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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#221 » by Rainyy » Mon Jan 30, 2017 11:48 pm

MrDollarBills wrote:
Rainyy wrote:
1. No, Trump is not a fascist, or Hitler.
2. No, this is not a ban on Muslims.
3. No, this is not the worst catastrophe in American policy since slavery.
4. No, this is not "un-American," at least not compared to the real, historical America.
5. No, Trump's business connections have nothing to do with the countries selected.


I say fair enough on points 1, 3, and 4.

Points 2 and 5 are open to warranted scrutiny, considering the fact that the man SAID he'd execute a ban on Muslims (his words)



The plain meaning of "Muslim ban" is that Muslims will not be able to enter the country. Factually this is not the case because Muslims can literally still enter the country. In fact, the vast majority of muslims, coming from the vast majority of countries, can still enter the country. This is indisputable. On top of this, a Christian, atheist, or whatever from one one of these seven countries would be similarly prohibited entry during the next three months.

Calling this a "Muslim ban" is like calling a ban on Cigars alone a "Tobacco ban." The phrasing is highly political - purposefully careless and imprecise so as to exaggerate the scope of Trump's policies. For all the ridicule and admonishment over the "alternative facts" soundbite, it's unfortunate how the media has absolutely zero problem misrepresenting the truth.

Furthermore, just because Trump used the words "Muslim ban," does not make his current actions so. If I say "I will climb to the top of Mount Everest," get 500 feet up the mountain from base camp, and give up, I have not climbed Mount Everest.

As an aside, lesser journalists have a nasty habit of falling back on "fact-checking" so much so that they miss the big picture. Absolutely Trump and his advisors should be called out for falsities and lies; but it does not end there. There's almost a fallacy going on that if a narrative, policy, whatever is based on one falsity, then the entire thing is therefore false. Alternatively, if select facts from that journalist's preferred political party are true, then that entire narrative is accurate.

How we reason with "facts" is just as important as the facts themselves - sometimes more important. Consider the phrase, "dolphins are mammals." It's a factual statement. Yet, the argument "Obama's immigration policies are good because dolphins are mammals" is a hideous non-sequitur, despite its invoking of fact.

Similarly, it is a fact that many Muslim people are being adversely affected by Trump's policies. Yet, it is a non-sequitur to use that fact as a basis for saying there is a "ban on Muslims."


MrDollarBills wrote:it goes without saying about the conflicts of interests that surround him.


You're question-begging by saying he currently has conflicts of interests. Legally, Donald Trump does not have conflicts of interests. If you want to argue that you believe he still has business ties that could potentially be conflicts of interest (or use a non-legal definition) that is fine. But, keep in mind, so has ever other President to varying degrees. Got to be careful of double standards.

It's a big accusation to say that Trump is selecting countries on the basis of his business interests, when you have not accounted for other explanations. The Obama Administration designating the identical seven countries and, as I mentioned, our long-standing relationship with Saudi Arabia, cut against your argument. In the act of designating these countries itself (not so much in the halting of immigration), Trump is acting as any other administration would. You need to bring more evidence to the table than pure speculation. There's also some double standard in regards to Trump's business ties. The Clintons had plenty of competing business interests as well. Same with the majority of Presidents.

The kingdom of Saudi Arabia donated to Hilary's Clinton campaign by the way. But I really doubt the media would be questioning Clinton for "conflicts of interest" in any favorable treatment of Saudi Arabia, which would undoubtedly happen under her hypothetical administration, as it is status quo policy.

MrDollarBills wrote:Then we have the whole "religious test" and Trump wanting to "prioritize Christian refugees" and you're really hard pressed to sell this as something other than a Muslim ban.


This is another disingenuous narrative from the Left (not saying the Right doesn't do exactly the same stuff). They are making it seem like Trump is adding a "religious test," but, in fact, Asylum applications in a way already do have this requirement (and nothing is actually changing anyway). Applicants must demonstrate a "well-founded fear of persecution" as a member of a "protected class." Religious groups are one of these classes. Asylum officers will often look for substantiation of belonging to this religious group and then the persecution they suffer or reasonably fear to suffer must emanate from this class. Nothing is actually being changed about the asylum test itself; there is certainly no added "religious test."

