You mean like the time he called an American born federal judge a Mexican and suggested he couldn't do his job?
Yes, exactly like that. Not racism.
Or his comments that offered the impression of Mexicans entering the U.S. as criminals with "some" good ones mixed in?
A perfectly valid statistically based conclusion to draw. It doesn't matter that you would have characterized the statistics differently; statistics are what they are. You know that.
You ever heard someone say something racist and then tell you they weren't racist?
No.
The woman who called Obama's wife a gorilla did that. It happens. Most people are the hero of their own narratives.
I can't tell what that has to do with President Trump believing that he has always judged people based on merit, and never on race or sex or any other variable, other than performance and projected performance.
Nazis had power, these people have none, and never will.
No, at first they didn't. And some people doubtless thought they never would. Not in Germany.
These people have no power and never will. Hitler was a political genius---there's no political genius here.
I'm not arguing against the first Amendment.
Then you should explain yourself, because many many people think that you are. Please link to pertinent First Amendment SCOTUS cases to help illustrate that your views are authoritative also. I'm thinking the "yelling 'fire' in a crowded theater" is on point, for example.
Or the post before that one:
The easy answer is that I have no idea what your education and background are so I can't know what is or isn't familiar to you. It was used by someone as plain speaking as Harry S. Truman, made famous by Lord Chesterfield and is nothing more or less than a natural reflection of my own background and education.
It's okay to ask or google if you run across a word or phrase that's unfamiliar to you for any number of reasons. I love it when that happens. Puts another arrow in the quiver. It's less okay to make a production out of it
Well that's why I mentioned it!
or cast aspersions as to my intent because you didn't get it.
I got it. It wasn't about your intent, it's about what you actually, factually did. You said "man of parts." Nobody knows what "man of parts" means, so you are "making a production out of it."
I love that one.
That needs context. So what what, by way of?
Go back and read my actual post, instead of just your bad editing. There's a whole paragraph between the two sentences you quoted me on. As if I just wrote them continuously.
. . . why would someone having a temper mean that they'll kill someone if you give them a gun?
A man with a temper is at odds with his wife. It's irresponsible to put any temptation in easy reach. It doesn't have to be a likely outcome, but the potential for disaster is foreseeable and your actions in leaving the means to make it more likely than without it isn't without moral weight, even if you have no criminal liability.
It isn't without moral weight, if your intention is for him to kill his wife! But barring that, this is not a moral matter.
A person is responsible for their actions.
. . . there've been plenty of murderers who are cool as a cucumber.
And some who are left handed. Some probably liked Snickers. There are likely any number of curious potential points unrelated to mine.
Correct, and good show!
Or maybe all you did is say, "Women" and give him that exasperated look of understanding. That appears to be what the lunatic fringe sees in Trump. And he knows it because it's been there for a while. A thing that should make a man of parts set a different rhetorical course.
Who accused him of being that?
Of using irresponsible with inflammatory rhetoric? Anyone who followed his comments over the course of his campaign who wasn't wedded to it. I've reposted some of that rhetoric in rebutting PJ's "He only said something like that once and took it back/regretted it" song and dance.
No, of being a "man of parts."
You think the Jews who lived in Germany stayed because they thought the Brown Shirts would come to power there?
They're still never going to have power.
The analogy wasn't cynical, it simply wasn't willfully naive. If you don't think it's apt then by all means tell me why in particular.
I did. I gave a counter analogy.
I've never said or thought you were slow. I've noted a tendency to be blind to the facts when your rooting interests are fully engaged.
Not slow; blind. Got it.
I didn't suggest he was...
You're talking about his morals. How else am I supposed to engage? Why else are you mentioning his morals?
what I did note is that I've been speaking to a broader moral accountability on Trump's part for the alt right response to his rhetorical approach, not some sense of literal, criminal liability framed by the intent to cause harm.
So you judge his "rhetorical approach" to be immoral. That's one of the more bizarre opinions I've run across wrt to President Trump, to be honest. I've heard plenty of opinions that opine that his rhetorical approach is untraditional and unpresidential, but none so far besides yours, that it is literally immoral how he says what he says. Not what he says, but how he says it; that's immoral; is that what you're saying?
So we might as well consider the pedophile and ourselves on the same moral ground? No.
Yes. There are grave sins and and there are light sins, but they are all immoral, and we all commit immorality. And immorality is why we deserve to die forever in hellfire, and the single remedy that He offers us couldn't be simpler and is that we should believe HE IS RISEN.
That's not the message. The message is that for all our distinctions we're still unworthy, that the best of us absent grace is in trouble if he argues for getting what he deserves. Did God set aside distinct punishments under the Law in the OT or did he say, "They're [offenses] all the same so just kill the offender for any and every transgression"?
Supra. Unless what you're suggesting is that President Trump is guilty of crimes, which is specifically what you've denied so far.