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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#5741 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-April-22, 12:07

From The Persistence of Trump Derangement Syndrome by Adam Gopnik:

Quote

Suddenly, Trump Derangement Syndrome is a thing, or is trying to become one.

We’re told by many wise and well-meaning people that it is a huge and even fatal mistake for liberals (and for constitutional conservatives) to respond negatively to every Trump initiative, every Trump policy, and every Trump idea. There are bound to be—in an Administration staffed not by orcs and ogres but for the most part by the usual run of military people and professional politicians—acceptable actions, even admirable initiatives, and we would do ourselves and our country a huge disservice by simply responding to them all with the same reflexive hatred. This may be especially true if that reflexive hatred, however unconsciously, mirrors and mimics the reflexive hatreds of the Trump White House itself. We owe it to our country and to our sanity to go on a case-by-case basis, empirically evaluating each action as it takes place, and refusing to succumb to the urge to turn politics into a series of set responses—exactly the habit, after all, that we so often deplore in Trump and the people around him.

This is a perfectly reasonable assertion, and one that would count for a lot in pretty much any semi-normal circumstance. The problem is that it refuses to see, or to entirely register, the actual nature of Trump and his actions. Our problem is not Trump Derangement Syndrome; our problem is Deranged Trump Self-Delusion. This is the habit of willfully substituting, as a motive for Trump’s latest action, a conventional political or geostrategic ambition, rather than recognizing the action as the daily spasm of narcissistic gratification and episodic vanity that it truly is.

The bombing of Syria, for instance, was not a sudden lurch either in the direction of liberal interventionism, à la Bill Clinton in the lands that were once Yugoslavia, nor was it a sudden reassertion of a neo-con version of American power, à la both Bushes in Iraq. It was, as best as anyone can understand, simply a reaction to an image, turned into a self-obsessed lashing out that involved the lives and deaths of many people. It was a detached gesture, unconnected to anything resembling a sequence of other actions, much less an ideology. Nothing followed from it, and no “doctrine” or even a single speech justified it. There is no credible evidence that Trump’s humanity was outraged by the act of poisoning children, only that Trump’s vanity was wounded by the seeming insult to America and, by extension, to him. It may be perfectly true that the failure of the Obama Administration to act sooner in Syria will go down forever, in the historical ledgers, as a reproach against it; or it may be that the wisdom of the Obama Administration in not getting engaged in another futile Middle Eastern folly will go down in its favor. But it is self-deluding to think that Trump’s action was meant to be in any way remedial. It was purely ritual, and the ritual acted out was the interminable Trumpist ritual of lashing out at those who fail to submit, the ritual act of someone whose inner accounting is conducted exclusively in terms of wounds given, worship received, and winnings displayed. (Perhaps his elder daughter, Ivanka, did play some small part in the action, as her brother Eric suggested in an interview, but this is hardly a comfort; the politics of a mad king with a court are no more reassuring than those of a mad king alone.)

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#5742 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-April-22, 15:05

 PassedOut, on 2017-April-22, 06:46, said:

Or one could note from the same paper that, of the 22.3 live births per thousand to girls in the US aged 15-19, only 2.1 of those live births were to girls who were married. Even if all of the married pregnant teenagers were from red states (and they were not), it would not overcome the red state - blue state disparity.


I gather you are looking the tables where they say the birth rate for women aged 15-19 is 22.3 per 100K and the corresponding rate for unmarried women is 20.2. Your conclusion pf 2.1 does not quite follow although it might be roughly correct to to low marriage rates.

To illustrate, suppose that there were 200,000 women aged 15-19 and 40,000 were married, 160,000 unmarried..
Suppose that the 200,000 women, married and unmarried combined, had 4400 births and the 160,000 unmarried women had 3200 births. That would give rates of 22 and 20 for the respective groups. (Rounding 22.3 and 20.2 to 22 and 20 doesn't affect the argument).

With this data we would have 4400 births, 3200 to unmarried women, 1200 to married women. That's still a lot of unmarried young women giving birth, but less dramatic than your numbers suggest.


