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Posted

I don’t think you’ve read anything about what is on the emails. They tie his dad directly to the money. And the emails have been verified by people who were on them. Might want to go read about them and then second guess your non fact based trolling. When you get called out you pivot to something else. Address what’s in front of you. Then we can talk about people paying to stay at a resort.

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Posted

Oh and the director of National intelligence this morning shot down that it’s a smear campaign.

Edit. Why isn’t Adam Schiff in trouble for his lies and mis information? That should seriously be answered.

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Posted

Man, the hypocrisy on both sides is disgusting! You guys crying about unfair coverage kill me. Simply depends on who's in power at the time. Suddenly, everything about Biden is verified and true, but when equal sources in similar positions, and people who literally just worked for Trump talk about his shadiness you guys just say #fakenews. Gross pot calling the kettle black here.

Let's just keep the discussion to what policy should be. I actually learn from people on here when they put forth well thought out ideas and articulate messages vs the constant defense of their side in spite of gross evidence damning both sides...


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Posted

Agree to disagree. There is actually evidence. Before there isn’t. Single witness testimony without evidence isn’t evidence.

Anywho.....what policy would you like to discuss?

Posted
Agree to disagree. There is actually evidence. Before there isn’t. Single witness testimony without evidence isn’t evidence.

Anywho.....what policy would you like to discuss?

You say that, but it's hilarious because one person's irrefutable evidence is clearly another's #fakenews. All the proof has been put in here a thousand times, but the left immediately discounts any "proof" as BS and the right calls it "fake news" on the other side of that coin. You proved it simply by replying. Everyone is so convinced of their own infallibility no one's ever going to give any credence to the other side... We're all just on opposite sides of opinions.

No issues in particular. Everything from social injustice to fiscal discipline in here seems to be covered by educated people. If you're able to get past some people's (both sides) smug attitude of thinking they're the only one in here that knows anything, there's actually a lot to be learned. Maybe I'm just the only idiot on BO.net that doesn't know everything. Meh...


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Posted
4 hours ago, drewpey said:

lifelong public servant who has been under public scrutiny for 40+ years ...

Could you remind why Biden quit his presidential run in the 70's?  

 

Posted (edited)
6 hours ago, Guardian said:

Oh and the director of National intelligence this morning shot down that it’s a smear campaign.

Edit. Why isn’t Adam Schiff in trouble for his lies and mis information? That should seriously be answered.

So the DNI, who reports to Trump, was nominated by Trump for the job, and been in the job since this past May, says that an email that was “verified” authentic from an anonymous source who sent it to Fox News, a media organization that is Pro-Trump, says it’s not a smear campaign?

Shocking 😂 

https://apnews.com/article/024b553e9a4ffb2716286dd134876f8a
 

Yet Giuliani says foreign sources didn’t provide the Hunter Biden emails. He says a laptop containing the emails and intimate photos was simply abandoned in a Delaware repair shop and the shop owner reached out to Giulianis lawyer.”

Seems “authentic.” So, the repair shop owner random reached out to the lawyer of the lawyer who’s job is to find dirt on Joe Biden, the father of the owner of the purported laptop, who’s running against Trump for President? And he did this possibly without trying to, I dunno, contact the owner of said laptop?

Oh and the media outlets that are making a big deal of the emails? Fox News and The New York Post which are Pro-Trump.

Edited by Sua Sponte
Posted
2 hours ago, slackline said:

You say that, but it's hilarious because one person's irrefutable evidence is clearly another's #fakenews. All the proof has been put in here a thousand times, but the left immediately discounts any "proof" as BS and the right calls it "fake news" on the other side of that coin. You proved it simply by replying. Everyone is so convinced of their own infallibility no one's ever going to give any credence to the other side... We're all just on opposite sides of opinions.

