笨狼發牢騷

發發牢騷,解解悶,消消愁
個人資料
笨狼 (熱門博主)
  • 博客訪問:
正文

淳樸錯過嗎?

(2016-09-17 14:51:00) 下一個
說淳樸(Donald Trump)有過錯的人要麽是左媒,要麽腦子有毛病。
 
左媒都在意淫,自己假話連篇,人人不屑。它們說的從來就沒有對的地方,不聽也罷。至於腦子有毛病的人,唉。
 
 
我想說的《華盛頓郵報》都說了,就不廢話了。
 
 
想再輕鬆享受領悟其中的奧妙,看看紐約時報專欄作家稻茉芸(Maureen Dowd)的說法。
 
 
稻茉芸是在其新著後的公關采訪,專談此次大選。其實稻茉芸不是左派,不過淳樸依舊惱羞成怒,跟她對罵:
 
 
 
 
唉,腦子有毛病,咋辦?
 
 
【附錄】淳樸(Donald Trump)如何擊敗克林頓(Hillary Clinton)?
克林頓自“混蛋”厥詞和中暑暈後,形勢急轉直下,敗勢微現。幾處民調說淳樸在主戰場領先,但估計綜合各種數據兩人勢均力敵,無疑淳樸占先機。
 
就全國看來,克林頓還是微微領先,其勝算還是過半,大於淳樸。不過實際感覺是淳樸機會反而高於克林頓。
 
Voter satisfaction with choice of candidates at lowest point in decades
皮尤民調:大家都越來越失望
 
為什麽?難道幾句話一暈倒就扭轉局麵?淳樸本人難見幾句真話,難道這麽不公平,他就沒事兒?這種想法是克林頓砸鍋的根源,她是個蹩腳政客。淳陣民眾不是因為淳樸是個人格高尚,有理性的競選人采取追隨他的(參見【1】,生動極了),大家對真理謊言已經麻木了,不論淳樸再怎麽胡謅,大家是充耳不聞,無所謂了。反而克林頓一旦把憤恨吐露出口,大事不得了,兩陣的人無礙,但中間的人立即覺得克林頓信不過、靠不住,他們縮了,這一縮,克陣馬上不頂。
 
這點,克林頓,克陣,民主黨和左派既不明白也不忿,覺得咋回事兒,克林頓人品確實有值得痛批的地方,跟利益集團瓜葛也說不清,但總的還是個公仆,要幹事兒的,而淳樸賺了一輩子錢,陰招用盡,百姓卻以為是“有本事”,而他僅僅是不再在公眾場合製造些傷天害理的言行,依舊信口雌黃,依舊邏輯混亂的忽悠,連本來絕望的共和黨溫和派也開始靠攏了。
 
【注】
共和黨慢慢重新接受淳樸,是近期局麵大變的一個關鍵,也是淳樸過去一個月競選出色的表現,很成功。
The GOP and Democratic nominees now have about the same amount of support within their respective parties
 
 
不公平。
 
The campaign overstates benefits for one sample household and understates them for another
 
其實這是絕望的邏輯。
 
上麵說過,“大家對真理謊言已經麻木了,不論淳樸再怎麽胡謅,大家是充耳不聞”,大家覺得淳樸沒有道德底線,現在聽不到過分的言辭,忽然覺得這人還真有道德。
 
 
 
對立的觀點【2】
 
這結果形如英國脫歐公投,平時愛喊口號的年輕人其實是大懶蟲,鬧的時候鬧得凶,到了關鍵時刻,黎明前的黑暗,出去投投票,不去,寧願在家裏睡大覺。結果呢?
 
 
 
淳樸當選。
 
 
大家皆大歡喜。
 
【資料】
 
 
2016.09.19
romneytrump
 
obamaclinton
 
allfour
 
allfourspread
 
trumpclintoncurrent
 
2016.09.20
左媒《赫芬頓郵報(HuffPost)》給克林頓敗選發的“未發生的訃告”
 
列舉因素:
  REASON
1
THE MEDIA
Everyone’s piñata. Trump will blame the media. Gary Johnson will blame the media. Jill Stein will blame the media. (The media will ask, “Wait, which one was Jill Stein?”)
2
THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING
Actually, they arrived long ago and got into her phone.
3
MILLENNIALS
Ugh. F**cking idealists, right?
4
BERNIE SANDERS
Remember when people worried that running unopposed in the primary would hurt Clinton? It's going to be an endless wail about how Sanders should have withdrawn sooner.
5
BILL CLINTON
You know how this will go down: Best campaigner of all time and he couldn’t close the sale. He lost his mojo.
6
SEXISTS
Ugh. F**cking glass ceiling.
7
OBAMA PEOPLE
If they could delete all of David Axelrod's tweets, they would.
8
JAMES COMEY
He might as well have indicted her for real, like he did in the court of public opinion. Extremely careless.
9
DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ AND THE DNC
Her Soviet-style approach to boosting Clinton was something that Hillary’s campaign was happy to countenance. But the former DNC chair should have left room for dissent rather than let it bottle up.
 
