razorjak: (bush no-sense)
BrickJAK ([personal profile] razorjak) wrote2008-02-28 01:00 pm

(no subject)

So Chimpy McFuckstick doesn't think we're heading into a recession.

He thinks it's "patentedly" unfair if the telecom companies are actually held accountable for their illegal actions.

...

I can't even go on. My brain wants to implode from listening to that dipshit.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)
It's like Schroedinger's "solved."

It's very similar to those Weapons of Mass Destruction that Neo-Con advocates will still say were found in Iraq along with Saddam's connections to Bin Laden. It's also similar to the End of Major Combat Operations.

When the Decider(tm) decides that the problem is solved, it will be solved. At that time we will all be able to marvel at what he really meant by "solved."
Edited 2008-02-28 19:31 (UTC)

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's very similar to those Weapons of Mass Destruction that Neo-Con advocates will still say were found in Iraq along with Saddam's connections to Bin Laden.."

I would call Sarin, Mustard Gas and binary 155mm artillery shells as fulfilling that qualification to a T. Moreover, the documentation recovered underscored that the Iraqi plan was to secretly maintain the programs in a suspended state as much as possible and then reconstitute them as SOON as the sanctions were lifted.

"It's also similar to the End of Major Combat Operations."

At least it's not the 'Victory' that the Democrats want to hand us ala 1975. Because actually finishing the job is too rational.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 08:46 pm (UTC)(link)
"I would call Sarin, Mustard Gas and binary 155mm artillery shells as fulfilling that qualification to a T."

I knew you would.

This is why the so vague as to be Schrödinger term "Weapons of Mass Destruction" was coined instead of the already sufficient and common terms of art "nuclear" "biological" and "chemical" used to describe weapons with special international restrictions. So that you could justify failed foriegn adventures by saying "hey! they had a warehouse with some worn-out cold-war artillery shells with Sarin gas in it! That is exactly the same thing as having nuclear bombs 45 minutes from leveling London with mushroom clouds! And having a "suspended program" is exactly the same thing as having secret labs building atomic bomb components and enriching uranium preparing for a huge terrorist after-market for atomic bombs.

Sarin and Mustard gas hardly qualify.
1. They are primitive.
2. It took 5 men and one liter of Sarin (an artillery shell would hold 5 times as much) to kill 12 people packed into a fucking subway in 1995.

This weapon is not that badass, and it is far from a ZOMG Weapon of Mass Destruction. By way of comparison, 2 high school kids with little planning totally crushed this terror group's high score with hand-guns. The "mass" is missing in the WMD here. 155mm shells filled with, oh I don't know, High Explosive would be much more "mass" than that!

"At least it's not the 'Victory'..."

You're right. It's much more effective to dump our increasingly debt-burdened economy into maintaining an expensive and ineffective presence in a hostile and destitute foreign country.

Yeah, that'll show 'em.

It's not like the region has a history of stubborn violence or anything, so I'm sure we heard the last gasps in 2003, deployed 300,000 Iraqi soldiers 2004 (right after the election it was supposed to be), turned the corner in 2005, stayed the course in 2006, deployed all the reserves in 2007 to victoriously get violence back down to the levels when we were winning back in 2005. Yeah, with failur-er successes like that, we would hate to just hand those shadowy bad-guys their victory.

I believe we had a discussion two years ago where I mentioned the words failure and lies to you. Not much has changed except that our economy is tanking and the national debt is increasing impressively.

I'm sure the terrorists are very impressed with us and our fantastic strategery.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 09:56 pm (UTC)(link)
This is why the so vague as to be Schrödinger term "Weapons of Mass Destruction" was coined instead of the already sufficient and common terms of art "nuclear" "biological" and "chemical" used to describe weapons with special international restrictions. So that you could justify failed foriegn adventures by saying "hey! they had a warehouse with some worn-out cold-war artillery shells with Sarin gas in it! That is exactly the same thing as having nuclear bombs 45 minutes from leveling London with mushroom clouds! And having a "suspended program" is exactly the same thing as having secret labs building atomic bomb components and enriching uranium preparing for a huge terrorist after-market for atomic bombs.

Sarin and Mustard gas hardly qualify.
1. They are primitive.
2. It took 5 men and one liter of Sarin (an artillery shell would hold 5 times as much) to kill 12 people packed into a fucking subway in 1995.


This is absolute ignorant, disingenuous and utterly wrong.

Mustard gas, a Blister Agent, is a NBC weapon. Specifically a Chemical weapon. Your adherence to WMD as the requirement is in fact you sticking to the poorly articulated requirements that you ascribe to me. (Cognitive dissonance at it's best I suppose.) It is a 1st World war technology. That is still a proscribed weapon according to the terms of the treaty, regardless of purity or age.

