Niccoló and the Bully

Burt Likko

Pseudonymous Portlander. Pursuer of happiness. Bon vivant. Homebrewer. Atheist. Recovering Republican. Recovering Catholic. Recovering divorcé. Editor-in-Chief Emeritus of Ordinary Times. Relapsed Lawyer, admitted to practice law (under his real name) in California and Oregon. There's a Twitter account at @burtlikko, but not used for posting on the general feed anymore. House Likko's Words: Scite Verum. Colite Iusticia. Vivere Con Gaudium.

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272 Responses

  1. Michael Cain says:

    One area where he is winning — or at least, has not been shot down yet — is that he has taken dead aim at the EPA. Ignoring the memorandums and EOs rolling back regulation generally, there have been:

    (1) an EO allowing fast-tracking of environmental reviews for infrastructure projects;
    (2) an EO ordering a review of the EPA’s latest “waters of the United States” rule;
    (3) a proposed budget that cuts one-third of the EPA’s budget; and
    (4) an EO ordering a review of the Clean Power Plan.

    Other environmental rules promulgated by the Dept. of the Interior — eg, the stream-protection rule that effectively banned mountain-top-removal mining — have been rolled back. Several other bills rolling back recent EPA rules are working their way through the process. There’s also the usual batch of court cases involving EPA rules, where the administration can simply choose to not defend the rules.Report

    • Francis in reply to Michael Cain says:

      We’ll see. CO2 is a pollutant unless Congress decides otherwise and McConnell doesn’t have 60 votes. So the endangerment finding is on solid ground; how can the EPA possibly find otherwise in the face of the worldwide work that is reflected in the IPCC papers. If you concede the endangerment finding and attack the CPP, you have to have an alternative.

      The biggest concern to me is that EPA and DOJ will abandon enforcement.Report

      • George Turner in reply to Francis says:

        You can forget about CO2 regulations staying in place. If CO2 is a pollutant, we’re all criminals because we all emit it every time we breathe.

        Congress in no way intended for CO2 to be considered a pollutant when they empowered the EPA. They were looking at actual pollutants like mercury and sulfur dioxide, not plant food.Report

        • Go read the convoluted mess that is Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA. CO2 from fixed sources is a pollutant that must be regulated when the source would be regulated for emissions of something else, ie, power plants. Two of Roberts, Kennedy, and the four liberal justices has to reverse themselves to change that. Or McConnell has to dump the filibuster on regular legislation so the Clean Air Act can be modified.

          Absent a change in the SCOTUS line-up, the blue states involved in Massachusetts v. EPA will eventually force the Clean Power Plan or some other regulation of CO2 from power plants through. But it might take a long time.Report

          • George Turner in reply to Michael Cain says:

            So CO2 from a fixed source is a pollutant, but CO2 from a mobile source is not… Yeah, that’s science right there. Yessiree Bob.Report

            • Massachusetts settled that CO2 is a pollutant under the CAA and must be regulated. The new CAFE standards regulated CO2 emissions from mobile sources. The one thing in Utility Air Regulatory Group that all the justices agreed on was that once the mobile sources were regulated, the plain language of the law required that fixed sources also be regulated. Up to that point, the “Kennedy Court” was consistent. Where things got weird was when the Court decided that “any source emitting more than 250 tons per year” of “any pollutant” meant CO2 regulations just for power plants.

              Myself, I think what happened behind closed doors was even uglier: the NE urban corridor conservatives dislike coal for all the other things it dumps into the environment — acid rain, smog precursors, fine particulates, heavy metals — and saw an opportunity to do something about it.Report

        • Francis in reply to George Turner says:

          SOx and NOx and mercury are perfectly natural! What makes them pollutants?

          Duh, the dose.

          Atmospheric CO2 in 1800 – 280 ppm per ice core data.
          Atmospheric CO2 in 1960 – 321 ppm per Keeling Curve
          Atmospheric CO2 in 2017 – 409 ppm per same.Report

          • Joe Sal in reply to Francis says:

            Yeah, and the high population density of ‘the blue’ have about zero odds of getting to carbon nuetrality. Yet yammer non-stop about the problem.Report

          • George Turner in reply to Francis says:

            Atmospheric CO2 since the Triassic – 1,000 ppm

            You generally want to keep the CO2 level between 1,000 and 1,500 ppm, but anything below 10,000 ppm works great.

            We’re in an ice age, which is very abnormal for the Earth.Report

            • Don Zeko in reply to George Turner says:

              Abnormal in geologic terms doesn’t meant that reversion to the mean wouldn’t be awful for human civilization. Beyond that, I’m not sure what reason I have to take this assertion any more seriously than a Kimmi comment. I don’t personally know anything about climate science, but as far as I can tell the vast majority of people who do think we’re in deep shit. Why should I credit your assertion that they’re all wrong?Report

              • George Turner in reply to Don Zeko says:

                They’re all wrong due to a variety of factors that include noble cause corruption, group think, institutional bias, mission blindness, the nexus of government/academic funding, and some very primitive human instincts regarding abundance.

                They completely skipped some very basic steps. First, they assumed that any human caused change in the climate must be very bad, not because of any science, but because the change must come as punishment for gluttony and greed, and our moral sense tells us that punishment must be bad, very bad, or else it’s not a punishment. That’s pretty instinctual for primates who used to be prey animals. A species of technological felines would never make that assumption.

                And of course they don’t want to fix the perceived problems (slight warming, slight sea level rise), they want mankind to repent and sin no more. They will viciously attack people for even suggesting solutions other than repentance.

                For example, I can give you a budget figure for controlling the sea level that is $10 billion a year per mm/year abated for pumping sea water 100 meters vertically onto wide areas of the Arctic and Antarctic where it will sit through the next ice age. If the costs are divided up by GDP, the US portion of that cost is about $2.6 billion a year per mm/year rise abated, which comes to 4 inches per century. So to handle a 16 inch rise per century the US share would be $10.4 billion a year added to the budget. The cost would actually be quite a lot lower because those figures are based on the cost of providing commercial electricity, and for a pump you don’t even need an electric generator or a distribution grid. But if you suggest such a scheme the alarmists heads all explode, as the fear they’ve so laboriously cultivated would evaporate, and their climate funding would go to guys in hard hats and flannel shirts that they despise.

                They don’t want a solution. In fact, the worst emitters are given a pass as long as they evangelize, which is why Al Gore and Leonardo DiCaprio are hailed as prophets even though they fly around in private jets and party on giant yachts and emit about a thousand times more per capita CO2 than the “denialists” they lambaste for destroying the planet, even if those “denialists” live in a tiny, efficient house, walk to work, and grow their own vegetables.Report

              • greginak in reply to George Turner says:

                You could have just said it was due to tribal identification and hyper partisanship. That would be true and ironic and leave all of us guessing how self-aware you are.Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                The “denialists” stand on science and logic instead of wacko religious beliefs about the apocalypse.

                For example, in the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere, the temperature goes up 1 C for every 90 miles south. The climate you are terrified of is already here, just a three hour drive from you.

                The temperature drops 1 C for approximately every 500 feet of elevation change. So for those who live on the hilltops of Appalachia, they can experience the apocalyptic future temperature by going to the bottom of their driveway.

                But even more to the point, suppose “denialists” could create an artificial environment where the average temperature was up to 12 C hotter than the natural environment. What would “alarmists” do about such places? Why, they’d all decide to live there. The cores of blue cities are about 12 C hotter than the rural red areas. And yet they are full of idiots who think a 2 C rise in temperatures will wipe out civilization.

                When all is said and done, social scientists will wonder how so many people could believe something so stupid for so long.Report

              • greginak in reply to George Turner says:

                Yup hyper partisanship and no self awareness.Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                And yet science and logic still say that the alarmists believe in something stupid.

                It makes lots of emotional sense, but no logical sense.

                They’re trying to scare us with a very slight warming (we’ve already had 1.5 degrees of it with only benefits). To make sure they scare all of us they say it will profoundly harm almost everyone on the entire planet. That’s absurdly non-scientific.

                The places where we live, by and large, have random temperatures. Yet if temperature is critically important, there must be an optimal temperature, and ideal climate for a person to live in. Yet they won’t tell us what it is. Is my climate better than your climate? If the Earth’s climate can become worse, due to temperature, then some temperatures must be better than others. But scientists forgot to investigate that. They just skipped that step entirely, which means temperature can’t be all that important. We just deal with it.

                And the entire problem of human expansion was dealing with cold temperatures, not hot temperatures, because we all come from the African savanna, where our survival advantage was that we have no fur and are entirely covered by sweat glands so we can run at high noon when lions have to hide in the shade.

                For humans, cold is deadly. Hot is not. That’s why we have the terms “tropical paradise” and “arctic wasteland”.

                So their first thought was to scare us silly with the coming ice age. The Coming Ice Age: Narrated by Leonard Nimoy. The solution was of course to repent and abandon our industrial lifestyle. That’s always the solution for everything.

                But then temperatures went up during the solar grand maximum, so they tried to scare us with warmth. Sure, it was an incredibly stupid idea for a species that evolved on the savanna, but they went for it anyway.

                And the heating they warn about is tiny, a fraction of the artificial heating you get just by living in a city. But since we know a little bit of cooling can cause crop failures and mass starvation, even in historical times, it seems that the entire planet was balanced on a precipice. A few degrees either way, either hotter or colder, and we all die. This even though we live in states whose average climates vary by 39 F. But heck, who said logic had anything to do with alarmism?

                So magically, the climatologists who grew up all over the Western world realized that the Earth’s ideal climate just happened, by pure chance, to be the exact climate each of them experienced during their childhoods in the 1970’s. What are the odds of that? The climate was not only perfect in the 1970’s, it was perfect everywhere! It was climatopia!

                But if the climate was perfect everywhere, and all those places had very different climates, then climate doesn’t actually matter until you slam into the Arctic regions. So that’s another logical failure.

                And then they just kept stacking failure on top of failure.

                Currently the NCDC in Ashville North Carolina automatically adjusts past temperatures downwards as part of their homogenization algorithms. When new temperature data comes in, it causes ripples in time back to the 1920’s and 30’s. A physicist would call such time travel nonsense, but climatologists consider this cutting edge “science”.

                And then they build climate models where F does not equal ma, F does not equal Gm1m2/R^2, and all of which overpredicted warming because they’re just wasting CPU cycles to produce the same outputs you can get with an Excel spreadsheet with a simple linear regression to within about 1%. (The MIT model differs from most by using Navier Stokes equations instead shallow water equations, but Navier Stokes equations are invalid if the fluid undergoes evaporation or condensation, the two things that, you know, drive the climate.)

                As Judith Curry says, climate models are not fit for purpose.Report

              • greginak in reply to George Turner says:

                Cripes this is why there was a march for science. So much wasted effort to ignore what you don’t want to see. The facts don’t match what you want so all of this. The best established facts re: AGW still leave a lot of value questions unanswered and uncertain choices but the rest is tribal.Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                I’m the one citing facts. You’re the one who can’t see.

                How does a 2 C increase in temperatures harm you?

                You can make all the claims you want, but those will be lies, because you don’t actually care about climate. How do I know this? Because if you get a range of job offers from Boston, New York, LA, Phoenix, Chicago, St Louis, Miami, Singapore, and London, you will look at the salary, benefits, stock options, state and local tax rates, cost of living, real estate market, home sizes, commutes, local schools, crime rates, the arts scene, the bar scene, and utility prices. You will only give the local climate a moment’s thought, and you probably won’t bother to learn what the area’s average temperature is to within 15 C. Those cities have such different climates that they might as well be on different Earths, but you don’t actually care about that because nobody actually cares about climate. It’s all just virtue signalling. ,Mankind has sinned and there is a reckoning hanging over all our heads. We will all be punished. We will all suffer. Many of us will die.

                If you agree with those last bits, you are part of a religion, not science. When you hear scientists repeat those last bits, they are religious nuts, not scientists practicing something we knew as science. They are no different from earlier Christian scientists who studied the Earth’s wonders looking to understand the perfection of His creation. Everything they saw and thought about Earth’s structure and species was related back to their understanding of the gospels, just as nearly every paper on any subject in ecology or biology today has to give voice to some aspect of climate change or global warming. In 30 years all those papers will make scientists wince and cringe. If you approach every subject to find evidence to support the same silly narrative, you’re not doing science.Report

              • Francis in reply to George Turner says:

                Loss of critical cropland. Ask the Syrians.

                Death. Ask the French in the last heatwave.

                Possible loss of habitability of portions of the planet (India and Pakistan look top of the list) due to maximum heat days that exceed the ability of humans to tolerate.

                Radical redesign of the ocean biosphere, with unknown but possibly severe impact on key fisheries. Its already clear that coral can die off a whole faster than it can settle and grow in new areas.

                Massive loss of forests in the US, due to a combination of heat stress and beetle infestation.

                Literally permanent commitment to geoengineering, and that’s only if we stop issuing CO2 and deal only with the problems we know that we will have. As there is no evidence that the Keeling curve is now downward sloping, we’re not actually sure what our total scope of problems will be once we finally get CO2 emissions to zero.

                btw, putting water on Arctic ice — you really don’t have any idea what you’re talking about, do you? Do you have a shred of data to suggest that pumping water onto Arctic ice will result in that ice lasting longer than it would otherwise be expected to?Report

              • Kimmi in reply to Francis says:

                Francis,
                You’re missing the deliberate genocide. The wall’s already built.

                And Syria? Try Egypt, once one of the middle eastern breadbaskets. One of the first places to have regime change because of global warming.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Since we can barely measure global warming, requiring calibrated thermometers and well sited instrumentation, how did this something almost nobody can detect cause regime change in Egypt?

                And get this. Egypt was a breadbasket during the Holocene climate optimum, when the Earth was a whole lot hotter (by up to 3 C) and the eastern Sahara was a green savanna, not a desert. The early Egyptian art reflects this, showing savanna animals like lions and elephants just roaming around in what is now just drifting sand.

                What happened? The Earth started cooling about 6,000 years ago, an event called the Mid-Holocene Transition. More importantly, continuing orbital changes shifted the heat balance and drove the Intertropical Convergence Zone far to the south. This shift greatly weakened the African and Asian monsoons, so the Sahara, the Stans, northern India, and the steppes (central Asia) went from moist to dry.

                These regime changes will continue, and occur at roughly 2,500 year intervals throughout the Holocene. We’re now in a period called “neoglaciation”, where glaciers have advanced far from where they were during Roman times, when they had retreated to their minimums.

                And throughout almost the entire Holocene, the temperature trend has been opposite the CO2 trend. As CO2 went up, the temperatures went down.

                Or just try reading today’s post at Climate etc, which is a blog run by climatologist Judith Curry.

                She always has fascinating new papers, such as the one last week that held that hurricane’s are not driven by ocean evaporation, but by feeding off pre-existing atmospheric moisture in a kind of avalanche effect. This new insight may greatly aid forecasts of a hurricane’s path and energy.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to George Turner says:

                The Earth started cooling about 6,000 years ago, an event called the Mid-Holocene Transition. More importantly, continuing orbital changes shifted the heat balance and drove the Intertropical Convergence Zone far to the south. This shift greatly weakened the African and Asian monsoons, so the Sahara, the Stans, northern India, and the steppes (central Asia) went from moist to dry.

                So let’s see if we’ve got this correct:

                You are 100% aware that, *within human history*, small changes in temperature have caused *massive* alterations in habitable area.

                Now, your example has slight *cooling* do that, by reducing monsoons and making a desert…but, uh, even if we assume the climate is *perfectly symmetrical*, that obviously means that slight *warming* could, duh, cause monsoons back in those places.

                While no one really lives in, or needs the Sahara, you do realize that putting those monsoons *back* into northern India and the stans would kill a fuckload of people with flooding, right? People *build* on rivers, and you can’t just start dumping five times the amount of water in desert mountain areas and expect the rivers to absorb it.

                This isn’t something you can lay down an extra layer of pavement to protect against.

                Of course, the climate *isn’t* symmetrical, and there are a lot of *other* changes that could happen. For example, the ITCZ could move around *at the Americas*. We still have very little idea of why it’s located where it is located, or why it’s mostly in the northern hemisphere (Logically, it should be exactly at the equator), which means *we do not know what makes it move*. Which, as you mentioned, it has done before.

                The rainfall pattern in the US is almost entire based on airflow. Move the ITCZ around, and it entirely changes.

                Or, for a related (In that it would probably move the ITCZ) problem, the *thermocline* could move, or shut off.

                Seriously, what sort of dumbness is this: ‘Natural climate change, *within recorded human history*, turned a previously inhabitable area into *the largest desert on the planet, completely inhospitable to human life* by altering the position *largest* feature on the planet, the ITCZ, thus changing rainfall massively…and we can ignore human climate change by just raising our harbors slightly. Herp derp.’.

                You have also, I have noticed, ignored ocean acidification completely. CO2 is *killing vast amounts of fish*. And, yes, fish will eventually adjust, but the problem is, we need to eat those fish *now*, not in five hundred years when they’ve evolved to the new ph levels and replenished themselves.

                But congratulations, you’ve proved we all aren’t going to drown, I guess. Except for those people who get hit with massive monsoons and their rivers flood and *they* drown.Report

              • George Turner in reply to DavidTC says:

                But we can try to prevent all these catastrophic natural changes that will occur due to naturally declining temperatures (as we slip into another glaciation period) by pumping out massive amounts of CO2 and methane. What we need is a carbon tax rebate and oil subsidies, or billions of poor and minorities, mostly women, will die when their cities are crushed under miles of ice.

                Also, the oceans aren’t acidifying, they’re neutralizing. Ocean pH has dropped from 8.11 to 8.09. The ideal for fish is probably 7.5, but in any event it varies daily by over a full pH point. We’re still in an ice age with abnormally high pH and abnormally low temperatures. The fish are suffering. The whales are suffering. Thank goodness man has developed enough to try and prevent further suffering by getting temperatures up, lowering the pH back into safe ranges, and greening the deserts.

                The trouble with alarmists is that they don’t believe in climate changes. They are climate denialists.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                The oceans have risen tremendously since 1700. Our cities didn’t go under water, they expanded their harbors outward. Look at historical maps of places like Boston Harbor. In an afternoon a man can pile more rocks up than a hundred years of sea level rise can submerge.

                Of course getting a leftist to perform an afternoon of physical labor once in a century is the sticking point.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to George Turner says:

                But we can try to prevent all these catastrophic natural changes that will occur due to naturally declining temperatures (as we slip into another glaciation period) by pumping out massive amounts of CO2 and methane.

                There is absolutely no evidence that we are slipping into another glaciation period.

                In fact, inter-glacial periods aren’t that normally that short. 15,000 years is a very quick time. Granted, the *last* one was about that length, but it was very short compared to others. The one before it was 50,000 years, for example.

                There is a debate in the scientific community how long we have in this current inter-glacial period, but the debate varies between ‘another 23,000 years’ and ‘another 50,000 years’. There is no indication we are anywhere near another one age.

                Moreover, even if we were entering another glaciation, those take *hundreds of years* to start…and haven’t.

                It is possible to argue that human-directed climate change has *canceled out* a glacial period, I guess, except two problems: One, again, they take hundreds of years to start, so at best it would have canceled the *very start* of one, and two, that makes human-directed climate change have *larger effects* than currently calculated, which means it is *even more dangerous*.

                It’s the difference between someone throwing a baseball at you at 80 miles an hour, and someone throwing a baseball that hits you at 80 miles an hour…that you discover was thrown backwards from a car driving 80, which means it was actually thrown at 160 mph.

                I.e., if we really are *stopping an ice age*, the takeaway isn’t ‘Hey, we’re accidentally stopping a disaster, that’s a good thing!’, the takeaway is ‘Holy shit, we can alter the climate *even more* than we thought we could! Maybe we should stop randomly doing that before we break things even more than we already are!’

                Also, the oceans aren’t acidifying, they’re neutralizing.

                ‘Acidification’ is a perfectly reasonable term to describe *any* lowering of pH, and attempting to argue otherwise is like idiots who argue that there is no such thing as ‘deceleration’.

                Ocean pH has dropped from 8.11 to 8.09.

                In what time frame? Ocean pH was 8.25 back at the start of the industrial revolution.

                And while a change of 0.16 doesn’t seem like much, pH is *logarithmic*. A change from 9 to 8 is *ten times* as acidic.

                The ideal for fish is probably 7.5, but in any event it varies daily by over a full pH point.

                The ideal for fish is wherever they are currently evolved to live at. There’s not some magical objective number.

                And, no the pH does not vary ‘daily’, or in fact at all based on time as far as I know. It varies based on depth and location.

                Which is why *specific* lifeforms are evolve to deal with *specific* pHs.

                Ocean acidification alters all sorts of things in the ocean, especially the calcifying life…a few of which form important parts of the food chain.

                — Edited to conform to commenting policy and clean up italicization. (BL)Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                Maybe we should stop randomly doing that before we break things even more than we already are!

                Depends on what the trade offs are. “Making the 3rd world stay in poverty” is a non-starter. Ditto “prevent any economic activity which involves electricity or transportation”.

                Anything which leaves me poorer is unworkable, so green energy needs to be cheaper than carbon. As far as I can tell, the value the world puts on removing carbon is basically zero.

                No one, including the greens themselves, are behaving as though the world is in danger (the greens aren’t screaming for nuclear, instead we have boondoggles that might pan out in decades or centuries).Report

              • Burt Likko in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Some environmentalists are opposed to nuclear power, others are amenable to it.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Burt Likko says:

                It’s progress that some Greens are willing to argue for nuclear power, but how much progress?

                The Anti-Nuclear Greens are willing (and eager) to protest, march, obstruct, and file lawsuits against nuclear power in an effort to make it impossible.

                The Pro-Nuclear Greens are willing to… what? Any of that? Are they willing to publicly shame their fellow greens to the point where they stop? As far as I can tell, the anti-nuclear greens are still running the show.