I agree with what you said.  However, as the starting point in regards to the Joe/Hunter Biden issue, can we all agree that career politicians becoming multi multi millionaires during and after their time in office is something that raises any number of serious questions that need answered?  Let's agree on that and go from there.  Folks on both sides like to throw out the "term limits" issue.  I wholeheartedly agree that we need term limits for folks just like Joe Biden.  There is absolutely no way you can spend almost 5 decades in DC and not be wrapped up in endless backdoor deals where someone, somewhere now has leverage on you.  In this case it would seem that China and Ukraine potentially hold the leverage.  Dirty money, kickbacks and bribes become normal to people like Biden who have been there that long.  Hell, he probably no longer sees anything wrong with it because it has gone on so long.  

I just don't see how anyone can deny the fact that Biden is surrounded by shady issues.  Just look at his houses.  He bought a 10,000 square foot house in 1974.  In 1996 he built a house on 4 acres that is almost 7000 square feet.  All this while being consistently listed as one of the poorest members of the senate.  I just don't buy the book sales and speaking fees line anymore.  Call me cynical, I just don't.  

Sim posted a video that details Biden's plagiarism and lies about school.  While it may not be surprising and good for a laugh or two, it shows what his character is like.  He is willing to lie, cheat and steal to get ahead in politics.  That is what dirty politicians do.  

Posted
6 minutes ago, lloyd christmas said:

I agree with what you said.  However, as the starting point in regards to the Joe/Hunter Biden issue, can we all agree that career politicians becoming multi multi millionaires during and after their time in office is something that raises any number of serious questions that need answered?  Let's agree on that and go from there.  Folks on both sides like to throw out the "term limits" issue.  I wholeheartedly agree that we need term limits for folks just like Joe Biden.  There is absolutely no way you can spend almost 5 decades in DC and not be wrapped up in endless backdoor deals where someone, somewhere now has leverage on you.  In this case it would seem that China and Ukraine potentially hold the leverage.  Dirty money, kickbacks and bribes become normal to people like Biden who have been there that long.  Hell, he probably no longer sees anything wrong with it because it has gone on so long.  

I just don't see how anyone can deny the fact that Biden is surrounded by shady issues.  Just look at his houses.  He bought a 10,000 square foot house in 1974.  In 1996 he built a house on 4 acres that is almost 7000 square feet.  All this while being consistently listed as one of the poorest members of the senate.  I just don't buy the book sales and speaking fees line anymore.  Call me cynical, I just don't.  

Sim posted a video that details Biden's plagiarism and lies about school.  While it may not be surprising and good for a laugh or two, it shows what his character is like.  He is willing to lie, cheat and steal to get ahead in politics.  That is what dirty politicians do.  

https://www.nytimes.com/1989/05/29/us/professional-board-clears-biden-in-two-allegations-of-plagiarism.html

Do your last two sentences apply to Trump and the GOP as well?

 

Posted
50 minutes ago, Sua Sponte said:

NYC Steel Workers Union < China/Ukraine IRT leverage.

I do not believe Trump is the most honest person out there.  I can promise you that.  However, I do not think it is fair to compare a businessman to a career politician who used his position in government to generate wealth for himself and his family.  Same for the Clintons, Obamas and any member of the GOP that has done the same.  

Posted
8 minutes ago, lloyd christmas said:

I  do not believe Trump is the most honest person out there.

Come on man...stop quibbling about this shit.  He is simply dishonest, says what he thinks will work in the moment or not and goes back on his word.  Both politically and in business.  Because one is in the "free market/private industry" doesn't make it better or worse than someone who's been in "public service" their whole life.
 

Quote

 I can promise you that.  However, I do not think it is fair to compare a businessman to a career politician who used his position in government to generate wealth for himself and his family.  Same for the Clintons, Obamas and any member of the GOP that has done the same.  

So, I know for one thing when I had to deal with Boxer AND Feinstein as my Senators digging into how they got so rich (and their families...Mr. Boxer in particular) was there's no insider trading for them.  So they can hear about a deal, or know how legislation is going to go.  I think this has since been changed because of those shit-ass republicans who took the classified briefs and started selling stock before the public getting in trouble.  This COULD explain it, but there's obviously more nefarious ways "Uncle Joe" coulda made his money.

But lets not act like Trump hasn't done the exact same thing for his family, example #1 - The Trump Foundation.

Also, personal opinion only, but to think that there's more leverage on Joe than there is on Donny...I'm hard pressed to believe that.

