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Random Politics & Religion #14 |
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Random Politics & Religion #14
If she'd have lost by one electoral college vote, it still would have been the most horrible routing the world has ever seen to the victors, it's all part of the game.
Bismarck.Josiahfk said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » And people are saying it, but they aren't being listened to while the liberals/media are licking their wounds from a horrendous defeat at the hands of the public. The sooner you stop, the sooner you don't sound foolish. Because it's pretty obvious when I say people, I mean political pundits, not the general population. Asura.Kingnobody said: » I did, but you cannot impeach a president outside of office.... An article I posted somewhere here about the concept of impeaching Hillary by a constitionial scholar said so. He was still limiting it to stuff done in office though. Asura.Kingnobody said: » Lakshmi.Flavin said: » Valefor.Omnys said: » Prior to the election, I didn't care which of these fools won but now I'm glad Trump did for one reason. It's forcing liberals to recognize that it's more than the fringe that disagree with them, which is what they were so sure of. Trump is not the candidate we wanted, but we got him, and he is better than the alternative. Better to elect him than it is to have more "PC crap" shoved down our throats. You complain of "PC" crap being shoved down your throats and others complain of other things like religion or other types of shaming being shoved down their throats... jesus its like some people are blind to the fact that this kind of stuff existed before the current "pc" stuff people complain about now... or maybe some of you just agreed with that stuff and didn't care... idk but this ***is annoying... Offline
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This is the best monologue I've heard all year (seriously - a very well articulated rant aimed at neoliberalism)
YouTube Video Placeholder
Garuda.Chanti said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » I did, but you cannot impeach a president outside of office.... An article I posted somewhere here about the concept of impeaching Hillary by a constitionial scholar said so. He was still limiting it to stuff done in office though. At least limit your anger to things he does, not what he or other say. You of all people should know that what a politician says ≠ what a politician does. Bismarck.Josiahfk said: » Blazed1979 said: » This is the best monologue I've heard all year (seriously - a very well articulated rant aimed at neoliberalism) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLG9g7BcjKs So, lamenting on it isn't going to help. Offline
Posts: 13787
Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bloodrose said: » Quite a few of the more liberal posters here have identified the problems - in a nut shell, Hillary managed to sabotage her own campaign. What it boils down to is that it wasn't really Trump vs. Clinton that won Trump the election, it was Political Correctness and Establishment vs. the rest of the nation. It was that people were tired of being looked down upon and called "deplorable" for not agreeing and falling in step with the liberal message. It's been building for years. The "elites" of the political class snubbing their noses towards the rest of the community and nation as a whole, telling us that we are no good for having a different viewpoint that they do. In FFXI terms, it's the very few people who can knock out 5% more damage on parsers snubbing those who are trying to enjoy the game as it is. It's really that simple. And people are saying it, but they aren't being listened to while the liberals/media are licking their wounds from a horrendous defeat at the hands of the public. It wasn't Trump who won this election, it was the voice of the people who won. I said PROBLEMS (plural, yo), and made A list of PROBLEMS. Part of what you describe is *how* she sabotaged her own campaign. Bloodrose said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bloodrose said: » Quite a few of the more liberal posters here have identified the problems - in a nut shell, Hillary managed to sabotage her own campaign. What it boils down to is that it wasn't really Trump vs. Clinton that won Trump the election, it was Political Correctness and Establishment vs. the rest of the nation. It was that people were tired of being looked down upon and called "deplorable" for not agreeing and falling in step with the liberal message. It's been building for years. The "elites" of the political class snubbing their noses towards the rest of the community and nation as a whole, telling us that we are no good for having a different viewpoint that they do. In FFXI terms, it's the very few people who can knock out 5% more damage on parsers snubbing those who are trying to enjoy the game as it is. It's really that simple. And people are saying it, but they aren't being listened to while the liberals/media are licking their wounds from a horrendous defeat at the hands of the public. It wasn't Trump who won this election, it was the voice of the people who won. I said PROBLEMS (plural, yo), and made A list of PROBLEMS. Part of what you describe is *how* she sabotaged her own campaign. I see your list, but it seems like everything you stated can be combined together in the quoted sentence. But the failure of the election to the liberals can be construed in several key articles outlying real, fixable problems with the liberal/democrat party. But none of that's going to happen when you continue down the same, tired, and continuously beaten path that lead them to losing so much of their gains from Obama's first day in office. It's almost like they don't even listen to reason anymore. Offline
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Dude the left on this website CAN'T STAND an opinion that is different than theirs.
