I take it your also agnostic on if Bernie would have invaded Iraq?I didn't "suggest he would have".
I said it's not objective and not accurate for you to assume he wouldn't have. The only accurate stance is being
I take it your also agnostic on if Bernie would have invaded Iraq?I didn't "suggest he would have".
I said it's not objective and not accurate for you to assume he wouldn't have. The only accurate stance is being
I didn't "suggest he would have".
I said it's not objective and not accurate for you to assume he wouldn't have. The only accurate stance is being agnostic and not leaning either way.
".... it is important to understand how such a horrible set of mistakes could have been made in a great democracy. And it is already obvious that the administration’s abnormal and un-American approach to secrecy, censorship, and massive systematic deception is the principal explanation for how America embraced this catastrophe.
Five years after Pres. Bush first made his case for an invasion of Iraq, it is now clear that virtually all of the arguments he made were based on falsehoods. We were told by the president that war was his last choice. But it is now clear that it was always his first preference."
I take it your also agnostic on if Bernie would have invaded Iraq?
If one is agnostic, they should probably not even bother to post about it.
We can safely deduce that Gore wouldn't have invaded Iraq since he was very vocal about criticizing Bush's actions in his book - Assault on Reason (2007, pg103) where he wrote
Gore was also fairly vocal about Bush's policies about military tribunals for suspected terrorists, so based on his actual positions of being anti-the Iraq war, we can safely assume he wouldn't have acted out the same policies he vocally criticized at the time.
You can't take his comments made in 2007 when the political climate had shifted drastically. No way to know how he actually would have acted so no, it cannot be "safely deduced" at all. First its literally induction you are using not deduction and second, there is no way to conclude that with certainty. It's just your opinion.
Well yes its an opinion that is backed up by actual quotes Gore himself made during the Iraq war, so unless you can refute them with some pro-invasion quotes then its a pretty air tight case that he wouldn't have invaded Iraq.
I would say the preponderance of the evidence suggests Bernie would not have invaded were he President in 2000-2004
This just sounds a lot like you’re biasing your response towards the guy you like, regardless of evidence to the contrary.With Gore I'd say there is not enough evidence to conclude a Gore-Liberman Presidency would not have invaded.
This just sounds a lot like you’re biasing your response towards the guy you like, regardless of evidence to the contrary.
I'm saying you made this argument...1. You think there is equal evidence for Gore and Bernie regarding whether they would have invaded Iraq? (Bernie voted against Iraq War in 1991 while Gore vote for it, I don't see how those can be reduced to equivalency)
2. You don't think any alternate history scenario that has Bernie Sanders as US President in 2000-2004 doesn't require a helluva lot more underlying changes to make that even reasonable? Its hard to even imagine how much reality would have had to be different than it was for Bernie Sanders to be the US candidate in 2000. Speculating on Nader would be a lot more reasonable and I think its safe to say that Nader not going to Iraq is a better bet than Gore not going to Iraq.
Then switched it as soon as you were asked about a politician that you liked.The only accurate stance is being agnostic and not leaning either way.
I'm saying you made this argument...
Then switched it as soon as you were asked about a politician that you liked.
How would you do so?Being agnostic doesn't preclude speculating about percentages when asked.
If you ask me if I "know" what Bernie or Nader would have done I would say no I do not know. I cannot "safely deduce" anything as Raoul asserted.
But I can break things down and give percentages if its clear its just speculation. They are two different things.
So it's okay when you do it, but not when @Raoul does it..? Oooookay...Being agnostic doesn't preclude speculating about percentages when asked.
If you ask me if I "know" what Bernie or Nader would have done I would say no I do not know. I cannot "safely deduce" anything as Raoul asserted.
But I can break things down and give percentages if its clear its just speculation. They are two different things.
So it's okay when you do it, but not when @Raoul does it..? Oooookay...
So it's okay when you do it, but not when @Raoul does it..? Oooookay...
How would you do so?
That's not how percentage works.In the only way possible - by induction. Raoul is in the wrong because he cannot deduce a counter factual. He tried to assert a counter factual situation as an actual fact which is not valid.
You are missing the point.
Raoul said "safely deduced". Deduction and induction are two different things. Raoul tried to assert he can deduce something that cannot be deduced (a counter factual).
Had Raoul not tried to assert absolute knowledge of a counter factual - that is literally what deduction is and how it differs from induction - then it would have been a different story.
What I did in specific response to your question (which I might have misunderstood) was induction. What Raoul originally tried to do was deduction. They aren't the same mate. These words have very precise meanings in logic and are not interchangeable.
@Raoul never argued in the absolute. He literally said "I'm pretty sure" that Gore wouldn't have invaded Iraq had he been in office.Surely if said hypothetical discussion was prompted by Raoul suggesting we wouldn't have had an Iraq War under Gore, it's a valid response to point out that invasion would've still been a possible outcome of a Gore presidency? It's hardly a far-fetched suggestion.
