pulse Report This Comment Date: March 03, 2025 02:21AM
And they'll never offer to help again. This is what the US is missing; the
"US first" point of view doesn't work when you've spent a hundred
years demanding the world does things your way and installing yourselves as de
facto world police. The next time help is asked for, the next 9/11 or
Afghanistan, the next Vietnam or Korea..
In the 50s-80s we had to stop Communism. In the 80s-90s we had to protect
countries from invasion; "Iraq can't just invade Kuwait!". Today the
Communists are invading. Maybe if Ukraine had more oil? Certainly no issues
supplying weapons to Israel.
I'm left to wonder why we are buying $400bn worth of US weapons in the AUKUS
deal when we have absolutely no guarantee of assistance from the USA?
woberto Report This Comment Date: March 03, 2025 10:59AM
USA will always offer assistance as it is in their best interests.
But I think the point is that they want to determine what assistance they
give...
...and what's in it for them in return.
It's kinda brutal but hey, they are the big dog.
pulse Report This Comment Date: March 03, 2025 12:05PM
Yep. And that's cool, but we can play the game too.
Eg, tariffs. They're planning on putting a 25% tariff on some of our exports.
Cool. We import 50% more from the USA than they import from us. We carry a
significant trade deficit to the USA (yet apparently trade deficit is the
reason for tariffs?). And the bulk of those imports we can get cheaper from
China or India, who are also logistically closer. Soo.. maybe we should?
At the same time USA is looking to put a tariff on our aluminium because
apparently "Australia is just killing our aluminium market" according
to Trump advisor Peter Navarro (with Australia being the supplier of a massive
2% of the USA's imports), BlueScope from Australia employs more than 4,000
Americans in Ohio alone..
It feels really counter productive pissing off all your friends and allies.
There's no winners here.
quasi Report This Comment Date: March 03, 2025 01:21PM
My apologies, pulse, it isn't all of the U.S. that wants this, and I'd venture
to say that the majority here doesn't want it. Dump won by one of slimmest if
not the slimmest margin ever and more people sat out the election than voted for
either Dump or Harris. The Dump voters and non-voters fucked around and now
there's going to be some serious finding out. Theodore Roosevelt, who was a
Republican President when my father was born (and quite progressive in many
ways), said of foreign policy, "Walk softly and carry a big stick."
Dump, who is Republican in name only, stomps loudly while swinging a big stick
at anyone who doesn't bow to him and/or flatter him. His only understanding of
give and take is in how to profit monetarily and gather real estate with none of
the nuance of working with others toward a common goal, it's all about
acquisition with him. Many of the people who fucked around and are already
finding out are raising hell with their Republican representatives and senators,
some of whom are pretty much going into hiding from the angry masses, and we can
hope those congresspersons as well as court judges will grow backbones and put a
stop to this craziness as much as they are able to. The biggest problem with
that is that this blitzkrieg of Muskovite directed actions will tie up the
courts for years - I tend to think that gridlock is the goal to just cause chaos
across the board. I said years ago that Musk is a Bond supervillain and
weaseling his way into the easily flattered Trump's innermost circle is truly
making him that. I also said more recently, prior to the election, that those in
other countries who did not care about U.S. politics better care because as the
big dog, deservedly or not, the U.S. will affect them and now here we are with a
president who shits on our allies and our own citizens for sport with the
world's richest man (and all around weird son of a bitch) as his Rasputin. Two
people shaped Trump into who he is, his ruthless, greedy father and his ruthless
mentor Roy Cohn who I spoke of back in 2016. Check out Cohn, though now it may
be too late to understand how a monster is made now that it's loosed upon the
earth. Again, I apologize for what my countrymen have done, and I wish y'all
good luck in this unfolding mess.
pro_junior Report This Comment Date: March 08, 2025 09:37PM
Pulse I apologize, quasi does not speak for most Americans.
No matter how much he wishes most of us agree with him, we do not.
Most people are more toward the center are sick and tired of the LBGTVWXYZ
bullshit.
And sick and tired of paying high taxes that are spent helping everyone except
Americans.
Our government is currupt. Both sides.
We want it fixed and we don't care who fixes it.
As for our last election?
According to grok:
Whether Donald Trump’s victory in the 2024 U.S. presidential election can be
called a "landslide" depends on how you define the term, and there’s
no universal standard for it. Historically, landslides are associated with
overwhelming margins in both the Electoral College and the popular vote—like
Nixon’s 1972 win (60.7% of the popular vote, 520 electoral votes) or
Reagan’s 1984 triumph (58.8%, 525). By those measures, Trump’s 2024 win
doesn’t quite stack up, but it was decisive in its own way.
Trump secured 312 electoral votes to Kamala Harris’s 226, a solid margin of 86
votes. That’s bigger than his 2016 win (306) or Biden’s 2020 victory (306),
but far short of those historical blowouts. He swept all seven major swing
states—Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and
Wisconsin—which surprised many after months of tight polling. His collective
margin across those battlegrounds was about 760,000 votes, a hefty jump from the
razor-thin 46,000-vote margins in the closest states of 2000. So, in Electoral
College terms, it was a strong, clean win, but not a runaway.
