#1801
sounds liek a job for... The Red Canadian
#1802
http://theconcourse.deadspin.com/donald-trump-is-a-frightened-coward-and-i-bet-100-000-1784774156?utm_campaign=socialflow_gawker_twitter&utm_source=gawker_twitter&utm_medium=socialflow

Early on, Trump famously appeared to question the heroism of prisoners of war in general, and John McCain in particular. “He’s not a war hero,” Trump mused. “He is a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren’t captured, okay?” (To put this statement in context, it’s helpful to review the events of McCain’s capture. McCain flew his A-4 Skyhawk directly into heavy anti-aircraft fire over Hanoi: “almost a suicide mission,” one witness reflected. His alarms blared that he was being tracked by enemy radar, but he pressed on, even as two members of his squadron were shot down alongside him. He managed to drop his bombs in the vicinity of his target, later earning him a Bronze Star, before his plane’s wing was blown off by a Soviet missile. McCain was knocked unconscious as he ejected, breaking both arms and his right knee in the process. After sinking to the bottom of a lake, he was able to inflate his life vest using only his teeth, as neither arm would move, and was taken into captivity upon surfacing. He was stripped naked, had a rifle butt smashed into his shoulder, and was bayonetted in his groin and ankle. By the time he arrived at the POW camp, he was in such poor shape that his captors thought he was already dead. He spent the next five and a half years as a prisoner, where he was tortured regularly, leaving him with permanent damage to both arms. His actions earned him a Silver Star and a Purple Heart. None of this, according to Donald Trump, qualified him as a hero.)
#1803
To put this statement in context, it’s helpful to review the events of Atta's death. Atta flew his 747 directly into the North Tower of the World Trade Center over Manhattan: “exactly a suicide mission,” one witness reflected. He knew it would end in his death, but he pressed on, even as fighter jets were scrambled and members of his squadron were dying in multiple locations. He managed to fly his plane directly into his target, later earning him a commendation from Osama bin Laden, before succumbing to his injuries. Atta was crushed into a paste as the plane hit, his skeleton shattering in thousands of places and his organs bursting in the process. After the jet fuel ignited, his liquified remains were further attenuated in a massive explosion and fire reaching hundreds of degrees. He was denied a traditional burial and his remains were never recovered. For the next fifteen years he was excoriated by the western media, and his friends and family harassed, tortured, and killed. His actions earned him many expressions of support in the Muslim world. None of this, according to Donald Trump, qualified him as a hero.

Edited by le_nelson_mandela_face ()

#1804
[account deactivated]
#1805
i feel like it's very hard for american media outlets to vehemently criticize the soldiers who actually did the pointless loathsome mass murdering in vietnam because those soldiers were those writers' fathers and uncles and grandfathers. this is a failure of a surplus of empathy. your father raised you, he pushed you on a swing, he taught you how to ride a bike. stare into his eyes and see a man who deserves to die, screaming
#1806
"Where's the birth certificate, slut?"
#1807
one consequence of ceaselessly pretending that the current top republican is a radical aberration is that anyone who is not currently head hitler in charge is retroactively turned into a reasonable moderate. i was used to it with reagan and mccain but god damn people are pointing to Bush as some detached statesman
#1808
#1809

le_nelson_mandela_face posted:

McCain flew his A-4 Skyhawk directly into heavy anti-aircraft fire over Hanoi: “almost a suicide mission,” one witness reflected. His alarms blared that he was being tracked by enemy radar, but he pressed on, even as two members of his squadron were shot down alongside him. He managed to drop his bombs in the vicinity of his target, later earning him a Bronze Star, before his plane’s wing was blown off by a Soviet missile.



this sounds like a pretty stupid thing to do imo

#1810
near his target. in one of the countries largest cities. basically a bronze star for almost certainly just bombing civilians
#1811
I'm sure it was absolutely imperative that those Vietnamese needed to be murdered that particular day
#1812
i wonder what became of whoever gave the order to go into enemy fire that got two pilots killed and one captured and tortured for five years
#1813

EmanuelaBrolandi posted:

near his target. in one of the countries largest cities. basically a bronze star for almost certainly just bombing civilians



yup

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_life_and_military_career_of_John_McCain#Prisoner_of_war

On October 26, 1967, McCain was flying his twenty-third mission, part of a twenty-plane strike force against the Yen Phu thermal power plant in central Hanoi that previously had almost always been off-limits to U.S. raids due to the possibility of collateral damage.

lmao this country

#1814
You literally cannot make stuff up that's worse than what Amerika does lol
#1815
http://donaldmaroney.tumblr.com/

Jenna Maroney's words. Donald Trump's face. The worst of both worlds.


