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Re: One-fourth of republicans now say they will vote for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump

By: Cactus Flower in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Mon, 21 Mar 16 9:12 PM | 101 view(s)
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Msg. 18424 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 18418 by Cactus Flower)

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Another one:

"The reasons for the rise of Mr. Trump are undoubtedly complicated and will be studied for decades to come. That Mr. Trump’s rise has occurred in the Republican Party is painful for those of us who are Republicans. That more and more Republicans are making their own accommodation with or offering outright support for Mr. Trump — governors like Chris Christie and Rick Scott, the former candidate Ben Carson and the former speaker of the House Newt Gingrich — makes things even worse. Because we can no longer deny what Mr. Trump is and what he represents. The prospect of turning the party apparatus over to such a person is sickening.

The founders, knowing history and human nature, took great care to devise a system that would prevent demagogues and those with authoritarian tendencies from rising up in America. That system has been extraordinarily successful. We have never before faced the prospect of a political strongman becoming president.

Until now."

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/20/opinion/campaign-stops/the-man-the-founders-feared.html

I wonder why they are so surprised. If you blow a dog whistle for long enough, eventually the dog will appear.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: One-fourth of republicans now say they will vote for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump
By: Cactus Flower
in ALEA
Mon, 21 Mar 16 3:19 AM
Msg. 18418 of 54959

Maybe including the leading Republican journalists such as David Brooks and George Will by the sound of it. Here's Will's latest on Garland - and Trump.

"The Republican Party’s incoherent response to the Supreme Court vacancy is a partisan reflex in search of a justifying principle. The multiplicity of Republican rationalizations for their refusal to even consider Merrick B. Garland radiates insincerity...

In their tossed salad of situational ethics, the Republicans’ most contradictory and least conservative self-justification is: The court’s supposedly fragile legitimacy is endangered unless the electorate speaks before a vacancy is filled. The preposterous premise is that the court will be “politicized” unless vacancies are left vacant until a political campaign registers public opinion about, say, “Chevron deference.”

This legal doctrine actually is germane to Garland. He is the most important member (chief judge) of the nation’s second-most important court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the importance of which derives primarily from its caseload of regulatory challenges.

There Garland has practiced what too many conservatives have preached — “deference” in the name of “judicial restraint” toward Congress, and toward the executive branch and its appendages in administering congressional enactments....

In his record of deference, Garland resembles two justices nominated by presidents George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan, respectively — Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and, even more, Scalia, who seems to be more revered than read by many conservatives. Garland’s reluctance to restrict the administrative state’s discretion would represent continuity in the chair he would fill...

Republicans who vow to deny Garland a hearing and who pledge to support Donald Trump if he is their party’s nominee are saying: Democracy somehow requires that this vacancy on a non-majoritarian institution must be filled only after voters have had their say through the election of the next president. And constitutional values will be served if the vacancy is filled not by Garland but by someone chosen by President Trump, a stupendously uninformed dilettante who thinks judges “sign” what he refers to as “bills.” There is every reason to think that Trump understands none of the issues pertinent to the Supreme Court’s role in the American regime, and there is no reason to doubt that he would bring to the selection of justices what he brings to all matters — arrogance leavened by frivolousness.

Trump’s multiplying Republican apologists do not deny the self-evident — that he is as clueless regarding everything as he is about the nuclear triad. These invertebrate Republicans assume that as president he would surround himself with people unlike himself — wise and temperate advisers.

So, we should wager everything on the hope that the man who says his “number one” foreign policy adviser is “myself” (because “I have a very good brain”) will succumb to humility and rely on people who actually know things.

If Republicans really think that either their front-runner or the Democrats’ would nominate someone superior to Garland, it would be amusing to hear them try to explain why they do."

Read more at http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/will031916.php3#tMhi3CL4faHyo1ec.99

Phew.


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