Darwoth wrote:you know, cause they were obviously fascist white supremacist burrito nazis.
saltmummy wrote:AND THE WALL GROWS! Why are we building trumps wall with text instead of bricks and on the internet instead of the Mexican border?
saltmummy wrote:Basically it would be another of Trumps vaguely phallic objects, laying limp across the southern end of the US.
Icon wrote:This isn't Farmville with fighting, its Mortal Kombat with corn.
TotalyMeow wrote:saltmummy wrote:Basically it would be another of Trumps vaguely phallic objects, laying limp across the southern end of the US.
But more effective than if it were to stand up straight.
Darwoth wrote:you know, cause they were obviously fascist white supremacist burrito nazis.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt like's to post a large number of different points in his posts and then argue them individually so that when he realizes he's gone horribly wrong somewhere, like he did with his attack on my gender, he can drop that section and hope no one notices in the shuffle.
TotalyMeow wrote: Claeyt's perspective of Salem and what it's about is very different from the devs and in many cases is completely the opposite of what we believe.
Darwoth wrote:trump is going to be the best president since george washington, claeyt is just pissy that all of his "rebel without a clue" bernie buddies are starting to understand what socialism means and deciding to be "anti establishment" with ol donald instead. things like muslims continuously blowing themselves up every few weeks around the globe and swarms of the very same undesirables that every american wants to get rid of rioting at his rallies continue to make his support grow.
Trismegistus wrote:Sorry if this theme has already been passed over but I couldn't bare to spend my entire afternoon reading page after page to see of it has been brought up. Something that I continuously get frustrated by when hearing discussion of political candidates statements during campaigns is taking their statements at face value. Quoting something and expecting those specific words to be laws enacted in the future by that particular candidate. They are political speeches and statements created to get votes, not to make laws. If a majority of people support those statements, and you do not, and you support a Democracy or a Republic, well, your *****. So don't get all riled up saying, "Holy moly, did you hear what he said?" Discuss whether the electorate is capable of supporting something like that. That would be more interesting. I'm thinking specifically of some of Claeyt's remarks but perhaps others as well. Mentioning things like "Oh, Trump said he wants to do a thing that is unconstitutional. He is unelectable and how dare you support him," and stating them as if it's fact and unarguable. Things like "Trump's father was a member of the KKK."
Trismegistus wrote:So ***** what? It's not illegal to be a member of the KKK or any other hate group. Why do you care if someone is a member of the KKK? If a member of the KKK breaks a law, they will be prosecuted. Problem solved. Why do you care if a candidate says something that implies a desire to create a law that, according to your interpretation, is unconstitutional? By your own definition, the thing that you are railing against is impossible to become fact. You live in a country that is ruled by laws and those laws are protected and interpreted by the Judicial branch. Sure, you can discuss that the law could be enacted, then it'll be in place for months or years until the Supreme Court rules on it, and ooooh the current Judges are evil, crony, party members who will help their party break the Constitution. Again, more interesting and more to the point of how things actually work than spewing your opinions and waiting to get in a back and forth with the opposing side.
jorb wrote:(jwhitehorn) you are an ungrateful, spoiled child
Claeyt wrote:[
It is illegal to be a member of a Hate group that organizes or funds criminal activity. This has happened many times to various chapters of the KKK.
TotalyMeow wrote: Claeyt's perspective of Salem and what it's about is very different from the devs and in many cases is completely the opposite of what we believe.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:There's a difference between the 2. In Walker's case, his advisers intentionally set it up to avoid open government laws. In HRC's case they openly set it up to try and control her email secrecy. We'll see if they broke any laws by intentionally setting it up but they were not hiding it. They thought they were lawful in setting it up whereas Walker's advisers knew they were breaking the law. Again, I don't think HRC has broken the law.
It's unlawful to put classified or top secret information out in the open where someone not qualified can see them, and a private email server is not very secure. Surely anyone in such high levels of public office knows this. You're making no sense saying that on one hand someone knew they were breaking the law but on the other they didn't so they weren't breaking a law. If there is a law against something, and you break it, it doesn't matter if you were ignorant of it's existence. It's YOUR responsibility to know what you are and aren't allowed to do.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:I'm living on the planet where fear and distrust of other peoples doesn't irrationally rule my mind. Have you ever actually talked to anyone from the middle-east. Most of them don't hate us and wish their countries were more like ours'. They're fighting against dictatorship and theocracy
So... you're saying there aren't large groups of people in them Middle East who hate us, would like to hurt us, and would use the opportunity to sneak into our country while the system is overloaded trying to process the much too large numbers of people we are now accepting into the country from that area? You're saying countries like Germany aren't having trouble with the culture clash of various refugees not being able to handle the sight of a woman's ankles and are seeing higher crime rates as a result? You're saying I should be happy and pretend that just because some of the refugees will be peaceful, all of them will surely be, lalala? That I shouldn't instead question these changes and prefer that the numbers accepted stay low enough that backgrounds can be checked and fake passports discovered before it's too late? That numbers stay low enough that those coming here can at least be somewhat integrated, hopefully, and not become violent when they try to hold onto parts of their culture that just won't work here?
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:The IMMIGRATION quotas have definitely NOT gone up and have not been raised. This includes all visas and citizenship immigration. Like I said above, the president and the state dept. may determine the REFUGEE QUOTAS which is what that article is talking about.
