Yeah but in the US, we have one party that's infinitely better than the other so fortunately that isn't our situation.If your choice is Kang or Kodos, it's not all that helpful.
Yeah but in the US, we have one party that's infinitely better than the other so fortunately that isn't our situation.If your choice is Kang or Kodos, it's not all that helpful.
Y'all have the Marijuana Party down there, too?Yeah but in the US, we have one party that's infinitely better than the other so fortunately that isn't our situation.
I got that.I am referring to how the Democratic Party is vastly superior to the nigh-fascist republicans, and that any equivalence drawn between the two is an attempt to muddy the waters for the sake of the republicans.
There's something to be said for overt fascism, instead of "for your own good" fascism with a happyface emoji.I am referring to how the Democratic Party is vastly superior to the nigh-fascist republicans, and that any equivalence drawn between the two is an attempt to muddy the waters for the sake of the republicans.
Well, if he's as successful as the Marijuana Party, soon all y'all will get to wear a boot on your head and you'll get your rent lowered.We have a guy with a boot on his head that runs on the platform that the rent is too damned high.
That depends on what they can pass until then, and visible it is.Only if I decided not to vote. At this point I am 100% voting Democrat in both midterms and the 2020 election, which will be a first for me, so there is no point fretting over it right now when there is nothing I can do to change the shitty situation we are in right now. I have to hope people in power just keep it as contained as possible till we can roll him out of the office. I think that is the opposite of what they wanted.
Ok, deleted mine too then.I deleted mine. Too slowly apparently. Just spinning wheels.
Could we stop calling any authoritarian position "fascism"? Neither Stalin nor Hitler would approve of you doing that.There's something to be said for overt fascism, instead of "for your own good" fascism with a happyface emoji.
You mean you threw away your vote, because FPTP...#Don'tBlameMeIVotedForGary
I deleted mine. Too slowly apparently. Just spinning wheels.
Ok, deleted mine too then.
I'm aware my vote was merely a symbolic protest vote, but hey, if EVERYBODY did it, it wouldn't be. I voted my conscience. Everybody else voted their bowels.You mean you threw away your vote, because FPTP...
Y'all need to change that shit at some point, or it's all useless. R's will get into office again once people get demotivated by the fact that the D's are also beholden to special interests, just not as insanely as R's. And even if they weren't, having only 2 parties that count means all the political spectrum and stances have to be absorbed into those 2 parties, so you're always forced to vote for people who might not share your actual political opinions, but are in the same party with people that do.
Until you get rid of FPTP, it would only make a difference once or twice, and then you'd simply be back to 2 parties, with just one being a new party, see: what happened every time in US history.if EVERYBODY did it, it wouldn't be
I never read their posts, so I guess that makes me the most qualified to write that memo.WHAT ARE YOU TOO HIDING?!
Someone write a memo about it, quick...
Only if I decided not to vote. At this point I am 100% voting Democrat in both midterms and the 2020 election, which will be a first for me, so there is no point fretting over it right now when there is nothing I can do to change the shitty situation we are in right now. I have to hope people in power just keep it as contained as possible till we can roll him out of the office. I think that is the opposite of what they wanted.
I am still processing this, but I thought it was a startling op-ed about calling the GOP as a whole to task to do better (also startlingly, by the Atlantic Monthly!): https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/boycott-the-gop/550907/I'm still voting for the best person for the job, regardless of affiliation. But more than likely it'll be democrat. I voted a pretty steady mix of the two until the Obama years when the right went batshit insane.
I would argue that a Kang v. Kodos matchup only shows that a “best person” mentality was not present in the primaries, at the state/local level, etc.If your choice is Kang or Kodos, it's not all that helpful.
I'm not sure I agree with the Atlantic either. It is definitely strategic voting, which doesn't seem to be the right choice to me. That said, I don't think they mean this to just be about Trump (which they state explicitly, I just believe them in that assertion) and more about a shift in the party as a whole, making it less palatable to those in the center or more traditional base.Undoubtedly the primaries is a big problem. If both parties implemented runoff voting even in the primaries then we'd have presented very different choices, I think, than what we got.
Or, at the minimum, the candidates would have had to present themselves much more moderately.
I can't agree with the Atlantic's article, though. But my primary issue is that all they claim Trump is doing has been done by previous presidents, just a lot more quietly and without as much exposure.
Trump openly embraces the villainy other politicians hide behind closed doors.
So for me, I know they are cheating. The question is would I rather have the one who is open and forthcoming (if not apologetic) or the one who is successful at hiding it?
And yes, I'm talking about all past presidents, not just one party or the other.
They specifically point to two things that they use to justify this, and both have to do with Trump (messing with ongoing investigations, and allegedly colluding with foreign governments)....a shift in the party as a whole...
Probably not because one died during his administration and Obama wasn't allowed to have his nominee heard.I suspect more than one judge is kicking themselves for not retiring during Obama's administration, and hoping they can outlast this one.
