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I remember when I'd get heat for saying the GOP is a White nationalist party.
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Not really related other than another data point in changing demographics that hits close to home. I live in Forsyth county. Mentioned it to my wife. She is a school teacher and she is thinks its not Asian Chinese ethnicity but more Asian Indian. (Forsyth is also the richest county in Georgia, I guess I made a good bet about 15 years ago but unfortunately home prices haven't come close to doubling) All things held equal, the Dems are going to win the demographics war in the next 20-40 years. The GOP can slow down the trend but they are going to have to cater to a minority group(s) and/or open up the immigration gates for White Europe vs others. Suburban Georgia county sees top increase in Asian population Quote:
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I bet half of those 10 people came from California |
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It wouldn't even be the first time in the last hundred years. |
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Burn the witch!! :devil: |
Back to the anthem shenanigans. He knows the issue polls well.
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I see CNN is going with the more polite, PC translation. Other sources say that say that Rouhani said that "the White House is afflicited by mental retardation".
It shouldn't be forgotten that advisers close to Trump talked about trying to generate momentum for a 25th Amendment challenge to his presidency. Not as a political power move (though it was likely shut down due to politics, as was, on the other side, efforts to impeach him). Because the real Trump behind the scenes is even scarier than the version we see. Everybody has just kind of decided we're just going to go with this until the election and hope for the best. |
Mueller will testify publically before House committee on July 17.
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I cant wait for the book to come out about what goes on behind the scenes. We crush anyone who supports him, but I bet some of them are heros who save us from him. |
:popcorn:
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I say fuck them. They have the ability to speak out. Staying silent and then using their heroics as a way to stay in political good graces is crap. |
dola
I wonder what will happen to our old friend Cam Edwards? |
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Yeah I'm a bit worried though-he's already said that his report says everything he's wanted to say and that he won't provide new evidence/information beyond that. So it may be a big dud. |
Sorry to Cam if he still works there, but good news about NRA/Loesch-hope its the beginning of the end of their influence over the Republican party,
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Cam was in support of the "learn to code" meme directed at fired journalists. So maybe he should take that advice.
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Alabama woman loses unborn child after being shot, gets arrested; shooter goes free - al.com
So is this really what we're doing now? I'm not sure if I find the racism or the manslaughter charge more disturbing. |
Between this and the voter suppression going on, along with the level of precision modern tech allows in identifying voters I’m really worried about our democracy.
Bloomberg - Are you a robot? |
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If she drove drunk, wrecked and caused the birth of her child would you oppose? That she drove to another woman's house and assaulted her and then confronted her after she pulled a gun shows a lack of responsibility for her child. I think both parties should be charged. But I cant imagine if the charges wouldnt stick against the trigger puller that they will stick against the failed mom. |
How about this,
a parent starts to argue with an ump at a little league game. The ump, who is carrying, feels threatened and pulls his gun and shoots. The bullet misses the father, but hits and kills a child on one of the teams. You would want the father charged with manslaughter? |
"Confronted her after she pulled a gun."
So fucking what? |
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In your scenario...I'm not sure. I'd be inclined to wish him executed just for being the dad that charged a little league ump. But Im pretty extreme on parenting responsibility. We've been down that rabbit hole before. I wouldnt be opposed to assault charges for mothers who drink, smoke or do drugs while pregnant. |
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A gun (in that environment) is a tool. It is a tool with one job. To kill. The mother saw the gun, knew the consequence and knowingly subjected her child to that danger. |
What if the mother had drawn a gun first? Is she then off the hook because the other woman should have backed down at that point?
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Not a child. Suppose our argument ends there. |
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Trump's threatening to delay the census, or in other words, to violate his oath to defend the Constitution.
Sure would be nice is the GOP cared. |
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Pretty much. Down the rabbit hole...but when does it become a child? When it passes through the birth canal? What part the leading edge of the fetus or the trailing edge? I mean can we decapitate partially born humans and it not be murder? Or can we poke their brains out before they hit the hole and its not murder? Or is there some other magic time? |
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I'm ignorant to the reference. Some quick googling in context brought up some RvW reference...but this isnt an abortion or medical procedure we are discussing. This isnt new legal territory. 38 states have laws on the books defining this specific situation. 30 of those provide full legal coverage. Alabama is one. You can express outrage over the law, but it isnt a new law.