2016.09.21
媒體之錯?
Thomas E. Patterson, Bradlee Professor of Government and the Press
Shorenstein Center
 
 
September 26, 2016 Issue
 
 
《金融時報》Globalisation ‘not to blame’ for income woes, study says
Chris Giles in London and Shawn Donnan in Washington
 
http://im.ft-static.com/content/images/88d82b6b-e5c5-457e-82af-58855e37a407.img
 
Trade and globalisation have been unfairly blamed for Brexit and the rise of Donald Trump, according to a study of incomes that debunks the popular view that a more connected world has led to stagnating fortunes for the lower middle class in rich countries.
 
http://im.ft-static.com/content/images/e2d16762-7911-11e6-a0c6-39e2633162d5.img
 
http://im.ft-static.com/content/images/e1d9221e-7911-11e6-a0c6-39e2633162d5.img
 
The idea that ordinary people have been unfairly hit by the rise of emerging markets and China over the past 30 years and the income gains of the global super-rich was propagated by the so-called “elephant chart” devised by the economist Branko Milanovic, a former senior official at the World Bank.
 
Development experts celebrated the graph as the “chart that explains the world”. But a new study by the Resolution Foundation, a British charity founded to support the interests of those on low to middle incomes, has overturned its findings.
 
After a detailed replication of the global incomes data provided by Mr Milanovic, the Resolution Foundation analysis challenges the conclusion that globalisation and trade harms the middle classes of rich countries.
 
A separate update by Mr Milanovic to the data from 2008 to 2011 also suggests greater income growth among precisely the groups hurt by stagnating incomes in the previous 30 years and much less gain for people with the top 1 per cent of global incomes, Mr Milanovic said in an interview. His update also demonstrated the world’s wealthy took a significant hit in the global financial crisis, which had actually served to narrow inequality.
 
“You can say the crisis was good for [reducing] inequality,” he told the Financial Times.
 
The Resolution Foundation found that faster population growth in emerging markets made it difficult to compare the incomes of the lower middle classes over time because their position in global income rankings changed. The larger number of Chinese families made it appear that the US poor were further up the global income scale in 2008 than they were in 1988.
 
If incomes were unchanged in every country, this population effect alone would lead to apparent drops of 25 per cent in parts of the global income scale associated with poorer people in rich countries. That generated the characteristic “elephant” shape, according to the Resolution Foundation.
 
These results were exacerbated by outlying factors, such as the former Soviet states of eastern Europe, which had incomes in the same zone and saw them collapse after the fall of communism.
 
Adjusting the chart for constant populations and removing China, ex-Soviet states and Japan shows a relatively even spread of income growth across the world. China is a clear outlier in performing very strongly.
 
“Globalisation is not to blame for all the ills of the world,” Torsten Bell, director of the Resolution Foundation, said. “Although globalisation brings a range of challenges for lower income families, we need to be clear that weak income growth generally is rooted in domestic policy, and blaming globalisation takes the pressure off governments.”
 
The Resolution Foundation’s analysis suggests that the fate of lower middle class incomes has differed greatly country by country, and even with a rise in inequality in many places the rich world’s lower middle classes have not fared badly.
 
Mr Milanovic has pioneered research into income comparisons on a global scale and says “the great winners [of the globalisation process] have been the Asian poor and middle classes”.
 
 
《Resolution Foundation》
 
 
High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. https://www.ft.com/content/804537f6-83d2-11e6-8897-2359a58ac7a5#ixzz4LWF2iz7B
 

Martin Wolf Martin Wolf

Under a President Trump, democracy would lose credibility as a model for a civilised political life
James Ferguson©James Ferguson

Sometimes history jumps. Think of the first world war, the Bolshevik revolution, the Great Depression, the election of Adolf Hitler, the second world war, the beginning of the cold war, the collapse of the European empires, Deng Xiaoping’s “reform and opening up” of China, the demise of the Soviet Union, and the financial crisis of 2007-09 and subsequent “great recession”.

We may be on the brink of an event as transformative as many of these: the election of Donald Trump as US president. This would mark the end of a US-led west as the central force in global affairs. The result would not be a new order. It would be perilous disorder.

The fact that Mr Trump can be a credible contender for the presidency is astounding. In business, he is a serial defaulter and litigator turned reality TV star. He is a peddler of falsehoods and conspiracy theories. He utters racist calumnies. He attacks the independence of the judiciary. He refuses to reveal his taxes. He has no experience of political office, and incoherent policies. He glories in ignorance. He even hints at a federal default. He undermines confidence in the US-created trade order, by threatening to tear up past agreements. He undermines confidence in US democracy by claiming the election will be rigged. He supports torture and the deliberate killing of the families of alleged terrorists. He admires the former KGB agent who runs Russia.

