GDT: 11/3/20, Election Day, Donald J. Trump vs. Joseph R. Biden

Status
Not open for further replies.
Ware County Election Supervisor Carlos Nelson has explained how all of this is BS. He explained it several days ago. I want fresh material. That's what I expect from you. You're disappointing me thethe.

btw Fauci would make a fine middle name...for a boy or girl

His name is Carlos.

Means he might be Hispanic. In that case, he might have a vendetta against Trump.

But WAIT, Hispanics were out for Trump in FULL this election. So I'm not sure which finger to point.
 
His name is Carlos.

Means he might be Hispanic. In that case, he might have a vendetta against Trump.

But WAIT, Hispanics were out for Trump in FULL this election. So I'm not sure which finger to point.

well he could be a non-Hispanic Carlos...maybe one of those insufferable elitists...i'm sure Ware County has a couple
 
Last edited:
EolMBcJVEAADmsK
 
Let's talk about a few things that thethe hasn't been adding to his posts. The 3% number with the first 100 duplicate ballots? When 1526 were reviewed after the first 100, 9 total ballots were discovered having an issue. 9. That includes the 3 found in the first 100. So that is 9 out of a total of 1626. All mistakes reported were fixed.

Now let's talk about the 11% number he keeps throwing around lately. Of the 11 out of 100 found inconclusive, there was no reason found to reject them. They were still legal ballots. All of them had the required matching phone number included, which is the fallback option for verifying an inconclusive signature. Over 20k people were contacted to verify.

Thank you for posting this. This confirms what everyone here already knows: Thethe doesn’t believe in facts.
 
Thank you for posting this. This confirms what everyone here already knows: Thethe doesn’t believe in facts.

It also confirms he doesn’t actual read more than cherry picked/select Tweets and headlines. That was already known but this just makes it even clearer.
 
It also confirms he doesn’t actual read more than cherry picked/select Tweets and headlines. That was already known but this just makes it even clearer.

Yup. Kind of makes you wonder what type of things he misses at work and throughout his life by taking this same narrow minded and lazy approach.
 
Yup. Kind of makes you wonder what type of things he misses at work and throughout his life by taking this same narrow minded and lazy approach.

I don’t wanna attack the dude in his professional and personal life (even though he spends enough time trying to belittle my profession) based on an Internet forum. I just think he exhibits traits of obvious mania and his delusions in his posting patterns. I also feel sorry for him because he’s fallen hard for the Trump con.
 
I also feel sorry for him because he’s fallen hard for the Trump con.

I study thethe closely because to me he is a type specimen for that portion of the population. very poorly chosen one is much less interesting to me than his hard core followers. I've talked to a few shrinks about it. There is kind of emotional aspect to the relationship (you could even call it love--though it seems to me a rather one-sided love) that is very different from what is typical of voters and politicians. It seems kinda unhealthy to me.
 
I don’t wanna attack the dude in his professional and personal life (even though he spends enough time trying to belittle my profession) based on an Internet forum. I just think he exhibits traits of obvious mania and his delusions in his posting patterns. I also feel sorry for him because he’s fallen hard for the Trump con.

There is a time and a place to feel badly for someone. This isn't one of them. When you have someone who continues to push his agenda, spouting lie after lie after lie, all the while talking down to you when you don't agree with his "facts," and then when you try and have a rational, objective conversation about it he keeps going. Sorry not sorry.

He chose to believe in Trump. He's heard the endless truths about who Trump is and how Trump has literally conned people out of millions of dollars at the expense of their health and emotional well being, and yet he kept doubling and tripling down. That's on him. The people you feel badly for are those that are naïve, get the wool pulled over their eyes once or twice, and then realize what happened. But thethe keeps going back for more and in the process insinuates that all of us who are rational and smart enough to realize what's going on are idiots.

I don't feel badly for him and I will continue to point out how narrowminded and insufferable he is. I asked this many, many pages ago, but I am genuinely curious, out of the 5k+ posts in this thread, how many are Thethe spewing lies and false claims about the election? When it's as many as he's posted you kind of lose the right for people to feel badly for you. He genuinely doesn't care about us viewing him as a moron so we really shouldn't feel badly about his behavior.
 
People who find themselves, either through luck, hard work or coincidence, able to benefit from the policies of the far right are easier to understand. Greed and/or economic insecurity at least makes logical sense, lack of empathy for others notwithstanding. It's the lower economic and education demographics, who would benefit the most from policies that raise more people into the middle class, that I don't understand.
 
