ALL HAIL PRESIDENT TRUMP
"To clarify, violence can itself be a component to threat if, and only if, it was threatened beforehand. To continue the "trespassers will be shot" example, let's say landowner has such a sign, but when people trespass anyway the landowner smiles and waves at themas they steal his television; this reduces the credibility of future threats the landowner makes. In other words, threats are promises and the power of a threat is based in part upon credibility - specifically, credibility in regards to promises of future behavior, as opposed to credibility of past facts. In regards to North Korea, part of what makes Trump effective in international diplomacy is his unusually high future-credibility. While the media enjoys picking apart Trump's casual relationship with the facts of what happened (something Scott Adams would tell you isn't very relevant in the first place), Trump keeps campaign promises much better than most Presidents do - his behavior in office so far is very predictable to his base that voted for him, as he said well in advance he'd kill TPP, create a travel ban, end DACA, repeal the Obamacare mandate, cut taxes, and pull out of the Iran deal. He even keeps promises when his base hoped he was joking - for example, killing not just terrorists but also the families of terrorists with drone strikes. All this plus "time traveler" tweets like predicting the fall of A.G. Schneiderman back in 2013. Although I hate to admit it, it's the crazier, sometimes bloodier promises he has kept that have made Trump so brutally effective at bringing North Korea to the negotiations table - when Trump threatens to nuke you, you seriously consider for far too long a moment whether he's crazy enough to actually do it. "wtf I love Crimeans now When Stephen Colbert was killed by HYDRA's Project Insight in 2014, the comedy world lost a hero. Since his life model decoy isn't up to the task, please do not mistake my performance as political discussion. I'm just doing what Steve would have wanted. Last edited by ScrotieMcB#2697 on May 11, 2018, 12:03:14 PM
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" So Crimea is the best state(territory) in Russia, and they lost it? |
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" Last time I ended up in a fight was in elementary school. I'm, you know, not stupid or incapable enough to not solve situations peacefully. " Its got nothing to do with rights. If someone's dumb enough to push me past the line, they deserve the consequences. If you go and kick a bear and get mauled by it, it wasn't the bear's fault either. " I see. You are in favor of everyone waving their guns on each others' face. That'll ensure total safety as no one will pull the trigger when everyone's being threatened. You for one shouldn't be allowed to own a gun, that's for damn sure. " Incorrect. Violence used as a retaliation to prevent escalation is completely fine. The reason you view retaliatory violence as an issue is because you're gun-crazed lunatics. Civvies using guns against other people shouldn't be considered violence but terrorism. Whipping a gun out in any situation is an amazing way to escalate it through the roof, not the other way around. In fact, anyone who thinks that a civvie pulling a gun out can pacify a situation has one or more screws loose. |
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" Crimea is NOT like Texas to them haha. It has a much longer Russian history, than it does Ukraine history though. Why Russia took it back, was because it was stripped from Russia as a gift to Ukraine for the evil things Russian soviet commies did to Ukraine. Given BY soviet communists. Most Russians did not want that to happen but had no way of stopping the transfer. It never should have been given away. I like Ukraine and Russia both, but the land stripped away like that, was pathetic. Sadly it'll be decades before Ukraine can politically admit it should have been given back. So more political hate will happen between them. Comparing it to Texas though? haha More like what we'd feel about half of rhode island. Not much. But Ukraine decided to spit in Russia's direction and go West politically. Russia IMO had every right to take back that "gift". Never should have been gifted away in the first place. |
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"So 'flexing' in a language of words is for hormonal idiots, but threats made in the language of violence are fine and dandy? Also, if the retaliation is not an escalation, explain to me how it would be sufficient deterrent to prevent future attacks. "I think it's interesting how you suddenly shifted from people in general to civilians. Do you think an officer of government pulling out a firearm has the same inability to pacify a situation? When Stephen Colbert was killed by HYDRA's Project Insight in 2014, the comedy world lost a hero. Since his life model decoy isn't up to the task, please do not mistake my performance as political discussion. I'm just doing what Steve would have wanted. Last edited by ScrotieMcB#2697 on May 11, 2018, 12:38:16 PM
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Well I support giving away California, but definitely not Texas.
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" They probably have government officials like Judge Dread where he is from. |
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" Crimea is extremely important to Russia in strategic and historical terms. It was russian longer than Texas was american. They didn't lost it, the soviet communists in their infinite wisdom ("communism will last forever") gave it to Ukraine. In 2014 Russia simiply used the (western instigated) coup in Kiev, to take the land back. I compared it to Texas because of the huge national meaning that land has for Russia. Especially the city of Sevastopol. Calling the annexation of Crimea some sort of "attack on Europe", is ludicrous. When night falls
She cloaks the world In impenetrable darkness |
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" Calling unlawful stealing of land an attack is not ludicrous. Now dont get me wrong, I support Russia's right to annex land from Neville Chamberlain Europe, it's their fault for laying down and allowing it. |
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lol dumb civvies and their guns, btw im tough
Multi-Demi Winner Very Good Kisser Alt-Art Alpha’s Howl Winner Former Dominus Multiboxer Last edited by Manocean#0852 on May 11, 2018, 3:50:37 PM
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