I'm voting for the hamster.There's a literal, actual Nazi going to run on the GOP ticket in Illinois. He's going to get the nomination. He's running unopposed, but wouldn't you think that the Republicans in that state would put someone - ANYONE - up against him just to say they're, you know, NOT the party of Nazis?
Seriously, throw a name out there. You don't have to even fund the campaign. How much does it seriously take to just make a "We're not Nazi people" statement?
Everyone knows he won’t be elected. Democrats have always won that seat, the highest voted republican got all of 35% of the vote years ago.[DOUBLEPOST=1517959951,1517959704][/DOUBLEPOST]There's a literal, actual Nazi going to run on the GOP ticket in Illinois. He's going to get the nomination. He's running unopposed, but wouldn't you think that the Republicans in that state would put someone - ANYONE - up against him just to say they're, you know, NOT the party of Nazis?
Seriously, throw a name out there. You don't have to even fund the campaign. How much does it seriously take to just make a "We're not Nazi people" statement?
Given that the American population voted those senators into those seats one could presume the senate had a duty to act according to their constituent’s desires.Probably not because one died during his administration and Obama wasn't allowed to have his nominee heard.
Wisconsin too. This guy is running for Congress in our 1st district-
I keep trying, but I always end up having to settle.Your best bet is to keep congress staffed with people who truly represent you.
THAT. IS. NOT. THE. FUCKING. POINT.Everyone knows he won’t be elected. Democrats have always won that seat, the highest voted republican got all of 35% of the vote years ago.
What? That isn't true. Like at all.They specifically point to two things that they use to justify this, and both have to do with Trump (messing with ongoing investigations, and allegedly colluding with foreign governments).
That's it. That's the whole reason they give for entirely voting against the republican party regardless of who the democrats offer in every race up and down the chain.
Sure, they didn't provide an exhaustive list; just a few examples, really. But it is an op-ed, not investigative journalism.That’s because Trump has won the heart of the Republican base. He may be unpopular with the public at large, but among Republicans, nothing he and his supporters said or did during his first year in office drove his Gallup approval ratings significantly below 80 percent. Forced to choose between their support for Trump and their suspicion of Russia, conservatives went with Trump. Forced to choose between their support for Trump and their insistence that character matters, evangelicals went with Trump.
It’s Trump’s party now; or, perhaps more to the point, it’s Trumpism’s party, because a portion of the base seems eager to out-Trump Trump. In last year’s special election to fill a vacant U.S. Senate seat in Alabama, Republican primary voters defied the president himself by nominating a candidate who was openly contemptuous of the rule of law—and many stuck with him when he was credibly alleged to have been a child molester. After initially balking, the Republican Party threw its institutional support behind him too. In Virginia, pressure from the base drove a previously sensible Republican gubernatorial candidate into the fever swamps. Faced with the choice between soul-killing accommodation and futile resistance, many Republican politicians who renounce Trumpism are fleeing the party or exiting politics altogether. Of those who remain, many are fighting for their political lives against a nihilistic insurgency.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/chicag...d-congressional-district-lipinski-newman/amp/THAT. IS. NOT. THE. FUCKING. POINT.
Not sure how real this is, but it is the Washington Post.
Trump wants military parades in Washington...and it's close to happening.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...91602206fb7_story.html?utm_term=.424616657942[DOUBLEPOST=1517971872,1517971783][/DOUBLEPOST]Welp:
Pentagon confirms this as true.
That’s interesting. Here’s a little history of military parades in the US and some supposition on why we have them less frequently, seemingly, than other countries:Not sure how real this is, but it is the Washington Post.
Trump wants military parades in Washington...and it's close to happening
The point is the perception that you seem to be okay with Nazis running because "they won't win." Really?https://www.google.com/amp/s/chicag...d-congressional-district-lipinski-newman/amp/
The local Republican Party has denounced him publicly. He’s not going to win. The district is so well gerrymandered that he cannot possibly win.
Why would the Republican Party spend any money or time there?
And because of state laws they can’t control whether he wins the Republican Party primary or not. They’re open to all whoever meets the requirements, and the voters choose.
So tell me what is the point? Is the point the bad gerrymandering that makes this race a lost cause? Is the point that in a fair and equal society even bad evil people can throw their name in a hat and if they convince enough other people to vote for them they can attain public office?
Or is it just a freak outlier among thousands of political positions where you can pretend that one person represents the entire party and/or the downfall of that party?
It’s a puff piece of journalism intended to get people’s dander up.
In your case it seems to have worked a little too well.
Unfortunately bringing attention to idiots like him is the wrong thing to do, but I guess the “news” organization that published it is getting mad money from ad views, so who cares what consequences it may have.
I read an interesting article earlier that said the US stopped doing large military parades during the later years of the Cold War as a way to draw distinction between us and the Soviet Union. Apparently it became (and still is for many) a symbol of totalitarianism in the eyes of Americans.That’s interesting. Here’s a little history of military parades in the US and some supposition on why we have them less frequently, seemingly, than other countries: