So your problem with Obama is that he advocates letting the states address same sex marriage instead of advocating full marriage rights himself? Well what is your alternative then? Nader?Gaborn said:Of course not, I'd rather he fight for TRUE equality. If he has to bow to political pressure in those circumstances and sign a civil union bill that's one thing, but he's showing no political spine on this issue, he's not willing to take the tough stand on the issue (whether out of a personal belief or political expedience), he's instead conceding second class status without a fight. THAT is what irks me. Fight for me on true equality or don't claim to be some great champion of equal rights for all Americans.
As Mandark said, scientific reality directly conflicts with the libertarian ideal. You can't both believe in global warming and its effects but also oppose any kind of climate change regulation/policy without being either ignorant or suicidal. While you are correct that not believing global warming has little effect on simplist libertarian policy, it does make me not trust the candidate on any climate related issues.Again though, how is a libertarian who believes in global warming going to make differing decisions? If there aren't any clear and obvious examples from a libertarian perspective (I don't think there are any off hand, but it's late). Speaking of, since it's 3:30 (almost) my time I'm going to bed, I'll respond tomorrow if you like though.
2000 was pretty close, with a 0.5 million difference between the candidates. 2004 less so, with a 3 million difference in the other direction.Jason's Ultimatum said:What do you guys expect the popular vote to look like in November? Pretty close, like in 2004, right?
I'd say it's less to do with confused voters unaware of buzz, but bitter Clinton voters clinging to their nonbamas possibly changing their minds.Cheebs said:I agree it will be only a few %. The primary has gotten so much media buzz I am unsure if there is this confused chunk of public out there who would suddenly switch cause he won.
The vast majority of peoples' votes don't make a difference now. If you're in a minority, your vote helped your candidate in no way. If you're in a large majority, your vote in particular didn't help your candidate any more than an outcome of 1-0 would've.Gaborn said:Yeah, and as I was just editing in... that just seems REALLY dangerous to me, it destroys the entire notion of a person's vote mattering in the smaller states.
Oozer3993 said:I forget the exact quote (and who said it) but it goes something like:
Anyone who aspires to the presidency is ill prepared to receive it.
I find that to be true 99% of the time.
But to get specific:
* I am against any form of universal healthcare. I believe Barack's plan does not address the real issues causing health care costs to rise.
* I believe the government should not be anywhere near the business of creating jobs.
* I am against any knee-jerk regulation against mortgage lenders when the "crisis" we currently have is largely the fault of the people taking out mortgages they couldn't afford.
* I believe his plan for troop withdrawal in Iraq will only lead to disaster down the road.
* I am strongly against abortion in all cases that are not for rape, incest or a situation where the mother's health is in serious danger. Obama quite obviously does not share this view.
Kaeru said:1. Name me one president who got chosen against his will?
2. What are the real issues causing health care costs to rise?
3. Goverment creates tons of job, look at your police dep, fire dep, schools, state officials etc. Be more specific please.
4. Why will it be a disaster, I mean more then it already is?
5. I wont even try to debate about the abortion issue though, we can skip that one :lol
And for the record I'm not trying to corner you or anything, I'm just a guy from Sweden who is interested in how conservative Americans resonate.
Not to mention a bunch of Vice Presidents, i.e. Truman (at least the first term)grandjedi6 said:1.) Washington and arguably Eisenhower
icarus-daedelus said:Not to mention a bunch of Vice Presidents, i.e. Truman (at least the first term)
FlightOfHeaven said:Oh, and on the mortgage crisis, that is absolutely the work of the government and the financial industry. By pushing for deregulation, and getting it, there's an entire speculative market out there on stock options that aren't taxed or overseen. Furthermore, the bundling of mortgages and the misinformation spread by the banking industry to the target market set the stage for an incoming disaster.
To lay the blame on the people for this one is quite wrong.
FlightOfHeaven said:These are people who probably don't have an extensive education or time to look up the meaning of the fine print.
Maybe, just maybe, there is more than one kind of situation to be considered here? Many people were sold fraudulent loans.Uncooked said:This was my point though, you can't claim ignorance as an excuse and throw all the blame on another party. There are plenty of things I don't understand, so I either take the time to educate myself or stay away. Most of the people thought they could simply not work as hard as responsible homeowners and get away with it, and it bit them in the ass. I am of course talking about the people who actually wanted to own their homes, not the ones trying to flip the houses for a quick profit. Those people truly got what they deserved, living far beyond their own means and thinking they could simply buy and sell houses like it required no proper skill or training.
