Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community

Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community (https://thetfp.com/tfp/)
-   Tilted Politics (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/)
-   -   Fohpah (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/132482-fohpah.html)

Rekna 03-12-2008 08:23 PM

Fohpah
 
So I committed a fopah tonight at a bar when I said "Bush is the worst thing for this country since Adolf Hitler".

My argument was that I said "since" meaning Bush isn't as bad as Hitler but there hasn't been anything worse since Hitler. Some people took this to mean "Bush is as bad as Hitler". I'm wondering if what all of you think, is this statement Out of line? True, but still out of line, True and not out of line, or False Bush is worse than Hitler?

Willravel 03-12-2008 08:37 PM

Not out of line at all. You should go to bars that aren't filed with neocons.

I would have probably bought you a Sammy Adams for that.

vanblah 03-12-2008 08:47 PM

Sorry for the thread jack: it's spelled "faux pas"

As for me ... I can't even begin to compare the two and I refuse to do so.

mixedmedia 03-12-2008 08:50 PM

Well,

#1 the expression is faux pas...sorry, but I'm a stickler for these things.
and
#2 I don't really see the parallel...in that Hitler was never president of the US
and
#3 making any sort of a Bush <, >, = comparison is tres passe :p

Willravel 03-12-2008 09:03 PM

You both seem to misunderstand. It was not a comparison at all. He said "since" Hitler. Hitler was only used as a chronological marker.

Ustwo 03-12-2008 09:51 PM

http://img339.imageshack.us/img339/323/threadfm1.jpg

host 03-13-2008 01:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
So I committed a fopah tonight at a bar when I said "Bush is the worst thing for this country since Adolf Hitler".

My argument was that I said "since" meaning Bush isn't as bad as Hitler but there hasn't been anything worse since Hitler. Some people took this to mean "Bush is as bad as Hitler". I'm wondering if what all of you think, is this statement Out of line? True, but still out of line, True and not out of line, or False Bush is worse than Hitler?

Rekna, tell "some people" to read the following and ST-hey-U... Morally and legally, your opinion seems to be on firm footing. Our government was part of a 1945 international tribunal of allies who hung to death, leaders of another country who did what is described in the following two quote boxes, as official US policy. After it was described by the US president, it was carried out, and we all know the outcome, whether impeachment is "on the table" or not:


Quote:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/relea...0020601-3.html
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
June 1, 2002

President Bush Delivers Graduation Speech at West Point
United States Military Academy

The President:

....Homeland defense and missile defense are part of stronger security, and they're essential priorities for America. Yet the war on terror <h3>will not be won on the defensive. We must take the battle to the enemy, disrupt his plans, and confront the worst threats before they emerge. (Applause.)</h3> In the world we have entered, the only path to safety is the path of action. And this nation will act. (Applause.)

Our security will require the best intelligence, to reveal threats hidden in caves and growing in laboratories. Our security will require modernizing domestic agencies such as the FBI, so they're prepared to act, and act quickly, against danger. Our security will require transforming the military you will lead -- a military that must be ready to strike at a moment's notice in any dark corner of the world. And our security will require all Americans to be forward-looking and resolute, <h3>to be ready for preemptive action when necessary to defend our liberty and to defend our lives. (Applause.).....</h3>
Quote:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/relea...0060320-7.html
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 20, 2006

President Discusses War on Terror and Operation Iraqi Freedom

.....Q Mr. President, at the beginning of your talk today you mentioned that you understand why Americans have had their confidence shaken by the events in Iraq. ....Before we went to war in Iraq we said there were three main reasons for going to war in Iraq: ....All three of those turned out to be false. My question is, how do we restore confidence that Americans may have in their leaders and to be sure that the information they are getting now is correct?

THE PRESIDENT: That's a great question. (Applause.) First, just if I might correct a misperception. I don't think we ever said -- at least I know I didn't say that there was a direct connection between September the 11th and Saddam Hussein. We did say that he was a state sponsor of terror -- by the way, not declared a state sponsor of terror by me, but declared by other administrations. We also did say that Zarqawi, the man who is now wreaking havoc and killing innocent life, was in Iraq. .....but I was very careful never to say that Saddam Hussein ordered the attacks on America....

...When he didn't disclose, and when he didn't disarm, and when he deceived inspectors, it sent a very disconcerting <h3>message to me, whose job it is to protect the American people and to take threats before they fully materialize.</h3> My view is, he was given the choice of whether or not he would face reprisal. It was his decision to make. And so he chose to not disclose, not disarm, as far as everybody was concerned. ......
<h3>This is an example of why preemptive war is both foolish and the ulitmate "crime against humanity".</h3>
Quote:

http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com...ves/14872.html
Keeping the al Qaeda report under wraps
Posted March 12th, 2008 at 3:30 pm
Share This | Spotlight | Permalink

Following up on an item from yesterday, the Pentagon has prepared a new report on non-existent ties between al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein’s regime. The document is the culmination of an exhaustive review of more than 600,000 Iraqi documents that were captured after the 2003 U.S. invasion. Not surprisingly, officials <a href="http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/29959.html">discovered what we already knew</a> — there was no “direct operational link” between Hussein’s Iraq and al Qaida before the invasion.

Obviously, this is at least mildly embarrassing for the Bush administration, given that they made frequent efforts to connect Saddam to al Qaeda before the invasion, in order to sell the war to the public. But how far would the Bush gang go to <a href="http://blogs.abcnews.com/rapidreport/2008/03/pentagon-report.html">conceal its humiliation?</a>

The Bush Administration apparently does not want a U.S. military study that found no direct connection between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda to get any attention. This morning, the Pentagon cancelled plans to send out a press release announcing the report’s release <h3>and will no longer make the report available online.</h3>

The report was to be posted on the Joint Forces Command website this afternoon, followed by a background briefing with the authors. No more. The report will be made available only to those who ask for it, and it will be sent via U.S. mail from Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Virginia.

It won’t be emailed to reporters and it won’t be posted online.

Hmm. They scheduled its release, then cancelled it. They scheduled a briefing, then cancelled it, too. And if asked, I’m certain Dana Perino would insist, with a mostly straight face, that the White House never contacted the Pentagon about this, and it was solely the decision of military officials, who, for whatever reason, preferred to hide its own report.