                Until they become sane, we’re going to be building coal plants so we don’t have to build nuclear plants.Report

              • Francis in reply to Dark Matter says:

                That’s just absurd. Plenty of projects get built all around this country over the objections of Greens. The only time that they really have any clout are in the rare occasions that the Kennedys or some other wealthy powerful interest is affected.

                Really, those poor pathetic downtrodden power executives can’t get nuclear power projects approved because of the enviros? Then fire the SOBs and bring people who can work the problem — California coastal real estate developers, for example.

                There was ample time in both Bush administrations to move forward on nuclear power issues, but no one in Congress had any desire to take on disposal. Sure people have an irrational fear of radiation, but it’s the goddamn job of power execs to step up and persuade Congress to cast a hard vote.

                (or maybe the real problem is that the nuclear power industry record in Europe is so catastrophically bad in terms of delivering projects on time and under budget that the industry couldn’t get financing here in the US that pencilled out to competitive rates. Perhaps what the nuke industry needs is for the carbon-emitting power industry to pay the true social cost of their waste steam. But only a Democrat would dare do that.)Report

              • Michael Cain in reply to Francis says:

                Consider what someone who wants to build a coastal nuke in California has to overcome.

                1) California state law does not allow construction of any new nukes until there is a national permanent spent fuel repository open and operating. The US House has held hearings on funding a revival of Yucca Mountain. They have not dealt with the fact that there is already more spent fuel in temporary storage — casks out in the parking lot at the reactor — than Yucca Mountain’s previous license application would cover. The nuclear industry has been lobbying Congress to quadruple Yucca Mountain’s authorized capacity, because they believe it is politically impossible to ever get another site approved.

                2) The California Coastal Commission has set limits on thermal discharge into the Pacific from power plants — any thermal plant, not just nukes — that would, order of magnitude, add $2-6B to the price of a 2GW thermal power plant that uses the ocean for cooling.

                3) Cooling water in the West has become a limiting factor — see my comment on Blue Castle elsewhere in the thread. California water law is particularly convoluted, but “just outbid everyone else” has not been the policy there for centuries. Air cooling is possible, but costs several percentage points of thermal efficiency, which changes the economics.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Francis says:

                There was ample time in both Bush administrations to move forward on nuclear power issues, but no one in Congress had any desire to take on disposal. Sure people have an irrational fear of radiation, but it’s the goddamn job of power execs to step up and persuade Congress to cast a hard vote.

                Persuading Congress to pass a hard vote is basically impossible. Nuclear power has the added complication that it’s benefits won’t occur in this election cycle, and probably not even within the political lifespan of the politicians who vote for it.

                Further, Congress is supposed to do this… because it’s Green? The actual solution the Greens want is either boondoggles (which Congress is fine with), or dismantling the economy (which current politicians promise future politicians will do).

                It’s the responsibility of activist groups to push for sane policies that Congress might reasonably do. As long as the Warmists want coal rather than nuclear, that’s what they’ll get.Report

              • notme in reply to Burt Likko says:

                The article only seems to mention one person Armond Cohen. I’ll believe that the enviro nuts are serious when you can build a nuke plant in CA.Report

              • California seems like a tough nut to crack these days. A combination of seismic concerns and the new standards for dumping waste heat into the Pacific killed Diablo Canyon. Neither of those constraints are likely to go away soon. Far more likely is something like the Blue Castle project, supposedly to be built in Utah* and power shipped to California. This is consistent with the California legislature’s instructions to the PUC in SB350 (2015) to look seriously at ways to expand the California ISO’s reach to the entire Western Interconnect, and obtain much more electricity generated out-of-state.

                * Blue Castle started with a plan to build a big nuke plant to generate electricity for California; eastern Utah was the closest location they could find where they could get rights to cooling water. Part of the push for wind and solar PV across the West is the lack of available water.Report

              • George Turner in reply to DavidTC says:

                Actually Scripps researchers went out and measured ocean pH in a variety of habitats using seaFET sensors. One site off Italy had natural variations in pH of 1.43! A site off Mexico had its pH vary by 0.3 points per hour. The open Pacific had its pH vary by 0.5 points between winter and summer.

                They were astonished to find that out, even though the pH of a pond varies wildly throughout the day, too. Evening pH can be a point or more off from morning pH, so it’s important to know when to measure the pH for proper adjustments.

                Fish have evolved to cope with rapid, wide swings in pH. They have to, because that’s just the way the ocean works. They also spent almost their entire evolutionary history with much higher atmospheric CO2 levels, and thus a much lower pH.

                Also, whales pee in the water. Isn’t that disgusting!Report

              • DavidTC in reply to George Turner says:

                Fish have evolved to cope with rapid, wide swings in pH. They have to, because that’s just the way the ocean works.

                pH changes are not screwing up fish. (Although, no, fish cannot normally survive the wild pH changes you are insisting happen naturally. I’m sure *some fish* can…but *some fish* can also pull themselves onto land and walk around for a bit. That doesn’t mean we should expect all fish to.)

                pH changes in the ocean screw up *calcifying life*.

                It screws up the larger shellfish, which probably isn’t going to bother anyone but us, but more importantly it screws up *plankton*. Which is a pretty damn vital part of the ocean food chain.

                Although, hilariously, looking *into* this for this post to cite some research, recently, there has been evidence that what is *actually* screwing them up is temperature changes in the ocean due to global warming, and the acidification of the oceans is less relevant. Heh.

                They also spent almost their entire evolutionary history with much higher atmospheric CO2 levels, and thus a much lower pH.

                And I feel I have to point out: Life makes it through climate transitions. Including the one we are artificially causing.

                At the end of all this, there will be life in the ocean. There will be life on land. Things will evolve to fill every niche in every ecosystem, as they always do.

                Hell, there will be *people*, we are much too spread out to actually destroy ourselves, environmentally. As long as there is edible life on this planet, there will be people.

                The problem is the *transition*, during which *entire ecosystems* get disrupted. For, normally, hundreds of years, although with our ability to manipulate and translate life we can probably *reduce* that.

                But ‘Don’t worry, our mass starvation will probably be limited to a decade at a time. Only until we figure out how to make food in different places and get it everywhere’ is, uh, not a particularly useful reassurance.

                It’s not helped by the fact that we insist on using all our natural resources *now*, which is going to suck *when we need them later*. I mean, we can all move, right…let’s have fun relocating millions of people and cities to the *new* places we can live, and building farms in the *new* locations, *right as we run out of fossil fuels*.

                Nor is it helped by the fact that certain political entities are *totally opposed* to doing anything to help with a reasonable transition because they are completely in denial it is happening at all.Report

              • George Turner in reply to DavidTC says:

                pH changes are not screwing up fish. (Although, no, fish cannot normally survive the wild pH changes you are insisting happen naturally. I’m sure *some fish* can…but *some fish* can also pull themselves onto land and walk around for a bit. That doesn’t mean we should expect all fish to.)

                I’m not insisting these wild pH swings happen naturally, Scripp’s oceanographers are reporting that they measured the ocean pH wildly swinging – naturally. That’s because apparently the ocean pH swings wildly – naturally.

                Like almost all climate alarmists, when measured data doesn’t match a theory, you seek to change the data instead of the theory.

                The pH of the open Pacific swings by 0.5 points. Every fish in the open Pacific must therefore cope with that. Since man isn’t make those swings, they must be natural, and that means the ocean pH has probably been swinging like that since fish first evolved. The pH swings on reefs are even larger.

                pH changes in the ocean screw up *calcifying life*.

                No, they don’t. Virtually every calcifying marine organism evolved under CO2 levels that were 1,000 to 10,000 ppm. They left us layers of shells miles thick, and those deposits were at an ocean pH of 7.8 or lower. I’m sitting on strata filled with trilobites that swam around with an atmospheric CO2 concentration of 4,800 ppm.

                The more CO2 in the ocean, the less the pH swings in response to changes in CO2. As CO2 concentrations get really low, the slope of the pH/pCO2 line goes almost vertical, and then it hits a pH of over 11. As CO2 concentrations get high, the slope becomes almost horizontal, with further CO2 changes having little effect on pH.

                It screws up the larger shellfish, which probably isn’t going to bother anyone but us, but more importantly it screws up *plankton*. Which is a pretty damn vital part of the ocean food chain.

                The plankton are what cause most of the wild surface pH swings. Photosynthesis naturally swings the pH.

                Although, hilariously, looking *into* this for this post to cite some research, recently, there has been evidence that what is *actually* screwing them up is temperature changes in the ocean due to global warming, and the acidification of the oceans is less relevant. Heh.

                Coral loves hot temperatures. I’m also sitting on strata that has coral deposited when ocean temperatures were far, far higher. We’re in an ice age. Even today, oceans are much cooler than in the Holocene Climate Optimum (which preceded the early Egyptian dynasties), and much below the temperatures during the previous interglacial. If you go back prior to the recent ice age, ocean temperatures were much warmer – and the ocean were filled with coral and other marine shellfish.

                What’s killing the coral is global warming alarmists, who keep diving on the best sites to monitor the reef for signs of global warming, so they can spread more panic. Every time they do that they kill immense amounts of coral with chemical contamination from sunscreens, which can bleach coral in as little as four days. But don’t worry, the alarmists insist that sunscreen is still okay because global warming is a bigger threat.Report

              • Troublesome Frog in reply to George Turner says:

                I’m not insisting these wild pH swings happen naturally, Scripp’s oceanographers are reporting that they measured the ocean pH wildly swinging – naturally. That’s because apparently the ocean pH swings wildly – naturally.

                This whole line of reasoning is completely ridiculous. The temperature in Minneapolis varies about 75 degrees over the course of a year. The fact that it swings so wildly does not mean that we can add 75 degrees to the average daily temperature and have everything continue as normal.Report

              • Troublesome Frog in reply to George Turner says:

                Ocean pH has dropped from 8.11 to 8.09. The ideal for fish is probably 7.5, but in any event it varies daily by over a full pH point.

                This was clearly not written by somebody who has done a lot of aquarium keeping.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Francis says:

                The Syrian crop failures are a result of natural drought cycles, but primarily by Assad cutting all his underlings loose to make money by pumping down their aquifers in a bid to get rich quick. They abandoned well controlled and coordinated water policy in an arid region. Perhaps instead you should cite California as evidence of global climate catastrophe. Oh wait. It started raining again.

                The French built hospitals with no air conditioners and windows that don’t open. And again, according to the EPA and NOAA, large urban centers can have 12 C of artificial warming due to the urban heat island effect. If 2 C of warming is catastrophic, why did millions of French people pack into a place with 12 C of warming?

                India and Pakistan were perfectly habitable during the Minoan and Roman warm periods, and the IPCC has not warned that they will somehow become uninhabitable. You’re citing apocalyptic religious fears, not science.

                The oceans aren’t going to radically “redesign” except in really bad Hollywood disaster movies.

                The only threat to the Eastern forests is massive deforestation to make wood chips to ship to inefficient European “green” power plants – to prevent global warming.

                Our emissions will never get to zero because of China, India, and Africa, which has vast coal reserves that they’ve just decided to use to provide electricity to Africans. If the entire Western World committed suicide tomorrow, CO2 emissions would still continue to increase.

                And putting water on Arctic ice would work perfectly. It freezes and stays frozen, just as if it had built up during an ice age. In Alaska they make giant ice-climbing structures with nothing more than a pump and a hose.

                You have a long list of emotional apocalyptic religious fears that are not connected to science, logic, or reason.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                People who worked for gingrich are talking about dead zones in India. It takes less than a day with enough humidity.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                That prediction is so wacky that even Google can’t find it.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Here, out of Purdue: http://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/research/2010/100504HuberLimits.html

                Cow colleges CARE about climate change, as understanding it is essential to bringing in what crops we’ll be able to.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Your link is a great illustration of apocalyptic religious thinking. First, they projected not 2 C, but 12 C increased temperatures in the coming centuries. We already have 12 C increased temperatures in liberal cities, due to the urban heat island effect, yet sadly, liberals there continue to vote Democrat instead of dying in accord with alarmist climate theories about people dying.

                Also, the Earth’s temperature is about 10 C below normal. So how did all this life evolve if hotter temperatures not survivable?Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Mammals have a hard time surviving if the humidity gets too high.

                12 C increased temperatures in liberal cities? NEW YORK CITY is not 53 Degrees Farenheit hotter than Ithaca. It’s Just NOT. Please, either you screwed the pooch with a typo, or you’re so out to lunch I’m going to check out of the conversation.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Tell that to the EPA, which posted the 12 C figure. Maybe it’s just more alarmism. More conventional estimates of urban heat island effect aren’t quite that high, but you know how alarmists throw data through a shredder to get the numbers they want.

                And mammals are fine with high humidity. Some of them have even adapted to live in the ocean.

                The closest to a warm place with few mammals is an island in the monsoon regions that has had all its nutrients stripped by constant rain. It is famous for its carnivorous plants.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Care to give me the link?
                NeverMIND, apparently you can’t understand the difference between “occasional temporary” and CLIMATE.

                “Air temperatures in cities, particularly after sunset, can be as much as 22°F (12°C) warmer than the air in neighboring, less developed regions”

                That’s your fucking link? Really? “CAN BE” is not “THIS IS WHAT THE HEAT ISLAND AFFECT IS.”

                There are clear marker words there that say “This is the Upper Bound” not the Climatological Average.

                Here’s the money quote (same link):
                “Elevated summertime temperatures in cities increase energy demand for cooling. Research shows that electricity demand for cooling increases 1.5–2.0% for every 1°F (0.6°C) increase in air temperatures, starting from 68 to 77°F (20 to 25°C), suggesting that 5–10% of community-wide demand for electricity is used to compensate for the heat island effect.2”

                About 5 degrees Farenheit. NOT fifty.

                That’s a reasonable number (doesn’t quite fit with Pittsburgh, but we’re a pretty green city).Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Yeah. You go live in Bangladesh.
                I PRICE IN Climate Disasters. SO DO YOU. It’s called housing insurance. Well, except if you live in the Gulf Coast, in which case you price in rebuilding your house because you CANT GET insurance anymore.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                You can’t buy climate insurance. It wouldn’t even make sense. What causes the damage are extreme weather events, which thankfully decrease with global warming. That is, if you listen to science instead of apocalyptic fear mongers looking for grant money.

                The worst hurricanes to ever hit the US were during the Little Ice Age. Some were so intense that they left no standing structures on Caribbean islands and stripped bark off trees.

                The predictions of increased frequency and intensity of hurricanes didn’t pan out. Empirical observation over the past decades have refuted those predictions. As Richard Feynman said, “It doesn’t matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn’t matter how smart you are. If it doesn’t agree with experiment, it’s wrong.” We had an experiment. The theory was wrong.

                Interestingly, the theory that hurricanes are driven by surface evaporation is also almost certainly wrong. Thankfully Russian scientists in St Petersburg just figured that out.

                What global warming predicts is a spreading of tropical heat further toward the poles, decreasing the latitudinal lapse rate that drives intense weather systems.

                It also predicts that most of the extra heating will occur at night, and toward the poles.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                only benefits, he says. Oi vai.
                95% humidity is fucking deadly, dude. We’ll die last, you know? We are good at leaking heat, much better than the animals.

                Savannah is DRY, dude. Get enough heat and you’re gonna get the humidity too. And humidity kills. Has killed. Will kill again.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Then why are the most heavily populated regions of Earth the most humid? Look at a global map of population density. Humans cluster around the equator. We like it very hot and very wet.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Because people are idiots who are going to die. Genocide is already planned (whether you support it or not).Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Exactly. The alarmists are planning a genocide. They want to deny the third world the ability to adapt to natural disasters, and deny them the ability to develop like Western civilization did.

                The alarmist left wants to make them use wind power, even though wind power is virtually useless in Africa and Asia because they don’t have strong steady winds there, making wind power about 10 times more expensive than it would be in Northern Europe, California, the central US, or the Northeast US. If wind power isn’t quite competitive in the areas where it’s cheap, how on Earth will third world people pay ten times more per kWh for it than people in Martha’s Vineyard?

                What the Third World needs is a mix of nuclear, cheap reliable coal, and abundant oil and natural gas from fracking. What they don’t need is a bunch of pampered elitists deciding that they must be denied the benefits of civilization to “save the planet” for latte sipping liberals who want to do more virtue signaling.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                you are an ignoramus. Perhaps if you could tell me where the wall was already built, I might concede that I was wrong.
                But as you can’t, and can’t even tell what the fuck I was talking about, I’m going to leave you to your delusions, and hope you take your own advice and move to Miami. Housing market is going up there, you know.

                There’s a sucker born every minute, and you’re worse than the poor saps supporting Solar Fucking Roadways.

                Tell me, do you buy guns from the Jackbooted Obama Thugs Commercials too???

                http://exxonknew.org/timeline/

                You want something from an analyst you’ve heard of? Here’s something. Bloke that pulled all the research was working for the Greens (who you’re right not to trust — even if they were the most anal-retentive political group he’s ever worked for), but he works for RAND too (and has worked for Gingrich and Dole).Report

              • Burt Likko in reply to Kimmi says:

                Let’s avoid the personal name calling. Whether @george-turner is making ignorant statements or not is evident on the face of his claims.

                I would have thought this exchange was played out by now but… Hey, if y’all still have energy for it, as long as you spar cleanly, have at it.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to George Turner says:

                Then why are the most heavily populated regions of Earth the most humid? Look at a global map of population density. Humans cluster around the equator. We like it very hot and very wet.

                This is, incidentally, not correct.

                For one thing, humans do not cluster around the equator. 88 percent of people live in the fricken Northern hemisphere. The line that divides the human population in half is way up at 27 degrees north, aka *Tampa Florida*.

                More to the point, humans do not live in humid areas. We *won’t* live in deserts (Unless they have oil under them), but we don’t pick humid areas either.

                There is exactly *one* constant where people live, in fact. It’s a constant that has been true for basically all of human existence, in all cultures: People live next to water.(1) The ocean or sea if they can get to it, otherwise rivers (And rivers going into oceans are where we really want to be.), otherwise lakes.

                This might, generally speaking, mean we live in more humid areas then would be located by randomly throwing darts at a globe, but it’s not because we like humidity, it’s because we like *water*, and humidity, obviously, is often caused by water nearby.

                And we *avoid* places that are too humid, *especially* if they are hot. We’ve always avoided rain forests like the plague, for example. There are entire vast stretches in both the middle of Africa *and* South America that do not have people in them, because *they are too hot and humid*.

                1) There is actually a theory that humans evolved their lack of fur due to living next to and operating in and out of water. The thick fur that other primates have becomes matted with water, whereas we’re at the density of body hair that other partial-water mammals, like seals, have. Whether it’s true or not, we are more suited to water operation than any other primate, some of which can’t even swim.

                Notable, they *do not* seem to live near water.Report

              • George Turner in reply to DavidTC says:

                Singapore sits one degree above the equator, is hot all the time (it drops into the mid-70’s for nightly lows, with highs in the high 80’s all year), and it gets over 90 inches of rain a year. It is hot and wet and has a population density of 20,000 per square mile.

                The tropical coasts of equatorial Africa get over 200 inches of rain and are very densely populated. Also densely populated is the area around Lake Victoria, which sits right on the equator.

                And of course you have the Mediterranean, parts of the Middle East, and India. Heat and moisture, and lots of it. In contrast, vast stretches of Canada and Russia might as well be uninhabited. Not enough warmth.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to George Turner says:

                Yes, George, if you *completely rewrite everything you say*, you are correct.

                As I said in my post: Humans do not decide to live in humid areas. They decide to live *near water*. This is the hard and fast rule of human civilization, extending across all societies and time: People cluster around surface water features.

                People only pick ‘humid’ areas to the extent that being near water *makes* things humid. No one lives in humid areas *without* easy access to water…as I said, there are vast stretches of both Africa and South America that are *extremely* humid, called ‘rain forests’ but do not have standing or running water, and *no one lives there*. (And when they do, they live *at rivers*.)

                This is not a complicated idea.

                Likewise, the idea that people want ‘heat’ is dumb. People want *room temperature*, they want a climate that is ~80 during the day and ~70 at night. They don’t want below that, and they don’t want *above* that.

                You want to claim that’s what you mean when you said ‘hot’, whatever. That is *my* daily temperature *right now* here in Georgia…at the start of March.

                And Singapore isn’t densely packed because it’s some awesome place that everyone is choosing to live in Singapore is densely packed because *it is a city*. Take Queens, New York, and multiple the area and people by two and half, and you have Singapore.

                It’s just a city that happens to be the entirety of a sovereign nation, so stands way up there on list of ‘population densities of nations’.Report

              • Joe Sal in reply to DavidTC says:

                In the past humans used water not only for hydration but also for aquatic food/resources. We often talk of hunter gatherers but not often do you see someone parse the aquatic resources as a third tier of it’s own.
                In the past, calories counted. The ability to sustain the bodies internal temperature for the fewest amount of calories mattered. That had to balance with the bodies ability to cool itself while in action or on the move, so it is best thermally to be a bit cooler than core body temperature but not cool enough to start subtracting calories. The ideal humidity of course would need to be low enough to allow rapid cool down, but no dry enough to quickly become dehydrated or be in constant pursuit of water.

                What that results in is easily habitable latitudes. Not that humans didn’t often find resources such as hides and herds that allowed them to live in much colder climates, or genetically adapt to climates that are very much at or above core temperature. It just allowed the development of populations within latitudes favorable for increased populations to flourish.

                Global warming may push those latitudes farther towards the poles from the equator. I really don’t know how much all that matters though. The jet stream and ocean currents can change things in a big way. Like in a ice age way.

                Not sure what value there is living next to a lake or ocean when you have to chisle two inches of ice off your windshield every few mornings. We may live near water, but damned few of us live on beach front property in the artic or antartic.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Quick question: are you Pro Wall? Are you Pro Genocide? Or are you going to pay for people to not drown as well?Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                The only people who’ll drown are the ones buried up to their necks in sand for forty years. Sea level rise is extremely slow, and has been going on since the end of the last ice age, when it was very rapid.