#1816
#1817


#1818
[account deactivated]
#1819
every republican is the Biggest Threat Ever. this is logic familiar to nerds. nearly every new Villain that appears in whatever format is always the strongest and most dangerous at the time. sometimes he is so dangerous you've got to Team Up with villains from the past to take him down. a familiar and comforting narrative. this is, of course, fantasy. the republicans have been completely insane trash since at least the 70s. the only difference is who they have to please and how much they choose to delegate the slander. the only difference between trump and w. politically is how much they say what they think vs. issuing talking points and how much of other people's money is in their respective g-strings
#1820
omg

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/05/opinion/campaign-stops/i-ran-the-cia-now-im-endorsing-hillary-clinton.html
#1821
A version of this op-ed appears in print on August 5, 2016, on page A27 of the New York edition with the headline: Spooks for Hillary.
#1822
~every lizardperson politely lines up behind two candidates and patiently watches while they debate narrow range of meaningless issues under studiously observed mark of queensberry rules~

see! this just proves they're exactly the same!

~every lizardperson frantically and hysterically-in-both-senses-of-the-word rallies around one candidate leaving the other one with a coalition of 4chan neonazis, dolchstosslegende addicts and mass deportation enthusiasts which is incidentally still enough to win~

see! this just proves they're exactly the same!
#1823
[account deactivated]
#1824
the lake mccain crashed into is in downtown hanoi

https://goo.gl/maps/Rx3pF4uYiXN2
#1825
Yep he died trying to shut off power to about a million civilians in North Vietnam's capital
e: Goat in your google map you can see that the region immediately to the east of the lake is named Yên Phụ so yeah

Edited by swampman ()

#1826

EmanuelaBrolandi posted:

near his target. in one of the countries largest cities. basically a bronze star for almost certainly just bombing civilians



I always liked this take on it (excerpt from a deleted blog):

The underachieving scion of a family of US Navy admirals, McCain spent his short period of active service (about twenty hours' flight time) bombing civilians in North Vietnam in 1967. He flew over cities in a heavily armed warplane and dropped tons of high explosive on them, on one occasion hitting a fish factory and destroying a number of barrels. While the bombing raids were dangerous for him — as evidenced by his eventual shooting down — they were, it is safe to say, rather more dangerous for the people underneath, and you wouldn't necessarily call them heroes. Besides, it was McCain's job to fly these missions, and in that, he was only continuing the family business. If he is a hero for doing that, then so is my local butcher.

It can't be said, either, that getting shot down and ejecting from your plane is a particularly heroic act — at the very least, I think you will agree, a heroic act should be voluntary. Perhaps the Vietnamese guy who rescued him from drowning in a lake was being heroic, but I, like McCain's many hagiographers, will ignore this person.

After his rescue, McCain was kept for five years as a prisoner of war in the infamous Hanoi Hilton, where he was routinely subjected to torture. Torture is no doubt a brutal, harrowing, mentally and physically shattering experience, but enduring it is not heroic. The unfortunate inmates of Guantanamo Bay are not heroes, and neither were the subjects of those well-publicised images from Abu Ghraib. Being tortured does not make one a hero, but a victim. A torture victim is not admirable; a torture victim is pathetic.

There is no indication that McCain behaved any differently under torture than ordinary mortals: he eventually broke down and did what he was told to, much like everyone else. Much play is made of his refusal to accept the offer of an early release*, as the son of the US Naval commander in Vietnam: but this is basically the minimum one would expect of a man with a shred of dignity. If he had walked free while leaving his less well-connected comrades in the slammer, then he would have kissed goodbye to any hope of a future political or military career.

And that about sums it up for McCain's so-called war heroism. While he no doubt displayed courage during his service and captivity, and while I wouldn't wish the suffering he endured on anyone, to call him a "hero" based on this record is quite flatly an abuse of the term, and one with definite political implications.

* Interestingly, most of Wikipedia's "facts" about McCain's heroism as a P.O.W. come from "The John McCain report", a serialised hagiography in the Arizona Republic, written in the style of a Tom Clancy novel, and "P.O.W.: A Definitive History of the American Prisoner-of-War Experience in Vietnam" by John G. Hubbell, published by the Reader's Digest Press in 1976, which is described in the Pacific Historical Review as "more a feel-good tribute to American valor than an objective history."

