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Artful Dodger: I had to laugh at Obama this morning on TV...we dont have a problem now but we will by Tuesday....what an idiot...TUESDAY, what the hell is the diff between now and then....what a difference a day makes they say, but Im thinking the USA is going to need a lot more than a couple days. If they keep raising the bar on the national debt ???.......see that splat on the wall?...it has already started "hitting the fan"
Argomento: Re: Rod simply made a good point but...
Artful Dodger:
> Obama making less than a quarter of Senate votes .. etc.
I find that this is a symptom of a problem in the political system in the USA (and probably other countries too). An elected official (whether in Congress, the Senate, the Cabinet, or the President) is campaigning for office two years ahead of the election, in some cases even longer. That means that if somebody is elected to a 4-year term, they are spending 50% of their time campaigning. These people (and they belong to both parties) are being paid with tax dollars, and they are campaigning for two years while tax payers pay their salaries. Since political campaigning is fierce, it comes as no surpise that they neglect the job they were elected to do while they go out to campaign.
Mr Reid said the Boehner plan was "a big wet kiss for the right wing", and Mr Obama has said he will not sign a short-term deal.
Also, in a new twist that analysts say illustrates the discord among the Republican party, Republican Senator John McCain, the party's 2008 presidential nominee, took to the Senate floor to criticise House Republicans who continue to push for a balanced budget amendment to the US constitution as the price of raising the debt ceiling.
A balanced budget amendment - which would require the US government to hold down spending to a certain percentage of gross domestic product and run in the black - was already rejected by the Senate and by Mr Obama.
Mr McCain called the demands "foolish" and "bizarro" and said they were "deceiving many of our constituents" and blamed them on newly elected House members' inexperience.
Argomento: Re:I don't think it'd be worthwhile going into what is good and bad etiquette with you.
(V): That could be taken as a flame. You know it's bad manners to flame even is it's a subtle one. Especially when someone isn't in the room. (I was offline when you posted that) tsk tsk
The fact is, you can't discuss it because we both know that you are wrong and are incapable of proving your point other than to keep restating it (which isn't proof you know). You made the claim, back it up (I won't hold my breath because I know you'll only try to weasel out of it as you can't prove you are right since you're not only wrong, but completely wrong.
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
Artful Dodger: I don't think it'd be worthwhile going into what is good and bad etiquette with you.
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
(V): And now ladies and gentlemen, since He (jules) cannot prove his point, he now utilizes chapter four: change the subject!!!
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
Artful Dodger: *sigh*
Btw.. do you now want to make the statement that all terrorists are Muslim?
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
(V): Just prove your point by showing a link where that rule is stated (since it's been known for over 100 years).
instead of conceding that, Jules and Tuesday decided to pick on his use of the word "she."
Obama making less than a quarter of Senate votes
November 02, 2007
Sen. Barack Obama makes a campaign stop at Iowa State University on Saturday.
Sen. Barack Obama has missed the most votes of any Democratic presidential hopeful in the Senate over the last two months, including a vote on an Iran resolution he has blasted Sen. Hillary Clinton for supporting.
The Illinois Democrat has missed nearly 80 percent of all votes since September.
The other Democrats in the Senate running for president have missed a high percentage of votes as well.
Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware has missed 68 percent of the votes during the same period, Sen. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut 65 percent and Clinton of New York 63 percent.
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
Artful Dodger: No.. I'm saying you just want to argue the point and I'm happy knowing I am right.
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
(V): So what your saying is you can't actually prove what you are claiming. And also you have interviewed everyone in the UK and they all agree with you.
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Justaminute: This forum is an informal conversation "room." Jules was clearly referring to Tuesday in his rejoinder to Rod. Rod replied using the pronoun she that clearly referred back to Tuesday. In the context you are describing, you are correct. In the situation here, Jules and Tuesday are wrong. And they will fail at proving that because there is no such rule against such use of pronouns in a discussion forum.
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
Artful Dodger: That you have a problem with English language use is your problem. Learn yourself.. I know I am right as anybody here in the UK will tell you whether Liberal/Conservative or Jedi Knight!!
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
(V): Nonsense. The antecedent was clear in the context of the discussion. Therefore the use of the word "she" was not only proper but its use is more common than is the restating of the antecedent. That's why we have rules for pronoun antecedent. When the antecedent is clear, the pronoun is almost always used.
But enlighten us, show us where this is the case and also defend your own use of the word "she" where several hundred times you yourself used that exact pronoun.
Argomento: Re: I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
Artful Dodger: When talking about someone in the room (or a poster here) "she" is considered rude and bad manners, the same rule does not apply when discussing someone as a topic.
