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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#7021 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 11:22

 ldrews, on 2017-August-07, 10:42, said:

And it sure does grind your a**, doesn't it?

Which is, of course, the entire point of trolling.
:rolleyes:
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The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
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#7022 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 14:48

 PassedOut, on 2017-August-07, 11:22, said:

Which is, of course, the entire point of trolling.
:rolleyes:


Don't be too harsh. As a Trump supporter, all he has going for him is his bitterness.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#7023 User is offline   ldrews 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 15:49

 Winstonm, on 2017-August-07, 14:48, said:

Don't be too harsh. As a Trump supporter, all he has going for him is his bitterness.


I beg to differ.

We are 6 months or so into Trump's term. In that six months we have seen:

  • Reduction in illegal alien entries of 70%
  • Suspension of unvetted entries from countries designated by the Obama administration as dangerous
  • Appointment of a conservative Supreme Court Justice
  • Stock market at record highs
  • Unemployment at 17 year low
  • Significant investments, actual or commited, by companies
  • 1 million jobs created
  • Bullying NATO countries to actually start meeting their pledges/commitments to fund defense spending
  • Starting the project of building a wall along the Mexican border
  • Reduction in excess regulations by federal agencies
  • Mobilizing international action to contain North Korea
  • Starting of revamping immigration policy
  • Renegotiating bad trade agreements/treaties
  • Reduction in US arming Syrian rebels
  • Significant progress in defeating ISIS


Congress has failed to address health care and Trump has failed to mobilize/motivate them to do so.

The Trump campaign has been under investigation for 7-8 months now for collusion with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election. So far no evidence of such collusion has surfaced.

Congress has called for a new special prosecutor to investigate all of the issues surrounding the Hillary Clinton/Comey/Loretta Lynch episodes.

By my count, the Trump team is winning, and they don't seem to be tired of it yet.
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#7024 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 16:03

 Winstonm, on 2017-August-07, 09:06, said:

From Newsweek:

Al Bundy Speaks!

Al Bundy voted for Trump because the mall he worked at as a women's shoe salesman closed due to very low foot traffic. Suburban malls in lower-middle class neighborhoods were one of the first casualties of the changing retail landscape. The advent of online sales and the rise of amazon.com and zappos.com was bad for what little commissions Al earned before he was laid off. Being unemployed, disillusioned, and unhappily married he voted for the promise to make America great again. With no viable job prospects and ample idle time he ran for and became President of NO__MA'AM.

Bless his heart. . .
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#7025 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 16:24

Thus far, the bitterness seems to be in one camp only. Obama had 8 years where the only thing that changed was more prosecutions of whistle-blowers and less transparency. Still he did offer EPA over congress and Presidential commitment to climate change mitigation but strangely (?) that didn't stop enough support for a Trump election. If you watched "The Apprentice" you knew what to expect. If you pay attention to the "circus" in Washington, the current chaos is not surprising.
If nothing else, Trump has shown the weakness and ineffectuality of the currently polarized situation. (Much as he demonstrated this for the Republican primary.) Next election.... will Congress shift to the Democrats? What are they offering of interest? So far, just NOT TRUMP! Bankruptcy is not only The Donald's specialty. ;)
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#7026 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 16:27

See what I mean? :P
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#7027 User is offline   ldrews 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 20:28

 Winstonm, on 2017-August-07, 16:27, said:

See what I mean? :P


No I don't. The only bitterness I am seeing is in the anti-Trump group. The Trump supporters don't seem to bitter at all. After all, they are getting what they voted for.
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#7028 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 20:59

Ha ha ha ha. Nothing but sound and fury, signifying nothing.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#7029 User is offline   ldrews 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 21:21

 Winstonm, on 2017-August-07, 20:59, said:

Ha ha ha ha. Nothing but sound and fury, signifying nothing.


You read my mind!
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#7030 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-August-07, 21:28

From Germany Joins the Resistance by Anna Sauerbrey:

Quote

Why can’t Germans do cool politics? There are the clichéd explanations, all of them true to some extent. Is it because of our Nazi past? Is it because after decades of working their way up through the German party system, candidates have lost their sense of daring? Is it because we are a nation in doubt, a nation of permanently self-reflecting ditherers?

