Trump and his nicknames

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More than 10% supported Donald Trump. He won the election. He is President. Insulting everyone, en masse, because they supported him over her, is demeaning. What she said was the very definition of bigotry, grouping people together in a lump and treating them as a group in a derogatory manner.
 
It is ok with you to write off a 10% that all bother to vote and by reason of their lack of a criminal record are eligible to vote as “deplorables”?

My whole point is name-calling a whole group of people is even worse than name-calling an individual. Going from “what you just said is false and you know it” is several notches less personal than “you are a liar.” What happens when you yell “you people, half of you are liars!” at a crowd?

Your contention that she was saying they’re not all like that was as weak as Trump’s concession that some people immigrating from Mexico are good people. That doesn’t wash to excuse the attack.
 
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You know, there is a big difference in the public calling names in political discourse and an elected official using silly names to slam opponents. A person cannot drain the swamp by mud-slinging.

The “bully pulpit” is supposed to be a means to set an example for the nation. Does anyone want their grade-school children to act in such a bullying, nasty manner?
 
More than 10% supported Donald Trump.
No one has said otherwise. I am not sure of your point.
Insulting everyone, en masse, because they supported him over her, is demeaning.
I am not sure where you get the idea that everyone is being insulted, or even everyone that supporter him is being insulted.
What she said was the very definition of bigotry, grouping people together in a lump and treating them as a group in a derogatory manner.
While I do not defend the remarks in toto, I think that that is a completely unfair reading of them. The people criticized were critciized for certain, specific characteristics. While the number of people with such characteristics may have been over-estimated, criticism of those characteristics is not unwarrented and not an example of bigotry.
It is ok with you to write off a 10% that all bother to vote and by reason of their lack of a criminal record are eligible to vote as “deplorables”?
I have not said that, nor do I think it.

Is it OK to suggest that the remarks were made about all Trump supporters?
Is it OK to divorce the remark from the specifics of what is deplorable?

Will it ever be possible to speak racism without the words being twisted for partisan advantage?
Your contention that she was saying they’re not all like that was as weak as Trump’s concession that some people immigrating from Mexico are good people.
On the contrary, however spun, her actual remarks spoke directly to understanding and empathy of the decent people who were supporting Trump. Directly. Please show me something similar where Trump champions the immigration of good people from s******e countries.
My whole point is name-calling a whole group of people is even worse than name-calling an individual.
I don’t disagree. But calling out a racism, sexism, xenophobia, sexism, is not the same thing, is it?
 
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Youre correct, so you start as to what constitues
I’ll start with racism:
  • prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one’s own race is superior.
  • the belief that all members of each race possess characteristics or abilities specific to that race, especially so as to distinguish it as inferior or superior to another race or races.
 
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I have not said that, nor do I think it.

Is it OK to suggest that the remarks were made about all Trump supporters?
Is it OK to divorce the remark from the specifics of what is deplorable?

Will it ever be possible to speak racism without the words being twisted for partisan advantage?
When Donald Trump made his " When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best" comment, I think it is reasonable that all Mexican immigrants would take that as an insult, regardless of his weak qualification “and some, I assume, are good people.”

Likewise, when Hillary Clinton said, “You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right? The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic—you name it. And unfortunately there are people like that. And he has lifted them up,” it likewise insults all of his supporters. When she said, “some of those folks—they are irredeemable, but thankfully they are not America,” that also crosses a line.

Do we believe there are “irredeemable” people? No, we don’t believe that and we don’t talk like that.

[And, hello, America is not just her people at their best. She is also her people at their worst. That’s truth. Scapegoating is a way to avoid repentance and amendment.]
Please show me something similar where Trump champions the immigration of good people from s******e countries.
He said of Mexican immigrants: “…and some, I assume, are good people.” Weak. Weak. Weak.
I don’t disagree. But calling out a racism, sexism, xenophobia, sexism, is not the same thing, is it?
Calling people names instead of calling out behavior–and I have done it myself–crosses a line because it makes the person the same as the worst thing they have ever done. It literally identifies them with their bad behavior. The worst thing they do or think: that is who they are.

