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Discussion » Statements » Rosie's Corner » Those who carry the most baggage with them are the ones who don't answer the question asked but reply to a question not asked. Why is that?

Those who carry the most baggage with them are the ones who don't answer the question asked but reply to a question not asked. Why is that?

Maybe a skewed sense of humor? Taking umbrage at the nerve of the question they cannot or dare not answer and so they do a WHATABOUT or speak of something entirely obscure and unrelated to the question. It gives more insight into what they are all about. It is illuminating in fact and gives you a roadmap into their character.

Posted - March 31, 2019

Responses


  • 34964
    Just applying the question to all sides not just Trump.

    And I did answer the question.  This post was edited by my2cents at March 31, 2019 9:49 AM MDT
      March 31, 2019 9:47 AM MDT
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  • 46117
    YOU ARE RIGHT. SO RIGHT.  Let's apply it to the entire GOP.


    Let's start with Huckabee, Trump's mouthpiece.  

    Outlook Perspective

    Kavanaugh is lying. His upbringing explains why.

     
     

    The elite learn early that they’re special — and that they won’t face consequences.

     
    Brett Kavanaugh's testimony, in 3 minutes
     
    Shamus Khan, the chair of the sociology department at Columbia University, is the author of “Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St. Paul’s School.”
    September 28, 2018

    Brett Kavanaugh is not telling the whole truth. When President George W. Bush nominated him to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 2006, he told senators that he’d had nothing to do with the war on terror’s detention policies; that was not true. Kavanaugh also claimed under oath, that year and again this month, that he didn’t know that Democratic Party memos a GOP staffer showed him in 2003 were illegally obtained; his emails from that period reveal that these statements were probably false. And it cannot be possible that the Supreme Court nominee was both a well-behaved virgin who never lost control as a young man, as he told Fox News and the Senate Judiciary Committee this past week, and an often-drunk member of the “Keg City Club” and a “Renate Alumnius ,” as he seems to have bragged to many people and written into his high school yearbook. Then there are the sexual misconduct allegations against him, which he denies.

    How could a man who appears to value honor and the integrity of the legal system explain this apparent mendacity? How could a man brought up in some of our nation’s most storied institutions — Georgetown Prep, Yale College, Yale Law School — dissemble with such ease? The answer lies in the privilege such institutions instill in their members, a privilege that suggests the rules that govern American society are for the common man, not the exceptional one.

    [Can truth survive this president? An honest investigation.]

    The classical root of “privilege,” privus lex, means “private law.” The French aristocracy, for instance, was endowed with privileges, primarily exemption from taxation. Today’s equivalents are not aristocrats, yet they have both the sense and the experience that the rules don’t really apply to them and that they can act without much concern for the consequences. Elite schools like Georgetown Prep and Yale have long cultivated this sensibility in conscious and unconscious ways.

    What makes these schools elite is that so few can attend. In the mythologies they construct, only those who are truly exceptional are admitted — precisely because they are not like everyone else. Yale President Peter Salovey, for instance, has welcomed freshmen by telling them that they are “the very best students.” To attend these schools is to be told constantly: You’re special, you’re a member of the elect, you have been chosen because of your outstanding qualities and accomplishments.

    Schools often quite openly affirm the idea that, because you are better, you are not governed by the same dynamics as everyone else. They celebratetheir astonishingly low acceptance rates and broadcast lists of notable alumni who have earned their places within the nation’s highest institutions, such as the Supreme Court. I heard these messages constantly when I attended St. Paul’s, one of the most exclusive New England boarding schools, where boys and girls broke rules with impunity, knowing that the school would protect them from the police and that their families would help ensure only the most trivial of consequences.

     
    Opinion | The country deserves an FBI investigation
     

    We should apply a higher standard to Supreme Court nominees. Nobody deserves to be on the bench, says editorial board member Stephen Stromberg. (Adriana Usero, Kate Woodsome/The Washington Post)

    This post was edited by WM BARR . =ABSOLUTE TRASH at April 1, 2019 4:19 AM MDT
      March 31, 2019 9:49 AM MDT
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  • 34964
    And the entire DNC. 
      March 31, 2019 9:52 AM MDT
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  • 46117
    NAME ONE.  You say Hillary and you are lying.  So give it up.  I have daily proof.  You have the GOP telling you the lies.
      March 31, 2019 9:53 AM MDT
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  • 34964
    Name one what.....I said apply everything to all. If a question complains about Trump and it also applies to another prominent Dem...it should be applied to the Dem as well. Or it is just biased BS.
    (This is nothing to do with Hillary but if it did it should apply)
      March 31, 2019 10:03 AM MDT
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  • 113301
    :):):)
      April 1, 2019 4:21 AM MDT
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  • 113301
    :):):)
      April 1, 2019 4:19 AM MDT
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  • 7280
    Applying the question to all sides is equivocation and simply obscures the issue at hand.  Equivocation...is an informal fallacy resulting from the use of a particular word/expression in multiple senses throughout an argument leading to a false conclusion. 

    (I had a mother like that---it took me years and a great deal of psychotherapy to get over the misinformation that she conveyed to me through that technique.)

    Is that perhaps your intention?---  
      March 31, 2019 10:25 AM MDT
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  • 34964
    Nope. The question implied that not releasing something was because the person was hiding something. 
    So I asked if Obama was hiding something? He also refused to release his records. 

    I do not care about 1040s or school records. I care about policies supported. 
      March 31, 2019 11:26 AM MDT
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  • 7280
    After Rosie got a response to her previous question from YOU, THEN she asked this question about whether those who carry the most baggage with them are the ones who don't answer the question asked but reply to a question not asked.

    That's what YOU did---and proved her thesis that people who do that: "it gives more insight into what they are all about."---which your answers definitely do.   
      April 2, 2019 3:02 PM MDT
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  • 34964
    Yes, all our answers tell more about ourselves. Some more than others. 
      April 2, 2019 3:24 PM MDT
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  • 113301
    :):):)
      April 1, 2019 4:19 AM MDT
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