One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Posts for: slatten49
Page: <<prev 1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ... 3716 next>>
Mar 19, 2024 06:51:20   #
Rose42 wrote:
The Mad Hatter.


Indeed.
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 18:50:38   #
Rose42 wrote:
Good grief stop with the political crap. And I’m pretty sure he was referring to Ron

Yes, I was referring to Ronald Hatt's rabid rants and capitalizations in postings.
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 17:41:15   #
RascalRiley wrote:
Sort of butting in but Ronnie is fun.

His posts are formatted like a puzzle or abstract art.

Are you sayin' that ol' Ronald could be OPP's version of Pablo Picasso or Salvador Dali
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 17:38:00   #
Rose42 wrote:
I agree. I’m sure we could have a nice conversation.

Ron needs to lighten up.


Yet, look the bright side of his more recent posts: There's less capitalization/yelling from the guy.
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 17:30:37   #
son of witless wrote:


Then there were at least 2 other customer's who kept lions and tigers and bears, oh my. This one guy had a male lion in a cage with a female tiger. He said " yes they breed, but every time she gives birth, the male eats the babies. We have not been able to separate them in time to save the babies when she gives birth, yet.


I have heard/read that about male lions and their babies.
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 10:52:15   #
Rose42 wrote:
Why can’t you respect that this section isn’t for politics and just shut up?

Sadly, Rose, Ronald Hatt has a personal legacy to which he apparently feels obligated to maintain.
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 10:45:20   #
archie bunker wrote:
I don't defend "The Donald", that is for him, and his record to do. Compared to where we are now, it speaks for itself.
And, I think the numbers are a lie.
Financially, life is ten times as bad as it was before Biden. People see that. I see that.
Have you been to the grocery store, or the gas pump lately?
Tried to finance anything?

You can give me all the "feel good" stuff you want about q***rs, the environment, "fairness", and all that scat all day long. And, I'll tell you you're full of s**t.
People are more focused on how much a sack of taters, and a gallon of gas cost, and if some wetback is gonna mug em while pumping their 10 gallons for 40 bucks.

You can h**e Trump all you want. I don't care. What I DO care about is policies that work. The policies in place now obviously don't work. Well, depending on your goal, I guess. And, what IS the goal of the "progressive left" here in America? Can you explain it to me?
Don't bother sending articles, you tell me.

Me, personally, I don't care about the man. I care about the policies.
It is more than obvious to me that Jose' Biden doesn't set his own policies. He is an elderly, declining puppet. A figurehead for other people to implement their goals.
In my mind, he isn't fit to be President of an HOA, let alone the once United States of America.

But, since you h**e one man so much, let's just burn the whole thing down.
Reasonable people are just collateral damage.
As much as that pisses me off, I'm willing to accept it, because I know my adult kids will die in a pile of hot brass fighting this bulls**t.
I don't defend "The Donald", that is for... (show quote)

Clearly, we often view life and politics through different lenses and may feel the other's lenses are muddied. C'est la vie. Even given that, I think too highly of you to have those differences effect our long-standing friendship.

Mark Twain was quoted as saying, "The rule is perfect: In matters of opinion, or adversaries are insane". Though I cannot comprehend how so many have been caught up in Trump's actions or rhetoric, I do not see them to be insane - just those holding a different opinion.

Btw, Arch, I buy groceries/gas/etc. on a daily basis. Who doesn't? As wages and costs have generally increased year to year my entire life, I am reminded of another quote by Will Rogers, "Things ain't what they used to be and never were". IMO, the main culprit for our current situation was c***d and its continuing effect upon our economy.

As always, my best to you and your Family.
Go to
Mar 18, 2024 06:19:32   #
slatten49 wrote:
Sorry Arch. Carefully re-read the doctor's assessment. 181 million+ of Americans clearly saw/see Trump as worse than President Biden. Btw, I honestly can't understand how anyone can defend The Donald.