                Boston used to be built right down to the harbor’s water line. Then the sea level rose about 8 inches. But the harbor didn’t get bigger, it got smaller. That’s because it almost impossible for humans to act on the extremely slow timescales of sea level rise. To stay ahead of IPPC predictions, a coastal city needs to lay down about 3 inches of extra asphalt – once every generation. That will take a road crew the better part of a couple afternoons. Once done, their children will grow up, join a road crew, and eventually do the same repaving job for a couple of afternoons. Then their children will grow up and spread three inches of asphalt, and so on.

                Or coastal cities could just have everybody walk their dogs on the 10-foot wide sea wall. Dog poop would easily outpace the rate of sea level rise. (I once did lots of math on that.)Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                Yeah, the IPCC is heavily optimistic.
                Check out NOAA.
                And you should worry about storm surge, not about the actual ocean rise.

                Half a foot higher means miles more of water for wind to blow across.

                http://www.nbcmiami.com/news/Miami-Dade-County-Expands-Hurricane-Evacuation-Zones-206288461.html

                NOAA is on top of this.

                Miami will have shitstorms to deal with (along with lack of fresh water), but try getting you to even freaking think about sewage in relation to global warming.

                NYC will be fine. Southern Florida will be demolished. Don’t move to southern florida, if you value your money.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Again, if sea level rise is a problem then engineers in hard hats can stop 16 inches/century of it by spending about $10.2 billion a year (US share by world GDP of pumping 1.44e15 kg of ocean water 100 meters vertically, requiring 44,746 MW, with commercial electricity prices of 10 cents per kWh.)

                Or we could just use dog poop along the shoreline.

                Not only does sea level rise, so does soil levels in the normal depositional areas that we tend to live in. That’s why archaeology works. You dig down in the dirt to see things from the past, because dirt just keeps piling up, kind of like the ocean’s sea level.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

                George,
                That only works if you aren’t on a tidal plain. If you are on a tidal plain, you get shitstorms. See the NY Times link.

                And if Antarctica is already melting, then I’m sorry but pumping more water will just make it melt quicker.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                But Antarctica is not melting. Not even a little bit. It does not rain there. All precipitation just adds to the ice.

                Also, due to increased CO2, Antarctica will get colder. The air that descends on Antarctica from high altitudes comes down from the North, carrying what little warmth will arrive there. If that air has increased CO2, it radiates more infrared to space as it heads south, so it is colder when it descends on the continent.Report

        • Kimmi in reply to George Turner says:

          George,
          You ain’t got a clue about mercury pollutants, do ya?
          … That’s what I thought.Report

  2. Oscar Gordon says:

    Man it’s going to be a long, strange 4 years.Report

      • Slade the Leveller in reply to Jaybird says:

        Sweet Jesus, let’s hope the American electorate isn’t that lazy.Report

        • LeeEsq in reply to Slade the Leveller says:

          Sweet Baby Jesus is a very good beer.Report

        • Saul Degraw in reply to Slade the Leveller says:

          @slade-the-leveller

          I have my hopes and doubts but also my cynical side. I don’t think it is that the American public are lazy. Most of us did not vote for Trump but I can see how cultural resentments among aging people produce another freak victory for Trump like he had in 2016.

          On the other hand, if things go down the drain with the economy and other issues.Report

        • Remember 2004? The general attitude of the Democrats was something to the effect of “since Bush is president… WE SHOULD RUN A VIETNAM VETERAN!”

          And so they picked Kerry, a Vietnam Veteran, to run against Bush (famously alleged to have dodged the draft).

          I expect Democrats to be similarly insightful in 2020.

          “Hey, we just need to run our own billionaire! Mark Zuckerberg!”Report

          • greginak in reply to Jaybird says:

            Well some D’s actually believed R’s really respected military service. Hah. But you do know the D’s have primaries and all that. An election thing that chooses the candidate through a complex process involving many factors, not some smoke filled room.Report

            • Jaybird in reply to greginak says:

              Well some D’s actually believed R’s really respected military service.

              “I know! We’ll get the guy who is famous for giving the ‘Winter Soldier’ speech!”Report

            • Dark Matter in reply to greginak says:

              greginak: Well some D’s actually believed R’s really respected military service.

              The Navy twice wanted to court martial Kerry over his activities (wiki: John Kerry).

              Kerry came back from the field and testified (lied) to congress and the public about the atrocities he’d seen american troops commit. He lied to increase his political standing among the anti-war left, sacrificing the honor and public standing of the army to increase his personal influence.Report

              • greginak in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Remember purple band aids. He was a highly decorated combat vet. If you respect military service then just simply respect it instead of ditching it when convenient. You don’t’ have to agree with all the persons other beliefs or actions. But if you say you respect the service then that is simple to do. R’s in general, with some notable exceptions, didn’t respect the service of a vet they disagreed with politically. They put tribe over respecting military service. Again it really isn’t hard to respect mil service and still disagree with that persons political beliefs.

                Yeah his anti war beliefs were not politically correct. That is the real heart of the objection to him. Of course people say they resepct peeps who stand up for their beliefs.That isn’t all that true either.Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                The issue was that Kerry was a liar and a fraud. His Silver Star was awarded for putting his life at great risk to rescue a soldier who’d fallen off his boat when Kerry gunned the throttle to escape an ambush after another swift boat hit a mine. But there was no ambush. Kerry told the Navy that he’d come under intense machine gun fire from both banks of the river, and that he was under that intense machine gun fire for an hour. The river where that occurred is 200 feet wide and Kerry’s boat was the size of a semi-trailer. It’s just not possible to fire a heavy machine gun for an hour at something the size of a semi-trailer from, about 100 feet away, and not hit it once, but that’s what would have to have happened for Kerry’s version to be true.

                His “extreme” bravery was leaving the cabin of his boat to go out on deck, fully exposed to the non-existent enemy fire, and where another of his crewman was stationed just out in the open as a matter of course, to pull Ragman out of the water. If Kerry deserves a Silver Star for “exposing himself” for a minute, why didn’t the other sailor get a thousand Silver Stars for being stationed his entire tour at the foredeck’s pintel-mount open gun position?

                Then, instead of staying with his men to tow back the damaged boat, he bailed on the whole scene because he had a little piece of shrapnel in his butt, which he allowed everyone to believe was the result of the ambush that didn’t happen. The fragment was actually from his own hand grenade which he’d dropped into some poor farmer’s rice jar. Injuries sustained outside of combat and through negligence are not eligible for a Purple Heart, but Kerry claimed one anyway.

                Antics like that are why his fellow sailors declared him unfit for command.Report

              • greginak in reply to George Turner says:

                Exhibit A baby…Exhibit A. R’s go all in for smearing a vet they don’t like. No respect for service. Tribe over all.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to greginak says:

                Exhibit A baby…Exhibit A. R’s go all in for smearing a vet they don’t like. No respect for service. Tribe over all.

                Actually I’d say the “Swiftboat veterans” was mostly military veterans as opposed to political activists. Expecting the GOP to “honor his service” when his fellow servicemen held him in contempt seems a little much.

                Kerry was despised for his actions after the war (the total lack of respect and honor he showed for people who served with respect and honor)… although granted, his actions during the war seemed fine if more than a little rules’ lawyerly.

                His swiftboating was definitely a hack job, but it was mostly the work of people whose honor he’d dragged through the mud for fun and profit.Report

              • greginak in reply to Dark Matter says:

                A virtuous hack job???

                Or of course they could have just not attacked his service, but that would have been bad for the Bush campaign. So tribe and winning over respecting his service. Gotcha.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to greginak says:

                A virtuous hack job???

                I would use the word “revenge”.

                Or of course they could have just not attacked his service, but that would have been bad for the Bush campaign.

                For them, Bush wasn’t the point.

                The point was making sure Kerry didn’t become President.

                So tribe… over respecting his service.

                This is like the guy asking for mercy from the judge because he’s an orphan when he killed his parents.

                Kerry burned to the ground any idea of “respect for service” by his own actions.Report

              • notme in reply to George Turner says:

                Then he lied about about “giving” his medals back.

                http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=123495&page=1Report

              • Francis in reply to George Turner says:

                Kerry saw combat. His political opponent flew around in circles over the Gulf of Mexico. No matter how many duty days he skipped — for all I care the whole issue was ridiculous — he never faced an enemy trying to kill him.

                So, yeah, when you minimize Kerry’s service in face of Bush’s experience, you exactly prove greginak’s point — you don’t actually care about vet status except when it might be politically useful.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Francis says:

                John Kerry was serving the country in combat while Bush was a drunk. *That* is their military experience, but it’s also not the end of the story no matter how much Dems want to end it there.

                Kerry came home and burned, to the ground, the concept of “respect for service” while Bush stopped drinking, became President, and then we had 911.

                Bush didn’t run (even the first time) on maybe, sometimes, flying a plane around between bottles. But Kerry did run on his military record… and I’m not sure what other than his 3 purple hearts and the disrespect the service had for him.

                Four years later, not-being-Bush would have been enough. Unfortunately Kerry had to run on being John Kerry and describing how he’d handle the remaining issues stemming from 911.

                Btw someone covered for him. As damning as the Swiftboaters were, it’d have been worse if Bush’s people had put out the video of young Kerry lying before Congress about the war crimes he’d personally seen.Report

              • Francis in reply to Dark Matter says:

                I don’t disagree with any of that. Having someone who was a major participant in the anti-war movement suddenly promote his military experience was … absurd, for lack of a better word.

                It is also the case that Republicans are big on the honor-your-sacrifice schtick, which seems to argue that no questions can ever be asked about the wisdom of American military action, until such time as the person at issue is a Democratic veteran seeking political office.

                This whole subthread is silly anyway; accusing the other side’s partisans of hypocrisy is weak sauce. The whole point of being a partisan is to back your side to the hilt. Politics ain’t beanbag, as someone once said.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Francis says:

                until such time as the person at issue is a Democratic veteran seeking political office.

                I hold both Kerry and Trump as special exceptions. Kerry because he fully earned the contempt/revenge the Swiftboats felt/gave him. Trump because he doesn’t have any ethics.

                So… examples other than them?Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to greginak says:

                greginak: Yeah his anti war beliefs were not politically correct.

                “Beliefs” don’t result in serious efforts to get someone court-martialed.

                We’re not talking about marching in protest, or throwing away his medals, or publically saying his opinion that the war was wrong, a mistake, evil, or whatever.

                We’re talking about falsely claiming to be the witness to war crimes.Report

              • greginak in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Serious efforts…but no court martial….Exhibit B.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Dark,
                You know what they say about McCain, right?Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Kimmi says:

                Dark,
                You know what they say about McCain, right?

                Which “they”? (And Trump doesn’t count as a “they” or even a person).Report

              • George Turner in reply to Kimmi says:

                Why did McCain cross the aisle?

                Because the cameras were on the other side.Report

              • Kolohe in reply to greginak says:

                greginak: Yeah his anti war beliefs were not politically correct.

                His anti war beliefs…were superficial and unreliable. Like most of his other beliefs. Which is why he didn’t become President. and why his accomplishments as Secretary of State are tenuous and ephemeral.Report

              • greginak in reply to Kolohe says:

                I don’t’ really care about his anti war views or how deeply they were held. Kerry is an example of the point i made, so is Max Clealand. Vets who served but R’s brought out the poop hose to smear them. Kerry may be a dork but that doesn’t mean his service shouldn’t be respected. Lot’s of vets had mediocre careers, failures or various character flaws…See McCain, John.

                That R’s can still bring out poop hose all these years later is special. Hell they went after Tammy Duckworth fairly recently. Wes Clark got poor thrown at him. Almost like any D vet gets their service smeared.Report

              • Kolohe in reply to greginak says:

                Kerry voted for the Iraq War. By that act, Kerry shit all over his own service more than any Republican dirty trickster could even dream of doing.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Kolohe says:

                Well, the main point is that the amount of insight required to be able to see see why John Kerry was not, in fact, the perfect opponent for George W. Bush does not, in fact, appear to have been achieved by the current Democratic party.

                I don’t have more than anecdotal evidence for this claim, however.Report

              • gregiank in reply to Kolohe says:

                None of which really relates to my point that R’s don’t really respect military service if they poop all over military service of any D that has served. Kerry had many flaws but an R with the same military record would have been lionized as an alpha male. That is really the entire point and none of the response have done anything to contradict it. Tribe is more important that respecting military service.Report

              • Kolohe in reply to gregiank says:

                Remember that time a GOP presidential candidate pooped all over McCain’s military service? Whatever happened to that guy?Report

              • gregiank in reply to Kolohe says:

                Yeah that is another bit of evidence that many R’s don’t care about respecting military service. They were fine with pooping on McCain’s service…no problem at all with that. So yeah that is another data point which backs up my claim.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to gregiank says:

                Kerry had many flaws but an R with the same military record would have been lionized as an alpha male.

                An R would have been court-martialed because he wouldn’t have had political support from the anti-war crowd.

                And if we’re going to subtract Kerry’s court-martial-worthy actions from his “many flaws”, then I absolutely don’t have a problem with his military record and view it as worthy of admiration.Report

              • gregiank in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Plenty of vets loudly opposed that war. The military wasn’t out there court martialing them all for everything they said.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to gregiank says:

                Plenty of vets loudly opposed that war. The military wasn’t out there court martialing them all for everything they said.

                Exactly my point.

                “Loudly opposing the war” isn’t the same as “giving false testimony to Congress about war crimes you’re claiming American troops are committing”.

                It’s like how “opposing Trump” isn’t the same as “trying to convince the police you’ve seen Trump personally commit murder”.Report

              • gregiank in reply to Dark Matter says:

                And yet he wasn’t court martialed and even you admitted the attacks against her were what…sleazy, underhanded…what was your word.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to gregiank says:

                And yet he wasn’t court martialed…

                So what? He did everything I said, you’re not even suggesting he didn’t.

                You’re also not even suggesting the reason why he did it wasn’t naked self serving ambition, or that the reason he wasn’t court martialed was because of politics.

                even you admitted the attacks against her were what…sleazy, underhanded…what was your word.

                Revenge driven lies by the people he’d betrayed.

                They did exactly to him what he did to them so many decades earlier.Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                Benedict Arnold was a war hero who served with distinction. I wonder why nobody tried to run him for President?

                Kerry faked injuries to get out after only about four months of a 12-month tour. Two of his injuries (which required a band-aid) were self-inflicted due to negligence. Kerry never spent a night in the hospital (not counting an overnight stay on a hospital ship where he typed up a bizarre account of his actions during an ambush), yet he got three Purple Hearts. I once calculated the odds of that and it was something like a million to one.

                He hated serving on a destroyer where he was a junior officer nobody, so he transferred to Swift Boats to be more like his hero, JFK. But he applied for the transfer when the Swift Boats weren’t going inland, just hanging out off the coast and partying all day.

                He once shot a child with an empty RPG launcher, and then had his crew return to the spot to film a re-enactment. He showed the film to Dana Delaney on their date. She thought he was self-centered and weird and didn’t date him again.

                When he found out his fake “war hero” status was politically useless to a Democrat, he became an anti-war activist, meeting secretly in Paris with the head of the Viet Cong, and act for which he could have been executed under the UCMJ, as he was still in the Navy Reserve. His goal was to get the North Vietnamese to release one American POW to himself, so he would have political clout to run for office. If Kerry’s “peace plan” had worked, the rest of the POW’s would of course have probably been shot and buried in the jungle, since they’d have been useless as bargaining chips.

                And yet the Democrats ran him, just like they ran Hillary, one of the most corrupt and unlikable people ever to run for high office. Next time they’ll probably run a 71-year old fake Indian and wonder why they’re losing the youth vote.Report

              • greginak in reply to George Turner says:

                Yeah Georgie keep digging into wikipedia for all the smears and totally avoid the point i was making. You just can’t leave it alone like you know there is some truth to the larger point so you gotta throw every bit of poo.Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                Wikipedia probably based their claims on my research during Kerry’s campaign. He probably hates me – personally. I was posting satellite imagery of the site of his ambush.

                Among the crews, there is disagreement as to whether there was any incoming fire during the attack. Some say there was intense fire from both banks, some say there was none. But considering that the river was extremely narrow (you could punt a football across it), and none of the boats got hit by any bullets, it’s likely that what some thought was incoming fire was actually outgoing bullets and tracers tearing through the undergrowth, because everybody opened up on the banks just in case.

                The other swift boat stopped to render aid while Kerry jammed his throttle forward and ran about a mile down the river, abandoning the other two boats, one filled with wounded. That was cowardly. While he was off gallivanting around with Rasman so he could write himself up for a silver star, the crew of the undamaged boat was busy jumping onto the damaged boat to render aid to the wounded, walking around on deck at the ambush site.

                So Kerry finally comes slinking back and helicopters arrive for the people wounded by the mine, and Kerry decides to abandon everybody for a trip to a hospital ship with hot nurses. After he left, the remaining crews had to spend an hour rigging up towlines at the ambush site so they could tow the damaged swift boat back, at very slow speed, along a narrow river.

                Of course later Kerry famously claimed that he spent Christmas eve in Cambodia, dropping off a CIA officer while listening to gunfire from the Khmer Rouge.

                Well, not only is it physically impossible to get a swift boat into Cambodia (the border has concrete pilings so no boats can pass), he wasn’t on a river that went toward Cambodia, and the Khmer Rouge didn’t even exist when he was over there.

                He might as well have claimed that he dropped a CIA assassin off on the Island of Misfit Toys to kill the abominable snowman.Report

              • greginak in reply to George Turner says:

                Oh so you are the male Kimmi. Ok, i guess we could use one of those.

                Then how about Trump smear of McCain getting captured/ Of the smears against McClealand. You’re spilling so many pixels to avoid the point. All you have to do is hold military service above tribe. Why is that so hard?Report

              • George Turner in reply to greginak says:

                The point is that you don’t become immune to derision if your military service consisted of being a traitor, a dumb ass, or a threat to your own men through incompetence or sloppiness, or if you spent your time trying to avoid combat. That kind of thing is very important to know about someone seeking office. You’re looking for courage, judgement, leadership, honesty, and loyalty. Kerry failed on all five counts.

                Ironically, Bush was at a greater risk of death flying an F-102 in the states than Kerry was in Vietnam. By modern standards, those planes were death traps.

                McCleland was wounded by a US grenade that wasn’t carried in a safe condition, which would have been his responsibility. It was even possibly his grenade. At the time he was heading to party with some buddies.

                That kind of thing happens in the military. My dad once put a live but unarmed bazooka round into the side of a French chimney – just because he was playing with lighting off a bazooka round. He then figured the owner would have to get somebody to safely remove it. That’s just goofing off. You don’t get points for getting wounded that way.

                And McCain’s service doesn’t render him immune to criticism, nor does it serve to answer the question as to why he’d stay in a Hilton in Hanoi instead of, perhaps, a much better Trump property.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to greginak says:

                Then how about Trump smear of McCain getting captured

                No one holds up Trump to be the standard for ethics, taste, tact, or good behavior.

                Trump was criticized for what he did and deservedly so.Report

        • Dark Matter in reply to Slade the Leveller says:

          Lazy? Trump will have a record in 4 years. We’ll be used to him.

          The insane statements he makes will have been shown to be a style of speaking. There will still be a profound lack of death camps for gays/jews/muslims/etc. Racism will once more have been shown to mean “not a Democrat”.

          He won’t have ended free trade any more than Obama lowered the seas but whatever.Report

      • LeeEsq in reply to Jaybird says:

        Trump is not a young or healthy man. Something could happen that prevents him from running in 2020 assuming that he would win if he ran again.Report

        • greginak in reply to LeeEsq says:

          And it isn’t’ any fun either. It’s also hard. Who could have known?Report

          • LeeEsq in reply to greginak says:

            I felt a some unsympathetic pity when I learned about Trump’s statement regarding the Presidency. It turns out that being even an incompetent and corrupt President is hard work. On the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon from the 1980s, they had an episode where the Turtles step into an alternative universe where Shredder does manage to take over the world. World Dictator Shredder is not happy because running the world requires you to do a lot of work and consider many different issues.Report

            • Troublesome Frog in reply to LeeEsq says:

              That’s usually the problem when a bunch of angry villager types storm the castle and take over. Pitchforks and torches are fun. Keeping the sewers from backing up and making sure the mail gets delivered is a drag.

              I firmly believe that most of being POTUS is not screwing up. Having an opportunity to be “transformative” is rare, but having the opportunity to slip up and cause some department to stop functioning comes a dozen times a day. We don’t know about 90% of the issues that come across their desk because they’re mundane things that we only notice when they stop working. Assuming he doesn’t get us into something serious, I expect the next few years to be a lot of small blow-ups of mundane things we never would have noticed under more competent management.Report

              • Joe Sal in reply to Troublesome Frog says:

                If your population is inclined to pitchforks and torches it makes sense to have your systems not be mundane, hidden or opaque.

                For all the posturing about enlightenment and darkness, the repeating ignorance is making fragile systems that can be destroyed by kicking the table on any given day.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to Troublesome Frog says:

                tf,
                GWB had a 10% chance of ending life on earth happen under his watch.

                “Not screwing up” isn’t much of a high bar,compared to that.Report

      • dragonfrog in reply to Jaybird says:

        You don’t think he’ll get a third term?Report

        • Jaybird in reply to dragonfrog says:

          Nah. Ivanka might get a third term. Maybe.