I've been suspended for weeks for stating my opinion! I am ANTI-GAY MARRIAGE I am ANTI-FEMINISM YES - I DO BELIEVE MEN AND WOMEN CAN ENJOY EQUAL RIGHTS BUT REMAIN FUNDAMENTALLY AND VASTLY DIFFERENT ON A BIOLOGICAL LEVEL. GENDER ISN'T A *** CHOICE! *** you fascists! It's the Windurstian's fault.
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Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bloodrose said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bloodrose said: » Quite a few of the more liberal posters here have identified the problems - in a nut shell, Hillary managed to sabotage her own campaign. What it boils down to is that it wasn't really Trump vs. Clinton that won Trump the election, it was Political Correctness and Establishment vs. the rest of the nation. It was that people were tired of being looked down upon and called "deplorable" for not agreeing and falling in step with the liberal message. It's been building for years. The "elites" of the political class snubbing their noses towards the rest of the community and nation as a whole, telling us that we are no good for having a different viewpoint that they do. In FFXI terms, it's the very few people who can knock out 5% more damage on parsers snubbing those who are trying to enjoy the game as it is. It's really that simple. And people are saying it, but they aren't being listened to while the liberals/media are licking their wounds from a horrendous defeat at the hands of the public. It wasn't Trump who won this election, it was the voice of the people who won. I said PROBLEMS (plural, yo), and made A list of PROBLEMS. Part of what you describe is *how* she sabotaged her own campaign. I see your list, but it seems like everything you stated can be combined together in the quoted sentence. But the failure of the election to the liberals can be construed in several key articles outlying real, fixable problems with the liberal/democrat party. But none of that's going to happen when you continue down the same, tired, and continuously beaten path that lead them to losing so much of their gains from Obama's first day in office. It's almost like they don't even listen to reason anymore. Blazed1979 said: » *** you fascists! *** you too buddy! Bloodrose said: » A lot of the same issues are found in equal measure, or nearly equal measure in the Republican base. The Republicans have a very rare opportunity to do some real good for this nation. This is (either first or 2nd) time since 1929 that they hold the WH, Congress, (essentially) the courts, the governorships, and the state legislation in most of the US. This is more power than the liberals/democrats had in 2009-2010. We have been handed a blank check. We could either do what the liberals/democrats did in 2010 and sign our future away or we could hold back, do some good for the nation, and see a flourish of long-term power for the Republicans for a good while. It's so real it's scary to think about it. Offline
Posts: 4028
YouTube Video Placeholder Blazed1979 said: » This is the best monologue I've heard all year (seriously - a very well articulated rant aimed at neoliberalism) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLG9g7BcjKs I absolutely love this. I hope more people watched. It's probably not anything that people haven't heard some variant of in the past three days, but it's said with such passion. Offline
Posts: 13787
Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bloodrose said: » A lot of the same issues are found in equal measure, or nearly equal measure in the Republican base. The Republicans have a very rare opportunity to do some real good for this nation. This is (either first or 2nd) time since 1929 that they hold the WH, Congress, (essentially) the courts, the governorships, and the state legislation in most of the US. This is more power than the liberals/democrats had in 2009-2010. We have been handed a blank check. We could either do what the liberals/democrats did in 2010 and sign our future away or we could hold back, do some good for the nation, and see a flourish of long-term power for the Republicans for a good while. It's so real it's scary to think about it. The hardcore partyliners who are apparently too good to take the gracious leanings of seeing what he does with an open mind, wishing to come to Canada, are doing the same thing that the hardcore partyliners of the republicans threatened to do with Obama was elected. Only I think some of them are trying to go through with it. There are a lot of things that the conservative base want to see implemented, but it has to be fiscally sound and responsible. The larger problem is that the party politics is what got in the way of making those things happen. As far as PPACA goes, I don't think it needs to be wiped away entirely, because let's face it - America needed to overhaul it's entire healthcare system. I just think placing it on the go federally all at once was a bad move. it should have been a gradual testing ground, with participation of each state having a say and discussion. And I really doubt it will be removed, too many people who didn't have even basic insurance, and now have it, need it, love it, and are using it as intended. If anything, it'll more than likely be tweaked in areas that are suffering most from overages as the health care system