Wild Zontargs wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Wild Zontargs wrote:I've tried that one before. Since the American left is mostly circle-jerking around Clinton (because TRUMP!!!111one), anything bad about her can be written off with "that's a right-wing source / only right-wingers believe that." Like maraxus2 said, everyone who cares has already made their decision on where they stand.
Bluntly, the problem is that there
is this huge cloud of manufactured scandal around Clinton, and I'd have said the same back in 2008 when the idea of Trump running a credible campaign would have been a joke. If you can't specify exactly what you
actually know Clinton did, in a way that makes it clear it isn't just another fabricated pile of nonsense spread by the cottage industry of professional Clinton detractors, why bother?
Hold up. back in June,
we both agreed that Clinton had been incredibly stupid about the emails.
Stupid, yes. Corrupt or evil, no.
The problem is that while we can argue that Clinton's lack of respect for handling of classified materials makes her
less qualified, we cannot really argue that it makes her corrupt or malevolent.
And we also cannot really argue that this election is really about whether the candidate is corrupt, malevolent, or unqualified, because if we do, then we are left with a very obvious choice about which candidate is less offensive in all three categories.
The vitriol people point at Hillary Clinton only really makes sense if they think she is one of the most
corrupt or otherwise 'evil' politicians in American history. And the evidence of that corruption is extremely scanty.
There's a difference between saying she did something stupid, and saying she's corrupt. And it stakes out a profoundly important position (what others are criticizing as the Golden Mean) to even
TALK about how she's allegedly "corrupt" in an election where another candidate with far less ambiguous evidence of his intense, thorough, personal corruption is running.
It's a classic enough moral lesson that even the Bible couldn't get it wrong: "Remove the beam from thine own eye!"
Simon_Jester wrote:I agree with you, and I hate stuff like this, and if the Republicans had chosen to nominate someone who follows procedures and respects them rather than being a big ball of puffery and ego who can't go more than a few years without defrauding someone, I might seriously consider letting the sheer stupidity of what Clinton did impact my vote.
Has your opinion actually changed, or is it just inconvenient now? I'm not saying "vote Trump", I'm saying "absent comparisons to Trump, Clinton is a terrible choice".
I'm saying even talking about how Clinton is a problematic choice (not terrible, but problematic), in the wake of the endless shower of shit the Republicans seem to think is an acceptable alternative to her, is laughable and increasingly so.
I've stopped bothering to even bring it up, precisely because of how stupid and pointless it is, and how it serves only to enable obsessive efforts to arrive at a Golden Mean, South Park-esque "well everyone's shitty so let's just retreat into trendy contempt for the world!"
In that respect my opinions have changed, as it has become more clear to me that
only the Democrats even care about the competence and personal decency of their candidate in this election cycle.
Caring about whether your candidate is competent and honest is not a suicide pact. It is not a reason to spend time chattering about the relatively petty scandals of a
merely ordinary politician while bigger fish go un-fried.
Everyone else is already doing a bang-up job of listing Trump's failings. I could join in the circle-jerk... or I could actually post something else about the campaign, rather than Me Too-ing. If failing to attack the "right" people often enough makes me a bad guy, then the state of political discourse is well and truly fucked.
It's more that you're not presenting anything
new. If you have evidence of Clinton having done anything wrong
in the past year, or whatever, fine. But when people keep beating the email drum over and over it starts to smell of an agenda, because the only reasons to keep bringing it up are:
1) As a dog-whistle to remind people who already hate Clinton how much they hate Clinton, or
2) As an attempt to keep calling back attention to 'this thing Clinton did' in an attempt to establish a Golden Mean fallacy.
OK, imagine this isn't an election year. If it came out that Clinton was doing all sorts of questionable things, and the US government, right up to the White House, was running interference to attempt to hide that fact, would you not be losing your shit? Ignoring it (because TRUMP!!!111one) seems really short-sighted to me.
Please list the "all sorts of questionable things." I mean, are you accusing Clinton of assassinating inconvenient political witnesses, or of reckless handling of government email, or of something in between?
Hey, leave the tinfoil out of this. Her personal business dealings have also been "iffy", and even
The New York Times was willing to say that in 2015. She's perfectly willing to change her publicly-stated opinions to whatever she thinks will get her votes, while continuing with whatever policies she actually wanted in the first place in private. We both already agree that she fucked up with the emails, and that:
If you want to talk about all of that,
fine. Let's go into more detail on an issue that is actually new.
Simon_Jester wrote:We're only ever going to fix things like this after we find a way to convince the top-level management class in America as a whole that they are not above the law. We've spent several decades creating that attitude.
Turning the election into a coronation for Clinton does the
opposite of that.
Turning the election into even a meaningful competition between Clinton and a shit like Trump does the opposite of that
even harder.
Even so, if you want to bring up things that are actually new and not just rehash the same scandal Fox likes to remind its watchers of every ten minutes, go for it, because then at least we're actually talking about facts that might be relevant to something.