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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#2101 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-11, 15:29

View PostWinstonm, on 2016-September-11, 13:36, said:

It appears to me as if Donald Trump doesn't care what he means - he is viewing this campaign like a t.v. ratings contest. As long as the tv cameras and lights are pointed at him, he is satisfied.


Yes, it seems crazy but yes. Even Sarah Palin had some sort of consistency to her zaniness. Trump is like a guy on a bar stool. From a drunk it is boring, from someone wishing to be president it is seriously scary.
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#2102 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2016-September-11, 16:15

So, is Hil sick (medically) or what?
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#2103 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-12, 05:06

View PostAl_U_Card, on 2016-September-11, 16:15, said:

So, is Hil sick (medically) or what?


I guess the entire world knows the answer bt now, although I had no idea what you were talking about until this morning. This will be, and should be, a very large problem.

We who are older have some direct experiences.

I was visiting a friend in the hospital yesterday, his situation is serious. He can be stubborn about not following doctors orders. A few days ago he was readmitted and, talking on the phone, he explained he was going to check himself out of the hospital the next day. I can be blunt at times and this is one of the times that I was. For whatever the reason, he did not check himself out.

How does this apply to HC?

Here is the statement from her doctor.


Quote

“Secretary Clinton has been experiencing a cough related to allergies,” Lisa R. Bardack, Clinton’s physician, said Sunday in the statement. “On Friday, during follow up evaluation of her prolonged cough, she was diagnosed with pneumonia. She was put on antibiotics, and advised to rest and modify her schedule. While at this morning’s event, she became overheated and dehydrated. I have just examined her and she is now re-hydrated and recovering nicely.”



If I get pneumonia and the doc tells me to cut back on my schedule and get some rest, I cut back on my schedule and get some rest. And I explain why I am doing it. It's not only her health here, it is her judgment. It took a while for Becky to calm me down after my friend started talking about checking himself out of the hospital.. The word "stupid" came up more than once.

We shall see how this goes, I of course wish her luck, but I am not happy.
Ken
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#2104 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2016-September-12, 06:52

View Postkenberg, on 2016-September-12, 05:06, said:

I guess the entire world knows the answer bt now, although I had no idea what you were talking about until this morning. This will be, and should be, a very large problem.

...

We shall see how this goes, I of course wish her luck, but I am not happy.

You have said the decent thing to say, I expect no less.

From a strictly practical (and admittedly coldhearted) perspective, this is a hint of a chance at ending up with a better president than either current candidate.


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#2105 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2016-September-12, 07:50

View Posthelene_t, on 2016-September-09, 10:30, said:

Interesting psychological study on the worldviews of concervatives and liberals, and on Trump supporters in particular: https://jerclifton.c...ople-living-in/

Basically, conservatives see the World as fair, as getting worse, and they see dichtomies as largely good-vs-bad while liberals tend to see dichotomies as more often equally good/bad.

Trump supporters are not that different from typical conservatives, actually Cruz supporters are less typical.


That is an interesting article. IMO, the information that liberals find more amusement in situations than do conservatives leads to a boatload of possibilities. I think the conservative mind sees himself as most important individually, while liberals find that idea quaintly funny as it is obvious that on a macro scale we have a commonality with bees hives and ant colonies. When you don't take yourself so seriously and view yourself as equally important as the least beggar in Somalia, it is quite easy to find humor in human gaffes and human absurdities.

At the same time, there is need at times for a more somber disposition. Some things are serious.

The Donald Trump campaign train should have been laughed off the rails before he ever set one foot aboard the engine. It's crazy and zany and, wow, isn't he a nut case, and haven't we all been nut cases some time in our life?

It's funny, all right, but Presidential elections need to be more serious than that.
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#2106 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-12, 15:44

View Postbillw55, on 2016-September-12, 06:52, said:

You have said the decent thing to say, I expect no less.

From a strictly practical (and admittedly coldhearted) perspective, this is a hint of a chance at ending up with a better president than either current candidate.


That last sentence was almost my first thought! I am not exactly proud of that, but she is running for president and so different standards apply.