3 hours ago, Sim said:

So...no, you can't.  This isn't fucking Twitter, stop being a shit-post crusader, lol.

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Posted
4 hours ago, slackline said:

No issues in particular. Everything from social injustice to fiscal discipline in here seems to be covered by educated people. If you're able to get past some people's (both sides) smug attitude of thinking they're the only one in here that knows anything, there's actually a lot to be learned. Maybe I'm just the only idiot on BO.net that doesn't know everything. Meh...

I actually have a policy question.  What is the Republican answer for Health Care?  ACA's been out for years, best I've heard is more HSA/FSA and "let states deal with it."

Those don't help with people that really need healthcare, though they do appeal to my political leanings.  I've had family members born with chronic medical conditions I've mentioned before, bankrupting their families.  FSA/HSA ain't gonna help with that.

Best I can find for Donny is - https://www.promiseskept.com/achievement/overview/healthcare/ which doesn't tell me anything about future plans, and his campaign site lacks anything on it.  Funny the "Shop" link is the biggest up top.

Best I can find for Joey - https://joebiden.com/healthcare/, plus there's a ton of "plan" links (didn't find Green Deal...also didn't look hard) for what they want.

Posted

Start with the assumption that health care is not a right and the US currently has the best healthcare system in the world (not talking insurance but the system of providing health care).

Now talk.

Posted

We as a country have determined that we want certain segments of the population to have government supported health care and have for more than 50 years. Why is expanding this out to include others a bad thing if the voting populous determines that is what they want? 

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Posted
9 minutes ago, Guardian said:

Start with the assumption that health care is not a right and the US currently has the best healthcare system in the world (not talking insurance but the system of providing health care).

Now talk.

How do you separate the insurance aspect from healthcare? I’m not sure there’s a conversation to be had about the”best healthcare system in the world” without considering insurance in the equation. As far as “healthcare is not a right”, it’s abundantly clear that the majority of Americans would like it to be. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/10/03/most-continue-to-say-ensuring-health-care-coverage-is-governments-responsibility/ 

Posted
Start with the assumption that health care is not a right and the US currently has the best healthcare system in the world (not talking insurance but the system of providing health care).

Now talk.

I’m curious as to what qualifies the US healthcare system as the best in the world. Is it the fact that the best possible care that exists happens to be in the US?

What good does something that is unattainable to a slew of Americans do? It might as well not exist to them.

Should getting decent healthcare really be something that drives people into the red? Why? Don’t we have a duty to our fellow man to help them out? The system in place now, doesn’t work for a lot of people. Without insurance and pretty solid job security I’d be in major debt through zero fault of my own. Health issues are someone else’s problem until you or someone close to you is fighting them...

This one is more philosophical than an actual question: So, happiness is a right, but being healthy to enjoy it isn’t? I’m just curious.


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Posted (edited)

Biden's "kid" is a 50-something year old grown ass man.  I believe he's a grandparent for Christ's sake...

But those arguing against his being included in the mud fest sure seem ok with anyone with a last name of Trump being slimed, including a teenager because they are related to "bad orange man" so it's ok to do so.

That said, although there are some other financial shenanigans Hunter is likely to see prison time over (look for an Indian casino thing along with one business partner in jail, the other just had his sentence confirmed after appeal), cashing in on a famous last name is not likely one of them.

Where the criminal acts come in is with whatever federal officials aided/abetted/contributed/were part of a conspiracy as part of that cashing in.

"You got six hours to fire the prosecutor or you aren't getting the billion dollars" isn't a good look as part of that.

Neither is using Air Force 2 as your calling card to score personal financial success.  

The veracity of the laptop and contents have been more than proven to include, released today, a physical receipt left at the repair shop and signed by Hunter.

Biden is now officially hiding in his basement since yesterday.  For "debate prep."  That sure is convenient that the press isn't hounding him over this scandal and letting him prepare.  I'm sure they'd give Trump the same courtesy.

Not to mention the deletion of foreign policy as a topic as agreed to previously by both candidates and has been historically precedented in these debates.  Wonder why that deletion?