And no one will believe her.
<h3>Here is President Eisenhower's opinion of President Bush's war policY:</h3>
Quote:

http://www.dbms.com/

All of us have heard this term 'preventative war' since the earliest days of Hitler. I recall that is about the first time I heard it. In this day and time... I don't believe there is such a thing; and, frankly, I wouldn't even listen to anyone seriously that came in and talked about such a thing.
[Dwight D. Eisenhower, Press conference, 1953]
THe chief uS prosecutor at Nuremberg, SCOTUS Chief Justice Robert Jackson, described aggressive, preemptive war as the "ultimate crime against humanity":
Quote:

http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/imt/proc/judnazi.htm

.....THE COMMON PLAN OR CONSPIRACY AND AGGRESSIVE WAR
The Tribunal now turns to the consideration of the Crimes against peace charged in the Indictment. Count One of the Indictment charges the defendants with conspiring or having a common plan to commit crimes against peace.

Count Two of the Indictment charges the defendants with committing specific crimes against peace by planning, preparing, initiating, and waging wars of aggression against a number of other States. It will be convenient to consider the question of the existence of a common plan and the question of aggressive war together, and to deal later in this Judgment with the question of the individual responsibility of the defendants.

The charges in the Indictment that the defendants planned and waged aggressive wars are charges of the utmost gravity. War is essentially an evil thing. Its consequences are not confined to the belligerent states alone, but affect the whole world.

<h3>To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.</h3>

The first acts of aggression referred to in the Indictment are the seizure of Austria and Czechoslovakia and the first war of aggression charged in the Indictment is the war against Poland begun on the 1st September, 1939.....
Quote:

http://www.wagingpeace.org/articles/...erg-trials.htm
The Holocaust and the Nuremberg Trials
by Benjamin B. Ferencz, December 8, 2005

The greatest tribute we can pay to the memory of those who perished in the Holocaust and similar tragedies is never to stop trying to make this a more humane and peaceful world. The United Nations Charter of June 1945, expressed the determination "to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war." Its Preamble spoke of the equality of nations large and small. It called for enhanced social justice, tolerance and respect for international law.....


...The Mentality of Mass Murderers

...According to Ohlendorf, <h2>it was known that the Soviets planned total war against Germany. A German preemptive strike was better than waiting to be attacked....</h2>

....The three experienced American judges concluded that a preemptive strike as anticipatory self-defense was not a valid legal justification for mass murder. <h3>If every nation could decide for itself when to attack a presumed enemy, and when to engage in total war, the rule of law would be destroyed and the world would be destroyed with it. All of the defendants were convicted; thirteen were sentenced to death and Ohlendorf was hanged.</h3> I was then 27 years old and it was my first case. The ideals that I then expressed have remained with me all of my life.

HOW FAR HAVE WE COME?....


<h3>....It is not permissible "self-defense" to slaughter "the other" -- it is the crime of murder.</h3>

Aggression, according to the Nuremberg judges and other precedents, is "the supreme international crime" since it includes all the other crimes. There can be no war without atrocities and unauthorized warfare in violation of the UN Charter is the biggest atrocity of all. The best way to protect the lives of courageous young people who serve in the military is to avoid war-making itself......

<i>Benjamin B. Ferencz, a member of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation's Advisory Council, was Chief Prosecutor in the Nuremberg war crimes trial against Nazi extermination squads.</i>
Quote:

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0407-10.htm

....To treat the United Nations with contempt today is to betray the American soldiers who gave their lives for a more peaceful, democratic world. The Bush doctrine of pre-emptive war, the doctrine under which our troops now occupy Iraq, was explicitly repudiated by the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal in 1946. As a presiding Judge between 1945 and 1949, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson wrote: "War is utterly renounced and condemned as an instrument of policy." The Tribunal concluded: "To initiate a war of aggression is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole." In 1953 when his advisors mentioned the concept of pre-emptive war, President Dwight Eisenhower (who led the military campaign against Hitler in Europe), remarked: "All of us have heard this term 'preventive war' since the earliest days of Hitler...I wouldn't even listen to anyone seriously that came in and talked about such a thing."

mixedmedia 03-13-2008 01:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
You both seem to misunderstand. It was not a comparison at all. He said "since" Hitler. Hitler was only used as a chronological marker.

Well then, the worse thing 'for the world' (as opposed to 'for this country') might have a been a more appropriate choice of phrasing. Of course, I realize it was an off-the-cuff remark. But the way it was put, to me, makes it sound a little opportunistic - like a cheap shot. And, come on, anytime you put the words 'Bush' and 'Hitler' together in a sentence you are making a very well-used association that will likely promote some very well-used reactions. And frankly, I'm tired of both.

host 03-13-2008 02:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mixedmedia
Well then, the worse thing 'for the world' (as opposed to 'for this country') might have a been a more appropriate choice of phrasing. Of course, I realize it was an off-the-cuff remark. But the way it was put, to me, makes it sound a little opportunistic - like a cheap shot. And, come on, anytime you put the words 'Bush' and 'Hitler' together in a sentence you are making a very well-used association that will likely promote some very well-used reactions. And frankly, I'm tired of both.

No offense intended, but you're tired of hearing some things said and written, and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis died avoidable deaths...avoidable if we didn't have openly avowed official civilian practitioners of "elective", "preemptive", aggressive war, commanding the US military, but we did in 2003, and we still do. That is the problem. Talking about it, objecting to it, is not the problem.

The CIC of the world's sole super power has waged "elective", "preemptive", aggressive war, after announcing his "policy change" after the 9/11 attacks, against two sovereign nations. It appears likely that he is at least considering initiating the same thing against a third nation, in the near future. Is Rekna anymore in error, comparing the effect of this "new policy" on the US, and on the reat of the world, with what Hitler did, than those who are under reacting to...or horrors....supporting these crimes against humanity?

Is there a more reasonable way, given the facts and the history, to put these acts of aggression in proper context or perspective? I don't see how it can be done without ignoring some or all of the information in my last post.

mixedmedia 03-13-2008 02:11 AM

I am quite aware of what is going on, host. But see, you managed to speak about it just now without bringing Hitler up even once.