takes on a new shape, and efficiency. Asura.Kingnobody said: » Again, how can you impeach somebody who has never taken office before in his life? Quote: At least limit your anger to things he does, not what he or other say. You of all people should know that what a politician says ≠ what a politician does. Asura.Kingnobody said: » ... The Republicans have a very rare opportunity to do some real good for this nation.... They will do wonderful things for the wealthy. But for the rest of us? Look at Kansas. Bloodrose said: » The hardcore partyliners who are apparently too good to take the gracious leanings of seeing what he does with an open mind, wishing to come to Canada, are doing the same thing that the hardcore partyliners of the republicans threatened to do with Obama was elected. Only I think some of them are trying to go through with it. But for a party who has played legal obstruction many times before (see: Wyoming democrats suing and using "lawfare" tactics on conservative opponents), it will more than likely happen. Except this time, it will be brought out onto the spotlight and a lot more democrats/liberals will be ousted because of it. Bloodrose said: » As far as PPACA goes, I don't think it needs to be wiped away entirely, because let's face it - America needed to overhaul it's entire healthcare system. I just think placing it on the go federally all at once was a bad move. it should have been a gradual testing ground, with participation of each state having a say and discussion. And I really doubt it will be removed, too many people who didn't have even basic insurance, and now have it, need it, love it, and are using it as intended. Those who get subsidies, even 2/3rds subsidies, are still paying nearly 100 bucks a month just to be covered. And those who don't get subsidies at all? A lot of them can't even afford it. And companies who are just barely making it without the very expensive health insurance bill each month? They are going out of business, which leads to more unemployment and compounding the real economic problem. You don't try to solve one problem by making another worse.... Candlejack said: » I wonder if KN realizes that under federal law, a convicted felon cannot hold public office of any kind? I wonder if KN realizes that the crime of rape warrants a felony charge, and there are still rape cases pending against Trump? Essentially, even if Trump is sworn in before the verdicts in any of those cases come down, if there is a single guilty verdict he is instantly impeachable. Proceedings can, and should, start if that happens. Also, I wonder if CJ realizes that these "rape" charges were never brought up until after Trump became nominee. Makes you wonder if these charges are real or not..... Candlejack said: » Bloodrose said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » Bloodrose said: » A lot of the same issues are found in equal measure, or nearly equal measure in the Republican base. The Republicans have a very rare opportunity to do some real good for this nation. This is (either first or 2nd) time since 1929 that they hold the WH, Congress, (essentially) the courts, the governorships, and the state legislation in most of the US. This is more power than the liberals/democrats had in 2009-2010. We have been handed a blank check. We could either do what the liberals/democrats did in 2010 and sign our future away or we could hold back, do some good for the nation, and see a flourish of long-term power for the Republicans for a good while. It's so real it's scary to think about it. The hardcore partyliners who are apparently too good to take the gracious leanings of seeing what he does with an open mind, wishing to come to Canada, are doing the same thing that the hardcore partyliners of the republicans threatened to do with Obama was elected. Only I think some of them are trying to go through with it. There are a lot of things that the conservative base want to see implemented, but it has to be fiscally sound and responsible. The larger problem is that the party politics is what got in the way of making those things happen. As far as PPACA goes, I don't think it needs to be wiped away entirely, because let's face it - America needed to overhaul it's entire healthcare system. I just think placing it on the go federally all at once was a bad move. it should have been a gradual testing ground, with participation of each state having a say and discussion. And I really doubt it will be removed, too many people who didn't have even basic insurance, and now have it, need it, love it, and are using it as intended. If anything, it'll more than likely be tweaked in areas that are suffering most from overages as the health care system takes on a new shape, and efficiency. I call ***. ACA has hurt me a ton. My insurance is $1200 a month for a family of 3 with a $6,000 deductible. When am I going to burn through a $6k deductible unless something major happens? It's no good. I spent about $5k on healthcare last year for regular checkups and scripts. I was way better off before it went into effect I had great coverage before that but obums lies about how I could keep my health plan was *** cause BCBS did away with it because it didnt cover womens health coverage. THERE ARE NO WOMEN ON MY INSURANCE! |
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