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Re: Oh noes.
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Re: Oh noes.
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Re: Cross-post From the Other FB
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Re: Oh noes.
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Like, on the one hand you're giving us all this "the powerful control everything" and on the other you're trying to pretend that's not always been true. ETA: I was going to write something longer about how the 20th century history was about a steady decline in the influence of the powerful - be they the rich, the clergy or just the white - in favor of the less power - women, people of color, the poor. Which took - the horror - government intervention. Which we then started to roll back around 2000. But whatever. |
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But I am 49 and I feel like this is the most important election I have ever voted in because one candidate has courted, validated, emboldened, and energized dark emotions in our country. Yes, yes, I know that not ALL Trump supporters are misogynistic, xenophobic racists. But a not insignificant portion are, and Trump has, at worst, actively encouraged and, at best, done absolutely nothing to discourage these sentiments and groups. You tend to argue that these issues are distractions because, on their face, these are not pure economic and foreign policy issues, and that is all that is really going to make a difference in the end. But for women, blacks, Mexicans, Muslims, etc., who want to live in a country where they are not persecuted and denigrated because of their gender, race, ethnicity, or religion, these arguments ring hollow. This is what motivates me today. |
Re: Oh noes.
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But it hasn't always been such an overwhelming mix of govt and corporate interests, working together (not in a conspiracy, but along complimentary lines, intentionally and not) driving us toward such a systemized, European style of govt. I don't want to live in a country where deference to the state is expected. Where we all are part of govt controlled wealth and transfer allocation systems. I don't want to live in a crony capitalist banana republic run by either a Head Nanny or a Head Demagogue. The powerful are still there. They're just underground. And they're not overtly trying to control anyone or anything. They're merely gaming the system -- using the govt, often working within in it, to siphon all the power and money to themselves. I understand being appalled by Trump. I am appalled by Trump. But while you're worrying about his gross tendencies and social views, the truly powerful are robbing you blind. They're looking at you, voting emotionally, to provide the the bloc that keeps getting stuffed suits like Hillary or Jeb elected to office. They don't care if a D or an R wins. They just want to keep the status quo chugging along -- to keep the govt that guards their control mechanisms, many of which are regulatory, and statutory, in place. We all feel like we're insulated, like we're doing fine. And it's probably true for the near future. But long term, we're frogs in the tea kettle. By the time we do something meaningful about the capture of our govt, it'll be too late. There's a much bigger inequality out there, and you're not on the winning side, my friend. Not by a fucking long shot. You were offered a choice of puppets. You've been offered a choice of puppets for many years. One good thing about Trump and Hillary? They degraded this sham process so badly it now receives the utter lack of respect it deserves. |
George
Carlin on "The American Dream:"
"Forget the politicians. They are irrelevant. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice. You don't. You have no choice! You have OWNERS! They OWN YOU. They own everything. They own all the important land. They own and control the corporations. They’ve long since bought, and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the state houses, the city halls, they got the judges in their back pockets and they own all the big media companies, so they control just about all of the news and information you get to hear. They got you by the balls. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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TM |
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Re: Cross-post From the Other FB
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1. Her post is about her. Can you read it and process the significance of the message and the emotion she is having without turning the focus on yourself? 2. We need to rid ourselves of the idea that voting is a cathartic, aspirational act meant to bring you a level of satisfaction on every issue you hold dear. It's not. It's a means to an end. It's a pragmatic tool at every level. It's the same as going to the eye doctor from the minute the process starts. This or that. This one or that one. Which is better? One or two? Because this country is made up of many different people with many different opinions based on many different issues which are influenced in ton of different ways, there is no perfect candidate. It's always going to be a choice between imperfect candidates. I have no problem with the desired goal of finding a candidate for whom voting feels like a gentle hug from a baby polar bear, but when you realize that person doesn't exist (or can't get elected because there aren't enough people who value exactly what you value for them to be the nominee), shake it off and vote for the person who (i) shares your views on most issues and (ii) will do the least harm to the most people. You shouldn't sit and pout on the sidelines like a little baby if you don't get your way completely. You shouldn't throw away your vote in some ridiculous message you think is being sent to candidates who aren't paying attention to your insignificant protest. Sometimes things align and you get a candidate that cares about the same things you do almost completely down the line--a candidate who may look like you or who worships like you or who is eloquent when it comes to things you care about. In that case, great! You win. You get both. But voting is about being practical, not satisfying your fragile soul. That's why we consider it a civic duty. TM |
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Searching for light in the darkness of insanity.
I hope tonight is not like Election Night 2000 (although I did enjoy chatting on Yahoo Messenger with tax_hottie about the morons in Florida). Anyway, I think we can all (regardless of political views) mostly agree that I am mainly correct when I say that 2000 was an electoral clusterfuck of the first order.
I also hope it's not like Election Night 2004, our first election on LawTalkers, with all of the hubaballo about Diebold machines and Ohio. I think that was the year of Bilmore's bee-swarm analogy. Sniff. Why, bilmore, why? I very much hope it's not like Election Night 2008, the night that we almost lost fringey for good. I hope she's doing well. Finally, I hope it's not like Election Night 2012 in terms of the bile that came forth by some on Fox (hi, Karl Rove) who were living in a bubble about the projections. I do hope it's like 2012 in that the result was clear and known fairly early. Carry on. |
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
I loathe him because I am the same age as he is. I got drafted, saw combat, and he hired a doctor to get him out of the draft so that other people could go in his stead. And the bastard then said he always wanted a Purple Heart. Calling out John McCain? Making fun of a Gold Star Mother?
I loathe him because he and his father consistently discriminated against some people who had every right to live in his buildings. I loathe him because he defrauded people into contracts and just blatantly stiffed them because he had economic leverage. I loathe him for his contempt of taxpayers who will never earn in a lifetime the amount he spends on himself in a year. I loathe him because he literally denied his own statements. The instances are too numerous to count. I loathe him because his misogyny knows no bounds. And his lizardlike son shares that view, as proven by his emails. I loathe him because he debases everything he touches. He is beneath contempt. I loathe him for his willful ignorance, his race-baiting, and his divisiveness. In a campaign of many months he had one and only one heartfelt, spontaneously superb moment: When he called out Ted Cruz and his disparagement of "New York Values" by referencing the first responders at the World Trade Center. And he couldn't even get that fully straight: Remember those thousands of people cheering the collapse of the towers in New Jersey? I pulled the lever for Hillary notwithstanding her baggage, her greed, and her many other serious flaws. She deserves her low approval ratings, even though she was a pretty good Secretary of State. It wasn't even a close call. Tammy Duckworth for President 2020. |
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