Trump: Primary Three functions of government are Healthcare, Education, Security
This wasn't even a gotcha question. It was an open-ended solicitation for opinion. That Donald Trump thinks this is the role of government tells me all I need to know about his suitability to be President. He either doesn't understand the proper role of government, or he is just as socialist as Bernie and Hillary. Either way it tells me what my research has continued to tell me all along: Trump will not be a Constitutional President if elected.
I'm reminded my friends int he military have some protection in the area of job preference and job reclaiming preference the civil employees the 'bureaurats' have ...zero.
Our nation has been corrupted slowly over the last 200 years by the usurpations of power bit by ever-so-tiny bit by all branches of government. The People themselves in the Seventeenth Amendment eradicated one of the biggest checks on the Federal Government then in existence: the States by making Senators a popular election rather than an election by State government. Go spend some time reading the history of each Amendment after the Tenth and you may see the hints of usurpation begin to creep in.
If you truly want to make this country great again, I suggest you start by understanding the Constitution of the United States, its founding, its principles, and its original intent. Compare that to what we have now and then determine how we went from one to the other. It may take a while, but it is well-spent time.
Trump is a lot more honest than any of the other remaining candidates and hides less (possible exception of Sanders on the honesty part), and he would make a great administrator. Better than any of the other candidates for sure.
As for the rest...
A short answer to your proposal? Any time you invest in anyone a supervisory or leadership role there exists the opportunity for that individual to abuse the powers of their position. They can attempt to enlist help in the form of cronies by paying them or promising them power, but the notion that there would ever be a government which could never infringe on natural rights presupposes the notion of humans who never seek for power.
The basic problem with elections in the USA ( and you might even agree with this) is that the president and the congress have carte blanche to take our money and our rights, which shouldnt be at all. Thats why contributors spend 200 million to elect their candidate and get political favors they want. If the country had a real constitution that protected our rights (which it does not), we would be electing a nexecutive adminstrator and congressional administrators who would run the country efficiently, but could not tax or take away our rights. The qualifications of the person as an efficient administrator would be the issues, not all this nonsense about whose rights would possibly be abridged by one candidate or another.
Seriously. I've met some people on this forum with whom I've disagreed but at least had an intelligent discussion. You keep running back to the same debunked talking points or assert the false choice that if I do not support Donald Trump (who has yet to be crowned either the Republican nominee or President of the United States) that somehow I am voting for Hillary Clinton (who similarly has neither been crowned the Democratic nominee nor President of the United States).
Now I supported the points you made where you expressed your desire that government be limited and campaign finance reform a positive step forward. I also support your ability to select for President whom you choose. But you've made very few other arguments which have held up to the level of scrutiny you will commonly see here in the Gulch. You certainly have not impressed me with a cogent, well-thought-out argument in favor of your preferred candidate and quite frankly, the repetition is not only pedantic, but pointless.
You have made your choice. I've made mine. We'll see how things play out.
When I say there are more important issues now to deal with, like getting rid of the war on drugs, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the budget deficit and things like that which will affect us all. I dont know the numbers, but I suspect there arent a lot of very late abortions being done now anyway which could be classified as murder. I think Rand weighed in on this one and as I remember said something like the fetus isnt a person until it can live outside the uterus.
On every issue I have presented I have pointed out the positions Mr. Trump takes. I have agreed with some, and I have disagreed with many. But the thing I am most disappointed with is how little thought Trump puts into actually forming his policy decisions. Everything seems to be off-the-cuff, spur-of-the-moment, or unscripted. That's fine for a reality TV persona, but as the potential President of the United States, it is a recipe for disaster.
You want a very different kind of President than I do. You want a populist that says things loudly and likes to hear himself talk. I want a Constitutionalist with well-thought-out positions and a history of doing what he says he will do. We're each entitled to our own opinions on the matter. What a great land!
Why does the US "prop up" Israel? Because we share the same emphasis on freedom and economy! We do tremendous business with the Israelis - despite them not having any oil! After oil, we get nothing from any other nation in the Arab Middle East. All they do is use our own money to scheme about how to manipulate the price of oil in their favor. It's called OPEC - it's a topic you might want to do some more research on.
"If I were an Israeli, I would leave the damn place even though its a "shrine" for their religion and go live somewhere where I wasnt hated."