Hitokage said:Maybe, just maybe, there is more than one kind of situation to be considered here? Not everyone was house flipping.
Stumpokapow said:Just to weigh in on one issue from the last few pages... I don't think it's possible to "believe in" climate change. To me, "believe in" is reserved for belief in either the mythological sense or the subjective opinion sense. I think it's okay to believe in God or to believe in supply-side economics, but I don't think it's possible to believe in the Sun or a round earth or evolution or climate change. Things that are factual are not believed in, they're recognized. If no one on earth chooses to recognize them, they'll still be true.
whoaThe Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Sunday shows Barack Obamas bounce growing to an eight-point lead over John McCain. Obama now attracts 48% of the vote while McCain earns 40%.
When leaners are included, Obama leads 50% to 43%. On Tuesday, just before Obama clinched the nomination, the candidates were tied at 46% (see recent daily results). Data from Rasmussen Markets gives Obama a % 95.0 chance of winning.
syllogism said:whoa
With leaners a 7 point lead?syllogism said:whoa
Gerald Ford never wanted to be President either.grandjedi6 said:1.) Washington and arguably Eisenhower
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24016480/syllogism said:whoa
I wouldn't take the 10 points claim from the GOP at face value. In politics you always under-predict how you do and over-predict your opposition so when expectations aren't met it is seen as a disappointment from your opposition.Hitokage said:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24016480/
"Currently polls show McCain either narrowly ahead or even with both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. It is impressive considering how poorly the GOP, and specifically the president, are viewed by the public.
But it is a faux lead. If the de facto Democratic nominee is clear within the next 4-6 weeks, that person will see a poll bounce. And according to GOP pollster Steve Lombardo, it could be one heck of a bounce, like post-convention. He anticipates the Democratic candidate will move up 10 points once the primary race is over."
- Chuck Todd, April 9th
The second part is true, but global warming isn't a market failure, so to speak, because the only real goal of an unregulated market is to produce profit, hence the only way to reliably change problems that arise (i.e. global warming) is a variance in governing policy.Sharp said:Global warming is pretty much a market failure and there's no way a libertarian is going to be willing to admit that fact, so it's probably not worth pursuing any further.
Your vote really doesn't matter in an uber-small state (except New Hampshire) or a really big one (except Florida) because those vote reliably one way or the other.JoshuaJSlone said:The vast majority of peoples' votes don't make a difference now. If you're in a minority, your vote helped your candidate in no way. If you're in a large majority, your vote in particular didn't help your candidate any more than an outcome of 1-0 would've.
Stumpokapow said:Just to weigh in on one issue from the last few pages... I don't think it's possible to "believe in" climate change. To me, "believe in" is reserved for belief in either the mythological sense or the subjective opinion sense. I think it's okay to believe in God or to believe in supply-side economics, but I don't think it's possible to believe in the Sun or a round earth or evolution or climate change. Things that are factual are not believed in, they're recognized. If no one on earth chooses to recognize them, they'll still be true.
You're confusing the mandate of a public corporation with that of a market.icarus-daedelus said:The second part is true, but global warming isn't a market failure, so to speak, because the only real goal of an unregulated market is to produce profit, hence the only way to reliably change problems that arise (i.e. global warming) is a variance in governing policy.
So, like, there's no invisible magical hand guiding everything in the economy, in other words.
At no other point in history did we have over six billion people with the demand for consistent food production. Whether or not people can adapt to various situations, our economy is fairly dependent on nothing rocking the boat or disrupting the food chain.VistraNorrez said:The thing is, earth has been around for a very long time with various different climates. What exactly is normal? We've only recently in human history been keeping extensive records of the climate. We have things like the Little Ice Age from the 1500s to mid 1800s, which it's coldest points happen to coincide with the Maunder Minimum.
VistraNorrez said:The thing is, earth has been around for a very long time with various different climates. What exactly is normal? We've only recently in human history been keeping extensive records of the climate. We have things like the Little Ice Age from the 1500s to mid 1800s, which it's coldest points happen to coincide with the Maunder Minimum.
I would agree the earth is getting warmer, we have the proof of that, but how much is man made and how much is just the earth doing it's thing is still not proven.
Evolution is just a theory.avaya said:The scientific community is united in their belief that the climate change is man made. It simply blows my mind people think they know better than people who've spent their entire careers researching these phenomena.
You're too smart to be president Mr. Obama.Hitokage said:You're confusing the mandate of a public corporation with that of a market.
At no other point in history did we have over six billion people with the demand for consistent food production. Whether or not people can adapt to various situations, our economy is fairly dependent on nothing rocking the boat or disrupting the food chain.
avaya said:The scientific community is united in their belief that the climate change is man made. It simply blows my mind people think they know better than people who've spent their entire careers researching these phenomena.
Hitokage said:You're confusing the mandate of a public corporation with that of a market.
If polls show that she largely undoes the damage she's wrecked over the past few months I'm ready to forgive her.BenjaminBirdie said:WELL.
I'm a little LTTP here, catching up, but I thought it was a pretty great speech by the Hill, and just what she needed to say. Boy, Olbermann really came out though as the true sore loser here. Harping on "after 6:25" and the "middle portion of the speech", it's like, dude. Come on. She did it. Give it a fucking rest.
Ship that guy off to cover the circuit court in Nebraska or some shit. He sticks out of their coverage like a sore thumb.
Anyway, I think she did a great job turning her supporters around by starting her speech focusing on them and then carrying them through to their necessary support for his campaign. Very artfully done.
Zeed said:Evolution is just a theory.
Please stopratcliffja said:Yes, yes it is. It's a widely accepted theory, but it's still just a theory. I happen to believe in evolution, but it really annoys me when people laugh at those who don't.
You know the scientific definition of a theory, right, and that nothing technically ever moves past the stage of "theory"?ratcliffja said:Yes, yes it is. It's a widely accepted theory, but it's still just a theory. I happen to believe in evolution, but it really annoys me when people laugh at those who don't.
It's from lack of sleep, I swear. I feel my normally rock-solid hold on the finer points of grammar slipping away as well.Hitokage said:You're confusing the mandate of a public corporation with that of a market.
It is the basis of all modern biology and those people you mention are actively participating in the scientific retardation of our society, as are you by being complicit in it.ratcliffja said:it really annoys me when people laugh at those who don't.
icarus-daedelus said:You know the scientific definition of a theory, right, and that nothing technically ever moves past the stage of "theory"?
If translated from common vernacular, "just a theory" becomes "just a hypothesis." So "global warming is just a hypothesis!" is rightly ridiculed.
ratcliffja said:Yes, yes it is. It's a widely accepted theory, but it's still just a theory. I happen to believe in evolution, but it really annoys me when people laugh at those who don't.
:lol :lol Only in America (and taliban afghanistan). Ask your junior high science teacher to clarify scientific theory for you....ratcliffja said:Yes, yes it is. It's a widely accepted theory, but it's still just a theory. I happen to believe in evolution, but it really annoys me when people laugh at those who don't.
ratcliffja said:Indeed I do. I won't go into this further, though. I just wanted to have my say, but I don't want to derail this thread. All I'm saying is that all science is open to debate and change, and we generally learn more about our world when we keep an open mind. This goes for both sides of the debate. Again, though, let's end this here. Think of me as you will. We just don't need to go into it in this thread.
ratcliffja said:Yes, yes it is. It's a widely accepted theory, but it's still just a theory. I happen to believe in evolution, but it really annoys me when people laugh at those who don't.
We're practically the laughingstock of the world because of it (and our backwards-ass approach to stem cell research). It's a big contributor to the "stupid American" stereotype that's gotten popular lately.Stumpokapow said:Also, I would note that America is virtually the only developed nation where this conversation would even be possible.
I've never seen anyone in my life that denies evolution.Stumpokapow said:Whether evolution is true or false has absolutely nothing to do with how many people accept it or do not accept it. Even operating on the assumption that it's a crock, it's still not a matter of belief. It's a matter of fact. Evolution either is or it is not true, and it doesn't care how many people on Earth "believe in it".
Also, I would note that America is virtually the only developed nation where this conversation would even be possible. (source). Offline, I've met maybe a handful of people in my life who do not recognize evolution--probably around ten or so at the most.
Yessir!Hitokage said:Ok, evolution discussion stops RIGHT NOW.
Thunder Monkey said:Yessir!
Did you guys see that Rammy poll?
Obama giving McCain a big stick!
Data from Rasmussen Markets gives Obama a 94.9 % chance of winning.
The primary. lolBenjaminBirdie said:
BenjaminBirdie said:
Additionally, 78% of all voters say they could vote for an African-American for President. But, only 56% believe their family, friends and co-workers are willing to do the same.