Brrr. That sounds like something that would hurt both parties.
https://www.axios.com/trumps-government ... 50819.htmlIn late June, President Trump hosted a group of Native American tribal leaders at the White House and urged them to "just do it" and extract whatever they want from the land they control.
The exchange turned out to be an unusually vivid window into the almost kingly power that Trump sees himself as holding, and which he has begun describing with increasing bluntness. The scene was recounted by a source in the room and confirmed by another. The White House didn't dispute the story.
The chiefs explained to Trump that there were regulatory barriers preventing them from getting at their energy. Trump replied: "But now it's me. The government's different now. Obama's gone; and we're doing things differently here."
There was a pause in the room and the tribal leaders looked at each other.
"Chief, chief," Trump continued, addressing one of the tribal leaders, "what are they going to do? Once you get it out of the ground are they going to make you put it back in there? I mean, once it's out of the ground it can't go back in there. You've just got to do it. I'm telling you, chief, you've just got to do it."
The tribal leader looked back at one of the White House officials in the room — perhaps somebody from the White House Counsel's office — and he said "can we just do that?" The official equivocated, saying the administration is making progress and has a plan to roll back various regulations.
Trump interjected again: "Guys, I feel like you're not hearing me right now. We've just got to do it. I feel like we've got no choice; other countries are just doing it. China is not asking questions about all of this stuff. They're just doing it. And guys, we've just got to do it."
Probably no big deal.When President Trump slurred his words during a news conference this week, some Trump watchers speculated that he was having a stroke. I watched the clip and, as a physician who specializes in brain function and disability, I don’t think a stroke was behind the slurred words. But having evaluated the chief executive’s remarkable behavior through my clinical lens for almost a year, I do believe he is displaying signs that could indicate a degenerative brain disorder.
...
I see worrisome symptoms that fall into three main categories: problems with language and executive function; problems with social cognition and behavior; and problems with memory, attention, and concentration. None of these are symptoms of being a bad or mean person. Nor do they require spelunking into the depths of his psyche to understand. Instead, they raise concern for a neurocognitive disease process in the same sense that wheezing raises the alarm for asthma.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/201 ... ght-regionIn his first 10 months in office, [trump] has told 103 separate untruths, many of them repeatedly. Obama told 18 over his entire eight-year tenure. That’s an average of about two a year for Obama and about 124 a year for Trump.
Really Big Strong Guy: There are a plethora of psychopaths among us.
The NYT editors have been pretty good recently, but this one's so bad it's embarrassing.dead man walking wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 3:08 pm trump v obama--who lies more?
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/201 ... ght-regionIn his first 10 months in office, [trump] has told 103 separate untruths, many of them repeatedly. Obama told 18 over his entire eight-year tenure. That’s an average of about two a year for Obama and about 124 a year for Trump.
Really Big Strong Guy: There are a plethora of psychopaths among us.
The article said this:dead man walking wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 5:49 pm turd:
a lie gets counted once. repetitions of the lie do not get added
imagine what donald's count would be if repetitions were included?
Poo-pooing the 'if you like your plan, you can keep your plan' as a 'careless exaggeration he avoided repeating' is a little ridiculous; same thing with the 'red line' comment regarding Syria. Those had a massive impact on domestic and foreign policy respectively. I don't even hold Obama particularly accountable for the red line comment FWIW-- things I don't know about may have changed on the groundthat made it prudent for him to change plans.As for Obama: His falsehoods tended to be attempts to make his own policies look better or to overstate a problem he was trying to solve. In a few cases, they seemed to be careless exaggerations he avoided repeating.
It's not an article about Russia.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 6:40 pmThe article said this:dead man walking wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 5:49 pm turd:
a lie gets counted once. repetitions of the lie do not get added
imagine what donald's count would be if repetitions were included?Poo-pooing the 'if you like your plan, you can keep your plan' as a 'careless exaggeration he avoided repeating' is a little ridiculous; same thing with the 'red line' comment regarding Syria. Those had a massive impact on domestic and foreign policy respectively. I don't even hold Obama particularly accountable for the red line comment FWIW-- things I don't know about may have changed on the groundthat made it prudent for him to change plans.As for Obama: His falsehoods tended to be attempts to make his own policies look better or to overstate a problem he was trying to solve. In a few cases, they seemed to be careless exaggerations he avoided repeating.