Sarin is a Nerve Agent. Specifically in the G-agent class, similar to Cyclosarin, Soman and Tabun. Your equivocation to make it seem less harmful is disingenuous. The delivery system which the Aum Shinrikyo cult used was primitive and poor. I guarantee you that with the same purity of agent, an explosive Chemical Shell, whether binary or unitary would be FAR more deadly over a much larger area. G and V agents are Cold War weapons and are QUITE deadly despite your characterizations to the contrary.

A functional chemical industry able to make pesticides and a foundry/machining complex to make shells is all that is required to manufacture G type chemical agents. Stocks of ANY of those components is a violation of the treaty that iraq was signatory to.

Filled and degraded or unfilled shells themselves, whether unitary (one chamber for a final product) or a binary (two chambers with a function on firing to mix the two components for a final chemical product) are a violation of the treaty.

The NBC weapons presence issue is a Binary function. There ARE or ARE NOT weapons there. The Fact is that weapons WERE found during ODS and the following years. That's a Positive, not a negative. You cannot hand wave that away by saying they were old or poorly kept or a bad design. They were in fact, extant NBC weapons in violation of the treaty. Inspection efforts showed a very clear and consistent to conceal extant programs over the 12 years following the 1st Gulf war war.


It's not like the region has a history of stubborn violence or anything, so I'm sure we heard the last gasps in 2003, deployed 300,000 Iraqi soldiers 2004 (right after the election it was supposed to be), turned the corner in 2005, stayed the course in 2006, deployed all the reserves in 2007 to victoriously get violence back down to the levels when we were winning back in 2005. Yeah, with failur-er successes like that, we would hate to just hand those shadowy bad-guys their victory.


Running away won't help us or any of the allies. We cannot loose, to do so is only going to be because we decided to fail. The most critical strategic goal is destroying Al Quaida's forces in Iraq and showing the Arab World that Iraq saw them up close and turned their backs on them. Witness how the Democrats have in fact stopped talking about iraq because the Success in areas like Al Anbar. Specifically due to the surge which you say is not or will not work. The Surge is in fact working.

Of course if you listen to Obama, the success is because Democrats were elected and that scared the terrorists off.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 10:38 pm (UTC)(link)
"This is absolute ignorant, disingenuous and utterly wrong."

Don't presume to lecture me on what the weapons are.

"There ARE or ARE NOT weapons there."

This is true when discussing whether or not there was a treaty violation, but treaty violations were not the administration's stated purpose for invasion, and it is ignorant, disingenuous, and utterly wrong to imply that it was.

When discussing the case given for war, this statement is false dichotomy.

In fact, you make my point. The term "Weapons of Mass Destruction" is an all-inclusive rhetorical trick where Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld could stand at the podium and talk about impending mushroom clouds, and later say "yeah this toxic chemical that many many orders of magnitude less destructive than an atomic bomb, yeah that is exactly the same thing as the nucs we were scaring the shit out of everyone with before the war." Which is, not to put too fine a point on it, equine excrement.

"We cannot loose [sic],"

Too late.

Don't forget the lies to go with that continued failure.

Incidentally, all of your victory rhetoric gets old after a few years.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Don't presume to lecture me on what the weapons are.


Then don't try to say Sarin is not an NBC weapon because some Japanese Nuts couldn't aerosolize it. If they'd walked throughout he subway with a garden sprayer you'd have seen a ten fold increase in the deaths because people would have had significant lung and skin contact.

This is true when discussing whether or not there was a treaty violation, but treaty violations were not the administration's stated purpose for invasion, and it is ignorant, disingenuous, and utterly wrong to imply that it was.


Then why is that the ONLY thing that the antiwar BDS crowd latch onto? It was one of 14 Points. All of which were largely valid.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:35 pm (UTC)(link)
"Then don't try to say Sarin is not an NBC weapon because some Japanese Nuts couldn't aerosolize it."

Aaaaaand, I didn't. Read all the words.

"Then why is that the ONLY thing that the antiwar BDS crowd latch onto?"

Because our administration has lied to us, utterly and completely. And, patsies like you continue to back those lies, for reasons that truly escape me.

The case was not "treaty violation" the case was "preemption due to clear and present danger," which was entirely false. Some sarin shells don't change that.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-29 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
You said they hardly qualified and minimalized it's hazard or qualification as an NBC because someone couldn't develop a good delivery system.

It's a binary question YES/NO. Not this 'NOT really' crap. You want to speak in Absolutes? Then guess what, your absolute position is full of holes.

