One key for each:
Demeaned.
Ignored.
Here's what their biographers say
Who is Hillary Clinton?
Who is Donald Trump?
Demeaned.
Ignored.
Here's what their biographers say
Who is Hillary Clinton?
Who is Donald Trump?
another vote for the libertarians?I understand them both just fine. Both believe that they're smarter than everyone else. Both will use and abuse the system to enhance they're personal and professional lives. Both are full of shit as a Christmas turkey.
The decision for voters, assuming you're going to allow yourself to be pushed into this Hobson's choice, is that Clinton we know for sure has held a very high position in government and acted with gross negligence, apparently within the law, on several occasions. The other, being Trump, has gamed the financial system to his favor, all within the law of course, on several occasions. I wouldn't trust either as far as I could throw them. You, any of you may choose to vote for one or the other of these two. I will not.
another vote for the libertarians?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_choice_theory
Formal statement
The available alternatives are often expressed as a set of objects, for example a set of j exhaustive and exclusive actions:
A = { a 1 , … , a i , … , a j }
For example, if a person can choose to vote for either Roger or Sara or to abstain, their set of possible alternatives is:
A = { Vote for Roger, Vote for Sara, Abstain }
The theory makes two technical assumptions about individuals' preferences over alternatives:
Completeness – for any two alternatives ai and aj in the set, either ai is preferred to aj, or aj is preferred to ai, or the individual is indifferent between ai and aj. In other words, all pairs of alternatives can be compared with each other.
Transitivity – if alternative a1 is preferred to a2, and alternative a2 is preferred to a3, then a1 is preferred to a3.
Together these two assumptions imply that given a set of exhaustive and exclusive actions to choose from, an individual can rank the elements of this set in terms of his preferences in an internally consistent way (the ranking constitutes a partial ordering), and the set has at least one maximal element.
The preference between two alternatives can be:
Strict preference occurs when an individual prefers a1 to a2 and does not view them as equally preferred.
Weak preference implies that individual either strictly prefers a1 over a2 or is indifferent between them.
Indifference occurs when an individual neither prefers a1 to a2, nor a2 to a1. Since (by completeness) the individual does not refuse a comparison, they must therefore be indifferent in this case.
Research that took off in the 1980s sought to develop models which drop these assumptions and argue that such behaviour could still be rational, Anand (1993). This work, often conducted by economic theorists and analytical philosophers, suggests ultimately that the assumptions or axioms above are not completely general and might at best be regarded as approximations.