He's a state senator. He's a nobody.
Trump, Ryan, and McConnell are in complete control of the country, meanwhile liberals are fighting over DNC chair and going after Bill fucking Maher... Yeah, that fells about right
Calling Maher the douche he is, isn't "the left tearing itself apart."
President Donald Trumps sweeping crackdown on undocumented immigrants will strain an already tight U.S. job market, with one study suggesting that removing all of them would cost the economy as much as $5 trillion over 10 years.
That represents the contribution of the millions of unauthorized workers to the worlds largest economy, about 3 percent of private-sector gross domestic product, according to a recent paper issued by the National Bureau of Economic Research. At an average of $500 billion in output a year, removing all such immigrants would be like lopping off the equivalent of Massachusetts from the U.S. economy, said study co-author Francesc Ortega.
It's slightly killing me inside that everyone thinks Mayor Pete would be great at the job but no one wants to vote for him. >_< STOP OVERTHINKING THIS DAMNIT.
Trump, Ryan, and McConnell are in complete control of the country, meanwhile liberals are fighting over DNC chair and going after Bill fucking Maher... Yeah, that fells about right
Haha, eat shit.
https://twitter.com/CGasparino/status/834502236550074368
Slightly more detail:
https://www.axios.com/companies-nix...rganic&utm_term=politics&utm_content=textlong
Let's be real, Trump, Ryan, and McConnel aren't even close to getting a single major piece of legislation put together. From the townhalls, you can see that this administration has sparked anger in people that weren't normally that invested in politics. When it comes time to put together a strategy for elections is where we need to be unified.
It's slightly killing me inside that everyone thinks Mayor Pete would be great at the job but no one wants to vote for him. >_< STOP OVERTHINKING THIS DAMNIT.
Calling Maher the douche he is, isn't "the left tearing itself apart."
The problem is the Republican parties fractured nature. McConnell is less extreme than Ryan in a lot of ways, and the House is the major problem for them. Nothing will clear the House due to them Right Wing Extremists in there who refuse to compromise. If you think passing the ACA was a nightmare because of Blue Dogs, repealing and replacing it from a Republican majority is like living the movie Groundhog Day but with Night Terrors. Nothing short of a clean repeal will get the support of 20-30 Republicans, on top of that another 20-30 want an instant replacement, then there's 20-30 that want certain programs kept and certain programs immediately gone, and Democrats are going to fight them the entire way.
When you do anything to win at all costs, you end up with a political party that is inherently dysfunctional. There is no way in hell these people Repeal and Replace Obamacare as advertised, because it's a divided effort, made up of people who spent 8 years trying to win and now don't have any plans to execute. This doesn't just apply to healthcare either, it's an entire Congressional Majority that is only united by their party in a lot of cases, and broad ideas. You've got 10 Senators who think Abortion should be banned, 10 who think it should be heavily restricted, and 20 who think it should be difficult to obtain but not completely impossible, and none of them will compromise because they found the sweetspot to winning in their state.
Let's be real, Trump, Ryan, and McConnel aren't even close to getting a single major piece of legislation put together. From the townhalls, you can see that this administration has sparked anger in people that weren't normally that invested in politics. When it comes time to put together a strategy for elections is where we need to be unified.
The beauty of the GOP fracture is how strictly ideological it comes down to. There are some in the party who think their ideas of governance are the best way forward. There are yet others who simply believe in cutting every regulation and tax, that government shouldn't do anything and everyone needs to fend for themselves.The problem is the Republican parties fractured nature. McConnell is less extreme than Ryan in a lot of ways, and the House is the major problem for them. Nothing will clear the House due to them Right Wing Extremists in there who refuse to compromise. If you think passing the ACA was a nightmare because of Blue Dogs, repealing and replacing it from a Republican majority is like living the movie Groundhog Day but with Night Terrors. Nothing short of a clean repeal will get the support of 20-30 Republicans, on top of that another 20-30 want an instant replacement, then there's 20-30 that want certain programs kept and certain programs immediately gone, and Democrats are going to fight them the entire way.
When you do anything to win at all costs, you end up with a political party that is inherently dysfunctional. There is no way in hell these people Repeal and Replace Obamacare as advertised, because it's a divided effort, made up of people who spent 8 years trying to win and now don't have any plans to execute. This doesn't just apply to healthcare either, it's an entire Congressional Majority that is only united by their party in a lot of cases, and broad ideas. You've got 10 Senators who think Abortion should be banned, 10 who think it should be heavily restricted, and 20 who think it should be difficult to obtain but not completely impossible, and none of them will compromise because they found the sweetspot to winning in their state.
