You're right. That was an insult to walruses.GreenGoo wrote:Now YK, we've been over this...
The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Sometimes the best defense is a good...constant onslaught of bullshit.Alefroth wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:08 amGuess winning graciously is out of the question.Grifman wrote: Mon Mar 25, 2019 10:31 pmWTF?! This is ridiculous. She has no idea what treason means. This is just crazy talk.Skinypupy wrote: Mon Mar 25, 2019 9:52 pm
Good lord.Sarah Sanders: "They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
I didn't think it possible, but she may have stolen the title of shitgoblin from her boss.GreenGoo wrote: Mon Mar 25, 2019 10:21 pmNow YK, we've been over this...YellowKing wrote: Mon Mar 25, 2019 10:15 pm It will be a happy day when I never have to look at that self-righteous walrus again.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Is it possible that SS means that critics have *accused* Trump of something that is "punishable by death in this country"?
In other words, could she be saying "Look at their ridiculous accusations" rather than "They should be killed"?
In other words, could she be saying "Look at their ridiculous accusations" rather than "They should be killed"?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Going by her history? No. Going by what she said? Still no.Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 10:20 am Is it possible that SS means that critics have *accused* Trump of something that is "punishable by death in this country"?
In other words, could she be saying "Look at their ridiculous accusations" rather than "They should be killed"?
She says, in this order, paraphrased, "what they are doing is equivalent to treason. Treason is punishable by death in this country." Leaving the base to connect the dot. Lock 'n load.
Agree that it could be parsed to mean, "they accused him of this thing that is equivalent to treason which is punishable by death. " But we all know this dog whistle Administration never means the least harmful interpretation.
And to clarify, so it doesn't sound merely flippant. She is priming all the way up to that statement: "Think how outrageous that is. Think what "they" are doing. "
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
I disagree. Just going by her words:LawBeefaroni wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 10:24 amGoing by her history? No. Going by what she said? Still no.Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 10:20 am Is it possible that SS means that critics have *accused* Trump of something that is "punishable by death in this country"?
In other words, could she be saying "Look at their ridiculous accusations" rather than "They should be killed"?
She says, in this order, paraphrased, "what they are doing is equivalent to treason. Treason is punishable by death in this country." Leaving the base to connect the dot. Lock 'n load.
Agree that it could be parsed to mean, "they accused him of this thing that is equivalent to treason which is punishable by death. " But we all know this dog whistle Administration never means the least harmful interpretation.
And to clarify, so it doesn't sound merely flippant. She is priming all the way up to that statement: "Think how outrageous that is. Think what "they" are doing. "
"They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
The most natural reading to me is that the "that" is "being an agent for a foreign government" which is equivalent by treason, and punishable by death. They're accusing Trump of a capital offense.
That said, it is ambiguous, maybe intentionally.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
That said, the more Trumpists spike the football here, the worse I think it may be in the long run *if* the Mueller report has information / details in it that are damaging (or if Barr is outright misrepresenting what's in the report, although that seems unlikely unless they are *super* confident that they can keep it confidential forever).
I guess the plan is to have Barr testify before the House, and then (I hope) potentially subpoena the report based upon what Barr says and any further summaries / redacted versions that get released in the meantime.
I guess the plan is to have Barr testify before the House, and then (I hope) potentially subpoena the report based upon what Barr says and any further summaries / redacted versions that get released in the meantime.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Yes. That's exactly what she is saying. I don't even think her statement is all that ambiguous, but in the midst of all the other ridiculous agitprop coming out of Fox and the administration, I can see why people would make that mistake.Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 10:20 am Is it possible that SS means that critics have *accused* Trump of something that is "punishable by death in this country"?
