But wouldn't you rather have that than actual Republicans?
You can't always get what you want
But if you try sometime you just might find you get what you need.
(I think some British guy said that.)
But wouldn't you rather have that than actual Republicans?
Hear! Hear!Bob Olhsson wrote: ↑December 7th, 2018, 1:22 am What needs to be let go of is just being lazy and handing campaign messaging and communication over to the personalities we like. Both Sanders and Clinton came across as the upper middle class guilt tripping the rest of the middle class about various characterizations of "helping the poor."
Guess what, "the poor" vote too and as far as most could see the Washington Ivy League Democrats don't really get their plight so they threw a temper tantrum. People voted for CryBaby Donnie the used car salesman in order to shake things up. It didn't need to come to this but that's squarely on you and me for nodding our heads at whichever talking points we liked the sound of instead of coming up with concrete examples of what can be done for rural and rust belt America.
Case in point: Social Security and Medicare are all about protecting children from having to support their elderly parents which would literally throw the American economy into a tailspin. That's the issue impacting most Americans but we're still hearing about "impoverished seniors."
You are making the erroneous assumption that I'm making an erroneous assumption.John Eppstein wrote: ↑December 7th, 2018, 7:29 pmAgain, you're making the erroneous assumption that you're dealing with a monolithic bloc.
It's really easy to make a minority look like a majority on TV. Rump does it at every rally.
"Wouldn't you prefer a pistol to a handgun?"John Eppstein wrote: ↑December 7th, 2018, 7:35 pm
But wouldn't you rather have that than actual Republicans?
Actually, it doesn't. Think about what you just said - The Republican Party is shedding members like a Saint Bernard in the heat of summer.nobby wrote: ↑December 7th, 2018, 8:10 pmYou are making the erroneous assumption that I'm making an erroneous assumption.John Eppstein wrote: ↑December 7th, 2018, 7:29 pmAgain, you're making the erroneous assumption that you're dealing with a monolithic bloc.
It's really easy to make a minority look like a majority on TV. Rump does it at every rally.
The Republican party is shrinking, and Trump is the main cause.
That said, I was a bit surprised to read recently that 89% of Republicans still support Trump. That would tend to repudiate most of your blather. And I have better things to do today than spend hours refuting your nonsense point by point, so that will have to do for now.
Sadly, you can say the same of most people regardless of orientation.
That’s just not true.John Eppstein wrote: ↑December 9th, 2018, 9:40 pm
Sadly, you can say the same of most people regardless of orientation.
Really? I don't see that at all.Bob Olhsson wrote: ↑December 9th, 2018, 10:08 pm One consequence will be the new Democrats shifting the party farther to the right.
The typical strategic mistake made by the Democratic Party is that they get a little bump when the Right gets taken over by a bunch of outright gangsters who royally screw up - like Watergate - and assume they've won. They then go into celebration mode and proceed to fragment into a bunch of splinter groups while the Right wing plots strategy, regroups, and comes roaring back to victory within a couple of election cycles, making things worse than they were before - because they PLAN and they STRATEGIZE.weedywet wrote: ↑December 10th, 2018, 6:54 pm The new crop of Democratic Congress people are amongst the most “left” leaning we’ve seen in 60 years.
I have some hope.
If I’m the other hand, the party leadership swerves right to pander to imaginary ‘swing’ Trump voters, they’re doomed to fail.
If there is ever a time to pull hard to the left this is it.
Understand, I'm not advocating "swinging to the right" to pander to anybody. I'm simply advocating behaving like adults and using our brains for something other than hat racks for a change.John Eppstein wrote: ↑December 10th, 2018, 7:28 pmThe typical strategic mistake made by the Democratic Party is that they get a little bump when the Right gets taken over by a bunch of outright gangsters who royally screw up - like Watergate - and assume they've won. They then go into celebration mode and proceed to fragment into a bunch of splinter groups while the Right wing plots strategy, regroups, and comes roaring back to victory within a couple of election cycles, making things worse than they were before - because they PLAN and they STRATEGIZE.weedywet wrote: ↑December 10th, 2018, 6:54 pm The new crop of Democratic Congress people are amongst the most “left” leaning we’ve seen in 60 years.
I have some hope.
If I’m the other hand, the party leadership swerves right to pander to imaginary ‘swing’ Trump voters, they’re doomed to fail.
If there is ever a time to pull hard to the left this is it.
Now is not a time to "pull harder to the left" - and fragment, which is the usual modus operandi, it is the time to CONSOLIDATE GAINS and to see about taking control of the rest of the government - which is going to be a hell of a job considering the current depth of right wing subversion.
Already we have Ocasia-Cortez - who I happen to support fairly strongly on a theoretical basis - indulging in incredibly stupid strategic blunders that are making her a laughingstock before she even takes office! This is not how you get the trust and support nof the general populace. It's rather disappointing, really. One hoped she would behave in a more statesmanlike manner, once elected.
Not really. The problem is that the American "left" has no core platform - they're all a bunch of loose planks floating down the river and have been since the end of the Vietnam War and the demise of Nixon.weedywet wrote: ↑December 10th, 2018, 6:55 pmThat’s just not true.John Eppstein wrote: ↑December 9th, 2018, 9:40 pm
Sadly, you can say the same of most people regardless of orientation.
Which explains all the talk of ‘dissension on the left’
Well, I doubt they're fooling anybody.Bob Olhsson wrote: ↑December 10th, 2018, 7:43 pm What I mean by "new Democrats" are disgusted former Republicans running for office as Democrats.
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