Every day is a new circus.

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Right-wing talk show host Joe Walsh: Donald Trump “betrayed his country”


You’ve been a strong critic of Donald Trump on this Russia issue, both on Twitter and elsewhere, even as most conservatives have stayed pretty quiet. Why is that?

Look, I guess Helsinki last week was the final straw. In my view, Trump, for the world to see, stood in front of the world and betrayed his country. Now, is it surprising? No, because really for 19 months he’s betrayed his country on this central issue of a foreign government attack on our country, and this president has never acknowledged it or done anything about it. As much as I support a hell of a lot of the agenda, because I’m still a Tea Party conservative, that’s like an ultimate betrayal. It’s unforgivable and it’s more important than any policy issues, as far as I’m concerned.

What is it specifically about the Russia allegations that is of greatest concern for you?

They attacked our country. They interfered in our election to try to get Trump elected, period. They did it at a scale that is unprecedented. What impact did it have on the election? Nobody knows, but it certainly didn’t help the Democrat candidate and it certainly helped Trump. The foreign government literally screwed our election process to help Trump become president.

That’s an attack on our country. That’s an attack on our institutions. Any president should rally the country around fighting back against that, and this president has never done it, from day one, because he’s always placed his own interest above the country’s interest. He doesn’t want anything to take away from his 2016 victory.

Before this issue came to a head, how did you feel about Donald Trump?

That’s a good question, Amanda. Just understand that from day one, this has been a real issue with me. The two biggest issues I’ve had from the get-go with Trump are that he’s not standing with the country and the fact that he lies all the time. I have a real problem with that.

What’s my overall opinion of Trump? I’ve generally done a good Trump/bad Trump thing. I think he’s a bad guy, but I’ve tried to balance that with his policy agenda.

Look, when I voted for him, I knew who he was, but I wanted the Supreme Court justice or two. I wanted the border security. I wanted Obamacare repeal. I wanted my taxes cut. I’ve been dancing this dance for 18 months, supporting some policies, balanced against the fact that I just don’t think he’s a very good guy at all.

Before November 2016 there was some information about Russian interference in the election, but the extent of it was not really understood by most of the public. But we did know that Donald Trump was gross. There was the "Access Hollywood" tape. How did you feel about all those things?

Look, I believed when I pulled the lever and voted for him: He’s that guy. I knew he was a dishonest guy. I knew he was a grifter. I knew he was a con man.

But understand, Amanda, that I’m a hardcore Tea Party conservative. I’m no fan of who Hillary is as a person. It was still a pretty easy vote, because I thought, these are two bad people. I don’t like either one, but at least with one I’m going to get some policy advances that I believe in. That’s all.

I think that was a calculation a lot of people made. What do you make of the way other Republicans have responded to this Russia issue? There are a handful of people like you, or Bob Corker or John McCain, who have spoken out. But by and large we’ve seen either minimal responses or support for Trump.

It’s really disappointing. Look, Amanda, virtually every one of my former Republican colleagues in the House and the Senate agree privately with everything I say about Trump, and they don’t say it publicly. Why? Well, 88 percent of the Republican Party supports him, so they want to get re-elected. They feel the exact same way [as I do] about Trump in private.

The position of conservative media -- I mean, this is a weird world, conservative talk radio and Fox News and conservative TV. These days, if you’re just going to be a dumb, stupid, sick sycophant or a cheerleader for Trump, that’s the safest place to be for ratings.

It's analogous to the politicians who just want to get re-elected, but a lot of these guys on conservative talk radio and TV, they know Trump is just a goof. But they would never say that publicly. Most have made calculations that it’s the safer place to be just to sing his praises every single day. I can’t do that.

It seems to me that you have a unique perspective since you’ve been both a talk radio host and a politician. Why do you think that these talk radio hosts feel that way? Why can’t they use the power they've amassed as pundits to shift the conversation in a different direction?

Because they’re afraid they’ll lose their radio shows and their TV shows, plain and simple. Again, it’s analogous to my former colleagues in the House who privately believe this guy is a nut, but they won’t say it publicly. It’s absolute fear. It’s fear of Trump. Look what he did to Mark Sanford of South Carolina.

These guys on the radio and TV, it’s absolute fear of losing their livelihood. I came down really hard on Trump last week with Helsinki, and believe me, I’ve gotten a backlash from tons of my listeners around the country. It’s dangerous. It’s really dangerous to say, “Look, he’s a bad guy, and this is a real concern.”