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triple dola: the sad part is you guys are trying even tangentially to make this about Trump.
This is an Alabama state legal matter. It has nothing to do with who is in the white house. The same law was on the books during the entirety of the Obama administration. |
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If the census is conducted in 2020, it doesn't, Constitutionally speaking, matter whether it's conducted in January or June. The ability to reapportion districts to reflect the census results doesn't happen until after the 2020 elections, anyhow. If the census isn't conducted in 2020 at all, it's a violation, to be sure, but a risky one: if a Democrat defeats him in 2020, then the census gets performed on THEIR terms. Well, y'know, assuming the transfer of power actually happens, but that would be a Constitutional crisis of a whole 'nother caliber. |
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What I'm hearing, but not out loud, is "fuck Alabama." I can support that. |
Twitter to tag, but not remove, world leaders' tweets that break its rules | TheHill
Twitter about to get savage. |
So, to borrow a Gawker term, putting them in the grays?
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Yep. Not only that, but some are there places that literally are bastions of progressivism. Take California for example: Quote:
There is generally nothing consistent with our nation's approach to whether the unborn are worth protecting or not. Basically, they are equal in value to humans when its convenient, but also equal in value to a dust mite when we find it to be convenient. |
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You must be extra fired up today (yesterday at this point). In my opinion, it becomes a child when the fetus is viable. Post 20 weeks, or so. Not a doctor, so I don't know the exact survivability rates. But c'mon, your comments here are a little hysterical. You sound like the "death panels" rhetoric. Nobody is decapitating newly born infants, or even advocating anything close to that. Quote:
I really wasn't trying to make it about Trump, this just seemed like the catch-all political commentary thread, didn't see another thread specifically about abortion. But I would argue that the challenges to long-standing abortion law have certainly ramped up in the past couple of years. Not sure that Trump really cares at all about abortion, but the GOP is aggressively trying to roll back these protections. Wouldn't be surprised if during Obama's presidency, something like this doesn't even get charged. I would also agree with Brian Swartz's statement that we tend to call it a person when it's convenient and not when it's not. Finally, I would also argue that intent has a lot to do with it. For example, abusive spouses that are attempting to bring an end to a pregnancy that the mother does not want to end probably should be held accountable in some extra way. |
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Yeah...I was probably a little extra amped yesterday. But I dont think that changes what I said. I guess my perspective, and its worth exactly what everyone else's is - nada - the viable point is where we just differ. From the moment of conception a mother doesnt have to "do anything special" to make a child be born. There isnt a choice or a divergent path where she gets to choose poop now=no baby;dont poop = baby...to me that makes the baby "viable" from the moment of conception. Yes, fetus(es) (fetusii?) at various stages have varying survivability rates, just like humans have various survivability rates. Especially outside of 1st world medical care during a human's 1st year on the planet and any point past its - say randomly - 60th year on the planet its life is more likely to end than during those other 59 years. It doesnt mean we give lesser sentences for killing old people. The crime is still the same. That some unborn fetus die without causation doesnt change the argument. Sometimes 20 year olds die of natural causes also. So to me, from the moment of conception it is a viable, possible life and we should do everything feasible to protect it. And when the very person entrusted with its care chooses to endanger it that is especially heionous and aggravated to my sensibilities. You will note I do not mention abortion, at all. I am personally conflicted there. I dont have that answer. I am talking only about intentional or negligent harm. |
I mean, every time you get in the car, you have a greater than 0 chance of getting in an accident and having something bad happen. Your comments above were silly, and the Gilead flag was a reference to the Handmaid's Tale, where people like you believe the sole job of a woman seems to be to cook, clean, and carry babies.
Could this lady have done anything different? Maybe, I'm sure there are often times we wish we could. Should she be charged with murder because somebody else shot her in the stomach while she was 5 months pregnant? Was she aware that somebody would actually shoot a pregnant lady in the stomach? That shit is stupid, or should we just say it's Alabaman... |
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Entrusted by whom? |
Yeah, where do you draw that line? What about the tree you didn't trim and it fell and killed your child? Taking your kid to NYC and they get measles and die? Feeding them known carcinogens?
