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Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.
By William Saletan


Half an hour into Wednesday’s Republican presidential debate, Sen. Ted
Cruz exploded at the CNBC moderators. “The questions that have been
asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t
trust the media,” Cruz fumed. “You look at the questions: ‘Donald Trump,
are you a comic-book villain?’ ‘Ben Carson, can you do math?’ ‘John
Kasich, will you insult two people over here?’ ‘Marco Rubio, why don't
you resign?’ ‘Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?’ How about talking
about the substantive issues the people care about?”

By the end of the evening, Cruz, Carson, Trump, Rubio, and several other
candidates had declared war on the press. They claimed to speak for the
Republican Party, the American people, and the truth. These candidates
are deluded. Many of their statements were falsified on the spot. Others
were exposed as absurd by their opponents. It’s true that the debate
exposed a division within the country. But the division isn’t between
the press and the public. It’s between people who listen to
evidence—reporters, policy analysts, and many Democrats and
Republicans—and an impervious, defiant wing of the GOP.

Take Cruz’s speech. It doesn’t even match the debate transcript. To
begin with, nobody called Trump a villain. CNBC’s John Harwood asked
Trump how he would fulfill his promises to “build a wall and make
another country pay for it” (Mexico), “send 11 million people out of the
country” (undocumented immigrants), and “cut taxes $10 trillion without
increasing the deficit.” Second, nobody asked Carson whether he could do
math. CNBC’s Becky Quick asked Carson how he would close the $1 trillion
gap between current federal spending and the revenue projected from
Carson’s 15 percent flat tax. Third, nobody asked Kasich to insult his
colleagues. Kasich volunteered that Trump’s and Carson’s promises were
impractical and incoherent. All of these questions were substantive. In
fact, Cruz’s speech was a diversion from the query that had been posed
to him—namely, why did he oppose this week’s agreement to raise the debt
limit?

Presented with facts and figures that didn’t fit their story, the
leading Republican candidates accused the moderators of malice and deceit.

As the evening wore on, it became increasingly obvious that Trump,
Carson, and their allies onstage didn’t just have a problem with the
press. They had problems with fellow Republicans. Harwood brought up Ben
Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman who recently declared that
the GOP, hijacked by the “know-nothingism of the far right,” had
forfeited Bernanke’s allegiance. Sen. Rand Paul dismissed Bernanke’s
criticism as “arrogance” and said it showed why the Fed should be
audited. Paul, one-upping Cruz and Rubio—who had already celebrated the
resignation of House Speaker John Boehner—spurned Boehner’s likely
replacement, Paul Ryan, as “more of the same.”

For much, much mo


http://tinyurl.com/ozxmvax
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On 11/2/2015 9:15 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:

Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.
By William Saletan


Half an hour into Wednesday’s Republican presidential debate, Sen. Ted
Cruz exploded at the CNBC moderators. “The questions that have been
asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t
trust the media,” Cruz fumed. “You look at the questions: ‘Donald Trump,
are you a comic-book villain?’ ‘Ben Carson, can you do math?’ ‘John
Kasich, will you insult two people over here?’ ‘Marco Rubio, why don't
you resign?’ ‘Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?’ How about talking
about the substantive issues the people care about?”

By the end of the evening, Cruz, Carson, Trump, Rubio, and several other
candidates had declared war on the press. They claimed to speak for the
Republican Party, the American people, and the truth. These candidates
are deluded. Many of their statements were falsified on the spot. Others
were exposed as absurd by their opponents. It’s true that the debate
exposed a division within the country. But the division isn’t between
the press and the public. It’s between people who listen to
evidence—reporters, policy analysts, and many Democrats and
Republicans—and an impervious, defiant wing of the GOP.

Take Cruz’s speech. It doesn’t even match the debate transcript. To
begin with, nobody called Trump a villain. CNBC’s John Harwood asked
Trump how he would fulfill his promises to “build a wall and make
another country pay for it” (Mexico), “send 11 million people out of the
country” (undocumented immigrants), and “cut taxes $10 trillion without
increasing the deficit.” Second, nobody asked Carson whether he could do
math. CNBC’s Becky Quick asked Carson how he would close the $1 trillion
gap between current federal spending and the revenue projected from
Carson’s 15 percent flat tax. Third, nobody asked Kasich to insult his
colleagues. Kasich volunteered that Trump’s and Carson’s promises were
impractical and incoherent. All of these questions were substantive. In
fact, Cruz’s speech was a diversion from the query that had been posed
to him—namely, why did he oppose this week’s agreement to raise the debt
limit?

Presented with facts and figures that didn’t fit their story, the
leading Republican candidates accused the moderators of malice and deceit.

As the evening wore on, it became increasingly obvious that Trump,
Carson, and their allies onstage didn’t just have a problem with the
press. They had problems with fellow Republicans. Harwood brought up Ben
Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman who recently declared that
the GOP, hijacked by the “know-nothingism of the far right,” had
forfeited Bernanke’s allegiance. Sen. Rand Paul dismissed Bernanke’s
criticism as “arrogance” and said it showed why the Fed should be
audited. Paul, one-upping Cruz and Rubio—who had already celebrated the
resignation of House Speaker John Boehner—spurned Boehner’s likely
replacement, Paul Ryan, as “more of the same.”