It seems to me that you’re saying that Republican politicians and pundits and thought leaders have these reservations, but as far as everyday Republican voters go, they're all in for Trump. What do you think accounts for the difference?

Well, I will tell you, I think that’s changing. Yeah, he’s got an 88 percent again, according to an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll -- 88 percent approval rating among Republicans. But it’s soft support. Twenty percent to 29 percent strongly support him.

I think among the voters, Trump voters, who are my listeners, increasingly I’ve found — and maybe it won’t happen fast enough to save somebody like me — that the average Trump supporter out there more and more wants an honest appraisal of him.

They’re not totally there yet. Helsinki confused the hell out of them, because he’s branded himself as this big, strong, tough guy, and he looked [like] he was Putin's lapdog last week.

Still -- look, they placed a lot of faith in this guy. It's a lot easier to go turn on Sean Hannity every night, because Sean Hannity can tell you that Trump walks on water. The vast majority of Trump supporters still want to hear that.

What you're describing to me is this climate of fear, and I believe you. But why do you think Donald Trump is so powerful? Why can’t all of these people, including yourself, do more to stop him?

Amanda, that is a really, pardon my language, [redacted] great question, because I do believe that virtually every Republican in Congress feels that same way. I do believe that most of the conservative media people feel the same way, though some of them -- conservative media people aren’t the sharpest guys in the world and maybe they don’t totally get it.

But you would think, if we all rose up in unison and said, “Mr. Trump, these tariffs are a terrible idea,” there'd be more power in that.

Look, I’m not exaggerating when I say that because I’m a pretty profound right-wing critic of his, I don’t know how long I’ll have a TV or radio show. You’re talking about people’s livelihood.

I think there still are a lot of people who want to believe that this guy can be corralled. That somebody can knock some sense into Trump, and kind of control him. Some people still have that hope.

Where do you think that hope comes from?

What else are we going to do? We’ve got so much invested in this guy.

Trump doesn’t believe anything. I think that’s what a lot of the Republicans in the media and Congress know as well. It’s the truth. Trump has no core. He has no philosophy. I think there’s the hope that if we can just get him to put down his phone every now and then, we can get the policy agenda we want.

You saw that on the Supreme Court. Donald Trump doesn’t give a damn who the Supreme Court justice is. He farmed that out.

I know a lot of my Republican colleagues hope that he’ll just sort of sit in the White House and they can eventually get most of the policy they want.

What do you think is going on with Trump and Vladimir Putin? I'm going to ask you to speculate wildly here.

To me there are only two possibilities. We do know that Trump is an egomaniac. He's a needy, thin-skinned baby. It's believable that he cannot acknowledge Russia interfered with the election because he doesn’t want anything to take away from his victory.

But I think last week kind of convinced me that there’s something more, because, Amanda, all he had to say was, “Look, hey, we know Russia did it. Putin denied it, but we know it happened. We’re going to make sure it never happens again, next question.”

That was such a [redacted] softball. It got me thinking, you know what? Maybe Putin does have something on him. Or, at least maybe Trump really does know Russia helped get him elected and maybe that’s what Putin got on him.

I keep coming back to the fact that he keeps saying, “Oh, maybe it was the Chinese. Maybe it was some 400-pound man in the basement.” The notion that he’s just worried about the legitimacy of his election, I can’t square that with his comments. His election would be illegitimate no matter who hacked the system, right? Why is he specifically fixated on denying it was Russia?

Yeah, that no longer suffices, I guess. But no matter what the reason is, he decided from day one that his personal interests are more important than the country’s interest. He’s doing Russia’s bidding, for whatever reason, and that’s a real danger to this country.

What do you hope, after all is said and done, Republicans — both voters and politicians — learn from all of this?

My hope, Amanda, is -- and look, again, pardon my language -- how the hell did this guy get elected? He got elected because the Republican Party sucks. The Democrat Party sucks and pardon me, respectfully, most of the media sucks.

Almost half of the American people, a year and a half ago, said, “Screw you all, I’m going to put this [redacted] in the White House.”

Look, I voted for him because I wanted some disruption. Washington, D.C., needs disruption. My hope is that everybody understands how the hell Donald Trump got elected.

My hope is this causes people, all of us, to reflect on what we’ve done wrong and on what needs to be done to salvage or fix our political system right now because if . . . Look, it’s broken. Trump didn’t break it. The fact that it’s broken is what got him elected. If this doesn’t wake people up, then nothing will.