In other words, could she be saying "Look at their ridiculous accusations" rather than "They should be killed"?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Is there a reason why Pelosi (or Schiff, if a committee stance is needed) can't just subpoena the full report today? How does that work?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
She tossed out the verbal equivalent of "survey markers" and we're supposed to interpret how they look on a map of people being elected. If only there was some type of forum or public event where she could make these comments and members of the press could ask her for clarifications in real time.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
They can, and most likely will. Barr and DoJ will almost certainly argue that some or all of the report is privileged. Barr has said that some information in the report relates to grand jury materials and investigations underway (which is almost certainly true to at least some degree, given the spin-off investigations that are ongoing). The administration will probably make a fairly sweeping executive privilege type argument. Odds are the issue would wind up in court.Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:04 am Is there a reason why Pelosi (or Schiff, if a committee stance is needed) can't just subpoena the full report today? How does that work?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
What stops Mueller from giving the report to Congress? Why does it have to stop at the DOJ if DOJ is obviously compromised by his boner for Trump ?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Yeah, I mean, this isn't the Ken Starr report on Clinton.El Guapo wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:27 am They can, and most likely will. Barr and DoJ will almost certainly argue that some or all of the report is privileged.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Mueller reports to Barr. In this case, literally.Vorret wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:40 am What stops Mueller from giving the report to Congress? Why does it have to stop at the DOJ if DOJ is obviously compromised by his boner for Trump ?
There's some question about whether he would even leak details if he thought his work were being mischaracterized, as such leaks would violate DOJ rules.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Ohh okay, it's kinda odd to me that a report on the administration is in the hand of someone selected by said administration, not sure how that makes sense in a legal point of view.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Yeah, and the special counsel rules specifically provide for that procedure - the special counsel sends the report to the AG, the AG makes a decision on what gets sent to Congress.Vorret wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:49 am Ohh okay, it's kinda odd to me that a report on the administration is in the hand of someone selected by said administration, not sure how that makes sense in a legal point of view.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Yeah. The whole system is very poorly designed for investigating a president.Vorret wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:49 am Ohh okay, it's kinda odd to me that a report on the administration is in the hand of someone selected by said administration, not sure how that makes sense in a legal point of view.
The Special Counsel is subordinate to the Attorney General, head of the DOJ. In theory--and according to traditional norms--the DOJ is independent of the POTUS' orders and influence, but the fact that the AG is a POTUS appointee makes those norms precarious. (But you knew that already, as now we all do.)
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
To the statement by the SS:
It's ambiguous because of descriptive grammar. Someone who speaks for a living to people who write for a living is
1) incompetent
2) knowingly being ambiguous
Take your pick
That said from a prescriptive perspective.
"They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
Phenomena described in a statement. The accusation.
Phenomena is defined by equivalency in a statement. That = Accusation = Treason.
Consequences of phenomena established in a statement. That = Treason = Death
...
Accusation = Death.
For *That* to be a subortinate clause of being a foreign agent, being a foriegn agant would have to be established the subject of the statement. Otherwise you have to establish to establish *that* is refering to a prepositional object, at which point it becomes a recurring referrent until changed by other grammar modifications.
Subect - Verb - Direct Object - Preposition - Prepostional phrase contianing the object of preposition.
We fought the law in good faith. That was our first mistake. That was our undoing.
Yes?
We fought the law in good faith. That was unfounded. That was our undoing
Yes?
The first tries to refer to the fight
The second tries to refer to good faith
The first works
The second fails.
Never mind.
It's ambiguous because of descriptive grammar. Someone who speaks for a living to people who write for a living is
1) incompetent
2) knowingly being ambiguous
Take your pick
That said from a prescriptive perspective.
"They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
Phenomena described in a statement. The accusation.
Phenomena is defined by equivalency in a statement. That = Accusation = Treason.
Consequences of phenomena established in a statement. That = Treason = Death
...
Accusation = Death.
For *That* to be a subortinate clause of being a foreign agent, being a foriegn agant would have to be established the subject of the statement. Otherwise you have to establish to establish *that* is refering to a prepositional object, at which point it becomes a recurring referrent until changed by other grammar modifications.
Subect - Verb - Direct Object - Preposition - Prepostional phrase contianing the object of preposition.
We fought the law in good faith. That was our first mistake. That was our undoing.
Yes?
We fought the law in good faith. That was unfounded. That was our undoing
Yes?
The first tries to refer to the fight
The second tries to refer to good faith
The first works
The second fails.
Never mind.
Last edited by LordMortis on Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Nah. The grammar doesn't do that.
"They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
That's equivalent to treason isn't a subordinate clause. It's independent. The "that" refers to the most recent significant noun, which is the gerund phrase "being an agent [etc]." The second "that" just repeats the first. (With a sloppy writer it could try to refer to "treason," but this wouldn't change the overall meaning of the statement.)
It's equivalent to "They accused me of killing the mailman. That's a felony. That gets you life in prison."