No, making people into their bad behavior isn’t the same thing as calling out bad behavior.
One is calling them to something better. The other is naming them as their worst and writing them off.

That is exactly what HRC did in her deplorables statement–she literally said people in that category are irredeemable.

This kind of reduction of people to some behavior he holds in contempt is what the President does, too. He does it habitually, and it is NOT OK, regardless of party.
 
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When Donald Trump … Likewise, when Hillary Clinton said
The comparison is gross, IMO.
Clinton, if you manage to look at the paragraph instead of the selected sentence, was speaking about the good people who supported Trump. What understanding and empathy - explicit in Clinton’s remarks - nwas present in Trump’s?
Do we believe there are “irredeemable” people?
No. And I have said so years ago on this forum.
But I think of “irredeemable” in a religious context, not a political one. I suspect, that Clinton was talking politically, not theologically, at a political gathering. And she is probably right. People who have the characteristics that she described are probably not redeemable in the sense of a political metanoia.
He said of Mexican immigrants: “…and some, I assume, are good people.”
With what empathy and understanding are we treating those nominally assumed good people under Trump?
BTW, Trump’s comments are not even on the mark about the nationality of people crossing the southern border.
Calling people names instead of calling out behavior–and I have done it myself–crosses a line
I agree.
But I do not and will not accept racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, and Islamophobic behavior.
I won’t give it a pass, because everyone does it, as some suggest.
At the same time, I am always happy to welcome those repudiate such former behavior,.
That is exactly what HRC did
That presuppose too much (are these static categories?) and seem to be the very reduction of her to some “behavior” - really a sentence quoted out of context - that you hold in contempt.
 
The comparison is gross, IMO.
Clinton, if you manage to look at the paragraph instead of the selected sentence, was speaking about the good people who supported Trump. What understanding and empathy - explicit in Clinton’s remarks - nwas present in Trump’s?
She split people who support Trump into “good people” and those she termed “irredeemable.”
Yeah, that is gross. There are former Nazis who can tell you that her attitude was not empathetic. It was contemptuous, not redemptive. Even if she was contemptuous of people who have objectively done or said contemptuous things, writing them off as “irredeemable” is not Christian.

It was a mistake. It isn’t excusable, though.
That presuppose too much (are these static categories?) and seem to be the very reduction of her to some “behavior” - really a sentence quoted out of context - that you hold in contempt.
What really sinks her statement as not being empathetic or Christian was her dismissal of roughly half of Trump’s supporters as irredeemable.

Her attack did reduce people down to the worst things they have done or said. That’s not OK, but particularly not when paired with judgements like “irredeemable.” We REALLY should not be silent when someone goes there.
 
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There are former Nazis who can tell you that her attitude was not empathetic.
Enough …

Godwin’s law.
And you might look up “redeem” in the dictionary.
And acknowledge that racism, sexism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, homophobia exist in this country and should be called out.
 
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Enough …

Godwin’s law.
And you might look up “redeem” in the dictionary.
And acknowledge that racism, sexism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, homophobia exist in this country and should be called out.
No, I’m not talking about analogies. I mean there are literally people who once belonged to the sentiment groups she was talking about who don’t belong any more. They grew as persons. They changed. They are people who held other groups of people in contempt but who don’t do that any more. They don’t make that journey by being treated as if they’re despicable or unredeemable or inferior as people and can’t ever be anything else. (That is the kind of message that actually puts people in that kind of mindset in the first place.)

I have not said anywhere on this thread that calling out behaviors or actions or false thinking is wrong. I have been objecting to reducing people to a bad trait through name-calling.

It is wrong when the President does it and it is wrong when Mrs Clinton did it, too. This is not a party politics thing. This is about treating human beings the right way and having standards about what is and what is not OK even in the rough-and-tumble of politics.
 
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I mean there are literally people who once belonged to the sentiment groups she was talking about who don’t belong any more
Then, as I have already suggest, they are not in the basket.
They don’t make that journey by being treated as if they’re despicable
At some point, they must bottom out and recognize that the acts are deplorable.
can’t ever be anything else.
Whoever said that people cannot change and be something else?
 