Were there NBC weapons in Iraq? YES.

The case was not "treaty violation" the case was "preemption due to clear and present danger," which was entirely false. Some sarin shells don't change that.


It does when you say there were NO NBC weapons. Again, even unfilled shells are violations of the treaty. Further, there's the whole intent issue with regards to Iraq. And the support for terrorist going into the year 2000. Sweep it under the rug all you want. There's still a big bloody lump that you're going to trip over.

Even if we set aside that any functional programs were closed down or sufficiently hidden (I'd place money on scientists and data along with some production gear going to Syria) there was still intent which the post invasion teams found to be exactly in the direction that supported the case for war. Up to 2003 Iraq was making noises through diplomatic channels that it HAD a NBC program of some sort. It was a bluff, but it still supports authorization for war.

I guarantee you that if Jak was working as a bouncer and had a troublemaker come on to property that he'd seen armed before and the troublemaker gestured in his pocket as if he had a firearm, Jak would use deadly force on the troublemaker and wouldn't give a rats ass about his lack of a real weapon.

To me, the principle's the same. Iraq had warnings, it prevaricated and obfuscated as well as hindered the inspection process and never lived up to terms, when push came to shove and it tried to bluff again, we called the bluff.

(no subject)

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com - 2008-03-01 02:39 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 09:56 pm (UTC)(link)

I believe we had a discussion two years ago where I mentioned the words failure and lies to you. Not much has changed except that our economy is tanking and the national debt is increasing impressively.

Weak but still positive growth numbers are not 'Tanking'. And surely, increasing taxes and expanding the number of people on the dole and social programs would do wonders for making the Federal budget smaller right?

Thanks for playing.

[identity profile] mspaintchuk.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 10:22 pm (UTC)(link)
And how much is the illegal war costing?

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Ya know, It's not illegal. Not any more than Operation Desert Fox was.

2nd, if we could get the Iraqi's to sell some oil to pay for the costs, that'd be great. But the Liberals would scream Bloody murder about Imperialism and Colonialism.

3. We're there. We can't change history. Can you change history? If you can, I'd love to borrow your time machine. Pulling out now, or 5 months ago or 3 years ago would catastrophic. If you say it wouldn't or refuse to admit so you're a fool. It would

And to answer your question obliquely:

Less than Social Security is.

Here's the breakdown:
Mandatory spending: $1.788 trillion (+4.2%)
$608 billion (+4.5%) - Social Security
$386 billion (+5.2%) - Medicare
$209 billion (+5.6%) - Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
$324 billion (+1.8%) - Unemployment/Welfare/Other mandatory spending
$261 billion (+9.2%) - Interest on National Debt
Discretionary spending: $1.114 trillion (+3.1%)
$481.4 billion (+12.1%) - United States Department of Defense
$145.2 billion (+45.8%) - Global War on Terror
$69.3 billion (+0.3%) - Health and Human Services
$56.0 billion (+0.0%) - United States Department of Education
$39.4 billion (+18.7%) - United States Department of Veterans Affairs
$35.2 billion (+1.4%) - US Department of Housing and Urban Development
$35.0 billion (+22.0%) - State and Other International Programs
$34.3 billion (+7.2%) - Department of Homeland Security
$24.3 billion (+6.6%) - Energy
$20.2 billion (+4.1%) - Administration of justice
$20.2 billion (+3.1%) - Department of Agriculture
$17.3 billion (+6.8%) - National Aeronautics and Space Administration
$12.1 billion (+13.1%) - Department of Transportation
$12.1 billion (+6.1%) - Department of Treasury
$10.6 billion (+2.9%) - United States Department of the Interior
$10.6 billion (-9.4%) - United States Department of Labor
$51.8 billion (+9.7%) - Other On-budget Discretionary Spending
$39.0 billion - Other Off-budget Discretionary Spending

Non Discretionary Non Legal (Where in the Constitution is Welfare a legal function of congress?) expenditures total 1.527 Trillion Dollars.

The Pentagon AND the GWOT's cost in the same year (FY '07) are ~1/3 of the total social programs that the FEderal Government is expending money on. If we JUST look at the cost of the GWOT's cost in Iraq and Afghanistan then it's only $145 billion. Heck, that's a fraction of the Medicare and Medicaid program. Or that's HUD, DHS and Health ANd human Services rolled together.

Where in the constitution again can you point to where congress is authorized to fund housing? I'm curious to know which article that's under.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah, $595 Billion of Medicaid and Medicare.

So, you characterize paying for healthcare for the poor as being on The Dole? Interesting.