For much, much mo


http://tinyurl.com/ozxmvax



Have you noticed that nobody else in this newsgroup routinely posts
long, cut and paste commentaries on politics like you do? Some express
personal opinions and preferences from time to time but that's about it.

What are you trying to prove?


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On 11/2/15 9:33 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/2/2015 9:15 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:

Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.
By William Saletan


Half an hour into Wednesday’s Republican presidential debate, Sen. Ted
Cruz exploded at the CNBC moderators. “The questions that have been
asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t
trust the media,” Cruz fumed. “You look at the questions: ‘Donald Trump,
are you a comic-book villain?’ ‘Ben Carson, can you do math?’ ‘John
Kasich, will you insult two people over here?’ ‘Marco Rubio, why don't
you resign?’ ‘Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?’ How about talking
about the substantive issues the people care about?”

By the end of the evening, Cruz, Carson, Trump, Rubio, and several other
candidates had declared war on the press. They claimed to speak for the
Republican Party, the American people, and the truth. These candidates
are deluded. Many of their statements were falsified on the spot. Others
were exposed as absurd by their opponents. It’s true that the debate
exposed a division within the country. But the division isn’t between
the press and the public. It’s between people who listen to
evidence—reporters, policy analysts, and many Democrats and
Republicans—and an impervious, defiant wing of the GOP.

Take Cruz’s speech. It doesn’t even match the debate transcript. To
begin with, nobody called Trump a villain. CNBC’s John Harwood asked
Trump how he would fulfill his promises to “build a wall and make
another country pay for it” (Mexico), “send 11 million people out of the
country” (undocumented immigrants), and “cut taxes $10 trillion without
increasing the deficit.” Second, nobody asked Carson whether he could do
math. CNBC’s Becky Quick asked Carson how he would close the $1 trillion
gap between current federal spending and the revenue projected from
Carson’s 15 percent flat tax. Third, nobody asked Kasich to insult his
colleagues. Kasich volunteered that Trump’s and Carson’s promises were
impractical and incoherent. All of these questions were substantive. In
fact, Cruz’s speech was a diversion from the query that had been posed
to him—namely, why did he oppose this week’s agreement to raise the debt
limit?

Presented with facts and figures that didn’t fit their story, the
leading Republican candidates accused the moderators of malice and
deceit.

As the evening wore on, it became increasingly obvious that Trump,
Carson, and their allies onstage didn’t just have a problem with the
press. They had problems with fellow Republicans. Harwood brought up Ben
Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman who recently declared that
the GOP, hijacked by the “know-nothingism of the far right,” had
forfeited Bernanke’s allegiance. Sen. Rand Paul dismissed Bernanke’s
criticism as “arrogance” and said it showed why the Fed should be
audited. Paul, one-upping Cruz and Rubio—who had already celebrated the
resignation of House Speaker John Boehner—spurned Boehner’s likely
replacement, Paul Ryan, as “more of the same.”

For much, much mo


http://tinyurl.com/ozxmvax



Have you noticed that nobody else in this newsgroup routinely posts
long, cut and paste commentaries on politics like you do? Some express
personal opinions and preferences from time to time but that's about it.

What are you trying to prove?



I occasionally post such articles or portions of them, as in the current
case.
  #4   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2015
Posts: 1,244
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On 11/2/2015 9:15 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:

Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.
By William Saletan


Half an hour into Wednesday’s Republican presidential debate, Sen. Ted
Cruz exploded at the CNBC moderators. “The questions that have been
asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t
trust the media,” Cruz fumed. “You look at the questions: ‘Donald Trump,
are you a comic-book villain?’ ‘Ben Carson, can you do math?’ ‘John
Kasich, will you insult two people over here?’ ‘Marco Rubio, why don't
you resign?’ ‘Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?’ How about talking
about the substantive issues the people care about?”

By the end of the evening, Cruz, Carson, Trump, Rubio, and several other
candidates had declared war on the press. They claimed to speak for the
Republican Party, the American people, and the truth. These candidates
are deluded. Many of their statements were falsified on the spot. Others
were exposed as absurd by their opponents. It’s true that the debate
exposed a division within the country. But the division isn’t between
the press and the public. It’s between people who listen to
evidence—reporters, policy analysts, and many Democrats and
Republicans—and an impervious, defiant wing of the GOP.

Take Cruz’s speech. It doesn’t even match the debate transcript. To
begin with, nobody called Trump a villain. CNBC’s John Harwood asked
Trump how he would fulfill his promises to “build a wall and make
another country pay for it” (Mexico), “send 11 million people out of the
country” (undocumented immigrants), and “cut taxes $10 trillion without
increasing the deficit.” Second, nobody asked Carson whether he could do
math. CNBC’s Becky Quick asked Carson how he would close the $1 trillion
gap between current federal spending and the revenue projected from
Carson’s 15 percent flat tax. Third, nobody asked Kasich to insult his
colleagues. Kasich volunteered that Trump’s and Carson’s promises were
impractical and incoherent. All of these questions were substantive. In
fact, Cruz’s speech was a diversion from the query that had been posed
to him—namely, why did he oppose this week’s agreement to raise the debt
limit?