How Trump got to the Oval Office and why he's still there.

Disgruntled voters who wanted, craved disruption. The hardcore of these want, crave, a civil war so they can keep and/or get their WASP culture back on top.
Hillary haters.
Voters who knew who and what he was and voted for him anyway - because ideology and party trumped country.
Spineless cowards in Congress.
Power-hungry sycophants in Congress.
Money, influence, ratings and click-hungry sycophants in the media, not limited to Fox et al., but also including a lot of the so-called MSM who failed to ask the hard questions and make the hard observations.
Ends-justifies-the-means religious conservatives who've mixed their religion and politics so thoroughly they see Trump as divinely inspired to lead a divinely inspired country.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
"[Russia] attacked our country. They interfered in our election to try to get Trump elected, period. They did it at a scale that is unprecedented. What impact did it have on the election? Nobody knows, but it certainly didn’t help the Democrat candidate and it certainly helped Trump. The foreign government literally screwed our election process to help Trump become president.

That’s an attack on our country. That’s an attack on our institutions. Any president should rally the country around fighting back against that, and this president has never done it, from day one, because he’s always placed his own interest above the country’s interest. He doesn’t want anything to take away from his 2016 victory."


I think that, without anything else is damning. Any American with a love of country and principle has to recognize that something unprecedented and dangerous is wrapped in our president's response to a foreign power meddling in our election process. The efficacy of the attempt is immaterial. The effort, the concerted, sustained effort at changing an electoral outcome in a dishonest, surreptitious fashion requires the strongest possible, unified response by our government, short of a declaration of war, and without regard to party politics.

Those who fail to do so should be held accountable.
 

ok doser

lifeguard at the cement pond
They attacked our country.

well, no

this is what attacking a country looks like

hqdefault.jpg


They interfered in our election to try to get Trump elected, period. They did it at a scale that is unprecedented.

again, no

for context:

161229073208-03-iraqi-voices-saddam-execution-exlarge-169.jpg








the rest of the emotional rant flows from a flawed premise and is thus easily ignored :wave2:



eta: i did find something to agree with :noway: :

... our political system (is) broken. Trump didn’t break it. The fact that it’s broken is what got him elected.
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass

I think that, without anything else is damning. Any American with a love of country and principle has to recognize that something unprecedented and dangerous is wrapped in our president's response to a foreign power meddling in our election process. The efficacy of the attempt is immaterial. The effort, the concerted, sustained effort at changing an electoral outcome in a dishonest, surreptitious fashion requires the strongest possible, unified response by our government, short of a declaration of war, and without regard to party politics.

Those who fail to do so should be held accountable.


Waiting on Mueller.

The Trumpers don't care. The GOP doesn't care. The Cabinet doesn't care. The president doesn't care.
 

George Affleck

TOL Subscriber
Did you ever think you'd see the day when Trump would shaft one of our closest friends and allies as Canada and gush over Kim Jong Un and Putin?

Up is down and down is up.

Trump is doing what is best for the USA. - No! even more! - what's best for freedom.

You wait and see. It will end well.
He's a negotiator, and he's got everyone on the defensive on purpose.
Except Putin - Trump is sweet talking him on purpose.

Some of us up here have been crying for Canada to participate more for a long time.
What do close friends do? They participate. Not happening!
Great wake up call!!
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Trump is doing what is best for the USA. - No! even more! - what's best for freedom.

think_outside_the_fox_bumper_bumper_sticker.jpg


You wait and see. It will end well.
He's a negotiator, and he's got everyone on the defensive on purpose.
Except Putin - Trump is sweet talking him on purpose.

:plain: Let me guess. 3-D chess?

Some of us up here have been crying for Canada to participate more for a long time.
What do close friends do? They participate. Not happening!
Great wake up call!!

Participate in what? Trump's trade wars? Trump's insults to Trudeau?
 

George Affleck

TOL Subscriber
make canada great again!


re-elect Harper!

Canada has never been great. It wants to think it is. But it won't be until it dumps the socialist mindset.
Capitalism makes wealth. Socialists are now spending it faster than we can make it and, in the process, telling us we don't don't need capitalism.
We have forgotten which side of our bread has the butter on it.