I know everytime I'm in the emergency room looking at those poor families waiting for treatment I'm thinking, "it's vile that they let these people in here with me, someone who works for a corporation that offers health benefits, they should be on the sidewalk dying, not here in the government subsidized air conditioning with their betters. Hell, if I had my way, my company wouldn't even have to provide health insurance at all, and arbitrary market forces and lack of consumer protections would completely control my health care fate!"

Okay, you are right. If we let Americans die in the street for being poor, then we could fund a War on Iraq and have some change left over.

I fail to see that this is a practical or human answer, but I will agree with you that it is possible.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, and old. Don't forget letting people die on the street for being old.

Yep, let's just get rid of all those protections for retired people.

Then we could blow up Afghanistan properly instead of fucking it all up, too.

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[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 00:19 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] mspaintchuk.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 10:37 pm (UTC)(link)
P.S. Today was the third day in a row that the dollar closed at record lows against the Euro. Sounds like positive growth to me!

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Here's a little observed fact for you.

A lower dollar means that our exports are in fact cheaper for sale overseas. That means our businesses are in fact MORE able to compete on the world market in spite of our increased costs for running industry in the US (Labor unions, payroll taxes, administration costs, federal state and local regulation compliance costs).

It also means we're a more desirable destination.

The rising yen and Euro are in fact indicative of severe problems in THOSE economies. Europe's economy is really stagnant. Their currency values are rising due to inflation in those markets of their currency.

If it gets too bad, it could spell disaster for those economies and a subsequent rebound in the US economy. However it's NOT the negative indicator you seem to think it is.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:13 pm (UTC)(link)
"nd surely, increasing taxes and expanding the number of people on the dole and social programs would do wonders for making the Federal budget smaller right?"

I love you for giving me this present.

< sarcasm >
I have seen the light! You are totally right, it is all those slackers on the Dole that is emptying the US coffers!

Let's look at the entire budgets of those evil liberal departments of the Executive, shall we (2008)?

$67.650 Billion - Department of Health and Human Services
$55.995 Billion - Department of Education
$35.201 Billion - Department of Housing and Human Development
$10.610 Billion - Department of the Interior
$7.200 Billion - Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------
$176.656 Billion for Liberal Slackers and Losers

Huh.

Interestingly, it is less thatn the Interest we are paying on our National Debt that all of your lovely cut-taxes-deficit spending is granting us. Current interest will cost us $281 Billion this year.

Hell, one mid-year emergency spending bill for the troops could completely pay for all this liberal big-government poppycock.

How about we look at those Conservative Small Government activities that you are soooooo fond of, shall we?

$481.406 Billion - Department of Defense
$145.200 Billion - Additional for the War on Terra
$34.998 Billion - Department of State
$39.418 Billion - For the underfunded Department of Veteran Affairs
$.340 Billion - Office of the President
$34.288 Billion - For that new, Republican small-government innovation that is rocking the world with its effectiveness and competence, the Department of Homeland Security
-------------------
$735.650 Billion* - The cost of world Jingoism**

* Not including the $150 or so Billion dollars more we will get hit with by the middle of the year (like we have every year) to Support the Troops (tm).

** I am not including War on Terra efforts coming from the Department of Justice ($20.181 Billion)

Or, are you proposing that we get rid of those Social Security entitlements that were paid into by the men that fought real wars? You've spent a lot of time standing on their shoulders comparing our current misadventures to World War II, are you going to fuck them over now because social security has been dishonestly raided instead of being the separate fund as it was always promised?

If so, you will save $608 Billion.

Go ahead and say that all those old people are the problem. I want to see you say that.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-29 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
I have seen the light! You are totally right, it is all those slackers on the Dole that is emptying the US coffers!

Let's look at the entire budgets of those evil liberal departments of the Executive, shall we (2008)?

$67.650 Billion - Department of Health and Human Services
$55.995 Billion - Department of Education
$35.201 Billion - Department of Housing and Human Development
$10.610 Billion - Department of the Interior
$7.200 Billion - Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------
$176.656 Billion for Liberal Slackers and Losers

Huh.


Aren't you forgetting a few line items?
$608 billion (+4.5%) - Social Security
$386 billion (+5.2%) - Medicare
$209 billion (+5.6%) - Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance
$324 billion (+1.8%) - Unemployment/Welfare/Other mandatory spending

$481.406 Billion - Department of Defense
$145.200 Billion - Additional for the War on Terra
$34.998 Billion - Department of State
$39.418 Billion - For the underfunded Department of Veteran Affairs
$.340 Billion - Office of the President
$34.288 Billion - For that new, Republican small-government innovation that is rocking the world with its effectiveness and competence, the Department of Homeland Security
-------------------
$735.650 Billion* - The cost of world Jingoism**


Thanks for the intellectual honesty. Are you intentionally rolling the entire cost of the Defense Department, the State department, Veterans Affairs and other segments of the Discretionary spending into the War on Terror? How honest of you.

