BreezyLimbo
Banned
We're going to lose next year and in 2020 aren't we?
I hope youre ready to see trump tweet every day about fake news for the next 8 years
We're going to lose next year and in 2020 aren't we?
More Sanders primary voters voted Clinton in the presidential than Clinton primary voters voted Obama in the presidential. You need to stop spreading fake news, it's pretty disgusting. I can't tell the difference between you rabid Clintonites and Trump supporters any more, it's all just lies and racism.
Not sure if posted, but the father of the Navy SEAL who died in Yemen was interviewed. It's a great read.
I'm clearly not talking about every single Sanders supporter period, but you cannot deny that the "Bernie or Bust" movement was a thing and there was a lot of hate from his side of the campaign after he conceded and started working with Clinton. These same supporters throw brat attacks every time Sanders tries to work with the Democrats or even says something positive about them because they aren't interested in building any fences. They want to take over the party and make it "Our way or the highway" and they aren't interested in working together towards common goals. Again, go look at the Perez congratulation Tweet from Sanders. It is trashed with people who seemingly support him telling him off for congratulating the guy and trying to build a relationship to work with him.More Sanders primary voters voted Clinton in the presidential than Clinton primary voters voted Obama in the presidential. You need to stop spreading fake news, it's pretty disgusting. I can't tell the difference between you rabid Clintonites and Trump supporters any more, it's all just lies and racism.
While there are some people who can't seem to let Clinton go despite her terribleness as a candidate, the ideologues are pretty easy to spot. They are the people who think following in the footsteps of the Tea Party is a good thing and are more concerned with protesting a Manchin townhall than a Trump appearance. You know it's true, so stop turning a blind eye.
You cannot groom the energy of people who's reaction to losing is to go "BURN IT ALL DOWN" into something productive.I really hate this dismissive rhetoric. You are diminishing the opinions and trying to snuff out the enthusiasm of people who are on your side.
I see this day after day here. It's so depressing. I really wish people here could better understand why young people are enamored with far-left ideals without considering themselves far-left. When you say they are petty or unappeasable and aren't interested in policy, you are ridiculing people who - until recently - didn't see any difference between you and them.
Do people here even talk to supposed far-left voters? Because I think a lot of the people you're writing off are just "voters under 25." They are deeply distrustful of establishments and institutions because they have been screwed or strung along by them their entire lives. They have no job security, their wages are low, their cost of living is high, and things their parents were doing at their age - like buying houses and having children - are completely off the table. Even people with college degrees and no debt - like me - have to work six days a week to pay their bills. They are furious they have paid into systems and programs their whole lives - including programs their parents were able to benefit from - only to see a fraction of the results.
These voters are energized and restless because they kept their heads down and plodded along under Obama because they believed everything would eventually be okay. Progress was progress, even if it was slow and measured. They liked Obama and he was making things better, and whoever succeeded him would carry us even further. But overnight, they watched their entire worldview get demolished under the weight of Donald Trump. It makes everything they thought was safe and guaranteed feel fragile and vulnerable. They are not willing to wait for 2018 or 2020 to try to defend themselves or take back territory. They trying to do it every single day. Their fight is right now. They will stop at nothing to feel like they have their voice back.
This is an energy you should be welcoming and grooming into good Democrats and regular voters, not closing the door to for not buying into another institution they're wary of. You have to realize that lots of these voters have never experienced anything as dramatic or traumatic as Donald Trump. This is their 9/11. This is their life-changing catastrophe that forever changes how they see the world. Everything they believed before the election is now threatened or collapsing in front of their eyes. They've never seen anything like this before - or at least never felt its effects. The reason they are so vicious is because they are terrified and angry in ways they have never been. These people are going to dictate the culture of a generation. These people are an asset to you. Connect with them. They desperately want to be connected with.
I always feel I need to make it clear I am not a Berniecrat and I voted for HRC. I still keep her keychain in my car. But is is plainly obvious to me as a young voter than people you brand as far-left and insatiable anarchists are people looking for somebody and something to rally behind. They want it to be somebody they took part in choosing. They want to feel like they're contributing directly to the machine that is going to determine how the remainder of their lives may go. Help them. You will win more elections.
I just can't stand seeing people who all believe the same things demonizing each other over what is ultimately just a difference in attitude, not politics. I give Gray Wolves another version of this same speech. There is so much opportunity here.