Not even Harper is a true conservative. And he couldn't get elected now if he tried.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Canada has never been great. It wants to think it is. But it won't be until it dumps the socialist mindset.
Capitalism makes wealth. Socialists are now spending it faster than we can make it
Darn socialist military. :mmph:


Canada spends appprox. 1% of GDP on NATO. - half of the guideline.
USA spends 3.5% of GDP on Nato - 1.5% more than the 2% guideline.

Pony up Canada!
Shoot. I just saw "pony" and got sucked in.
 

ClimateSanity

New member
Right-wing talk show host Joe Walsh: Donald Trump “betrayed his country”


You’ve been a strong critic of Donald Trump on this Russia issue, both on Twitter and elsewhere, even as most conservatives have stayed pretty quiet. Why is that?

Look, I guess Helsinki last week was the final straw. In my view, Trump, for the world to see, stood in front of the world and betrayed his country. Now, is it surprising? No, because really for 19 months he’s betrayed his country on this central issue of a foreign government attack on our country, and this president has never acknowledged it or done anything about it. As much as I support a hell of a lot of the agenda, because I’m still a Tea Party conservative, that’s like an ultimate betrayal. It’s unforgivable and it’s more important than any policy issues, as far as I’m concerned.

What is it specifically about the Russia allegations that is of greatest concern for you?

They attacked our country. They interfered in our election to try to get Trump elected, period. They did it at a scale that is unprecedented. What impact did it have on the election? Nobody knows, but it certainly didn’t help the Democrat candidate and it certainly helped Trump. The foreign government literally screwed our election process to help Trump become president.

That’s an attack on our country. That’s an attack on our institutions. Any president should rally the country around fighting back against that, and this president has never done it, from day one, because he’s always placed his own interest above the country’s interest. He doesn’t want anything to take away from his 2016 victory.

Before this issue came to a head, how did you feel about Donald Trump?

That’s a good question, Amanda. Just understand that from day one, this has been a real issue with me. The two biggest issues I’ve had from the get-go with Trump are that he’s not standing with the country and the fact that he lies all the time. I have a real problem with that.

What’s my overall opinion of Trump? I’ve generally done a good Trump/bad Trump thing. I think he’s a bad guy, but I’ve tried to balance that with his policy agenda.

Look, when I voted for him, I knew who he was, but I wanted the Supreme Court justice or two. I wanted the border security. I wanted Obamacare repeal. I wanted my taxes cut. I’ve been dancing this dance for 18 months, supporting some policies, balanced against the fact that I just don’t think he’s a very good guy at all.

Before November 2016 there was some information about Russian interference in the election, but the extent of it was not really understood by most of the public. But we did know that Donald Trump was gross. There was the "Access Hollywood" tape. How did you feel about all those things?

Look, I believed when I pulled the lever and voted for him: He’s that guy. I knew he was a dishonest guy. I knew he was a grifter. I knew he was a con man.

But understand, Amanda, that I’m a hardcore Tea Party conservative. I’m no fan of who Hillary is as a person. It was still a pretty easy vote, because I thought, these are two bad people. I don’t like either one, but at least with one I’m going to get some policy advances that I believe in. That’s all.

I think that was a calculation a lot of people made. What do you make of the way other Republicans have responded to this Russia issue? There are a handful of people like you, or Bob Corker or John McCain, who have spoken out. But by and large we’ve seen either minimal responses or support for Trump.

It’s really disappointing. Look, Amanda, virtually every one of my former Republican colleagues in the House and the Senate agree privately with everything I say about Trump, and they don’t say it publicly. Why? Well, 88 percent of the Republican Party supports him, so they want to get re-elected. They feel the exact same way [as I do] about Trump in private.

The position of conservative media -- I mean, this is a weird world, conservative talk radio and Fox News and conservative TV. These days, if you’re just going to be a dumb, stupid, sick sycophant or a cheerleader for Trump, that’s the safest place to be for ratings.

It's analogous to the politicians who just want to get re-elected, but a lot of these guys on conservative talk radio and TV, they know Trump is just a goof. But they would never say that publicly. Most have made calculations that it’s the safer place to be just to sing his praises every single day. I can’t do that.

It seems to me that you have a unique perspective since you’ve been both a talk radio host and a politician. Why do you think that these talk radio hosts feel that way? Why can’t they use the power they've amassed as pundits to shift the conversation in a different direction?

Because they’re afraid they’ll lose their radio shows and their TV shows, plain and simple. Again, it’s analogous to my former colleagues in the House who privately believe this guy is a nut, but they won’t say it publicly. It’s absolute fear. It’s fear of Trump. Look what he did to Mark Sanford of South Carolina.

