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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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That is different (maybe only slightly) than focusing on him violating Congress' power of the purse, putting Ukraine in jeopardy, and using YOUR money to extort a political hit piece on an enemy (dems should compare Trump to Nixon, his enemies list, misuse of office for political purposes, and resultant resignation in the face of impeachment as often as possible). |
Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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1. Justification for throwing Trump out, if that seems the safe or advantageous political route; 2. Justification for acquitting Trump, if that seems the safe or advantageous political route. There will be a mix of legal standards used in this stuff because either way these guys go, they have to have looked at it carefully. Also, their lawyers will be involved. |
Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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I think, and I think I'm right about this, however, that coming to each issue subjectively, as opposed to coming at it with a bias, will allow for better quality of decisions, conclusions, and yes, opinions. If you come to a subject with a "belief" about it, that colors your view of it. If you come to it open, your view of it is more accurate. |
Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
Don't overlegalize impeachment.
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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And I don't think people have to become robots to overcome this. We merely need to remind ourselves everything is unique. There are endless scenarios we encounter, and hewing to some core set of "beliefs" can impede our ability to most effectively and cooperatively navigate them. The "bundling" element of our politics, I think, has to go. I think it has a lot to do with this polarization because it compels people to get behind sets of issues rather than address each issue individually. It forms groups aligned against one another. It compels a devil's bargain with each vote, and it stifles innovation. Right now, if climate change were a referendum issue, you might see a Green New Deal. But because climate change has to be bundled into a pile of other issues that split the people who'd vote to address it, it's going to be 85 degrees for the next three weeks in the Northeast, and Greenland is melting. John McCain argued for unbundling cable packages years ago - for allowing an ala carte ordering of channels. We need to dust off his speech there and apply it our politics. This picking sides shit based on "beliefs" and "values" is just creating warring armies of idiots. |
Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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I think what you say about polarization and climate change is not right. There is no progress on climate change because polarization among conservatives have increasingly caused that significant minority of the country to disregard the science of climate change and to oppose the government doing anything about it. In my view, often expressed here, polarization in this country is driven by conservatives, who form their views in reaction to a mainstream that they see as hostile. Again and again, conservatives reject mainstream institutions as biased against them, and create their own crappy, politicized alternatives. The Washington Post begets the Washington Times. Harvard begets Liberty University. CNN begets Fox News. There simply are no left-wing alternative institutions of the sort, which means that liberals are in the mainstream institutions, which means that the conservative rejection of the mainstream institutions has its own vicious cycle feeding it. On the other side of the aisle, the left used to be subordinate to centrists, who favored bipartisan compromise, but since conservatives will no longer do bipartisan compromise, the centrist approach seems futile, which leads to secondary polarization on the left. You are congenitally incapable of faulting conservatives for the way things are without finding equal fault on the left, so you're left to bemoan that our political system doesn't address climate change but unable to see or say that it's conservatives who are blocking progress. |
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Re: Doesn’t Matter Who Wins the K Race; We’re All the Same
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Impeachment Process
When are they going to add Barr to the formal inquiry/investigation? Or will that be separate? Do the Democrats have the balls even though it's obvious Barr is a complete fucking hack with his tongue shoved all the way up Trump's ass?
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