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@TheDredPriateRoberts
trump supporters are on average less educated than not. intelligence and education are correlated. so, is it all that far fetched that they might be less intelligent?
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During the 2016 election, Donald Trump famously proclaimed "I love the poorly educated!" Well, if "poorly educated" is a euphemism for "cognitively challenged," new research finds they loved him right back.
It reports Trump voters, on average, performed more poorly than Hillary Clintonsupporters on a standard test widely regarded as a good indicator of intellectual ability.
"Intellectual factors played an important role in the 2016 election," writes a research team led by Yoav Ganzach of Tel Aviv University. "These results suggest that the 2016 U.S. presidential election had less to do with party affiliation, income, or education, and more to do with basic cognitive ability."
In the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science, Ganzach and his colleagues analyzed data from the American National Election Studies, which included 5,914 participants in 2012 and 4,271 in 2016.
Besides expressing their attitudes toward that year's presidential candidates, participants took a standard test of verbal ability. Specifically, they were presented with 10 sets of words, and asked "to identify the word or phrase in a set of five that was the closest to the target word."While hardly comprehensive, the test "is considered a good indicator of general cognitive ability," the researchers note.
After taking into account participants' party affiliation, the researchers found intellectual ability was a strong predictor of attitudes toward the two major candidates in 2016. Specifically, they found "clear negative relationships of verbal ability and education with attitude toward Trump."
In contrast, they found "weak, nonsignificant relationships of verbal ability and education with attitude toward [Mitt] Romney" in his failed 2012 campaign. In both elections, higher levels of education and verbal ability were associated with support for the Democratic candidate [Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton].
"Support for Trump was better predicted by lower verbal ability than education or income," the researchers add. "Our analyses indicate that support for Trump was less about socioeconomic standing, and more about intellect."
Ganzach and his team note that Trump, on the campaign trail, expressed his opposition to both socially liberal beliefs (such as support for abortion rights and opposition to racism) and fiscally conservative beliefs (such as free trade). Both sets of beliefs have been linked in past research with higher cognitive ability, so it makes sense that their appeal would be largely limited to those who score lower on such measures.This research adds to the rapidly growing list of findings attempting to explain why the American voters (although not a majority) supported a candidate widely viewed as lacking the qualifications or temperament to be president.
While economic anxiety has been largely ruled out as a likely explanation, studies have pointed to whites' fear of declining social status in a rapidly changing society, as well as racist and sexist beliefs, tribalism, possessing an authoritarian mindset, and even being prone to anxiety, and thus susceptible to Trump's fear-based appeals.
Ganzach's findings align with those of another recent study that found Democrats who crossed over to vote for him were the least likely demographic to engage in analytical thinking. This may be because, in many cases, they just aren't good at it.
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perhaps if trump is bluffing then it might be okay to make threats to close the border. if mexico refused to comply after it was closed, trump would surely fold. thus it only makes sense if he's bluffing. i dont think he should bluff when there are thousands of ways to get mexico to do what we want that doesnt involve false pretexts and pain to us if they are done. the trusty old upping the sanctions on mexico until they comply, for instance.
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@ronjs
it's sad you don't think God is the loving being the way he is portrayed in those experiences
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@DBlaze
the opening post shows why there shouldn't be confederate statues. to keep them would be like germany keeping nazi statues.
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@Outplayz
trump isn't much of a writer. he'd probably have someone else write the book for him.
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even the scholars who are considered republican, put trump in the bottom five.
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this is according to the 170 expert members of the American Political Science Association’s Presidents and Executive Politics section who filled out the survey
questions, comments, words of wisdom?
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But feminists—the narcissists they are—don’t dare fathom blaming themselves for their problems. Instead of admitting they’re too lazy and undisciplined to look decent, they try to convince everybody else that there’s nothing intrinsically wrong with them and that their triple chins and high blood pressure should be idolized as “the new beautiful.”
So-called “fat-shaming” might just be the most pathetic event at the Self-Victimization Olympics. For one thing, since almost three-quarters of women in America are overweight, that actually makes them the majority and therefore logically incapable of taking refuge in “muh minority rights.”
