moon
Satire for Sanity
LyingFishy
You saddo, Jew-hating s.o.b.
Haw, haw............................haw.
Da Jews, Da Jews![]()
You saddo, Jew-hating s.o.b.
Haw, haw............................haw.
Da Jews, Da Jews![]()
Germans voted for it just like Russians voted for Putin and Americans voted for Trump.
Nazis only won 33 percent of the vote in 1932. They achieved totalitarian power by coup. By burning down the Reichstag, dismissing the parliament, and subverting Weimar democracy. And by killing or imprisoning their opponents, the communists, the socialists, and the liberal social democrats.
I agree that the German nation is accountable for not doing more to resist the actions of the Nazis.
Nazis only won 33 percent of the vote in 1932. They achieved totalitarian power by coup. By burning down the Reichstag, dismissing the parliament, and subverting Weimar democracy. And by killing or imprisoning their opponents, the communists, the socialists, and the liberal social democrats.
I agree that the German nation is accountable for not doing more to resist the actions of the Nazis.
Russians did a similar thing by re-embracing totalitarianism under Putin. Some Americans tried to do the same thing on 1/6. Why?
Circumstances are similar: fear of their own future. Being spineless cowards, they choose to let someone smarter, braver and stronger do all the heavy lifting instead of keeping themselves accountable for their own fate.
Americans dance too close to the concept of royalty as it is; political royalty and Hollywood royalty....words that make me gag.
What people are saying when they say "royalty" is that a certain group of people have rights more powerful than others simply by birthright. That's completely antithetical to American ideas.
Do we really want someone in Congress because of their birthright? To be President? Dispensing mandatory advice because of who their family is, not individual achievement?
Consider Prince Andrew; how long did the Royal family hide his crimes?
While I agree some members of Hollywood, political families and British royalty have used their position for good, it doesn't erase the harm they've caused simply because they were born with the privilege of doing it.
Germany went from a King to a dictator back in the 20th Century. Swapping out dictators, be they monarchs or not, is not the solution to a free people, IMHO.
The English monarch has been (in practice) a non-executive head of state since the early 18th century.
If you have an elected, executive head of state, you can get problems once in a century or so - like TRUMP.
Are you advocating monarchy or democracy?
It's possible to have both. England has had both for about a century and a half (and much longer than that with freedom under the law, which is not the same thing as democracy). Early days yet, but it seems to work well
What is virtually impossible imo is to have something like Trump rising to the top in a parliamentary democracy. He would have to spend many years working his way through the House and Senate before he had a chance at the Presidency - and that's assuming his colleagues hadn't seen what he was by then.
You could get some not-so-good ones coming through, but not a Trump type. That isn't his game.
It's possible to have both. England has had both for about a century and a half (and much longer than that with freedom under the law, which is not the same thing as democracy). Early days yet, but it seems to work well
What is virtually impossible imo is to have something like Trump rising to the top in a parliamentary democracy. He would have to spend many years working his way through the House and Senate before he had a chance at the Presidency - and that's assuming his colleagues hadn't seen what he was by then.
You could get some not-so-good ones coming through, but not a Trump type. That isn't his game.
Or we could pass an amendment getting rid of the electoral college and end the tyranny of the minority.
Trump would have never been president if the will of the voter were respected. Trump decisively lost the popular vote both times he ran --> in other words, the American voter knew how to make the right choice.
Or we could pass an amendment getting rid of the electoral college and end the tyranny of the minority.
Trump would have never been president if the will of the voter were respected. Trump decisively lost the popular vote both times he ran --> in other words, the American voter knew how to make the right choice.
It's possible to have both. England has had both for about a century and a half (and much longer than that with freedom under the law, which is not the same thing as democracy). Early days yet, but it seems to work well
What is virtually impossible imo is to have something like Trump rising to the top in a parliamentary democracy. He would have to spend many years working his way through the House and Senate before he had a chance at the Presidency - and that's assuming his colleagues hadn't seen what he was by then.
You could get some not-so-good ones coming through, but not a Trump type. That isn't his game.