Sure, they exist. But they're a tiny minority of Sanders supporters, and ultimately inconsequential. The bigger problem, by far, is entrenched ideologues like dramatis and kirblar who want to try exactly the same thing that just resulted in the biggest Democratic defeat in nearly a century and can't bear the idea of having to compromise even slightly. Judging by how many posts in this thread I'm having to not even particularly subtlety lampoon, the greater portion of blinded ideologues aren't in camp Sanders.
I really hate this dismissive rhetoric. You are diminishing the opinions and trying to snuff out the enthusiasm of people who are on your side.
They want it to be somebody they took part in choosing. They want to feel like they're contributing directly to the machine that is going to determine how the remainder of their lives may go. Help them. You will win more elections.
I just can't stand seeing people who all believe the same things demonizing each other over what is ultimately just a difference in attitude, not politics. I give Gray Wolves another version of this same speech. There is so much opportunity here.
Especially when it's literally the smallest Dem defeat in a century. We picked up seats, won the popular vote, and lost the electoral one by under 70K votes.What? This hyperbole is ridiculous.
You need to let go of Clinton, it would be a complete tragedy if she had lost the popular vote against president Tweet. Kander is an outlier, no extrapolation should be made by him, the fact of the matter is that the left does try to solve for the underlying issues that undermine human autonomy, Hillary had her own version of bootstrap mentality and old ideas.Eh, I think that completely misses the mark in terms of analyzing the causal factors behind those trends. Clinton handily won the popular vote, so why are we surprised that the majority of the country hates Trump? How else would you extrapolate out the results to the non-voting population?
Furthermore, even if the party got annihilated down-ballot, it wasn't Bernie type leftists who performed best, it was Kander type moderates. How does that translate into a conclusion that socialist ideas/candidates are more popular than centrism? If the demand was there we would see more Bernie's in Congress, but we don't. The best Seattle could do was elect a single socialist to the City Council over 100 years. And we think that kind of ''success" is somehow going to translate to district or state wide contests in states like Missouri or Ohio?
I mean seriously, voters don't have to believe in universal healthcare to be mad about Trump trying to repeal Obamacare. You don't have to believe in free college tuition to think Devos was a terrible pick. We should not mistake anger over Trump's raw incompetence as anything more than that; the democratic wave in 2006 happened because people were anti-war, not pro-democrat.
I'll believe the country is ready for far-left ideas when it starts electing representatives who campaign on them. The simple fact is that there has never been a leftist version of the Tea Party that demonstrates sustained demand for radical policies through repeated large-scale congressional victories.
Especially when it's literally the smallest Dem defeat in a century. We picked up seats, won the popular vote, and lost the electoral one by under 70K votes.
Especially when it's literally the smallest Dem defeat in a century. We picked up seats, won the popular vote, and lost the electoral one by under 70K votes.
What? This hyperbole is ridiculous.
Continue to underestimate Trump at your detriment. I've learned my lesson about that.
It still has left the party in a weaker position than it has ever been.Especially when it's literally the smallest Dem defeat in a century. We picked up seats, won the popular vote, and lost the electoral one by under 70K votes.
The people who say "I'm not gonna vote" are.It still has left the party in a weaker position than it has ever been.
It was mounted on top of devistating losses in 2010 and 2014.
People aren't saying "burn it all down!" As much saying the party needs to do a better job of showing strong intent of a change in direction because what they are currently doing is not working at all.
Also governorships, state house and senate positions; literally every possible elected position.This is the first time since (iirc) 1928 that the Democrats have failed to control all of the House, the Senate, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. At the same time, they are at a post-war low in state government. It is not at all hyperbole to point out the Democrats have not had less institutional influence than they do now in over a century. The margin of the loss was small. The consequences are catastrophic.
There's 2002-2006 also, which also had massive catastrophic consequences.This is the first time since (iirc) 1928 that the Democrats have failed to control all of the House, the Senate, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. At the same time, they are at a post-war low in state government. It is not at all hyperbole to point out the Democrats have not had less institutional influence than they do now in over a century. The margin of the loss was small. The consequences are catastrophic.