What is happening is that priority is being given to applicants claiming religious status, where their religion is a minority in that country. Note: this does not effect the chances of success as "test" would seem to imply, but rather the timeline of receiving an asylum interview.

This policy is clearly designed to benefit Christians in the Middle East, although it will in practice benefit minority religions in a variety of countries. It will be interesting if or how this affects sub-classifications like Sunni and ****. It will presumably not affect timelines for those persons claiming fear of persecution under non-religious classes (political affiliation, gender (domestic abuse), sexual orientation), which many refugees in the Middle East will qualify for.

I personally do not like this policy, but it's not a "religious test," and it isn't as black and white as you make it out to be. Here's the justification:

1. Christians are underrepresented as refugees relative to population size. For instance, in Syria, Christians are about ~10% of the population, but by some estimations make up only .5% of all refugees. They are under-represented twenty-fold. There's certainly some question over how many Christians actually apply versus non-Christians as a percentage of those populations, but I do think there might be some bias in the process.

2. The logic of prioritizing minority religions: minority groups are more susceptible to persecution than non-minority groups; therefore they should be given priority in the asylum process.

The second-point is interesting to me. Does that rationale sound familiar to anyone else? To me, it sounds a lot like some of the arguments the United States Left uses in regards to race, gender (etc.), and social justice. It's amusing to me that domestically we recognize the vulnerability of minority populations, but deny the logic when applied here.

Now, I personally believe blanket policies like this are bad, and everything should be assessed on a case-by-case basis. I really don't know whether Christians are more vulnerable than Muslims in these regions, though they are seemingly underrepresented in the Asylum Process. And it's pretty clear Trump is trying to score political points by raising the Christian issue. Still, as bad as this policy is, please avoid hyperbole and imprecision.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#222 » by shakendfries » Mon Jan 30, 2017 11:51 pm

MrDollarBills wrote:
shakendfries wrote:I can't disagree with you on that. I have close friends and university classmates getting hemmed up in this. It's definitely a mess for those with green cards and those on the path to attain them and isn't the warm welcome these people deserve to receive. Nobody with any sense of empathy likes to see that, or the vitriol being directed towards the Muslim community.

With that said I feel like labeling it a Muslim ban (which is something Trump brought upon himself with his rhetoric) doesn't quite capture the legitimate nature of the threat that Obama warned about from these particular countries in question.


I don't think that the threat should be downplayed, which is why the country has stringent vetting on people we allow to come over here. I am not sympathetic to Islamist extremists. I hate them because I think they're cowards who attack soft targets and target their own people or use them as shields. But I am empathetic to refugees who haven't done anything wrong, and I am empathetic to our legal residents and green card holders who come here, live peacefully, and in turn get treated like trash by Trump and wrongfully disparaged by his rabid white nationalist followers. My family members are immigrants turned citizens, it's sick to see people who have done all the right things to come here and make a better lives for themselves being treated like dogs. It also makes it clear to me, that the whole "we don't hate immigrants, just illegals" argument was a bunch of crap.

But to try and paint it as anything but a Muslim ban, when his rhetoric and comments actually lend credence to that, I'm trying to find out where the disconnect is here. What makes you think, personally, that this isn't a Muslim targeted ban? This is exactly what he said he'd do months ago (which I honestly didn't think he was crazy enough to execute so haphazardly, but I gave him waaaay too much credit).


The term "Muslim ban" implies that any and every practicing Muslim is banned from entering the country.

The intention/motivation behind the "ban" appears to be stricter regulation of individuals to and from countries that have been identified (by the Obama administration) as emerging threats.

Any sense of safety one may feel is, without a doubt, largely superficial (since very little can stop a person with bad intent) but there is a rationale behind taking precaution.

