Members JKane Posted July 25, 2020 Author Members Posted July 25, 2020 Lucky, Latbear4blk and AdamSmith 2 1 Quote
AdamSmith Posted July 26, 2020 Posted July 26, 2020 On 7/12/2020 at 6:40 PM, tassojunior said: What worked was war. Been working ever since. I think the searchable record shows the New Deal started delivering considerable benefits a good time before the War started. JKane and Buddy2 2 Quote
Members JKane Posted July 29, 2020 Author Members Posted July 29, 2020 Except the uniform is gray... Lucky 1 Quote
Members Buddy2 Posted August 1, 2020 Members Posted August 1, 2020 At least we can't blame Trump directlyabout covid19 knocking out the Florida Marlins and the old-school St. Louis Cardinals baseball teams, just a few more players testing positive and the the season will be over. But Trump is responsible for leaving millions of people without renewed assistance during the pandemic. And for calling covid19 the China virus. And the post office delivery Quote
Members Buddy2 Posted August 1, 2020 Members Posted August 1, 2020 On 7/25/2020 at 11:32 PM, AdamSmith said: I think the searchable record shows the New Deal started delivering considerable benefits a good time before the War started. My mother's blue collar family was helped by FDR backed programs, especially her parents. My mom was the youngest of eight children. Quote
AdamSmith Posted August 2, 2020 Posted August 2, 2020 5 hours ago, Buddy2 said: My mother's blue collar family was helped by FDR backed programs, especially her parents. My mom was the youngest of eight children. Likewise. My maternal grandmother, born 1902 and working a 12-hour day at the local cotton mill, 6 days a week, starting age 15 (until age 73, btw; she liked the work) once said to me: ’When FDR came in and gave us the 8-hour workday and the minimum wage, we thought we had died and gone to Heaven!’ Buddy2 1 Quote
Members JKane Posted August 2, 2020 Author Members Posted August 2, 2020 Same writer... Lucky 1 Quote
Members Latbear4blk Posted August 4, 2020 Members Posted August 4, 2020 The truth about the American Dream: you have to be asleep to believe it. Buddy2, AdamSmith and JKane 1 2 Quote
AdamSmith Posted August 5, 2020 Posted August 5, 2020 8 hours ago, Latbear4blk said: The truth about the American Dream: you have to be asleep to believe it. Also, that only a very small handful of leaders created it & kept it going: the Founders, then Jackson (maybe), then Lincoln, then FDR, then Kennedy (also Eisenhower in his own rather subtle & crafty ways), then Nixon (!) in his equally crafty approaches to the Soviets & the Chinese (walling off the psychological pathologies of Watergate, not to discount them as a precursor to where we are today)... After all that, here we are. Quote
Members Buddy2 Posted August 5, 2020 Members Posted August 5, 2020 15 minutes ago, AdamSmith said: Also, that only a very small handful of leaders created it & kept it going: the Founders, then Jackson (maybe), then Lincoln, then FDR, then Kennedy (also Eisenhower in his own rather subtle & crafty ways), then Nixon (!) in his equally crafty approaches to the Soviets & the Chinese (walling off the psychological pathologies of Watergate, not to discount them as a precursor to where we are today)... After all that, here we are. Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson were far more consequential Presidents than John Kennedy. Quote
AdamSmith Posted August 5, 2020 Posted August 5, 2020 22 minutes ago, Buddy2 said: Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson were far more consequential Presidents than John Kennedy. Agree. His one real thing was deescalating the Cuban missile crisis. Not an entirely negligible accomplishment. (Which of course one could argue he may have partly triggered by his Bay of Pigs fiasco. So maybe as you imply 0 for 0.) Quote
Members Buddy2 Posted August 5, 2020 Members Posted August 5, 2020 57 minutes ago, AdamSmith said: Agree. His one real thing was deescalating the Cuban missile crisis. Not an entirely negligible accomplishment. (Which of course one could argue he may have partly triggered by his Bay of Pigs fiasco. So maybe as you imply 0 for 0.) President Kennedy was party to the assassination of Pres. Diem of South Vietnam in early November 1963. Yes, Diem was a petty dictator, but the subsequent leaders were just as bad and often worse and holding the South together. Quote
AdamSmith Posted August 5, 2020 Posted August 5, 2020 30 minutes ago, Buddy2 said: President Kennedy was party to the assassination of Pres. Diem of South Vietnam in early November 1963. Yes, Diem was a petty dictator, but the subsequent leaders were just as bad and often worse and holding the South together. Yes. Which we have done over and over again, such as deposing the duly elected leader of Iran and imposing our puppet the Shah. With an eventually entirely predictable chain of outcomes. Quote
Members Buddy2 Posted August 5, 2020 Members Posted August 5, 2020 9 hours ago, AdamSmith said: Yes. Which we have done over and over again, such as deposing the duly elected leader of Iran and imposing our puppet the Shah. With an eventually entirely predictable chain of outcomes. Even on the day of the assassinations in South Vietnam, Kennedy seemed confused and out of touch. Quote
Members JKane Posted August 5, 2020 Author Members Posted August 5, 2020 Latbear4blk, Lucky and AdamSmith 3 Quote
Members Pete1111 Posted August 7, 2020 Members Posted August 7, 2020 (edited) The thing about Bishop Talbert Swan, in the tweet further above, I can't get past his anti-gay book. To me he shares that much with a lot of Trumpsters. Do all his Tweets keep the collection plate full and sell more copies? Edited August 7, 2020 by Pete1111 Quoted wrong post Quote