          If Barron doesn’t abolish the office entirely on her behalf.Report

          • Marchmaine in reply to Jaybird says:

            At that point we’ll all be fine with it since Ivanka would have married off Barron to the young Mezvinsky baby. Uniting the lines and bringing a thousand years of peace. That’s how they do it Byzantine style.Report

            • Stillwater in reply to Marchmaine says:

              Baron’s the one to keep your eye on. 10 years from now we’ll all be like “you’ve got to give him credit. How many young guys — he was like 15 or 16 when his father was termed out — take over these tough generals, and all of a sudden — you know, it’s pretty amazing when you think of it. How did he do that? He goes in, he takes over, he’s the boss. It’s incredible. He wiped out his brothers and sisters, he wiped out this one, that one. Wiped out Ivanka, too. This guy doesn’t play games. He’s obviously a pretty smart cookie.”Report

  3. Saul Degraw says:

    Interesting essay. I agree with a lot of it but not completely.

    I am not sure if Trump’s defining characteristic is hubris alone. He certainly has it. It is the hubris of someone who has always gotten by on a larger than life personality and being a character and being praised for it. There was an interesting bit on Slate where Marc Joseph Stern said that Trump had a reputation for being a bit of a “camp” icon in the LBGT community before he ran for President. I can see this. His persona is that of the chairman on the Apprentice combined with his accent.

    But he always had a history of deep bigotry that goes way back to the 1970s when the Nixon administration sued Trump the Senior for racially discriminating in his apartments and Donald Trump was the PR defense. Not too mention the Central Park 5.

    But Trump is also a profoundly ignorant man. I find it plausible that Trump really thought of Congress as being middle managers instead of 435 Representatives and 100 Senators with their own agendas and priorities and independent source of agency including some that are polar opposites from Trump’s agenda.

    There is a part of Trump that needs to be seen as successful and doing well and he probably hates all these failures. But there is also the kleptocratic side of Trump that only cares about making as much money as possible and the Trump family seems to be doing extremely well financially based on this. From Vox:

    http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/4/28/15365438/donald-trump-100-days-kleptocracy

    Corruption changes policy, not always for the better

    This same trend can easily point in darker directions. The Trump family has business interests in the Persian Gulf, and Trump’s foreign policy is moving the United States into much closer alignment with the Gulf monarchies, including deeper involvement in a disastrous war in Yemen and abandonment of any pretense of caring about human rights in Egypt.

    Further from the center of media attention, an eye-opening report by Allan Nairn for the Intercept says that “[a]ssociates of Donald Trump in Indonesia have joined army officers and a vigilante street movement linked to ISIS in a campaign that ultimately aims to oust the country’s president.” The movement includes current and former army officers looking to evade accountability for past crimes during Indonesia’s period as a military dictatorship, but also “Hary Tanoe, Trump’s primary Indonesian business partner, who is building two Trump resorts, one in Bali and one outside Jakarta.”

    In a normal administration, it would go without saying that American attitudes toward civil strife in Indonesia — no matter how misguided — were driven primarily by policy considerations and not by the president’s personal financial interests. With Trump, we have no such assurance.

    There has always been a part of Trump that was out for his own. This part of Trump figured out how to take his Apprentice persona and turn it into a successful campaign for the GOP nomination. The freak and anti-democratic nature of the American electoral college system allowed around 100K votes in three states to make Trump President for at least one term. This Trump sees himself as damned successful and look at how much he is milking it for all it is worth.

    2018 is a favorable map for the GOP. Though it looks like a lot of people are fed up with Trump and Democrats are energized. See the recent special elections in very safe GOP districts. Trump still has support of the GOP base but this will change as things go further and further down the drain. The Democrats were written off for dead in 2002 and 2004 and rebounded in 2006 and 2008 as thing went down the drain during the last days of Bush II.

    The issue though is if both parties end up doing these switches every two to four years. That could make it hard for long-term policy changes.Report

    • Troublesome Frog in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      But Trump is also a profoundly ignorant man. I find it plausible that Trump really thought of Congress as being middle managers instead of 435 Representatives and 100 Senators with their own agendas and priorities and independent source of agency including some that are polar opposites from Trump’s agenda.

      I think that’s actually what middle managers are. But at least the boss can fire middle managers.

      I roll my eyes whenever I hear somebody plans to be a “CEO President.” The president isn’t the CEO of the government. Not even close. It’s more like being a middle manager who has to get managers from other departments to work with you so your department can do its job. And those managers don’t report to you and often don’t particularly care if your department works or fails. And everybody hates you.Report

  4. Saul Degraw says:

    Also Trump’s “fights” with the media might be more of a show than anything else according to Politico:

    http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/04/23/trump-loves-media-reporters-white-house-215043

    In societies around the world, anthropologists have observed a phenomenon called “ritualized warfare,” a sort of pantomime of battle most famously observed among the Dani people of Papua New Guinea, who would regularly line up in formation to shout insults and shoot arrows at warriors from rival villages with no decisive outcome. The practice results in a lot of noise and relatively little bloodshed, allowing both sides to advertise their courage and vent emotion while avoiding catastrophic loss of human life.

    The practice might look familiar to the new president. On the campaign trail, Trump called the press “dishonest” and “scum.” He defended Russian strongman Vladimir Putin against charges of murdering journalists and vowed to somehow “open up our libel laws” to weaken the First Amendment. Since taking office, he has dismissed unfavorable coverage as “fake news” and described the mainstream media as “the enemy of the American people.” And there’s been a string of symbolic, almost gratuitous little slaps: He not only rejected the traditional invitation to the White House Correspondents Association dinner, but announced the Saturday beforehand that he’d be holding a rally the same night, meaning some reporters will have to skip their own professional event to cover his. Not since Richard Nixon has an American president been so hostile to the press—and Nixon largely limited his rants against the media to private venting with his aides.

    But behind that theatrical assault, the Trump White House has turned into a kind of playground for the press. We interviewed more than three dozen members of the White House press corps, along with White House staff and outside allies, about the first whirlwind weeks of Trump’s presidency. Rather than a historically toxic relationship, they described a historic gap between the public perception and the private reality.

    When he is not fulminating on stage or on Twitter, the president himself has mustered a number of cordial interactions with reporters since taking office, often showing them more courtesy than he grants his own staff. When White House chief strategist Steve Bannon is not labeling the media “the opposition party,” he can be found sending crush notes to journalists to let them know they’ve nailed a story. And when Spicer is not popping off from his podium, he is often busy maintaining old relationships with journalists and building new ones. (Spicer did not respond to requests for an interview for this article or to a long list of questions.)

    What I suspect is that their are two kinds of journalism and they conflict. There is journalism that wants to find the truth and hold people accountable and ask difficult questions but this kind of journalism makes the Powers that Be uncomfortable and does not pay the bills. And then there is mainstream/access journalism which puts on an appearance of being truthtellers but is really about just another avenue to the upper-middle class or above. So it doesn’t rock the boat too hard, has a focus on people who want to look like they are informed but don’t ask hard questions, etc. And you get the fake fights as described above.Report

    • George Turner in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      Trump is winning his battle against the press. 37 percent of people believe Trump over the media, while 29 percent of people believe the media over Trump.Report

      • El Muneco in reply to George Turner says:

        The absolute numbers don’t tell if he’s winning or losing, the change in numbers tells that.

        I’d be surprised if those numbers are better for 45 than they were on Election Day.Report

      • Jesse in reply to George Turner says:

        Those 37% would believe a Republican over a media if the Republican said the sun was shining as a hurricane hit their house.Report

        • George Turner in reply to Jesse says:

          Exactly. They know that the sun’s nuclear fires have burned non-stop for over 4 billion years, and that the sun doesn’t just go out because it’s raining someplace.

          The journalism majors who make up the media, however, are probably that stupid.Report

      • Patrick in reply to George Turner says:

        Trump is winning his battle against the press. 37 percent of people believe Trump over the media, while 29 percent of people believe the media over Trump.

        Citation for that one?Report

  5. Res dura, et regni novitas me talia cogunt moliri, et late fines custode tueri.

    Clearly Dido was a former librarian.Report

  6. Kolohe says:

    Trump himself appears to have never read Machiavelli, or at least never understood him. But he has advisors who clearly have. They must surely be advising him that he needs to gain some political strength, as soon as possible.

    But that’s one of the quirks of this administration – we don’t know who is advising Trump on a day to day basis, or how frequently he listens to any advice. (There’s also the CW, with some evidence, that he merely acts on whatever the last person who speaks with him told him)

    And thus unknown unknown about advisors is in spite of (and a bit because of) more gossip and palace intrigue stories coming from this admin than any other in living memory.

    It’s also not entirely clear in how much Trump, the combined Michelangelo and Picasso of bullshit artists, actually believes his own bullshit. His frequent ‘hoocodanode?’ about many things provides evididence that he believes a lot of his own BS, but not all of it – and also that wallowing in certain BS for long enough allows the BS to become reality. (But also if he thinks people don’t like a certain reality, he’ll make another for them – which is the essential skill of the con artist)Report

    • Morat20 in reply to Kolohe says:

      There’s also the fact that he might be, well, mentally unfit. I’m not talking narcissism. Alzheimer’s, dementia, etc.

      Watch an interview of him in the last year compared to one 20 years ago.

      Maybe it’s something else, but 50 year old Trump spoke in complete, fairly on-topic, logically connected sentences. They might have been sentences full of BS, but they were coherent BS. The stuff now is….disjointed ramblings.Report

      • Kolohe in reply to Morat20 says:

        I’m less convinced he’s lost of step than we’re just getting a larger sample size. He’s never been not in the media for the past 40 years (that’s pretty much exactly how he is where he is today), but he was never *continuously* in the media as he was for the past 2 years.

        (eta – and he’s been playing in a different league for the past 2 years – even Tebow can hit a home run in the minors)Report

    • Saul Degraw in reply to Kolohe says:

      @kolohe

      It’s also not entirely clear in how much Trump, the combined Michelangelo and Picasso of bullshit artists, actually believes his own bullshit.

      Does this really matter? Does it matter with Alex Jones is a full on conspiracy theorist or whether he is just a performance artist as his lawyer said in the custody dispute said.

      There seems to be something in the human mind that really dislike coincidence because coincidence is boring, boring, boring. Two Friday’s ago, there was a substation fire in San Francisco and a lot of power was out across the city for a few hours. There were also power grid issues in New York and Los Angeles.

      The United States is a big country and it is perfectly possible for three major cities to have completely random and unconnected issues with their substations. But that isn’t interesting so I needed to listen to lots of babble/”jokes”/”just wondering” about how they were all connected and intentional. I wonder if enough “wondering”/”joking” about these things causes people to believe in the wild stuff eventually.

      So there seems to be a tendency to go for whatever is interesting, amusing, damages the other side even if it is clearly wrong.Report

      • Stillwater in reply to Saul Degraw says:

        Does this really matter?

        No, it doesn’t. A bullshitter neither believes nor disbelieves the bull he’s shitting except insofar as it achieves the instrumental goal: getting people to act in a way that serves the speaker’s self-interest. Beyond that, Trump is an ignorant, incurious dolt who has no understanding of politics, policy, history, governance or how government functions.

        Nobody knew bullshitting your way thru the presidency could be so hard!Report

      • Kolohe in reply to Saul Degraw says:

        Saul Degraw: Does this really matter?

        As the saying goes, don’t get high on your own supply.

        A Trump that believes in nothing is less troublesome & less worrysome than one that believes in something. As someone mentioned here once, it moves him to a different portion of the von Manstein quad chart.Report

  7. CJColucci says:

    About 2020, if we leave aside the very real possibility of a foreign policy clusterf**k that gets people behind the President, whoever he is and whatever he does, in which case all bets are off, here is what I see:
    A. Past Facts
    1. The Dems won the popular vote this time
    2. A lot of Dems sat out or voted for 3d-parties
    3. The EV turned on c. 80K votes in 3 purple states
    4. Hillary had been the subject of vicious attacks for over 20 years
    B. Likely Future Facts
    1. Trump won’t have accomplished much
    2. His core voters won’t care about (1)
    3. But ordinary Republicans will be unenthusiastic because of (1) and will turn out somewhat less
    4. Whoever the Dem candidate is, he or she won’t have Hillary’s 20 years of baggage
    5. Long-term demographic trends continue to run in Dems’ favor
    6. The desperate desire to be rid of Trump will reduce defections to 3d parties and boost turnout

    Am I missing something?Report

    • Hoosegow Flask in reply to CJColucci says:

      There are cracks on the left, and there’s a real possibility they may only get worse before the next election. Just recently we’ve had crowds chanting “Bernie would have won” at the Perez/Sanders “Unity” tour, Sanders backing an anti-abortion candidate, and Warren & Sanders criticizing Obama’s paid speech.

      A more savvy administration may have found a way to work with some, but not all, of the Democrats to drive a wedge between them. But they may not need his help anyway.Report

      • Saul Degraw in reply to Hoosegow Flask says:

        @hoosegow-flask

        The tension on the left is between those who think progressivism should be extremely focused on economics and those who think you can discuss economics without examining race and racism in the United States. I also suspect Bernie’s endorsement of the Omaha Mayoral candidate would have gone down easier if he had nice things to say about Orstoff in Georgia instead of questioning the guy’s progressive credentials.

        The problem with the general concept of “No Enemies on the Left” is that it translates to “So I am going to put you on the Right.”Report

      • DavidTC in reply to Hoosegow Flask says:

        A more savvy administration may have found a way to work with some, but not all, of the Democrats to drive a wedge between them.

        ‘Savvy’? An administration that *knew how to tie their own shoelaces* might have been able to do that.

        But they may not need his help anyway.

        The Democrats, since the election and even before, were poised to tear themselves apart. It would have taken *epically stupid* mismanagement from the Republican side and extremely partisanship and a horrific Republican administration that caused everyone to rise as one against it to stop that.

        …oh, heh.

        Seriously, you magically give us the 2004 Republican government right now, under GWB, and the Democratic base and the Democratic establishment would be *at war* with each other. Outright war.

        Hell, you give us the 1992 *Democratic* government and same thing.

        This current government…you know, in the long term, and I know it sounds horrible, but at this point, I’m getting to the point where I’m glad Trump won. We were faced with years of the Democrats tearing themselves apart, the Republican Congress obstructing everything, continuing to make up bullshit about Clinton, and continuing to win on their anti-ACA platform.

        Instead we got this. Yes, it’s going to be a while until we can appraise all the results of this, our standing with other countries, and there are people who are going to be hurt…but it’s unequivocally exposed *all* the Republican problems and nonsense, and *somehow* has resulted in Democratic pols *actually taking a stand and discovering it is popular among the voters*, which bodes well for the future.Report

    • Saul Degraw in reply to CJColucci says:

      @cjcolucci

      This seems largely plausible to me. If Trump runs reelection in 2020, I see his election being a repeat of 2016. Trends are largely continuing in the Democratic Party’s favor but the 80K switch happened in states that are becoming older, white, and more Evangelical than the country overall. This is a problem for Presidential elections. We have seen numerous elections where the Democratic candidates receive more votes than the Republican candidates and the GOP still has a majority in Congress and in State Houses for a variety of reasons.

      The response to this has not been whether the system is set up in a wrong or unfair way but to tell Democrats to suck it and stop being such out of step urban elitists.

      There is also a decades long propaganda campaign that was designed to present the Democrats as out of touch and it seems to have paid in spades.

      There is also the issue about whether white identity politics can override all that you wrote above.Report

      • Kimmi in reply to Saul Degraw says:

        Saul,
        All those white voters voted for Obama. Most of them Twice.

        Anyone but hillary would have curbstomped Trump (well, other than Biden — milquetoast).Report

        • CJColucci in reply to Kimmi says:

          I know a fair number of purple-state districts that went for Obama went for Trump. But was that because John Smith changed his mind or because John Smith stayed home and Fred Jones, who never voted for Obama, showed up? Just how many actual human voters, as opposed to districts, changed?Report

    • Stillwater in reply to CJColucci says:

      Am I missing something?

      Maybe that voters increasingly don’t like Democratic policies all that much, in particular Dem economic policy. Bernie exposed that. Trump exposed that. Merely waiting for Trump and the GOP to fail won’t solve that problem.Report

      • Stillwater in reply to Stillwater says:

        And adding to that: I think effectively annointing Hillary as the Nominee, given all her personal and political flaws, significantly damaged the Democratic brand in myriad and far-reaching ways. Lots of people really didn’t like her, and the fact that the Dem establishment did undermined whatever trust marginal Dem supporters might have otherwise had in the Party.Report

        • Damon in reply to Stillwater says:

          “I think effectively anointing Hillary as the Nominee, given all her personal and political flaws, significantly damaged the Democratic brand in myriad and far-reaching ways.”

          Bingo. Hell, I had a lot of respect for Bernie, even though I disagreed with almost all of his positions, but he had the appearance of conviction and integrity. After watching HRC over the last twenty years, it was clear to me that HRC didn’t have any of that.Report

          • Kimmi in reply to Damon says:

            Damon,
            Yeah. I know some republicans who care a hell of a lot more about integrity than actual policy positions. (and I can at least see the reasoning on that — most folks don’t know what the actual issues of the day are. No to northkorea, yes to global warming).Report

            • Damon in reply to Kimmi says:

              Here’s the thing though. You need to care about both. One needs to hold the politician’s feet to the fire for the stuff they got elected on AND for them to maintain integrity. I’m stunned that people are willing to compromise on either, except, perhaps to prevent the other side from winning…Report

        • Morat20 in reply to Stillwater says:

          “Winning the primary by three million votes” is “anointing”.

          I’ve been misusing that word my whole life.Report

          • Kolohe in reply to Morat20 says:

            against a field that had one other person who was a Democrat in the 20th century as well as the 21st.Report

            • Morat20 in reply to Kolohe says:

              So how many is enough to avoid an “anointing”? How is it “anointing”? Does someone or some organization handpick the candidates? Do they restrict the pool in some way?

              I’m trying to figure out who “anointed” and “how”. What action was taken and by whom. Because the only actions I’m familiar with are (1) people choosing to run and (2) people choosing to vote. Clearly there’s some third party here, either preventing people from running or forcing people to vote for specific candidates.

              Failing that, I’m not sure how it’s different from all the other primaries, Presidential and otherwise, where there were just two serious candidates….we must do a lot of anointing.Report

              • Kolohe in reply to Morat20 says:

                Bernie wasn’t a serious candidate. Though neither was Trump, yet, here we are.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to Morat20 says:

                morat20,
                Systematic purging of voter rolls was one of the cracks on the DNC (and this I get from a Clinton operative, so…) this time round.Report

              • Marchmaine in reply to Morat20 says:

                Annointing might not be the best word, so if that’s your objection a reasonable alternative might be Colluding.

                The DNC colluded to put their thumb on the scale to insure that HRC was the democratic nominee. One could argue that that is well within the purview of the DNC… it seems the DNC is arguing exactly this in court. But I don’t think there’s much doubt at this point that the DNC colluded with the Democratic constituent parts to clear the way for HRC.

                Again, I think one could say that that’s what parties should do…if the Republican party had colluded better there wouldn’t be Trump… but pointing to the # of votes cast for the favored candidate is (potentially) proof of good collusion, not an argument against it.Report

              • notme in reply to Marchmaine says:

                Yet the DNC kept falling over themselves telling everyone they were neutral in the face of evidence to the contrary. I say fine, rig it for HRC just be honest about it.Report

              • Morat20 in reply to Marchmaine says:

                The DNC colluded to put their thumb on the scale to insure that HRC was the democratic nominee.

                How? What actions did they take? How many voters did they sway? What did they do in 2016 that they didn’t in 2008?

                Specifically, I’m fascinated by how they could do this given each state had it’s own independent apparatus for running elections.

                Other than the debate schedule and the rules for how to tell who won (“delegate counts”), the latter of which hasn’t been changed in decades, the DNC as a whole isn’t that involved in the actual primary election process.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Morat20 says:

                How? What actions did they take? How many voters did they sway? What did they do in 2016 that they didn’t in 2008?

                But enough about the Russians.
                We need to do an autopsy on the Clinton campaign.

                Did you see that the DNC testified in court that they had their thumbs on the scale during the primary?Report

              • Morat20 in reply to Jaybird says:

                Ah, yes. It’s a bold claim, Cotton. But sadly, if you go to the transcript — it doesn’t say what the article claims it does:

                That line wasn’t an “admission” — it was an argument about whether the plaintiffs even had a concrete injury, part of the defendant’s argument about standing.

                What was said was:

                then in terms of concrete injury, which was really
                the first prong
                , that, again, is problematic, because — and
                this goes back to your Honor’s question — there is no right
                to — just by virtue of making a donation, to enforce the
                parties’ internal rules. And there’s no right to not have your
                candidate disadvantaged or have another candidate advantaged.
                There’s no contractual obligation here.

                See the bolded bit? He’s talking about the three prongs of the standing test. He’s arguing in court that the plaintiff’s lack standing because the mere act of donating to the DNC does not alone give standing to sue in this case.

                So by “Did you see that the DNC testified in court that they had their thumbs on the scale during the primary?” what I actually saw, when I read the court transcript was “Did you see where the DNC said, in court, that even if they’d jumped up and down on the scale, the plaintiff’s lacked standing to sue”.

                My god, Democracy is dead. The DNC argued, in open court, about whether someone had standing to sue them.

                Seriously, that’s the problem with this “anointing” thing. Nobody ever provides evidence.

                You just tried, and what I got was an article that lied about it’s primary source — or was written by someone who hadn’t read it.

                It’s like such an unquestioned article of faith among some people that they haven’t ever encountered evidence. just random bits of fact or claims that back up their priors and are thus accepted and never verified.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to Morat20 says:

                morat20,
                I know a clinton operative.
                Clinton knew where all the bodies were buried.
                The DNC systematically purged the voter rolls.
                If you pull statistics, you’ll find that many more people voted for Bernie on the top line, but for Clinton in the electors. And the electors are the ones who vote.Report

              • switters in reply to Morat20 says:

                Man – IF only that guy, whats his name, who comes around to tell people to be wary or articles that simply confirm their priors, was around to talk to Jaybird…Report

              • Morat20 in reply to switters says:

                It’s not like this song and dance hasn’t happened before. It all ends up pointing to some leaked emails.

