JerryBaumchen 1,363 #26 December 19, 2023 (edited) 2 hours ago, billvon said: Along came Hitler who promised to bring back the old Germany, where the German people were free of sanctions, immigrants and the New World Order of a Europe united against them. He did this by choosing an internal enemy (the Jews) and blaming them for Germany's problems, as well as external enemies (the more liberal European countries.) That, of course, allowed him to sell himself as the solution to all these threats. This similiarity is why Trump's language is so similar to Hitler's - same approach, same goals. Hi Bill, Since 2015, this is what I have been saying; in different wording. It was real in the 1930's and it is real now. Jerry Baumchen PS) ETA: half of all voters believe Trump would be a threat to democracy if he is reelected president More than half of voters think Trump will act like a dictator if elected: poll | The Hill Edited December 19, 2023 by JerryBaumchen Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
brenthutch 444 #27 December 19, 2023 1 hour ago, jakee said: Ok cool - so people are either progressives or monarchists. Which one are you? Let's see what the other Hitchens has to say: "what can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence" Some more evidence https://intellectualtakeout.org/2017/04/the-progressive-roots-of-fascism/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jakee 1,489 #28 December 19, 2023 1 hour ago, brenthutch said: Some more evidence Which part of that would you call evidence, exactly? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wolfriverjoe 1,523 #29 December 20, 2023 17 hours ago, jakee said: Ok cool - so people are either progressives or monarchists. Which one are you? Let's see what the other Hitchens has to say: "what can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence" Evidence? From him? Oh puh-leeeeeeeeze. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
olofscience 480 #30 December 20, 2023 (edited) 19 hours ago, jakee said: Which part of that would you call evidence, exactly? Anything that anyone has ever written on the internet can be evidence to him...as long as he agrees with it. Opinion pieces, AI-generated articles, whatever. Even random blogs run by unhinged deniers (one of which who came here with hilarious results). But respected journals like Nature? Lefty, commie rags. The IEA? Same, except when they report things he likes about coal. Then suddenly they're a respected authority. Edited December 20, 2023 by olofscience Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kallend 2,027 #31 January 8, 2024 Business Insider published two stories last week alleging that Neri Oxman, a prominent former MIT professor and wife of billionaire Bill Ackman, had plagiarized repeatedly in her academic work, including copying from Wikipedia more than a dozen times in her dissertation. This is the same Bill Ackman who spent weeks pressuring his alma mater, Harvard University, to oust its president over reports that she had committed plagiarism earlier in her career. At one point, Ackman wrote that a Harvard student who committed “much less” plagiarism than president Gay would be forced out of the university. Gay resigned from the Harvard presidency last week. But when Business Insider published plagiarism concerns about his wife’s work, Ackman excoriated the publication, accusing it of unethical journalism, promising to review its writers’ work and predicting that it would “go bankrupt and be liquidated.” He did not, however, dispute the accuracy of the plagiarism allegation. As a retired academic I dislike plagiarism, but I dislike hypocrisy more. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JoeWeber 2,720 #32 January 9, 2024 3 hours ago, kallend said: Business Insider published two stories last week alleging that Neri Oxman, a prominent former MIT professor and wife of billionaire Bill Ackman, had plagiarized repeatedly in her academic work, including copying from Wikipedia more than a dozen times in her dissertation. This is the same Bill Ackman who spent weeks pressuring his alma mater, Harvard University, to oust its president over reports that she had committed plagiarism earlier in her career. At one point, Ackman wrote that a Harvard student who committed “much less” plagiarism than president Gay would be forced out of the university. Gay resigned from the Harvard presidency last week. But when Business Insider published plagiarism concerns about his wife’s work, Ackman excoriated the publication, accusing it of unethical journalism, promising to review its writers’ work and predicting that it would “go bankrupt and be liquidated.” He did not, however, dispute the accuracy of the plagiarism allegation. As a retired academic I dislike plagiarism, but I dislike hypocrisy more. I abhor plagiarism as dislikable, as I do hypocrisy, but even more so. But you're academically right, we really need to draw the line somewhere. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
normiss 800 #33 January 9, 2024 29 minutes ago, JoeWeber said: I abhor plagiarism as dislikable, as I do hypocrisy, but even more so. But you're academically right, we really need to draw the line somewhere. Art and architecture. That's where. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
winsor 236 #34 January 9, 2024 17 hours ago, kallend said: Business Insider published two stories last week alleging that Neri Oxman, a prominent former MIT professor and wife of billionaire Bill Ackman, had plagiarized repeatedly in her academic work, including copying from Wikipedia more than a dozen times in her dissertation. This is the same Bill Ackman who spent weeks pressuring his alma mater, Harvard University, to oust its president over reports that she had committed plagiarism earlier in her career. At one point, Ackman wrote that a Harvard student who committed “much less” plagiarism than president Gay would be forced out of the university. Gay resigned from the Harvard presidency last week. But when Business Insider published plagiarism concerns about his wife’s work, Ackman excoriated the publication, accusing it of unethical journalism, promising to review its writers’ work and predicting that it would “go bankrupt and be liquidated.” He did not, however, dispute the accuracy of the plagiarism allegation. As a retired academic I dislike plagiarism, but I dislike hypocrisy more. One point I made with my students is that their lifetime quota for cheating was one instance. After that they could do whatever they chose with their time, but it would be somewhere other than my classroom. The school's policy was slightly more forgiving. I, too, loathe a double standard. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites