tstorm823 said:
Analyze this for a moment. "Do you take responsibility for the lag in testing?" is a reasonable question that he may have answer differently.
Look, it could not be simpler. The Trump administration oversaw the released of a faulty test. Trump heads up the administration, and you agree he is responsible for what his administration does. Therefore, he is responsible, QED, by your own rationale. You can't then resaonably argue a question putting precisely that to him is somehow unfair.
It's not a trick. You act like Trump can only give a direct, honest answer. Seriously: Trump,
honest? What parallel universe are you in? This is the easiest thing in the world to deal with. Here: "Obviously it's unfortunate a faulty test was released by the CDC, but I have taken responsibility to prioritise production of a working test that will go to millions of Americans in the next couple of weeks". That question's only a problem to a pathetically egotistical man-child who is so hypersensitive to criticism that he can't pull his thoughts together to bat it away.
Or, it's nasty because it's dishonest. The experts and resources of the Pandemic Response team still exist at the White House, they just got restructured underneath a different umbrella.
No, this was about efficiency savings. And efficiency savings are about reducing manpower and resources.
This is how works, because it's how it always works. Scrap a team with a dedicated remit and merge its functions into a wider department, it always gets diluted. A once-dedicated team leader becomes a generic manager with several other things to oversee, once-dedicated team workers and resources are part-diverted to other projects, and the once-dedicated remit becomes just another thing to balance against competing projects under the same unit.
He did not say that he didn't know. He said he would have said that.
So Trump says he would say he didn't know flu killed if he were asked. So then... he didn't know flu killed, would be the logical conclusion. Or you expect us to just know this is one of those moments Trump was lying, whilst you're also arguing Trump is such a straight shooter that he's incapable of sidestepping a question asking if he takes responsibility for the errors of his administration. Ugh.
Then why are you ignoring what's going on and why, and focusing only on the tone?
I'm not. I'm pointing out that you should not reasonably credit truths which are jumbled with untruths, unclear and incoherently presented. Imagine you read an essay and have to mark it. It appears to have what might be accurate facts, but they're often unclear and sometimes the writer contradicts those facts with inaccuracies. The organisation and logical flow is muddled and unclear, so it's hard to tell what the reasoning is and how the evidence and reasoning supports the conclusions. Large tracts of it are irrelevant. Yeah, you hand that a very low grade. Pointing out a few bits of evidence are correct doesn't salvage it.
You want us to pick out a few things that Trump says that are potentially more accurate, interpret them through the lack of clarity in the kindest way possible, and declare Trump fine. You know what? No, I'm not going to.
There is a difference between a rally and a press release...
What isn't fair is to take like an hour of information, most of which is useful, factual, and civil, and cut out only the dishonest questions and post them as headlines.
Okay. I once took the effort of reading through a couple of transcripts entire Trump press conferences.
They're awful. The way the media has to focus attention on snippets often does Trump a favour, because it means you don't see the vast tracts of incoherent rambling, boasting and vapidity that occupies considerable tracts of them.
Disagree. Decision to design a test? Good. Decision to redesign when it was faulty? Also good. Results? We don't know yet. The people who were seriously suspected of having the virus were tested by different means in the meantime. I'm not sure I call that a failure.
It was a failure. The USA used a faulty test which impaired its ability to track and record the disease during a critical period of spread, as even acknowledged by your country's scientific director on the pandemic. Intentions are nice, but consequences matter.
So you're going to tell this person that Trump's response wasn't that bad, right?
I'm not interested in dignifying your prejudices against people who disagree with you.