                What’s in them? Some people complaining about Sanders, in April. You know, after he was effectively out of the raise but was attacking the party trying to pretend he wasn’t?

                Or some emails that floated ideas that…like literally went no where. No planning, no implementation, just…some guy spitballing.

                And then, IIRC, some emails about potential attack avenues on Sanders from the GOP side — the stuff the DNC would have to be prepared for if he won. You know, the part where any campaign with a hope of winning does oppo research on itself and tries to figure out the best lines of attack on themselves so they can prepare for it?

                But that’s all it is. Evidence that vanishes once you get past the rhetoric and into the source material.

                Like Jaybird’s link. If he’d just glanced at the transcript (or heck, even read the quoted bit in the piece) he’d have realized that the DNC “admitted” so such freaking thing. But he didn’t.

                Who examines evidence closely if they already “know” the truth?Report

              • PD Shaw in reply to Morat20 says:

                The anointing begins when the candidate (or his/her people) encourage other party leaders to give their support, promise not to run themselves or at the very least not support anybody else. The campaigns that have done this effectively recently are Bush in 2000 and Clinton in 2008 and 2016. They were able to use past loyalties for the next generation, even this sort of dynastic politics is unpopular. The anointment will generate support for “the outsider”(TM), who will almost certainly not win.

                (Mystery to be solved someday, did Jeb try to eliminate potential opposition the way his brother did? If he tried and failed, why did he fail, and should he have dropped-out at that point?)Report

              • Marchmaine in reply to PD Shaw says:

                Interesting point, the Jeb!/Marco? untold story is (probably) a story of collusion gone sour.

                Almost surely its an entirely different race if one or neither had run. That both ran means that Reince Priebus deserves everything he gets now and in the future.

                That’s a book I’d be willing to commit Will to read and summarize for me.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to PD Shaw says:

                did Jeb try to eliminate potential opposition the way his brother did?

                I think I remember hearing stories about how Jeb felt “betrayed” by Marco choosing to run rather than “waiting his turn”.Report

              • PD Shaw in reply to Jaybird says:

                One suspicion is that Marco was below the level of attention and his support as a fellow-Floridian was assumed. Scarborough was above it. The other part of the issue with Marco though is that it seems that he did have a pocket of establishment support that helped his campaign and had Jeb tried to capture them?Report

              • Morat20 in reply to PD Shaw says:

                The anointing begins when the candidate (or his/her people) encourage other party leaders to give their support, promise not to run themselves or at the very least not support anybody else.

                Ah, right. So “anointing” is when members of the party who are also elected officials are allowed to support and/or vote for a candidate in their own primaries.

                I guess President’s up for relection are almost always anointed. Didn’t hear a lot of people being real upset with Obama 2012 for that. Strange. Because man if you were upset about the competition in 2016, you must have been furious about 2012. Did anyone run? Someone must have.

                So how does the non-anointing primary work? Is every elected Democrat forced to remain silent, less they anoint someone? Not allowed to campaign, raise money for them, anything?

                I don’t even know how to handle “promising not to run” — I mean, are they not even allowed to decide whether to run or not? Should we have a pre-primary wherein voters vote on who to make run in the real primary?Report

              • PD Shaw in reply to Morat20 says:

                I never said I was upset.Report

          • Dark Matter in reply to Morat20 says:

            “Winning the primary by three million votes” is “anointing”.

            One Democrat on the ballot… and the “not a Democrat” alternative who forced his way onto the ballot nearly unseated her.Report

            • Jesse in reply to Dark Matter says:

              Are you going to force Cory Booker, John Hickenlooper, and Elizabeth Warren to run in a primary against a candidate they agree with and respect that they don’t want too? I mean I realize this site is a “Hillary Clinton is terrible” zone, but most Democrat’s like and respect Hillary. It took the greatest political talent of a generation to barely beat her in 2008.

              Also, the only way Bernie “nearly” unseated Hillary is if an NBA team who ends up losing by double digits “nearly” won because they won one quarter. The only reason Bernie numbers looks as good as they do is because he continued to run after it was all but mathematically impossible for him to actually win the nomination.

              We could’ve said that say, John McCain nearly unseated Dubya in 2000 if he’d run in every single primary.Report

              • Kolohe in reply to Jesse says:

                Jesse: It took the greatest political talent of a generation to barely beat her in 2008.

                That contest wasn’t a close as the score. Obama chose to try to win the nomination instead of trying to win a lot of votes; in addition, there were a lot of garbage time votes for Clinton.

                And it doesn’t explain how the biggest political imbecile of a generation – of all time, really – barely beat her in 2016.Report

              • Jesse in reply to Kolohe says:

                “And it doesn’t explain how the biggest political imbecile of a generation – of all time, really – barely beat her in 2016.”

                To boil it down, throwing everything else out, people will vote for an idiot telling them what they want to hear over a smart person either not talking to them or telling them things they don’t like.Report

              • Morat20 in reply to Jesse says:

                That’s the clear gist I’m getting. It was rigged or “anointed”, because she didn’t have enough competition. Clearly through nefarious means, because Clinton, right?

                It’s very circular. The primary was rigged because not enough people ran. How is that rigged? Clearly Clinton made them not run. Why do we think that? Because not enough people ran!

                It only holds together if you first assume nefarious intent, which is what we’re trying to prove.

                Clinton was anointed because not enough people ran, which was clearly because she was anointed and not for any other reason at all. Impossible.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Jesse says:

                It took the greatest political talent of a generation to barely beat her in 2008.

                Just like Trump did in 2016 (after she had 8 more years to get her act together and starve out any internal dissent.)

                Does that mean that Obama isn’t that great or that Trump is really good at this or both?

                Also, the only way Bernie “nearly” unseated Hillary is if an NBA team who ends up losing by double digits “nearly” won because they won one quarter.

                Adjust Bernie for money, backing, and not being a Democrat, and how well he did looks more impressive, and how well she did looks worse.

                We could’ve said that say, John McCain nearly unseated Dubya in 2000 if he’d run in every single primary.

                Sure. If McCain hadn’t been starved of money and resources he could have, and arguably should have, won.

                IMHO this country is poorly served by these “selected by above” nominations.Report

      • Saul Degraw in reply to Stillwater says:

        @stillwater

        I would say you are not fully right with Bernie. Bernie’s problem was always that he never figured out how to reach the base of the Democratic Party which is older people of color. Bernie supporters make up a decent size of the Democratic Party but they are still a minority within the party, not a majority. HRC did have an incumbent advantage but Bernie never figured out how to appeal to most voters over 30 and many non-white voters.

        The Democratic Party might be made up of too many disparate groups because the United States is not a sane political system and the GOP dive to the far-right on social issues causes many people to be Democrats despite not being that progressive economically. There are plenty of upper-middle class people who make more sense as center-right voters but get scared from the GOP because of their lockstep stances on LBGT rights, Abortion, the Environment, and other largely social issues. A sane country would probably have a socially friendly but economically moderate GOP that could compete for the professional class vote in cities like Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, etc. But we don’t have that.

        After all, London is seen as Tory territory more often than it is seen as Labour territory because of the financial jobs and because the Tories have figured out how to downplay social conservatism and bigotry.

        As for Donald Trump, I would say he proved H.L. Mencken’s observations on how Democracy is the system of government where the people get what they want and they get it good and hard. Trump is not draining the swamp and his economic policies are huge boons to the big banks and the rich. Much more so than anything HRC would have done even though she is more free trade friendly openly. But Trump does so with unvarnished racism and bigotry and sexism and lots of people like that.

        The problem for the moderate wing of the Democratic Party is that they say the best we can do is muddle along in this transition time and people don’t like that.Report

        • Kimmi in reply to Saul Degraw says:

          Saul,
          You’re talking about the economic policies of Hillary’s pick to be Treasury Secretary.
          Same shit different day.
          Clinton had a NIIIICE big registry of Illegals so she could continue what Obama started — deporting them.Report

        • Damon in reply to Saul Degraw says:

          Saul, it sounds like you’re saying Trump is ending up being a “mainstream” republican president. Seems “the system” won.Report

    • Dark Matter in reply to CJColucci says:

      Am I missing something?

      1) The lesson of Bush 2 is it is very hard to unseat a sitting President.

      2) Trump lost about 3% of the GOP vote because he’s insane, in 4 years he’ll have proven that doesn’t matter and he’ll likely get those votes back. He’ll have proven that he’s not building death camps, etc. So he’ll be a lot less scary because he’s been in office for four years.

      3) Trump will be just as vulgar, just as good at throwing shit, just as impossible to embarrass… and this time he’ll have the full backing of the GOP.

      4) The Dems are moving to the left.

      5) The system is showing it’s good at preventing Trump’s crazier ideas and/or that he wasn’t serious.

      6) through 100) Trump is showing signs of returning to his Money! roots and is trying to put in economic growth creating reforms. Yes, they’re going to be self serving, and yes, the socialists in the media will scream he’s helping the evil rich rather than eating them.

      But economic growth buys a lot of forgiveness for a lot of sins. Trump will be the “safe” choice if he shows he gets that no matter how vulgar he is.Report

      • Nevermoor in reply to Dark Matter says:

        Trump is showing signs of returning to his Money! roots and is trying to put in economic growth creating reforms.

        This is my solace, too. Regressive tax cuts tank economies, so no matter how many supposed principles GOP tribalists abandon, it would seem likely that the fundamentals will be pro-Democrat in 2020.Report

  8. DensityDuck says:

    Trump has been a perfect example of what would happen if you just took some random schmoe and put him in the White House. He’d spend the first few weeks learning how all the dumb stuff the government wastes money on actually has good reasons behind it (or, at least, understandable reasons) and he’d spend the next few weeks learning how difficult it was to change even the smallest thing (due to decades of accumulated policy and regulatory decisions about everything).Report

    • Kimmi in reply to DensityDuck says:

      DD,
      normal people aren’t nepotists.Report

    • Stillwater in reply to DensityDuck says:

      Trump has been a perfect example of what would happen if you just took some random schmoe and put him in the White House.

      You’re being very charitable to Trump.Report

      • DensityDuck in reply to Stillwater says:

        Oh, I really doubt that. I’ve heard the same “drain the swamp” rhetoric–albeit a bit cleaned up–from PhD holders. “The dang government’s wastin’ money on stupid stuff, why can’t we just get things done like we used to” was a topic of conversation on this blog, jast last week.Report

        • Kimmi in reply to DensityDuck says:

          DD,
          Yes, but… take your average citizen and tell him he has to Run Government, and he’ll hit the books. May get bored halfway through, but then would find “okayish” advisors, not the Trumpish equivalent.Report

        • Brent F in reply to DensityDuck says:

          I think there have been a few smart people who had at some point pinned certain hopes on Trump because he did seem to occassionally ask the right questions.

          This line of thinking ignored how it would be much harder to find the right answers and this guy showed no signs of even knowing who to ask for help in finding them.Report

      • Troublesome Frog in reply to Stillwater says:

        I actually thought about it during the last election and decided something kind of scary: If the election were between “President Donald Trump” and “We randomly select an American and swear him or her in as POTUS” I’d be very tempted to pull the lever for “randomly selected American.” I’m fairly risk averse and the tail risk to that is pretty high, but Trump is dangerously below the median in a lot of important variables and only slightly above the median in a handful of other useful variables, so I genuinely don’t know what I’d do.Report

        • Marchmaine in reply to Troublesome Frog says:

          If I’m not mistaken, governance at random via the Boston telephone directory has been mooted once before.Report

        • Kazzy in reply to Troublesome Frog says:

          I think if you put a random person into the White House, they would at least try to “play” President. They would think about what they’ve seen past Presidents do and try to remember what they learned about the Executive Branch in school and then try to perform the role as they understand it. This would be problematic for a host of reasons, but at least their intent would likely be, “I’m going to do what I think it is the President is supposed to do.”

          I don’t think Trump has that intention. I think Trump’s intentions are far more selfish than the average American. Which is why on the few occasion when Trump kinda sorta really had to act like the President, he seems to have grossly bungled them.Report

    • Joe Sal in reply to DensityDuck says:

      To go from private sector to public/political sector is a big jump. It likely takes two years to map the convolution. Even if Trump is skilled in the arts of systems, I give it two years before he can start inacting much change.

      All he could really do is poke a stick in the darkness the first hundred days, and see what pokes back.

      Completely different field of vision from Obama who likely knew the contours of office from working in/around them for years.Report

      • Marchmaine in reply to Joe Sal says:

        Well, without comparing Obama to Trump, one of the more common criticisms from the left was that he hired the Clinton team to run his transition. Which, at the time, we heralded as a wise choice for such a political newbie. It certainly prevented a lot of unforced errors, but I’d suggest that it also set the course and tone for his administration… a course and tone I’m not sure he ever redirected. I joked as a traditionalist that all the cool radical things I hoped for I got not; but the neo-liberal status quo I got thrice.

        So I’m basically agreeing that governing is not the same thing as campaigning, but I’m also pointing out that real changes in direction require years, maybe decades, of work to build a governing faction that changes the direction of a Party and then the country. Regan and (to a lesser extent) boy Clinton did this. W, Obama and Trump didn’t. Trump much less so than the others… there is no Trumpism, only Trump.Report

  9. DavidTC says:

    An aside about bullying:

    And my own experience is that once a bully is exposed as not being nearly so strong and scary as initially perceived, it’s basically impossible for him to regain the power that the aura of fear once gave him.

    Let’s be clear here: That statement is entirely true, but hinges on the assumption of the bully *not being as powerful as they present themselves*.

    And thus it, while it is true, it’s not the greatest advice to give children to ‘just stand up to the bully’. Because sometimes bullies *actually are as powerful* as they appear. Sometimes they will punch back. Sometimes they have powerful protectors. Etc, etc.

    This is, of course, not particularly relevant to the situation here, where the bully is Trump, who *should be * somewhat powerful, compared to normal citizens, as the president, but has *absolutely* no idea how to use his power or in what manner, and tries to use it against people he has no power over.(1) So standing up to him is working fine.

    1) Because, again, he is *astonishingly* stupid, which as I’ve said before, is the fundamental problem of this presidency. There’s a lot for ways you can slice it, a lot of ways you can phrase it so it sounds less rude or is more politically correct, but fundamentally, the problem is that Trump is basically an idiot who has gotten through life by inheriting a ton of money and blustering a lot, and isn’t even smart enough to realize his own limitations.Report

    • Burt Likko in reply to DavidTC says:

      I agree that one who would confront a bully must take an accurate and clear-eyed measure of the bully’s actual power before doing so.

      That said, Trump’s governing style is a lot of bluster and not a lot of action, which strongly suggests that he is a classic bully who uses aggression as a mask over self-perceived powerlessness. More’s the pity, as the Presidency really is a powerful position, one which can be used to great advantage and benefit when the office is held by someone who leads rather than bullies, by someone who has a plan rather than a series of impulses, someone who builds relationships instead of just doing one-off deals.Report

      • Morat20 in reply to Burt Likko says:

        That said, Trump’s governing style is a lot of bluster and not a lot of action

        Trump is a man of action. His preferred course of action was “the legal system” and his method of utilizing that as a tool of bullying was “I have enough money to never let this drop”.

        He wasn’t very good at it (he ended up settling most of his lawsuits), but the problem is he rarely seemed to notice the losses.

        (Honestly, the only thing that’s ever seemed to hurt him has been the disdain he’s gotten from Hollywood and the NY elites. )

        If you want to make the bully analogy — he’s a bully who really doesn’t feel pain. He’s got a weak punch and is constantly swinging (which means he actually hurts people almost randomly) but he doesn’t feel you punch back, so he doesn’t really stop. (This is all prior to the Presidency).

        As President, his swings are even weaker — it’d be like taking a schoolyard bully, moving it to a dojo with a rule system, and telling him “no hands, this is feet only”. His favorite method of attack is crippled, the rules system constricts him in ways he doesn’t understand (which results in a lot of free points for his appoints when he violates them), and he’s always used his hands — never bothered with kicking unless the guy was already down.

        He’s still a bully, he’s just even more ineffectual because he’s been straight jacketed into a fight whose parameters he doesn’t understand, that foreclose his favorite methods, and against opponents who are on an equal footing.Report

    • Nevermoor in reply to DavidTC says:

      I think his pure non-partisan stupidity is not given enough attention. I mean, c’mon:

      JOHN DICKERSON: George W. Bush said the reason the Oval Office is round is there are no corners you can hide in.

      PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Well, there’s truth to that. There is truth to that. There are certainly no corners. And you look, there’s a certain openness. But there’s nobody out there. You know, there is an openness, but I’ve never seen anybody out there actually, as you could imagine.

      Report

      • Don Zeko in reply to Nevermoor says:

        I’m inclined to blame conservative ideology for that. if you convince your base that the Federal government is so bad that the only important question is whether or not your chosen politicians are tearing the whole edifice down, then you can’t turn around and tell them that they shouldn’t vote for a guy because he has no frakking clue what he’s doing and will run the ship of state into the ground.Report

        • Pinky in reply to Don Zeko says:

          I don’t think that’s an accurate depiction of conservative ideology.

          As I’ve said before, Barack Obama’s presidency left a lot of people thinking that a president doesn’t have to be intelligent.Report

          • Dark Matter in reply to Pinky says:

            As I’ve said before, Barack Obama’s presidency left a lot of people thinking that a president doesn’t have to be intelligent.

            Is this about Obama confessing he couldn’t help his kids with their middle school math?Report

          • Morat20 in reply to Pinky says:

            As I’ve said before, Barack Obama’s presidency left a lot of people thinking that a president doesn’t have to be intelligent.

            A lot of people believe the earth is flat, so what?Report

            • Pinky in reply to Morat20 says:

              The question was what caused the American voter to devalue intelligence in elected officials. It’s very relevant if the last president appeared to be unintelligent to a great number of voters. I think if we did one of those play-actor things, like the female Trump and male Clinton, people would be shocked at how dim Obama sounds, both in delivery and substance.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Pinky says:

                People will note, of course, the Pinky, despite having *eight years* of public statements of Obama, has not bothered to quote any of them that make Obama sound dumb, despite Obama giving plenty of interviews.

                Whereas Trump, in addition to being in office only three and a half months, has been somewhat stingy with interviews (And not giving any during the transition)…and yet it is trivially easy to find circumstances where *he* sounds like an idiot and misstates basic things.

                Now, before someone says ‘Obama has more message discipline and better writers, but he’s actually pretty stupid if caught outside those constraint’, let me remind people that Pinky’s premise is that Obama *sounded so dumb that presidential expectations were lowered*, ergo, there *has* to be some examples *of* him sounding stupid for that to make any sense. He can’t just be stupid *in private*.

                There are plenty of lists of ‘Obama gaffs’ out there if you google them. Most of them have to really, really, reach to get to *ten*, including things that are just insensitive, like the time he compared his bowling to the Special Olympics, or him confusing the name of two random people he gave medals to a month earlier, and even a few things that were probably politically motivated *lies*, or at least deliberately misleading.

                You try to make a list of ‘factual errors that make him look stupid’, you get maybe half a dozen, at best. The list: He once said he had visited 57 states instead of 47, he once said Austrian was language, he once said he was in Asia when he was in Hawaii, he didn’t know how to pronounce corpsman, and he called the transcontinental railroad the ‘intercontinental’ railroad.

                That’s it. That’s all the unknowledgeable things he’s actually said in eight years of things I could find. Oh, I’m sure there are a few more, but it’s a pretty damn short list.

                Trump has actually said as many equally dumb things *already*. Just flat out dumb things, like confusing Kim Jong-un with his father.

                Hell, Paul Ryan apparently *duped him* into thinking that there’s some sort of congressional rule that requires Congress tackle health care reform before tax reform, when in reality that was just a political strategy Ryan came up with. But Trump keeps going around talking like it’s some *rule* that he *learned about*.

                He still seems to think that Obama tapped his phones, despite that literally not being possible, and, no , Republicans running around trying to rewrite that statement into something true does not change the fact that *Trump* still seems to think what he clearly said originally: That Obama put a tap on his phone line and listened to him.

                Oh, recently, we learned that he thinks Andrew Jackson would have headed off the civil war. Let’s ignore the fact Jackson was dead already, which is what everyone else has latched on to, and try to figure out why anyone thinks *Andrew Jackson*, the slave-owner and well-noted racist that was a *certifiable lunatic* that ran roughshod over anyone he disagreed with, would be a reasonable negotiator within the tension of the civil war? (I can’t even figure out which side Trump thinks *he would be on*.) How the hell does that make any sense at all?

                Did someone once compare Trump to Andrew Jackson (I can’t even figure out which side that is an insult to…probably both?) and he decided that meant Andrew Jackson was a ‘great negotiator’? If so: Trump, uh, sorry to tell you, but that’s *not* why they compared you to Andrew Jackson.Report

              • Pinky in reply to DavidTC says:

                You’re undercounting his factual errors. You’re leaving out his mischaracterizations of opponents and his trollings. You didn’t mention Recovery Summer, the scandals he hadn’t heard about until he read the paper, the “you can keep your doctor” lie, the Syrian line in the sand, or his changing stories about the investigation into the IRS. But even if you did, you wouldn’t have gotten the point of what I was saying: he sounds like an idiot. He can’t put a sentence together without five pauses. He pouts. He talks about himself a lot. He doesn’t come off as an intelligent, mature person.Report

              • DensityDuck in reply to Pinky says:

                Well actually you have to understand there’s a lot of context and you’re clearly misinterpreting based on partisan slant because you’re racist.

                Also Trump is worse. Also Bush was worse. Also Reagan was worse. And you can’t point to Clinton as being bad because that’s just BSDI butwhataboutism.Report

              • Pinky in reply to DensityDuck says:

                I would really love it if someone would do an Obama speech with someone else delivering it (see my comment above). Doesn’t matter what color or sex. I think people would be blown away.Report

              • Kimmi in reply to DensityDuck says:

                GWB was drunk on duty. Granted, it was after the stock market had gone to hell, so he did have a reason to drink…

                But he was seriously drunk while giving speeches.

