Monday, December 07, 2015

Rand Paul is the only candidate that has a long history of being correct regarding privacy standards and sending soldiers into random war.

Is there anything Richard Hass can say other than war?

That was the most fast talking bullshit I have ever heard.. There must be the perfume of a Bush in the air.

When are white men like Hass going to live the in the real world other than a world of violence? 

Let's hear the lies. The NSA never violates privacy rights. What is the next one?

Did Bush say President Obama is using the strong man argument or the straw man argument? 

Quick and Dirties 

Political ads and analysis (click here) are reaching a fever pitch, so it seems like a good time to talk about the phrase “straw man.” What does it mean when two people are debating and one accuses the other of putting forth a straw man argument?

What Is a Straw Man Argument?

I always think of the Straw Man from the Wizard of Oz, but that's not where the term comes from. In its simplest definition, it's the name of a logical fallacy, which means that if you carefully dissect the argument or statement, it doesn't make sense. Debaters invoke a straw man when they put forth an argument--usually something extreme or easy to argue against--that they know their opponent doesn't support. You put forth a straw man because you know it will be easy for you to knock down or discredit. It's a way of misrepresenting your opponent's position.
Political ads and analysis are reaching a fever pitch, so it seems like a good time to talk about the phrase “straw man.” What does it mean when two people are debating and one accuses the other of putting forth a straw man argument?

What Is a Straw Man Argument?

I always think of the Straw Man from the Wizard of Oz, but that's not where the term comes from. In its simplest definition, it's the name of a logical fallacy, which means that if you carefully dissect the argument or statement, it doesn't make sense. Debaters invoke a straw man when they put forth an argument--usually something extreme or easy to argue against--that they know their opponent doesn't support. You put forth a straw man because you know it will be easy for you to knock down or discredit. It's a way of misrepresenting your opponent's position.
- See more at: http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/what-straw-man-argument?page=all#sthash.aA54RGJl.dpuf

Opps, "you know what" Bush stated Donald Trump, at times, talks like an adult and Bush will never insult any one except the intelligence of Americans. The next thing we know Bush will bring duct tape to hush others who say "hell" due to the First Amendment laws. Oh, yeah, I forgot the Patriot Act.

Bush has a limited vocabulary that tells Americans they are stupid and without knowledge of what he speaks. He said nothing. 

He followed Hass in a media attempt to put fear back in the gut of the American public. The media should have real questions like, "Do you believe there will ever be peace for the USA and how are you going to go accomplish it. You know, Peace Mission Accomplished. Perhaps when Bush actually knows his own policies he can say something other than, "Something like that."

There is a small arms treaty the United Nations have, how do you see that ending the violence globally? 

There a many schools of etiquette in the USA but I've heard of a school of the fast talker. They must let Americans know where they can go to learn the skill, maybe if Americans spoke Bush and Hass language they might actually hear us. 

June 1, 2015
Rand Paul

Congress (click here) will this week force the president to end his illegal collection of all American phone records. This is a victory for defenders of privacy.

The Fourth Amendment requires that government searches be individualized. Collecting all Americans' phone records all the time indiscriminately is what our Founders fought against when they objected to general warrants....

It is obvious Rand Paul THINKS and does just run at the mouth.

I really wish politicans would not lie. If nothing else it gets boring.

I was actually sleeping in when the television I left on started a rant of Richard Hass. God works in strange ways. My mother is right. 

In the spirit of openness and transparency, (click here) here is a partial list of current and planned future data collection targets:

  • internet searches
  • websites visited
  • emails sent and received
  • social media activity (Facebook, Twitter, etc)
  • blogging activity including posts read, written, and commented on 
  • videos watched and/or uploaded online
  • photos viewed and/or uploaded online
  • mobile phone GPS-location data
  • mobile phone apps downloaded
  • phone call records
  • text messages sent and received
  • Skype video calls
  • online purchases and auction transactions
  • credit card/ debit card transactions
  • financial information
  • legal documents
  • travel documents
  • health records
  • cable television shows watched and recorded
  • commuter toll records
  • electronic bus and subway passes / Smartpasses
  • facial recognition data from surveillance cameras
  • educational records
  • arrest records
  • driver license information

Political ads and analysis are reaching a fever pitch, so it seems like a good time to talk about the phrase “straw man.” What does it mean when two people are debating and one accuses the other of putting forth a straw man argument?

What Is a Straw Man Argument?

I always think of the Straw Man from the Wizard of Oz, but that's not where the term comes from. In its simplest definition, it's the name of a logical fallacy, which means that if you carefully dissect the argument or statement, it doesn't make sense. Debaters invoke a straw man when they put forth an argument--usually something extreme or easy to argue against--that they know their opponent doesn't support. You put forth a straw man because you know it will be easy for you to knock down or discredit. It's a way of misrepresenting your opponent's position.
- See more at: http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/what-straw-man-argument?page=all#sthash.aA54RGJl.dpuf=
Political ads and analysis are reaching a fever pitch, so it seems like a good time to talk about the phrase “straw man.” What does it mean when two people are debating and one accuses the other of putting forth a straw man argument?

What Is a Straw Man Argument?

I always think of the Straw Man from the Wizard of Oz, but that's not where the term comes from. In its simplest definition, it's the name of a logical fallacy, which means that if you carefully dissect the argument or statement, it doesn't make sense. Debaters invoke a straw man when they put forth an argument--usually something extreme or easy to argue against--that they know their opponent doesn't support. You put forth a straw man because you know it will be easy for you to knock down or discredit. It's a way of misrepresenting your opponent's position.
- See more at: http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/what-straw-man-argument?page=all#sthash.aA54RGJl.dpuf