I just spent the whole day on a jury (and will be on for a while) so I am not totally up on what has come from this. I think, at the least, her health will now become a key issue. I had not really paid all that much attention to it, other than noting that she is not young. I regard myself as healthy, but honestly there is something of a caveat, healthy for my age. Many of my friends of the same age are healthy, but we find that we now ask about each other's health now. This would only rarely occur to a person in his/her forties. We all now can list things that are, at the least, harder to do. For whatever the reason, I now find it very difficult to be at high altitudes. That's new. Clinton gets blood clots. She takes meds for it. There was a time not very long ago when I took no meds. That's no longer the case. We get older. But I am not running for president, she is. So the effects of getting older are of greater interest with regard to her.

And of course the same applies to Trump, except that I find him so completely awful that I don't have to go to his health.
Ken
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#2107 User is offline   The_Badger 

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Posted 2016-September-14, 01:43

Here's a bit of 'light relief' (among the 106 pages of replies on here) for us statistically-minded bods courtesy of Columbia University.

And yes, I know, it's quite bizarre what university students study these days...

http://www.stat.colu...gelman_icml.pdf
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#2108 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2016-September-14, 09:34

Someone posted that link on Bridge Winners a few months ago.

#2109 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2016-September-21, 08:51

The campaign is starting to sound like a bad Kids Meal at KFC -- I'll take a basket of deplorables with a bag of skittles.

#2110 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2016-September-26, 20:36

What an incredible embarrassment to the Republican Party as well as the entire U.S. that this buffoon, Donald Trump, is involved in a televised Presidential debate. Anyone above the age of 6 or an equivalent IQ should be ashamed to support this guy.
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#2111 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2016-September-26, 20:50

View Postcherdano, on 2016-September-09, 13:39, said:

Here is my theory. Right now there is a lot of coverage about Clinton emails and Clinton Foundation. It seems the election is a referendum on that, and since voters don't like Clinton, the polls are tightening.

Once the debates happen, voters will remember that this is a choice about whether Clinton or Trump will be president. After the debates, no matter who "won" them, Clinton's poll numbers will improve.


Let's see whether I was right.
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#2112 User is offline   shyams 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 03:00

This is what the largest betting company thought of the TV debate.

Last evening, the odds of a Trump victory stood at 2.64 (roughly 38% chance of winning). This morning the odds are 3.35 (roughly 30% chance of winning). If I recall, US nationals are not allowed to bet via British betting shops. If true, it means that an impartial, dispassionate, capitalistic*** group of gamblers collectively decided that Trump had damaged his chances during the debate.

PS: I haven't seen the debate yet, nor have I read any media reports on last night's events. I have TiVo'd the debate and plan to watch it later this evening.

*** The betting odds are almost entirely driven by money flows. When more money comes in to back Trump, his odds reduce -- and when money instead chases Clinton, Trump's odds drift higher. Any move in odds is "markets" driven, the kind of capitalism Americans respect!
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#2113 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 06:42

First, a chart that I have linked to earlier.There are many threads but they can be untangled by clicking on the tabs. This is pre-debate.

If we click on Registered/likely we can see that
Between Sept 8 and Sept22 Clinton's lead with registered voters has shrunk from 10 points to 0.
Between Sept 8 and Sept22 Clinton's lead with likely voters has shrunk from 5 points to 2.

I have been scanning over some of the supporting data but so far I have not figured out whether the principal ingredient here is that people have changed their preference from Clinton to Trump or whether it comes from previously undecideds now making their choice.

Clicking on the gender tab is interesting. In the 2 week period from Sept8 to 22 the lead with women went from 17 points to 15. A drop, but not a large drop. With men, the change was from a 3 point lead for Clinton to a 16 point lead for Trump. You would have to call that significant.

The debate itself would partially support Cherdano. The Foundation was not mentioned (or so briefly that I missed it) and the emails came and went in a moment.. That's over. But there is still this shift over the two weeks preceding the debate. That shift toward Trump did not occur because voters suddenly heard about the emails, so the withering of that issue will not undo that shift.

If I had to place a bet, I would bet that Clinton's numbers will go up a bit now. But I would not want to bet much on that. To me, Trump looked very bad. But that's not new. He always looks bad to me. Clinton looked sort of good, better than she sometimes does. Is that enough? Beats me. To me, Trump always looks like the guy on a bar stool who knows everything, just ask him, or don't even bother to ask him, he will tell you. It will be loud and it will be incoherent. Talk to Hannity. Talk to Hannity. I don't want to talk to Hannity.

We shall see.