Then, as I have already suggest, they are not in the basket.
Oh, so some of them are irredeemable, she just doesn’t know which ones.
Nope. It is still writing people off. Sorry, misguided people are still people the Lord thirsts for.

Secondly, sorry, but they are America. That is us, too. It is painful to know it and to claim them as ours when our fellow citizens say hateful things about other fellow citizens, but they are us, too. We don’t get to deport them. They’re ours, they’re us, too. We have improvements to make.
At some point, they must bottom out and recognize that the acts are deplorable
She did not say that too many of Trump’s supporters also support deplorable things or do deplorable things.
She said that they, themselves, are “deplorables.” A whole basket of them! Roughly half of his supporters. (That was roughly in the ballpark of half of likely voters.)
You’re saying name-calling accomplishes that when Hillary Clinton does it? No.
Whoever said that people cannot change and be something else?
ir·re·deem·a·ble /ˌi( r)rəˈdēməb(ə)l/
adjective 1. 1. not able to be saved, improved, or corrected.

Hmmm…whoever said anything like that?

Has she made a habit of this kind of thing? Nope.
Has Donald Trump? Yep.
Does she get to do it and get away with it because he seems to? Nope.

No mulligans. Sorry. It is wrong when he does it and it is wrong when she did it.
 
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You seem determined to attach the worst possible interpretation of remarks that, in their explicit appeal to empathy and understanding, manifestly have a different meaning that you ascribe to them. You also assert some existential and even theological content to “irredeemable”, ignoring the simple meaning of “redeem” - compensating for bad aspects of (something) - and the context of campaign, where the aim of that compensation would be to change people’s voting by the time of the upcoming election. That is your choice. Not sure why one would make such a choice.
 
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You seem determined to attach the worst possible interpretation of remarks that, in their explicit appeal to empathy and understanding, manifestly have a different meaning that you ascribe to them. You also assert some existential and even theological content to “irredeemable”, ignoring the simple meaning of “redeem” - compensating for bad aspects of (something) - and the context of campaign, where the aim of that compensation would be to change people’s voting by the time of the upcoming election. That is your choice. Not sure why one would make such a choice.
I’d say I’m trying to be fair and so I’m assessing that statement by the same measures I would use if the President said it.

She sunk to name-calling and writing people off. We all make mistakes, but that doesn’t mean that we all deserve to have excuses made for us.

The President says the things he says so he’ll be popular…so he’ll “win.” She did, too. The ends do not justify any means. That technique of name-calling and reducing people as human beings because of their worst attitudes or their worst actions is off-limits for me. I am sorry you cannot understand that “choice.”

Mind you, this is different than saying “would you trust So-and-So in such and so office.” That is a matter of trust and a matter of privilege. That still wouldn’t justify name-calling.
 
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That technique of name-calling and reducing people as human beings because of their worst attitudes or their worst actions is off-limits for me
I agree completely with the aversion to name-calling. But, as I have said, there was a definiteness to the expression used that involved actions that arguably are deplorable. That difference between this remark and mere name-calling must be acknowledged if one is to be fair. And it is also important, if there is any hope of progress on these matters, to acknowledge that these isms and phobias are part of America. I appreciate your charity in not reducing people to their worst sins, but loving the sinner does not mean accepting the sin. I think that the matter of writing people off, is, as I have said before, likely to be in the simply a matter focus during an election in an election, not more.
 
Childish insults are very annoying, but if that is the price to pay for a reduction in funding of abortion, it’s worth it.
 
It is wrong when she does it, it is wrong times 100 when he does it
 
It is ironic to be a Trump supporter and be sensitive to name calling. You can remember her words so vividly.
You really cannot with Trump. He insults so often it acts as a BLUR on memory. You employ tactics like insults he made in the last 24 hours, to give examples. Insults are virtually a primary form of communication for Trump.
 
How transactional! Satan could pick up a lot of voters with just one lost leader issue. Make up on the back end.
 
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