Rekna 03-13-2008 03:31 AM

I definitely should have said in the world and not just the US. Unfortunately this was after a few to many real beers. Damn Utah beers have made me soft. I was quite surprised by their reaction and also by how much the people here support the Republican party. I guess Georgia is a lot more conservative than Utah.

highthief 03-13-2008 04:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
I definitely should have said in the world and not just the US.

I think you'd have to throw Mao Tse Tung, Stalin, Pol Pot, and a few others into the equation if you are talking about the world and not just the US.

He's certainly been your worst president since the second world war.

Ustwo 03-13-2008 05:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
I definitely should have said in the world and not just the US. Unfortunately this was after a few to many real beers. Damn Utah beers have made me soft. I was quite surprised by their reaction and also by how much the people here support the Republican party. I guess Georgia is a lot more conservative than Utah.

So are you trying to troll or are you just stupid?

Seriously whats the point of this thread?

The worst in the world?

I am just going to assume its a troll, because in the words of a moderator, this is horseshit.

Tully Mars 03-13-2008 05:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by highthief
He's certainly been your worst president since the second world war.

Bush is like a drug to some people. I wonder how long it's going to take to recover from him?

I hear Neil Young's "The Needle and Damage Done" and I think of Bush and the neo-cons.

On the Op- I have a problem when people start bringing up the Nazis and Hilter in comparison to, well, anyone. To me it really cheapens the suffering of those at the hands of the Nazis. I'd say the millions of people who lost their lives and their families would tend to disagree with you. But it's a free country and you have the right to your opinion same as anyone else.

roachboy 03-13-2008 05:43 AM

well, ustwo, perhaps you might take a moment to ask yourself why your lovely posts about islam get qualified as horseshit where this does not.
think long and hard if you have to.


besides, this thread is still on a higher level than the frat-house eliot spitzer thread--its about a drunken metaphor..
that's about it.

in the spitzer thread, the fratboy jokes were flying and you are a willing participant...and that's fine, yes?
har de har and all that.
but surely you cannot expect me or anyone else to believe you've suddenly developed standards for intellectual content in a debate.

please....

you sure you want to play this game?

ratbastid 03-13-2008 05:59 AM

Substitute "world" for "America", and I agree completely. Doesn't necessarily mean any random bar in Georgia (especially outside Atlanta metro) would agree with us.

One could make the case that Hitler was good for America. Bad for the world, obviously, especially Europe and certainly for the particular ethnic and cultural groups he targeted for elimination, but overall, good for America. Without WWII, American hegemony would have taken much longer to establish--we walked out of the war an economic and military powerhouse, and have remained that way until, well, George Bush's presidency, when it all went to hell in a multi-trillion dollar international-relations nightmare called Iraq.

dksuddeth 03-13-2008 06:03 AM

notify me when our president (any president for that matter) starts interring millions of people belonging to one race or religion, using them as slave labor for a war effort, and then conducts mass executions and burials when those millions become a liability. Until that time, any comparison of that magnitude reeks of simple hatred of republicans.

roachboy 03-13-2008 06:04 AM

for what it's worth, while i marvel at the disaster that has been the bush administration, i dont think they've pulled down the house--it has been problematic structurally for a long time, and ideologically dysfunctional since the reagan period--the politics of wholesale denial of structural issues in a context where structural issues are at the center of problems is not a good mix. the bush people have simply sped things up, by all appearances.

context matters. it is not enough to simply blame this administration, no matter the magnitude of the fiasco they've been.

ratbastid 03-13-2008 06:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dksuddeth
notify me when our president (any president for that matter) starts interring millions of people belonging to one race or religion, using them as slave labor for a war effort, and then conducts mass executions and burials when those millions become a liability. Until that time, any comparison of that magnitude reeks of simple hatred of republicans.

Well, it might if it WAS a comparison--that is, if what was said was "Bush is as bad as Hitler was."

But that's not what was said. What was said explicitly means that Bush is NOT as bad as Hitler was. So... it becomes a communication problem, I think, rather than an ideological one.

(Although I will say that Gitmo and Abu Ghraib do have a certain Auschwitz-in-miniature flavor to them. Ah, let the flame-fest begin...)

roachboy 03-13-2008 07:02 AM

another note: the creepiest thing about the bush period has been its demonstration of the ease with which a variant of neofascist ideology can and will be swallowed by the american people--for a while. i sometimes wonder what would have happened had they not been so incompetent---had they not decided to invade iraq, for example. it's kinda unnerving.

i dont see bush<=>hitler comparisons as useful then because they are hyperbolic on the one hand, and function to trivialize the problem of neofascism on the other by pegging the notion to a particular expression-hitler's germany was one version---what the americans flirted with was closer to italian fascism--but that at the level of parallel. what made fascism particularly dangerous was that it was new--it advanced more or less unnamed because among the first moves in the consolidation of power was the elimination of political positions that would do the naming--the left in most cases.

in the states, things did not have to go so far as the physical elimination of the left, and this is important--both in itself and in that it provides something to think about. in most european contexts (say) of the 1920s-30s, left political organizations had their own press outlets, and so were permanent features of a media landscape--in the states, the dominant media outlets are owned and operated by pseudo-neutral corporations and geared around selling advertising (information as window dressing around announcements of sales as saks fifth avenue, which are more important because they are american reality...) there is a **big** problem with the american mediascape.

Tully Mars 03-13-2008 07:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ratbastid
(Although I will say that Gitmo and Abu Ghraib do have a certain Auschwitz-in-miniature flavor to them. Ah, let the flame-fest begin...)

You know, I agree with much of what you say but... Gitmo- Auschwitz-lite?

I have no interest in a flame fest but to compare throwing people in an oven to activities such as throwing a Koran in the toilet seems a bit absurd. I know many things have likely been done to the people currently being held at places like Gitmo but I have feeling it pales in comparison to the activities of places such as Auschwitz.

mixedmedia 03-13-2008 08:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
I definitely should have said in the world and not just the US. Unfortunately this was after a few to many real beers. Damn Utah beers have made me soft. I was quite surprised by their reaction and also by how much the people here support the Republican party. I guess Georgia is a lot more conservative than Utah.