To each their own, but you'll get another chance at it this coming November.

Sorry. I meant 81 million, but in my haste to leave the house for a visit with Family, I mis-posted the number and failed to catch and correct it.
Go to
Mar 17, 2024 12:50:17   #
archie bunker wrote:
You know, Slats, you can put new tires, and a paint job on an old car, and some 90 weight in the engine, sawdust in the t***smission, and make it sound good till you get it sold.
But, the fact is that it has a bad engine, and t***smission.
I'm guessing, but I would bet you folding money they have him amped up on amphetamines, or something for certain events. And, look at him walk!! He's a broken hip looking for a place to happen, for crying out loud!
And the stuttering thing....
I've seen videos of him from the earliest days of his career as a politician, and never seen him stutter. Not once. That political career has been his whole life long. Well, except for his football days in college when he couldn't be drafted because he had asthma.
But anyway, I have, and have had relatives older than good ole Puerto Rican, Jewish, Lunchbox Joe who exhibit none of his obvious mental issues.
Mrs. B. took her mother, who is 86 for her yearly at the doctor about 3 weeks ago, and they gave her a cognitive test as part of the check up. She passed with flying colors.
Why won't good ole truck driving Joe take one when he's 5 years younger than her?
I honestly don't understand how you can try to defend this when it's perfectly obvious that this guy is every bit as sharp as the blunt side of a bowling ball.
You know, Slats, you can put new tires, and a pain... (show quote)

Sorry Arch. Carefully re-read the doctor's assessment. 181 million+ of Americans clearly saw/see Trump as worse than President Biden. Btw, I honestly can't understand how anyone can defend The Donald.

To each their own, but you'll get another chance at it this coming November.
Go to
Mar 16, 2024 19:23:10   #
Rose42 wrote:
I’ll bet he’s a democrat and I’ll bet it would be easy to find other doctors who say he’s in decline and shouldn’t run.

Rose, of those possibilities, I have no doubt
Go to
Mar 16, 2024 19:21:01   #
archie bunker wrote:
How many times has Biden seen this doctor?

Arch, you'd have to ask the good doctor or President Biden himself. I do not know. But I suspect that like many, he has seen and heard the president numerous times on radio and television. And, I would also suspect he has many patients/clients of that age.
Go to
Mar 16, 2024 18:38:01   #
lindynduff1 wrote:
Uh….. I thought this was a place to share ideas about politics. However.. the amount of discussion about personal religious beliefs is large. What about the site dividing out religious discussions and then a separate section for politics. It is offensive to be overwhelmed with others personal beliefs while thinking you are talking politics, law , strategy, history and ideas. I would also not mind discussing religious stuff but just not when we are attempting to sort out our public life. A huge number of people are scared by Gods Army and all those mega MAGA churches and the hatred and hypocrisy coming from them. It is scary. It is also infuriating to have people jam their religious views down other peoples throats. I do not want white Christian nationalists taking over the country. I’m scared of them and they seem to have blown off Jesus and replaced him with a Christian warrior cult. We've done this Christian Army before and it has t worked out so well. Can One political Plaza consider separating the two topics?
Uh….. I thought this was a place to share ideas ab... (show quote)


Any who choose can subscribe to the following section of OPP:

Faith, Religion, Spirituality
Bible, faith, daily message, request for prayer, and beliefs of all religions. Managed by Pennylynn, Rose42.
Topics: 2738
Posts: 25148
Subscribed users: 267

...Subscribe
Go to
Mar 16, 2024 18:20:07   #
guzzimaestro wrote:
Nice spin, but I don't believe it

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMzd40i8TfA
Go to
Mar 16, 2024 17:21:19   #
March 7, 2024 by DANIEL J. STONE, an internist and geriatrician in Beverly Hills

As a geriatrician, I discuss the effects of aging with patients every day. I wish I had a chance to give my usual talk to everyone who chortles or tears their hair out about President Biden’s fitness for his job.