Now I doubt that 20% of women age 15-19 are married, although it might have been true when I was young and might still approximate that in rural states. I was 21, my wife 20, for my first marriage. But the point is that it matters in figuring from the given data what a baby's odds are of having a married mother given that she is 15-19.

the same data sheet says that 40% of births are to unmarried women. It's another statistic that, standing alone, is ominous although inconclusive. We could say that it is one of our business whether the woman is married or not. Fair enough. But then the follow up is often that we have to help these women and children because obviously they are in difficult straits. Also true, quite often. But then wait up. Is it our business or is it not how things go for this woman and child? If a woman lacks the resources to raise a child on her own is it completely outlandish to suggest maybe I well chosen husband might be a good idea? Actually I think we guys can occasionally be useful for something even if all the financial resources are there. But that's another story.
Ken
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#5743 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-22, 16:38

This further explains U.S. teen births.

Quote

Substantial geographic variation also exists in adolescent childbearing across the United States. In 2013, the lowest teen birth rates were reported in the Northeast, while rates were highest in states across the southern part of the country (see Figure 2).1 See how your state compares on birth rates, pregnancy rates, sexual activity, and contraceptive use with OAH’s reproductive health state fact sheets.

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#5744 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-April-22, 17:42

 Winstonm, on 2017-April-22, 16:38, said:

This further explains U.S. teen births.




That's a nice site. I was aware that the teen age birth rate was declining but having all those numbers at hand is nice.
Ken
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#5745 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-22, 18:59

 kenberg, on 2017-April-22, 17:42, said:

That's a nice site. I was aware that the teen age birth rate was declining but having all those numbers at hand is nice.


This information is interesting to me:

Quote

Characteristics Associated with Adolescent Childbearing
Numerous individual, family, and community characteristics have been linked to adolescent childbearing. For example, adolescents who are enrolled in school and engaged in learning (including participating in after-school activities, having positive attitudes toward school, and performing well educationally) are less likely than are other adolescents to have or to father a baby. 7 At the family level, adolescents with mothers who gave birth as teens and/or whose mothers have only a high school degree are more likely to have a baby before age 20 than are teens whose mothers were older at their birth or who attended at least some college. In addition, having lived with both biological parents at age 14 is associated with a lower risk of a teen birth.8 At the community level, adolescents who live in wealthier neighborhoods with strong levels of employment are less likely to have or to father a baby than are adolescents in neighborhoods in which income and employment opportunities are more limited.7

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#5746 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-April-23, 06:51

The tables yo cite show that the drop has been very substantial and I would be interested in explanations of why. We might expect the problem to be self-perpetuating: A teen age mother lives in pverty, the children are prought up ni poverty, the children grow up and have children before they are ready, and so on. But somehow this seems to be not the whole story. One could, optimisticall, thinnk that the child of poverty decided that s/he wants his/her life to be better and so decides to put off child bearing. Or maybe anti-poverty programs have helped. Pr community programs to help young people make better choices. Or some combination. Anyway, it would be interesting to hear what those who study this have concluded.

Another point of interest. I suppose few girls age 15 choose to get pregnant, or at least I hope not. Unintended pregnancies still happen. But how about the 17-19 year olds. For statistics to really be useful, details are often needed. Did the pregnancy just happen as one of those things or was it a conscious decision to bear a child? Sometimes one, sometimes the other no doubt, but the numbers would be interesting.

Anyway, it is good to see the numbers dropping. I was at a Bat Mitzvah sometime back where the father spoke: "You are now 13, an age where you can marry according to Jewish law. Your father has other ideas." I liked that a lot. What was right in Biblical times, and perhaps was manageable a hundred years ago, is a disaster today.

Disasters are sometimes from bad circumstances, sometimes from bad choices, often from a bit of both. The dropping rate of teen pregnancy is a very good thing, I would like to hear just how it came about. The answer might be useful in addressing our many other social problems.
Ken
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#5747 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-23, 09:17

 kenberg, on 2017-April-23, 06:51, said:

The tables yo cite show that the drop has been very substantial and I would be interested in explanations of why. We might expect the problem to be self-perpetuating: A teen age mother lives in pverty, the children are prought up ni poverty, the children grow up and have children before they are ready, and so on. But somehow this seems to be not the whole story. One could, optimisticall, thinnk that the child of poverty decided that s/he wants his/her life to be better and so decides to put off child bearing. Or maybe anti-poverty programs have helped. Pr community programs to help young people make better choices. Or some combination. Anyway, it would be interesting to hear what those who study this have concluded.