Furthermore, fat isn’t an intrinsic characteristic, like race or gender – it’s the aftereffects of idleness and gluttony. It’s like being asked to take pity on a man who chose to saw off his arm for the insurance money, or feeling bad for a four-pack-a-day smoker with emphysema. Such fates could’ve easily been avoided, and the only person to be blamed for such pitiful circumstances are the individuals who CHOSE to engage in the dangerous behavior to begin with.
Civil rights revolve around what people are, not what they do. “Fat” is not an identity, it’s a consequence – dare I say, even a representation of one’s failing content of character. With more than 800 million people in the world at risk for starvation, how insulting is it that these fatass feminists dare posit themselves as “victims” of anything other than their own bad decisions?If only those proud lardasses would drop a couple of pounds, the money used to pay for their Metformin prescriptions and motorized scooters could be diverted to fighting childhood cancer and finding cures for Alzheimer’s. Because these shameless Instagram whores are too vain to admit they’re killing themselves with terrible diets and too apathetic to stop cramming Ring Dings down their gullets like Tic-Tacs, millions of innocent children and senior citizens continue to suffer and die.urth of ALL taxpayer-subsidized health costs if only these waddling, thunder-thighed, self-professed “BBWs” would lay off the Chunky Monkey and figure out how to use an elliptical every now and then.
Don’t take it from me, take it from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – obesity, a totally PREVENTABLE condition, is now the greatest contributing factor to death in this country.
There’s nothing liberating or empowering about that kind of self-destructive behavior and there’s absolutely nothing noble or admirable about sucking funding from taxpayers’ coffers to deal with the dire consequences of your own poor choices. In that, ridiculing, mocking and belittling fat women isn’t just reasonable – it very well could save untold lives.
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I’ve always found it moronic—if not morosely comedic—that middle-aged women think the plastic proportions of Barbie dolls have a negative influence on the emotional well being of little girls.
Perhaps these “body positive” activists should try waltzing down the boys’ aisle some time. Row after row of miniature super-heroes and professional wrestlers, all sporting impossibly muscular physiques – surely, such perverse parodies of masculinity would have the same deleterious effects on boys’ developing body images, right?
Strangely, you don’t see 50-year-old men—with their sagging bellies and receding hairlines—raising a fuss about G.I. Joe’s “unrealistic” anatomy. Nor do you hear of any organizations attacking the NFL, NBA and bodybuilder magazines for giving boys unpleasant ideas about nigh-impossible-to-attain physiques.
Why? Because men do something that women simply don’t – when it comes to their own bodies, they take self-responsibility for the end-outcomes.
One look at the “fat activist” ranks demonstrates the “body acceptance” jihad is an almost entirely female phenomenon. Statistically, this makes sense, since the bulk—pun most definitely intended—of America’s obese populace is female. But therein lies a key difference between the sexes: while men wallow in obesity in relative silence, female fatasses are utterly obsessed with politicizing—and ultimately, weaponizing—their unhealthiness.When irresponsibility becomes a “disease”How a whale managed to get this far inland, I’ve no idea.
Obesity doesn’t just happen out of the blue. In fact, there’s an algorithmic process for how it happens – a person consumes far more calories than he or she expends on a day-to-day basis. One must marvel at the incredible gluttony that occurs for a 5’6 female to maintain a 300-pound-plus body weight. By one metric, to do so would require the person in question to gobble up at least 4,200 calories every 24 hours – more than double the recommended daily allowance established by the National Academies’ Institute of Medicine.
In that, being fat isn’t “a disease.” It’s the consequences of overconsumption and a sedentary lifestyle. But today’s third wave feminists can’t accept they and they alone are responsible for their miserable health conditions – and since it’s much easier to normalize their biologically suicidal lifestyles than hit the treadmill, naturally they try to make a virtue out of their biggest character defects.
Don’t you just love it when feminists use the phrase “unrealistic body image,” as if thin, beautiful women don’t exist anywhere in the world? As evident by the entire industry of modeling still existing, however, it quite obviously is possible to not be a lumbering, 300-pound wad of redundant adipose tissue. Of course, such requires moderation, dedication and vigilant repression of instant gratification wants – i.e., the kind of personal discipline and restraint fat women just can’t muster.Why would anybody be proud of being unhealthy?Care for a shag?
