So you are not in favor of enforcement of our immigration laws?mainejeff wrote:You are getting our U.S. Military confused with ICE (otherwise known as Trump's SS).AZGrizFan wrote:
Target practice, bro.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
So you are not in favor of enforcement of our immigration laws?mainejeff wrote:You are getting our U.S. Military confused with ICE (otherwise known as Trump's SS).AZGrizFan wrote:
Target practice, bro.
Only a libtard would think protecting our borders is a waste of money.mainejeff wrote:Trump now pledging to send 15,000 troops to the border.
This guy sure knows how to waste money.
Trump wasn't presidentmainejeff wrote:Saudi Arabia wasn't on the list.AZGrizFan wrote: He tried to be tough on immigration from the ME and you fucking snowflakes pissed and moaned about how unfair it was...you got a real short memory, Jeff.
I don't know if this is related to what you are saying there but I think the bottom line is that US consumers have benefitted greatly from being able to buy cheap goods produced in China. If that situation gets disturbed US consumers are not going to like it. That and the fact that China is a totalitarian government, in my opinion. puts China in the catbird seat. I don't think Trump or anyone else in the United States is going to win a trade war with China.CID1990 wrote:[ And more importantly, the trade infrastructure between us and China is ultimately weighted heavily towards China in ways we cannot affect - such as demand in both countries for the things we each can readily produce
He's the one that proposed the ban moron.ALPHAGRIZ1 wrote:Trump wasn't presidentmainejeff wrote:
Saudi Arabia wasn't on the list.
Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
Those are legitimate concerns. One is structural and is sort of what I was talking about - China makes cheap crap and we demand cheap crap. That is part of the trade infrastructure. That is why using the tariff to manipulate the behavior of bad actors is only a part of what should be an overall strategy - improving our own domestic production capabilities, which also improves the consumer buying power of more Americans... and then more Americans move up out of the WalMart bracket and into the North Face bracket. (Yes, I am aware that the North Face produces some products in China)JohnStOnge wrote:I don't know if this is related to what you are saying there but I think the bottom line is that US consumers have benefitted greatly from being able to buy cheap goods produced in China. If that situation gets disturbed US consumers are not going to like it. That and the fact that China is a totalitarian government, in my opinion. puts China in the catbird seat. I don't think Trump or anyone else in the United States is going to win a trade war with China.CID1990 wrote:[ And more importantly, the trade infrastructure between us and China is ultimately weighted heavily towards China in ways we cannot affect - such as demand in both countries for the things we each can readily produce
Good god you're stupid........ I am completely amazed you can log onto this site and hit submit. You are not to far from smoke signalsmainejeff wrote:He's the one that proposed the ban moron.ALPHAGRIZ1 wrote:Trump wasn't president
Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
Your act......ALPHAGRIZ1 wrote:Good god you're stupid........ I am completely amazed you can log onto this site and hit submit. You are not to far from smoke signalsmainejeff wrote:
He's the one that proposed the ban moron.
Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
You mean before Obama proposed the ban?mainejeff wrote:He's the one that proposed the ban moron.ALPHAGRIZ1 wrote:Trump wasn't president
Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
Whos acting?mainejeff wrote:Your act......ALPHAGRIZ1 wrote:Good god you're stupid........ I am completely amazed you can log onto this site and hit submit. You are not to far from smoke signals
Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
Name one country that allows nonresident aliens the right to vote in national elections, Treep∞∞∞ wrote:I mean we allowed aliens to vote before states began banning it (out of fear) in the early 1900s, with the last being in 20s (and didn't formally ban it until the 90s).
So yeah, I imagine the intent was for anyone born within the US (unless to diplomats) was a citizen.
OK Mr SemanticSkjellyfetti wrote:Pretty sure he's talking about resident aliens.
Yes, national elections. And I don't care enough to look up the answer.CID1990 wrote:OK Mr SemanticSkjellyfetti wrote:Pretty sure he's talking about resident aliens.
I'm also pretty sure he's talking about national elections, no?
I'll continue to wait
Once again you don't think past the initial "this would be nice" stage∞∞∞ wrote:Yes, national elections. And I don't care enough to look up the answer.CID1990 wrote:
OK Mr Semantic
I'm also pretty sure he's talking about national elections, no?
I'll continue to wait
A good democracy allows everyone to have a say; America should be better than every nation.
I guess for 100+ years, no one thought past it either. And yet the nation soldiered on.CID1990 wrote:Once again you don't think past the initial "this would be nice" stage∞∞∞ wrote: Yes, national elections. And I don't care enough to look up the answer.
A good democracy allows everyone to have a say; America should be better than every nation.
Even foreigners?∞∞∞ wrote:Yes, national elections. And I don't care enough to look up the answer.CID1990 wrote:
OK Mr Semantic
I'm also pretty sure he's talking about national elections, no?
I'll continue to wait
A good democracy allows everyone to have a say; America should be better than every nation.
Sounds Nationalistic.Ibanez wrote:Even foreigners?∞∞∞ wrote: Yes, national elections. And I don't care enough to look up the answer.
A good democracy allows everyone to have a say; America should be better than every nation.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yes, I expect to have more voice in my own country than someone who is a citizen of another country. And, the US is the only country I can vote in (since exactly zero countries allow noncitizens to vote in their national elections... with commonwealth exceptions)∞∞∞ wrote:I guess for 100+ years, no one thought past it either. And yet the nation soldiered on.CID1990 wrote:
Once again you don't think past the initial "this would be nice" stage
I get it; you want to have power over another because you're born here - randomly in the context of human history - which somehow makes you more entitled to having a voice than someone else. (We even have Americans screwing Americans with gerrymandering, voter suppression, unequal representation, etc.)
A genuinely fair democracy gives an equal voice to everyone; there's nothing more to it than that. Any consequence which comes from it is separate from the philosophy itself.
I wonder if Trip ever gets tired of having his ass handed to him. Repeatedly.CID1990 wrote:Yes, I expect to have more voice in my own country than someone who is a citizen of another country. And, the US is the only country I can vote in (since exactly zero countries allow noncitizens to vote in their national elections... with commonwealth exceptions)∞∞∞ wrote: I guess for 100+ years, no one thought past it either. And yet the nation soldiered on.
I get it; you want to have power over another because you're born here - randomly in the context of human history - which somehow makes you more entitled to having a voice than someone else. (We even have Americans screwing Americans with gerrymandering, voter suppression, unequal representation, etc.)
A genuinely fair democracy gives an equal voice to everyone; there's nothing more to it than that. Any consequence which comes from it is separate from the philosophy itself.
BTW I can’t figure out why it is that you and others like to point out how things were done a century ago when it suits you.. we did lots of stupid things 100 years ago. Like allowing noncitizens to vote while prohibiting women and blacks from doing so... ah yes! Those old times they are not forgotten!