Nobody is saying stopping harassing everyone traveling from these countries was the right way to go about it. However, the increased, and legitimate, concern for American safety amidst recent attacks in Europe (which appears to have very little to do with this ban in particular) resonates with many Americans.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#223 » by bws94 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 12:07 am

Guiliani claims Trump asked him how can he make a legal Muslim ban.

Muslim ban was called on by Trump when he campaigned.



The difference is he could not ban all Muslims, so he found a way to ban some of them.

In spirit, this is a Muslim ban but can't be full for legal reasons, IMO. The 7 countries is a way for him to do it.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#224 » by bws94 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 12:18 am

shakendfries wrote:
MrDollarBills wrote:
shakendfries wrote:I can't disagree with you on that. I have close friends and university classmates getting hemmed up in this. It's definitely a mess for those with green cards and those on the path to attain them and isn't the warm welcome these people deserve to receive. Nobody with any sense of empathy likes to see that, or the vitriol being directed towards the Muslim community.

With that said I feel like labeling it a Muslim ban (which is something Trump brought upon himself with his rhetoric) doesn't quite capture the legitimate nature of the threat that Obama warned about from these particular countries in question.


I don't think that the threat should be downplayed, which is why the country has stringent vetting on people we allow to come over here. I am not sympathetic to Islamist extremists. I hate them because I think they're cowards who attack soft targets and target their own people or use them as shields. But I am empathetic to refugees who haven't done anything wrong, and I am empathetic to our legal residents and green card holders who come here, live peacefully, and in turn get treated like trash by Trump and wrongfully disparaged by his rabid white nationalist followers. My family members are immigrants turned citizens, it's sick to see people who have done all the right things to come here and make a better lives for themselves being treated like dogs. It also makes it clear to me, that the whole "we don't hate immigrants, just illegals" argument was a bunch of crap.

But to try and paint it as anything but a Muslim ban, when his rhetoric and comments actually lend credence to that, I'm trying to find out where the disconnect is here. What makes you think, personally, that this isn't a Muslim targeted ban? This is exactly what he said he'd do months ago (which I honestly didn't think he was crazy enough to execute so haphazardly, but I gave him waaaay too much credit).


The term "Muslim ban" implies that any and every practicing Muslim is banned from entering the country.

The intention/motivation behind the "ban" appears to be stricter regulation of individuals to and from countries that have been identified (by the Obama administration) as emerging threats.

Any sense of safety one may feel is, without a doubt, largely superficial (since very little can stop a person with bad intent) but there is a rationale behind taking precaution.

Nobody is saying stopping harassing everyone traveling from these countries was the right way to go about it. However, the increased, and legitimate, concern for American safety amidst recent attacks in Europe (which appears to have very little to do with this ban in particular) resonates with many Americans.


It is such an obviously made up fear. Guiliani flat out said they couldn't make this ban off of religion so they made it security. There was no pressing threat from the seven countries. And there is no direct comparison to the USA and EUrope. Europe has a different geography, different way of getting into the different countries, border security, etc., and doesn't have the vetting. It's another way to appeal to the fear of Americans. It may resonate, but it still is built on tissue paper, not on anything solid. Their methods are crude and transparent, and they lie and exaggerate to get their policies through. Trump is known to use hyperbole to his advantage, that's his trademark through his business life.

This is not about just what happened to the immigrants. It's this man's way of going about business. And I'm calling out his BS. He's full of it.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#225 » by Rainyy » Tue Jan 31, 2017 12:24 am

MrDollarBills wrote: I'm trying to find out where the disconnect is here. What makes you think, personally, that this isn't a Muslim targeted ban?


There's a pretty significant difference between saying the immigration/travel ban is targeted towards and disproportionately affects Muslims and the moniker "Muslim ban," which implies Muslims are banned from the United States.

It's the difference between a policy taxing sodas (in effect curtailing their consumption) and one outright banning them. Surely the democrats favoring those soda taxes would feel misrepresented if their tax was described as a ban.