(The second "that" probably duplicates the first, but even if it refers to "a felony" the meaning is basically the same.)
"They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
That's equivalent to treason isn't a subordinate clause. It's independent. The "that" refers to the most recent significant noun, which is the gerund phrase "being an agent [etc]." The second "that" just repeats the first. (With a sloppy writer it could try to refer to "treason," but this wouldn't change the overall meaning of the statement.)
It's equivalent to "They accused me of killing the mailman. That's a felony. That gets you life in prison."
(The second "that" probably duplicates the first, but even if it refers to "a felony" the meaning is basically the same.)
Last edited by Holman on Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
My bad. Confused the use of that. reading...
That is pronoun and the antecedent is... not clear
https://webapps.towson.edu/ows/pro_antagree.htm
https://webapps.towson.edu/ows/proref.htm
See "Here is another example of faulty pronoun reference where a pronoun is asked to refer to a whole group of words instead of a clear, single noun antecedent."
http://www.chompchomp.com/rules/prorefrules.htm
see "Sometimes we sum up a complicated situation with a pronouncement like "That was really cool!" or "This blew our minds!" Or we might add as a tag to the end of a sentence, "Which amazed us all." Remember, though, that that, this, and which all require one clear antecedent. If too many things happened, your reader will get confused."
That is pronoun and the antecedent is... not clear
https://webapps.towson.edu/ows/pro_antagree.htm
https://webapps.towson.edu/ows/proref.htm
See "Here is another example of faulty pronoun reference where a pronoun is asked to refer to a whole group of words instead of a clear, single noun antecedent."
http://www.chompchomp.com/rules/prorefrules.htm
see "Sometimes we sum up a complicated situation with a pronouncement like "That was really cool!" or "This blew our minds!" Or we might add as a tag to the end of a sentence, "Which amazed us all." Remember, though, that that, this, and which all require one clear antecedent. If too many things happened, your reader will get confused."
Last edited by LordMortis on Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
We also shouldn't lose sight of what Sanders (and the Trump administration) is mainly trying to do here, which is to use the Barr summary to further delegitimize the media, and to try to scare them away from looking more into the Russia-Trump connection.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
My guess is that Sanders' wording was very intentional. It was vague enough that they can clutch their pearls and scream "FAKE NEWS" when the rest of us have the natural "WTF?" reaction that we all had.
"That was not at all what we meant, and how dare you accuse us of making threatening statements!" ::wink and nod to Trump supporters::
"That was not at all what we meant, and how dare you accuse us of making threatening statements!" ::wink and nod to Trump supporters::
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Doubt that's gonna work, the left will still believe cnn/wapo and the right will still think foxnews is signing gospel, the division will simple widen even more.El Guapo wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:43 pm We also shouldn't lose sight of what Sanders (and the Trump administration) is mainly trying to do here, which is to use the Barr summary to further delegitimize the media, and to try to scare them away from looking more into the Russia-Trump connection.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Well, the gold mine here would be convincing a few editors / owners at the WaPo / NYT / CNN that Russia is over, Trump is cleared, no need to do more digging on Russia, and the administration will try to bury you if you do any more on this, so don't devote investigative resources to it any more.Vorret wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:57 pmDoubt that's gonna work, the left will still believe cnn/wapo and the right will still think foxnews is signing gospel, the division will simple widen even more.El Guapo wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:43 pm We also shouldn't lose sight of what Sanders (and the Trump administration) is mainly trying to do here, which is to use the Barr summary to further delegitimize the media, and to try to scare them away from looking more into the Russia-Trump connection.
Beyond that, they still have to hold onto soft Trump voters from 2016 who might be receptive to this stuff.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Still can't accept the election results? I figured as much.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Feel free to substitute grown up governing or reconciling leadership for winning graciously.GreenGoo wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 1:18 amI acknowledge the spirit of your comment and agree, but I take exception that this was a win/lose situation. It wasn't political, it wasn't a witchhunt and exonerated/not exonerated is not a win for one side or the other.
It was a much needed investigation based on significant probable cause. Letting anyone, Dems, GOP term this as a win/lose situation is unreasonable and absolutely unfair to the FBI and/or Mueller.