Coolness is not a democratic necessity, of course, and we have no right to expect that our policy makers entertain us. You could even argue that the sort of maverick quality that we marvel at in Mr. Macron is inappropriate, because democracy is not about lone decision-making but about seeking broad compromise. But coolness can serve as a means to engage people in politics, to create a sense of belonging. Coolness has the power to create cohesion.

So we keep trying. Lacking a figure to rally around, Germans have found one to rally against: Donald Trump. If we can’t be inspired by the positive, we have decided to embrace the negative, to join the “resistance” as a way of unifying, motivating and aestheticizing our politics.

After all, sometimes all you need is a good evildoer to make a story work. And Mr. Trump is the perfect villain, particularly to the German left. The political coolness everyone can agree on is to be anti-Trump.

A “cool” political culture needs a code that insiders can quickly recognize to create social cohesion. The more people you’d like to be involved, the simpler the code needs to be. And so we’ve reduced Mr. Trump to a caricature — his yellowish hair, his ill-fitting suits, his figure rendered into various comic-book-villain tropes (the Joker is a favorite among Germans). During the G-20 summit meeting, such depictions were everywhere. An uninformed visitor might assume that Mr. Trump is a candidate in the coming election.

Predictably, Mr. Schulz has tried to harness the anti-Trump cool for his own campaign. He embraces the resistance, telling supporters, “It is our duty to step into this man’s way with everything we stand for.” He personalizes the fight, trying to make himself the star of the anti-Trump show, even going after him on Twitter.

When Mr. Trump tweeted that his son’s meeting with a Russian lobbyist was business as usual — “most politicians would have gone” — Mr. Schulz replied: “I wouldn’t have gone there. This is not politics.”

This might be good for politicians, but it’s bad for our politics. In the same way that the public often swoons over charismatic candidates, losing sight of their flaws and nuances, turning Mr. Trump into a cartoon bad guy renders him unreal. If he’s too bad to be true, we may forget that he actually exists.

It also distorts what voters should really worry about. Of course it’s relevant to Germany what happens in the United States, our closest ally. But Mr. Trump is not running for chancellor. Mr. Trump is nothing but a strange surrogate for the lack of catchy slogans and German political coolness.

Eventually, he’ll go away. In the meantime, German politics needs to find a more positive, sustainable way of engaging with the public, speaking to the issues that matter to them, not just tossing up politicians to love — or love to hate.

Ja. Wir auch.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#7031 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 00:55

 awm, on 2017-July-20, 11:33, said:

To ask a somewhat speculative question, suppose that Mueller uncovers a smoking gun. Suppose the Trump campaign provided Russia with voter targeting data which they used to remove democratic voters from the registration rolls in key states, sufficient to swing the election. Suppose Trump has been laundering Russian money for decades, and has promised to end sanctions in exchange for the electoral help...

In this (perhaps far fetched) scenario -- do we think Trump will be impeached? Surely most Republicans won't believe the above story no matter how many mainstream news orgs report it. The Democrats are unlikely to control the Senate before 2020 and it only takes 35 senators to block removal from office (so even some moderate Republicans defecting won't be enough to remove).

I predict Trump stays in office through 2020 unless health issues happen or he voluntarily resigns (which seems not in his nature).

Question: Did the Democratic National Committee election meddle when its leaders gave the Clinton campaign questions to debates in advance of the actual televised debate to the detriment of Bernie Sanders? Or is that just plain old graft and corruption which is unethical but not unlawful and a testament to "how dirty the political game is played" in D.C.?
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#7032 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 09:41

 Al_U_Card, on 2017-August-07, 16:24, said:

Obama had 8 years where the only thing that changed was more prosecutions of whistle-blowers and less transparency.

Don't forget health care. Whether you like Obamacare or not, it happened and was very significant.

One big thing he kept promising but didn't accomplish was closing Guantanamo.

