Being fairly new to this forum, I can say that sheep is one of the people I agree with most of the time but not all of the time. If I understand him correctly, I disagree on one major point. Here is what sheep said:
If you stood silently by while the last president wrote policy via executive orders, just because you happened to agree with those policies, then how can you credibly argue that the current president is constitutionally wrong to write policy via executive orders?
I want to take this out of the context of executive orders and broaden it to "if you didn't complain about Obama, how can you credibly argue against Trump?" so it will cover more than just the current situation. My position is that one can credibly argue against Trump, in good faith, even if one didn't argue against Obama. Further, I believe that it is not wrong to consider those arguments.
What I am willing to do (that sheep is apparently not willing to do) is to separate the message from the messenger. If you tell me that President Trump is wrong on the immigration ban because a) it is a bad idea on the merits, b) because he didn't consult the appropriate officials in his own government, and c) because he did so by executive order, I believe I should consider each of your arguments on its merits. To me, it would be irrational to consider Argument (a) and (b), but not to consider Argument (c) because you did not object so some executive order issued by President Obama. It would be equally irrational for me not to consider one of your arguments because you are a habitual liar, or a drug addict, or a CNN viewer.
So, I understand sheep's point of view. If you asked me at pretty much any point in my life, I would say the same thing.
If you stood silently by while the last president wrote policy via executive orders, just because you happened to agree with those policies, then how can you credibly argue that the current president is constitutionally wrong to write policy via executive orders?
I want to take this out of the context of executive orders and broaden it to "if you didn't complain about Obama, how can you credibly argue against Trump?" so it will cover more than just the current situation. My position is that one can credibly argue against Trump, in good faith, even if one didn't argue against Obama. Further, I believe that it is not wrong to consider those arguments.
What I am willing to do (that sheep is apparently not willing to do) is to separate the message from the messenger. If you tell me that President Trump is wrong on the immigration ban because a) it is a bad idea on the merits, b) because he didn't consult the appropriate officials in his own government, and c) because he did so by executive order, I believe I should consider each of your arguments on its merits. To me, it would be irrational to consider Argument (a) and (b), but not to consider Argument (c) because you did not object so some executive order issued by President Obama. It would be equally irrational for me not to consider one of your arguments because you are a habitual liar, or a drug addict, or a CNN viewer.
So, I understand sheep's point of view. If you asked me at pretty much any point in my life, I would say the same thing.
Comment