brian ross wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 7:34 pm
The4thEstate wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 5:11 pm
The4thEstate wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 4:03 am
Nah, I wouldn't consider Murdoch a globalist sellout. He founded Fox News, which presents news and views that are the antithesis of the globalist perspective. Without Fox News cable news would be nothing but leftist propaganda.
brian ross wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 1:49 pm
You may not but you're only looking at his domestic US enterprise. Outside the US he has been quite willing to be a Globalist. Your views on what constitutes "leftist" is as we have seen all too often, far more biased than what reality indicates, 4E.

Actually, my views on what constitutes leftists are entirely consistent with the way they're defined in America.
Your mileage may vary.
Of course it will vary. Your milage is long overdue for a political realignment. Long over due.
I suspect you wouldn't recognise a real Leftist if they bit you on the bum, mate.
And hopefully you won't try to prove it.
brian ross wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2019 6:21 pm
The US is not the world, 4E. I do wish you'd wake up to that.
The4thEstate wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2019 5:44 pm
Really? Silly me, I thought the U.S. was the only country on the entire globe!
brian ross wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2019 2:45 pm
I could well believe that, 4E.

Just as I'm not surprised that you'd drag out the shopworn "America is not the world" cliche.
Can't remember the first time I heard that one, but I do recall the same words appearing in a sappy Finnish song from about 30 years ago.
Well, I don't speak Finnish nor do I particularly follow popular music, so you're one up on me there, not that it's terribly important.
No, America isn't the world but Americans, like yourself, all too often act as if it was. America is special, America is exceptional. Yeah, sure, what ever floats your boat, 4E. Whatever fantasy you want to live in.

[/quote]
Sounds like an inferiority complex to me.
No reason to be defensive just because some of us Yanks happen to have a favorable opinion of our own country. It's not a zero-sum game.
As for my "left/right" references ... well, if you prefer I can refer to it as "liberal/conservative." But I was told that these terms, well understood in the U.S., don't mean the same thing elsewhere in the world. So take your pick; I'm easy.
brian ross wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2019 2:45 pm
The US is rather unique in how it applies such terms, 4E. They don't translate well outside of the US context as a consequence simply because the rest of the world is a great deal more flexible in how it views such things. What I have always found interesting is how many Americans view the Nazis as being "left-wing" whereas the rest of the world views them as having been "right-wing". Perhaps its 'cause they actually experienced them whereas the US never really did.
Well, naturally the international left isn't about to claim the Nazis, even though their name was short for "National Socialist Party."
Perhaps that strange beast, the "International Left" knows the difference between a Fascist Party and a real Socialist Party, 4E, unlike you, as a member of the American Right. Naziism was a Fascist Party.

[/quote]
Well, not everybody marches to your drummer. I find more wisdom in defining "left vs. right" as "statist vs. individual liberty," as described in this 2013 Forbes article:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/harrybinsw ... a1a59c5f5c
"We need a rational way of setting up the political spectrum ... I have no objection to calling this spectrum 'Right vs. Left.' I have every possible objection to defining the extreme Right as fascism and the extreme Left as communism.
"Fascism and communism are two variants of statism. Both are forms of dictatorship. Neither one recognizes individual rights nor permits individual freedom. The differences are non-essential: fascism is racial statism and communism is statism of economic class."
Whether or not they were true socialists, their brutal, totalitarian government mimicked that of the most oppressive communist regimes, such as the Soviet Union under Stalin, China under Mao, and Cambodia under Pol Pot. And the commies were most definitely not right-wingers.
All depends on how you define the matter of "left-right". All three of those regimes were more interested in the Cult of the Personality than they were necessarily in the plight of the people. Stalin invented it, Mao refined it and Pol Pot took it to it's ultimate form. I'm surprised you haven't mentioned the Kims of the DPRK. Or is that 'cause el Presidente' Trump has decreed that their excesses must now be ignored and you, being a good little Trumpite, have obeyed?
The4thEstate wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 4:03 am
Anyway, it's not about any bias on my part. I already linked to the Harvard study showing how some of America's major media presented news that was 90 percent negative to Trump. Amazingly, Obama got considerably more favorable treatment from the same fawning reporters.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/byro ... t-negative
brian ross wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2019 2:45 pm
As I keep pointing out, it is all a matter of perception, 4E. Harvard is in American society so it looks at politics through a lense shaped by American society. I'm not saying that they or you are wrong, rather that you and they are perhaps mistaken, as is US society in general. The US tends to magnify politics and social elements to the extreme and attempts to paint them as being generally characteristics of either side of politics.