On the popular vote, it’s closer. As of now, with counting nearly complete,
Trump’s at roughly 74.6 million votes (49.9%) to Harris’s 72.9 million
(48.3%), a gap of about 1.6 percentage points or 1.7 million votes. That’s his
first popular vote win in three runs, and it makes him only the second
Republican since 1988 to pull it off. But it’s tight—among the smallest
winning margins since 1888, when Cleveland beat Harrison by 0.8 points. Harris
could’ve flipped the election with just 229,726 votes spread across Michigan,
Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Compare that to Obama’s 2008 haul (52.9%, 9.5
million-vote edge) or even Biden’s 2020 (51.3%, 7 million), and Trump’s 2024
looks more like a solid W than a landslide.
The narrative’s muddied by perception. Trump and his team have pushed the
“landslide” label hard, pointing to the swing-state sweep and a rightward
shift in over 90% of counties nationwide. Posts on X echo this, with some
claiming it’s a mandate because “89% of counties went right” or citing his
gains with Latino voters (up to 46% from 29% in 2016). Critics, though, call it
overhyped—pointing out he didn’t crack 50% and that most voters still picked
someone else when you factor in third parties. Data backs both sides: Trump’s
gains were broad but not deep, with margins staying slim in key spots like
Pennsylvania (2 points) and Wisconsin (1 point).
So, did he win by a landslide? Not by historical blowout standards—think 10+
points or 400+ electoral votes. But in the context of today’s polarized,
close-election norm, his 2024 win was unusually dominant: flipping the Electoral
College decisively, nabbing the popular vote, and breaking Democratic
strongholds like the “blue wall.” It’s not Nixon ’72, but it’s not
2000 or 2016 either. Call it a landslide if you weigh the sweep; call it close
if you tally the votes. The numbers say both are half-right.
quasi Report This Comment Date: March 11, 2025 12:14PM
Pro's equivocation on whether or not he supports the republican agenda under
Dump is tiresome. He shows support then says they're all bad. Pick a lane. Would
a functional multi-party system be great? Hell yes. Does it exist in the U.S.?
Not really, and voting third party (or claiming to) when there are only two
viable candidates is a cop out. Pro got what he wanted while saying he's third
party, but that doesn't absolve him or anyone else who did the same from the
consequences. LGBTQ rights are individual human rights, and if their rights can
be infringed, anyone's rights can be infringed, something any so called
Libertarian should know. There's an effort in Texas right now to criminalize
claiming to be trans, and LGBTQ rights are under attack in many places. As far
as spending taxpayer money abroad, there are no doubt abuses, but besides the
humanitarian considerations there are also strategic considerations which are
generally the government's primary concern; unilaterally cutting off that hand
of good will to others leaves them ripe for the picking by China as has already
been happening. The DOGE indiscriminate cuts and alienating neighbors and allies
will have serious consequences for the U.S. in obvious and as yet unimaginable
ways, and a more thoughtful, measured approach could and should be used (search
Chesterton's fence), but I think the goal isn't the monetary savings, it's the
chaos. Beyond that, the flipping sides from Europe and NATO to Russia is
unconscionable and alarming, particularly while Dump has imperialist ideas
regarding Canada, Greenland, Panama, and who knows where else, maybe
Australia.
So hey, Pulse, woberto, and the rest of the international crew here, I guess pro
says fuck y'all but is too chickenshit to flat out say it.
pro_junior Report This Comment Date: March 12, 2025 07:07PM
Whenever I see anyone say Dump, tRump, Drumpf...I can't take them
seriously.
All I think is, awww hims don't wike hims pwesident ...
and you wonder why you get accused of crying liberal tears...
The rest of your comments about me just further prove your complete lack of
reading comprehension ability yet again.
quasi Report This Comment Date: March 13, 2025 12:27AM
"Whenever I see anyone say Dump, tRump, Drumpf...I can't take them
seriously."
Yet, you take him seriously when he's champion name caller. I used to feel the
same as you about the name calling, but after years of listening to him and his
minions call people names and belittle them, I figured it must be okay. I had to
look at a flag every day that said, "fuck you if you voted for Biden"
and was told I should be put against a wall and be shot, so cry me a river about
his name. Dump and you MAGAts can kiss my ass, y'all killed civility and now
you're whining about it.
Whoever you think was running things the last four years, the U.S. economy
recovered from the pandemic better than most other nations despite having a
higher mortality rate and had the respect and friendship of much of the world.
In less than two months, Dump has sided with Russia, thrown his weight around
and swapped the previous respect and goodwill we had for fear and loathing and
set everyone on the road to more difficult economic times with his ill-advised
tariff and land grab obsessions. Rather than analyzing then government for
places to trim the budget he sent in his new best pal with a wrecking ball with
sometimes near disastrous result when people in important positions were let go
and then called back. I can hardly wait for hurricane season with the cuts made
to NOAA and the NHC. But, hey, electric cars are cool again, you can get one at
Whitehouse Motors.
pulse Report This Comment Date: March 13, 2025 03:03AM
Are the trump & flag adorned jacked up "trucks" still unplugging
Teslas and parking in charging spots?
They must be so confused what to do now it's right wing to own an electric car
rather than that damn hippy crap