#7033 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 10:04

 RedSpawn, on 2017-August-08, 00:55, said:

Question: Did the Democratic National Committee election meddle when its leaders gave the Clinton campaign questions to debates in advance of the actual televised debate to the detriment of Bernie Sanders? Or is that just plain old graft and corruption which is unethical but not unlawful and a testament to "how dirty the political game is played" in D.C.?


1. This does not matter, because Clinton didn't win.
2. This is a matter of party operatives helping a long time party loyalist over an "independent." There is no possibility of collision with a foreign power, no indication that data was stolen nor that votes or registrations were changed. So the bias here is nowhere near the same level of severity as what may have happened with Trump.
3. Clinton won the primary by a lot. So even some irregularities would not impact the result.
4. I'm all for the DNC cleaning up their act. Some investigation and reform is merited!
5... but this whole thing is like a bridge player arguing that "you failed to alert, so who cares that I had my Russian buddy hack the computers to get me the hand records in advance? It is false equivalency to the extreme.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
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#7034 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 10:11

USA Today along with other sources are reporting a troubling development: that Erick Prince (aka as founder of Blackwater mercinaries) is suggesting his company be paid to intervene in Afghanistan - which to me is profiteering on war - at the same time Trump is claiming to have anger and unhappiness with his Afghanistan general's leadership.

This does not bode well.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#7035 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 10:54

From Our Broken Economy, in One Simple Chart by David Leonhardt:

Quote

The basic problem is that most families used to receive something approaching their fair share of economic growth, and they don’t anymore.

It’s true that the country can’t magically return to the 1950s and 1960s (nor would we want to, all things considered). Economic growth was faster in those decades than we can reasonably expect today. Yet there is nothing natural about the distribution of today’s growth — the fact that our economic bounty flows overwhelmingly to a small share of the population.

Different policies could produce a different outcome. My list would start with a tax code that does less to favor the affluent, a better-functioning education system, more bargaining power for workers and less tolerance for corporate consolidation.

Remarkably, President Trump and the Republican leaders in Congress are trying to go in the other direction. They spent months trying to take away health insurance from millions of middle-class and poor families. Their initial tax-reform plans would reduce taxes for the rich much more than for everyone else. And they want to cut spending on schools, even though education is the single best way to improve middle-class living standards over the long term.

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#7036 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 13:47

 y66, on 2017-August-08, 10:54, said:

From Our Broken Economy, in One Simple Chart by David Leonhardt:

All of the political factions since WW1 are responsible. Clearly, the vampire-squid sector is sucking the economic life-blood from our society. Loss of sovereignty in money (the FRB is privately owned by the rich) as well as more and more casino capitalism that gets the profits privatized and the losses socialized. Imagine the economic growth from just the bail-outs being in the hands of the people.
Only the political will to restrict banking to S&L and speculation to gamblers can save us. Deftness to avoid assassin's bullets will help the responsible politicians stay in office...
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#7037 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 15:28

 Al_U_Card, on 2017-July-31, 06:26, said:

Better batten down the hatches, boys.... if this analysis is correct, you have not yet begun to Trump ;)