Finally, and the big takeaway from Hunter-gate, is the deliberate squelching of a major news story by supposedly "neutral" IT providers.  By taking their stance, both Facebook and Twitter have declared themselves as publishers.  I hope the FCC and/or Congress act accordingly.

 

edited to add:  Talking head lawyer Jeffrey Tobin of way too many liberal outlets and impeachment cheerleader was "given time off to deal with personal issues" after being caught spanking his monkey on a business zoom call.  

 

 

Oh, and our deficit is now 3.1 trillion this year.  What could possibly go wrong?

Edited by brickhistory
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Posted



Start with the assumption that health care is not a right and the US currently has the best healthcare system in the world (not talking insurance but the system of providing health care).

Now talk.


Need more information... What defines "best" regarding healthcare? This is probably the fundamental question regarding healthcare policy. So what is best? Cutting edge technologies and research in treatments? Access to basic care at adorable prices? Access to basic care covered by taxes? Access to emergency/preventative/diagnostic care?

You also make a strong assumption that you can separate insurance from the healthcare system. So long as people may need to pay for medical treatments that they can't afford to pay out of pocket for, insurance will be a factor in the discussion. It's like saying car insurance should be made optional (especially if you believe healthcare is not a right, since most people don't consider driving a car a right).

As military members, it's easy to have a skewed opinion, as Tricare has pretty good coverage and is significantly cheaper than anything comparable on the open market.
Posted
8 minutes ago, jazzdude said:

As military members, it's easy to have a skewed opinion, as Tricare has pretty good coverage and is significantly cheaper than anything comparable on the open market.

This is one of the reasons I ask this question here.  I'm the only member of my current family generation that did the military thing. My Dad retired, got that Tricare, but emphatically urged us not to join.  Watching my brothers struggle through the financial crisis, and then medical issues really opened my eyes up to what it was costing for healthcare.

Then I married into a family w/Hemophilia.  From having eyes being open, to getting lemon juice squeezed in them.

There are competing opinions on here, but they're usually thought provoking enough and good conversation to make me think about what I want vs. what I think is right outside my little sphere.

Thanks Dudes and Dudettes.

Posted
1 hour ago, Guardian said:

Start with the assumption that health care is not a right and the US currently has the best healthcare system in the world (not talking insurance but the system of providing health care).

Now talk.

Why can't we start here:

Are we as a culture ok with people falling into unrecoverable lifelong poverty and never returning to be productive taxpaying citizens for what amounts to losing a medical lottery?

I think the large majority of people would agree something should be done.  If so, what?

Posted



This is one of the reasons I ask this question here.  I'm the only member of my current family generation that did the military thing. My Dad retired, got that Tricare, but emphatically urged us not to join.  Watching my brothers struggle through the financial crisis, and then medical issues really opened my eyes up to what it was costing for healthcare.

Then I married into a family w/Hemophilia.  From having eyes being open, to getting lemon juice squeezed in them.
There are competing opinions on here, but they're usually thought provoking enough and good conversation to make me think about what I want vs. what I think is right outside my little sphere.
Thanks Dudes and Dudettes.


Access to Tricare was probably the single most important factor is me deciding to take the pilot bonus (and stay to 20).

Pilot bonus put money in the bank/investment portfolio for my family if something were to happen to me (above and beyond SGLI), and check of the month would mean that even if I can't work after I reach military retirement, my family's basic needs could be met. But Tricare removes what I feel is the biggest risk to finances in retirement-healthcare costs.

Healthcare costs are probably the one big risk (in my opinion) that can ruin financial security, especially as you get closer to retirement (real retirement, and no longer working), and could potentially wipe out decades, or a lifetime, of careful financial planning.

Hell, it was hard enough to decide how much I was willing to pay when my pet cat went to the emergency vet; I can't imagine having a loved one going to the ER and having to set a price on their life because health insurance didn't cover the care (or cover enough with high deductables or co-insurance). Especially when I (eventually) am no longer working and living on a fixed income. What's the catastrophic cap for Tricare? $600 in a given year? It's low enough that as a major, it's a drop in the bucket in my emergency fund.
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