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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Likewise, no one has postulated that, perhaps, they way that Democrats go about their business, was in any way a proximate cause of the loss of the Senate, House, Presidency, and numerous state legislatures and Governorships. I know not many of you live in deep red states, but the idea of anyone mobilizing voters to hold R's accountable in many areas of the country is laughable. Especially when it comes from people who think that McCain used to be filled with integrity and that he's the one that was punished for such. Isn't that inconsistent with the common agreement that everybody, including the GOP Senators, hates Ted Cruz? Lindsay Graham just got around to apologizing for his killing Cruz on the Senate floor joke. I don't think my Congressman (who sucks, btw) would be persuaded by calls to act any differently. My calls regarding his participation in the GOP failure theater and pointless show votes that don't really matter, but then capitulating on matters of substance seem to have fallen on deaf ears. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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That has been the curious side of this election. I lost respect for Cruz and others I used to respect, and have been increasingly finding myself on the side of those I would have previously designated RINOs (mainly McCain and Graham). That said, this is all still a bit weird for me. Trump is not a Republican and does not really seem to share traditional Republican values. He has an established history of supporting and giving $ to Democrats in far greater numbers. Unfortunately, the GOP owns him now. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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You can call him whatever you want. It matters none. I don't care if at one point he voted for Jimmy Carter. The only thing that matters is what positions he takes as a Presidential candidate and now President Elect. My best understanding of Trump is that he is whoever the people in whatever room he's currently in want him to be. When his whole world was NYC, he pretended he cared about things New Yorkers care about. Now that his "room" consists of the idiots in this country who like him, he is whatever they want him to be. And the people who like him are small-minded Republicans. Therefore he will argue that he's against abortion and take steps to curtail it, he will argue that Obama is not a legitimate President, he will appoint rightwing assholes to every cabinet position, he will embrace Breitbart and other bullshit white supremacist trash, he will destroy healthcare for people because that's what people who adore him want him to do. And that's all that matters. The Republicans you mention who some might have thought had a bit of integrity in the past have exposed themselves as political cowards. They were against him when they thought he'd bring the Party down. Now they suck his tiny dick because they're scared of what his Vienna sausage-like Twitter fingers can do. So, pretend all you want that he isn't a Republican or a conservative or whatever. But you're right. You guys own him now. The small-minded idiots who make up the vast majority of the Republican Party love him. The question now is, based on where your party actually is, are you a Republican? TM |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Over the years, I haven't surrendered my core principles or radically shifted my views on the issues. If anything, I'm more to the left now than ever (and remember, my resume includes the campaigns of Ted Kennedy and Jesse Jackson). But, as I age I put more and more weight in integrity and honesty than ideology. And I can find a lot of Democrats I'd hold up as honest and having integrity, but there are only a very, very small handful of Republicans, most of them not in elected office (like McMullin) I'd give that to. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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The moment that really made it sink in that I while I still consider myself to be a conservative, there is no way I could possibly call myself a Republican was the Access Hollywood video, and how few Rs were willing to condemn Trump's words and conduct. That failure reflected on them and their lack of dignity. I could not in good conscience identify with such cowards. I have thought about it. I had pollsters call, and I identify as conservative, but as independent. I refuse to answer when they try to push it down to a binary choice. In November, I voted for some libertarians for some local offices, and there were some local races in which I did not vote, because I did not see an acceptable option. In TX, you don't formally register as one party, they just ask which primary ballot you want. I will likely still ask for the R ballot, mainly because for statewide races, the Republican primary is effectively the election. Now the list of Rs I'll give money to is pretty short and is limited to people who opposed Trump from beginning to end. Like Ben Sasse and Mike Lee. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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And part of the point of organizing is strategic, not tactical -- it's shaping the narrative of the next two and four years, for the elections that follow. There are good and bad ways to lose. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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I think its working. A couple of them having joined local committees. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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But there are a few very, very important seats where what you say is true. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be amused.
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Also, I don't think Trump won Texas because of Trump. I think he won because of the R. I don't see that much fawning over him down here. Most of the Rs I know who voted for him (including some family members) did so because of party identity. There are almost two Republican parties down here: more traditional (and reasonable) Republicans and Tea Party / Trump types. When the legislature is in session (as sadly, it is now) the dichotomy is pretty clear. And every single reasonable R legislator has told me that there is a constant primary threat against them on the Tea Party side. I don't generally give a shit about why Hillary lost some random guy in Wisconsin or Michigan as I do why the Rs took Texas over 20 years ago and haven't let go. I go through small Texas towns and know that the hardships borne by manufacturing jobs leaving or coal mines shutting down are not at all borne here. I know a shit ton of it has to do with the redistricting in 2004 (and the Ds knew that too, which is why they fled the state to avoid a quorum). But now I think it comes down to Cowboys vs. Giants*. Teams were picked and no matter how bad your $72 million quarterback sucks, you're still going to root for the Texans in their slaughter on Saturday. *I was going to use the Washington team, but that name is repulsive to me. The Cowboys are repulsive to me too, but that has to do with the sides I picked (or was assigned) decades ago. |
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