Irony is that I bet the gang of 8 immigration bill would still get 60 votes in the Senate. Clinton said she had assurances from 60 senators, and that was before the Dem caucus added two members.Exactly, and you don't have the benefit of popularity for the president to use the bully pulpit to try and push legislation. GWB's 9/11 popularity gave him leeway for years that Trump won't have and will be lucky to stay in the 40s for most of his term. At some point republicans have to actually attempt to pass legilsation and it will be hilarious to watch because they don't have a single policy that could pull 60 votes.
There's also a political calculation in there - surprise swing votes like Bill Cassidy who recognize how badly a full ACA repeal would blow up in their face, without so much as a token replacement effort.
For all that can be said about Democrats' weaknesses, or what Obama should have done, I honestly don't think ACA is going anywhere. When GOP leaders start talking about "oh, well we're just doing Obamacare repairs" you can tell they've surrendered. Obama crafted a piece of legislation that's virtually impossible to repeal. It would be like repealing Social Security at this point.
Kansas (potentially) passing Medicaid expansion is great. Perhaps John Bel's prediction that several more red states would pass it will come true, even with President Trump.
I can't wait for the Correspondent's Dinner. This could be the last one for 4yrs...
I can't wait for the Correspondent's Dinner. This could be the last one for 4yrs...
An ACA fix bill with a restored Medicaid expansion, strong public option, and Medicare buy-in at 55 is my dream for the next Democratic president. The Medicare expansion was proposed as a compromise when the public option got chucked, until Lieberman killed if. So whynotboth.gifI'm hoping this happens because every state that buckles and passes it, is a victory for the ACA. If every state had passed it the ACA would be a more than adequate solution--that we could fine tune to be a good solution over time and eventually phase out in favor of Single Payer. As time goes on the ACA is going to become increasingly essential to the American public, and no amount of "but Obama!" will make that go away. Despite how it seemed at the time, it's almost looking like the ACA will inevitably be Obama's greatest accomplishment.
Haha, eat shit.
https://twitter.com/CGasparino/status/834502236550074368
Slightly more detail:
https://www.axios.com/companies-nix...rganic&utm_term=politics&utm_content=textlong
Haha, eat shit.
https://twitter.com/CGasparino/status/834502236550074368
Slightly more detail:
https://www.axios.com/companies-nix...rganic&utm_term=politics&utm_content=textlong
This trend has kind of disturbed me. I really hope the left doesnt tear itself apart while the right laughs maniacally like they usually do. We seem to be going down this road. Remember guys, the right is the party that is backing the pussy grabber potential Russian plant no problem. Think about that.
I agree. I'm starting to suspect even the GOP didn't think they would win the Presidency (with Trump) and retain Senate and House control. They just seem like they have no real idea where to go legislatively.
All of their proposals are pretty unpopular, and most of the stuff they are vehemently against is the kind of legislation people really want--criminal justice reform, marijuana legalization, gay marriage, even stuff like Net Neutrality when properly explained is something people support. It's going to be a tough year or two for Republicans, but honestly, fuck em. They're mostly terrible.
This bloodlust over Bill Maher that emerged while I was away is... something. Am I allowed to say I still like him and watch him every week? I don't think there's a single political commentator on right now who's more vicious towards conservatives.
Fuck the dinner. It's self congratulatory institutional fluff from people who currently deserve none. Piss on a crutch.
Well he certainly wasn't vicious towards Milo. He certainly wasn't vicious when he called Milo's argument, that trans women should be kept out of women's bathrooms to protect qomen and girls, reasonable.
This has been a long time coming.
What's been a long time coming? He fucked up with the Milo interview and in the overtime segment, but I don't think that's really enough to justify this kind of vitriol when you consider how many shows he's done. Not everyone on the left is going to align 100 percent with anyone's worldview, have perfect morals, or never say something they shouldn't. Maher has always had a hugely irreverent sense of humor, but he doesn't actually hate transgender people or Muslims. I'm not expecting to change anyone's mind, but this is just how I feel about him, others are free to never watch him again.
Can he do damage? I suppose he can. To a degree. Not a great degree, I dont think. Could he offend people? Could he even inspire a borderline person to do something violent?
I wasnt trying to get him removed from society," Maher said, noting that some had tried to do exactly that to him many times over the years. "It just rubs me the wrong way when somebody says, 'I dont like what this person is saying he should go away.'"
Cause the people booking it didn't realize Colbert was satire lolSo you say. Recall the Stephen Colbert one from a while back?
This bloodlust over Bill Maher that emerged while I was away is... something. Am I allowed to say I still like him and watch him every week? I don't think there's a single political commentator on right now who's more vicious towards conservatives.
Agreed. Let it die.Fuck the dinner. It's self congratulatory institutional fluff from people who currently deserve none. Piss on a crutch.