Because Even BEFORE the WAR on Terror...

The Department of Veteran's Affiars had a budget of $45 Bil in 2001 and the DOD had a budget of $281 Bil in 2000 and $293 Bil in 2001. ACtual spending in 2007 for the VA was $72.6 Billion for the VA and $548.8 billion for the DOD.

In 1962 the DOD accounted for 46.9% of the Federal Budget. It accounted for 15 percent in 2000. The Department of Health and Human Services accounts for 21.4% today. Explain that please.

A great deal of the Federal Military budget relates to maintenance of existing systems and development of new systems. Those new systems need to be brought online to replace hardware which has reached end of life regardless of it's use in Iraq or not. Or, are all those things baby killing implements to you as well?

Half of it is construction of facilities for the military and replacement of old facilities. We still have barracks buildings that were built in WWII. I guess if they were prisoners it would be cruel and unusual punishment but since they're not, you figure it's only just that the 'imperialist war mongers' live in such decrepit facilities?

Or, are you proposing that we get rid of those Social Security entitlements that were paid into by the men that fought real wars? You've spent a lot of time standing on their shoulders comparing our current misadventures to World War II, are you going to fuck them over now because social security has been dishonestly raided instead of being the separate fund as it was always promised?


You're going to call Funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs Jingoism and you're laying that sort of shit on me? How nice of you. Why don't you just spit on Jak and be done with it. He's a vet and I guess in your book is an imperialist jingoism perpetrating baby killer. Or perhaps you'd like to rephrase your statement above?


Here's a fact for you. Social Security under the current scheme is not guaranteed. When the Republicans proposed a system where it WOULD be the Democrats screamed bloody murder. My mother died at age 55. Me and my sister never saw a cent of that money. My mother never saw a cent. Social Security under the current scheme is a ponzi scheme and nothing more. It's a tax. Nothing else. Statements from the Social Security Administration not withstanding.

We've got a Democratically controlled congress. They haven't cut spending, they increased it. Have the fixed Social Security? No they have not.

No matter how you argue it, the social programs take the lions share of the Federal Budget. If you were so concerned about cutting it, you'd be looking to cut the pork with the $20 Billion of pork and perhaps trying to trim down some of the social programs.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-29 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
"He's a vet and I guess in your book is an imperialist jingoism perpetrating baby killer."

You forget that I am a vet, and I am proud of my service.

I am however, ashamed of those that compare the senseless and unnecessary invasion of Iraq to the necessary and righteous invasion of Europe in WWII.

And if we are going to bask in the glory of their achievements, then we damn well better keep our promises to them too.

(no subject)

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 00:47 (UTC) - Expand

Pay our Bills

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 02:08 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 02:39 (UTC) - Expand

Pathetic

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 17:26 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com - 2008-03-01 02:48 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com - 2008-03-01 02:49 (UTC) - Expand

TANSTAFL

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 18:03 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com - 2008-03-01 02:39 (UTC) - Expand

TANSTAFL PT II.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com - 2008-02-29 18:03 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 09:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Failure.

We aren't done.

[identity profile] mspaintchuk.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 09:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Well shit, I thought we had gotten that one right.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 10:53 pm (UTC)(link)
The job Bill Clinton was working on.

Then there was his speech:

Here's the relevant line.

"The best way to end that threat once and for all is with a new Iraqi government -- a government ready to live in peace with its neighbors, a government that respects the rights of its people," Clinton said.

Or was Clinton's speech and Operation Desert Fox all just a bunch of smoke to get out of the way of Congress. Personally I believed him and as unhappy as I was that he lied under oath, I was happy to see him prosecute a fight against Iraq.

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:16 pm (UTC)(link)
We are way past the statute of limitations for "blame Bill Clinton."

If Hillary gets elected, you can trot all the crap back out, but it really doesn't wash anymore.

[identity profile] montieth.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Same Policy. Same arguments. Same stated objectives. It's only wrong if Bush says it?

You say one is valid but the other is not.

I say both arguments are valid.

How about some consistency?

[identity profile] geekalpha.livejournal.com 2008-02-28 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Sure.

It consistently annoys me how a specific irrelevant ex-president makes it in to current events discussions.

Clinton did bad: don't care, irrelevant.
Clinton did same: don't care, irrelevant.
Clinton did good: don't care, irrelevant.

That's pretty consistent.