Look, "Muslim ban" is a clever meme the democrats are using to rile up opposition to Trump. It's a very cynical phrase because it is obviously inaccurate, but is nonetheless deployed. That does not mean the phrase isn't rooted in legitimate concerns, and maybe propaganda - and make no mistake this is propaganda - is justified when it raises public consciousness to an important issue (I personally believe not).

Now, I know part of this is a way of turning Trump's own words against him. He called for a "Muslim ban" and maybe it's fair to grant that terminology when that was/is his underlying intent. But as a descriptor of reality, it is highly misleading. The pros of capturing Trump's rhetoric and implied intent, are outweighed by the cons of disseminating a facially false narrative to the American people. Put in another way, the media is choosing ideology over truth.

I am loosely paraphrasing here, but I believe it was Jon Stewart who once said something to the tune of "you can submit to ideas without submitting to a corresponding ideology. We can see the obvious flaws in Trump's policy without having to buy into the Democratic party line or conformity with Twitter's meme of the day. I think the risk of doing those things is that one begins to favor social allegiance over truth.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#226 » by CalamityX12 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 12:44 am

bws94 wrote:Guiliani claims Trump asked him how can he make a legal Muslim ban.

Muslim ban was called on by Trump when he campaigned.



The difference is he could not ban all Muslims, so he found a way to ban some of them.

In spirit, this is a Muslim ban but can't be full for legal reasons, IMO. The 7 countries is a way for him to do it.

There's the letter of the law and there's the spirit of the law....

Lets read beyond the words.

BTW, he's ban happened to the countries that aren't at risk as the others he has business relations with I believe.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#227 » by Rainyy » Tue Jan 31, 2017 12:58 am

CalamityX12 wrote:BTW, he's ban happened to the countries that aren't at risk as the others he has business relations with I believe.


So what? Considering it is one million times easier to do business in the UAE/Saudi Arabia than in Iran/Iraq/Syria where its either illegal and/or too risky to invest, it doesn't surprise me Trump doesn't have business relationships with the latter countries. Also not surprising that the more prosperous Middle East countries aren't on that list and the more politically/economically tumultuous ones are.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#228 » by bws94 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 3:53 pm

Rainyy wrote:
CalamityX12 wrote:BTW, he's ban happened to the countries that aren't at risk as the others he has business relations with I believe.


So what? Considering it is one million times easier to do business in the UAE/Saudi Arabia than in Iran/Iraq/Syria where its either illegal and/or too risky to invest, it doesn't surprise me Trump doesn't have business relationships with the latter countries. Also not surprising that the more prosperous Middle East countries aren't on that list and the more politically/economically tumultuous ones are.


Yet, Saudi Arabia sponsors as much terrorism as any of them. I saw a figure than no one has committed terrorism on US soil from any of those countries in over 40 years. Yet, 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudi. That's the whole hypocrisy, what countries weren't included regardless of whether there is a war there or not. The San Bernadino terrorists had a connection to Pakistan, which also sponsors terrorism, and that country isn't on the list. How is this to protect America with this being said? And the question of business considerations over the safety of Americans is valid based on those considerations.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#229 » by NyCeEvO » Tue Jan 31, 2017 4:53 pm

bws94 wrote:
Rainyy wrote:
CalamityX12 wrote:BTW, he's ban happened to the countries that aren't at risk as the others he has business relations with I believe.


So what? Considering it is one million times easier to do business in the UAE/Saudi Arabia than in Iran/Iraq/Syria where its either illegal and/or too risky to invest, it doesn't surprise me Trump doesn't have business relationships with the latter countries. Also not surprising that the more prosperous Middle East countries aren't on that list and the more politically/economically tumultuous ones are.


Yet, Saudi Arabia sponsors as much terrorism as any of them. I saw a figure than no one has committed terrorism on US soil from any of those countries in over 40 years. Yet, 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudi. That's the whole hypocrisy, what countries weren't included regardless of whether there is a war there or not. The San Bernadino terrorists had a connection to Pakistan, which also sponsors terrorism, and that country isn't on the list. How is this to protect America with this being said? And the question of business considerations over the safety of Americans is valid based on those considerations.