At least men are honest about this kind of thing. Average Joes like you and me admit we don’t have the kind of tenacity and willpower to have a physique like Brock Lesnar or JJ Watt. We don’t blame “genetics” and “societal norms,” we blame our damn selves for not having the proper impulse control and sticktoitiveness.
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
yes you could speed in a non sports car, but you are more likely to speed in a sports car. that's the analogy point that isn't sitting right with you according to the overall evidence. i could buy if you thought a person isn't more likely to kill with an assault rifle, but i don't know how you can claim they aren't more likely to choose an assault rifle over a hand gun if they do kill. at least, that's what they evidence indicates with all that math i did. if you are able and willing, i'd be open to seeing your math if you find some numbers that you find credible. i know the numbers for assault rifles in circulation and their use aren't well settled, but i used the best numbers i figured i could find.
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@dustryder
i'm not sure id agree that it's poorly supported. do you see any other valid way to interpret the graph, that says guns deaths are wildly out of whack while non gun deaths aren't.....to mean anything other than people are more likely to kill if they have a gun? i know with a lot of the statistics, there is the correlation versus causation argument so you dont know for sure that more guns leads to more deaths (maybe there are more deaths so that leads to more guns, or something). but i dont see another valid way to interpret the gun v non gun homicide graph.
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the title of this thread is the title of the article.....
doesn't this prove that species can evolve from one species to another? why or why not?
any other questions, comments, or words of wisdom?
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@dustryder
can you make any sense out of why what you said about gun v non gun homicides and that graph, isn't clear to everyone?
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
here is an analogy. if you have a sports car, you are more likely to speed than if you don't have a sports car. but, most cars that speed are not sports cars.
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Donald Trump Is Trying to Kill YouThere’s a lot we don’t know about the legacy Donald Trump will leave behind. And it is, of course, hugely important what happens in the 2020 election. But one thing seems sure: Even if he’s a one-term president, Trump will have caused, directly or indirectly, the premature deaths of a large number of Americans.Some of those deaths will come at the hands of right-wing, white nationalist extremists, who are a rapidly growing threat, partly because they feel empowered by a president who calls them “very fine people.”
Some will come from failures of governance, like the inadequate response to Hurricane Maria, which surely contributed to the high death toll in Puerto Rico. (Reminder: Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens.)
Some will come from the administration’s continuing efforts to sabotage Obamacare, which have failed to kill health reform but have stalled the decline in the number of uninsured, meaning that many people still aren’t getting the health care they need. Of course, if Trump gets his way and eliminates Obamacare altogether, things on this front will get much, much worse.But the biggest death toll is likely to come from Trump’s agenda of deregulation — or maybe we should call it “deregulation,” because his administration is curiously selective about which industries it wants to leave alone.
Consider two recent events that help capture the deadly strangeness of what’s going on.
One is the administration’s plan for hog plants to take over much of the federal responsibility for food safety inspections. And why not? It’s not as if we’ve seen safety problems arise from self-regulation in, say, the aircraft industry, have we? Or as if we ever experience major outbreaks of food-borne illness? Or as if there was a reason the U.S. government stepped in to regulate meatpacking in the first place?
Now, you could see the Trump administration’s willingness to trust the meat industry to keep our meat safe as part of an overall attack on government regulation, a willingness to trust profit-making businesses to do the right thing and let the market rule. And there’s something to that, but it’s not the whole story, as illustrated by another event: Trump’s declaration the other day that wind turbines cause cancer.
Now, you could put this down to personal derangement: Trump has had an irrational hatred for wind power ever since he failed to prevent construction of a wind farm near his Scottish golf course. And Trump seems deranged and irrational on so many issues that one more bizarre claim hardly seems to matter.
But there’s more to this than just another Trumpism. After all, we normally think of Republicans in general, and Trump in particular, as people who minimize or deny the “negative externalities” imposed by some business activities — the uncompensated costs they impose on other people or businesses.For example, the Trump administration wants to roll back rules that limit emissions of mercury from power plants. And in pursuit of that goal, it wants to prevent the Environmental Protection Agency from taking account of many of the benefits from reduced mercury emissions, such as an associated reduction in nitrogen oxide.
But when it comes to renewable energy, Trump and company are suddenly very worried about supposed negative side effects, which generally exist only in their imagination. Last year the administration floated a proposal that would have forced the operators of electricity grids to subsidize coal and nuclear energy. The supposed rationale was that new sources were threatening to destabilize those grids — but the grid operators themselves denied that this was the case.