Colbert was entirely an accident that largely went against the purpose of the event. It's the exception, not the rule.So you say. Recall the Stephen Colbert one from a while back?
Same with Michael Moore but he's not as loud anymore.Cause the people booking it didn't realize Colbert was satire lol
Maher is like Wikileaks, a dated relic from the Bush admin that's aged like rotten fruit.
Something to consider with Kansas is there's an almost formal split between the business GOP and the wacky teabaggers. A moderate Dem governor in Kansas would be able to get a lot done.Honestly amidst all the "we should talk about Kansas more" talk I sort of wonder if there's anything long-term we could do there beyond just trying to pick up the governor's mansion. It's not insignificant that in a wave year we picked up seats in the state legislature, right? It's still not pre-2010 levels but I don't think picking up 10% of the state house in a year otherwise marked by losses for the state party is something to ignore.
There's an argument that it's too socially conservative a state to become purple long-term but it did elect Sebelius twice, and it's not like she was a JBE-type blue dog, she was a normalish progressive running in a red state and winning twice. In neighboring Missouri, last year Kander got 46% of the vote while talking about how black lives matter. Kansas is a little less black, but they're otherwise pretty demographically similar states I think.
Something that stands out to me in a lot of these Republican town halls are religious people taking their representatives to task for being un-Christian. There's the woman in Tennessee who was talking about the need for the ACA because Christians have a duty to take care of the sick. There was several appeals to social gospel stuff in Cotton's town hall, including the antiwar guy. I think there's something there, and if the Kansas Democrats could make a real earnest appeal to the social gospel I think that could be big. My grandparents are from Kansas, and they're staunch advocates for equality and justice in a way that's rooted in their Catholicism.
Maybe I'm wrong and we'll make a fluke pickup there because of backlash to Brownback and then lose it, but I think there might be a chance to expand the map there. It certainly couldn't hurt if we're looking to do the 50 state strategy.
Sahil KapurVerified account‏@sahilkapur 15h15 hours ago
DNC race whip countvia @AP
Perez 205
Ellison 153
Harrison 27
Brown 10
Buttigieg 8
Greene 0
And the current DNC lost to the pussy grabber potential Russian plant no problem, so maybe some bloodletting is needed.
Wait what are you saying exactly?
Posted?
I believe the following things:
1. The left believes widely in the damaging influence of religion on politics and political freedoms when the two are not separated.
2. Maher in particular believes this, which is borne out by his movie Religulous.
3. I can find hundreds of posts on the board complaining about white evangelical Christians (which I agree with)
4. Maher makes those complaints constantly (that Christians are hypocritical, that their views on women and gays are incompatible with democracy). He says that religion is full of "bad ideas" (specifically, that's his phrase)
5. Maher largely makes the same argument about Muslims.
There is nuance here, for sure. Muslims are an oppressed minority in the country, Christians are not. Most commentators (when attacking the religion) focus on how Muslims are foreign and more likely to be terrorists (hence the "radical Islamic terrorism"). All of this is unfair.
Anyway, I don't want to conflate this with his issues on minorities / women / LGBT. I just want to focus very narrowly on the religion stuff. If it would be beneficial for me to go find completely intolerant and ridiculous posts about Christians on GAF I can do that.
Honestly amidst all the "we should talk about Kansas more" talk I sort of wonder if there's anything long-term we could do there beyond just trying to pick up the governor's mansion. It's not insignificant that in a wave year we picked up seats in the state legislature, right? It's still not pre-2010 levels but I don't think picking up 10% of the state house in a year otherwise marked by losses for the state party is something to ignore.
There's an argument that it's too socially conservative a state to become purple long-term but it did elect Sebelius twice, and it's not like she was a JBE-type blue dog, she was a normalish progressive running in a red state and winning twice. In neighboring Missouri, last year Kander got 46% of the vote while talking about how black lives matter. Kansas is a little less black, but they're otherwise pretty demographically similar states I think.
Something that stands out to me in a lot of these Republican town halls are religious people taking their representatives to task for being un-Christian. There's the woman in Tennessee who was talking about the need for the ACA because Christians have a duty to take care of the sick. There was several appeals to social gospel stuff in Cotton's town hall, including the antiwar guy. I think there's something there, and if the Kansas Democrats could make a real earnest appeal to the social gospel I think that could be big. My grandparents are from Kansas, and they're staunch advocates for equality and justice in a way that's rooted in their Catholicism.
Maybe I'm wrong and we'll make a fluke pickup there because of backlash to Brownback and then lose it, but I think there might be a chance to expand the map there. It certainly couldn't hurt if we're looking to do the 50 state strategy.
Nerd!He was the Secretary of Labor...
If I was Hillary Clinton, I'd probably endorse Keith Ellison now. Just to fuck with everybody.
Exactlythat'd probably sink him