I've seen some GOP supporters on TV, even point out Pakistan and Saudi Arabia is pretty baffling. Giuliani's defense for Saudi Arabia was terrible. Citing that the prince has a completely different understanding of the threat of ISIS than the previous regime has nothing to do with the current active movement of actual terrorists. He showed his hand when he talked about SA's connection to Israel and the US.

It's quite clear that country borders don't mean anything to ISIS and radicalization is online now, so simply stopping entry from particular countries doesn't make sense. I can understanding logically clamping down on all immigration from any country, but to act like terrorism is only confined to inhabitants of those countries is wrong. Similar to what Reagan cited, one man's terrorist is often (but not always) another person's freedom fighter. This doesn't mean that terrorism is ultimately completely relative, however its implications should cause us to think deeper about the labels and intentions behind such labels and whether they are truly of good or malicious intent.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#230 » by shakendfries » Tue Jan 31, 2017 5:30 pm

So wait, are you guys concerned that Trump hasn't added more countries to Obama's list, or the fear that Trump will attempt to ban all Muslims? These concerns seem to contradict each other
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#231 » by CalamityX12 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 6:49 pm

My concern with Trump, while i believe he has "good" intentions, he's not rectifying the situation but only to escalate it and perhaps further the causes of the anti-USA sentiments shared not just around Muslim majority countries but throughout the world.

While doing so, compromising the integrity and regard this country holds dear.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#232 » by CalamityX12 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 6:50 pm

The road to hell is paved with good intentions
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#233 » by shakendfries » Tue Jan 31, 2017 7:01 pm

CalamityX12 wrote:My concern with Trump, while i believe he has "good" intentions, he's not rectifying the situation but only to escalate it and perhaps further the causes of the anti-USA sentiments shared not just around Muslim majority countries but throughout the world.

While doing so, compromising the integrity and regard this country holds dear.


As opposed to simply bombing these countries like Hilary, Obama, and their predecessors?
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#234 » by Rainyy » Tue Jan 31, 2017 7:02 pm

bws94 wrote:Yet, Saudi Arabia sponsors as much terrorism as any of them. I saw a figure than no one has committed terrorism on US soil from any of those countries in over 40 years. Yet, 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudi. That's the whole hypocrisy, what countries weren't included regardless of whether there is a war there or not.


I mean, I don't disagree with you that our policy in regards to Saudi Arabia is very hypocritical and flawed. But the big point is that this is not Trump-specific favoritism. This has been our policy towards Saudi Arabia for decades, regardless of democrat or republic, and would be the same policy regardless of if Hilary or Clinton, or any other candidate would have won.

It's just so ridiculous that now all of the sudden there is this liberal outrage over the US pursuing problematic policies abroad. And suddenly status quo historical practices that no one cried about before are being attributed to the personal biases of Trump. That's ludicrous. Hell, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia donated to Hilary Clinton's campaign and many of the Saudi princes were friends of both Clintons. Not to mention this list of seven countries that didn't include Saudi Arabia was a product of the Obama administration...

Do you guys not follow the history of US foreign policy? Are people not aware we have financed and supported more military dictatorships than we have democracies, regardless of who is in office? Do people forget that Bill Clinton failed to intervene in the Rwandan genocide (because there was no economic incentive) and cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of people? As a nation, we've only ever cared about democracy or humanitarian rights when it is in our immediate political-economic interest, and usually that is as an ideological justification, not the base rationale. This idealizing of American values is annoying.

bws94 wrote: And the question of business considerations over the safety of Americans is valid based on those considerations.


No. When there is a historical/policy explanation for our favorable treatment of Saudi Arabia that takes precedent over speculation of business interests.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#235 » by twosevenstreet » Tue Jan 31, 2017 7:03 pm

This will be the only comment I will make.

Regardless of WHAT WE AMERICANS believe, ISIS will use everything that TRUMP does as a RECRUITING TOOL.

