Saying it's the left who started the "fuck civility" move in modern political discourse is utterly laughable.
Mind you, I prefer a conversation where both sides manage a bit of civility, and I do agree some things said here are over the line. I also think people are letting emotions cloud their thinking. But the way some on the right have been treating a LOT of people on the left is not just uncivil but far, far worse. There's a reason some on the left have let the gloves come off.
As for Trump voters - I can understand blotsfan's position. Easily most Trump voters who matter won't be swayed by logical and fair political discourse.
As for stienman: I look up to him as someone who manages to properly defend a whole lot of positions I don't agree with. That doesn't mean I haven't (also) been annoyed by his absolute defense of almsot everything done by Trump or his administration - it's absolutely right to defend "normal" conservative moves made by this admin and it's fair to be devil's advocate, but sometimes stien is defending some extremely unchristian policies for...What? Being oppositional?
As for this SC pick - the choice for a somewhat moderate right winger is tactically right. Democrats and the left will have a hard time demonizing him - and thus getting masses up in arms about it - while it still means Roe vs Wade is dead.
As for the American political system - it has been broken for a long time now, and Trumpism and the Tea Party are an exponent of it. It's hardly fair to call your current system a democracy anymore. But neither main party will ever meaningfully change the system, because they're the ones kept in charge. There are many different forms of Western democracies - France, Germany, the UK, Italy, Greece, Belgium all have wildly different rules - but practically anything is better than a de facto two party system where both parties can be controlled and swayed by absolute minorities.
As for formula, like I said earlier, I'm all in favor of keeping breast feeding as a primary choice, but yes, people using formula are heavily stigmatized in some layers and parts of society, and the pendulum really doesn't need to swing that far the other way. I never said I agreed with the US' opposition to the bill, quite the opposite.