Sure, they exist. But they're a tiny minority of Sanders supporters, and ultimately inconsequential. The bigger problem, by far, is entrenched ideologues like dramatis and kirblar who want to try exactly the same thing that just resulted in the biggest Democratic defeat in nearly a century and can't bear the idea of having to compromise even slightly. Judging by how many posts in this thread I'm having to not even particularly subtlety lampoon, the greater portion of blinded ideologues aren't in camp Sanders.
This is the first time since (iirc) 1928 that the Democrats have failed to control all of the House, the Senate, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. At the same time, they are at a post-war low in state government. It is not at all hyperbole to point out the Democrats have not had less institutional influence than they do now in over a century. The margin of the loss was small. The consequences are catastrophic.
How young are you that you don't remember the Dubya years?This is the first time since (iirc) 1928 that the Democrats have failed to control all of the House, the Senate, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. At the same time, they are at a post-war low in state government. It is not at all hyperbole to point out the Democrats have not had less institutional influence than they do now in over a century. The margin of the loss was small. The consequences are catastrophic.
This is the first time since (iirc) 1928 that the Democrats have failed to control all of the House, the Senate, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. At the same time, they are at a post-war low in state government. It is not at all hyperbole to point out the Democrats have not had less institutional influence than they do now in over a century. The margin of the loss was small. The consequences are catastrophic.
This is the first time since (iirc) 1928 that the Democrats have failed to control all of the House, the Senate, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. At the same time, they are at a post-war low in state government. It is not at all hyperbole to point out the Democrats have not had less institutional influence than they do now in over a century. The margin of the loss was small. The consequences are catastrophic.
If we're talking just about the federal government, the Republicans had a stronger position post 2004 and actually controlled all of those positions starting in 2000.
You need to let go of Clinton, it would be a complete tragedy if she had lost the popular vote against president Tweet. Kander is an outlier, no extrapolation should be made by him, the fact of the matter is that the left does try to solve for the underlying issues that undermine human autonomy, Hillary had her own version of bootstrap mentality and old ideas.
In 2001 a senator flipped to avoid RRR, they didn't have control very long.If we're talking just about the federal government, the Republicans had a stronger position post 2004 and actually controlled all of those positions starting in 2000.
The Democrats controlled the Senate in 2001-2002 when Jeffords switched to an independent, but before that it was 50-50 with Cheney as the tiebreaker. But, yeah, 2004 was worse for Democrats on a federal level (and a little better on a state level).
If we're talking just about the federal government, the Republicans had a stronger position post 2004 and actually controlled all of those positions starting in 2000.
Bush also pushed most of his big early legislation with bipartisan support, except for the tax cuts.Apologies, double-checked the dates and the precise fact is that this is the first time since 1928 the Republicans have controlled the House, the Senate, the Presidency, the Supreme Court, a majority of governors, and a majority of state legislatures. So the Democrats are indeed much weaker than they were even under Bush. Hence, no hyperbole.
The Democrats just won a special election in Delaware and expanded their margin from three points to 17 last night. Meanwhile Jeremy Corbyn, the far left godhead, can barely hold on to seats Labor has had for a century and the French socialists are about to finish fourth or fifth. Do you know how hard it is for a socialist to finish fifth in France? Where does anyone get the idea that following in the footsteps of the continental left will get us anywhere but back to Mondale in '84?
Apologies, double-checked the dates and the precise fact is that this is the first time since 1928 the Republicans have controlled the House, the Senate, the Presidency, the Supreme Court, a majority of governors, and a majority of state legislatures. So the Democrats are indeed much weaker than they were even under Bush. Hence, no hyperbole.
Don't kid yourself.Sure, they exist. But they're a tiny minority of Sanders supporters, and ultimately inconsequential. The bigger problem, by far, is entrenched ideologues like dramatis and kirblar who want to try exactly the same thing that just resulted in the biggest Democratic defeat in nearly a century and can't bear the idea of having to compromise even slightly. Judging by how many posts in this thread I'm having to not even particularly subtlety lampoon, the greater portion of blinded ideologues aren't in camp Sanders.
You're incredibly tone deaf when it comes to issues of race and gender, and it shows. If you don't like being called out on it, don't play the victim. You're callous when it comes to identifying with minorities, that is why you get slammed. Who is blind here? Who is entrenched here? Who is the one who needs lampooning and some self-reflection?blah blah blahPlease don't equate all the struggles one must endure living through abject poverty and overcome to achieve a high position in life through hard work and by ethical means to "endorsed by politician X". Thanks.