@Raoul never argued in the absolute. He literally said "I'm pretty sure" that Gore wouldn't have invaded Iraq had he been in office.
There's also the fact that Gore gave a speech in 2002 criticizing Bush's policy towards Iraq, stating that invading Iraq at that time was a mistake and that it should only be done with the type of massive international support that Bush Sr. had in 1991.
That's not how percentage works.
You're pretty much the only person I know who would take that to the pedantic logical/philosophical extreme in a casual conversation about the results of an election. Anyone with a bit of common sense about the conversation would know that he means the same as "you can safely assume...".He literally said "it can be safely deduced". As I quoted in logic deduction has a precise meaning and that precise meaning IS absolute.
When Raoul says "it can be safely deduced" that literally means logically that he is asserting 100% that something would have happened.
https://www.redcafe.net/threads/2020-us-presidential-elections.433222/page-289#post-24579523
Oh and saying "Gore would only have invaded with massive international support" is a lot fecking different from "Gore wouldn't have invaded"
You're pretty much the only person I know who would take that to the pedantic logical/philosophical extreme in a casual conversation about the results of an election. Anyone with a bit of common sense about the conversation would know that he means the same as "you can safely assume...".
Oh and was there massive international support in 2002/2003? That's what I thought.
It seems they don't when you use them...I'm not going to apologize for words having precise meanings
About an hour earlier...That's what I mean by percentage not guesstimating some precise percent number
I'd give Gore maybe a 40-50% chance of invading
It seems they don't when you use them...
About an hour earlier...
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15368370601054894
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0031-9155/49/2/011/meta
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30196934
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29884550
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29709736
I could go on and on and on, there's loads.
Not sure if this is serious but if serious here's an article explaining some of the basic science, challenges facing research into this topic and the reasoning behind certain countries adopting certain policies regarding the use of Wifi in buildings desinged for use by children https://www.wirelesseducation.org/1073-2/Judging by the abstracts, all of those have to do specifically with cell-phone use (i. e. holding it next to your head). That's a completely different thing than claiming that WiFi is in any way harmful.
Not sure if this is serious but if serious here's an article explaining some of the basic science, challenges facing research into this topic and the reasoning behind certain countries adopting certain policies regarding the use of Wifi in buildings desinged for use by children https://www.wirelesseducation.org/1073-2/
Here's a link to the IARC basis for classification as possibly carcinogenic. http://publications.iarc.fr/_public.../6464cac7e8eca3fa20f11d4d134613e4870158c5.pdf
Sorry if I derailed the thread, I'll leave it here.
The rapid reduction in field strength that occurs with increasing distance means that SARs can be expected to be much lower than from mobile phones under such scenarios.
Studies have also examined the general field strengths in environments where Wi-Fi networks are installed. Foster (2007) measured RF fields at 55 public and private sites in the US and Europe (4 countries) (. . .) In nearly all cases, the measured Wi-Fi signals were far lower than other RF signals in the same environment.
In general, the exposure values were several orders of magnitude below the ICNIRP (1998) reference levels.
The minority also pointed to the fact that no increase in rates of glioma or acoustic neuroma was seen in a nation-wide Danish cohort study, and that up to now, reported time trends in incidence rates of glioma have not shown a trend parallel to time trends in mobile-phone use.
a) So tell me the statements in the article that are false or which one of the cited studies is not objective.Not sure if this is serious, because...
Brexiteers have fantasised about her drowning and now more mainstream conservatives say:
The conservative movement in the us and UK is driven by some death wish towards everyone else in the planet and it has international collaborators and will win.
Brexiteers have fantasised about her drowning and now more mainstream conservatives say:
The conservative movement in the us and UK is driven by some death wish towards everyone else in the planet and it has international collaborators and will win.
The conservative movement in the us and UK is driven by some death wish towards everyone else in the planet and it has international collaborators and will win.
There is.There is a death-drive in the modern conservative movement.
I always suspected this to be a core idea behind the 'left wing populism' some on here champion, so I'm kind of glad you spelled it out. Frankly, I think it's a dead end - not necessarily for gaining (state) power, but for using it in any other way than to reproduce the power-based institutions and relationships it's supposed to overcome. The initial result might be somewhat prettier or perhaps even nastier - history has seen both -, but imo it will ultimately result in the repetition of 'the same old shit'.Using power to transform the world fundamentally - that is something the left has forgotten is possible.
(...)
Boris today is another example. He is creating history.
If there is world left to inherit from them, the parliamentary left should study and learn from Mitch McConnell, Boris, and the left in power should learn from Modi, Netanyahu, etc.
An example of what I mean is this:
- Bernie voted against the 1991 Iraq War.
- Gore vote for the 1991 Iraq War.
- Therefore I believe Bernie has a lower percentage chance of going to war in 2000 had he been president than Gore.
That's what I mean by percentage not guesstimating some precise percent number
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Its like saying in football "if we played that match 100 times, I think X side would have won 75 of those".
That's different than saying "we can safely deduce X would have happened" which impliess a 100 out of 100.