Flagg?
Is Trump
that aloof douchenozzle? Or is he the other kind.
Fenix's basic point is that Trump has every bad trait that Bush had, but
also has other bad traits piled on top of those traits. It's like "from the party that gave you Presidential Fuckup, here's Presidential Fuckup II: Electric Boogaloo, now Bigger, Yuger, and Oranger!"
Flagg wrote: ↑2017-08-28 03:56pm
Don't lump me in with "everyone else present" please.
My apologies, I honestly didn't realize you were using Thanas's "karma model."
Thanas wrote: ↑2017-08-28 07:19pmSimon_Jester wrote: ↑2017-08-28 03:33pmOTwo, some of us mean this in terms of the amount of evil he does
per day. A president is graded on the rate at which he shovels evil acts from his desk, not the total number. If Trump did half as much evil per day he would become "less bad" in the eyes of such people, for instance- only half as bad as before. Whereas under the system you appear to be using he would not, because whether he is good or bad depends entirely on what he has done, and so long as he continues to be a
net negative per day, there is no possibility of "Trump tomorrow" being any less bad than "Trump today."
In this viewpoint I would still rate somebody who managed to cause almost 2k deaths per day during his term as somebody worse, because Trump is not at that level yet.
Out of curiosity, does this mean you'd rate pre-9/11 Bush as a better president than, say, 2004-era Bush? Because the latter had invaded Iraq and set in motion the mass death you describe, while the latter had not.
[Incidentally, where are you getting the figure of roughly five million deaths caused by Bush? I'm not disputing it, just asking you where it came from. Because "slightly less than" two thousand deaths a day would be, oh, six or seven hundred thousand people a year, which adds up to about five million people when multiplied by eight years. Again, I'm not disputing this figure, just asking where it comes from.]
Or is he killing 2k persons a day with his politics? Right now there is no indication of that.
Out of curiosity, would you consider the following hypothetical scenario to make the answer "yes?"
Suppose the Republicans succeeded in repealing the ACA, and Trump signs off on it. As per existing predictions by the Congressional Budget Office, twenty million people lose their health insurance. Surplus mortality of seven hundred thousand deaths a year or so sounds fairly realistic as a plausible outcome of that, which would correspond to about two thousand a day
Would the answer then become "yes, Trump is in fact killing that many people a day with his politics?"
But it's useless to do this in a comparison between a historical figure and a current serving politician. By saying "Trump has less bad president karma right now than Dubya has after his whole eight-year presidency," you're saying something that I can agree is true... but it doesn't matter very much. It doesn't enable us to predict anything useful or form useful conclusions about Trump's character.
It matters however immensely when you try to prove that historically Trump was the worst president ever.
It matters immensely if you assume that Trump will be expelled from office tomorrow and that the consequences of his actions will fade away into nothingness.
Otherwise, you should either be comparing the first seven months of the Trump presidency to the first seven months of other presidencies, or trying to assess what Trump would do in an otherwise equal situation.
You can't do a meaningful comparison between two things without controlling for other variables like "time in office" and "opportunities to mismanage major national crises."