from CNN

"
Trump is coming off the worst week of his presidency, a disastrous seven days in which the infighting he stokes broke into public, the Senate's attempt to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act foundered, and Trump himself attacked his own attorney general, delivered a series of heavily political speeches that made clear his growing frustration with his current position and ousted his chief of staff Reince Priebus.
The decision to part ways with Priebus and bring on Department of Homeland Security chief John Kelly as chief of staff, all which Trump announced via Twitter late Friday, was cast by allies of the President as a much-needed reset for a White House that had lost its direction.
RELATED: Republicans try to move forward
"To the extent that we can do more and do it more quickly in the disruptive fashion in which we're accustomed to with Donald J. Trump, I think that having the tools in place is very important," Kellyanne Conway, counselor to President Trump, said on "Fox News Sunday."
Maybe.
Kelly is, by all accounts, a highly disciplined and organized leader. The Trump White House needs that. He is also a highly decorated military man and someone Trump regards as an equal; Priebus was neither of those things. Kelly is the man Trump wanted. Priebus was the guy he accepted as, in his mind, a sop to a Republican establishment fretting over what sort of President he might be.
The problem with all of the talk of a "reset" in the White House led by Kelly is that Donald Trump is still the President. Priebus proved ineffective at managing Trump's erraticness -- leaping from issue to issue within a single day, tweeting out things that directly contradicted his White House's official line, fomenting competition among top staffers into a sort of blood sport.
RELATED: Who is John Kelly, Trump's new chief of staff?
This is, quite literally, who Trump is. He has lived his entire adult life a certain way. At 71, the idea that anyone -- Kelly included -- can fundamentally alter who Trump is -- or who Trump is willing to be for political purposes -- seems very far-fetched.
No one, ever, has wrangled Trump for any extended period of time. Sure, for a day or even a week during his first six months in office, Trump would avoid sending an inflammatory tweet or straying way, way off the teleprompter when delivering a speech. But it never lasted. He always returned to what he knows: the brash, unapologetic provocateur who is as interested in making a stir as he is in getting things done.
Trump didn't bring in Kelly to hamstring his natural instincts. Ditto Anthony Scaramucci, the new White House communications director who spent his first week on the job savaging Priebus (and chief strategist Steve Bannon) to The New Yorker's Ryan Lizza. Trump brought both men in because he sees them as equals, as men who understand who he is and will work to implement his wishes as opposed to trying to fit him into a traditional political frame.
"The thing that General Kelly should do is not try to change Donald Trump," Corey Lewandowski, who managed Trump's 2016 primary campaign, told NBC's Chuck Todd on "Meet the Press" on Sunday. "I say you have to let Trump be Trump. That is what has made him successful over the last 30 years. That is what the American people voted for. And anybody who thinks they're going to change Donald Trump doesn't know Donald Trump."
RELATED: Donald Trump's DC swamp purge is really picking up speed
That last line from Lewandowski is the most important one: "Anybody who thinks they're going to change Donald Trump doesn't know Donald Trump."
That's 100% right. It's also why the chances of the next 193 days being any different than the past 193 days are very, very small.
Trump doesn't look back on the past six months as a failure on his part. He views it as a failure of the experiment he undertook to play nice with the Washington establishment. He put Priebus and Priebus' allies (Sean Spicer, Katie Walsh) in senior roles -- right alongside the likes of his daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jared Kushner -- and they failed to deliver. Their attempts to manage Trump made him angry; their inability to grind the gears of official Washington to work for him infuriated him.
The lesson Trump learned from these first six months office wasn't that he needs to change. It was that trying to change him into a Washington figure or anything close to a traditional politician wouldn't work. And that even if it had worked, he didn't want to do it anyway.
To the extent Trump is "starting over" then, it is really, in his mind, a return to his roots -- to who he should always have been from the start. He has put in place a team -- from Kelly to Scaramucci and on down -- that is much more likely to affirm and amplify his gut instincts to "let Trump be Trump" than to block them.
That is the only reset anyone watching this White House should expect. Trump isn't going to change. Instead, he's going to double down on being exactly who he's always been.


Since Trump is coming off the worst week in his Presidency, I think we need to take some time to analyze the top 10 WORST Presidents in U.S. History and see how we plan to classify President Trump in light of the circumstances.

https://www.usnews.c...ts?int=news-rec

Do we know all of these Presidents? What type of biases has U.S. News and World Report demonstrated in their analysis?
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#7038 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 16:13

When Truman's approval rating dropped to 32% in 1946, Senator Fulbright suggested that he should resign

There is an argument to be made that Truman has been vastly overrated by many experts/scholars on the subject.


"Truman's presidency was one of the most unpopular in history, with approval ratings lower than Nixon after Watergate. His presidency was also plagued by corruption concerns, such as his favoritism in judicial appointments, though nothing could be conclusively proven"

You can add in things such as Korea and Communist witch hunts among other items.