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I think "Known Carcinogens" would be a great name for a band.
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How about "The Untrimmed Trees" |
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Sounds more like an album title. |
Alabama would be a great band name.
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Trump, when asked about Western liberalism, complains about the mayors of SF and LA.
When asked about school busing, he says there really aren't other ways to get kids to school. God help us. |
This discussion of abortion is interesting. Like everyone, Im conflicted. When does life start? I believe in choice and life. This is why it is such a hot button topic I imagine.
But you cannot compare someone shooting a woman in the stomach and charging her with murder, unless she told the person to do it, to a conscious choice to terminate. Or a tree branch falling? That is an accident. Not a conscious decision. Some people have no clue when to trim a tree or even if you should. Everyone knows what an abortion is and what it does. |
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BUY "UNTRIMMED TREES" THE NEW ALBUM BY "KNOWN CARCINOGENS" ON ITUNES, AMAZON, AND WHEREVER MUSIC SOLD. |
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The point was that we put our children in danger all the time, but the odds are nothing comes of it. But if we're in a world where getting shot is manslaughter, how would we deal with all the risks we take with our children? |
Right on, comrade!
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It’s a nice touch that it was edited a minute after posting...
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It's comparatively small, but Trump turning the 4th of July into a campaign rally really pisses me off.
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His event requires tickets too; I've wondered where the proceeds go.
edit: ok, they're apparently free, but for "VIPs" |
Cozying up to a mass murderer and dictator with no intent to discuss policy, who would have thought ...
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This would be just PERFECT it if weren't at the same time so sad.
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Heh. didn't embed the right thread. I meant this one, summing up what happened:
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"If someone on the left were willing to engage me on policy issues."
That's fine, but it's also like saying "well, you can either bend to our policy wills and have a non-horrible president, or bend to our policy wills and have a horrible president. Your choice." I think the Freedom Caucus, McConnell, etc. have shown that the right will absolutely not meet the left on issues, they insist on the left coming to them. What is "reasonable" has shifted so far to the right that moderation is "well, we're going to persecute blacks, browns, gays, and disenfranchise folks as we please, but ok we'll back down and not have a president who is an absolute train-wreck as a person and a leader. Man, I can't believe we're doing you such a favor." Also, I think that after all is said and done anyone who made this administration possible SHOULD be shamed*. We should all be ashamed of it. |
I'm not interested in someone bending to me on policy; I'd just like people to engage on the level of "here's why I think this policy is better." If I thought my side winning the election to be as important as many others apparently do (and I don't,) I'd spend the time they spend trying to get "wins" on the internet by shaming/ridiculing instead attempting to convince people why the policies I advocate for are the most viable. But it really does seem like folks are valuing put-downs over votes.
I am not so tribal to be in any way, shape, or form ashamed that Trump is President. Nope. Not remotely. And I even if I were ashamed, as someone who voted third party I'd accept no responsibility whatsoever for it. That's on the two major Parties for creating and continue to use a primary system, ultimately. Letting the masses be a part of their nominating process was the wrong move, and HRC vs. Trump was the natural eventual result of that ill-advised decision. |
Dola...To be clear, sure, I think he's a hateful, lazy, incompetent buffoon who has sullied the office tremendously. It's that "American" (or any other tribe to which I belong, for that matter) is wayyyyy down the list in the hierarchy of all of my identities.
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I think a big part of the problem is that both major parties seem to have abandoned committing to any particular policy other than tribalism. Consistuents of either side have little of substance to argue over because both parties' strategies have devolved into simply publicly de-humanizing the other.
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Ben, you ignorant slut.... :)
No, it is sad that there is nothing close to discourse anymore. Even those on the same side viciously attack each other. I watched John Cusack attack AOC as a "party-shill" because she hasn't endorsed anyone. I can't think of anyone as close on the political spectrum as those two, but her not immediately endorsing Bernie makes her a fake. Democrats are going to have to learn to disagree among themselves and not immediately go nuclear over every issue/opinion. |
Democrats are in this weird position of both being seen as too wonky (“No one wants to read Elizabeth Warren’s policy papers!”) and lacking any substance (“All they are is anti-Trump!”)
