• Pronell@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Negative shit thrown at Pelosi in recent years:

      She got a haircut during COVID.

      She has a separate freezer for her ice cream.

      She profits greatly from stock trades.

      Two are non issues, and one is an issue that a great deal of congress members are guilty of.

      Knock it off.

      It’s petty, it reduces her accomplishments to a meme, and it ignores the true scale of the problem that neither party wants to stop.

      I agree it’s a problem but it isn’t solely a Pelosi issue. This is misogyny on full display. She isn’t the Speaker. She’s in the minority party and not even the minority leader.

      • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        Shutting down legitimate criticism of leadership is MAGA type thinking. Knock THAT off. Pretending the politicians you support are flawless or deflecting valid grievances with whataboutisms is not how you hold your party accountable for its shortcomings.

        • Xanis@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          But like…the haircut, man! That’s almost as bad as that time Obama wore that one suit!

          SCANDALOUS.

          sigh

        • Pronell@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Fair. I didn’t, and acknowledged she is part of the problem, but I take that hit for the tone I took.

          And thanks for the civil reply, that was more civil than mine.

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        Two are non issues, and one is an issue that a great deal of congress members are guilty of.

        Nope! She’s not alone in the practice but as the speaker she greatly normalized the corruption and made incredible money at the cost of her constituents.

        She did a fair amount of good but her deserved legacy is someone who ripped off those she represented for her personal gain.

        • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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          4 months ago

          as the speaker she greatly normalized the corruption and made incredible money at the cost of her constituents

          So, what evidence do you have to support this conclusion? Because this sounds an awful lot like the narrative that gets pushed by Fox and Trump about “corrupt Democrats”.

          • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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            4 months ago

            The evidence is how incredibly well her portfolio has out performed index funds. She just happens to be one of the luckiest investors and coincidentally was a house rep.

            Please don’t defend someone “on our team” when they do shitty stuff. We’re better than the Republicans.

            • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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              4 months ago

              Couple points:

              1. Asking for evidence for your claim is not equivalent to defending Nancy Pelosi’s stock trading habits, and it’s a dirty little trick for you to try to equate them.

              2. Nancy Pelosi’s stock portfolio outperformed the SPY trust fund in 2023, but underperformed it in 2022. She has not “out performed index funds” on a regular basis, which could be evidence of corruption - if it had happened. Please read my other post where I discuss the actual data.

              3. Still waiting on that evidence.

              • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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                3 months ago

                Oh sorry, you wanted evidence for her normalizing it?

                She’s the boss. If the boss does it, it’s okay. That may not sound complicated enough to you but that’s absolutely enough to normalize behavior in a workplace - if the person with the power to set rules does a thing than that thing is alright. She is the first speaker to be called out for her behavior and she refused to change.

                That wasn’t a dishonest debate topic you were just vague with your question, and I misunderstood you.

                Oh and in case I doubt misunderstood your question (it was just highlighting my statement and asking “Why?”). If you were asking how she’s taking money from her constituents then it’s also pretty simple. Ignoring dividend focused investment, which she minimally engages in, the stock market is a zero sum game - if you make money in it, it’s at the expense of someone else… the value of the market may traditionally be going up but that isn’t a guarantee and, arguably, it has been growing at a deeply unhealthy rate since the 80s.

                Did I get your question? If not then that’s on you. Me writing up this wall of text to your vague gotcha question is an underhanded tactic on your part - you left your question extremely vague so I’m not certain what to answer… I’ve answered every interpretation I could think of so most people will just skip my response.

                Also, regarding the index fund, she absolutely has out performed the market just not over each YoY period. You shifted the goal posts and that’s absolutely an underhanded gotcha response.

                • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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                  3 months ago

                  I didn’t ask any “extremely vague” questions, I asked you for evidence that supports your opinion. There’s nothing remotely vague about that.

                  Oh sorry, you wanted evidence for her normalizing it?

                  She’s the boss. If the boss does it, it’s okay.

                  This is not evidence, it is conjecture. Evidence requires you to present some corroborating information which substantiates your opinion. You still haven’t presented any. Everything you have said is still just your opinion - that is, a load of hot air.

                  That may not sound complicated enough to you

                  Being complicated or not has nothing to do with it. You need to present information that backs up your claims, otherwise they’re not worth the time you spent typing them.

                  Did I get your question? If not then that’s on you.

                  There is no question to “get”. There is simply a request for evidence. Sources. News articles. Stock value tracking. Data analyses. Anything.

                  To put it bluntly: [citations needed]

                  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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                    3 months ago

                    I can’t help you if you reject evidence.

                    We have one government and we can’t gather data on how it responds to different stimuli… unless, that is, you look at the thousands of workplaces we have with similar power dynamics (and general sociology studies) where people set social contracts by observing seniority and leadership.

                    If you want a discussion of how social norms emerge in most settings, see Section 4 in

                    https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-economics-080614-115322

                    But if you work in an office this should be pretty self-evident.

      • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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        4 months ago

        So last year earlier this year when this issue was getting a lot of attention, this chart produced by unusualwhales.com was spread around:

        Looks kind of bad, right? SPY is being used for comparison, and it’s near the bottom of that chart. Look at all those congress critters playing the market and winning! They must be corrupt.

        Except that this is a small fraction of the total membership of the US Congress. Out of 435 Representatives and 100 Senators, the 32 members shown here represent 6% of congress, and they have been specifically selected as the top performers. There’s nothing exactly wrong with showing them in a chart this way, but it’s very important to understand that this means 94% of congress members did not beat SPY. If you have the idea that congress members in general are substantially profiteering from stock trading, that is directly contradicted by the evidence.

        OK, so what about these top performers? Are they individually corrupt? How could we know?

        If certain members of congress were regularly using their legislative access to earn profit on the stock market, well that should show up in long-term statistics. If they do this a lot, they should be beating SPY consistently, right?

        So we can look at the larger chart from the 2023 report:

        And then we can compare it with the one from 2022:

        And so do we see any correlations? Well, no not really. The names at the top of 2023 are completely different from 2022. Nancy Pelosi actually lost about 20% of her portfololio value in 2022. There are a couple names that appear on both lists but their performance varies wildly from one year to the next.

        Obviously 2 years isn’t enough data to identify real trends, but at least in this context we can see that you can’t really justify the idea that stock trading corruption is common in congress. Only a small fraction of congress members do better than SPY in either 2022 or 2023, and they aren’t the same people year to year.

        The vast majority of congress members have lower returns than SPY, and that is the only actual trend supported by the data.

        • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          I get it but beating the market by whatever percentage is not the deciding factor in whether or not you’re making an insider trade. I expect lawmakers to follow the same laws as the rest of us.

          • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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            4 months ago

            Statistically, as a group, congress members are doing no better in the market than any average trader, and many of them are in fact doing worse. If you have some evidence that actually shows there is some broad corruption involved (not with one or two, but like with a statistically significant number of them, say >10%) I would be very interested to see it.

            Otherwise, you’re just making vague implications based on assumptions.

        • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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          3 months ago

          I replied in a different thread but breaking it down YoY is deeply dishonest especially when we had a devastating market performance year. It’s also important to remember that stock trading is (mostly) a zero sum game where some cohort of traders having insider information means that everyone else has less potential to make money. It’s one of the reasons why insider trading is so illegal… an information cartel would be highly profitable while accelerating wealth inequality.