Added remark on numbers: Suppose 100 people are to choose between A and B. Suppose 50 prefer A, 30 prefer B, and 15 have not made up their minds. So A has a 20 point lead. If 10 undecideds now declare for B, the lead is cut by 10 points from 20 to 10. If the undecideds remain undecided and but only 5 switch their preference from A to B, then the lead goes from 20=50-30 to 10= 45-35, also a drop of 10. I apologize if this is obvious to everyone, of course changing someone's mind is a bigger deal than winning over an undecided, but sometimes such things slide by . It would be interesting to know just how this 3 point lead for Clinton among men changed by 19 to an 16 point lead for Trump.I doubt that there were enough undecideds to account for all of it.
Ken
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#2114 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 07:51

I thought it very useful to see them together, unfiltered. It seemed to me that both candidates debated to the best of their abilities and showed themselves to best advantage. For those undecided voters -- those just starting to focus on the election -- the contrast should be helpful.

I do think Trump was right to say, "I think my strongest asset by far is my temperament." I don't like his temperament, but many folks do. In any case, his qualifications drop off pretty quickly after that. The big question will be whether or not Donald's temperament outweighs Hillary's competence in most voters' minds.
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#2115 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 08:14

View Postkenberg, on 2016-September-27, 06:42, said:

To me, Trump always looks like the guy on a bar stool who knows everything, just ask him, or don't even bother to ask him, he will tell you. It will be loud and it will be incoherent.

So there's a significant number of voters who want Cliff Claven (from "Cheers") as their President?

#2116 User is offline   Phil 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 08:39

Random observations:

1. Trump blew a massive opportunity when asked about cybersecurity and not discussing the email server. He also let her off too easy when she just apologized. It will be hard to recapitalize on that again.

2. Hill looks like a SNL skit when she laughs. I can't help but think of Jan Hooks. She is utterly unlikable.

3. She could have taken him to task on the unpreparedness thing - if he can't prep for a debate, how will he prep for policy discussions or trade talks?

4. I was concerned that she was going to come out looking ashen or sick. I think she fielded the 'stamina' attack well with her response about long senate hearings and visiting 112 countries.

Hillary evidently won. More importantly, I don't think DT converted many fence-sitters. I will be especially interested in what the undecideds in Florida, Colorado and Nevada thought.
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#2117 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 08:47

View Postbarmar, on 2016-September-27, 08:14, said:

So there's a significant number of voters who want Cliff Claven (from "Cheers") as their President?


I have been thinking and, while it may sound crazy, I think it's a big part of Trump's appeal. I don't want the guy who sounds like Cliff Claven. I don't
even want the guy who sounds like me. I would not vote for me. I want someone who knows foreign policy better than I do, who knows more about economics than I do, and, importantly, has spent more time engaged in such matters than I have. Of course a president must choose advisers that s/he can rely on. But it helps if you first know something about the issues.

A sample from the debate. Trump spoke of Law and Order. Well, I can favor Law and Order, depending on what it means. But go into a bar and you can easily find some guy who will explain that, back when he was a child, if his teacher hit him in school and he told his father about it, his father would hit him twice as hard. It's an old canard.
But I would come at this differently. We start by acknowledging that the mother of a young black man wants her son to come home alive and, very importantly, the family of a police officer wants that person to come home alive. And the community wants the drug dealers off the corner. This seems to me to be a solid basis for working together to solve a problem. Law and Order is involved, but we don't get there just by whacking people. I want someone who has some ideas beyond whacking.

But there are plenty of people out there to listen to the guy talk about how being whacked as a child made him what he is today. And maybe it did.
Ken
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#2118 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 09:00

View Postbarmar, on 2016-September-27, 08:14, said:

So there's a significant number of voters who want Cliff Claven (from "Cheers") as their President?

I don't think so.

Cliff Claven is an obvious loser. Not a billionaire, and not psychopathic enough to be able to pass a a billionaire.
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#2119 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 11:58

View PostPhil, on 2016-September-27, 08:39, said:

2. Hill looks like a SNL skit when she laughs. I can't help but think of Jan Hooks. She is utterly unlikable.

How would you characterize Donald's facial expressions during the debate? I'm guessing that SNL will have a field day with this debate. :D
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#2120 User is offline   Phil 

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Posted 2016-September-27, 13:01

View PostPassedOut, on 2016-September-27, 11:58, said:

How would you characterize Donald's facial expressions during the debate? I'm guessing that SNL will have a field day with this debate. :D


Will Ferrell would be credible. So would Darrell Hammond.

Phil Hartman RIP would have nailed it.
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