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So Trump got to be the First President to Visit North Korea.
Understanding that he’s motivated by doing things others have not, I think we should amuse ourselves over the next two to six years by giving him lots of stupid human tricks to do. “Obama lacked the courage to burp the entire national anthem.” “No President has ever eaten two jars of mayonnaise in a row.” “Liberals say that there’s no way you’ll be awesome enough to wear nothing but a Speedo when addressing the UN.” |
Feeding conspiracy theorists of all ideologies, the Kochs and Soros are teaming up to start a think tank dedicated to diplomacy and stopping the U.S. forever wars.
Really. |
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Thinking about this more, I wonder if there is simply more of an interest in winning a war of words for those on the left. Just thinking of how I keep hearing and seeing Democrats talk about how Harris or Warren would wipe the floor with Trump in a debate as if that matters. Hillary won all three debates fairly handily. Have they forgotten that? Nominating a candidate on the basis of how well they’ll do in the debates seems to be really missing the mark here, but it seems to be quite important to a lot of people.
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The parties have realized that they can get elected without doing things. If they do not solve the problems they were elected to solve, are you going to go to the other side?
I find Trump personally abhorrent, but my likely alternative is someone taking the country in a direction from where I want it to go? What are my options, vote for someone who I disagree with and will likely negatively affect me, or vote for someone personally abhorrent, but has positively helped me in their policies? |
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How do you beat him then? The idea, I think, is that Harris and Warren are likely smarter than Trump, and that intelligence and reason should matter. Because if they don't, what have we? It's then just a race to appeal to the base instincts of the masses. That thought is about as disconcerting as anything about this whole Trump emergence. Logic, reason, science - they don't matter. Coherent policy plans? Bah! It's bread and circuses, all the way. It's the grown-up smart kid was told that when he/she grows up, it's not going to be the kids who cared more about being popular than doing well in school, or the jocks, or the bullies who are going to run things or succeed, it will be the smart, hard-working kids. Nope! It's still the popular kids. |
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So you think that Trump is personally abhorrent but has been good for the United States? Interesting. |
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Is that really an alien opinion to you? I know tons of people that feel like that. They love seeing their 401k go up. |
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Or simply “Trump is abhorrent but I get to keep more of the money I earn because he’s in there, and I’ll keep less if a Dem wins.” For many, I doubt it has as much to do with “good for the United States” as “good for my wallet.” We paid something like $8000 less in taxes in 2018 vs 2017, despite making a bit more in 2018. (And yes, our 401ks have gone up.) If money were more important to us than it is, we’d be tempted to vote for him. |
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That hasn't been the case for everyone though, certainly not at that level anyway. And the whole time Obama was president all we heard was debt, debt, debt and here we are, running up record deficits year after year with zero likelihood of them closing, and desired plans to shift spending from safety nets (can't afford it) , to defense (rah rah rah), and all that seems to matter now is how it effected us individually. Debt is fine now, because less taxes. I just don't understand how the conversation is about me, my 401k, my job. I mean if we're all so narrow minded to only focus on ourselves I guess we'll be alright. Surely during the great depression that mindset would not have worked. Maybe we won't need government intervention again? Maybe what the government does with it's budget and cash won't matter because 30% of us will be riding so high we don't care? The way things are going the bottom 70% won't have a voice in the game anyway. They'll have just enough to grind themselves to death in the economic machine of the consumer. That's what the gig economy does. That's why low income wages don't keep up. Their income level rises just high enough to survive to eat and sleep, but the window to prosperity gets smaller and smaller. The real money flows up from value produced from that work. No benefits, no vacation, just a cog in the wheel. Those lives are only significant enough to hold up the rest. It seems that as long as the middle upper and above are good, the things that matter to the rest just don't. The only time it matters is when that wheel gets slower because of catastrophe. I just wish we understood that this direction were going will have its consequences. Choosing to ignore them now will lead to a massive crisis. |
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No, it's not. It's just selfish and short-sighted as fuck. |
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Going back to winning more electoral votes: as divided as our country is, I suspect fewer and fewer voters will be switching sides. More and more, it's going to be a matter of a combination of convincing people who generally agree with you and usually vote to show up, and figuring out a way to tap into what is--by far--the greatest potential source of election-changing votes: the people who aren't showing up. I just ran some numbers on 2016 in Texas. Trump won handily there: 52-43. If HRC had gotten only 14% of the REGISTERED VOTERS who didn't vote--not merely all adults, just the actual registered voters--to show up for her, she wins Texas. Texas! We're not talking about some impossible task of getting all of them or anywhere near a majority of them; we're talking one outta seven. I don't claim to know what gets one out of seven to get off the couch, but I'm pretty sure being a better debater isn't it. |
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I don't understand why the parties aren't spending millions on buses to the polls. The data is so good that you can target areas where you'll get many more of your voters than any opposition that might sneak on board. When presidential campaigns cost over a billion, it seems like a pretty cheap and efficient way to get votes.