Doh! You didn't say you were in Georgia...well, yeah. :p

roachboy 03-13-2008 08:16 AM

obviously there are significant differences of degree between these: but nonetheless people like to think that the us is a country of laws and that it's reliance on law is one of the things that makes it distinctive, that makes it "free" (at the formal level anyway)--perhaps it is the shock of abu graib and the program of "extraordinary renditions" that on one hand leads to such reactions--"we" do not do this stuff--but obviously, "we" do.

there's a deeper problem however: part of the external legacy of the united states includes active support for and training of fascist paramilitaries in latin america through the school of the americas--the rationalization and spreading of torture techniques in the name of "anti-communism"--and this is not new--so "we" live in a bubble, separated domestically from much of the brutality that the americans are known for internationally. maybe abu ghraib and other bush-particular actions are opportunities to walk through the mirror. maybe that will lead people to demand change--and end to the grotesque military-industrial regime that the united states has become through and since the cold war. the united states does not operate in ways that symmetrical with its domestic political discourse and the ethics that supposedly underpin that.

no sense in pretending this isn't true---there's so much information out there about it that the shocking thing is that folk manage to find ways to evade it.

Willravel 03-13-2008 08:25 AM

It's a good thing that no one is under the mistaken impression that Rekna was actually comparing Bush to Hitler.

Yeesh...

mixedmedia 03-13-2008 08:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by roachboy
for what it's worth, while i marvel at the disaster that has been the bush administration, i dont think they've pulled down the house--it has been problematic structurally for a long time, and ideologically dysfunctional since the reagan period--the politics of wholesale denial of structural issues in a context where structural issues are at the center of problems is not a good mix. the bush people have simply sped things up, by all appearances.

context matters. it is not enough to simply blame this administration, no matter the magnitude of the fiasco they've been.

I agree with this and with rb's next post a few frames down.

I don't like Bush. I didn't like Reagan. I don't care for republican ideology and politics for the most part, but I don't fool myself into thinking that democratic politics and ideology are the inverse of them. And often I think it's the practicing of politics itself (rather than the ideological forces that inform its context) that is the greater threat to my own ideals as a citizen and a carbon-based life form on this planet...for the practicing of politics has largely become an exercise lacking in ideals and vision. It is largely motivated by two things: self-interest and money - sometimes one or the other, sometimes both. Thus we have the veritable liberal messiah of American politics, Bill Clinton, telling his administration not to use the word 'genocide' when speaking publicly about Rwanda even though they knew.

Which brings me back around to why it is I am so totally disillusioned with American politics as a whole. It's about 95% charade....I guesstimate.

ratbastid 03-13-2008 08:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tully Mars
You know, I agree with much of what you say but... Gitmo- Auschwitz-lite?

I have no interest in a flame fest but to compare throwing people in an oven to activities such as throwing a Koran in the toilet seems a bit absurd. I know many things have likely been done to the people currently being held at places like Gitmo but I have feeling it pales in comparison to the activities of places such as Auschwitz.

Hence my use of the words "flavor" and "-in-miniature".

I confess, I meant to be a bit inflammatory. America's not nearly outraged enough about what's been done in its name.

In Nazi concentration camps, prisoners were subhuman chattel for use as slave labor and as medical experiment subjects, and their murder was ultimately no more a matter of concern than slaughtering a herd of animals. In Abu Ghraib, prisoners are human toys whose suffering and humiliation is for the enjoyment of sadistic bullies who have been put in charge and enacted the ultimate "law of the playground". I honestly don't know which is worse, between treating people as sub-humans whose lives are worthless, or treating them as human playthings who you can humiliate at your pleasure.

SirSeymour 03-13-2008 08:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ratbastid
I confess, I meant to be a bit inflammatory. America's not nearly outraged enough about what's been done in its name.

An unfortunate reality of today is that as long as they believe it is being done to protect them most Americans can and will stomach just about anything done in their name.

loquitur 03-13-2008 08:54 AM

I can't vote for any of the choices. The statement is the product of the recency and proximity fallacies and is silly to boot. People said similar things about Reagan in the '80s, and - believe it or not - about Ford after the Nixon pardon.

I'm invoking Godwin on this one.

Willravel 03-13-2008 09:04 AM

I feel like I'm taking crazy pills.
"Bush is the worst thing for this country since Adolf Hitler."

Let's break this down. Adolf Hitler was a bad thing for the US. He was a bad thing in the 40s. Since the 40s, Bush has been the worst thing for the US.

Again, Hitler was a chronological marker.

Fotzlid 03-13-2008 09:22 AM

This poll is just plain silly.

the choices might as well be
1 - I hate Bush
2 - I really hate Bush
3 - I really,really hate Bush
4 - I wish Bush was dead

Jinn 03-13-2008 09:27 AM

Quote:

"Bush is the worst thing for this country since Adolf Hitler."


Let's break this down. Adolf Hitler was a bad thing for the US. He was a bad thing in the 40s. Since the 40s, Bush has been the worst thing for the US.

Again, Hitler was a chronological marker.
It's a semantic game you can play to justify yourself, but it doesn't change the effect it's going to have on someone.

Technically speaking, you're right - we have is a collection of "things", all of which are "since Hitler", and we are saying that Bush is the worst of them.

So basically we are just saying that Bush is the worst thing to have happened since Hitler - but we say nothing about whether it is better or worse than Hitler itself! Nothing can be said about the quality of Bush with respect to the quality of Hitler.

Nonetheless, a "reasonable observer" is going to take it in the simplest sense - a direct comparison between Bush and Hilter. I hate Bush and he's definitely the worst President in my lifetime, but I'm not niave enough to think Bush is gassing Jews. It's called Godwin's Law for a reason - it's a lame comparison.

Just like the policitian who was recently asked to resign for using "niggardly" when describing low-income families, people took it for what they thought it meant, not what it ACTUALLY means. If you're going to say "worst thing since Hitler" about anything or anyone, you'd better be prepared to have it heard as a direct comparsion.