#1827

thirdplace posted:

~every lizardperson politely lines up behind two candidates and patiently watches while they debate narrow range of meaningless issues under studiously observed mark of queensberry rules~

see! this just proves they're exactly the same!

~every lizardperson frantically and hysterically-in-both-senses-of-the-word rallies around one candidate leaving the other one with a coalition of 4chan neonazis, dolchstosslegende addicts and mass deportation enthusiasts which is incidentally still enough to win~

see! this just proves they're exactly the same!



im confused on what you're trying to say here. are you getting Commie Schizophrenia

#1828
hes a liberal!!
#1829
Funny as hell, it was the worst thing I could think of.
#1830
i don't care if the cat is black or white as long as it continues to shit in the liberals' cheerios
#1831
People are just afraid to admit they hate everything Trump is doing in his campaign because they don't want to be called a liberal. Trump has fascist positions on just about everything. Pig worship, ethnonationalism, expanded deportation
#1832
and it wouldn't even bother me if people had their reasons for waiving it all off as more of the same, but it all reads to me as "we can't pretend there's a difference between liberal white supremacy and fascist white supremacy because that would suggest that liberal imperialism isn't the worst of all possible worlds." it's like the marxist version of the guy who blames every evil in the world on the corrupt corporate duocracy.

all that said, daddyholes is right
#1833

thirdplace posted:

we can't pretend there's a difference between liberal white supremacy and fascist white supremacy because that would suggest that liberal imperialism isn't the worst of all possible worlds

this, but unpejoratively

#1834

thirdplace posted:

and it wouldn't even bother me if people had their reasons for waiving it all off as more of the same, but it all reads to me as "we can't pretend there's a difference between liberal white supremacy and fascist white supremacy because that would suggest that liberal imperialism isn't the worst of all possible worlds." it's like the marxist version of the guy who blames every evil in the world on the corrupt corporate duocracy.

Not all right-wing populist, nationalist, militarist, racist buffoonery is fascist, though. Fascism is total class war in the hopes of forging social peace through extreme violence and exploitation, it is a radical right counter-revolution designed to break the labour movement completely, to systematically murder or imprison even passive potential resistance. It emerges to suspend all forms of bourgeois democracy and conciliation as an emergency form of bourgeois dictatorship against socialist revolution.

I think Trump does open the door to those sorts of things, though, in that he's deliberately weakening some of the civility of bourgeois discourse. I mean, we don't want total class war like that, we want the bourgeoisie to be surprised by the sudden insurgency of the working class and to vacillate enough about legality and politeness that it hesitates at key moments. I was reading the other day that the resistance of everyday people during the first days of the Paris Commune was so unexpected, for example, that one of the commanders leading a cavalry unit was routed out of town by children beating his horse with sticks, solely because all the troops refused to mow down kids.

#1835
the civility of bourgeois discourse is not an end worth preserving
#1836
Obama is worse than Bush, and Clinton will be worse than both, because the president as we all know is a mere puppet of capital anyway. Trump would be no different.

Trump is bad because his superficial radicalism lends legitimacy to the american electoral process. Now basically everyone can say, see this fucking nutjob could have been/is president democracy in america isnt completely rigged the people have spoken etc...
#1837
"The horror of Trump manages to create the ultimate liberal fantasy of post-partisanship, consensus and respect for the discourse. We are actually seeing a class solidarity of Washington careerists, policy wonks, the national security state and the media."

https://overland.org.au/2016/08/trump-fascism-putin-and-wikileaks-the-anatomy-of-a-liberal-nervous-breakdown/
#1838
the democrats accusing everybody of being russian agents is the best thing about this election cycle
#1839
2016: vilerats parent's sue the clinton
2017: Cars sues vilerats parents for lost posting time/internet comedy career
#1840

gyrofry posted:

the civility of bourgeois discourse is not an end worth preserving


yes, but it's worth being concerned about nonetheless. it's not as though a clinton victory* would put the cat back in the bag, in fact i think there is a real risk of trump supporters lashing out in reaction to what they would see as their disenfranchisement. but the fact is that trump has reintroduced overtly fascist discourse to the mainstream, and the polite "liberal" response is disquieting at best. anyway, the "end" worth struggling for is of course not a return of bourgeois civility but the defeat of fascism and its bourgeois sponsors.

* hypothetical of course, as trump is bound to win