It was cops doing their jobs for the benefit and protection of the nation, whatever the outcome.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
No, we can't accept that our country is being run by a less intelligent version of Elmer Fudd....or that you folks were so easily conned.em2nought wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 1:34 pm Still can't accept the election results? I figured as much.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Elmer Fudd, whatever his issues, at least struck me as a responsible gun owner. Trump is more of a Yosemite Sam.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
I'll have to take your word for it. I'm not an English major.Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:11 pm Nah. The grammar doesn't do that.
"They literally accused the President of the United States of being an agent for a foreign government. That's equivalent to treason. Thats punishable by death in this country."
That's equivalent to treason isn't a subordinate clause. It's independent. The "that" refers to the most recent significant noun, which is the gerund phrase "being an agent [etc]." The second "that" just repeats the first. (With a sloppy writer it could try to refer to "treason," but this wouldn't change the overall meaning of the statement.)
It's equivalent to "They accused me of killing the mailman. That's a felony. That gets you life in prison."
(The second "that" probably duplicates the first, but even if it refers to "a felony" the meaning is basically the same.)
The subject of the first sentence is the accusation. "That's" should be referencing the subject of the previous sentence, not the specifics of the accusation. I find your (well, other people have made it too) interpretation to be counter-intuitive, but that's fine, I don't do English in any real capacity.
Last edited by GreenGoo on Tue Mar 26, 2019 2:07 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
See the first sentence I wrote.Alefroth wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 1:42 pmFeel free to substitute grown up governing or reconciling leadership for winning graciously.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
For me it's always been about the Mueller investigation. So now the only thing in the way is McConnell, go figure. I don't have to like the Mueller's finding but I trust them enough to accept them and work toward a better 2020. That said. they've already won. Mueller didn't push for indictment, so there is some faith all is not lost and we will recover and with that faith, it seems to fall short of tearing the country apart. The tyranny of the minority will continue at least until 2020 whereat we will work to change. In the mean time the wealthy looters will continue to loot and I will grow more resentful of the machinations of the US senate whose greed and corruption set this all in motions.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Isgrimnur wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 1:51 pm Elmer Fudd, whatever his issues, at least struck me as a responsible gun owner. Trump is more of a Yosemite Sam.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Or any reason one of the committees can't bring in Mueller himself to testify about the report?Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:04 am Is there a reason why Pelosi (or Schiff, if a committee stance is needed) can't just subpoena the full report today? How does that work?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Maybe. I'm sure that there would privilege arguments over that too, and a lot would depend upon Mueller's willingness to testify about this stuff (potentially over the objections of the administration).Ralph-Wiggum wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 3:00 pmOr any reason one of the committees can't bring in Mueller himself to testify about the report?Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 11:04 am Is there a reason why Pelosi (or Schiff, if a committee stance is needed) can't just subpoena the full report today? How does that work?
Although if I were Pelosi or Schiff, I would *much* rather have the Mueller report itself. I'd be nervous about bringing Mueller in without knowing exactly what he's going to say, and I'm not sure how you would know what he's going to say without seeing some or all of the report first.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
Yeah, you're not understanding, or choosing it ignore my point.Alefroth wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 4:24 pm I saw them all, I just wanted to provide choices you wouldn't have to take exception with.
First, I understand and agree with your point. I don't need options because I get what you were saying.
Second, I'm expressing my dissatisfaction with anyone, Dem, GOP, media talking head, internet personality, whoever, discussing the report in win/lose terms. Your post seemed like a pretty good place to express that dissatisfaction. I wasn't speaking directly to you, I was speaking to the idea.
That's it.
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
edit: Doesn't matter. It's bugging me, that's all.
What if someone said this:
"They slandered me when they said I killed the mailman. That's a travesty. That's against the law".
What is the "that's" referring to in the second sentence? Or the third?
See, this annoys me. We already know that accusations aren't a felony, but that killing people is. We automatically know what is being referred to in the second sentence.Holman wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 12:11 pm It's equivalent to "They accused me of killing the mailman. That's a felony. That gets you life in prison."
What if someone said this:
"They slandered me when they said I killed the mailman. That's a travesty. That's against the law".
What is the "that's" referring to in the second sentence? Or the third?
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Re: The Trump Investigation(s) Thread
I imagine it wasn't only the DNC and HRC doing underhanded things to keep Trump out of office. Swamp monsters on both sides you see.LordMortis wrote: Tue Mar 26, 2019 2:34 pm For me it's always been about the Mueller investigation. So now the only thing in the way is McConnell, go figure.
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