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  #101  
Old 06-26-2012, 02:31 PM
Really Not All That Bright Really Not All That Bright is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
Show me where he's even bowed a little (except to foreign dictators, I already seen enough of that) to get bipartisan support on anything.
You mean like removing the public option from the healthcare reform bill because Republicans didn't like it?

Last edited by Really Not All That Bright; 06-26-2012 at 02:31 PM.
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  #102  
Old 06-26-2012, 02:33 PM
Robot Arm Robot Arm is offline
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And keeping two high-level appointments from the previous administration; Ben Bernanke as Chairman of the Federal Reserve, and Robert Gates as Secretary of Defense.

And appointing Jon Huntsman as Ambassador to China.
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  #103  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:06 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by Really Not All That Bright View Post
You mean like removing the public option from the healthcare reform bill because Republicans didn't like it?
I think that's really slicing it thin, with some opposition in his own party and republicans jumping on him hard he gets half a point for caving.

RobotArm I'll have to say not really. Keeping a few appointments and diplomatic slots doesnt fit with the "bending over backwards" to work with the GOP argument that was made up thread.

I know I shouldnt be, but I remain surprised that there is anyone left to defend the president's leadership style. It surely isnt what he promised Americans.

Last edited by IntelliQ; 06-26-2012 at 03:09 PM.
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  #104  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:07 PM
Chronos Chronos is offline
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All right, but apart from the sanitation, medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?
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  #105  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:12 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by Chronos View Post
All right, but apart from the sanitation, medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?
Obama is like the Roman empire?

Hand me a bib and pass me the cup I want some of that.
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  #106  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:19 PM
Robot Arm Robot Arm is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
I think that's really slicing it thin, with some opposition in his own party and republicans jumping on him hard he gets half a point for caving.

RobotArm I'll have to say not really. Keeping a few appointments and diplomatic slots doesnt fit with the "bending over backwards" to work with the GOP argument that was made up thread.
Fine, name any Republican in the last twenty years who has done half as much as Obama has in terms of appointing members of the other party to high-ranking positions, or of implementing their policy ideas.
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  #107  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:20 PM
zamboniracer zamboniracer is offline
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IntelliQ, your contention that Prez Obama and/or the Democrats in the House and Senate didn't reach across the aisle enough for you or the Republicans is really off point as to this thread, which is supposedly about whether or not a businessman would make a better president than one without business experience. When a Republican such as Mitch McConnell says that the Democrats didn't reach enough to satisfy him, to me that's like the wolf complaining that the rabbit wouldn't lay down in front of him.
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  #108  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:45 PM
elucidator elucidator is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
Obama is like the Roman empire?

Hand me a bib and pass me the cup I want some of that.
Pssst. Joke. Life of Brian?
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  #109  
Old 06-26-2012, 03:56 PM
rogerbox rogerbox is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
Correction: It's community agitator.

Ahh yes the ever-moving goal post. If they're down to earth they're not smart enough. If the person is highly successful and earned a great deal of wealth they're out of touch. (Unless of course they hang in marxist circles and race bait, then it's ok to be wealthy.)

Shit, I lost track of which traits you're against and which one's you're for. Maybe it's time to get out your bumper stickers so I can keep up.
Here let me try to communicate with you, y'see, talkingpoint talkingpoint, and because talkingpoint, talktalkapointpoint? So like, talkingpoint, point.

Clear now?
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  #110  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:09 PM
BrainGlutton BrainGlutton is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
Correction: It's community agitator.
If only!
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  #111  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:10 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by zamboniracer View Post
IntelliQ, your contention that Prez Obama and/or the Democrats in the House and Senate didn't reach across the aisle enough for you or the Republicans is really off point as to this thread, which is supposedly about whether or not a businessman would make a better president than one without business experience. When a Republican such as Mitch McConnell says that the Democrats didn't reach enough to satisfy him, to me that's like the wolf complaining that the rabbit wouldn't lay down in front of him.
No kidding. It snowballed after I rebuked the notion of democrats "bending over backwards" to please republicans. Now someone is trying to hand me a homework assignment on the 20 year history of presidential appointments. :-/

Last edited by IntelliQ; 06-26-2012 at 04:11 PM.
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  #112  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:15 PM
BrainGlutton BrainGlutton is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
I think that's really slicing it thin, with some opposition in his own party and republicans jumping on him hard he gets half a point for caving.
Don't forget that the Dem opposition, and most of the public dissatisfaction with Obama's health-care reform package, exists because it didn't go far enough.

Quote:
A new AP poll finds that Americans who think the law should have done more outnumber those who think the government should stay out of health care by 2-to-1.

<snip>

More than 30 million people would gain coverage in 2019 when the law is fully phased in, but another 20 million or so would remain uninsured. Bleakley, who was uninsured early in her career, views the overhaul as a work in progress.

The poll found that about four in 10 adults think the new law did not go far enough to change the health care system, regardless of whether they support the law, oppose it or remain neutral. On the other side, about one in five say they oppose the law because they think the federal government should not be involved in health care at all.