Now you can twist that all you like, but it ain't gonna change 100's of years of English language use and the rules thereof.
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Justaminute: I guess it depends where you were brought up. If I referred to someone as "she" when I was growing up and they were in the room the response would be "who's she the cat's mother". Meaning you are being rude. It isn't rude to refer the same way about soeone who is not going to over hear the conversation.
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Pedro Martínez: I wonder if it's still proper to call them typos since a typo refers to the mistake one makes when hitting a wrong key on a typewriter. I'm using a keyboard so maybe my mistakes are actually keyos.
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Artful Dodger: Right. By now, Tuesday has tried to teach the people on this forum how to use conjunctions (“don't you start a sentence with them!”), prepositions (“don't you end a sentence with them!”) and pronouns (“don't you use them to refer to people in conversations with someone else!”). I can't wait for the other word classes…
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Pedro Martínez: It's all hogwash that using a personal pronoun when referring back to someone is bad manners. It's done all the time in formal writing. And in casual conversations such as are done here, things are supposed to be more relaxed. Funny that the persons objecting to the use of personal pronouns have used those pronouns themselves. I counted over a hundred in a quick survey of posts by Jules. He'll have a hundred excuses for his use of the word "she" but still, he (opps) used the same word to which he is now objecting.
This is just another way the left attemps to avoid dealing with an issue where they are clearly wrong. They (opps) don't like their narrative interrupted and when they (dang it) are caught with their pants down (as you have shown in reference to Tuesday), they always go to chapter three: diverting attention away from the real point of an argument. I can't wait to see what they will twist next.
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Justaminute: Her point was clear: “You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.” I fail to see any further specification there.
Argomento: Re: it's about manners. You are supposed to use someone's name when referring to them in a conversation with someone else.
Pedro Martínez: I fail to see the relevance. The point was that it is rude to refer to someone as "she" when that person is in the room, as if they are not there. As this "she" is presumably the lady who has died, she is not in a position to object.
Argomento: Re:"her" is not an insult. Unless you are just LOOKING for things to insult you. Typical of "politcally correct" libs who are offended over everything that can possibly be misconstrued as offensive.
rod03801: It is considered bad manners as in talking about someone who is there as if they are not there. It's considered a sign of anger or hate towards the person and just an attempt to disguise it.
Argomento: Re:without taking into consideration that your golden boy was just as guilty.
Tuesday: "her" is not an insult. Unless you are just LOOKING for things to insult you. Typical of "politcally correct" libs who are offended over everything that can possibly be misconstrued as offensive.
And MY point was, you would NEVER have pointed that out about Obama 3 years ago. When "your" people do something, it's hunky dorry. When "the other ones" do the same thing, it's gotta be put out there as NOT ok.
When in reality, (as I've already said twice, I believe) I would imagine any person who currently holds office (of WHATEVER party), who is campaigning, probably misses more votes than they should. And as I also said, I don't defend that. They are ALL doing their constituents a disservice when this happens.
Argomento: Re:without taking into consideration that your golden boy was just as guilty.
rod03801: Guees I just read more and did some math on the dates.
ie Bachmann 4 years and 50 votes missed.... Obama 2 months and a number of votes in just that 2 month period missed.
It's Simple.. maybe it's just me from when I did Statistics and the matter of comparing 2 different time periods. As such the comparison is too dodgy to make any real sense comparing wise.
If the time period on Obama's missed votes was a year or longer then you'd get a fair and informative comparison.
Argomento: Re:without taking into consideration that your golden boy was just as guilty.
Modificato da rod03801 (27. Luglio 2011, 20:26:30)
And the point is, really, that anyone who is in elected office who is running for presidency (regardless of party) is probably going to be slacking at their elected job. (Which, personally, I don't defend)
And of course, that wasn't going to be brought up by her, that the golden boy was just as bad.
Argomento: Re:without taking into consideration that your golden boy was just as guilty.
rod03801: Can we also take into consideration that the article regarding Bachmann was for a period covering 4 YEARS, and the period in the article covering Obama was just 2 MONTHS.
Bachmann would seem to be a symptomatic vote skipper looking for votes and Obama's record a blip..N' as your article says...
"...Most of the votes Obama missed were for amendments to spending bills, when his vote would not have decided the outcome..."
Modificato da rod03801 (27. Luglio 2011, 12:49:04)
Tuesday: You were trying to make one of your points, without taking into consideration that your golden boy was just as guilty. And of course you wouldn't have brought THAT up.
