Re: Uncle Joe
Posted: Mon May 27, 2024 5:44 pm
Before every NBA game that the TNT guys, Shaq, Barkley, et al don't do, and instead it's Stephen Smith's group, I consider posting in the "NBA Playoffs 2024" thread that it only reminds me of how much I don't care for Smith. I've never have liked him, going back years. For the longest time I thought it was because of all the yelling, but it's not only that.DeletedUser wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2024 5:44 pm White people like fried chicken too.
https://youtu.be/ci0EfjFuCIo?si=TdHQGeBJ-LLE7-Ol
Even when he has a good point, his over the top theatrics often lose him listeners. He just can't help himself. Due to his job/what gets him paid, he is stuck between a journalist and an entertainment personality.Shirley wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2024 6:58 pmBefore every NBA game that the TNT guys, Shaq, Barkley, et al don't do, and instead it's Stephen Smith's group, I consider posting in the "NBA Playoffs 2024" thread that it only reminds me of how much I don't care for Smith. I've never have liked him, going back years. For the longest time I thought it was because of all the yelling, but it's not only that.DeletedUser wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2024 5:44 pm White people like fried chicken too.
https://youtu.be/ci0EfjFuCIo?si=TdHQGeBJ-LLE7-Ol
That being said, there have been times when he has good points to make that no one else seemed to be making. But, he's trying too hard here, and showing what a clown he is.
If it were watermelon, then he'd have a point.
He's a smart dude. But he's a 1 trick pony.Shirley wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2024 8:13 pm No doubt I'm more critical because he's goring my ox.
What occurred to me was, with the many problems and challenges confronting young black men these days, something Smith might have some insight into, instead, all the oxygen is being sucked out of the room by someone who appears to be, like so, so many on the far left, looking for something to be offended about.
Seems like an opportunity missed.
More than trying to create fake outrage about the commercial, I think SAS was more so pointing out the hypocrisy or selective outrage that he sees from some on the left. The left that expects the black vote to fall in line.TDub wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2024 10:52 pm fried chicken (and watermelon) are fucking delicious, shut the fuck up Stephen. Creating faux outrage for viewership is the cornerstone of current media. Turn it off, read a book, watch a documentary. (I will now be taking my own advice and watching "Alone in the Wilderness"......again...)
Speaking of "watermelon are fucking delicious"...TDub wrote: ↑Mon May 27, 2024 10:52 pm fried chicken (and watermelon) are fucking delicious, shut the fuck up Stephen. Creating faux outrage for viewership is the cornerstone of current media. Turn it off, read a book, watch a documentary. (I will now be taking my own advice and watching "Alone in the Wilderness"......again...)
He's an opportunist. No more, no less.KUTradition wrote: ↑Tue May 28, 2024 7:39 am the dude is a clown, echoing all the nonsense trump’s mouthpieces have spouted about trump’s legal problems
if he’s “center”, he’s not doing a very good job showing it
indeedjfish26 wrote: ↑Tue May 28, 2024 8:33 amHe's an opportunist. No more, no less.KUTradition wrote: ↑Tue May 28, 2024 7:39 am the dude is a clown, echoing all the nonsense trump’s mouthpieces have spouted about trump’s legal problems
if he’s “center”, he’s not doing a very good job showing it
Donald Trump has been destined to become the first president convicted of a felony since the day he came down the escalator at Trump Tower and announced he was running for president. 1 The man had no respect for convention, for law or for the Constitution, and now he has been branded a criminal with the prospect of jail time for the 34 counts on which he was convicted.
Tonight is a moment to celebrate that even for Teflon Don, eventually our criminal justice system could gather itself and deliver consequences. But that celebration should be short.
Trump, speaking outside the courtroom, has already doubled down on his dishonest attacks on our justice system, alleging a presidential conspiracy to steer state officials over which Joe Biden has no authority into indicting an innocent Trump on politically motivated charges. 2
Already his minions are spreading the word that a Democratic prosecutor before a Democratic judge aided by a jury pulled from an overwhelmingly Democratic city can’t be trusted. Even Republicans who have resisted boarding the Trump train are rallying to the message because it is true. 3
Trump’s presidential donations site, built to capitalize on the rage of the right, is so flooded with money that it has shut down 4 — unable to choke down the wads of cash true believers are sending the felonious former president’s way. A legion of right-leaning journalists — some ethical 5, some not — are desperately seeking to expose the jurors’ personal information so that the nation will know their political pasts and every sin in an effort to discredit the verdict. 6
After a night of celebration, Biden should react with caution, not just because the forces unleashed by this conviction are unpredictable 7, but also because while he is the Democrats’ president, he is also the nation’s president. In this unprecedented moment, he should bring the nation together by being both modest and merciful.
Modest because it is reasonable for many in the rightward half of the American electorate to doubt the justice system of New York. 8 There was another historic unanimous decision today, this one by the Supreme Court of the United States — which ruled that New York’s Democratic regulators must face a National Rifle Association lawsuit that they targeted the group in violation of its First Amendment rights. The decision rebuking New York was written by liberal lion Justice Sonia Sotomayor.
Just as a unanimous jury said today that Donald Trump is corrupt 9, a 9-0 Supreme Court ruled that the Democrats of New York are not to be trusted. 10
The smart move for Biden is to ask the Democratic governor of New York, Kathy Hochul, to use her clemency power to pardon Trump. 11
First, because as much as Trump has trashed the norms of our Democratic system, we do not want to go down the road of the party of an incumbent president prosecuting his chief political opponent for paperwork infractions. 12 Presidential campaigns produce a lot of paper, pushed by a lot of people. An ambitious prosecutor with a partisan lens can always find an indictable offense if not deliver a conviction in open court.
Second, because it most likely ends Trump’s ability to appeal the verdict against him. Courts will rule any appeal moot if Trump has been pardoned and does not face jail or fines for his crimes. Democrats should not be so confident that such a complicated case will withstand appellate scrutiny at both the state and the federal level. After a pardon, the stain of conviction will be permanent. 13
Third, because it strips Trump of the martyrdom mantle he could well ride into the White House. 14 Moreover, it builds up Democrats and Biden as the adults who, when offered partisan advantage against a wounded opponent, chose to put the nation first. 15
Biden won in 2020 because an exhausted nation turned to him for a chance at peace. This is his opportunity to deliver. 16
Some notes:David Mastio, who served as a political appointee in the George W. Bush administration, is a regional editor for The Center Square and a regular Star Opinion correspondent.
Nope, Biden simply adjusted that giant “consumer prices” knob that we all know exists.KUTradition wrote: ↑Sun Jun 02, 2024 8:23 am news reporting a slew of price cuts by retailers and food chains
it’s almost like they coulda afforded to offer these lower prices all along
Sounds like ELECTION INTERFERENCE to me.Overlander wrote: ↑Sun Jun 02, 2024 8:54 amNope, Biden simply adjusted that giant “consumer prices” knob that we all know exists.KUTradition wrote: ↑Sun Jun 02, 2024 8:23 am news reporting a slew of price cuts by retailers and food chains
it’s almost like they coulda afforded to offer these lower prices all along