The AP poll was conducted by Stanford University with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Overall, 30 percent favored the legislation, while 40 percent opposed it, and another 30 percent remained neutral.

Those numbers are no endorsement for Obama’s plan, but the survey also found a deep-seated desire for change that could pose a problem for Republicans. Only 25 percent in the poll said minimal tinkering would suffice for the health care system.
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  #113  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:19 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by rogerbox View Post
Here let me try to communicate with you, y'see, talkingpoint talkingpoint, and because talkingpoint, talktalkapointpoint? So like, talkingpoint, point.

Clear now?
Yes, thank you. I really enjoyed that.
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  #114  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:21 PM
ladyfoxfyre ladyfoxfyre is offline
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Wow, a thread talking about Romney's qualifications for president has devolved into a discussion about how much the right wing branch of the SDMB hates Obama. How...shocking.

Last edited by ladyfoxfyre; 06-26-2012 at 04:21 PM.
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  #115  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:23 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by ladyfoxfyre View Post
Wow, a thread talking about Romney's qualifications for president has devolved into a discussion about how much the right wing branch of the SDMB hates Obama. How...shocking.
There's likely to be daily repeats and similar spin-off episodes until November so dont worry about tivo'ing it.
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  #116  
Old 06-26-2012, 04:54 PM
Robot Arm Robot Arm is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
No kidding. It snowballed after I rebuked the notion of democrats "bending over backwards" to please republicans. Now someone is trying to hand me a homework assignment on the 20 year history of presidential appointments. :-/
No, someone is asking you to back up your opinions with some facts.
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  #117  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:08 PM
ladyfoxfyre ladyfoxfyre is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
There's likely to be daily repeats and similar spin-off episodes until November so dont worry about tivo'ing it.
You're one of the biggest contributors of this spinoff bullshit, so I can think of an easier way to avoid seeing it besides just not turning my Tivo on.
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  #118  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:10 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by Robot Arm View Post
No, someone is asking you to back up your opinions with some facts.
Nope. You posed a question unrelated to anything I claimed. Then you expect me to dig into it. No thanks, it's just not interesting or relevant.
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  #119  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:19 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by ladyfoxfyre View Post
You're one of the biggest contributors of this spinoff bullshit, so I can think of an easier way to avoid seeing it besides just not turning my Tivo on.
Gee whiz, I was just trying to make light of the derailment which Im partially responsible. :-s

(In my defense it's sometimes difficult to stop the ball rolling in the wrong direction without coming off like Im ducking questions, like with the last guy who didnt want to let it go.)
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  #120  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:25 PM
Robot Arm Robot Arm is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
Nope. You posed a question unrelated to anything I claimed. Then you expect me to dig into it.
Obama has worked harder to reach out to Republicans than any Republican in my memory has reached out to Democrats. I say that counts as bending over backwards; something you said he didn't do.

So, yes, it is related to something you claimed.
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  #121  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:26 PM
BrainGlutton BrainGlutton is offline
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Originally Posted by Esox Lucius View Post
Yet the GOP welcomed the Tea Party extremists and served them with an unbending rigidity that unfairly took advantage of the democratic process. If you still don't understand liberal outrage at this, consider the mirror situation: the Democratic party taking an extreme communist group under its wing in order to get elected and holding the country hostage to achieve its ends. You think that wouldn't bring a righteous hue and cry from conservatives?
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Sounds like you have a problem with Democracy.
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Originally Posted by BrainGlutton View Post
Sounds like you dodged the question.
Still dodging it.
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  #122  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:32 PM
IntelliQ IntelliQ is offline
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Originally Posted by Robot Arm View Post
Obama has worked harder to reach out to Republicans than any Republican in my memory has reached out to Democrats. I say that counts as bending over backwards; something you said he didn't do.

So, yes, it is related to something you claimed.
No, it's not.
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  #123  
Old 06-26-2012, 05:44 PM
BrainGlutton BrainGlutton is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
No, it's not.
You'll have to do better than that.
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  #124  
Old 06-26-2012, 09:32 PM
gamerunknown gamerunknown is offline
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Pro tip IntelliQ: you can't claim the Democratic party is in ideological Marxist lockstep (#75) and simultaneously point out that their compromise resulted from dissension in the ranks (#103).
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  #125  
Old 06-26-2012, 09:39 PM
zamboniracer zamboniracer is offline
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Originally Posted by IntelliQ View Post
No kidding. It snowballed after I rebuked the notion of democrats "bending over backwards" to please republicans. Now someone is trying to hand me a homework assignment on the 20 year history of presidential appointments. :-/
The word is "rebut" not "rebuke", but your posts really didn't do either. Not that I care anymore.
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  #126  
Old 06-26-2012, 09:47 PM
magellan01 magellan01 is offline
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Originally Posted by BrainGlutton View Post
I'd go with the ex-governor, who understands government (which Obama does, BTW), or the community organizer, who understands the real lives of the people on the ground. Either might have a good grasp of macroeconomics as such, and especially government's role in it. The CEO don't even show.
That's funny. Both the way you included "community organizer" in your answer and the way you completely reframed the question you asked in order to not have it sound as if including "community organizer" in your answer wasn't the height of ridiculousness.
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  #127  
Old 06-26-2012, 09:54 PM
Leaper Leaper is offline
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Originally Posted by magellan01 View Post
A question for you, BrainGlutton, regarding this:

Let's say there's a lot of truth in that. Who do you think is more apt to understand those things when they look into them. Which of these people on the street would you put you money on.