Another point of interest. I suppose few girls age 15 choose to get pregnant, or at least I hope not. Unintended pregnancies still happen. But how about the 17-19 year olds. For statistics to really be useful, details are often needed. Did the pregnancy just happen as one of those things or was it a conscious decision to bear a child? Sometimes one, sometimes the other no doubt, but the numbers would be interesting.

Anyway, it is good to see the numbers dropping. I was at a Bat Mitzvah sometime back where the father spoke: "You are now 13, an age where you can marry according to Jewish law. Your father has other ideas." I liked that a lot. What was right in Biblical times, and perhaps was manageable a hundred years ago, is a disaster today.

Disasters are sometimes from bad circumstances, sometimes from bad choices, often from a bit of both. The dropping rate of teen pregnancy is a very good thing, I would like to hear just how it came about. The answer might be useful in addressing our many other social problems.

It appears contraceptive use is the key: (emphasis added)

Quote

The rapid declines in adolescent pregnancy and births from 2007 to 2012 occurred despite stagnant rates of sexual activity. Instead, we find that the contraceptive behaviors of sexually active adolescents have driven the recent shifts in fertility outcomes. The increases in overall contraceptive use at last sex from 2007 to 2012 are part of a longer trend. Between 1995 and 2012, any method use at last sex among adolescent women increased from 66% to 86%, while use of multiple methods increased from 11% to 37% [14]. Taken together, evidence from this study and our previous studies indicates that the substantial long-term decline of 57% in adolescent birth rates from 1991 to 2013 [1] can be primarily attributed to increases in overall contraceptive use.

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#5748 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-April-23, 10:05

 Winstonm, on 2017-April-22, 18:59, said:

This information is interesting to me:

Quote

... At the family level, adolescents with mothers who gave birth as teens and/or whose mothers have only a high school degree are more likely to have a baby before age 20 than are teens whose mothers were older at their birth or who attended at least some college.


So apparently teenage motherhood is genetic. :)

#5749 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-23, 12:32

Understanding Trump. From Politico: (emphasis added)

Quote

These three statements, 53 words in all, are potent shots of unadulterated, time-tested Trump—short, confident declarations of success, in spite of object evidence of failure, uttered with total disregard for the parsing and fact-checking that constitutes so much of the coverage of him and his administration. Biographers, ex-employees, veteran New York City gossip columnists, public relations professionals and political operatives from both major parties say recognizing this well-established pattern of behavior—stumble, proclaim victory, move on—is imperative to understanding Trump.


Normal people wonder how someone can be so totally immune to self-doubt, the consequences of continual lying, etc., and that is reasonable - but Trump is not a reasonable man. He is only interested in self - his ego must be stroked at all times - and if that means entirely disregarding reality so be it.

It is plain to see with his continued push of a disastrous healthcare bill, the ridiculous Muslim/travel ban, and the attempted Wall/Aca blackmail of Democrats that this is a man who has no interest in what the consequences of his actions are but only that the spotlight shines on him and he get credit for causing something, anything to be done.
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#5750 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-April-23, 14:00

 Winstonm, on 2017-April-23, 09:17, said:

It appears contraceptive use is the key: (emphasis added)




To push just a little further:

The use of contraceptives by teenagers reduces the chance of pregnancy.


The use of textbooks by teenagers increases the chance of doing well academically.

The first seems to be getting applied, the second not so much. Granted the first is probably more fun, but it would be nice t get a little of the second going.
Ken
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#5751 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-23, 14:55

Or as our president would say: Education is an ignorance prophylaxis - bigly!
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#5752 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 07:15

This morning I was reading, again, how the government might rub out of money because the various politicians cannot agree. Like most of my fellow citizens, I am thoroughly fed up with this.

I know I have told this (true) story before. My friend Neal and I were in out cars at opposite ends of a block, we spontaneously moved to the center and accelerated. We both gave way at the last second, missing a collision by maybe a foot at most. The explanation is simple, we were sixteen.

These adolescent morons we have elected are screwing with the country. If any or all of them put getting their way in front of working together in the interests of the country then the whole mob of them needs to be gone. Neal and I decided it was a tie and that there would be no rematch. If these adults(?) lack the sense of a couple of sixteen year olds then they need to be shown to the door. All of them.
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#5753 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 07:42

 Cyberyeti, on 2017-April-21, 09:26, said:

Or you could do your own research, a few minutes on the net (figures not perfect due to the date mismatch)

sources https://en.wikipedia...e_United_States https://en.wikipedia...te_legislatures

The top 13 if you ignore DC have 8 republican legislatures, one coalition and 4 democrat

Your source confirms what I'm saying. The left loves to misuse statistics. The critical stat is the rate of teen pregnancy, not the the absolute numbers. There are 5 times as many whites as blacks in America.