                Back in the day they’d have called that liquid courage.Report

              • KenB in reply to Pinky says:

                Interesting… Obama has always struck me as intelligent in sort of an “academic liberal” way, though once he became the primary front-runner in 2007 he moved away from saying some thought-provoking reasonable things to just saying conventional Dem politician things. But i have to admit that I haven’t listened to him much since 2008 — I avoid political speeches like the plague.

                Who’s the last president who sounded intelligent to you?Report

              • Marchmaine in reply to KenB says:

                Agreed… my rightist recollection was that he was smart, but that was the problem… Academic Liberal without any meaningful experience… young, naive, idealistic – you know, all the things Hillary campaigned on.

                Perhaps he means inexperienced vs. ignorant?Report

              • Pinky in reply to KenB says:

                Clinton, hands down.

                Let’s see…across my voting-age life…Reagan was more folksy than I care for, but he knew policy and it showed. Bush Senior had some kind of speech disorder, I suspect, but knew the material. Clinton was naturally both intelligent and passionate about policy. Bush Junior was hard to listen to, but in a different way than his father.Report

              • KenB in reply to Pinky says:

                OK, I certainly agree about Clinton and am not too far off on the others. Sounds like here you’re really talking about sharpness on politics & policy rather than general intelligence or the appearance of it.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Pinky says:

                You’re undercounting his factual errors.

                And then you provided a post *without listing any factual errors* in it.

                You’re leaving out his mischaracterizations of opponents and his trollings.

                Which has nothing to do with intelligence at all. Dishonesty!=intelligence. (Not that I agree with you, but it doesn’t matter.)

                You didn’t mention Recovery Summer,

                …which was a political stunt. Feel free to argue it was a lie from the start, or it didn’t work, or anything. But it’s not a *factual error*.

                the scandals he hadn’t heard about until he read the paper,

                You have not given any specific examples so it’s rather hard to judge anything. It is entirely possible you are assuming that he’s behind a lot of things he had nothing to do with, and thus *legitimately* wouldn’t have known until the papers reported it. (Or, possibly, was deliberately lying about.)

                the “you can keep your doctor” lie,

                Lies, by definition, are not ‘factual errors’. To be a lie requires him *knowing* the truth, and then saying something else.

                the Syrian line in the sand,

                Not sure how it is even *possible* to consider this a factual error.

                or his changing stories about the investigation into the IRS.

                Changing stories as part of a scandal *also* is not factual errors. Those would be, once again, *lies*.

                I’m glad you have a nice list of things you think Obama was lying about, or his dishonest actions, or whatever. And if you had claimed Obama was a *serial liar* or something, those might be relevant.

                But you claimed he *sounded stupid*, which is an entirely different thing.

                Granted, lies *can* sound stupid, but only if they are obviously untrue at the time they are spoken. *cough*DonaldTrump*cough*

                But even if you did, you wouldn’t have gotten the point of what I was saying: he sounds like an idiot.

                Oh, I see. He just *sounds* like an idiot, despite pretty much everyone agreeing otherwise.

                He can’t put a sentence together without five pauses.

                Obama speaks very deliberately, yes, with pauses, especially if he hasn’t come up with a prepared answer.

                As have *all* presidents, at least before Trump. (Actually, Trump pauses also, but cannot possibly be spoken of as ‘speaking deliberately’.)

                That’s how everyone who has their every word being scrutinized (and isn’t an idiot) speaks.

                Well, until we get to Reagan, who often would slip in a joke, and then formulate an answer while everyone was laughing…or not at all. But I think everyone agrees that Obama is no Reagan, communications-wise.

                He pouts.

                Sure, why not. Let’s just claim that.

                He talks about himself a lot.

                When the president speaks, any president, in a lot of circumstances he is *supposed* to be speaking about himself. In most interviews, for example, the president is being interviewed about *his* policies and *his* directions. In the State of the Union, the president will lay out what is going on, and then talk about what *he* wants to happen, which obviously will require ‘talking about himself’.

                And I’m not sure why this would make him sound dumb. Talking about things in the context of yourself is actually a *really good* way to get the audience on your side.

                I know a lot of idiots on the left try to claim Trump, for example, ‘talks about himself a lot’, but that’s not *actually* the problem with what Trump does. It’s nothing to do with the amount, and everything to do with the context and topic.

                Because there are places where it is *not* expected that the president will talk about himself, or at least not as much. Some sort memorial or honoring of someone else, for example, the president might say how he feels (Which is not only fine but *required*. That is what Heads of State do, they ‘feel’ certain ways about the situation, basically officially feeling that way as a representative of the American people.) But that should be basically it.

                Trump…not only talks about himself repeatedly in those situations, he tends to wander off topic into *completely irrelevant* things about himself in situations that are *not* about himself. I.e., his NSA speech stupidity.

                In front of the NSA, a story from the president about how a family member in WWII helped intercept communications, and how intercepted communications are still keeping America safe, would be relevant there, and completely acceptable. The president talking about his percentage of the popular vote and how the media is misrepresenting it…not so much. Both those can be portrayed as ‘the president talking about himself’, but they are very different.

                He doesn’t come off as an intelligent, mature person.

                Have you *ever* watched an actual interview of him?

                Here’s one, for reference. It claims to be the full, uncut interview, although I have no proof that it was not edited to make him look better, but let’s just assume for now:

                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXH5agV7skw

                Obama, without a speechwriter, speaks much slower. He pauses to carefully consider what he is going to say, and throws some ‘um’s in there. He makes longish sentences where he’d probably be better off with simpler shorter ones.

                But he does not, in the slightest sense, sound unintelligent.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Pinky says:

                It’s very relevant if the last president appeared to be unintelligent to a great number of voters.

                Not so much “unintelligent” as unaccomplished and held to a VERY different standard.

                The starkest example is his Nobel prize (nominated when he’d had at most 11 days in office). The head of the committee said “We have not given the prize for what may happen in the future. We are awarding Obama for what he has done in the past year….”

                Did he get it for not being Bush? For being the first Black President? And the Nobel Prize committee is supposedly made up of the finest minds on the planet judging the highest accomplishments on the planet.

                Weirdly someone with no measurable accomplishments was assumed to be brilliant, accomplished, and competent. He had lots of opportunities to prove his intellect before being President, but somehow never did.Report

              • gregiank in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Today’s lesser known facts.Conservatives are known for being obsessed with the actions of Swedish committees.Report

              • Morat20 in reply to gregiank says:

                Noted: being a Senator, going to Harvard, passing the bar, teaching at a university — not signs of “intelligence”.Report

              • Pinky in reply to Morat20 says:

                You and Greg just set up two nice staring contests. Let’s see who can go the longest without mentioning the Nobel Prize, and/or without calling a Senator stupid.

                Together, they make it impossible to talk about Al Gore.Report

              • gregiank in reply to Pinky says:

                I have no idea what you are referring to Pinky. He got a Nobel…it was silly. But it also really didn’t mean anything…so what. It had nothing to do with his policies for the US. I cared a lot more about what he was going to do then a Nobel. Why do conservatives care? Well other then just an attack quip in arguments.

                I always assumed the Nobel peeps gave it to him because they were hoping for a change from Bush’s disastrous foreign policies. Am i correct? Was it for being the first black prez. Beats me cause like i said i just didn’t care that much.

                People to often think anybody who disagrees with their own preferred polices must be stupid. That is a universal problem. People in all groups do that.Report

              • Pinky in reply to gregiank says:

                What I was referring to…your comment indicated that any mention of the Nobel Prize is irrelevant. So I speculated about how well it’d work if no one could bring up that particular award. That’s what I meant by a staring contest – who would break first? Wouldn’t you allow that American liberals consider the Nobel Prize an honor more than American conservatives consider it a dishonor?

                Likewise, Morat’s comment seems to confer automatic respect for the intelligence of all members of the Senate. I can’t help but wonder if that’s a rule everyone would agree to follow.Report

              • greginak in reply to Pinky says:

                I think conservatives focus on the NP is more just catty poo flinging then anything else. I don’t see it as relevant to his presidency but it is reflective of how many people saw him. In the end many people who didn’t think he was a good president are going to say he was dumb and get a chuckle out of silly noble prize quips. But those don’t have much value to me. As i noted, people to often confuse agreement with beliefs with intelligent.

                If a conservative gets the NP they will consider it an honor. Just being a senator does not make one intelligent although i would guess most probably are what we would generally consider smart in many ways.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Morat20 says:

                Noted: being a Senator, going to Harvard, passing the bar, teaching at a university — not signs of “intelligence”.

                And… what did he do with any of those things? Pass wonderful laws? Otherwise distinguish himself? His Harvard grades are hidden (and note just how lame it is to need to ask an adult man in his late 40’s about his college grades… but maybe he understood middle school math then?)

                Or in each case, exactly like with his Nobel Peace Prize, was being Black and Charismatic enough?Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Dark Matter says:

                His grades in college were very good. The reason he kept his records sealed was because he claimed to have been born in Africa in order to get better financial aid.

                Falsely, might I add.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Jaybird says:

                His grades in college were very good. The reason he kept his records sealed was because he claimed to have been born in Africa in order to get better financial aid.

                Doubtful. One of my High School friends went to Harvard Law and she got a full ride for being black. Obama is older so he went earlier, but probably the same logic applies.

                Good Menu Options are:
                1) Terrible Grades.
                2) Terrible Classes (“Communism for you” perhaps).
                3) Something else?

                And I still think it really says a lot that this is even an issue. Picture yourself interviewing a 48 year old Engineer and needing to wonder what his grades were like 25 years earlier. Needing to ask the question means you shouldn’t be asking the question.Report

              • gregiank in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Why yes it was lame to be asking him about his college grads. Very lame and childish. I agree with you. The people who were asking were indeed being very lame. It’s nice we can agree on that.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to gregiank says:

                The problem isn’t that people were asking for his grades, the problem is that they needed to. Obama’s resume was *that* thin, so thin that you need to bring up his college experiences as reason why he should be President.

                It’s the equiv of Bush trying to present his National Guard experience (which he didn’t) as qualification. The moment you open that door people have to ask, how good was he when he was doing that?Report

              • One of my complaints about the Congressional Dems is that they have maintained a seniority system that means no one in Congress establishes meaningful credentials until they’ve been there for decades. The Democratic rules mean they won’t ever have a Ryan who takes office in Jan 1999 and by October 2015 is Speaker, having also chaired both Budget and Ways & Means.Report

              • George Turner in reply to Michael Cain says:

                I didn’t realize that was the reason the Democrats were coming to resemble the old Politburo, but it makes sense.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                His Harvard grades are hidden (and note just how lame it is to need to ask an adult man in his late 40’s about his college grades… but maybe he understood middle school math then?)

                He graduated *magna cum laude* from Harvard Law. In 1991, that meant he had at least a 5.8 general average out of 8 possible…and couldn’t really have gotten any higher honors. (There is, in theory, summa cum laude, but literally only 5 people got it in the 38 years under the old standard, as it was way up at 7.8. It was changed in 1999 to be awarded to the highest GPA if no one get to that, to avoid that dumbness.)

                So, as he has magna cum laude on his diploma, we know for a fact he got somewhere between 5.8 and 7.8 ‘general average’, which is a range that only the top 16% of students manage made it into, and was basically the topmost level of Harvard graduates, outside the mostly hypothetical summa cum laude.

                Of course, if you google this, there are a lot of people crowing that he wouldn’t get magna cum laude now, because it changed to the top 10% in 1999, instead of just a 5.8 cutoff…this idea is based on literally no evidence at all, as far as I can tell. He *might* not get it now, if he was in that bottom 6 points of that 16%, but we don’t _know_ that!

                These people, and by people I mean ‘liars’, usually try to confuse the issue by trying to point out that 76% of the graduates graduated ‘with honors’, and, thus, honors were meaningless…and completely fail to mention that Obama didn’t just generically get ‘honors’, he got magna cum laude, which was approximately 16%, varying from year to year.

                Edit: Even if Obama actually was only in, say, the top 15% of his class at Harvard, barely sliding in with a 5.9 grade…what’s the opposite of damning with faint praise? Praising with faint criticism? Oh no! Obama might only be smarter than *85%* of *Harvard graduates*!Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                OK, top 16%… at least in theory. So that means it’s bad politics to release his grades… why?

                I see…
                1) Grades were adjusted for race to put him in the top 16%?
                2) Took Communism/Fluff Classes?

                #1 is more reasonable than it sounds, I’ve seen colleges bend the rules for this sort of thing (although granted, not at Harvard specifically).Report

              • gregiank in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Wait. We already agreed people who wanted to see his grades were lame….what gives. What kind of people would make evidence free accusations about his grades? Lame?Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to gregiank says:

                Lame?

                It’s only lame as long as we’re not using it as a yardstick. The part that’s nuts is his supporters want us to.

                what gives?

                One of the *big* things on Obama resume, when people cared that his resume was so absurdly thin, was his college degree. I’ve pointed out that if someone 25 years out of college needs to rely on that for an advertised job, then the answer is that he shouldn’t be hired.

                However people have insisted that his degree means a lot so we’re going to go down the path of examining it.

                Obama is a political animal to an absurd degree and more than a little narcissistic.
                He’s supposedly a brilliant mind (who doesn’t understand middle school math but that came out later).
                He’s in the top 16% of his class.

                So um… why on Earth wouldn’t he do what Bush (and others) did and post his grades for bragging rights?

                The only possible answer is that in his view, the benefits don’t outweigh the harm. The number of votes he’d lose is greater than the number he’d win.

                By all means, feel free to come up with other explanations, ideally we’d find one that totally excuses him. I can think of bad, good, and meaningless reasons why Trump won’t release his taxes so that he’s not makes the exercise meaningless.

                But I can’t think of any reason for Obama to not release his grades in 2007 which reflect well on him.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Dark Matter says:

                RE: Trump’s Taxes
                The risks and costs of him releasing his taxes outweigh the benefits.

                The Reason why is…
                1) He’s cheating on his taxes and is paying roughly zero.
                2) He’s not cheating on his taxes and is paying roughly zero.
                3) He’s not cheating on his taxes and is paying more than most Americans.
                4) The last truly rich guy who published his taxes had bricks thrown at him even though everything he did was ethical.

                So we’re all over the place. If he’s doing something good he’d not release them, ditto bad, ditto just keeping up his ego.Report

              • I’ll take a variation on (2), please: he’s not cheating, and is paying roughly zero, because we give real estate developers/speculators a whole lot of tax breaks no one else gets. None of his family’s friends in the business want that cat out of the bag.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Michael Cain says:

                I’ll take a variation on (2), please: he’s not cheating, and is paying roughly zero,

                Maybe… but his (illegally) released taxes for 2005 showed him paying a lot more than zero and getting bit, hard, by the AMT.

                This whole franchise thing he’s got going is way beyond my experience, I’ve no clue how to scope it. Before his 2005 came out I’d have leaned towards #2 + #4… now I’m leaning towards #3 + #4.

                But as long as there are legit and reasonable reasons for him to do what he’s doing, I’m willing to give a presumption of innocence and assume whatever is most in his favor.

                “Reasonable” means “within the laws of probability” and “he’s acting in his own best interest”.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                One of the *big* things on Obama resume, when people cared that his resume was so absurdly thin, was his college degree. I’ve pointed out that if someone 25 years out of college needs to rely on that for an advertised job, then the answer is that he shouldn’t be hired.

                This entire concept seems to be based on the idea that *Obama* presented his degree as some sort of grounds to get elected on, instead of people trying to discredit it combing through his background trying to find stuff for that purpose.

                You seem to be working on the assumption that the reason that people dissected Obama’s past is that *he* made his education important. That’s….not how I remember things, at all. I can’t remember Obama ever talking about how he was an amazing student.

                Instead, I remember a concentrated effort, from the right, at every single level, to take his past apart. Part of that effort was reasonable, sure. He claims to he did something, let’s check if he did. (I mean, there have been politicians elected who had *fake* diplomas before. Don’t want that.) And let’s see if there’s something in the past that he’s trying to hide.

                And that’s where it stops for *normal politicians*. It’s not where it stopped for Obama. It continued with batshit insane Birthers, but it also continued where *every single thing* demanded evidence, over and over, even when the evidence was *well documented*.

                I.e., people suggesting he did bad at Harvard Law. He…clearly didn’t. We don’t know exactly how well he did, but he certainly didn’t do bad.

                People have *also* suggested he got into Harvard Law because of his race, which is idiotically untrue…he got in because he was a *legacy*, his father went to Harvard so he got in. This, hilariously, could indeed make his acceptance somewhat ‘undeserved’ (Except he then did pretty good, so clearly belong there.), exactly as the claim. But the chattering classes *really* don’t want to point *that* out, as it not only raises questions about all legacys, but makes their ‘affirmative action’ whining look amazingly hypocritical, considered how biased towards wealthy white people that the legacy admission system is.

                People also have pointed out that he could have gone to Harvard Law with *really bad grades* from Columbia. This is, factually, correct. Apparently post-grad Harvard Law, at that time, cared a lot more about how you tested than your college graduation grades, and Columbia didn’t put grades on the transcript…but this is *entirely supposition*. There is no evidence of this at all. (Nor does it seem particularly relevant to *anything*. Even if this was 100% true, it means…he was lazy for four years when young and coasted through college, only buckling down in post-grad? Decades ago? What sort of weird complaint is that?)

                People have also suggested he did bad on the LSAT. Again, no evidence of this.

                This is the stuff that he has to fight. His educational history is ‘graduated Columbia, graduated Harvard law’, and people spent *years* just making shit up about that, and then demanding he prove those things *aren’t* true. Just like *every single piece of his past*.

                You seem to think he said ‘I did well in school, but I’m not going to show you’, whereas what happened as far as *I* can tell is that people said ‘He did poorly in school and only got in due to affirmative action’ and he said ‘My diplomas are on the wall. The schools will confirm I earned them. I’m not playing your game of proving I did well at or ‘earned’ every little thing.’

                Just accepting ‘Obama went to Columbia, and then graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law, at the top-ish of his class, while holding the prestigious position of editor of the Law Review.’ seems *completely impossible* for a certain set of people to just accept. Even long after the election was over.

                I have no idea if this was due to race, BTW. I really don’t. I suspect it *started* as a continuation of the 24 hours news cycle and standard dirty tricks, and it’s certainly possible it was entirely that.

                But *that* sort of digging though the past has, in the past, had a requirement of *finding something*, and then pointing it out. Or at least having *someone* have some logical position to opposing claims, like the Swiftboat nonsense, or the apparently fake National Guard documents of Bush. It was *someone* holding up or stating personal knowledge of something, even that was a lie.

                But with Obama it became ‘I have decided to make up things, and now everyone will repeat them as fact until the president disproves them.’. No one is out there claiming to *know* he did bad in school, just like no one is running around claiming they have *evidence* he wasn’t born in the US. (Well, eventually, made up evidence did appear, but that was long after the conspiracy theory was already out there.) It’s just people *making up hypotheticals* and demanding they be disproven!

                And refusing to accept the fact that a black person did reasonably well, in what is basically the ‘highest level’ of education, certainly *sounds* like it has racist origins and is playing off racism.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                You seem to be working on the assumption that the reason that people dissected Obama’s past is that *he* made his education important. That’s….not how I remember things, at all.

                Trace this thread. The way it worked here is the way it always does. His *defenders* bring up the whole “college” thing when we talk about previous successes. Someone points out he had a thin resume and someone rushes to point out that he went to Harvard Law so he must be brilliant.

                I remember a concentrated effort, from the right, at every single level, to take his past apart.

                And that effort failed because there’s *no* information. Obama himself admitted he was a blank slate that people could write their dreams upon. The Press openly talked about how it was a thrill to be in the same room as him.

                Lots of people (even today) take that and breathlessly assume he must be brilliant. I find it hard to believe that a brilliant mind would have no measurable accomplishments 25 years past college. At some point absence of evidence becomes evidence of absence.

                And refusing to accept the fact that a black person did reasonably well, in what is basically the ‘highest level’ of education, certainly *sounds* like it has racist origins and is playing off racism.

                Ah the race card. It’s racist to ask for proof of Intelligence. It’s racist to ask for proof of Competence. It’s racist to point out that great minds can understand middle school math. It’s racist to point out he was a professional academic who didn’t produce anything academic. It’s racist to ask a Black candidate about his grades even if Bush felt comfortable with his being posted online.

                Part of this is a problem with Affirmative Action. If colleges are allowed (and encouraged, and forced) to bend the usual rules for certain groups of people then those groups’ qualifications are suspect.

                A claim of intelligence and/or competence is affirmative, i.e. you need to prove that, we don’t just default to its acceptance. There’s been a lot of claims of his Brilliance, he doesn’t seem to have shown it before being President.

                We don’t know exactly how well he did [at Harvard], but he certainly didn’t do bad.

                Then post something I can evaluate.

                I’m not playing your game of proving I did well at or ‘earned’ every little thing.’

                Harvard Law is a small thing? And… why not? Assume he is the most brilliant guy in the last 30 years to go there and he’s got all A’s. How does he not post that? Or make one phone call and tell Harvard to release it?

                My assumption is that Trump’s claim to be the #1 student the year he graduated is bull, and that’s why he won’t release his records. If Trump actually were the #1 student then he’d be rubbing our noses in it by posting it on billboards. Bush let the college post his grades just to prove that he’d really gotten B’s and C’s rather than failing outright and passing because his Daddy’s friends purchased a building or something.

                Obama does what’s in his political best interest. Releasing his records isn’t.Report

              • j r in reply to Dark Matter says:

                1) Grades were adjusted for race to put him in the top 16%?

                What does that mean? I have heard of schools accepting lower SATs/GPAs from minority students, but I’ve never heard of a school adjusting grades for minorities to qualify them for academic honors.