These guys on the radio and TV, it’s absolute fear of losing their livelihood. I came down really hard on Trump last week with Helsinki, and believe me, I’ve gotten a backlash from tons of my listeners around the country. It’s dangerous. It’s really dangerous to say, “Look, he’s a bad guy, and this is a real concern.”

It seems to me that you’re saying that Republican politicians and pundits and thought leaders have these reservations, but as far as everyday Republican voters go, they're all in for Trump. What do you think accounts for the difference?

Well, I will tell you, I think that’s changing. Yeah, he’s got an 88 percent again, according to an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll -- 88 percent approval rating among Republicans. But it’s soft support. Twenty percent to 29 percent strongly support him.

I think among the voters, Trump voters, who are my listeners, increasingly I’ve found — and maybe it won’t happen fast enough to save somebody like me — that the average Trump supporter out there more and more wants an honest appraisal of him.

They’re not totally there yet. Helsinki confused the hell out of them, because he’s branded himself as this big, strong, tough guy, and he looked [like] he was Putin's lapdog last week.

Still -- look, they placed a lot of faith in this guy. It's a lot easier to go turn on Sean Hannity every night, because Sean Hannity can tell you that Trump walks on water. The vast majority of Trump supporters still want to hear that.

What you're describing to me is this climate of fear, and I believe you. But why do you think Donald Trump is so powerful? Why can’t all of these people, including yourself, do more to stop him?

Amanda, that is a really, pardon my language, [redacted] great question, because I do believe that virtually every Republican in Congress feels that same way. I do believe that most of the conservative media people feel the same way, though some of them -- conservative media people aren’t the sharpest guys in the world and maybe they don’t totally get it.

But you would think, if we all rose up in unison and said, “Mr. Trump, these tariffs are a terrible idea,” there'd be more power in that.

Look, I’m not exaggerating when I say that because I’m a pretty profound right-wing critic of his, I don’t know how long I’ll have a TV or radio show. You’re talking about people’s livelihood.

I think there still are a lot of people who want to believe that this guy can be corralled. That somebody can knock some sense into Trump, and kind of control him. Some people still have that hope.

Where do you think that hope comes from?

What else are we going to do? We’ve got so much invested in this guy.

Trump doesn’t believe anything. I think that’s what a lot of the Republicans in the media and Congress know as well. It’s the truth. Trump has no core. He has no philosophy. I think there’s the hope that if we can just get him to put down his phone every now and then, we can get the policy agenda we want.

You saw that on the Supreme Court. Donald Trump doesn’t give a damn who the Supreme Court justice is. He farmed that out.

I know a lot of my Republican colleagues hope that he’ll just sort of sit in the White House and they can eventually get most of the policy they want.

What do you think is going on with Trump and Vladimir Putin? I'm going to ask you to speculate wildly here.

To me there are only two possibilities. We do know that Trump is an egomaniac. He's a needy, thin-skinned baby. It's believable that he cannot acknowledge Russia interfered with the election because he doesn’t want anything to take away from his victory.

But I think last week kind of convinced me that there’s something more, because, Amanda, all he had to say was, “Look, hey, we know Russia did it. Putin denied it, but we know it happened. We’re going to make sure it never happens again, next question.”

That was such a [redacted] softball. It got me thinking, you know what? Maybe Putin does have something on him. Or, at least maybe Trump really does know Russia helped get him elected and maybe that’s what Putin got on him.

I keep coming back to the fact that he keeps saying, “Oh, maybe it was the Chinese. Maybe it was some 400-pound man in the basement.” The notion that he’s just worried about the legitimacy of his election, I can’t square that with his comments. His election would be illegitimate no matter who hacked the system, right? Why is he specifically fixated on denying it was Russia?

Yeah, that no longer suffices, I guess. But no matter what the reason is, he decided from day one that his personal interests are more important than the country’s interest. He’s doing Russia’s bidding, for whatever reason, and that’s a real danger to this country.

What do you hope, after all is said and done, Republicans — both voters and politicians — learn from all of this?

My hope, Amanda, is -- and look, again, pardon my language -- how the hell did this guy get elected? He got elected because the Republican Party sucks. The Democrat Party sucks and pardon me, respectfully, most of the media sucks.

Almost half of the American people, a year and a half ago, said, “Screw you all, I’m going to put this [redacted] in the White House.”