That's all well and good, but on what basis are you asserting that Harvard and I are perhaps mistaken?
The Harvard study identified negative media stories about Trump. You can argue about what's left and what's right, but it's pretty hard to claim that a story that bashes Trump is, in fact, a report that cheerfully accents his positive traits.
You are mistaken 'cause you have identified negative stories about Trump as meaning those stories are actually "Left" in tone/sentiment. They aren't, they're just anti-Trump. Trump does not personify the ideals of the Right. Indeed, I am unsure what Trump believes as against what Trump actively does.[/quote]
Yeah right, and I suppose you also believe that Bernie Sanders doesn't personify the ideals of the Left.
You can try to split hairs on whether anti-Trump stories signify lefty bias, but when the same media gives a liberal president like Obama positive treatment -- and when Democrat scandals are minimized, whitewashed and/or ignored by the same media -- then it's a matter of "If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck and quacks like a duck" ... what is it?
Trump may not be a traditional conservative (right-winger), but a great many of his policies and stances fit neatly into that category. Here, I'll throw you a bone and list a few:
1. Strong national sovereignty as opposed to open borders and taking in hordes of Third World refugees and asylum seekers.
2. Supreme Court judges that are firm Constitutionalists.
3. "America first" decisions when it comes to treaties that don't benefit the nation and its citizens, such as the Paris climate agreement, the TPP and Obama's Iran treaty.
4. American energy independence instead of a policy banning energy exploration to pay homage to the climate change lobby.
5. Anti-socialism.
6. Strong military.
7. Minimal allegiance to the dictates of unelected supernational bodies such as the EU and the U.N.
So what, in your mind, makes Trump a lefty?
brian ross wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2019 2:45 pm
I am unsure why you believe Obama or any el Presidente' of the USA should be perfect. They aren't. Obama should be accorded a better deal than many on the right in US society allows but he was far from perfect. History will treat him much better than many Americans allow and it will I don't doubt, treat Trump much worse than many Americans believe.
Since I never claimed that any president should be perfect, I'll have to file that comment under "strawman."
Regardless, I tend to believe that history will show that Trump did a great deal more for the average American than Obama, who was more concerned with pleasing the chardonnay-sipping lefties in Europe than improving the lives of working citizens in his own country.
Plus, his entire foreign policy seemed based on the notion that America can't apologize enough for itself. What kind of president inks his name to the Paris climate accord, given the fact that America was on the hook to pay $3 billion to some U.N. slush fund ... and that China, the world's greatest spewer of CO2, got a free pass for 15 years?
There are problems, I am willing to admit with the way the UN is funded. There are also problems with China being identified as a "developing nation". However, Trump appears to be rather a "no-nothing" in his attitudes towards the world. America is no longer isolated from the effects of the world economy, 4E and I think it is time Americans in general acknowledged that rather than continually deny it.

[/quote]
Well, that's the point: America IS affected by the world economy, which is why Trump has declared that the U.S. will no longer meekly accept multi-billion-dollar trade imbalances at the hands of China, South Korea, Japan, etc.
He's also served notice to NATO nations that it's time for all of them to pay their agreed-upon "fair share."
That's why I find it refreshing to have a president who asserts America's interests instead of constantly bowing -- literally and figuratively -- to foreign leaders and international bodies that don't deserve $3 billion of the American taxpayers' money, given their track record for wasting it.