Your biggest faux pas was discussing politics at a bar. Have you never seen a bar fight?

silent_jay 03-13-2008 09:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by roachboy
well, ustwo, perhaps you might take a moment to ask yourself why your lovely posts about islam get qualified as horseshit where this does not.
think long and hard if you have to.


besides, this thread is still on a higher level than the frat-house eliot spitzer thread--its about a drunken metaphor..
that's about it.

in the spitzer thread, the fratboy jokes were flying and you are a willing participant...and that's fine, yes?
har de har and all that.
but surely you cannot expect me or anyone else to believe you've suddenly developed standards for intellectual content in a debate.

please....

you sure you want to play this game?

Should be fun to see Ustwo respond to this, seems he likes joking in threads that aren't about his beloved Bush.....

Oh and yes Bush is the worst thing to happen to the US since Hitler. Is it really that hard to see this isn't a direct comparison? Guess some people here see what they want to see and only read enough to get worked up and respond.

Willravel 03-13-2008 09:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JinnKai
It's a semantic game you can play to justify yourself, but it doesn't change the effect it's going to have on someone.

I can't be blamed for people's misunderstandings due to illogical emotional reactions, nor can Rekna. If you don't understand english, you should be at home studying instead of out drinking.

Rephrased, but not changing any of the values or meanings, the question can read: "Bush is the worst thing for this country since the 1940s." This is probably a correct statement.

loquitur 03-13-2008 09:49 AM

Will, that's disingenuous in the extreme. Suppose a roughly contemporaneous marker was used, like Churchill or FDR. What would you say about "Bush is the worst thing since FDR?" You'd accept "oh, I was talking chronologically" as an explanation?

Didn't think so.

Willravel 03-13-2008 09:58 AM

You'd have to be naming something that was bad for the US. Hitler was clearly intending to do the US harm. Neither Churchill nor FDR intended the US harm. How about this? Bush is the worst thing for this country since Nixon (negative). Oh snap. Or Bush is the worst thing for this country since the 1950s (neutral). Or Bush is the worst thing for this country since the Moynihan Report.

vanblah 03-13-2008 10:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
I can't be blamed for people's misunderstandings due to illogical emotional reactions, nor can Rekna. If you don't understand english, you should be at home studying instead of out drinking.

Rephrased, but not changing any of the values or meanings, the question can read: "Bush is the worst thing for this country since the 1940s." This is probably a correct statement.

You can't compare a person with a time; and you're really not supposed to compare people using the word "since." Neither statement is correct. The word "since" in classical definition according to the OED with regard to this statement: "From that time till now; or between then and now." This is why people who are public speakers by profession choose their words very carefully ... it is very easy to slip up.

The correct statement would have been something along the lines of this: "The time that Bush has spent as president of the U.S. is the worst example of leadership since Hitler as dictator over Germany in the '30s and '40s."

Again, as far as Hitler is concerned the worst thing he did TO THE U.S. is get us involved in a war in Europe. Hitler had no DIRECT effect on U.S. non-military NATIVE citizens. His effects were oblique at best. He did declare war on the U.S. I'm not refuting that ... but there was never a German invasion on NATIVE soil that I'm aware of.

Now, Bush has certainly caused a lot of upset on NATIVE soil ... but that's nothing new.

In my opinion, comparing the two MEN or TIME PERIODS in which they were leaders is comparing apples to oranges.

I don't like Bush. I think some of the things he has done are vile and contemptible ... I feel the same way about Hitler. But I will not compare them beyond that.

Willravel 03-13-2008 10:21 AM

What do you think "since" means?

pan6467 03-13-2008 10:22 AM

I personally think it lacks taste but one is free to say what they want. I think he has screwed the country up and the next Pres. better fix things real fast or he'll be hanging from a rope and be a huge scape coat.

I don't know if Bush is he worst thing since Hitler to Hit this country.... 9/11, Vietnam, the fact black people had to fight for a right to vote, sit where they wanted, use the same toilets, and so on as late as he 60's, trials against Clinton to prevent him from doing the job, none of those were highlights and some were more a black eye than Bush ever will be.

I think some people give Bush too much credit. I think it is more the generation.

Bush isn't the greedy CEO making more in one day than his workers will in a year combined nor the CEO making millions as he lays everyone off, ships jobs overseas and makes his bonus.

Bush didn't make ARMS and set the rates.... he may have been able to do something sooner and should have but he didn't, that's his only crime there.

I'm sure if you look back our CIA waterboarded and had questionable techniques throughout it's history, it's just now it's being watched like a hawk and we don't have the leaders like Hussein, the Shah, Osama Bin Laden, etc to do their bidding anymore.

So no, bush may have taken us deeper than we were and taken us faster than we wanted but we have been headed this way for a very long time and people just didn't care until it they see it and it's too late to do anything about it.

Yes, I pity the poor guy/lady next in office, because if they can't change things fast and if they make a mistake in trying..... we'll be hanging them from a rope and blaming them for all the things we saw years ago coming but turned blind eyes to because we wanted the newest toy, we wanted to blame the other party and everyone else.....

loquitur 03-13-2008 10:28 AM

<35> Will, if it has to be something that's bad for the US then it's not just a chronological marker, is it now. It definitely implies a characterization or comparison, which I think was the point the other people were making.

I have serious problems with Bush in a lot of areas, but comparing him to Hitler is just silly.

vanblah 03-13-2008 10:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
What do you think "since" means?

Are you asking me?

abaya 03-13-2008 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mixedmedia
#1 the expression is faux pas...sorry, but I'm a stickler for these things.

I still can't really get past this... my inner English teacher is lashing out every time I hit "New Posts" and this thread comes up. Then again, my dad calls it "foo-pah," so maybe I should just get used to it.

/nothing else constructive to add that hasn't already been said, sorry.

powerclown 03-13-2008 10:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by roachboy
in the spitzer thread, the fratboy jokes were flying and you are a willing participant...and that's fine, yes?
har de har and all that.
but surely you cannot expect me or anyone else to believe you've suddenly developed standards for intellectual content in a debate.