Look, I voted for him because I wanted some disruption. Washington, D.C., needs disruption. My hope is that everybody understands how the hell Donald Trump got elected.

My hope is this causes people, all of us, to reflect on what we’ve done wrong and on what needs to be done to salvage or fix our political system right now because if . . . Look, it’s broken. Trump didn’t break it. The fact that it’s broken is what got him elected. If this doesn’t wake people up, then nothing will.






How Trump got to the Oval Office and why he's still there.

Disgruntled voters who wanted, craved disruption. The hardcore of these want, crave, a civil war so they can keep and/or get their WASP culture back on top.
Hillary haters.
Voters who knew who and what he was and voted for him anyway - because ideology and party trumped country.
Spineless cowards in Congress.
Power-hungry sycophants in Congress.
Money, influence, ratings and click-hungry sycophants in the media, not limited to Fox et al., but also including a lot of the so-called MSM who failed to ask the hard questions and make the hard observations.
Ends-justifies-the-means religious conservatives who've mixed their religion and politics so thoroughly they see Trump as divinely inspired to lead a divinely inspired country.


“Robert Mueller is a stand-up American patriot,” ...Joe Walsh

Anyone who can make that statement is either stridently partisan or has not bothered to educate himself on the matter. Either way, that's enough to make honest Republicans ignore his pronouncements concerning trump.
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
“Robert Mueller is a stand-up American patriot,” ...Joe Walsh

Anyone who can make that statement is either stridently partisan or has not bothered to educate himself on the matter. Either way, that's enough to make honest Republicans ignore his pronouncements concerning trump.

False dilemma.
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
On the day President Trump imposed tariffs on Canadian lumber shipments, inspiring whispers of a potential a trade war with our northern neighbor, his office released a readout of a call with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Trudeau's office did the same.

The White House Tuesday readout was two sentences: "President Donald J. Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke today. The two leaders discussed the dairy trade in Wisconsin, New York State, and various other places. It was a very amicable call."

The Trudeau readout was, er, considerably longer: "Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke today with United States President Donald J. Trump.

"The Prime Minister and the President reaffirmed the importance of the mutually-beneficial Canada-US trade relationship. On the issue of softwood lumber, the Prime Minister refuted the baseless allegations by the U.S. Department of Commerce and the decision to impose unfair duties. The Prime Minister stressed that the Government of Canada will vigorously defend the interests of the Canadian softwood lumber industry, as we have successfully done in all past lumber disputes with the U.S. The two leaders agreed on the importance of reaching a negotiated agreement, recognizing the integrated nature of the industry between Canada and the United States."

Insert a lengthy paragraph about the benefits the U.S. gets from the Canadian dairy industry here.

The Canadian statement concludes: "The Prime Minister and the President agreed to continue their dialogue on these important bilateral issues."

Our question: This was the same phone call, right?
 

jgarden

BANNED
Banned
Canada has never been great. It wants to think it is. But it won't be until it dumps the socialist mindset.
Capitalism makes wealth. Socialists are now spending it faster than we can make it and, in the process, telling us we don't don't need capitalism.
We have forgotten which side of our bread has the butter on it.

Not even Harper is a true conservative. And he couldn't get elected now if he tried.
Life Expectancy by Country 2017

Country - Life Expectancy - Rank
*******************************************
Hong Kong 84.462 years 1
Japan 83.995 years 2
Italy 83.686 years 3
Singapore 83.608 years 4
Switzerland 83.489 years 5
Spain 83.127 years 6
Iceland 83.056 years 7
Israel 82.932 years 8
Australia 82.906 years 9
France 82.74 years 10
Sweden 82.683 years 11
South Korea 82.626 years 12

Canada 82.563 years 13

Chile 82.515 years 14
Martinique 82.409 years 15
New Zealand 82.361 years 16
Luxembourg 82.255 years 17
Norway 82.028 years 18
Netherlands 81.998 years 19
Austria 81.971 years 20
Guadeloupe 81.793 years 21
Portugal 81.64 years 22
Greece 81.465 years 23
Germany 81.449 years 24
Ireland 81.431 years 25
Finland 81.386 years 26
Belgium 81.345 years 27
Macau 81.237 years 28
United Kingdom 81.167 years 29
United States Virgin Islands 81.097 years 31
Malta 81.073 years 32
Slovenia 80.922 years 33
Denmark 80.7 years 34
Cyprus 80.673 years 35
Reunion 80.664 years 36
Mayotte 80.512 years 37
French Guiana 80.177 years 38
Taiwan 80.163 years 39
Puerto Rico 80.106 years 40
Lebanon 80.099 years 41
Costa Rica 79.993 years 42
Cuba 79.934 years 43
Guam 79.898 years 44

