This guy gets it.
MAFA (Make America Fun Again).
Moderators: donlever, Referees

This guy gets it.
Well, the breadcrumbs are all there...I just...put them together and made my own puzzle out of it.

"Are you not entertained?" - Donald J TrumpArgay Ham wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2025 2:26 pmWell, the breadcrumbs are all there...I just...put them together and made my own puzzle out of it.
If my parents made it through Nixon, I can make it through this. Just gotta believe.

Nice response, UW. ThanksUWSaint wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2025 10:00 amGenerally, I think tariffs are not good for consumers.Chef Boi RD wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2025 7:37 am UW, regarding tariffs…is raising them good for the American consumer struggling to make ends meet? Or are they just better for the coffers of “Trump’s government”, that is to offset his promised tax cuts and downsizing government? Ie - firing low to middle income earners in the public sector?
But neither is any form of tax, regulation, or inflation that raises the costs of good or deteriorates buying power. But revenue must be raised for government, there are rules for safety, environment, etc that are either internalizing true costs or paternalistically governing citizens.
Tariffs, like taxes, are often used to modify incentives and change behaviors. Foreign policy is about that, and there’s also a knock on domestic economy effect — beneficial for some industries, detrimental to others, generally detrimental to the consumer. Possibly, but not necessarily, a drag on growth (you really have to analyze that within the constellation of policy change).
While I am generally not a tariff fan, I do think it’s a tool properly on the table for revenue generation or foreign policy influence. And while I think it’s usually not a great tool for domestic economic policy (protectionism doesn’t typically help long term), there is some sense in having economic policies that hedge against trade interruption. (Essential production and capabilities for production that would allow the US to better handle international trade disruption).
So generally bad, but I am not ideological about it and taking them totally off the table is also bad.

Lol, how many government employees are doing this?

Read the article.

Yeah I did skim it. That's a lot of government employees wiring proceeds of corruption to Swiss bank accounts to affect Google search trends LOL.

We're making progress.5thhorseman wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2025 4:35 pmYeah I did skim it.
Where is proof a coup? They are talking to opposition leaders, in parliament, and trying to convince them to stick together and agree on a joint candidate.UWSaint wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2025 9:38 amDebunked by Foreign Policy? Whose propaganda have you ll bought hook line and sinker, Per. State and CIA are the best at this, are they not?Per wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2025 5:50 am
OK, there was a lot of interesting stuff you wrote, and I don't have time to address all at once.
I will just have to protest this bit though; you have apparently bought the Russian narrative hook, line and sinker.
There was no coup in Ukraine in 2014. Read the article below, it is quite interesting and enlightening.
This transcript was not made up: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26079957.amp
Hmmm, caught in the act (and what Nuland proposed came to be).
And it’s an example of US State playing Masters of the Universe. ) The US tirelessly pushes for regime changes in this country or that. Sometimes it’s a smart alternative to war; sometimes that’s a false choice. But it’s not “democracy.”


Sure seems like Russia won the negotiations before even stepping up to the table."The leader in Ukraine is down at 4% approval ratings. [fact check, its' about 50%] Wouldn't the people of Ukraine need to have an election? Ukraine is being wiped out,"
You should have never started it — you could have made a deal. I like him personally, but it is the leadership that allowed the war to go on."
Not just talking, Per. Carrots and sticks. If you heard the conversation, you would know that Nuland's attitude was that the US would control to the degree it could who would run Ukraine -- and that the US has pretty big carrots and sticks to make that happen. (And we know that Biden, as VP, threatened to withdraw aid for something as small as removing a "prosecutor" investigating an energy business in 24 hours or else....).Per wrote: ↑Wed Feb 19, 2025 6:39 am Where is proof a coup? They are talking to opposition leaders, in parliament, and trying to convince them to stick together and agree on a joint candidate.
Of course the USA (and Russia) is trying to persuade political leaders to see things their way.
But the suggestion that there was a coup in Ukraine is still factually wrong.

And here is where we differ, because I think that that is the only thing that matters.

And this is a fundamental misunderstanding. Russia is not interested in having influence over Ukraine for economic and security reasons. That is what they want you to think. The Ukraine has never and will never pose a threat to Russia, other and as a picture of what Russia could have been.At the end of the day, I think Russia is as interested in having influence over Ukraine for economic and security reasons as the west is in having influence in Ukraine for economic and security reasons. The Russians couldn't win the soft power war and so they crossed a line by manifesting that interest with a real war, but is the west willing to fight a defensive war on Ukraine's behalf? Because merely funding it isn't moving the needle.... If f we are going to continue talking Ukraine and criticize whatever's on the table from the US, Per, give me your endgame -- answer my questions about what your limits are.