So it’s deregulation for some, but dire warnings about imaginary threats for others. What’s going on?
Part of the answer is, follow the money. Political contributions from the meat-processing industry overwhelmingly favor Republicans. Coal mining supports the G.O.P. almost exclusively. Alternative energy, on the other hand, generally favors Democrats.
There are probably other things, too. If you’re a party that wishes we could go back to the 1950s (but without the 91 percent top tax rate), you’re going to have a hard time accepting the reality that hippie-dippy, unmanly things like wind and solar power are becoming ever more cost-competitive.
Whatever the drivers of Trump policy, the fact, as I said, is that it will kill people. Wind turbines don’t cause cancer, but coal-burning power plants do — along with many other ailments. The Trump administration’s own estimates indicate that its relaxation of coal pollution rules will kill more than 1,000 Americans every year. If the administration gets to implement its full agenda — not just deregulation of many industries, but discrimination against industries it doesn’t like, such as renewable energy — the toll will be much higher.
So if you eat meat — or, for that matter, drink water or breathe air — there’s a real sense in which Donald Trump is trying to kill you. And even if he’s turned out of office next year, for many Americans it will be too late.
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@dustryder
what's your opinion of the opening post which compares gun homicides versus non gun homicides?
here is the graph
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
seriously though, what kind of grades did you get in math in school? i got an A in every math class i ever took, including college level calculus and graduate level statistics.
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do you not understand math? do you not understand statistics?
i can't make out what all the numbers mean in your list there, but it looks like it would probably show the same conclusion. that is, overall handguns are more likely to be used in murder but only because there are more handguns in circulation. if you compare the percent chance a rifle or a hand gun will be used, a rifle has a higher chance.
i think you're just too stupid to understand the distinction. which is no surprise given how i can never get a sensible response of of ya.
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
@Snoopy
you can do the math yourself
i googled that there are 2.5 million assault rifles in circulation. 374 rifle deaths per year. there are 11000 gun homicides. there's a gun for every person in the usa, 340 million.
what's the math say? 374 divided by 11000 is 3.4 percent of deaths are from rifles. 2.5 milliion divided by 340 milliion is less than a percent. so what does this mean? despite rifles being less than a percent of guns, they cause 3.4 percent of deaths. that is, a rifle has a higher percent chance of being used to murder than a non rifle.
i think dred is just getting stuck on the fact that hand guns OVERALL are more likely to be used, but that doesn't mean each hand gun has a higher percent chance of being used for murder than a rifle.
obvious dred is the one who doesn't know what he's talking about. and he still hasn't answered the question of why nongun homicides aren't wildly out of whack in the usa, which it would be if we just had a more murderous bad person society as he claims.
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trying to get a straight answer from dred is like trying to nail jello to the wall
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
i didn't say that there are more assault rifle killings than hand guns. i said the likelihood an assualt rifle will be used is higher than the likelihood an other gun will be used. there are more hand guns, so there are more hand gun deaths. i dont know the number but for example there's a ten percent chance an assult rifle will be used to murder, but a five percent chance a handgun will.
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
do you want me to keep asking until you answer it, or admit you have no answer?
you still haven't explained it. here is the graph
why are gun homicides wildly out of whack, but not non gun homicides? you say i haven't proven guns cause problems, but i dont see any other way around that graph.
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-where there is more gun control, there is less murder. this is the scientific consensus, as shown with the literature review. being a literature review makes this a lot more informing than just being a single study; we see the consensus forming. also included is a link to a poll of scientists but a literature review itself makes the claims even stronger.
-where there are more guns, there is more murder, across geographic regions from localities and larger. this is also a lot more informing because it a literature review of lots of studies. what's more, people are shown not to kill with other weopons instead of guns, as is often argued, because if they did there would be no correlation here.
-women are five times more likely to be killed if their significant other has a gun. this is a practical point in illustration of the guns v murders correlation. same in individual lives as general trends
-you are more likely to be murdered if you have a gun, as well as those close to you
-States with more gun control have fewer mass shootings
-only around two hundred and fifty killings are done in the name of self defense per year. people like to pretend defense is such a huge thing, but the odds of being murdered is is closer to forty times higher. the odds of being shot and not necessarily killed are upwards of four hundred times higher.
