Sigma_Orionis wrote:
Since there's no USSR bogeyman anymore, I think that the US Economic elites think they don't need the rabble anymore. Which, if you ask me, is at best stupid, the rise of communism happened PRECISELY because of that. Now the Elites of the US Right have to deal with a loose cannon like Trump. Hopefully the US left will win and even more hopefully they don't mess up badly enough to make the US right look appealing at least till that side has more reasonable people managing them.
I'd like my unicorn in purple
At this point, it's not clear if Trump can be stopped anytime before November 8th, but liberals should nevertheless be doing everything they can to help his opponents relegate him to the ashcan of history. After all, it's no sure thing that he'll lose in November either. There are lots of ways he could win. An economic downturn could do it. Trump's demagoguery might do it. Some kind of unexpected scandal could do it. He might turn out to be a better general election campaigner than we think. Or Hillary Clinton could just run a bad campaign.
And then there are his comments about his daughter, Ivanka: "[S]he does have a very nice figure. I've said if she wasn't my daughter, perhaps I'd be dating her."
Gullible Jones wrote:@vendic
Hate to say it, but I think you are missing the point of the article. Sanders is beside the point. He could, quite possibly, also turn out unexpectedly weak against Trump.
vendic wrote:.....
The Oz public hated the Liberal party (conservative party, don't even bother asking)......
vendic wrote: Here's the real problem as I see it. The DNC has hedged their bets already that Hillary is going to be the one.
When you prepare to dig in and fight, you want to make sure you have the best chance.
You choose your best weapon, not the one that you've pre-selected before you even knew the enemy, simply because you believe it's her turn.
vendic wrote:If that's the case, then fuck her even more.
They aren't "her" delegates. That's just a huge nail in the coffin for her being establishment.
While I'm at it, many people don't seem to understand why people who supported Bernie won't support Hillary.
They act like they are betraying the Democrats.
Which is pretty ironic considering that the reason they won't vote for Hillary is that they are anti establishment and feel betrayed themselves.
Anyone that then tells them that a vote for Bernie, or no vote, is a vote for Trump will be met with, a fuck you too mentality, I've had enough.
Has anyone noticed that as time passes Bernie gets more votes while Hillary loses. It's because people still don't really know about him. The Clinton campaign is now even trying not to mention him because that provides him with exposure.
The DNC deliberately tried to not expose him by manipulating the debates.
Now the campaign is concentrating on Trump vs Hillary.
Pretty impressive that we've had three states so far that have voted and the shift is to ignore the other candidate and hope that no one notices. This might really bite them on the ass as people might end up feeling they have been manipulated by the party yet again.
geonuc wrote:If y'all want to rant about US election problems, here's some suggested topics:
1). Voter ID laws. A lot of states have passed onerous laws that restrict which IDs are acceptable for voting and some have cut back on places where you can obtain a state ID (drivers license or non-driver ID). Those cutbacks have been largely in rural, minority districts and tend - more than tend - to make it harder for Democrats to vote. The excuse for these laws has been the boogeyman of voter fraud, even though no such significant fraud has ever been shown to happen in modern times anywhere in this country.
2) Voting machines. If you were in this country and of voting age 2000, you know what this means. We still haven't fixed the problems.
3) Advance voting. Another favorite for the GOP shenanigans. Seems that more Democrats vote in advance because more of them have trouble getting off work and traveling to the polling place during designated election hours. So Republican legislatures have cut back on this obviously beneficial public service.
4) Winner take all primary and general election delegates. This is big. Someone could win a state by literally a single vote and yet reap the entire load of delegates. Argues against the whole concept of delegates and for elimination of the electoral college.
I'm sure there are other issues.
Yosh wrote:Based on population distribution of the country in 2015, Presidential candidates would only need to campaign in 14 states in order to reach a little over 200 million citizens. They could basically blow off everywhere else, perhaps except for major urban centers in the remaining states...and not very many of those. What is airily dismissed by the chattering classes as "fly over country" would essentially be disenfranchised from our presidential election process.
I cannot think of anything, short of the downfall of our current method of government, that would have such a damaging social and political effect. It would make the partisan divide we have now look like a garden furrow.
Yosh wrote:Converse of the second scenario is also Grid Lock (i.e., Pubbie owned Legislature with a Dem President)...same as we've been seeing these last few years.
SciFi Chick wrote:Yosh wrote:Converse of the second scenario is also Grid Lock (i.e., Pubbie owned Legislature with a Dem President)...same as we've been seeing these last few years.
Depends. Sanders has a proven track record working with Republicans and Democrats. He's not Black. And he's not Hillary.
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