Presented with facts and figures that didn’t fit their story, the
leading Republican candidates accused the moderators of malice and deceit.

As the evening wore on, it became increasingly obvious that Trump,
Carson, and their allies onstage didn’t just have a problem with the
press. They had problems with fellow Republicans. Harwood brought up Ben
Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman who recently declared that
the GOP, hijacked by the “know-nothingism of the far right,” had
forfeited Bernanke’s allegiance. Sen. Rand Paul dismissed Bernanke’s
criticism as “arrogance” and said it showed why the Fed should be
audited. Paul, one-upping Cruz and Rubio—who had already celebrated the
resignation of House Speaker John Boehner—spurned Boehner’s likely
replacement, Paul Ryan, as “more of the same.”

For much, much mo


http://tinyurl.com/ozxmvax


That's enough already. Besides what difference does it make?
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On 11/2/2015 10:06 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/2/15 9:33 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/2/2015 9:15 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:

Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.
By William Saletan


Half an hour into Wednesday’s Republican presidential debate, Sen. Ted
Cruz exploded at the CNBC moderators. “The questions that have been
asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t
trust the media,” Cruz fumed. “You look at the questions: ‘Donald Trump,
are you a comic-book villain?’ ‘Ben Carson, can you do math?’ ‘John
Kasich, will you insult two people over here?’ ‘Marco Rubio, why don't
you resign?’ ‘Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?’ How about talking
about the substantive issues the people care about?”

By the end of the evening, Cruz, Carson, Trump, Rubio, and several other
candidates had declared war on the press. They claimed to speak for the
Republican Party, the American people, and the truth. These candidates
are deluded. Many of their statements were falsified on the spot. Others
were exposed as absurd by their opponents. It’s true that the debate
exposed a division within the country. But the division isn’t between
the press and the public. It’s between people who listen to
evidence—reporters, policy analysts, and many Democrats and
Republicans—and an impervious, defiant wing of the GOP.

Take Cruz’s speech. It doesn’t even match the debate transcript. To
begin with, nobody called Trump a villain. CNBC’s John Harwood asked
Trump how he would fulfill his promises to “build a wall and make
another country pay for it” (Mexico), “send 11 million people out of the
country” (undocumented immigrants), and “cut taxes $10 trillion without
increasing the deficit.” Second, nobody asked Carson whether he could do
math. CNBC’s Becky Quick asked Carson how he would close the $1 trillion
gap between current federal spending and the revenue projected from
Carson’s 15 percent flat tax. Third, nobody asked Kasich to insult his
colleagues. Kasich volunteered that Trump’s and Carson’s promises were
impractical and incoherent. All of these questions were substantive. In
fact, Cruz’s speech was a diversion from the query that had been posed
to him—namely, why did he oppose this week’s agreement to raise the debt
limit?

Presented with facts and figures that didn’t fit their story, the
leading Republican candidates accused the moderators of malice and
deceit.

As the evening wore on, it became increasingly obvious that Trump,
Carson, and their allies onstage didn’t just have a problem with the
press. They had problems with fellow Republicans. Harwood brought up Ben
Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman who recently declared that
the GOP, hijacked by the “know-nothingism of the far right,” had
forfeited Bernanke’s allegiance. Sen. Rand Paul dismissed Bernanke’s
criticism as “arrogance” and said it showed why the Fed should be
audited. Paul, one-upping Cruz and Rubio—who had already celebrated the
resignation of House Speaker John Boehner—spurned Boehner’s likely
replacement, Paul Ryan, as “more of the same.”

For much, much mo


http://tinyurl.com/ozxmvax



Have you noticed that nobody else in this newsgroup routinely posts
long, cut and paste commentaries on politics like you do? Some express
personal opinions and preferences from time to time but that's about it.

What are you trying to prove?



I occasionally post such articles or portions of them, as in the current
case.


You didn't answer Luddite's question.


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On Mon, 2 Nov 2015 09:15:45 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:

Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.


It is true that CNBC, which is supposed to be a business channel, did
not ask that many economic questions.
It is also true that none of these press conferences can be called
debates because there is very little actual interchange between the
candidates.

I asked before and didn't really get an answer from you. Are the
democrats going to let Fox moderate one of their debates?
Your brain fart was along the lines of "if the GOP can't deal with
NBC, how will they deal with Putin". I could say the same thing about
the Democrats and Mygan Kelly or Hannity
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On Mon, 2 Nov 2015 09:33:26 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 11/2/2015 9:15 AM, Keyser Söze wrote:

Reality Sucks
Leading GOP candidates aren’t at war with the press. They just have a
problem with the truth.
By William Saletan


Have you noticed that nobody else in this newsgroup routinely posts
long, cut and paste commentaries on politics like you do? Some express
personal opinions and preferences from time to time but that's about it.

What are you trying to prove?

Lack of imagination?


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