Originally posted by teamsaint
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Chomsky on Trump
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostActually no, they get the least jobs. The masses get most jobs.
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Originally posted by jean View PostIndeed. But we were talking about the 'clout' governments do or do not have in the matter of where those jobs might be.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Is anyone looking forward to the Trump Presidency?
In a perverse way, I am. Trump has strong entertainment value (or he did have when he was on the campaign trail) and though no-one will sleep easy in their beds while he occupies the Oval Office (only I hear he's not really going to occupy it), it might be interesting for observers. Lots of skeletons ready to fall out of lots of closets, Trump's trumping business interests ripe for conflict with his administrative ones and a wall to build and lots of unhappy people if it isn't built.
The next four years could be interesting - if we make it through them! Anyone think there's any danger of Trump being a 'dull' President?Last edited by Conchis; 22-11-16, 19:52.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThat's not 'clout', it's bribery born of desperation!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostIs anyone looking forward to the Trump Presidency?
Our fears and concerns might have more to do with our belief system than what might actually happen - a bit like the idea of him being elected was treated as joke by us, initially. Perhaps reality isn't as closely related to our world view as we think.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI wouldn’t say I’m looking forward to it, but he might turn out to be a 'good president’.
Our fears and concerns might have more to do with our belief system than what might actually happen - a bit like the idea of him being elected was treated as joke by us, initially. Perhaps reality isn't as closely related to our world view as we think.
Whilst I take the remainder of your points, I rather think that it's at least as likely that a substantial number of people's fears about the Trump Presidency (should it come about) are founded principally upon the sheer uncertainty surrounding what he and his henchpersons might or might not do once he's in office rather than the actions themselves (whatever they might be); in this, as with so much else, it parallels the Brexit business in which, at least for the foreseeable future (to the extent that the future is foreseeable!), many people's concerns relate more to such uncertainty as to what might be attempted and when than to what the outcomes of such attempts might turn out to be. In other words, it's as much if not more a case of fear engendered by not knowing what those in charge might or might not do rather than one predicated upon particular decisions to take specific actions.
I'm not so certain that many people treated the prospect of a Trump electoral success as a "joke" as much as an improbability; I rather think that some people regarded (and indeed still do regard) Trump himself, rather than the prospect of his being elected as President of the not remotely "free" world, as a "joke". I also think that, the way things are going, the very term "world view" is on a dangerous trajectory towards a redundancy born of ever increasing meaninglessness.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostA "good President" for whom and on what grounds? What might define a "good President"?
Whilst I take the remainder of your points, I rather think that it's at least as likely that a substantial number of people's fears about the Trump Presidency (should it come about) are founded principally upon the sheer uncertainty surrounding what he and his henchpersons might or might not do once he's in office rather than the actions themselves (whatever they might be)
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