The country WILL be less SAFE because Trump is the President.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#236 » by CalamityX12 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 7:06 pm

shakendfries wrote:
CalamityX12 wrote:My concern with Trump, while i believe he has "good" intentions, he's not rectifying the situation but only to escalate it and perhaps further the causes of the anti-USA sentiments shared not just around Muslim majority countries but throughout the world.

While doing so, compromising the integrity and regard this country holds dear.


As opposed to simply bombing these countries like Hilary, Obama, and their predecessors?

Bombing against the enemy is not the same as banning innocence or those with legit US entry certified credentials of the same country.

and i never said i approved or disapproved the bombings.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#237 » by Rainyy » Tue Jan 31, 2017 7:10 pm

CalamityX12 wrote:Bombing against the enemy is not the same as banning innocence or those with legit US entry certified credentials of the same country


You're right - bombing civilians and destabilizing a country is far worse than the inconveniences of a travel ban.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#238 » by bws94 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 7:36 pm

Rainyy wrote:
bws94 wrote:Yet, Saudi Arabia sponsors as much terrorism as any of them. I saw a figure than no one has committed terrorism on US soil from any of those countries in over 40 years. Yet, 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudi. That's the whole hypocrisy, what countries weren't included regardless of whether there is a war there or not.


I mean, I don't disagree with you that our policy in regards to Saudi Arabia is very hypocritical and flawed. But the big point is that this is not Trump-specific favoritism. This has been our policy towards Saudi Arabia for decades, regardless of democrat or republic, and would be the same policy regardless of if Hilary or Clinton, or any other candidate would have won.

It's just so ridiculous that now all of the sudden there is this liberal outrage over the US pursuing problematic policies abroad. And suddenly status quo historical practices that no one cried about before are being attributed to the personal biases of Trump. That's ludicrous. Hell, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia donated to Hilary Clinton's campaign and many of the Saudi princes were friends of both Clintons. Not to mention this list of seven countries that didn't include Saudi Arabia was a product of the Obama administration...

Do you guys not follow the history of US foreign policy? Are people not aware we have financed and supported more military dictatorships than we have democracies, regardless of who is in office? Do people forget that Bill Clinton failed to intervene in the Rwandan genocide (because there was no economic incentive) and cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of people? As a nation, we've only ever cared about democracy or humanitarian rights when it is in our immediate political-economic interest, and usually that is as an ideological justification, not the base rationale. This idealizing of American values is annoying.

bws94 wrote: And the question of business considerations over the safety of Americans is valid based on those considerations.


No. When there is a historical/policy explanation for our favorable treatment of Saudi Arabia that takes precedent over speculation of business interests.



Rainny, it's NOT the point about other administration's policy on Saudi Arabia before Trump's. If he's this do-different type who is doing this ban in the security of the American people, as he says, then he should do different than previous administrations and include Saudi Arabia in a ban and talk about how they sponsor terrorism. If the point is keeping Americans safe, not including SA exposes him as not doing so. And like other politicians, he's in bed businesswise with the Saudi's at the expense of the safety of Americans.

I definitely have followed American foreign policy but beyond from American sources, to people who have been affected by it that come from other lands.

Trump is not a normal president. And I think a mistake that some are making is looking at his policies and trying to separate them from his personality. You can't. His personality is what drives his actions. There's no logic to what he's doing, there's Trump knows the way and will do what he wants, and justify it how he sees fit. So I think Trump's words are BS as businessman or president. He's just justifying what he said he'll do. But I think he lacks the international knowledge to know what he thinks he knew prior to becoming president especially about foreign policy. I'm not saying he's always going to be wrong, but how he justifies things is he turns a situation to fit his preconceived notions of how things are, whether right or wrong.
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#239 » by Rainyy » Tue Jan 31, 2017 10:19 pm

bws94 wrote:ban for the security of the American people, as he says, then he should do different than previous administrations and include Saudi Arabia in a ban and talk about how they sponsor terrorism. If the point is keeping Americans safe, not including SA exposes him as not doing so.