-we have half the worlds guns in the usa but a small percent of the worlds population
-Police are more likely to kill unjustifiably in low gun control and high gun areas due to their increased fear, and police are more likely to be shot themselves in those areas.
-we have half the worlds guns in the usa but a small percent of the worlds population
-Police are more likely to kill unjustifiably in low gun control and high gun areas due to their increased fear, and police are more likely to be shot themselves in those areas.
-Compared to 22 other high-income nations, the United States' gun-related murder rate is 25 times higher.
-High school kids in the USA are eighty two times more likely to be shot than the same kids in other developed countries.
-it is claimed that most murders are gang related, but this looks to be factually incorrect in the link. even if higher numbers floating around on the internet are true, our murder problem still there if you take out the gang murders from consideration. the numbers here can be arrived at with basic math.
-this really isn't just a mental health problem. we don't have more people with mental health problems than other countries.... just more people with guns. the study controls for mental health factors v other factors.
-we dont have more crime than the rest of the world, just a lot more people getting shot and killed. you aren't more likely to be mugged here, for instance, but you are more likely to be mugged and shot in the process. again a gun problem. showing it's not just deviants being deviants as some suggest but an emphasis on the gun problem.
-You can tell this is a gun problem, not just a bad person problem as the gun lobby says, also by comparing non-gun homicides of similar countries as the USA, and then adding guns to the mix: non-gun homicides are slightly on the higher side but within normal range, while gun homicides go wildly higher. If this was a bad person problem at its core, there would be a wildly higher amount of non-gun homicides as well, but that's not the case. Included is an article describing this phenomenon and a link with a picture.
https://i.imgur.com/skcT8qr.png
https://i.imgur.com/skcT8qr.png
https://www.reddit.com/r/gunpolitics/comments/71n1u2/gunnongun_homicide_rates_in_oecd_countries_for/
-people like to say assault rifles are not that dangerous, because there are only a few hundred murders with them per year out of only around ten or so thousand of gun murders. the thing is though, the percent chance an assault rifle will be used to kill someone is significantly higher than the chance other guns will be used to kill someone.
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you aren't more likely to be mugged in the usa, but you are more likely to be mugged and shot in the process. again a gun problem.
you aren't more likely to find people who are mentally ill in the usa, but you are more likely to find people with easy access to guns. again a gun problem. not a mental health problem like conservatives say.
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also if you look at the long laundry list of things that go up with increased guns, it's hard to deny it. police shooting people, police being shot, women being shot, anyone owning a gun getting shot, etc etc. if there was just one factor that went up with increased guns, that's one thing. but there's tons of studies that show different factors getting out of whack.
you just choose to ignore it all. but that's on you.
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@TheDredPriateRoberts
you still haven't explained it. here is the graph
why are gun homicides wildly out of whack, but not non gun homicides? you say i haven't proven guns cause problems, but i dont see any other way around that graph.
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i must be on shrooms cause your profile picture looks like a raccoon wearing a suit
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"As for Friedman’s claim that keeping a gun out of someone’s hands won’t disincline them to commit murder, Cukier said, “The evidence doesn’t support that. Look at the numbers.” She went on to analyze homicide statistics from 2016: “If you look at the rate of murders not caused by guns and you compare Canada, the U.S., the U.K., and Australia, what you see is that it’s roughly the same in all four countries, although the U.S. rate is slightly higher,” Cukier said. In other words, in a scenario without guns, the four populations exhibit roughly similar rates of homicidal behavior.
That changes when you look at the rate of murders that were caused by guns. “As soon as you add guns into the mix, you see that the U.S. has six times the rate of gun murders as Canada has. And Canada has 15 times the rate of gun murders as the U.K., and four times the rate of Australia. It’s very clear that the difference in the murder rates between those countries is a function of the availability of firearms, period.” "
That changes when you look at the rate of murders that were caused by guns. “As soon as you add guns into the mix, you see that the U.S. has six times the rate of gun murders as Canada has. And Canada has 15 times the rate of gun murders as the U.K., and four times the rate of Australia. It’s very clear that the difference in the murder rates between those countries is a function of the availability of firearms, period.” "
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@Snoopy
the issue i want addressed is what i posed in the opening post. why are gun homicides wildly out of whack with the rest of the world in the usa, but non gun homicides not wildly out of whack? if all the murder are just bad guys being bad guys and guns have no influence on whether a murder occurs, why aren't non gun homicides wildly out of whack too?
here is the graph since it doesn't always clearly show up in the links i posted.