Seriously, what the hell are you talking about? Were you raised in some backwoods fundamentalist parish by autistic, transsexual pulpitarians? Lacking "intellectual content"? And you speak for anyone else but yourself, since when? What do you have against a little bawdy humor anyway -- too barbaric and unsophisticated for you?

Smoke a bowl and go read The Hairy Ape or something.

:cringe:

Willravel 03-13-2008 10:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by loquitur
I have serious problems with Bush in a lot of areas, but comparing him to Hitler is just silly.

There are of course comparisons to be made, but that's really beside the point. It was a chronological marker with a negative connotation. What, does Bush not deserve a negative connotation? The sentence provided does not even present a direct comparison, i.e. "is bush as bad as hitler?". It simply states:
1) Hitler was bad for the US.
2) Hitler's effect was at this given time.
3) Since said given time, Bush is the worst thing.

I don't see any problems with that.
Quote:

Originally Posted by vanblah
Are you asking me?

Sure.

loquitur 03-13-2008 10:42 AM

Will, you could compare Bush to Nixon much more profitably, and even that one would be a stretch. Or Carter, who was a bit like Nixon but without the felonies. He actually might be most like Emperor Paul of Russia, except that Paul got assassinated and his wife, Catherine the Great, took over the throne. And we know what happened to her, don't we...........

Jinn 03-13-2008 11:22 AM

Quote:

I can't be blamed for people's misunderstandings due to illogical emotional reactions, nor can Rekna. If you don't understand english, you should be at home studying instead of out drinking.
Enjoy your world alone then. You can, and will be held responsible for people's misunderstandings in a world populated by other people. I view it is just as much a failure of the speaker as the receiver is the meaning is unclear. It is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY as the speaker to anticipate how the recipient will misunderstand or misinterpret what you've said and speak clearly enough to avoid such things.

I'm very well versed in English, I have a very logical emotional process and yet I still don't think that blaming the receiver for misunderstanding what you've said is fair or responsible.

Words get a lot of people in trouble when they think that it's "not my responsibility to make sure I'm understood."

Willravel 03-13-2008 11:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JinnKai
Enjoy your world alone then.

Fortunately, I'm not alone at all. I asked a few people I work with and a few on AIM about it after I posted and they agreed with me 100%.
Quote:

Originally Posted by JinnKai
You can, and will be held responsible for people's misunderstandings in a world populated by other people. I view it is just as much a failure of the speaker as the receiver is the meaning is unclear. It is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY as the speaker to anticipate how the recipient will misunderstand or misinterpret what you've said and speak clearly enough to avoid such things.

Translation: Hmmm... I'm way smarter than everyone so I should speak in baby talk so that these idiots will get what I' saying.

I don't think so.

powerclown 03-13-2008 12:11 PM

Next time, no more Coronas with lime twists, Rekna...a fews pints of Guinness or even ice cold Labatts Blue will clarify your worldview in no time.

Willravel 03-13-2008 12:32 PM

Real men drink single malt scotch.

silent_jay 03-13-2008 12:39 PM

Mmmmmmm scotch, although a nice Canadian beer is always good as well, yeah I have nothing constructive to add to the thread, just that I like beer and scotch.

loquitur 03-13-2008 12:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Real men drink single malt scotch.

Highland? Islay? or what?

One of my friends says that anything lighter than Lagavulin is for pansies.

powerclown 03-13-2008 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Real men drink single malt scotch.

Hear that Rekna? Scotch, for real men. Go forth now and drink properly. Bars are for escaping talk of Chimpton Haliburton McBushitler.

Rekna 03-13-2008 12:58 PM

I have to say I like Scotch but I make it a point to find microbrews when I travel and try out the local brews. Last night I was drinking some nice German style Hefes.

I've been at a conference all day so I haven't been able to respond but I'm with Will on this one. "Since" implies that Bush is not as bad as Hitler but does imply he is worse than anything since then.....

As for 9/11, I believe Bushes reaction to 9/11 and what he has had us doing since then has been far worse than the initial act itself. Had a wiser person been in the Whitehouse at the time the world as a whole could be a lot better off.

loquitur 03-13-2008 01:09 PM

dunno, Rekna..... if my grandma had wheels she would have been a trolley car....

Tully Mars 03-13-2008 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fotzlid
This poll is just plain silly.

the choices might as well be
1 - I hate Bush
2 - I really hate Bush
3 - I really,really hate Bush
4 - I wish Bush was dead

Close, but you left out:

5 - All of the above

mixedmedia 03-13-2008 01:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mixedmedia
I am quite aware of what is going on, host. But see, you managed to speak about it just now without bringing Hitler up even once.

Hey, no fair. host went back and wrote Hitler.

dc_dux 03-13-2008 01:40 PM

The Hitler comparison served only as a distraction. I think a better OP would have been to ask the question:
Have the Bush policies of the last eight years resulted in the greatest US loss of credibility and influence around the world in the recent (post WW II) history of our nation?
IMO, the answer is a resounding YES.

mixedmedia 03-13-2008 01:42 PM

About all this 'since' business. I don't think I'm stupid, but when I think about bad things that have happened to 'this country' I don't think Hitler. Hence, the statement in the OP seems heavy-handed. Like Hitler was being used for effect. If it were being used solely as a chronological marker, it would have made more sense to use our president at that time.

I would possibly stand behind the statement: Bush is the worst thing to happen to this world since Hitler. But I would have to give the matter some serious thought.

vanblah 03-13-2008 01:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Sure.

Will, I already defined the word "since" according to the OED in an earlier post and that will be the definition I will follow.

On the one hand you talk about being "smarter than everyone else" and so you choose NOT to "baby talk" so everyone else can understand you. Yet, here is the crux of the problem at hand. Rekna used the word "since" in a way that is not particularly accepted except in lazy speech or vernacular.

Then a whole shitload of interpretations ensued. Wonder why?

It's not that I disagree with the SENTIMENT of the original phrase ... but I didn't think we were discussing that issue. I thought the debate was over whether the phrase was accurate in LANGUAGE not IDEA.

Rekna even corroborated it:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
"Since" implies that Bush is not as bad as Hitler but does imply he is worse than anything since then.....