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My first guess is that it would be less cost-effective for Republicans; transportation isn't an issue for their suburban voters, and the nature of rural areas being more spread-out would, I suspect, lead to a low ROI. Perhaps they could identify some of the larger majority-white trailer parks in FL, OH, NC, OH, PA and run buses from there, but it just seems like the numbers wouldn't be big enough to make a difference. |
And Harris is out for me. You can't win the general running on forced busing in 2019.
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So she wants to bring back busing? That was a boondoggle. A terrible program. Need to fund schools equally. Its hard to compete when your tax base is small. I live next to the 2nd largest school district in Missouri. They are based in west St Louis county. Huge tax base. Our district is just west in a different county. We have a fraction of the tax base the big district has. The programs offered by that district compared to ours is crazy. |
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Well, one point of view on this is... the Democratic party basically can't win a modern presidential election without a transformational figure atop the ticket. Carter won because of post-Watergate blues and a Nixon pardon, set that aside. Clinton and Obama (whatever you think of them) were both unusually gifted and charming, and both "changed the game" when the November Tuesday night map of reds and blues got posted up. Political people tend to look for "it." I know I do when I talk with candidates and office-holders. I think that's connected to both the intra-party desire to be inspired, and also the notion that inspiration is essential to succeeding. The string of also-rans in recent Presidential history who were generally competent and deserving, yet uninspiring and eventually unsuccessful is pretty long. |
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Interesting take. I wonder how many people understood that debate point to be about what is right for today rather than Biden being wrong at that time. |
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Harris seems to be collecting politically unpopular stances. As a black woman, she's already got a difficult road, she doesn't need to spend her time talking about things that repel a lot of voters.
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Yes. But that's not the point. Dems win by inspiring. Or at least there's a logic there. Maybe we will look back and say this is 1976 all over again, and basically anyone could beat Trump. It's possible. But I can put myself in the shoes of a voter who looks at their lifetime and says "the only time I remember Dems winning was when people ran to the polls because they had to vote for them." FWIW, I'm basically with you. I want Trump out more deeply than my current or future differences of opinion among the many alternatives, and my guess is that playing it safe is the best way to do that. But I just see the logic that Dems need to win by two touchdowns to win at all. |
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It seems like one of the biggest issues in Wisconsin and Michigan is that voters in the cities did not come out to vote in numbers they had in the last two elections. It speaks to the need to get someone to get out of the vote, and not necessarily to appeal to moderate Republicans. |
Dems have more infrequent voters than does the GOP, so excitement probably matters more for them.