[facepalm] That was the whole point about them getting their own country in the first place! They had just had tens of millions of their people massacred!
"Trump is right that its time for Israel and Palestine to resolve their differences."
You weren't satisfied with that leg, huh? [shaking head in disbelief] You're making the ouroboros jealous.
The Israeli/Arab conflict is an irreconcilable problem - that what pragmatists like Trump can not comprehend. Like Bill Clinton, they only see the $$$ and their own status from one more negotiation. They have no concept of political or religious identity, what it means, or how that is a part of the very being of those people. Unless you have actually spent time over there, Americans can not understand because we are used to being able to do pretty much whatever we want ideologically without fear of repercussions. We live in a very privileged world, but it is a world Muslim nations do not share with us. Part of being a Jew is a connection to the history of that land and what it stands for. It's a concept few Americans can comprehend and one that we have not had to face as a nation - let alone individuals. We do not grow up with a mandate to visit a land far from our birth at least once in life (Muslims) or having our history of persecution, slavery, and deliverance revisited every year (Jewish passover).
"On the other hand Cruz would just continue business as usual, giving billions to enable Israel to continue fighting terrorism and getting nowhere."
So first you take the position that Donald Trump would just solve the problem. Then you admit that maybe he can't solve the problem. Then before you actually present a potential solution to the problem, you criticize the one plan that has been around for 60+ years through presidents and diplomats of both parties. Clueless doesn't even begin to describe such folly. It is no wonder you sympathize with Donald Trump. It doesn't require any actual thought.
We can't change the history of the area. It is what it is. All we can do is deal with what we have now. Neither can we can't force either side to change their minds. Neither do we have the moral authority to dictate the terms of how each group uses their land. Here are the options we have:
1. Take no side. We can refuse to give money to either side and let them battle it out. If we do that, it is just like taking the side of the Palestinians (see below).
2. Take both sides (the one we currently do). We give both sides money and aid. We give Israel aid in the form of fighters and aircraft and money with which they develop their own firearms and ground weapon systems (take a look at their systems - they are pretty impressive). And we know that's where they are going to use the money. We give money to the Palestinians - ostensibly for infrastructure projects like building schools. They turn around and use the money to build rockets to fire at Israel, tunnels to use to capture Israelis or engage in suicide attacks, and payments to the families of the martyrs. And even though we tell them that's not where they are supposed to be using their money, we keep giving it to them knowing they will keep doing the same thing.
3. Overtly take a side.
a. If we side with the Palestinians, it will mean that we choose to abandon the only pro-democracy and pro-market nation in the region. It will mean that we will side with those whom even the State Department has listed on the terror watch list. We wouldn't be fighting terrorism, we'd be joining it. It would result in the ultimate destruction of the nation of Israel. Bully for us.
b. If we side with the Israelis, it means that we will call upon ourselves the wrath of 2 billion Muslims across the globe. It means that we are forced to confront an ideology that currently occupies 98 of 100 top positions on the global terror watch list. It means open war, and dragging most of our allies - even some Muslim allies - into a World War III that would dwarf all previous wars. We would even have to go to war with the Muslim believers in our own nation. Just wonderful!
Given the options, which one would you choose? To me, staying the present course isn't all that unreasonable.
So from day 1, the palestinians hated the jews and wanted the complete destruction of Israel, which they have stuck to ever since. There is no other solution for them than elimination of the jews and israel. Thats why the conflict goes on to this day, and will continue.
The US got involved (I think that was a mistake) and propped up Israel with billions upon billions of our country's resources. There was no real solution to this issue other than for the Israelis to kill off the palestinians, or vice versa.
If I were an Israeli, I would leave the damn place even though its a "shrine" for their religion and go live somewhere where I wasnt hated.
Trump is right that its time for Israel and Palestine to resolve their differences. Either they kill off one side or the other, or they find some common ground. He is the only one who says we should be neutral and see if there really IS a solution (other than mass genocide). He says it would the toughest negotiation he would ever do, and it may not work. Thats telling it like it is.
On the other hand Cruz would just continue business as usual, giving billions to enable Israel to continue fighting terrorism and getting nowhere.
I've often said that if you assigned someone to sit at a desk and do nothing but look out the window, you would be able to come back in five years and find the "looking out the window" department with a manager, assistant and three "viewers" one of them a "senior viewer".
Load more comments...