A) A person who is the CEO of a big corporation overseeing many companies and has spent time dealing with companies internationally

B) An ex-Governor of a state

C) a community organizer

What say you?
There seems to be an implication that being a "community organizer" (and I still don't get what's wrong with being one, or how being one is useless for politics or running for the Presidency) is all Obama can/could point to in the way of experience, or is somehow solely defining of his experience as a candidate and a President. Would you like to argue that this implication is correct, or am I misinterpreting somehow?
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  #128  
Old 06-26-2012, 10:03 PM
magellan01 magellan01 is offline
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There seems to be an implication that being a "community organizer" (and I still don't get what's wrong with being one, or how being one is useless for politics or running for the Presidency) is all Obama can/could point to in the way of experience, or is somehow solely defining of his experience as a candidate and a President. Would you like to argue that this implication is correct, or am I misinterpreting somehow?
Feel free to offer other credentials that would likely increase his understanding of what BrainGlutton described. Theoretically, being a community organizer might be the best training in the universe for being President. But it certainly doesn't increase the likelihood that one will be able to grasp the items on his list.

If you'd like to argue that being a law professor helps, go right ahead. But I'd point out that it looks like that were' about to find out on Thursday that Obama doesn't understand the very Constitution he was teaching. Or maybe being a State Senator is somehow helpful. Possibly. Especially if said Senator was reading up on those subjects during all that time he was simply voting "present".
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  #129  
Old 06-26-2012, 10:13 PM
Leaper Leaper is offline
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Originally Posted by magellan01 View Post
If you'd like to argue that being a law professor helps, go right ahead. But I'd point out that it looks like that were' about to find out on Thursday that Obama doesn't understand the very Constitution he was teaching. Or maybe being a State Senator is somehow helpful. Possibly. Especially if said Senator was reading up on those subjects during all that time he was simply voting "present".
No matter how you feel about the ACA, it's undeniable (as far as I can tell) that there are many legal professionals who know what they're talking about who think that it is constitutional (or, at the least, that the point of view that it is is reasonable). I don't think it'd be fair to single out the President on this point, unless you think that all of his advisers (or, for that matter, the courts that ruled in favor of the ACA) also lack the same basic understanding, or are somehow so afraid of him that they'd let him humiliate himself such.

I also don't agree with the implication that voting "present" is a necessary indicator that the voter in question is ducking the issue, not actually there, or is otherwise somehow shirking his/her duties. At the least, it goes against my understanding. If you have information to the contrary, feel free to share.
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  #130  
Old 06-27-2012, 04:49 AM
Esox Lucius Esox Lucius is offline
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I don't think Americans will buy into the juvenile blame-gaming this time around, especially since democrats had a super-majority head-start before the President even took office - up until just last year.

Hell I remember that excuse for failures being flung around when republicans were being shut out of meetings and democrats failed to come to agreements within their own party. Blaming republicans is fashionable but in the end I think will be largely ineffective this time around.
I'm not running for office, so I couldn't care less what political strategy is fashionable. I don't know why you brought it up. I can only assume that passing off criticism of the GOP as mere gamesmanship means you don't have anything substantial to rebut it with.

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Sounds like your talking about the president and his democrat senators.
Have you already forgotten what the president and the Dems did last year to accommodate a deal for the debt ceiling?
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  #131  
Old 06-27-2012, 10:14 AM
Really Not All That Bright Really Not All That Bright is offline
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Originally Posted by magellan01 View Post
If you'd like to argue that being a law professor helps, go right ahead. But I'd point out that it looks like that were' about to find out on Thursday that Obama doesn't understand the very Constitution he was teaching. Or maybe being a State Senator is somehow helpful. Possibly. Especially if said Senator was reading up on those subjects during all that time he was simply voting "present".
It doesn't look like that at all. The presumption is that the statute is constitutional. Even if it was struck down, inferring that he doesn't understand the constitution from that is frankly moronic. Antonin Scalia is in the minority slightly more than half the time. Does that mean he doesn't understand the constitution?
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  #132  
Old 06-27-2012, 11:40 AM
BrainGlutton BrainGlutton is offline
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Originally Posted by Really Not All That Bright View Post
It doesn't look like that at all. The presumption is that the statute is constitutional. Even if it was struck down, inferring that he doesn't understand the constitution from that is frankly moronic. Antonin Scalia is in the minority slightly more than half the time. Does that mean he doesn't understand the constitution?
It means he's an "originalist," which amounts to the same thing.
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