Evidently, a huge number of US voters have lost confidence in the country’s political and economic systems. This is so to an extent not seen even in the 1930s, when voters turned towards an established politician. Yet, for all its challenges, the US is not in such terrible shape. It is the richest large country in the history of the world. Growth is slow, but unemployment is low. If voters were to choose Mr Trump — despite his failings, displayed again in the first presidential debate — this would tell us grim things about the health of the US.

It is the world’s leading power, so this is not just a domestic US concern. What might a Trump presidency mean? Forecasting the policies of someone so unpredictable is impossible. But a few things seem at least reasonably clear.

The US and its allies remain immensely powerful. But their economic dominance is in slow decline. According to the International Monetary Fund, the share of the high-income countries (essentially, the US and its chief allies) will fall from 64 per cent of global output (measured at purchasing power) in 1990 to 39 per cent in 2020, while the US share will fall from 22 per cent to 15 per cent over this period.

While the US military might is still huge, two caveats must be made. One is that winning a conventional war is quite a different matter from achieving one’s aims on the ground, as the Viet­nam and Iraq wars showed. Furthermore, China’s rapidly rising defence spending could create serious military difficulties for the US in the Asia-Pacific region.

It follows that the ability of the US to shape the world to its liking will rest increasingly on its influence over the global economic and political systems. Indeed, this is not new. It has been a feature of US hegemony since the 1940s. But this is even more important today. The alliances the US creates, the institutions it supports and the prestige it possesses are truly invaluable assets. All such strategic assets would be in grave peril if Mr Trump were to be president.

The biggest contrast between the US and China is that the former has so many powerful allies. Even Vladimir Putin is not a reliable ally for China. America’s allies support the US largely because they trust it. That trust is based on its perceived commitment to predictable, values-based behaviour. Its alliances have not been problem-free, far from it. But they have worked. Mr Trump’s cherished unpredictability and transactional approach to partnerships would damage the alliances irreparably.

A vital feature of the US-led global order has been the role of multilateral institutions, such as the IMF, the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation. In binding itself by the rules of an open economic system, the US has encouraged others to do the same. The result has been extraordinary growth in prosperity: between 1950 and 2015, average global real output per head rose sixfold. Mr Trump does not understand this system. The results of repudiation could be calamitous for all.

A split-screen America will have seen different realities in the clash between him and Clinton

The Iraq war has damaged trust in US wisdom and competence. But the global financial crisis has been even more destructive. Many have long suspected US motives. But they thought it knew how to manage a capitalist system. The crisis devastated that confidence.

After all this damage, election of a man as unqualified as Mr Trump would call into question something even more fundamental: belief in the capacity of the US to choose reasonably well-informed and competent leaders. Under a President Trump, the democratic system would lose much of its credibility as a model for the organisation of a civilised political life. Mr Putin and other actual or would-be despots would cheer. Their belief that talk of western values is just hypocrisy would be vindicated. But those who see the US as a bastion of democracy would despair.

If Mr Trump were to win, it would be a regime change for the world. It would, for example, end efforts to manage the threat of climate change, possibly forever. But even his candidacy suggests that the US role in the global order risks undergoing a transformation. That role depended not only on American economic and military prowess, but also on the values it represented. For all its mistakes, the ideal of a law-governed democratic republic remained visible. Hillary Clinton is an imperfect candidate. Mr Trump is something else altogether. Far from making America great, his presidency might unravel the world.

 
 
[ 打印 ]
閱讀 ()評論 (2)
評論
笨狼 回複 悄悄話 回複 'Norcalfan0' 的評論 :

克林頓真是個撇腳的政客,“淳陣過半時混蛋(deplorable)”那種話都說得出口,真的也得忍著,況且說這話實在是缺德,一大群人,再惡,也不能一棍子打死。

有時人真是鬼迷心竅,得了總統病,老覺得他人怎麽搞的,我這麽辛苦大家還刁難,不忿。人長時間在興奮狀態下度過,難免精神失常,說話也控製不住。據說她以前就說過了,上次沒人留意,她自己忍不住,覺得委屈,又說出來了,翻船也可能了,不知道後悔到啥程度。

這也反映她的團隊的問題,無盡的錢,幾百人,全世界絕無僅有的第一流競選班子、技術和資源,但事無巨細反而容易出錯,而且克林頓心腹對她的肝膽塗地過頭了,反而誤了她,Blumenthal就是個例子。

現在民主黨傾巢而出,可見大家緊張到何種地步。奧巴馬大方向跟克林頓相近,但兩人脾氣不合,彼此不服,相互討厭,不過奧仍舊馬不停蹄,一是他顧全大局,二是他也慌了。

現在民眾往往就一個影響就下賭注,鹿死誰手還真說不準。
Norcalfan0 回複 悄悄話 在不少川迷眼中,川普不會錯。\n1 川普不會做錯事。\n2 川普不會說錯話。\n3 如果報道說川普說錯了,不要相信。\n在川黑眼裏則是相反\n1 川普總做壞事。\n2 川普總說錯話。\n3 不管川普說什麽做什麽,不要相信。\n我的直覺是希拉裏要輸,但至少她的勝率目前還是高於川普的。
登錄後才可評論.