I am real fucking sick of the implication, though, that if we're not on board with just running the Democrats as a full on dem socialist european style party its because we don't want it bad enough
By this logic, shouldn't we have all abandoned the ACA as well? Over the past 6 years, it often polled terribly, was partially responsible for lots of 2010 Democratic losses, and even that parts that polled well (no pre-existing conditions, children stay on until 26, medicaid expansion) should apparently be compromised away because "there's a huge ol asterisk next to that question"? Were you even more distrustful of those?
All those folks back in 2010 did the "rational" thing and ran away from the ACA, because after all, you gotta appeal to the "moderates" right?
I guess I don't see why "lock in the private insurance system, make backroom deals with insurance companies, and steadily tweak a bunch of things until maybe one day we turn into Switzerland. Maybe." is considered a sober and rational political message that will rally people, but "hey you know that Medicare program that's pretty popular? Well, we should expand that to everyone" is some loony leftist message that only privileged white liberals in college would be into (to paraphrase a lot of the criticisms)
I'll be blunt - what if the only way to win those mythical working class voters is to throw non-white people under the bus? Will it be OK to care about the needs of minorities and women over the WWC then?
There are no common goals with people who want socialism, but only for white people. Because that's what they want. No matter how much you talk about "universal" policies, 90% of Trump voters will still say no because brown people get a piece as well.
The presidency I'm not worried about. But I am deeply deeply worried about our ability to control the senate, and without the senate the whole thing falls apart. There's no getting around the 2 votes given to every goddamn red state
It's nothing to be worried about, more upsetting, considering the same Republican came within 3% of winning the seat in 2014, when turnout was lower, and this would have given the state senate to the Republicans. It's very positive for Democrats though. GA-06 should be interesting though, yes.I think the GOP will only start worrying once they lose races like GA-6.Not when they lose races in blue states like delaware.
The GOP won't care as long as the democrats are getting results like the delaware special election in lean blue or super blue states.
Time to force through legislation to make DC and Puerto Rico a state (assuming they ever get their referendum process worked out)
will never happen
This is how I feel too, in almost exact measure.
Knowing and previously being close to people like my mother and father, I have no hope in converting them into decent non-racist human beings. This is the kind of thing that's rooted in upbringing. It comes from lifelong mental construction. If it is ever going to change, change will come from within. No amount of conversation geared towards changing their minds or helping them see peace is ever going to make a difference.
So if people like my parents, and many Trump fans, are a lost cause... where does that leave us?
I think back to before the election when I didn't know which ones of my friends or coworkers were racists. I didn't know which ones were misogynists. I didn't know which ones valued the safety of their guns over the safety of their fellow American. These things were below the surface and we were able to get along. We were able to coexist. I would never be close to them, or deepen my relationship with them, but we could at least function together on a basic social level.
Some days I think that that's the best we can hope for. Because you can't make a fifty year old man not a racist. But you can raise a new generation of Americans not to be. Sometimes I think if we can at least get to a point where our politics is rallied around common ground, then we can promote a culture that is a standard for progressive and liberal ideals. If we can normalize equality and liberal ideology in our culture, it will manifest in the burgeoning generation of politics.
That's why I think stuff like Star Wars having black or female leads is important too. That's the culture we want to promote and standardize, even if we have to talk about politics in regards to the issues instead of the voters.
I'm sort of rambling, but I need somewhere to talk about these ideas so that I can property digest them. I spend a lot of time in the real world not talking to anybody about this at all because the climate is so incredibly volatile. Talking about it here, even with apprehension, is important for me to find truth.
Really only Twitter is freaking outHuh, Reddit seemed to take Tom Perez's appointment pretty well.
Mr.Shrugglesツ;231029046 said:Twitter Thread Summary:
Kuwait Embassy moved event from 4 Seasons to Trump Hotel, paying around 60K. Trump stopping by Hotel coincidentally. Press Pool not being allowed into hotel.
https://twitter.com/JuddLegum/status/835664800663408641
No you're probably spot on if he's doing that (I haven't noticed). He doesn't want to stop calling him General.How come whenever Trump refers to Secretary Kelly. He always says this (well everytime I hear him mention him he says it): General Kelly now Secretary Kelly like to me he isn't comfortable with how Kelly is now Secretary Kelly like its only a womans job or some shit so he always starts with General Kelly to show that this guy is masculine or some shit before then proceeding to say Secretary Kelly.
Or am I just overthinking it. He does it all the time.
This inspired me to check Facebook and only one friend posted about it, along with DSA (which just said "Perez is the new chair, organize with us for true democracy") and ginandtacos which made a joke about the guy who gave the nomination speech for Perez being a coal lobbyist. My roommate hasn't said anything about it yet.Really only Twitter is freaking out
Well and this forum apparently
Did we just live through the same six years? Half of the country went frothing with rage over those basic improvements only to freak out when they realized taking the good stuff away from the "moochers" meant they would lose out also. I'm not saying we need to compromise away on universal healthcare, I'm cautioning people against thinking that its a surefire campaign winner
Roland_Gunner said:Calling strawman arguments paraphrasing is an interesting twist I guess. Most Dems, including more moderate ones, support the public option.
The problem is that there weren't 60 votes for it in the senate in 2009 and eliminating the filibuster wasn't an option. It sucks but that's our version of democracy. Most of the arguments you're trying to hand wave away are that the ACA was still worth doing without it. We're seeing the reason why working with insurance companies make sense right now. They're throwing up huge roadblocks to the GOP rolling back Obamacare instead of working with the Republicans.
But anyhoo, good discussion. I'll leave things off with this, lol: One thing red state voters dont like about Obamacare is that it sucks.