Argomento: Re: If these are simply abstract concepts for you, then you don't understand their importance.
Iamon lyme:
Straight from the dictionary:
Ignorant: Lacking education or knowledge. Showing or arising from a lack of education or knowledge. Unaware or uninformed.
> First of all, the term 'ignorant masses' isn't just insulting, it's usually used as a means to an end. If you agree with the premise (ignorant masses) you can then assume you are not a part of that group.
Maybe I should spare the feelings of the masses, and instead of calling them "ignorant", I can use a politically correct term like "knowledge challenged" or "educationally disadvantaged". Those sanitized terms are less insulting, are they not?
Then I said that I am the worst kind of ignoramus. The kind that knows exactly what is going on, and does nothing to stop it. I merely defeat myself intellectually. All that knowledge is useless if I don't know what to do with it. Yes, I am a aprt of the ignorant masses. We all are. Nobody likes to be called ignorant, yet we all are.
Knowledge is a relative thing. I can give you a good example of how the masses are "ignorant" about something, and then take it for granted.
Take plastic bags. Almost every human being on the planet has used a plastic bag at one point or another. People go shopping, put their things in bags, and go home wihtout even thinking whqt a plastic bag is. However, a chemist sees more than just a plastic bag. A chemist will know that it is made of a polymer called polyethylene. This polymer is made by polymerizing ethene gas with a Ziegler-Natta catalyst embedded inside a zeolite support. A chemist can draw chemical structures, and propose reaction mechanisms. He or she knows about the physical properties of the polymer such as the melting point and the glass point. He or she also knwos that Ziegler and Natta won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for their discovery of this family of catalysts that is used to make all plastic bags in the world.
The masses are ignorant in relation to the chemist who knows all about plastic bags.
Likewise, the masses are ignorant about politics and economics. Their sense of knowledge about politics and economics is based on what they see in the media. Newspapers and TV will describe current events, and self-appointed experts (like Glenn Beck) will interpret those events giving them the slant that is convenient either to themselves, or to somebody else.
Yet, when the masses never bother to study the history of political systems and the philosphical basis behind them. People will pass a judgement on demcoracy, socialism, etc. without having taken the time to study or analyze the history and meaning of those things. The perfect example is communism. Just about everybody hates communism, even though all that people know about it is what they heard on TV or on their high school social studies class. I have never met anyone who read Marx's Capital and interpreted according to Hegel's dialectic system. If people did that, it would be impossible for a government like China's to exist, because they ihgt call themselves communist party, but they are nothing more than a form of state capitalism.
Well, ignorant is not an insult. It is merely a fact. All that people need to be happy is enough money for Macdonalds and Walmart. As long as people can consume they have no fighting spirit. Consumer capitalism turns human beings into consuming automatons, always in fear of change or social discontent. So the masses, like a big flock of ostrich, hide their head in the sands of blissful ignorance. It might sound insulting, but it is the sad truth.
The US is about to default its 14.5 trillion dollar debt, and people don't even realize how bad the situation is and how risky it is. Instead of making an effor tto educate the public, politicians are bickering and bringing the world's financial system to the brink of catastrophe. And the masses, lacking knowledge and information, continue blissfully unaware of what impact this could have in their daly lives. This is the perfect example of how the rich and powerful use ignorance to advantage. While the masses sleep, the rich are setting themselves up for huge tax breaks and the fattening of their own pockets at tax payer's expense.
Let's hope that the stories Anders Behren Breivik was not working with others as he has now said. All these years after 9/11 everybody has been focusing on Muslim terrorists, yet forgetting about the older terrorist groups. Nationalists using Islam as a recruitment card for various right wing neo nazi and ultra conservative hate groups just spouting their version of hate that they complain the Muslim hate groups might get better at than them.
We've had terrorism in Europe since the end of WWII.
Argomento: Re: If you agree with the premise (ignorant masses) you can then assume you are not a part of that group. Thought control is just another way of saying con job. It often works because it appeals to greed
Iamon lyme: We are all ignorant. It's a matter of a finite brain divided by infinite knowledge... In the end we all have something we no no-thing about. Thought control does not mean con job. Some people have to persuade others they are right just to be right, ie a matter of insecurity over beliefs like we have with some religious sects that say 'the word of God/Allah (whatever the name) cannot be questioned.
"Being educated and informed is meaningless if all you are dealing with is raw facts and information.."
No.. there are fields of study such as statistics that aid in dealing with such. How they can be manipulated, that extreme figures tend to be 'blips', and a feel for bull when someone says it means "X" when more factors are implicit that makes "X" untrue, part true or "XYZ"
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