(Bold is mine.)

The word "since" didn't imply anything ... THE SPEAKER implied the idea. But that's where the barrier is ... a speaker should not IMPLY anything but rather spell it out exactly. When you IMPLY something you should not be upset when those around you don't understand the implication. They have their own pre-conceived notions about the language and thus react within their own understanding.

I can't be sure that it was a bar full of neocons ... but if this thread is any indication as to the demographics then I'm pretty sure it wasn't.

I'm not a neocon by any stretch of the imagination and I disagree with the original statement.

Rekna 03-13-2008 02:14 PM

If I say "Martin Luther King is the most profound person to walk to the earth since Jesus" would I have just insulted every Christian on the planet by implying that Martin Luther King is better than Jesus?

Willravel 03-13-2008 02:16 PM

Martin Luther King Jr. could fly.

Ustwo 03-13-2008 02:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
If I say "Martin Luther King is the most profound person to walk to the earth since Jesus" would I have just insulted every Christian on the planet by implying that Martin Luther King is better than Jesus?

No but you would have insulted your history teachers.

Willravel 03-13-2008 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ustwo
No but you would have insulted your agnostic, atheist, or non-christian history teachers.

ftfy

powerclown 03-13-2008 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by loquitur
dunno, Rekna..... if my grandma had wheels she would have been a trolley car....

Come again?

:lol: :lol: :lol:

vanblah 03-13-2008 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rekna
If I say "Martin Luther King is the most profound person to walk to the earth since Jesus" would I have just insulted every Christian on the planet by implying that Martin Luther King is better than Jesus?

Probably some of them. Just like in your neocon biker-bar Bush/Hitler scenario. You will still have to choose your words carefully ...

Besides, I can't compare a non-fiction character (MLK) with one that I believe to be fictional (the Legend of Jesus). Whether or not there was an actual man called Jesus to whom all this NT Christianity is attributed is up in the air for me (and a topic for another post).

I suppose you could have said, "The teachings of Martin Luther King are the most profound since the teachings of Jesus."

Furthermore, with regard to MLK and Jesus as people, there is no "IS" ... only "WAS."

:thumbsup: :D

dksuddeth 03-14-2008 06:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ratbastid
(Although I will say that Gitmo and Abu Ghraib do have a certain Auschwitz-in-miniature flavor to them. Ah, let the flame-fest begin...)

actually, I would have to very much agree with this statement. Bush makes executive number three to have wantonly violated numerous areas of the constitution and not only should he and cheney be impeached, tried, and convicted, but also serve life sentences or be executed. This should immediately be followed by the trials of ashcroft and gonzalez. Then every congress and senate miscreant who voted FOR these 'laws' that violated the constitution should face charges and expulsion. Follow that with the judges who sided with the government in these cases.

Unfortunately, in todays wishy washy and apathetically fearful society, none of this will ever happen.

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Real men drink single malt scotch.

Quoted for Truth!!!!

and just to make sure nobody misses it. :thumbsup:

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Real men drink single malt scotch.


loquitur 03-14-2008 07:34 AM

FWIW, I found these on a site called lolpresident. Enjoy!!<br><br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...8/03/turdz.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...rylostcape.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...potatochip.JPG<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...ry_hillary.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...le-boobies.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...-out-again.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...oozenboobs.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...yr-contrys.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...07/06/dick.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...07/06/taft.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...07/06/halp.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...6/lolnixon.jpg<br>
http://lolpresident.com/wp-content/u...06/lolbush.jpg

ottopilot 03-14-2008 09:55 AM

Quote:

"Bush is the worst thing for this country since Adolf Hitler"
OK, you did say "since". But if we reviewed history with balanced detached non-political honesty, I believe there would be little that compares in design and scope to the effects of Hitler on America (or the world).

Saying that Bush is worst for America since Hitler draws a back-handed comparison of the two. Why not say "since WWII" if it's what you really mean? ...it still wouldn't be true. Were you not backpedaling to avoid drunken criticism? If it's something really believe, stand up for your beliefs.

Bush isn't the best ever ... thank goodness for the hard work of our House and Senate. Always vigilant, incorruptible, marshaling the people's mandate.

MuadDib 03-14-2008 09:58 AM

Let me cast a "False, but not out of line" vote. There have certainly been worse leaders than Bush since Hitler (maybe not a worse American President, but I don't think that was the question). However, I wouldn't call the comment out of line because I don't assume that most people actually mean it when they say such things and even if they do it is almost entirely unlikely that they did the research to back up such an opinion. If the comment is meant as to analogize the relative badness of awful world leaders then I suppose that is a valid opinion, though the one I don't agree with. Bush is awful, and some may consider him evil I suppose (though I wouldn't take it that far), but Hitler and other leaders since have been intentionally, maliciously, and truly evil in a category all together separate from any terrible results that were birthed by Bush.

ratbastid 03-14-2008 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ottopilot
Saying that Bush is worst for America since Hitler draws a back-handed comparison of the two.

Nothing back-handed about it. What it EXPLICITLY SAYS is that Bush is NOT as bad as Hitler. I don't understand why this is hard to understand, but evidently it is.

The statement asserts that nobody SINCE Hitler has been worse for America than George Bush is. But that the comparison ENDS with Hitler, since Hitler was WORSE. That's actually what the WORDS MEAN.

Jinn 03-14-2008 11:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ratbastid
Nothing back-handed about it. What it EXPLICITLY SAYS is that Bush is NOT as bad as Hitler. I don't understand why this is hard to understand, but evidently it is.

The statement asserts that nobody SINCE Hitler has been worse for America than George Bush is. But that the comparison ENDS with Hitler, since Hitler was WORSE. That's actually what the WORDS MEAN.

I respond, as before:

Quote:

Originally Posted by me, Page 1
Nonetheless, a "reasonable observer" is going to take it in the simplest sense - a direct comparison between Bush and Hilter.

Quote:

Originally Posted by me, Page 1
Just like the policitian who was recently asked to resign for using "niggardly" when describing low-income families, people took it for what they thought it meant, not what it ACTUALLY means. If you're going to say "worst thing since Hitler" about anything or anyone, you'd better be prepared to have it heard as a direct comparsion.