                I just Googled various versions of the phrase “grades adjusted for race” and found nothing. What exactly do you mean when you say that you’ve seen colleges bend the rules? Sounds like an attempt to say something nebulous enough to suggest something, but not specific enough to say anything meaningful.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to j r says:

                What exactly do you mean when you say that you’ve seen colleges bend the rules?

                Engineer in the Honors program who did NOT meet the black-letter requirements for being in the Honors program or graduating with honors.

                Female, charismatic, Black, great networking skills, survived homework by trading answers, very socially intelligent, and didn’t get middle school math. Same time period as Obama. Not Harvard but a top U with a highly respected program.

                Either Social Justice Warriors are in all parts of the U’s administration or the U was doing what is in the U’s best interest. They didn’t adjust her GPA upwards, they just ignored it.

                At the time I wondered if she’d kill someone through general Engineering incompetence. I decided the answer was “no”, she’s not going to go out and do Engineering, she’ll go into Administration or Management or something where her social skills are what’s important, and will be a credit to the U and it’s decision to give her a degree with honors.

                Similarly, Obama is a credit to his U and the honors they gave him, regardless of what his grades were.

                Occasionally Obama made me wonder if he was another example of her. He seemed to have serious holes in his intellect for someone who was supposed to be world class, and the world class intellects I’ve known go from place to place leaving a trail of measurable accomplishments. On the other hand if your skill set includes convincing the Nobel Peace Prize committee that you deserve one, maybe that’s enough.Report

              • Burt Likko in reply to Dark Matter says:

                I’m curious as to what intellectual lacuna(e) you perceived in Obama, at least that were relevant to the duties of the Presidency.

                I disagreed with his position on certain things from time to time, like his interpretation of the War Powers Act with respect to air combat operations in Libya, and his unwillingness to more robustly assert his inherent power as Commander-in-Chief to excise the odium appurtenant to interrogating prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, and a couple of other things I’m sure. There was the “57 states” thing but that was a slip of the tongue rather than a sober assertion of fact. Point is, being wrong about something is different than being ignorant about that same thing.

                But I cannot think of an instance in which he acted or spoke at any length about anything when he demonstrated ignorance of a sufficient corpus of relevant information before opening his mouth or using his pen. You clearly feel differently; what have I missed or forgotten?Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Burt Likko says:

                I’m curious as to what intellectual lacuna(e) you perceived in Obama.

                It’s really hard to judge someone’s intellect while they’re in office. I doubt Trump created his own Supreme Court list and then we have Reagan. And you’re right that a slip of the tongue doesn’t count.

                A world-class mind doesn’t have weaknesses, they’re good at everything and superior at whatever they want. They’re able to get outside their comfort zone and should expect to be successful. And they are most certainly successful and productive inside their chosen field.

                For Obama, two things stand out:

                1) When he was talking about his then middle school children, he let slip that he was incapable of helping them with their math. That is an amazing admission of weakness. It doesn’t mean he’s dumb, but it does rule out the whole “world-class mind” idea.

                2) He was an academic for 12 years and produced no academic articles. He should have what? Two or three dozen articles and three or four books?

                Once again there doesn’t seem to be an explanation that reflects well on him. Lack of ability? Lack of work ethic? Something else? Afaict, we’re deep into the zone of that engineer who couldn’t do math.

                , at least that were relevant to the duties of the Presidency

                In terms of duties relevant to the Presidency I think his lack of leadership and management experience were serious problems.

                25 years of real world experience is more than enough time to rack up a track record of at least attempts… and a lack of attempts suggests this is way outside his comfort zone and/or he not interested, which is a problem for a President.

                On his #1 priority, armed with a blank check, unlimited manpower, and total freedom from any GOP interference, not only did the Obamacare website fail on rollout but none of his people had a clue it had any problems.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                1) When he was talking about his then middle school children, he let slip that he was incapable of helping them with their math. That is an amazing admission of weakness. It doesn’t mean he’s dumb, but it does rule out the whole “world-class mind” idea.

                Uh, no. First, Obama said that he got lost WRT Malia’s math when *she entered high school*. That was, literally, his words.

                ‘Well, the math stuff I was fine with up until about seventh grade. But Malia is now a freshman in high school and — I’m pretty lost. You know, it’s tough.’

                Pretending he got lost on *middle school* math is just obvious dishonesty. The logical progression is he was fine on seventh grade, started vaguely to lose track in eight, and in ninth didn’t follow it anymore.

                It’s worth pointing out that his kids are going to an elite school. I *didn’t* go to an elite school, but even I managed to take algebra in eight grade, and then geometry in in ninth grade. It is not an unreasonable assumption that that is what she is taking, also.

                In other words, Obama is a typical adult who does not know algebra well, and doesn’t know geometry at all, almost certainly because *he does not use them in daily life* so has completely forgotten them. Obama was a *lawyer* and a *law professor*, then a politician. Him not remembering math from decades early does not make him stupid.

                This is, of course, pretending he actually *did* have a ‘problem’ with her math, and wasn’t just making a self-deprecating joke about how his kid was better at math than he was, especially since he followed it up by saying he solves the problem by having the Department of Energy send a physicist over to help with her homework.

                Which would, obviously, be inappropriate and illegal (And very weird), so I *presume* most everyone understands that part, at least, was a joke, so it’s somewhat odd to treat the first part as some sort of serious statement.

                tl;dr – President is asked on a talk show if there’s any subject of his daughter’s that he’s not good at. President, clearly making a joke, says he’s not good at Malia’s *high school* math, but because he’s president, he can just misuse some government employed physicists to help out with her homework.

                Dark Matter decides this means the president is not intelligent.

                Once again there doesn’t seem to be an explanation that reflects well on him. Lack of ability? Lack of work ethic? Something else? Afaict, we’re deep into the zone of that engineer who couldn’t do math.

                There is an obvious reason he didn’t publish anything: He didn’t want anything interfering with his political ambitions. He didn’t want to take a published stance on anything.

                Which might not reflect well on him, and certainly hasn’t helped his *academic* career. In fact, it makes it look like his academic career existed solely as a stepping stone to politics….much like his legal careers appears to have been. And…I don’t disagree with that. There is a reason he turned down tenured positions.

                But that makes him ambitious, not stupid.

                On his #1 priority, armed with a blank check, unlimited manpower, and total freedom from any GOP interference, not only did the Obamacare website fail on rollout but none of his people had a clue it had any problems.

                I know! And being a law professor, Obama certainly should know about how software development and how to make sure software scales when tested under a large load!

                Wait, no. Obama actually not only has no history with software development at all, but wasn’t actually involved in the development at all. And even if he did test it…it would have worked fine, because it failed *under load*. It did not *scale*. He could have spent *days* playing with the site before release, had his entire staff trying to use it, and everything would have worked correctly.

                The president is not an engineer. The president is not a software engineer, either.

                Here is the Government Accountability Office report of what went wrong there:

                http://www.gao.gov/assets/670/668834.pdf

                The blame is pretty clearly laid on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the people in charge of the website:

                We determined that the agency undertook the development of Healthcare.gov and its related systems without effective planning or oversight practices, despite facing a number of challenges that increased both the level of risk and the need for effective oversight. In addition, CMS incurred significant cost increases, schedule slips, and delayed system functionality for the FFM and DSH systems due primarily to changing requirements that were exacerbated by oversight gaps. Lastly, CMS identified major performance issues with the FFM contractor but took only limited steps to hold the contractor accountable.

                The head of that, incidentally, is always a medical profession, who is *also* not an expert in software.

                I.e., the problem here is that a government agency that didn’t really know what it was doing did something on its own. It thought it knew software enough to hire a contractor, and thought it could estimate demand, and it was wrong about both things. It also had trouble pinning down requirements or doing oversight.

                Which is exactly why the GAO said the Office of Management and Budget should have been much more involved. They actually know this stuff.

                I.e., the ACA launch misfire was due to, basically, structural problems in the government. Probably due to the fact that the Federal exchange site was originally planned to service *much less* people, so it wasn’t treated seriously at first. (They were thinking, like five states. Not more than half the country.) And Obama does, indeed, have to take *some* blame for those. The buck stops there.

                But stating that was because he’s not very smart is idiotic. Identifying scaling problems in large pieces of software is a *very specific* skill, that requires a lot of knowledge to set up and test. I’m not even sure how to have written tests to test every aspect of the ACA’s website, and I am literally a computer programmer. Non-programmers usually *aren’t even aware it’s a thing* to test specifically.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                Uh, no. First, Obama said that he got lost WRT Malia’s math when *she entered high school*. That was, literally, his words.

                Well, the math stuff I was fine with up until 7th grade. But Malia is now a freshman in High School and I’m pretty lost. It’s tough.

                -Obama, October 2012 on Leno.

                Malia had *just* started highschool as a freshman and had just turned 13, school starts in September. So he was fine *before* 7th grade, started having problems then, and was lost somewhere before 9th grade.

                I managed to take algebra in eight grade, and then geometry in in ninth grade. It is not an unreasonable assumption that that is what she is taking, also.

                Are you suggesting that a genius level intellect can have problems with algebra and/or geometry? Even with the book right there in the context of trying to teach an 11 year old?

                Obama is a typical adult who does not know algebra well, and doesn’t know geometry at all, almost certainly because *he does not use them in daily life* so has completely forgotten them. Obama was a *lawyer* and a *law professor*, then a politician. Him not remembering math from decades early does not make him stupid.

                I guess you are suggesting it. One of my kids is the right age for this and struggles in math so I’m going through this right now. I don’t have a world class mind, and I haven’t used geometry since school. It’s *easy*. You don’t need to remember anything. Presumably you’ve gotten smarter since middle school.

                It can take a few seconds or even a minute to relearn it from scratch… but the context of this is sitting down with a middle school math book with the equations, how to apply them, and so forth all right in front of you.

                And agreed, the typical Joe-Average person might struggle and have problems with all this… but that’s my point. He’s describing his math-intellect as being average or even below average.

                Dark Matter decides this means the president is not intelligent.

                No, I’m not saying “not intelligent”, I’m saying “not the world class mind which his ardent admirers read into him”.

                There is an obvious reason he didn’t publish anything: He didn’t want anything interfering with his political ambitions. He didn’t want to take a published stance on anything…. But that makes him ambitious, not stupid.

                So by normal human standards his actions over a 12 year span show a lack of ability and/or drive. But for the Great One they indicate the opposite. You’re assuming brilliance only because you have assumed brilliance.

                You’re also ignoring that in all these decades Obama spent supposedly getting ready to be President, he skipped the management and leadership aspects of the office and did *nothing* to prepare himself for that part of it.

                Wait, no. Obama actually not only has no history with software development at all, but wasn’t actually involved in the development at all.

                We’re talking about management and leadership. This was a massive failure of both of those. I don’t expect him to know Software because he has no background in it… but it looks like we shouldn’t expect him to know anything about management or leadership for the same reasons.

                When we start talking about someone failing (and this was a failure) because they’re outside of their skill set and outside of their comfort zone, and they’ve shown over a long period of time they can’t function outside of that zone, then we’re not talking about a world class mind.

                Obama’s responsibility for his own highest priority didn’t end after he gave the speech and signed a bill. It’s on him that he didn’t know he was supposed to put competent people in charge, or that he didn’t know how to select competent people.

                Probably due to the fact that the Federal exchange site was originally planned to service *much less* people

                From your link, lack of load ability was *one* problem in a list of categories.

                The problem isn’t so much that they didn’t test it at all, not testing is fine if engineers know for a fact that it’s not working. The way it was reported in the papers, the person who Obama had put in charge had no clue anything was wrong and was totally confident that it was turn key ready, time for a victory dance. I don’t know how many layers of management down you need to get to before you find someone who knew there were problems, but that was a problem in itself.

                So what we had was an expensive lesson in “software projects are hard”, which anyone who was widely read should already know (massive software project blowups make the news on a yearly basis), and which anyone who cared to do a one minute google search could certainly figure out. If he had no idea software is hard then he lacks intellectual curiosity, which is somewhere between possible and likely, but that also bespeaks of an intellect which isn’t world class.

                In theory we had a genius leader who knew how to do a one minute google search, entered ready to be President, and who had Obamacare has his top domestic priority.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Malia had *just* started highschool as a freshman and had just turned 13, school starts in September. So he was fine *before* 7th grade, started having problems then, and was lost somewhere before 9th grade.

                “But Malia is now a freshman in High School and I’m pretty lost.”

                When someone says ‘But blah blah is *now* blah, and I’m something’, it means ‘That first part became true, and due to that…’

                And I have no idea why you think giving the months is relevant. Obama is talking about how he *now* is lost. In October. From schoolwork that, yes, started *that year*, a month or two earlier. (Note: School actually starts in August pretty much everywhere. I have no specific information about Malia’s school, but September is fairly late for school to start.)

                Moreover, I notice you completely removed the part when I point out that this is clearly self-deprecating humor and *not true*. He was talking about how his kids were in school and very smart, Leno asked him if there was anywhere he was having trouble keeping up with them, and he (hopefully) makes up a story about having the Department of Energy send people over to help him out!

                You seem to be assuming that he made up the later story, but legitimately has a problem helping with homework. Whereas I suspect the most ‘grounded’ that story is in real life is that Malia might have asked ‘How do you calculate cosine’ and Obama’s ‘I…honestly don’t remember. What does the book say?’.

                Are you suggesting that a genius level intellect can have problems with algebra and/or geometry?

                And now we see how the goalposts have been moved from me asserting that ‘Obama, as far as the evidence presents itself, did fairly well at Harvard Law.’ (Which was a rebuttal to the claim he was stupid.) to you now trying to disprove he’s a *genius*.

                Obama is not a genius. I have never, at any point, said he was a genius.

                Obama has, as far as I can tell, roughly the same-ish IQ as two presidents before him. Yes, including Bush, who had some sort of *speech* problem that made him sound dumb sometimes, but he was not actually unintelligent. They all belong in, I dunno, the top quarter of the population in intelligence. (I have not bothered to form an opinion about Bush Sr.)

                I am mostly judging them by personal interviews that seemed candid (Although you never know.) where they were able to converse intelligently on a wide range of topics. And not their speeches, because their speeches, of course, are written by other people, and frankly seem to be no judge of anything at all. (Reagan managed to give fairly good speeches while going senile.)

                Obama additionally was a lawyer, like Clinton, and on top of that a professor in constitutional law, which means he had to be fairly *knowledgeable* about certain specific things which was later useful in the government. (Knowledge and intelligence, of course, being two different things.)

                But Obama, as far as I know, is not any sort of genius, nor has anyone been *claiming* he was a genius.

                Incidentally, there are plenty of geniuses that cannot do math very well. If anyone has been calling Obama a genius, I suspect it was a ‘political genius’, not some sort of math genius or general purpose genius, which don’t even really *exist*.

                Even with the book right there in the context of trying to teach an 11 year old?

                Pssst. Someone in eighth grade is not 11. And you just made up the ‘book right there’ and ‘he still didn’t know’, and all this stuff.

                If there is *any* truth to this at all (As opposed to Obama just making up an anecdote to seem down-to-earth), it is almost certainly that Malia had finally reached the point *he didn’t remember the math offhand*, so he had to pay attention to help with it. Most adults remember anything that’s pre-algebra. Somewhere mid-algebra is the point where most adults have to start looking things up.

                So by normal human standards his actions over a 12 year span show a lack of ability and/or drive. But for the Great One they indicate the opposite. You’re assuming brilliance only because you have assumed brilliance.

                I don’t understand why you think I’m assuming brilliance.

                I am assuming *calculation*. He wanted to run for office. In fact, when he was hired by his *law firm* he basically admitted to them that he was working for them just to get political connections. It’s not absurd to think that’s also why he was an ‘academic’ also.

                So he *didn’t write any academic papers about politics that could be held against him*. He didn’t produce anything that could be used in a political ad as a position of his.

                Obama, as an academic, is…not a very successful one. He never even tried to be. ‘Academic’ was just something he was doing until he could get into politics, thus he didn’t sabotage that later political career by writing any papers that he could be quoted from later. (Despite the fact he had reached the height of his academic career if he didn’t publish.)

                From your link, lack of load ability was *one* problem in a list of categories.

                Not really. The other problems were *missing features*, and considering the hard deadline they were up against, complaining about those when the site barely got finished in time (Or, really, didn’t.) is a bit pointless.

                A lot of the supposed ‘missing features’ didn’t show up until long after the site was ‘working’. I think the only one that anyone noticed was the ability to shop and see what there was *before* you spent years filling out the stupid prompts.

                We’re talking about management and leadership. This was a massive failure of both of those. I don’t expect him to know Software because he has no background in it… but it looks like we shouldn’t expect him to know anything about management or leadership for the same reasons.

                A website that doesn’t scale correctly is not a massive failure. It’s a pretty normal sized failure. It happens on launches and redesigns all the time.

                Scale is *literally the most difficult problem* in website design when it is relevant to the design at all. (Most websites have so little traffic they do not care.) Failing at scale is basically the most common problem of large websites.

                This is also why companies like Facebook roll out changes slowly, and why new features on Google seem to show up semi-randomly for individual users. Those companies are worried those features might not scale, so keeps a careful eye on them while handing them out, ready to yank them back if they cause problems. The testing is *so hard* that the companies don’t even want to do it, instead it’s just ‘Let’s let 1% of our users do it, see if it breaks something. No? Okay, let’s try 5%…20%….etc, etc’

                healthcare.gov, of course, couldn’t do that. Everyone showed up at once.

                And you’re about to say ‘Well, they should have known about it, then, and planned for it’.

                THEY DID.

                In fact, they found out it was horrible at scaling in their final testing…which apparently, due to delays, was mere *weeks* before launch.

                The problem was that they didn’t have time to fix the problems they found. They put patches on patches and cleaned up some stuff and were working up until the deadline. The contractors didn’t realize the scope of the problem until fairly late, and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services didn’t seem to either.

                The president then rolled the dice and hoped they managed to finished up all the problems. They did not. And it wasn’t helped by ten times as many people trying to use the system at the start than was planned for.

                And it is perfectly reasonable to claim ‘The president choose wrongly not to delay the launch’. I disagree with that, because frankly delaying the launch would have been just as problematic politically as what happened, but you can argue otherwise.

                Asserting that’s a sign of dumbness is, well, dumb.

                So what we had was an expensive lesson in “software projects are hard”, which anyone who was widely read should already know (massive software project blowups make the news on a yearly basis), and which anyone who cared to do a one minute google search could certainly figure out. If he had no idea software is hard then he lacks intellectual curiosity, which is somewhere between possible and likely, but that also bespeaks of an intellect which isn’t world class.

                It’s weird how you seem to know that massive software project blowups make the news all the time, but have not realized that is because *we do not really understand how to prevent that*.

                In fact, we’re pretty bad at that in *all* large construction projects. But software development is rather infamous for having serious problems that people only realize exist *right at the end*. The project will be mostly on track, almost everything is finished, and then it turns out that something is completely broken or much harder than expected and will take months to fix.

                This is, literally, *how software development works*. There is a programming joke about it: The first 90 percent of the code accounts for the first 90 percent of the development time. The remaining 10 percent of the code accounts for the other 90 percent of the development time.

                The problem arises when there’s a deadline, and the people in charge will not change the deadline. Programmers try papering over problems, and sometimes it mostly works, and sometimes doesn’t.

                And, basically, the Federal government falling prey to the most common software development failure in human history , by running into an extremely difficult-to-solve problem at the last minute…makes me think the government is, uh, basically of normal competence levels. The government is not super-hyper-competent. Who knew?

                It certainly doesn’t make me think Obama is unintelligent. I’m not even 100% sure there was enough miscommunication for it to be a *firing offense* of Kathleen Sebelius. I understand, politically, why she had to go, but I’m not really sure she messed up at any level.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                When someone says ‘But blah blah is *now* blah, and I’m something’, it means ‘That first part became true, and due to that…’

                the math stuff I was fine with up until 7th grade.

                you completely removed the part when I point out that this is clearly self-deprecating humor and *not true*.

                Because you’re arguing both that he didn’t say it, and that when he did say it he was joking. Further the joke part is bringing in the power of the government to bear on his kid’s homework. The rest of it works great with the truth no matter where the truth is, “was fine with up until High School”, “until Calculus”, etc.

                And now we see how the goalposts have been moved from me asserting that ‘Obama, as far as the evidence presents itself, did fairly well at Harvard Law.’ (Which was a rebuttal to the claim he was stupid.) to you now trying to disprove he’s a *genius*.

                Wrong both times. First let’s quote me:

                Dark Matter: Obama… seemed to have serious holes in his intellect for someone who was supposed to be world class, and the world class intellects I’ve known go from place to place leaving a trail of measurable accomplishments.

                So no, I’ve never said he was stupid, just not a world class genius.

                2nd you’re claiming he dominated at Harvard Law. Upper 15% at Harvard puts him one Standard Deviation above Harvard’s median, which is itself two above the general population, and that is indeed getting into Genius / World Class territory (or savant: Law… but we have no evidence suggesting that).

                Obama has, as far as I can tell, roughly the same-ish IQ as two presidents before him. Yes, including Bush, who had some sort of *speech* problem that made him sound dumb sometimes, but he was not actually unintelligent. They all belong in, I dunno, the top quarter of the population in intelligence.

                You don’t realize the implications of what you just said. IQ has a mean of 100 and Standard Dev of 15. 25th percentile would be about IQ of 110. Merely Bright (i.e. 25th percentile) people going to Harvard would struggle.

                If you’re right then you just explained why it’s not politically advantageous to publish how he did.

                Someone in eighth grade is not 11.

                Middle school (6th grade) is 11, I should have said 12 for 7th grade.

                And you just made up the ‘book right there’ and ‘he still didn’t know’, and all this stuff.

