"When the President of the United States almost immolates himself through sheer stupidity."
Explain when he did that. He picked up an electric cord. That was all he did.
You're saying that he almost blew himself up because he could have put it too close to the hydrogen, but that's an unfounded assumption.
An assumption, yes. Unfounded...no. For one thing, this is George W. Bush we're talking about. The man has a well-documented history of being an idiot. More to the point, he has a well-documented history of being plain dumb. And inadvertently plugging a cord into the wrong outlet is something that you'd have to be plain dumb to do.
The cord was lying near the wrong outlet. The president had picked it up and was going to put it in. Mulally recognized it and stopped him. Just because it
didn't happen doesn't mean it wasn't going to. As to whether or not his action would have resulted in an explosion had he been able to complete it, I couldn't say. Neither could you, for that matter, given the spare details of the story. But Mulally was there, and, vis-a-vis the president's credibility, Mulally's actions indicate face-saving at best, and live-saving at worst.
If I am reaching, it is in the degree of just how "almost" he got to blowing himself up. And I grant that; I wouldn't argue it with you.
You're reaching too, mack, and I'll tell you whose arm is out over the hydrogen.
Would you like to be ridiculed for all the bad choices you could have made, but never had the chance to, based simply on the shared assumption that it was what you would have inevitably done?
He's the president,. Like it or not, he gets more scrutiny and is held to a higher standard than others. Do I think that's fair? I didn't make a claim on that either way. In posting this story to the Compendium, I'm just exploiting the "higher standard" reality to take a shot at America's worst president. More honorably, you might say I was doing others here the service of pointing out what a dipshit stupid fool he is.
The problem here is that people are speaking of a hypothetical situation so matter of factly. Nobody is thinking critically about who wrote the article, whether or not it would have been dangerous or just looked embarrassing if he tried plugging it in the wrong spot, and what the claim that he almost blew himself up is even founded on.
I don't get how you can accuse me of reaching and then write that. You've got zero facts available to back you up; you're just playing devil's advocate for the hell of it, I guess. Me, I've got two facts: One, Mulally himself broke protocol (in a diplomatic fashion) to prevent the president from taking an action that he almost certainly otherwise would have taken. Two, hydrogen is a highly flammable substance and one spark is all it takes to have a very bad day.
From those two direct facts, I can infer a third: Playing with electricity near hydrogen without knowing what you are doing can lead to an explosion. How close did Bush get to that? Maybe not very close at all. Maybe closer than the pimples on your ass. I don't know and couldn't say. What I can and do say is that he put himself (and those around him, including the vice president) in a dangerous situation because of his ignorance. It's just a quick jump of the diction to turn that into the word "almost" (or "nearly"), as in "almost blew himself up."
They're just glancing over the content and assuming the president nearly blew himself up, but was swiftly saved by someone they can relate to as a fellow intellectual.
Perhaps the story writer was being sensational. But the reporters were there talking with Mulally, and know more than you or I do. Given the strong wording of the story, if the reporter was indeed sensationalizing, they were also probably lying outright. That would expose them to legal liabilities. The Detroit News is a legitimate news reporting operation, and knows more about journalistic ethics than you do. So do I, for that matter, given my experience in newspapers.
Your second claim, that the argument made by me or the story as reported originally is somehow biased so as to praise Mulally as a "fellow intellectual" to Bush's blind fool, is bullshit. Don't waste my time.
Hell, I bet there wouldn't even have been any danger if he had plugged it into the wrong spot.
Filed under: Unsubstantiated Hearsay. Next...
For one thing, hydrogen is only dangerous when mixed with oxygen, and even when it burns it's not as dangerous as, say, gasoline.
I learned through experience, Ramsus, the importance of not pretending to be an expert when one is, in fact, not an expert.
This is why I hate the media, and why I hate media followers even more.
Whoa there, pard'ner! You should be smarter than to fit two humongously stupid prejudices into one small sentence...at least in my company. I don't think you even know what "the media" are. If you do, then you just weren't thinking when you dropped your H-bomb on them. (That's H for "hate," yo.) For all the Fox Newses out there, for all the infotainment, celebrity gossip, fear-mongering, sex and violence, and for all the half-truths, lies by omission, biased reports, and all the rest of it, the media bring news to the world. Quite frankly, anyone who condemns the media outright is a fool. All that's missing is for you to use the cute little "MSM" and your conversion to the Dumb Side will be complete.
And if you hate "media followers even more" than you do the media, then you're an even bigger fool. Awareness is everything in the measure of a person, and included in that is a functional knowledge of current events, so that one can interact with the world in an informed, intelligent way. I am going to give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that you were talking about people who watch shows like "Entertainment Tonight" or "Hannity & Colmes."
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Finally, turning it all over in my head, the only thing I can give you is this: Ford probably wouldn't have engineered a car that can be accidentally blown up. That, I think, is your best argument. It's also a reach, because even the most conventional car is lethal in its use and maintenance to an inexperienced person, and, moreover, in light of further information we don't know much about the particular model of car that Bush interacted with.
I'm afraid your hand is pretty weak. You might be able to subdue Kyronea, but I won't be so easily blown over by a loud argument.