So what? They're still here, now.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:...but you're willing to vote for and support for president a man who irrationally and falsely claims based on no facts or reason that Mexicans are rapists.
I intend to vote for someone, anyway. It's not going to be a Democrat. Though I don't agree with everything Trump says and does, I still think he'll be a better president than either Hillary or Bernie, or the other remaining Republican candidates, for that matter. Let's not forget that the whole hash of Hillary vs Trump arguments might be moot.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:It is always okay to break an immoral law that favors immigrants from white western European countries. If our forefathers had been denied access to America's freedom they would have been pouring over the Canadian border instead.
“An unjust law is itself a species of violence. Arrest for its breach is more so. Now the law of nonviolence says that violence should be resisted not by counter-violence but by nonviolence. This I do by breaking the law and by peacefully submitting to arrest and imprisonment.”
― Mahatma Gandhi, Non-violence in Peace and War 1942-49
“One has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.”
― Martin Luther King Jr.
Okay... you're insane. There is a difference between breaking a law perceived as unjust and taking the ensuing punishment in an attempt to make people aware of an injustice being committed and therefore change the law, and just breaking a law because you don't agree with it and stand to personally benefit if you get away with it. Disobeying an 'unjust law' is still a crime, and even your quote by Gandhi acknowledges that one will be arrested and imprisoned (or in this case, deported). I have argued that illegal immigrants should be deported and the law changed if it needs to be changed. Allowing them to be here, pretending it's okay so a few politicians can get votes from their legal relatives, is not justice but is itself immoral. It's also not okay to do something just because someone else said so, did you ever question that maybe Gandhi and MLK are simply wrong in this viewpoint?
I also don't see how you even can call it immoral if the US accepts more people who are qualified to work and do well than we do poor people with no skills that will likely need some form of support or another right away. It makes perfect sense. It doesn't matter if a couple hundred years ago we accepted any warm body that could manage to get on a ship bound here. This country has changed since then, the entire world has changed since then, and it is no longer possible to make a living on 40 acres and a mule.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:They've said "hi, I'm with the KKK and I support Donald Trump." That woman had clear white power tattoos on her arms and she still works for Trump's campaign.
That's what they're saying on their calls to people? I think you're lying.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:No, I would not accept help from someone who ran a dog fighting ring, or killed animals for snuff films, or had sex with animals if I ran a no-kill shelter. I would tell them they are evil and should stop doing what they are doing and if they said that they were continuing with their violence towards animals I'd call the police. That's in fact almost exactly what I'm doing here on this forum. I'm saying to the dog ***** Trump sycophants that they ARE wrong for following a racist, misogynist, nativist, bigot simply because they believe it's time for a change in the political order of Washington. I'm telling them dog ***** that they are wrong and need to change. The question is when will they wise up and stop ***** those dogs because Trump keeps encouraging them to ***** more and more dogs. Just because Trump says that ***** dogs will make America great again doesn't mean that he's right or for that matter... sane.
You're very disturbing.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:Of course they're allowed to disallow crazy racists from entering their volunteer center. Of course they're allowed to not have David Duke come and answer phones for Trump... but they didn't.
But it's not David Duke, it's just some random woman who has a right to express her political opinion. You keep talking about fascism and how it's a bad thing, but then you turn around and have these extremely intolerant viewpoints. No one can see this woman's tattoos over the phone. She is presumably not spouting White Supremacist rhetoric over those phones, but is reading whatever script they gave her (I'm sure there is call monitoring to make sure no one is working for the opposition or some such and they would catch that).
This is what I've been referring to when I've asked if political campaigns are allowed to ask questions about whether or not someone belongs to a white supremacist group and whether or not they are allowed to discriminate based on the answers:
http://finduslaw.com/civil-rights-act-1 ... pter-21#17
The Civil Rights Act of 1964, title VII, which deals with equal opportunity employment. All things considered, I'm surprised you don't know about it. It's a heavy read, and other laws like the Age Discrimination Act have been passed as well to supplement it, so it's not all there, but explanatory articles I've read on the subject seem to indicate that it's illegal to ask any questions related to an applicant's beliefs.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:Why don't the other candidates have brown people shutting down their rallies. What a mystery.
Not a mystery, pandering.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:...and I think you're an idiot for preferring him over Hillary and especially Bernie as "He's categorically not qualified to be President" according to Mitt Romney and the many, many other people within the Republican party.
You really don't need to resort to name-calling. I'm perfectly willing to agree to disagree that just about anyone is better than Hillary.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:The presidency makes the person bigger in some way. It shows in how fast they age and how fast their hair goes gray. They seem more important once they become president.
Then I'm sure Trump will do fine. If they all grow into the position, we've nothing to worry about.
TotalyMeow wrote:Claeyt wrote:You can disagree with some of her policies (like I do) but she has been effective in many ways. Being able to work in the Senate and being Secretary of State; these aren't small jobs. You can't deny these are jobs where you have to be able to do big things for the country as a civil servant.
She has been effectively bad in many ways. Sure those are big jobs, but just because she has done the jobs, doesn't mean she has done them well.
jorb wrote:(jwhitehorn) you are an ungrateful, spoiled child
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