My opinion will change if it turns out that Trump willingly colluded with the Russians during the election; or that Russian interference materially impacted the election in the states that mattered-- but at this point, none of Trump's 'lies' are particularly significant. At this point the NYT is being willfully dishonest, and foolishly so.
The article points out several Trump tweets about Russia.Grandpa's Spells wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 6:47 pmIt's not an article about Russia.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 6:40 pmThe article said this:dead man walking wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 5:49 pm turd:
a lie gets counted once. repetitions of the lie do not get added
imagine what donald's count would be if repetitions were included?Poo-pooing the 'if you like your plan, you can keep your plan' as a 'careless exaggeration he avoided repeating' is a little ridiculous; same thing with the 'red line' comment regarding Syria. Those had a massive impact on domestic and foreign policy respectively. I don't even hold Obama particularly accountable for the red line comment FWIW-- things I don't know about may have changed on the groundthat made it prudent for him to change plans.As for Obama: His falsehoods tended to be attempts to make his own policies look better or to overstate a problem he was trying to solve. In a few cases, they seemed to be careless exaggerations he avoided repeating.
My opinion will change if it turns out that Trump willingly colluded with the Russians during the election; or that Russian interference materially impacted the election in the states that mattered-- but at this point, none of Trump's 'lies' are particularly significant. At this point the NYT is being willfully dishonest, and foolishly so.
It's weird you bring up healthcare falsehoods, as Trump's lies on his failed healthcare plan exceeded your example of Obama's.
I know I'm on the wrong side of the zeitgeist on this one, but I never fully understood why "if you like your plan you can keep it" is rated as a "lie". For ~98% of us (insured Americans), it turned out to be true. I personally kept my plan. There's some plan turnover in the insurance market every year, with or without the ACA; I've occasionally had to change my choices during open enrollment because some things had changed from the prior year.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 6:40 pmPoo-pooing the 'if you like your plan, you can keep your plan' as a 'careless exaggeration he avoided repeating' is a little ridiculous ... massive impact on domestic policy...
This barely registers on the scale of campaign-soundbite policy over-simplifications."If you like your current plan, there's no provision in the ACA to force you to switch to another plan, so you can likely keep your plan, assuming it adheres to the standards enacted and assuming your employer continues to offer that plan rather than switch to some other cheaper plan that becomes available; so about the same number of you will be able to keep your plan as would have been able to keep your plan prior to the ACA."
It's certainly possible you were one of the people whose plan didn't change. However the broader trend is that provider networks got narrower, deductibles got significantly higher, and out-of-network costs at in-network hospitals grew. People who were in the individual market prior to Obamacare for the most part have gotten nasty surprises every year. It's possible that you haven't seen direct impact (especially if you haven't gotten sick); to be honest it's pretty hard to measure the labor market effects of rising health insurance costs outside of the blue collar class professions.JimZipCode wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 9:56 pmI know I'm on the wrong side of the zeitgeist on this one, but I never fully understood why "if you like your plan you can keep it" is rated as a "lie". For ~98% of us (insured Americans), it turned out to be true. I personally kept my plan. There's some plan turnover in the insurance market every year, with or without the ACA; I've occasionally had to change my choices during open enrollment because some things had changed from the prior year.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 6:40 pmPoo-pooing the 'if you like your plan, you can keep your plan' as a 'careless exaggeration he avoided repeating' is a little ridiculous ... massive impact on domestic policy...
Yes, it would have been more accurate for Obama to say:This barely registers on the scale of campaign-soundbite policy over-simplifications."If you like your current plan, there's no provision in the ACA to force you to switch to another plan, so you can likely keep your plan, assuming it adheres to the standards enacted and assuming your employer continues to offer that plan rather than switch to some other cheaper plan that becomes available; so about the same number of you will be able to keep your plan as would have been able to keep your plan prior to the ACA."
Yes, I read the Politifact "lie of the year" article from 2013.
Fucking Trump.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 11:36 pm this just in-- the 2016 mortality stats are out-- they got worse for the second year in a row.
Trump Stress SyndromeJimZipCode wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2017 7:25 amFucking Trump.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 11:36 pm this just in-- the 2016 mortality stats are out-- they got worse for the second year in a row.
Mao wrote:Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party
That's a real thing. *sigh* Enough already.DrDonkeyLove wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2017 12:58 pmTrump Stress SyndromeJimZipCode wrote: ↑Fri Dec 15, 2017 7:25 amFucking Trump.Turdacious wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 11:36 pm this just in-- the 2016 mortality stats are out-- they got worse for the second year in a row.