But caring about the debate performances is silly. I'm pretty sure the data shows that debates don't do much and what they do is more short term than election day. |
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Are those people Liberals that somebody like Warren or Sanders will motivate to get out, or are there more complicated demographic and franchisement questions in there? For all the playing up of the Clinton's record and history with African-American voters, they overwhelmingly didn't turn out to vote for her. Seems like you can spin that narrative two different ways with two different results, if it's just generically "getting out the vote" then it's almost certainly looking better than 2016 which was a huge wake up call. If it's more nuanced than that then that's a less rosy scenario for the Dems, and I agree that just going to the left and picking somebody who "excites the base" isn't really getting to the root of the problem, which is getting turnout in the rust belt and cities in the midwest back to a level where you will win. In that scenario I agree with Ben - most of the base who are excited are in places that don't really help you that much. |
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So I am someone who is very far left personally but often I get extremely frustrated at how hardline that makes some people as far as their communication with moderates or folks who are slightly right leaning. From my perspective, what I'm noticing is that a lot of these people on the left - especially keyboard warriors just arguing on reddit or facebook - is that there is an extreme sense of an idealistic viewpoint on the world, and having any one belief that is different from this idealized set of views makes you abhorrent and just as bad as any trump voter. The line is absolutely insane. For many that goes as far left as lifelong democrats who are supporting Biden right now. He's too big business, too status quo, nothing could possibly change with Biden, so if you land on him you're a piece of shit human being who is against progressive ideas to improve the situation of the lower and middle classes. I could be off, I certainly cannot speak to your own personal experiences and the reasons for comments you've received, but the above is an attitude that I see far too frequently on left leaning echo chambers and it certainly leads to behaviors that you're mentioning. I can also note my own hypocrisy in saying all that. I've got my own line in the sand drawn where individuals that still actively support and defend Trump are not people I'm interested in interacting with at all anymore. There is so much hatred coming out of that man, so much empowerment of white supremacy and hate based on gender and race that if someone still actively supports the man my judgement is that they are at the very minimum willing to decide that white supremacy is an acceptable side effect of whatever reason they've decided they like him. Maybe that makes me just as bad as everyone else. I don't think so personally but if that's the judgement of anyone here I'll own it. Of course, I should point out that I'm not wishing death upon any of these people the way that someone like Jon will just openly and consistently state that the world would be a better place if I died. I'm just saying that on a personal level I lose the desire and ability to make a personal connection because of this belief. |
Dola, I may not have picked the best thing to quote in my reply. The "war of words" line got me thinking more regarding Ben's own personal experiences that he was recounting earlier.
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I'm sure I've seen it at one point, but I can't find it quickly. I do remember that traditionally a likely voter screen moves things a little in favor of the GOP. |
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If you had a moderate that actually excited people (Bill Clinton as an example), you may have an argument for them. But you don't here. Biden doesn't really excite people. Klobuchar is dullsville. Hickenlooper is meh. So really what you are going to want to go for is a liberal who excites the base, but who can also speak to and excite more moderate elements. Which is why I thought Warren's trip to West Virginia, where she got Trump voters to be impressed with her, was very important. Potentially Buttigieg and Harris can do that too - but Buttigieg is kind of an empty suit at the moment and Harris has to decide her next steps (remember Bill Clinton decided to go 'tough on crime' to add some more moderate elements to his campaign and Harris definitely has that record - which may kill her with progressives). |
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I'll use two counties in Wisconsin, Dane (Madison) and Milwaukee, as an example. Dane County saw Bernie Sanders destroy Clinton 63% to 37% in the primary. But Hillary still outperformed Obama by 2000 votes in Dane County in November. Looks like the Sanders voters still showed up for Clinton. Milwaukee County was won more narrowly in the primary by Clinton (52-48) yet Clinton still underperformed Obama in Milwaukee County. So I don't think Sanders as the candidate would've made a difference in Wisconsin. The voters in Milwaukee County just didn't turn up to vote. And with a large segment of Milwaukee County being black, The Dems need to ask themselves how they can get those voters excited again. Unless voter ID suppressed turnout that badly. 2016 was the first Presidential election we had voter ID. |
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When people show you who they really are, believe them.
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The 401K argument is weird because they went up much more under Obama than Trump.
Just vote for the guy you want, no need to make excuses up for it. |
And I don't care that people vote for their own self interest. That's as natural a decision as you get. But there is a weird narrative out there that people have to vote Trump economically when the biggest economic growth periods in the past few decades have been under Democratic Presidents.
If you think a President controls the S&P 500, pull up the numbers for when it saw the biggest jumps. |
Ugh, can we not do this? Nike Nixes ‘Betsy Ross Flag’ Sneaker After Colin Kaepernick Intervenes - WSJ
That flag flies outside my parents house, which was part of the underground railroad in a town known for abolitionist activism. I don't care if there are idiots misappropriating it, it's not a white power or pro-slavery symbol, and trying to say that that whole era should not be celebrated in spite of some people having some faults is just dumb. |
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