Keep on believing that trump did better in deep blue areas like SF and NYC but somehow did worse with record turnout in swing state big cities.
 
People who find themselves, either through luck, hard work or coincidence, able to benefit from the policies of the far right are easier to understand. Greed and/or economic insecurity at least makes logical sense, lack of empathy for others notwithstanding. It's the lower economic and education demographics, who would benefit the most from policies that raise more people into the middle class, that I don't understand.

Like the policies which showed the largest wage increase for non supervisory positions in decades?
 
Like the policies which showed the largest wage increase for non supervisory positions in decades?

Wages have increased around 2.4% since Trump took office. During Obama's two terms combined, the average weekly earnings for production and non supervisory workers went up 4.2%. It was 4.9% his final term. They also increased 4.2% under Bush during his two terms. And 6.4% under Clinton. When you look at nominal hourly wages year-to-year, things are currently increasing at the highest clip in almost 1 decade, not decades. That is the only truth to be found in that statement.
 
I study thethe closely because to me he is a type specimen for that portion of the population. very poorly chosen one is much less interesting to me than his hard core followers. I've talked to a few shrinks about it. There is kind of emotional aspect to the relationship (you could even call it love--though it seems to me a rather one-sided love) that is very different from what is typical of voters and politicians. It seems kinda unhealthy to me.

You're in the right church, wrong pew. I'll give you a hint. Think of the cultural values of the ancestors of Trump supporters, prior to their immigration to the US.
 
You're in the right church, wrong pew. I'll give you a hint. Think of the cultural values of the ancestors of Trump supporters, prior to their immigration to the US.

I'm been trying to wrap my head about it. Much of the way I think of this country and its history is based on Albion's Seed by David Hackett Fischer. And I can readily identify the cultural core of his supporters as being almost linear descendants of the Scotch-Irish and Northern English strand of migration.

My thinking has also been shaped by Robert Tombs' The English and Their History. I learned a lot especially from his discussion of religion in the UK, the dissenters vs the Anglican Church. And then you have the Presbyterians off in Scotland. But it seems to me religion in this country, especially as it pertains to its intersection with culture and politics, has evolved in a much different way than in England. It is a culturally conservative force here. In England it has been more of an agent for cultural change. It wasn't always so, but that's the way its been probably for the last 100 years at least.

Thoughts?

As an aside, I think many of Trump's supporters display a sort of tribalism that is more Balkan than anything else. And sure enough it wasn't too hard to find this article about Milosevic and parallels with Trump:

https://theintercept.com/2017/02/07/what-slobodan-milosevic-taught-me-about-donald-trump/

Of course, none of these parallels and analogies work perfectly. But they provide insight.
 
Last edited:
I'm been trying to wrap my head about it. Much of the way I think of this country and its history is based on Albion's Seed by David Hackett Fischer. And I can readily identify the cultural core of his supporters as being almost linear descendants of the Scotch-Irish and Northern English strand of migration.

My thinking has also been shaped by Robert Tombs' The English and Their History. I learned a lot especially from his discussion of religion in the UK, the dissenters vs the Anglican Church. And then you have the Presbyterians off in Scotland. But it seems to me religion in this country, especially as it pertains to its intersection with culture and politics, has evolved in a much different way than in England. It is a culturally conservative force here. In England it has been more of an agent for cultural change. It wasn't always so, but that's the way its been probably for the last 100 years at least.

Thoughts?

You had it in the first paragraph and over thought it after that. Scotch-Irish cultural attitudes, morals, and pride still dominate the reddest parts of the map. The clannish nature still holds.

Recall the Irish being so sick of the English tyranny that the United Irishmen were willing to invite the French ashore? Flaws aside, Trump jumped right into the fray, fully on their side. Who was the last politician to do that? He's not part of the clan, but he is part of the clans. Short of him turncoating, they'll stay on his side until they or he gets carried off on a shield.
 
You had it in the first paragraph and over thought it after that. Scotch-Irish cultural attitudes, morals, and pride still dominate the reddest parts of the map. The clannish nature still holds.

Recall the Irish being so sick of the English tyranny that the United Irishmen were willing to invite the French ashore? Flaws aside, Trump jumped right into the fray, fully on their side. Who was the last politician to do that? He's not part of the clan, but he is part of the clans. Short of him turncoating, they'll stay on his side until they or he gets carried off on a shield.

He is their Milosevic ("No one will ever be able to beat the Serbs again"). See the bit I added above.

Some of the Irish went over the Kaiser's side as well.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top