Quote:

Originally Posted by me, Page 2
You can, and will be held responsible for people's misunderstandings in a world populated by other people. I view it is just as much a failure of the speaker as the receiver is the meaning is unclear. It is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY as the speaker to anticipate how the recipient will misunderstand or misinterpret what you've said and speak clearly enough to avoid such things.


Ustwo 03-14-2008 11:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dksuddeth
actually, I would have to very much agree with this statement. Bush makes executive number three to have wantonly violated numerous areas of the constitution and not only should he and cheney be impeached, tried, and convicted, but also serve life sentences or be executed. This should immediately be followed by the trials of ashcroft and gonzalez. Then every congress and senate miscreant who voted FOR these 'laws' that violated the constitution should face charges and expulsion. Follow that with the judges who sided with the government in these cases.

Unfortunately, in todays wishy washy and apathetically fearful society, none of this will ever happen.

Since I would guess just about every president is worthy of execution in your eyes, perhaps you can start a new party. I'd recommend the name "Sacred King Party", where the president would be sacrificed at the end of his term.

Term limits would really have meaning.

SirSeymour 03-14-2008 11:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dksuddeth
actually, I would have to very much agree with this statement. Bush makes executive number three to have wantonly violated numerous areas of the constitution and not only should he and cheney be impeached, tried, and convicted, but also serve life sentences or be executed. This should immediately be followed by the trials of ashcroft and gonzalez.

I am curious as to who you would consider executives #1 and #2...

ottopilot 03-14-2008 12:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dksuddeth
actually, I would have to very much agree with this statement. Bush makes executive number three to have wantonly violated numerous areas of the constitution and not only should he and cheney be impeached, tried, and convicted, but also serve life sentences or be executed. This should immediately be followed by the trials of ashcroft and gonzalez. Then every congress and senate miscreant who voted FOR these 'laws' that violated the constitution should face charges and expulsion. Follow that with the judges who sided with the government in these cases.

Unfortunately, in todays wishy washy and apathetically fearful society, none of this will ever happen.

I think Henry Waxman could look in to this right after the MLB steroids investigations.

dksuddeth 03-14-2008 01:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SirSeymour
I am curious as to who you would consider executives #1 and #2...

Abraham Lincoln and FDR.

mixedmedia 03-14-2008 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JinnKai
I respond, as before:

And I would also like to add (again) that the association between Bush and Hitler has been so ill-used and over-used that a person should never be surprised at getting a negative reaction from people...regardless of the subtlety of their intent. Rekna would have been better off choosing another bad world leader, lol.

And that said, I do realize that what was said was an off-hand comment in a bar and not a calculated statement. If I had a nickel for everytime I said something and later wished I had said it differently I'd...well, I'd have a shitload of nickels.

telekinetic 03-14-2008 04:07 PM

First of all, fohpah? If you don't know, google is your friend.

Second, I've totally got Will's back in the literal interpretation that the remark uses Hitler as a chronological marker.

Turn off your kneejerk for a moment, and observe my handy visual aid:


http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c5.../badthings.gif

This is an awesome graph of bad things that have happened to America over time. Here are some true things you can say about this graph:

Bush is the worst thing for this country since Adolf Hitler
Bush is the worst thing for this country since Hippies
Hitler is the worst thing for this country since Great Depression
Hippies were the worst thing for this country since Hitler (until Bush)

etc etc.

All that statement means is "Starting immediately after Event B, there is nothing worse than event A for our country". It doesn't give you any relative measure of badness between events A and B.

edit: Holy crap, thread has moved significantly since last page. Why didn't I see it was two pages? Feel free to disregard. :orly:

Willravel 03-14-2008 04:11 PM

Twisted gets it.

My world isn't alone!

ottopilot 03-14-2008 10:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Twisted gets it.

apparently.

dksuddeth 03-15-2008 03:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ustwo
Since I would guess just about every president is worthy of execution in your eyes, perhaps you can start a new party. I'd recommend the name "Sacred King Party", where the president would be sacrificed at the end of his term.

Term limits would really have meaning.

well god forbid that we should actually hold our so called elected representatives accountable when they violate the law/constitution/our basic fundamental rights.

mixedmedia 03-15-2008 03:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Twisted gets it.

My world isn't alone!

I think we all understand the meaning of the word 'since.' But there are many ways in which a statement, especially a loaded one, can be interpreted and that's what the rest of us are talking about.

ottopilot 03-15-2008 06:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mixedmedia
I think we all understand the meaning of the word 'since.' But there are many ways in which a statement, especially a loaded one, can be interpreted and that's what the rest of us are talking about.

By arguing the literal use of "since", it allows for smarmy rationalization and plausible denial of the statement's implied meaning.

Willravel 03-15-2008 08:39 AM

The "implication" is a subjective interpretation. The objective meaning is clear.

Fotzlid 03-15-2008 08:47 AM

This thread reminds me of the "definition of is" issue from a number of years back.

Quote:

"It depends on what the meaning of the word 'is' is. If the--if he--if 'is' means is and never has been, that is not--that is one thing. If it means there is none, that was a completely true statement....Now, if someone had asked me on that day, are you having any kind of sexual relations with Ms. Lewinsky, that is, asked me a question in the present tense, I would have said no. And it would have been completely true."


mixedmedia 03-15-2008 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
The "implication" is a subjective interpretation. The objective meaning is clear.

The objective meaning is clear only in a totally objective (ie, unrealistic) scenario. I've read plenty of Rekna's writing here and I've no reason to believe that Rekna meant the statement in a literally objective sense. And I've certainly no expectation for anyone to take it as such. Your argument is bordering on the pedantic.

Willravel 03-15-2008 09:20 AM

You can't justify projecting your unsupportable interpretation on Rekna. My argument is somewhat pedantic, but it's still correct.

mixedmedia 03-15-2008 09:27 AM

The interpretation is totally supportable as is evidenced by the majority of reactions to it here, not to mention the reactions that prompted the OP. And I'm not trying to pin anything on Rekna. I'm saying that he/she is not in more of an objective bubble than anyone else.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:18 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360