This is a strawman, I know it's a strawman, you know it's a strawman. Trying to bat for the moral superiority team without having a leg to stand on doesn't win internet arguments.
EDIT: especially when your colleague eBay Huckster is making the argument above.
As far as state legislatures, Democrats did have a majority. Of about 0.00014 percent.
It was hyperbole.
Apologies, double-checked the dates and the precise fact is that this is the first time since 1928 the Republicans have controlled the House, the Senate, the Presidency, the Supreme Court, a majority of governors, and a majority of state legislatures. So the Democrats are indeed much weaker than they were even under Bush.
Your link doesn't support you. It points out the Republicans controlled 20 state legislatures, which is not a majority (26+) and is simply a plurality.
If you're going to try and make references to British politics, at least do it right. The UK Liberals are lead by Tim Farron. As for Corbyn, I don't support him. Never have. So saying "yeah well Corbyn!" is like me saying "why should I listen to you? You just elected Trump!", simply because you happen to be American. But given I know you didn't actually support Trump, I wouldn't be so discourteous as to try and make that point.
Also, give me a break. If we're talking insensitivities, you were so insensitive to the Democrats of the Rust Belt you just lost to an orange fascist puppeted by Russia. Go look in the mirror and get some perspective. It's just tedious to see you fall back on 'someone has called out my atrocious arguments, better imply they're racially insensitive'. Alternative hypothesis: you're just making a terrible argument.
Also what we're not talking about here is the complete collapse of Democratic support (locally) among Southern whites during the Obama era. States like West Virginia, Kentucky, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina were all lost due to white flight away from the party when a black man became the face of the party and I think that's the bigger story.
This is a really shitty take, especially coming from someone who just watched from the sidelines and didn't live through the election. If exposing and calling out the racist, Islamaphobic, sexist, homophobic and hateful rhetoric Trump and his surrogates were spewing on a daily here was insensitive to Rust Belt Democrats - and I don't think it was to the Democrats in the region that were the problem - instead of talking about muh bad trade deals, then so be it. I know a lot of people here of all races and sexualities who've been damaged from the election and their sensitivities are just as important.Also, give me a break. If we're talking insensitivities, you were so insensitive to the Democrats of the Rust Belt you just lost to an orange fascist puppeted by Russia.
Saw this on facebook...
So instead we should make assumptions based on no evidence because we like those conclusions better? The hell does Clinton losing electorally to Trump have to do with far-leftists being popular? Maybe try engaging with the rest of my post instead of just complaining about the fact I mentioned Clinton/Kander.
to be fair here, Kentucky kept a Democratic governor until 2015 and a Dem state house until last year (and we didn't have the senate since 2004). Race is (the biggest) part of it but they didn't just jump ship in 2010 like the Dem-held Confederate states.Also what we're not talking about here is the complete collapse of Democratic support (locally) among Southern whites during the Obama era. States like West Virginia, Kentucky, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina were all lost due to white flight away from the party when a black man became the face of the party and I think that's the bigger story.
The backlash was front loaded(many of the legislatures were lost in 2010), I think Kentucky's shift to Republican controlled government was a more natural pace, but Beshear's coat tails helped a lot here. There's a reason why he's the first person who was chosen to give a Democratic response to Trump.to be fair here, Kentucky kept a Democratic governor until 2015 and a Dem state house until last year (and we didn't have the senate since 2004). Race is (the biggest) part of it but they didn't just jump ship in 2010 like the Dem-held Confederate states.
Too bad Paul was reelected last year instead of up in 2018, we might have had a shot at knocking him out.
The Dems lost the south because they moved too far away from the "center" on white supremacy and moved closer to "people of all skin colors are good."
And I'm not sure that centrism or... whatever is to blame.
This is a really shitty take, especially coming from someone who just watched from the sidelines and didn't live through the election. If exposing and calling out the racist, Islamaphobic, sexist, homophobic and hateful rhetoric Trump and his surrogates were spewing on a daily here was insensitive to Rust Belt Democrats - and I don't think it was to the Democrats in the region that were the problem - instead of talking about muh bad trade deals, then so be it. I know a lot of people here of all races and sexualities who've been damaged from the election and their sensitivities are just as important.