                I’m going off his words and my own experiences. It’s impossible to clear up school math methodology questions without the book there. You need to know what they’re supposed to know. The typical question is “I don’t understand *this*” or “I got *this* wrong”. Without a definition of “this” you’re at a road block.

                If anyone has been calling Obama a genius, I suspect it was a ‘political genius’,

                Then they’re misusing the term and should be calling him a “savant”, someone who is really good inside a limited field. That’s fine… except the amount of skill needed to defeat HRC has recently come into question.

                So he *didn’t write any academic papers about politics that could be held against him*. He didn’t produce anything that could be used in a political ad as a position of his.

                He doesn’t have to produce “academic papers about politics” he could have produced “academic papers about law” on subjects too esoteric to be quoted. If he was amazingly good at Harvard law then that’s a fine option and almost expected. He didn’t produce anything at all, and 12 years is a very long time to doing nothing… and this lack of results seems to be a habit of his.

                A website that doesn’t scale correctly is not a massive failure. It’s a pretty normal sized failure. It happens on launches and redesigns all the time.

                For a project with an unlimited budget for the President’s #1 priority where the President has put his rep on the line? I think we need to agree to disagree.

                I’m not even 100% sure there was enough miscommunication for it to be a *firing offense* of Kathleen Sebelius. I understand, politically, why she had to go, but I’m not really sure she messed up at any level.

                The way it was reported, Sebelius didn’t think they were going to have any problems and was expecting a product that would work. Your own link details lots of “bad management created this” problems.

                What is Sebelius’ track record of success with projects of this nature? Nothing, right? If memory serves, she was replaced by someone who had a track record of success in managing software projects.

                You don’t get to link to bad management because of inexperience / incompetence without admitting that we had bad management because of inexperience / incompetence. The people who were in charge shouldn’t have been in charge. And yes, Obama put them there.

                If we’re talking about a guy who has shown zero interest or ability in management (etc) throughout his entire life, who you view as merely somewhat smart, then it shouldn’t be a surprise if successful management is a problem.

                I find it weird that you’re claiming both that he’s not a genius and also that no failure was because of him lacking something. Let’s reverse the question, what would you say are Obama’s weak points and how did it affect his Presidency?Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                So no, I’ve never said he was stupid, just not a world class genius.

                Your claim that he wasn’t able to help his kids with their middle school math was *introduced in response* to the idea that Obama wasn’t intelligent.

                And claiming that he’s not a world class genius *is* moving the goalposts, to start with. You want to assert that’s how you entered the conversation, fine, but that just means you *started* with a strawman argument instead of moving the goalposts *to* that strawman argument.

                Absolutely no one here is claiming that Obama is a genius in any sense. The only claims I have ever heard that he is a ‘genius’ were calling him a _political_ genius, which isn’t really a form of ‘genius’ (Or being a savant), but more ‘very politically canny’.

                And frankly, that ‘political genius’ claim is pretty well accepted to be nonsense at this point, it really was just a way for Democrats to try to justify some of the dumb political stuff he did with ideas he was playing 11-dimensional chess, when it turns out he was playing perfectly normal 2-dimensional chess…which he sometimes did good at, and sometimes didn’t.

                You don’t realize the implications of what you just said. IQ has a mean of 100 and Standard Dev of 15. 25th percentile would be about IQ of 110. Merely Bright (i.e. 25th percentile) people going to Harvard would struggle.

                I’m not sure how you think I couldn’t realize the implications. If I said an *IQ*, I might be confused (Although almost everyone *over-estimates* IQ), but I said a percentage.

                I think Obama (The three previous presidents, in fact.) is more intelligent than 75% of the population. I am not confused about what that means. He *might* be more intelligent than that, but I have very little to base that on.

                2nd you’re claiming he dominated at Harvard Law. Upper 15% at Harvard puts him one Standard Deviation above Harvard’s median, which is itself two above the general population, and that is indeed getting into Genius / World Class territory (or savant: Law… but we have no evidence suggesting that).

                First, can we not use ‘claiming’ for facts? Obama graduated magna cum laude from Harvard. Everything I read says that approximately 16% of students used to graduate with that. (Before Harvard decided that was too many and changed the rules to the top 10%.) There’s not really a lot of ‘claim’ there, unless someone wants to count the *exact* percentage of people who got it his year. (If anything, I might be over-estimating it, because 16% seems to be *where it crept up to* before Harvard corrected it, which means it probably hadn’t reached that high when Obama graduated.)

                But I think the problem is that you think Harvard *and* the presidency requires a lot more intelligence than I think they do.

                College requires dedication and hard-work and previously-good education. Obama got a degree in law, which also requires a fairly good memory.

                The presidency, in addition to all the ‘charismatic’ stuff that is needed to get elected, and having policies that give him the support of his party, requires a few things…and none of them are really intelligence:

                He or she requires the ability to pick useful people to surround themselves with, a willingness to listen to others (Both people they have picked, and others, even nominal ‘enemies’.), the ability to change their mind if required, a basic concept of fairness, and an ability to understand and remember moderately complicated situations.

                The presidency actually *is* a CEO position, not a position that needs a genius…which is somewhat ironic because we just got a ‘CEO president’ who is completely incapable of doing *any* of those things. But I digress.

                For a project with an unlimited budget for the President’s #1 priority where the President has put his rep on the line? I think we need to agree to disagree.

                Literally every large software project I have ever heard of has done both of two things:
                1) Gone over budget
                2) Not been finished at deadline, resulting in a) random delays, or b) a buggy launch on time.

                The FBI spent $170 million dollars, and 200-2005, on a project called ‘Virtual Case File’. It was, in every possible way, a complete failure.

                Then the US Air Force spent $1.1 *billion* dollars on a logistics system called Expeditionary Combat Support System between 2005 and 2012, which was canceled because it was utter shit and going to only be able to do a 1/4th of what it was supposed to…for another billion dollars.

                healthcare.gov is actually fairly unique in my mind because *they got the thing working very quickly*. That, frankly, was a bit mind-blowing to me. It was, like, 90% workable on time, and mostly within budget! Fucking GOLD STAR EVERYONE!

                It’s worth pointing out that web rollout of the Medicare part D had *the exact same problems*…but the Bush administration delayed the launch for a *month*, and it was still a bit buggy there.

                If there is any wrong thing Obama did, it is not realizing the problems and delaying the launch. *That*, I fully blame Obama for…assuming that was the wrong decision, which I am not 100% sure of.

                I suspect that had not the ACA been under constant attack, the launch of that website would have been delayed also, and we’d think of it like Medicare D…it launched late, and had some slight troubles at launch. But I think he made a political decision to launch,. and it is perhaps worth arguing it was the wrong one, but I don’t really care there.

                You don’t get to link to bad management because of inexperience / incompetence without admitting that we had bad management because of inexperience / incompetence. The people who were in charge shouldn’t have been in charge. And yes, Obama put them there.

                If there was ‘bad management’ WRT the ACA launch, it was *way* below anywhere Obama could see it, or even anywhere Sebelius could see it. It was a government contracting problem.

                However, there wasn’t even bad management. There was *average management*. Average. This is *exactly like how every large software projects goes*. All of them. It is a *systematic problem that comprises the entire software development industry*.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                And claiming that he’s not a world class genius *is* moving the goalposts, to start with. You want to assert that’s how you entered the conversation, fine,

                If you want to keep claiming I said something on this thread, then you back it up with a quote of me.

                Literally every large software project I have ever heard of has done both of two things…

                That’s because you hear of them because they’ve done those things. Software is hard, not impossible.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                If you want to keep claiming I said something on this thread, then you back it up with a quote of me.

                Here is the very first mention of Obama supposedly doing badly at math:

                Pinky: As I’ve said before, Barack Obama’s presidency left a lot of people thinking that a president doesn’t have to be intelligent.

                You: Is this about Obama confessing he couldn’t help his kids with their middle school math?

                That’s because you hear of them because they’ve done those things. Software is hard, not impossible.

                …which is exactly what I said.

                Software development fails up against hard deadlines. This is as much a rule of thumb as ‘objects fall downward’…you can point to astronauts in the space station, but in 99% of the contexts we’re talking about, it is true.

                It is, to repeat myself, a systematic, industry-wide problem. Either projects will be delayed, or they will be released incomplete and buggy. (Or both.)

                Microsoft is, quite obviously, a professional software development country, with decades of experience…and they had to delay *every single OS release*…until they wised up and started keeping the release dates a secret until they’re done. There are huge, professional game companies that have had to repeatedly delay launches, or, instead, launched with large bugs. (Or both.)

                This it not some weird isolated thing, it’s not even a ‘common’ thing. It is literally *how things work*. A lot of software companies have finally noticed their complete inability to estimate this stuff…and, like MS, have fixed that by not announcing release dates until products are done and just need some polish and packaging. (Game companies like to write DLCs between that point and launch.) The software development industry has, at this point in time, basically have decided the problem of an accurate time estimate is *unsolvable* and just given up on the concept.

                And thus I am not the least bit startled that it happened!(1)

                Software is hard, not impossible. Accurate *project deadlines* for software, however, *do* appear to be impossible, or at least are so hard we haven’t figured them out.

                And because I know that, I don’t necessarily think it reflects poorly on someone that managed such a project, and, frankly, at the level of distance of *Obama*, it’s more like he’s the CEO of a gigantic company that managed one project while doing millions of other things.

                Likewise, the actual *type* of problem, lack of scalability, is the most common problem in any project that *needs* scalability. We’ve been getting a better grip on it, and that, *unlike* the constant underestimation of project deadlines, will eventually be solved. But if you asked, in 2013, ‘What problem is most likely to affect a complicated internet connected system that ties together a bunch of things, and is designed to serve millions of people?’, I would have said ‘Bet they’re having trouble making it scale’.

                You’re basically asserting that a taxi company owner doesn’t know what he’s doing because one of his drivers rear-ended someone. That, uh, happens all the time for people who drive that amount. It’s not even particularly *weird* auto accident.

                1) In fact, given some of the failures of *government contracted* software development, I’m somewhat amazed that we got a ‘project that really needed another six months testing and development’ instead of ‘complete piece of shit that utterly fails at everything’.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                Here is [your] very first mention of Obama supposedly doing badly at math:

                Yes, I do claim that Obama said he was bad at math, even to the point of middle school math. I’ve also quoted and sourced him directly.

                You’ve been claiming I said he was dumb, presumably in general.

                You’re basically asserting that a taxi company owner doesn’t know what he’s doing because one of his drivers rear-ended someone. That, uh, happens all the time for people who drive that amount. It’s not even particularly *weird* auto accident.

                I’m saying that we had a maximum priority project that suffered from multiple management failures. Obama had zero management experience. It shouldn’t be hard to draw a line there.

                It seems odd you don’t want to list this as a weakness of his.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to Dark Matter says:

                Let me expand on this whole “bad management” thing with a different example.

                The 2nd Gulf War’s big problem was bad management. Lack of planning, making lots of “In Iraq” decisions based on our own local politics, and leaving Rummy in charge *long* after it was clear he was the source of a lot of this.

                Are we really supposed to believe that Bush had nothing to do with this?Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                The difference between the ACA website and Iraq is that when Obama realized things weren’t going well, he…instantly changed things up, switching contractors, putting in more money, making it a priority, and fixing it.

                He reacted in a matter of days, and things were working within a month. And then the person had been in charge of it and screwed it up resigned.

                Basically, if I’m forced to actually state an opinion about it, the screwup of the ACA website launch actually *showed Obama’s leadership skills*. A perfectly reasonable screwup happened, and he got it fixed pretty quickly and competently.

                And you can call it ‘bad planning’ if you want, but, functionally, the president wasn’t really able to change a lot of the planning once the ACA passed. He was actively fighting hostile forces try to destroy it. If he had said ‘We need to launch later’ a month out, when was starting to become clear the site might not be ready in time, he’s handing the enemy ammunition. Again, it’s possible he made the *wrong* choice there, but it’s not an *incompetent* choice.

                Meanwhile, Iraq…really didn’t get fixed. I mean, yes, a country is much harder to fix, I won’t claim Bush could have just hired a different military and been done in the month, but a lot of completely broken stuff was left broken for *years*, without even slight attempts to fix it. Dumbasses fresh out of Heritage Foundation internships were left in charge of things they clearly could not handle, because, shrug, why not?

                So even if you somehow give them a pass on the rosy estimates of how it would work *before* the war, you still hit the reality of the fact that, *at some point*, they should have said ‘Holy crap, we’re going to have to recalculate all this, because we really aren’t doing that well.’

                Although a better example of Bush’s problems would be Katrina, which started out as something that was definitively wasn’t his fault at all. But it had a lot of situations that could have been quickly resolved by him, except he didn’t really even try to.

                Of course, there are a lot of excuses as to why he didn’t, but the thing is, all those are excuses that could have been removed by him just *demanding* to talk to people and *demanding* be given authorization to do stuff, and that if he didn’t get it, he’d do it anyway, and they could have lots of fun trying to have him impeached because he illegally saved drowning people. Instead, he just sorta vaguely waited for people to fill out proper forms and follow proper channels. No. You are the goddamn president and you can call anyone in this country and they will take your call, so *start calling* and straighten this out. (Or, hell, have John Yoo write another memo about how it’s legal *anyway*, he’s good at that.)

                Obama did that, with the ACA website. Bush…didn’t.Report

              • Dark Matter in reply to DavidTC says:

                The difference between the ACA website and Iraq is that when Obama realized things weren’t going well, he…instantly changed things up, switching contractors, putting in more money, making it a priority, and fixing it.

                1) You’re trying to claim that he’s a better manager than Bush. Problem is that even if true, that sets the bar so low that “really bad” is still a possibility.

                On a side note I’m not sure how much Katrina was a “Bush” thing. After you subtract massive media hype (cannibalism), local (the mayor hiding in the bathroom), and state (refusal to let the feds in) screw ups, how much is left?

                Iraq on the other hand showcased his flaws in all their glory. All trails led to his office, it wasn’t just “on his watch”, it was “the people he put in place were supposed to be getting the job done and if they wouldn’t or couldn’t, it was his job to replace them”.

                2) “making it a priority”? Meaning he hadn’t made his own #1 priority a priority before this? If true, why is this an excuse?

                3) “when Obama realized things weren’t going well…” Translation: He had no clue before it hit the news that there was a problem, even though this had been going on for years. That’s kind of my point.

                the screwup of the ACA website launch actually *showed Obama’s leadership skills*. A perfectly reasonable screwup happened, and he got it fixed pretty quickly and competently.

                You’re making the assumption that it was Obama who stepped in and made things work and handled the reorg. Given how many people wanted the site to work (i.e. every Dem), and given how high a priority it was, that seems like a big assumption. This falls under the whole “it’s tough to evaluate the President or separate his work from his minions”.

                Obama showed leadership when he refused to enforce his own red line and take military action against Syria. There were strong forces arguing for action, he refused. Similarly he showed leadership in making the ACA… both good and bad. Good in that he eventually got it passed, bad in that it took forever to get it done and cost him his supermajority.

                While we’re making Bush v Obama comparisons, both of them managed to bungle a winning hand in Iraq, basically from some combination of inept leadership and bad management.

                Probably more than half of being President is management… which is why I wanted Romney in there. Just for fun he does things like taking on impossible management challenges like making the Olympics Profitable. Give that job to either Bush or Obama and I’m sure after the blow up people would be whining about how *hard* it is and how there are embedded institutional problems.Report

              • Pinky in reply to Dark Matter says:

                However you describe it, I think it’s safe to say that something happened in the past 8 years that changed the American voter’s definition of “farce”. At least, a sizable percentage of the people who voted in both primaries. I listen to Barack Obama and it’s pretty clear to me what that was.Report

              • Mike Schilling in reply to Pinky says:

                Bush->Palin->Trump, a simple progression downwards. And whose fault it is? Obviously, the guy who did his homework and could speak in complete, grammatical sentences.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to Dark Matter says:

                The starkest example is his Nobel prize (nominated when he’d had at most 11 days in office). The head of the committee said “We have not given the prize for what may happen in the future. We are awarding Obama for what he has done in the past year….”

                He *did* stop torture within the first 11 days. That, in my book, clearly deserves a peace prize, but I don’t think that’s why *they* did it.

                Did he get it for not being Bush? For being the first Black President?

                Most people, myself included, are pretty certain that giving the Nobel Peace Prize to Obama was basically the Nobel Committee trying to award a *negative* Nobel Peace Prize to Bush.

                And the Nobel Prize committee is supposedly made up of the finest minds on the planet judging the highest accomplishments on the planet.

                Uh, no. They gave *Henry Kissinger* a Noble Peace Prize. A war criminal! For ending a war he committed war crimes in!

                They’re clearly complete morons, at least on the *Peace* Prize side.Report

              • Troublesome Frog in reply to DavidTC says:

                I don’t get all the crap flinging over the Nobel Prize thing. It’s not like it’s something Obama did to all of us. He was just doing his thing and the Nobel Prize committee decided to award it to him. If I had to guess, I’d guess that he was pretty ticked off when it happened because it’s a political loser all the way around.

                Of course, if he had declined, this discussion would be about how Arrogant Narcissist Obama thought he was too good for a Nobel Peace Prize and shamed America by turning it down.Report

              • I think it is a mockery of “The Idea Of Obama”.

                Everybody knows that The Real Obama doesn’t line up with The Idea Of Obama. They’re not alike at all. (See also: #45.)

                That said, The Idea Of Obama is something that is kinda funny to point out from time to time (especially now that we can see the difference between TRO and TIOO (See also: #45)).

                Pointing at the Nobel Peace Prize is a way to tweak the whole TIOO thing. Remember when the *WORLD* believed in TIOO?

                Good times.Report

              • Troublesome Frog in reply to Jaybird says:

                This still seems like more of a condemnation of what some people thought about Obama than about Obama himself. If the benchmark for a politician is whether he lives up to the fever dreams of his biggest fans, nobody comes out looking particularly good.

                I just don’t see why it’s hard to just accept that Obama was a bright, competent politician who had some successes and some failures. Blaming him for the shortcomings of his supporters or for a Nobel committee using him to make a statement or just making up nonsense about special grades for black people at Harvard just doesn’t seem necessary.Report

              • If the benchmark for a politician is whether he lives up to the fever dreams of his biggest fans, nobody comes out looking particularly good.

                It’s not about the benchmark for politicians.

                It’s about the fever dreams manifesting in real life as a Nobel Prize.

                It’s about The Idea Of Obama.

                You know what? I’m pretty sure that there are still people out there who believe in The Idea Of Obama.Report

              • Troublesome Frog in reply to Jaybird says:

                Those people are awful, aren’t they?

                Therefore, Obama is pretty terrible. Or something.Report

              • I’m not trying to imply that they’re awful.

                No more than children are awful for their belief in whatever figments they believe in.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Mike Schilling says:

                I WISH!

                Sadly, he seems to be sane.Report

              • j r in reply to DavidTC says:

                He *did* stop torture within the first 11 days. That, in my book, clearly deserves a peace prize, but I don’t think that’s why *they* did it.

                That is one of the most ridiculous statements that I’ve ever heard. I take that back. It’s only ridiculous if you understand the backstory to how and why Obama stopped torture and what took its place. And the popular understanding of these things is always lacking, which I guess is why Obama got the Nobel.

                Two things to note: One, the torture policy was already on its way out well before GWB left office and not for any humanitarian reasons. Basically, no one in the WH wanted to officially sign off on torture to such a degree that the CIA folks running those operations felt safe from later prosecutions. So, the CIA basically started refusing to do it.

                Also, and this is the more important one, torture stopped, because the US just didn’t know what to do with captured enemy combatants. The Obama administration didn’t want to keep filling Guantanamo Bay and nobody wanted to bring these guys to the US and give them a trial. The answer was a greater use of the “Disposition Matrix.” You can read about that here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disposition_Matrix

                So, I’ll just go back to my original statement and say that awarding a US president the Nobel Peace Prize for banning torture, a practice that had effectively gone out of use already, and replacing it with the practice of increased targeted assassination might be the most ridiculous thing that I’ve seen on the internet today. And I read a Breitbart headline earlier.Report

              • DavidTC in reply to j r says:

                I think I was perhaps unclear when I said ‘in my book’.

                Ending a torture program does, indeed, deserve a peace prize. In my book.

                And that was all the information that the Nobel Peace Prize people were working off of *at the time*. So if *I* had been on the Noble Peace Committee, I would have said ‘Yes, he deserves it for that.’

                Even if the program had *practically* shut down at that point, there’s a difference between ‘program in mothballs’ and ‘unequivocally state this is something the US does not do’. (Although that is almost pointless without *prosecutions*.) Also, I’m not sure we *knew* at the time that the CIA had grown reluctant.

                *Later*, it came out that he had swapped that completely unacceptable program for a different 99.999% unacceptable program.(1) Which would have made the committee look very stupid…

                …except they already do look stupid, because they gave a Nobel Peace Prize to Henry “Literally a War Criminal” Kissinger.

                However, as I said, I don’t think that’s why they gave him a Peace Prize, but it’s not an absurd justification.

                He also ran on the idea of not starting pointless wars, and I suspect that, more than anything, is why he won the Not-Bush Peace Prize. Possibly some combination of saying ‘no pointless wars’ and saying ‘no torture’.

                This is just evidence of how completely idiotic it is to give a prize for people *saying* what they’re going to do. But, again, we already knew they were dumb.

                1) As I’ve said before, I think targeted killings can, *hypothetically*, be justified, whereas torture *literally never can be*. This justification would require not only a *lot* more care than the government currently takes to avoid killing other people, but also require some sort of adversarial trial system that it is hard to figure out how it could exist and require the government to *present actual evidence* as to why someone needing killing and reach a real threshold under the law. But it is, at least, hypothetically possible as something the government could *possibly* be allowed to do…whereas torture isn’t. (The targeted killing as we *currently* practice it, however, is basically just random murder of people, mostly not even the people we say we’re trying to kill.)Report