Dak
mentat
I don't see any real ambiguity in the statement. We shouldn't even have needed this much discussion on it. It makes fine sense (hence plausible deniability - can't be plausible if it's total nonsense) as it is written. It's little different than me being on TV and saying "Hey Dallas Cowboys, I hope you win the Super Bowl, I promise you that the media/fans/your owner will reward you.
The ambiguity is manufactured via TDS. Paranoia.
This is based on politics as usual history. The argument is that the future is less certain. This is the premise on which predictions of Trump's and Brexit's sure failure were based on. Our instant access, instant results demanding consumer populace is going to increasingly agitate for MORE, NOW, and social media and an Amazon Prime/Netflix mentality ("microwave mentality") will facilitate it. This can be a good or bad thing in politics, but I expect probably mostly bad.
The ambiguity is manufactured via TDS. Paranoia.
Congressmen have much less to fear though. They market themselves to their immediate state/district, and as long as they say the right words for their local constituency and deliver enough pork, they're good. The only ones that have to fear are those in purple areas, which naturally means replacing one milquetoast suit with another. It's true that the trend is towards increasingly left-wing politicians in blue areas and increasingly right-wing ones in red areas, but save for the aforementioned cataclysm, fringe people will never make up a majority.
This is based on politics as usual history. The argument is that the future is less certain. This is the premise on which predictions of Trump's and Brexit's sure failure were based on. Our instant access, instant results demanding consumer populace is going to increasingly agitate for MORE, NOW, and social media and an Amazon Prime/Netflix mentality ("microwave mentality") will facilitate it. This can be a good or bad thing in politics, but I expect probably mostly bad.