crimsonfloyd
Active Member
By definition then you'd also be arguing from ignorance. You make me lol.
No I wouldn't. My basic premise is that because Trump has no experience in the field, he is likely to do a terrible job at the most difficult job within the field. That is not an argument from ignorance. Would you expect someone who had never coached at even the high school level to step in and be a successful NFL head coach? Would you expect someone with zero military experience at any level to come in and successfully lead an army to war? Of course you wouldn't. Is it possible that they would have success? Sure. Probable? Definitely not. Saying "we just don't know, so I'll stick my head up my ass" is an appeal to ignorance because it flies in the face of common sense.
Her core supporters are middle Americans? I guess that's why electoral maps of middle America look like this:
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(btw that's from an article from yesterday)
My bad on this point. I read middle class. That said, I haven't heard her say anything anti-middle America, unless you're referring to the very accurate (though politically unwise) "basket of deplorablea" comment. (Edit: Although I would add that this comment wasn't targeted at middle America specifically, but Trump supporters in general. While there may be a disproportionate number in middle America, there are also Trump supporters on the coasts and many people in middle America who are do not fall into said category. That leads me to wonder what is this supposed "anti-middle America" comment Clinton made?)
As I've said before, I am opposed to Clinton's trade policies. That said, shipping jobs overseas is not the same as not paying someone for work they did. The former could result in lay off or as you mentioned, wage depression. However, the workers are presumably paid for the work they were contracted to do. The basic economic contract is not broken. Trump literally just didn't pay people for their work and then used the legally system to deflect them. The two cases aren't equivocal at all.Depression of wages from the offshoring of jobs and illegal immigration. It's simple supply and demand, not rocket science.
Carpet bombing did far more damage in both material and human tolls to Japan than the nukes did, but no one mentions that.
This is a profoundly stupid argument. A nuke COULD do far more damage than carpet bombing, which is why there is such reservation about using them in the first place. Which leads to....
Drones get used, nukes do not.
You are assuming that what happened in the past will happen in the future. However, if we have a radically different type of leader, who openly says nukes should be on the table, on what grounds do you assume that what happened in the past will continue to happen in the future?
Also, it must be looked at who did Trump support getting nuke access? I'm not saying nuclear proliferation is a good thing, but it's not exactly cutting edge at this point, and MAD is a real thing that has pragmatically worked.
Why on earth would you assume that MAD would continue under a Trump regime when he's openly promoted other nations getting nukes?
Hell no. I don't have the requisite level of narcissism...

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