United States 79.501 years 45

Brunei 79.423 years 46
Czech Republic 79.061 years 47
Qatar 78.623 years 48
Curaçao 78.564 years 49
Albania 78.341 years 50

http://worldpopulationreview.com/countries/life-expectancy-by-country/
Those "not so great" socialists up in The People's Republic of Canada have this nasty habit of having a life expectancy (82.563 years) that is a full 3 years longer than their capitalist American counterparts (79.501 years) - and in most "red" states the years an is even more!

If being considered a "capitalist" and "great" comes at the expense of 3 years to one's longevity, I'd gladly take the time and live with the disapproval "George Affleck" and the conservatives!
 
Last edited:

George Affleck

TOL Subscriber
Those "not so great" socialists up in The People's Republic of Canada have this nasty habit of having a life expectancy 2-3 years longer than their American counterparts - and in most "red" states the span is even more!

If being considered a "capitalist" and "great" comes at the expense of 2-3 years to one's longevity, I'd gladly take the time and live with the disapproval "George Affleck" and the conservatives!

Hey, Japan is way up there above Canada in life expectancy.
Why don't you go live there?
 

jgarden

BANNED
Banned
US Life Expectancy by State - 2017

Rank - State - Life Expectancy
**************************************

1 Hawaii 81.3
2 Minnesota 81.1
3 Connecticut 80.8
4 California 80.8
5 Massachusetts 80.5
6 New York 80.5
7 Vermont 80.5
8 New Hampshire 80.3
9 New Jersey 80.3
10 Utah 80.2
11 Colorado 80.0
12 Wisconsin 80.0
13 Washington 79.9
14 Rhode Island 79.9
15 Nebraska 79.8
16 Iowa 79.7
17 Arizona 79.6
18 North Dakota 79.5
19 Oregon 79.5
20 Idaho 79.5
21 South Dakota 79.5
22 Florida 79.4
23 Maine 79.2
24 Virginia 79.0
25 Illinois 79.0
26 Maryland 78.8
27 Kansas 78.7
28 Pennsylvania 78.5
29 Montana 78.5
30 Texas 78.5
31 New Mexico 78.4
32 Delaware 78.4
33 Wyoming 78.3
34 Alaska 78.3
35 Michigan 78.2
36 Nevada 78.1
37 North Carolina 77.8
38 Ohio 77.8
39 Indiana 77.6
40 Missouri 77.5
41 Georgia 77.2
42 South Carolina 77.0
43 District of Columbia 76.5
44 Tennessee 76.3
45 Kentucky 76.0
46 Arkansas 76.0
47 Oklahoma 75.9
48 Louisiana 75.7
49 Alabama 75.4
50 West Virginia 75.4
51 Mississippi 75.0

https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/us-states-by-life-expectancy.html

Hey, Japan is way up there above Canada in life expectancy.
Why don't you go live there?

Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservative.
- John Stuart Mill

https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/john_stuart_mill_201721
 
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ok doser

lifeguard at the cement pond
Those "not so great" socialists up in The People's Republic of Canada have this nasty habit of having a life expectancy (82.563 years) that is a full 3 years longer than their capitalist American counterparts (79.501 years) ...

Canada has the benefit of not having a certain demographic we're saddled with - one that has a propensity for violence and mayhem, which tend to drastically reduce life expectancy


see: chicago
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Canada has the benefit of not having a certain demographic we're saddled with - one that has a propensity for violence and mayhem, which tend to drastically reduce life expectancy


see: chicago


Laura Ingraham, appealing to Trump's white nationalist base, approves the above message.


LAURA INGRAHAM : Nevertheless, she's kind of right in a general sense, because in some parts of the country, it does seem like the America that we know and love doesn't exist anymore.
Massive demographic changes have been foisted upon the American people, and they are changes that none of us ever voted for, and most of us don't like. From Virginia to California, we see stark examples of how radically, in some ways, the country has changed.
Now, much of this is related to both illegal, and in some cases legal immigration that, of course, progressives love.


https://www.thewrap.com/laura-ingraham-blasted-rant-demographic-changes-us-dont-like/
 
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