Sheik Yerbouti
Lifer
- Feb 16, 2005
- 14,075
- 5,438
- 136
False equivalency.
Please show me something even remotely equivalent to the loaded wording in the NYT hit piece on Rubio.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/07/u...ton-traces-friendly-path-troubling-party.html
These same moves (low saving rate, taking on too much debt, spending on unnecessary luxury items, not saving enough for retirement) seem to be very typical for most Americans, sadly. Rubio's certainly one of us!
it's that season again.
reminds me of 2008, when they insinuated that John McCain was having an affair with a lobbyist.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/30/AR2008123002872.html
I believe a lot of people can relate to Rubio. I imagine that his definition of "dead broke" is much different than Hillary's.These same moves (low saving rate, taking on too much debt, spending on unnecessary luxury items, not saving enough for retirement) seem to be very typical for most Americans, sadly. Rubio's certainly one of us!
You live in a world so different than mine and I'm happy for you.In order to be able to detect false equivalencies you have to be in complete balance yourself. And if you have an unconscious bias that says that what you believe is balanced then you will believe yourself to be thus capable. That would introduce bias and self deception into the equation.
What evidence can you provide to assure me that you are deeply aware of everything that you feel. Do you know, for example, how much pain would be involved knowing that you hate yourself, and how powerfully denied and deeply buried those feelings might be.
It might be, for example, possible that my opinion that we hate ourselves is incorrect, a projection, say, of my own personal feelings, something I think you have even suggested, but even if true, and I don't think it is for reasons I will explain in a moment, what it would do for me, knowing that, is not to trust my opinions, to suspect that everything I believe is a product of that unconscious opinion. So even if I am wrong, what I am forced to do is to doubt my ability to evaluate what is balance and what is not. The result, of course, is what I would call humility.
As to why I doubt that my opinion of self hate only applies to me is that I was told by somebody else that was my condition and I didn't believe it, but the person who told me said he was sure 99.999% that he had discovered that very fact about himself and gotten free and was additionally so different than anybody else I had ever met that I took the chance to see. Well all I can say to keep this short is that I couldn't believe it when I managed to dredge up those feelings. I had no idea, I said over and over a thousand times. All my remembered life I had been full of shit and had no idea. I had a brain defect that denied my true reality. The great sin people commit, in my opinion, is to be sure of themselves and I'll be damned but I'm convinced of it. What a pickle.
So what happens to me when I face the fact that I know that I don't know and wonder how that can be is to come to the end of thinking. I turn to the right and look out my kitchen window. It's a beautiful bright warm day and the plants in the garden sway in the breeze. Everything is perfect when my ego is defeated, when paradox resolves at a higher level of understanding.
There is a Buddhist prayer that goes I vow to save all sentient beings, and a saying that says a person can be known by their aim.
I believe a lot of people can relate to Rubio.
And contrast that with Hillary if you don't mind. Who do you think people will relate to more?Yeah, I can definitely relate. I also used an $800k book advance to pay off my student loans and accidently gave my GOP credit card to the stone pavers. Hang on, I have to go drive my Audi Q7 to my $80k fishing boat for the weekend.
New York Times Embarrasses Itself
You live in a world so different than mine and I'm happy for you.
I believe a lot of people can relate to Rubio.
I don't believe that anyone has a problem with NYT looking into the management of his finances....it's the rhetoric used, the trivialities "reported", and the way it was framed. Hit piece is hit piece...highly partisan yellow journalism. The NYT has lost a good chunk of its integrity imo.Traffic article was totally silly, and it was put on the front page so it being a blog isn't terribly relevant.
But still, the look into his finances is totally legitimate, so OP is faux outrage at best.
Where did Rubio dock his boat to dodge taxes? Anyone?
http://iotwreport.com/?p=289117
Here's Rubio's:
Here's Kerry's:
And just who was that somebody? Interesting question. NYT denies American Bridge had anything to do with the story...that's their story and they're sticking to it! Yet records show that each of the citations mentioned by the New York Times were pulled in person by American Bridge operatives on May 26, 2015. How curious is that?One appears to be dedicated to the 2016 election. And somebody had to go dig through FL records to find the ticket info.
I don't believe that anyone has a problem with NYT looking into the management of his finances....it's the rhetoric used, the trivialities "reported", and the way it was framed. Hit piece is hit piece...highly partisan yellow journalism. The NYT has lost a good chunk of its integrity imo.
And just who was that somebody? Interesting question. NYT denies American Bridge had anything to do with the story...that's their story and they're sticking to it! Yet records show that each of the citations mentioned by the New York Times were pulled in person by American Bridge operatives on May 26, 2015. How curious is that?
You'll feel different when all the good work that the Marco and Jeanette Rubio Foundation has done comes out.Indeed, a law school graduate with multiple homes and an $800K book deal. A true man of the people.
-snip-
or leasing an ultra-expensive luxury SUV, ....
So now a $50k car is "ultra-expensive"?
Fern
A Q7 after taxes and destination/etc. fees will be near $60k. Average car price is nearly half that. So yes, that is ultra-expensive. I'm not sure what you're confused about. And leasing is the least financially sensible way of owning a car, to boot.
The news article said $50K.
Comparable SUVs cost the same.
And I disagree with your last statement. My last auto 'purchase' was originally arranged as a lease because the difference between a lease and outright purchase was about $150. (Debt on purchase was about $150 lower than price to purchase at expiration of lease). I paid the extra $150. I considered it a cheap 'put option' in case I decided to unload the vehicle.
Fern