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so i see a lot of verbiage in this thread, but not one post that tries to explain the issue posed in the opening post. that is, gun v non gun homicide comparisons.
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@Greyparrot
do you doubt that i can quickly find another twenty news articles that say this would be a bad idea?
if you can't find any supporting your position, just say so.
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@Greyparrot
and if you read the article, they reference other auto experts. and i can also cite all the other main stream media. i know you think it's all fake news. but if you can't find credible people that say what you say, maybe you should reexamine your beliefs.
i take your lack of citations as a tacit admission you have nothing to back up what you say.
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@Greyparrot
well u got me in that i dont know how severe the damage would be. but all the experts say it would be bad, all the news sources. maybe the produce or cars can't be gotten elsewhere or itd be too expensive. but maybe it's not as bad as i'm thinking.
show me some credible news and experts that believes as you do, otherwise you're just blowing smoke.
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@Greyparrot
are you positive that all that produce and every specific part that needs made, can come from somewhere else at a decent price? that's a big assumption on your part.
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@Greyparrot
can you find any credible news sources that agree with you? all the sources i see say closing the border would be a disaster.
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You can tell this is a gun problem, not just a bad person problem as the gun lobby says, also by comparing non-gun homicides of similar countries as the USA, and then adding guns to the mix: non-gun homicides are slightly on the higher side but within normal range, while gun homicides go wildly higher. If this was a bad person problem at its core, there would be a wildly higher amount of non-gun homicides as well, but that's not the case. Included is an article describing this phenomenon and a link with a picture.
https://www.reddit.com/r/gunpolitics/comments/71n1u2/gunnongun_homicide_rates_in_oecd_countries_for/
i know thedred and grey have the typical non answers, so i'm curious if anyone else can defend the position that guns don't cause problems and that this is just a bad person problem.
also here is an overview of some issues in gun control science and policy
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this is why it's no surprise to me that the news says trump supporters lack education. education and intelligence go hand and hand. closing down the border is sheer stupidity, and going along with it is even worse. at least trump could be blowing smoke, but his supporters on this are just sheeple and are shameful for how much they go with. fool me once, trump, shame on me... keep fooling me no matter what you do....
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"Members of his own administration have told CNN that he has been warned several times about the economic consequences of a shutdown. One administration official described the effects as "catastrophic" and "a whole world of hurt." But the president continues to contemplate the idea of shutting the border in sections or in its entirety, according to officials."
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"About 16% of all auto parts used in the United States, both at assembly plants and sold at auto parts stores, originate in Mexico. Virtually all car models in America have Mexican parts, she said. Because of that reliance, she said the auto industry would stop producing vehicles relatively quickly.
"You can't sell cars with missing pieces," she said. "You've got to have them all. I see the whole industry shutdown within a week of a border closing.""
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@Greyparrot
@DBlaze
so you disagree with mitch mcconnell that closing the border would have devastating consequences for the economy?
you think stopping half our produce from coming wouldn't phase anything?
you disagree with all the news that says the auto industry would be faltering?
it doesn't take critical thinking skills to think closing the border is good. it's a lack of critical thinking skills. it goes against expert consensus. it's devoid of good judgment.
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@Greyparrot
what say you?
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An irrational creature prone to wild overreaction, rattling its cage at the slightest provocation and indiscriminately flinging its faeces around until everything is covered in excrement.
(That is the original definition from the person who coined the term)
"The devout Trumpanzee is immune to fact or evidence caring only for the unintelligible howls of the tribe's Alpha male"
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half our produce comes from mexico. i just read an article that said USA auto plants would shut down within a week. this is clearly something that would cause a recession or worse, at least be bad for the economy. it would inconvenience and upset a lot of people, so if he did do it, it'd be like the government shut down that he said would last for 'years'.
so who supports him doing this and why?
can all you trumpanzees at least admit in this case that trump is off his rocker?
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"we're passing this amendment because people have a right to a gun". nothing of the sort was ever uttered by the founding fathers.
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