There have been examples of Democrats talking about how poorly the ACA is working or not working. Ol' Bill called it crazy and Dayton (who expanded Medicaid and is certainly not a conservative) said it was unaffordable and not working.Do they dislike it because of what it is as policy or because their governor/state government didn't expand Medicaid or set up an exchange, therefore weakening it?
Unless things have changed.. pretty sure Kynect was pretty popular in Kentucky until Matt Bevin ended it, as one example.
There have been examples of Democrats talking about how poorly the ACA is working or not working. Ol' Bill called it crazy and Dayton (who expanded Medicaid and is certainly not a conservative) said it was unaffordable and not working.
Also the article goes into that it's frustrating for poor people to see Medicaid be 1000x better than subsidized exchange plans so when they are working less hours so they can stay on Medicaid, it's probably not a good system.
There have been examples of Democrats talking about how poorly the ACA is working or not working. Ol' Bill called it crazy and Dayton (who expanded Medicaid and is certainly not a conservative) said it was unaffordable and not working.
Also the article goes into that it's frustrating for poor people to see Medicaid be 1000x better than subsidized exchange plans so when they are working less hours so they can stay on Medicaid, it's probably not a good system.
That's 40% of the people using the exchanges, which might mean there's a bigger problem here, especially since keeping those people in the market is key to keeping it affordable for the other 60%!Mark Dayton said it wasn't working for the 2 percent of people in the individual market who don't receive any kind of subsidy.
And, yes, that gap is a big issue! It's something that needs to be addressed. I just don't know that it's proof that the ACA isn't working. It certainly isn't for that small group of people. But it is for a larger group of people.
Do they dislike it because of what it is as policy or because their governor/state government didn't expand Medicaid or set up an exchange, therefore weakening it?
Unless things have changed.. pretty sure Kynect was pretty popular in Kentucky until Matt Bevin ended it, as one example.
This is a small number of people and they wouldn't have had healthcare before the ACA. Not to be heartless, but, there are very very few pieces of legislation that don't have "losers", those people who are not benefited by it. I don't blame them for gaming the system because otherwise they would fall into the loser camp and I also don't think that makes the ACA a failure.
Again, run that poll with the cavaet, "do you support a federally funded healthcare program if middle class taxes go up and the level of care for middle class families stays the same."
There are multiple threads here even on NeoGAF where people freak about their taxes going up - because they thought it would all be paid for by Wall Street & billionaires.
And I say that as somebody who believes middle class taxes need to go up, but they need to go up after people have gotten benefits. Create the program, then say we need to increase taxes to pay for it.
The officeholder who vacated the seat, Bethany Hall-Long, was a Democrat. She was elected as the lieutenant governor of Delaware in the November 2016 elections. In the special election, Democrat Stephanie Hansen defeated Republican John Marino.
We had something like this for Erik Paulsen, we surpassed the fire code at a local church and people ended up being turned away, including me. I signed in though all the same.My Indivisible group for our district (TX-21) held their own town hall since our rep, Lamar Smith, refuses to meet with them.
Tweet saying over 400 people with a shot of the crowd in video:
https://twitter.com/lauriejoyfrick/status/835645664365277188
Media says over 600 people here:
http://www.kvue.com/news/local/citizens-hold-town-hall-meeting-for-us-rep-lamar-smith/414758399
My Indivisible group for our district (TX-21) held their own town hall since our rep, Lamar Smith, refuses to meet with them.
Tweet saying over 400 people with a shot of the crowd in video:
https://twitter.com/lauriejoyfrick/status/835645664365277188
Media says over 600 people here:
http://www.kvue.com/news/local/citizens-hold-town-hall-meeting-for-us-rep-lamar-smith/414758399
Even though it would just be for catharsis, I really want to go yell at Labrador. Unsurprisingly, he hasn't done town halls or anything in quite a long time.We had something like this for Erik Paulsen, we surpassed the fire code at a local church and people ended up being turned away, including me. I signed in though all the same.
If you make a concerted effort to explain to people they're already paying for other people's healthcare, you're just going to convince them that that program should be ended, not expanded.
I have far more respect for "women who get abortions should be in prison" people than "abortion is murder with no murderers involved or...." politicians that infest the GOP.
I am real fucking sick of the implication, though, that if we're not on board with just running the Democrats as a full on dem socialist european style party its because we don't want it bad enough
It was a Latino versus an African-American...In other tales from Bernie-or-busters, I had a professor tell me today on facebook that literally the only reason to vote for Perez over Ellison was racism. And no I'm not being reductive, that's exactly what they said.
I do think people are underplaying the "Ellison is a spooky Muslim who hates Jews" smear.
The spooky Muslim is the Deputy Chair, confirmed afaik by pretty unanimous viva voce.I do think people are underplaying the "Ellison is a spooky Muslim who hates Jews" smear.
I do think people are underplaying the "Ellison is a spooky Muslim who hates Jews" smear.
I think I'm honestly beginning to hate Berniecrats more than I hate Trump supporters.
It's chair of the DNC. How petty can you get?
Plenty petty. Let's see how low we can go.
I think this will settle down soon enough.Plenty petty. Let's see how low we can go.
(From: Winners and losers from the Democratic National Committee chairman's race )Sens. Bernie Sanders/Elizabeth Warren: The two most prominent voices of liberals in Washington made a show of force with very early endorsements of Ellison. The goal was to end the race before it started, discouraging other serious candidates from running.
Republicans had been open about their hopes that Ellison would win the chair's race, believing his strongly liberal record and past controversies would give them a useful punching bag for years to come. Perez, while still quite liberal, is not the lightning rod that Ellison would have been. The search continues ...