By Ethnicity
Black, Latina, and American Indian youth experience the highest rates of teenage pregnancy and childbirth.[5] Studies show that whites (43 per 1,000)[6] and Asians (23 per 1,000)[10] have the lowest rate of pregnancy before the age of 20. The pregnancy rate among black teens decreased 48% between 1990 and 2008, more than the overall U.S. teen pregnancy rate declined during the same period (42%).[6] The teen birth rate decline broken down by race in 2014 from 2013:[5]

7% for Non-Hispanic Whites
11% for Non-Hispanic Blacks
9% Hispanic
11% Asian/Pacific Islander
12% American Indian/Alaska Natives


Quote

For every 1,000 black boys in the United States, 29 of them are fathers, compared to 14 per 1,000 white boys.

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#5754 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 09:16

 kenberg, on 2017-April-24, 07:15, said:

This morning I was reading, again, how the government might rub out of money because the various politicians cannot agree. Like most of my fellow citizens, I am thoroughly fed up with this.

I know I have told this (true) story before. My friend Neal and I were in out cars at opposite ends of a block, we spontaneously moved to the center and accelerated. We both gave way at the last second, missing a collision by maybe a foot at most. The explanation is simple, we were sixteen.

These adolescent morons we have elected are screwing with the country. If any or all of them put getting their way in front of working together in the interests of the country then the whole mob of them needs to be gone. Neal and I decided it was a tie and that there would be no rematch. If these adults(?) lack the sense of a couple of sixteen year olds then they need to be shown to the door. All of them.


Drain the swamp? OK. With this proviso: of slime.

On a more serious note, I understand Trump's abysmal approval ratings. I understand how 53% are fooled into thinking he is a strong leader. I cannot understand why 96% of his voters would vote for him again. Truly, it baffles me that so many are so deeply conned.
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#5755 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 09:53

Posted Image
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
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#5756 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 09:58

 gwnn, on 2017-April-24, 09:53, said:

Teenage pregnancy rates sharply decrease after 19.

Yet another left wing stat...

Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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#5757 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 10:07

 Winstonm, on 2017-April-24, 09:16, said:

Truly, it baffles me that so many are so deeply conned.

Cognitive dissonance and the endowment effect explain why many Trump supporters still think he's doing a good job.

#5758 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 10:12

 jogs, on 2017-April-24, 07:42, said:

The critical stat is the rate of teen pregnancy, not the the absolute numbers. There are 5 times as many whites as blacks in America.

You might also want to point out that in the latest statistics, 33.6 of each thousand white teenaged girls in Arkansas gave birth, while only 14.1 of each thousand black teenaged girls in Massachusetts gave birth. So the state of residence does make a difference. States vary widely in the quality of sex education provided to students.

Although several decades have passed since I was in high school, matters of sex in those days were much more restricted. The only place that high school students could buy condoms then (that I knew of, anyway) was a particular gas station where they were sold 'under the counter' for 50 cents each (a lot more money then than now). And the only place that I knew of where a girl could get an abortion was in Chicago, and you and the girl had to leave cash on a table in an empty room -- then leave the room while the cash was gathered -- before the girl would be taken in for the procedure. Returning to those days won't make America great again...
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#5759 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 10:17

 gwnn, on 2017-April-24, 09:53, said:

Posted Image

I hope you noted the x-axis title. It only applies in Scandinavia...

Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
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#5760 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-April-24, 10:19

For those of you who like Trump giving roles to Ivanka and Jared Kushner, John Oliver's main story last night was about them. Particularly, how little we really know about them. When Ivanka has given interviews, she's been as evasive as Donald when asked for details. She's very poised and seems rational, but we don't know what she really thinks about policies, or if she would actually be a check on Donald's extremism. And there's practically nothing in Jared's business experience to suggest he's ready for all the responsibility he's been given (he took over his father's real estate business after dad was convicted of several white-collar crimes).

https://www.youtube....h?v=wD8AwgO0AQI

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