And like other politicians, he's in bed businesswise with the Saudi's at the expense of the safety of Americans.


First, it isn't about "being in bed with the Saudi's in business." It is foremost about the United States' foreign interest. We need Saudi Arabia for their oil. That's why no administration has ever stood up to them. It would be political suicide.

So what you are clearly doing here is holding Trump to a different standard. How many times must I say this: this list of seven designated nations was created by the Obama administration. They were well aware of Saudi Arabia's deplorable human rights record and their ties with terrorist organizations and left them off the list. Where was the media's outrage then? Where was your outrage?

Again, I am not justifying Trump's decision. I disagree with the entirety of his executive order and also think we should come down hard on nations like SA. Only saying we have a clear national interest in keeping Saudi Arabia off the list, and that it would be political suicide to put them on that list. To ignore that justification and turn to speculation over Trump's own personal business dealings is dishonest at best.

bws94 wrote: the mistake you are making is looking at [Trump's] policies and trying to separate them from his personality. You can't. His personality is what drives his actions.


You absolutely can evaluate the policies separately and should. To do otherwise is to commit an ad hominem fallacy, whereby we let irrelevant personal attributes bias our perception of the issue at hands.

I think you have perfectly encapsulated my main criticisms of the left. They have let identity politics get so out of hand that actual policy discussions take a back seat.
bws94
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Re: Official Current Affairs & Politics thread 

Post#240 » by bws94 » Tue Jan 31, 2017 10:40 pm

Rainyy wrote:
bws94 wrote:ban for the security of the American people, as he says, then he should do different than previous administrations and include Saudi Arabia in a ban and talk about how they sponsor terrorism. If the point is keeping Americans safe, not including SA exposes him as not doing so.

And like other politicians, he's in bed businesswise with the Saudi's at the expense of the safety of Americans.


First, it isn't about "being in bed with the Saudi's in business." It is foremost about the United States' foreign interest. We need Saudi Arabia for their oil. That's why no administration has ever stood up to them. It would be political suicide.

So what you are clearly doing here is holding Trump to a different standard. How many times must I say this: this list of seven designated nations was created by the Obama administration. They were well aware of Saudi Arabia's deplorable human rights record and their ties with terrorist organizations and left them off the list. Where was the media's outrage then? Where was your outrage?

Again, I am not justifying Trump's decision. I disagree with the entirety of his executive order and also think we should come down hard on nations like SA. Only saying we have a clear national interest in keeping Saudi Arabia off the list, and that it would be political suicide to put them on that list. To ignore that justification and turn to speculation over Trump's own personal business dealings is dishonest at best.

bws94 wrote: the mistake you are making is looking at [Trump's] policies and trying to separate them from his personality. You can't. His personality is what drives his actions.


You absolutely can evaluate the policies separately and should. To do otherwise is to commit an ad hominem fallacy, whereby we let irrelevant personal attributes bias our perception of the issue at hands.

I think you have perfectly encapsulated my main criticisms of the left. They have let identity politics get so out of hand that actual policy discussions take a back seat.



HE, not ME, held himself to a different standard. He talks like he's different, yet he's not doing anything different regarding Saudi Arabia. But let's get out of this other administrations vs. what Trump did stuff. That's a side issue. The main point is what I said before. If it is about safety, like he proclaims, he's not proving he's putting the American people's safety first by not including countries like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan in his list. That's the main argument he or anyone on his team has had a good response to.

And I stand by what I say. Trump is personality driven. This isn't ad hominem, it's his modus operandi. Everything about Donald Trump's presidency, the tone he sets and what he does is through emotion, not logic, and him proving whatever it is he think he should do. That's why he doesn't take input well from others and is acting like he is now. There is absolutely no president that tweets like Trump does, and acts upon those tweets. The rest had some sort of tact and measure, Trump is not showing either. He's just going about doing what he wants as fast as possible.

We can agree to disagree about Trump not being ruled by personality and emotion, but I have really no more to say about it as it is very, very clear to me that's the case.

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