"...for creating the CIA with a mandate to destroy undesirable democracy around the world via assassination and coups; for instigating the Cold War; for involvement in the Korean War...."
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#7039 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 16:17

 awm, on 2017-August-08, 10:04, said:

1. This does not matter, because Clinton didn't win.
2. This is a matter of party operatives helping a long time party loyalist over an "independent." There is no possibility of collision with a foreign power, no indication that data was stolen nor that votes or registrations were changed. So the bias here is nowhere near the same level of severity as what may have happened with Trump.
3. Clinton won the primary by a lot. So even some irregularities would not impact the result.
4. I'm all for the DNC cleaning up their act. Some investigation and reform is merited!
5... but this whole thing is like a bridge player arguing that "you failed to alert, so who cares that I had my Russian buddy hack the computers to get me the hand records in advance? It is false equivalency to the extreme.

The graft or corruption with the debate questions is not dependent on the outcome of the election. If her campaign received the assistance without whistleblowing, then the Clinton campaign is a witting or unwitting accomplice regardless of if she won or lost. The campaign cannot receive and accept the assistance and then act like it wasn't a beneficiary of such coaching and unfair practices. Has the Clinton campaign even apologized to Bernie Sanders for this lapse of character and judgment? It is a character issue, plain and simple. It is demonstrative of a "winning by any means necessary" mentality. My review shows the Clinton campaign issued no apology. No surprise as people who game systems typically don't make apologies for their behavior especially when it is implicitly sanctioned by a National Committee at the time.

We don't know how Clinton would have performed during the debates had she not been given a heads up on those questions. THAT'S the point. We don't know how a "live" performance of her at the debates would have swayed public sentiment. The DNC corrupted voter's ability to see her as she really is and funneled questions to her campaign to help windrow dress how THEY wanted her constituents to perceive her.

In addition, with the DNC server, we have received absolutely no verifiable proof about who hacked the DNC server since it was never claimed to be a national security matter when it was hacked. We have military intelligence, but they haven't supplied any hard core data but plenty of innuendo and mudslinging. Our government failed to secure the alleged crime scene and evidence, downplayed the incident's impact on the federal election when it occurred, and then subsequently hyped it up with a McCarthyism fevered-pitch after Trump won the election.

You don't find that a bit odd?

Edit: changed 'benefactor' to 'beneficiary'
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#7040 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-August-08, 16:23

 RedSpawn, on 2017-August-08, 16:17, said:

The graft or corruption with the debate questions is not dependent on the outcome of the election. If her campaign received the assistance without whistleblowing, then the Clinton campaign is a witting or unwitting accomplice regardless of if she won or lost. The campaign cannot receive and accept the assistance and then act like it wasn't a benefactor of such coaching and unfair practices. Has the Clinton campaign even apologized to Bernie Sanders for this lapse of character and judgment? It is a character issue, plain and simple. It is demonstrative of a "winning by any means necessary mentality". My review shows the Clinton campaign issued no apology. No surprise as people who game systems typically don't make apologies for their behavior especially when it is implicitly sanctioned by a National Committee at the time.

We don't know how Clinton would have performed during the debates had she not been given a heads up on those questions. THAT'S the point. We don't know how a "live" performance of her at the debates would have swayed public sentiment. The DNC corrupted voter's ability to see her as she really is and funneled questions to her campaign to help windrow dress how THEY wanted her constituents to perceive her.

In addition, with the DNC server, we have received absolutely no verifiable proof of who hacked the DNC server since it was never claimed to be a national security matter when it was hacked. We have military intelligence, but they haven't supplied any hard core data but plenty of innuendo and mudslinging. Our government failed to secure the alleged crime scene and evidence, downplayed the incident's impact on the federal election when it occurred, and then subsequently hyped it up with a McCarthyism fevered-pitch after Trump won the election.

You don't find that a bit odd?

Reminiscent of the typical alarmist climate "scientist" saying such as the use of upside-down Tiljander sediments doesn't make a difference to the overall outcome of the proxy analysis. The fact that the proxy analysis is flawed is the problem. Similarly, the use of flawed, or even illegal, (certainly unethical) methods is the issue. Whose side it is does not make a difference.
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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