First, memory. I explain to patients that there are three components to consider. One is formation. Then storage. And, finally, recall. The most common issue among seniors is slow recall. This is the familiar “tip of the tongue” phenomenon, when a word seems to hide or a name won’t come to mind. You know the name, it’s in your bank of memories, it just can’t be accessed quickly. Given time, it usually arrives.

This problem, called age-associated memory impairment, often starts for people in their 30s and gradually progresses. It’s a nuisance but not disabling. If, like me, you find yourself using the term “whatchamacallit,” you probably have it. Don’t worry, you’ll be fine.

Alzheimer’s disease, the most common cause of dementia, is a different story. Those affected lose the ability to store new memories. They can still access old memories in their memory bank and may recount events that occurred decades ago. But they can’t tell you what they had for breakfast because that never entered the memory bank. (I reassure my patients with age-associated memory impairment by asking whether they remember their breakfast. They do.)

Alzheimer’s is cognitively crippling. Losing the ability to form new memories freezes one in time. Those affected can’t make new friends or address new situations without fresh memories. Additionally, the disease progressively impairs other domains, including behavior and ultimately physical sk**ls.

Fortunately, President Biden shows no signs of Alzheimer’s disease. At news conferences, he references new events and obviously creates new memories efficiently. He speaks slowly and pauses to find words like others with benign age-associated memory impairment. These issues are exacerbated by a chronic speech impediment. Biden has struggled with stuttering since childhood, and remnants of the condition have long been apparent in his speech.

Unfortunately, word hesitations coupled with the mild stutter can’t help but affect his public speaking. Biden’s political opponents and the uninformed exploit it, along with stereotypes about older people, to create a false narrative about intellectual impairment.

I take care of many high-functioning seniors like President Biden in my practice. One that I know, who is not a patient of mine, has been my family’s lawyer for five decades. Melvin Spears, at 96, recently responded to an emailed legal question with succinct and well-targeted advice, as he always has. When I spoke to him, he acknowledged some concessions to his age. He speaks more slowly, and t***sportation is a challenge because he’s stopped driving. (He considers Uber and Lyft “a hassle.”) Like Biden, Spears focuses on his work and lets others worry about his age if they choose.

Studies show that high-functioning seniors like Mel Spears and the president compensate for slower reaction time by applying superior knowledge and judgment. The presidency is not a job that requires lightning-quick reflexes. First-hand experience with the successes and failures of U.S. foreign policy over decades, for example, combined with time-tested judgment offers far more than speed in speech or decision-making.

Actuarial tables show that the 81-year-old president’s life expectancy extends nearly eight years, well beyond a second term. He gets excellent healthcare, has no major chronic illnesses, and at his recent physical at Walter Reed Military Medical Center, he was declared “healthy, active” and “fit for duty.” All that means that Biden is likely to beat the actuarial estimate. Given his overall health and the absence of current cognitive impairment, he would likely complete a second term with stable cognition.

All candidates for political office in the United States deserve to be evaluated on their accomplishments and capabilities rather than by their age. Seniors may be the last minority whose natural traits are singled out for ridicule and stereotyping. If the American people disagree with President Biden’s policies and prefer change, they should support his opponent. But in the absence of valid evidence of true cognitive impairment, their judgment should not be influenced by ageist social stereotypes. Biden and the American political process deserve better.

Daniel J. Stone is an internist and geriatrician in Beverly Hills.
Go to
Mar 16, 2024 16:34:16   #
Rose42 wrote:
I remember this. Great post. I’m sorry to hear of your uncle’s passing. Sounds like he was a thoughtful man - whether or not he wrote this.

Jim, who was my mother's youngest sibling, was indeed a thoughtful man. As well, like my Dad - being a Marine, he was one of my childhood heroes.
Go to
Page: <<prev 1 ... 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ... 3716 next>>
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.