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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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If you're going to complain about lack of policy solutions, please try to stay on a policy discussion for a few minutes without worrying about the politics. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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More importantly, Not Bob won the K race, and we need a new thread! |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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The massive political problem is that voters resent this, don't see the Left as solving their problems, and have turned to a nativist Right that is more interested in restoring traditional social hierarchies and dumping on out-groups (especially but certainly not only immigrants). The Right is much more interested in zero-sum transfers of wealth and social status than in creating opportunity. A positive message about what government can do can resonate and can defeat this, but the Democrats don't have it right now. One can criticize Hillary for being a bad messenger, but it's not like Bernie, Joe, Martin or anyone else had a great platform that she ignored in the general election. Now, you can say (and you did!) that Obama had a great platform, but didn't have the votes on the Hill to get it passed after 2010. I agree! But that's a big part of the problem. During Obama's time, I thought he was being wise by taking the long view, that voters would reward Democrats for governing well and responsibly. I was wrong! We got Trump and Republican control of government instead. So, saying that the Democrats have great policies isn't appealing if those policies get you two years of positive change, six years of stagnation, and then two/four/??? years of retrograde devolution. I love Obama, but in hindsight it's pretty tempting to say that he got the policies right but the politics wrong. (Could he have built a durable Democratic majority if he'd done things differently? I really don't know.). And if that's the case, maybe the policies weren't quite right -- maybe the policies please you and me but didn't do enough to address the real problems that many voters experience. Obama faced opposition from Republicans, true, but he never found a way to make Republicans pay a political price for that opposition, which is one reason we have Justice Gorsuch instead of Justice Garland. Which is to say, I don't have good answers, but I do think that discussing policy as if it's untethered to politics is, at a high level, possibly part of the problem. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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I'd also suggest that the Bush tax cuts and post-recession austerity have a lot to do with why the yachts are rising and nothing else is. Especially at the state and local level. Teacher and social worker and nurse are good middle class jobs whose wages used to keep up with inflation. |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Hell, you just said a few posts ago that Democrats have done a poor job helping struggling people when you know that they've been killing themselves repairing damage done by Republicans and trying to help those who are being wiped out by market forces. When the people they're trying to help turn to their left and right and see firemen and teachers as the enemies who are making way too much money, it's an uphill battle. And one that is made harder because it's way easier to point and say, "See? Bad! Let's destroy government," than it is to say, "Here's why we should invest in this, that, and the other. Let's build." Pointing at Obama is the former and it perpetuates the ignorance that Republicans thrive on. Quote:
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TM |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Yes, that is hard. And there are many ways to do it, including working from the grass roots to develop the policy. But the alternative of snowing the public on what you can do whether it works or not is a truly lousy approach, even if it is the political low hanging fruit. So there needs to be a debate first about what works, what can get us those jobs. That debate needs to be about more than white male working class men, it needs to be about all people, and acknowledge that the unemployment rate and average income for minorities and women lags very significantly behind that for white men. The Republicans right now are making policy behind closed doors, without committee hearings or public discussions or input. We should do the opposite, but when we do, our focus needs to be on delivering jobs not on winning votes. |
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TM |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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Don't tell me. You think they went for Trump because he is such a devout Christian? |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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But if Obama were white, I don't think Trump gains much traction here. The gains made in 2010 wouldn't be anywhere near as big on the right, which means there would be far fewer gerrymandered Republican districts, the racist outpouring that is the Tea Party vote wouldn't exist. Etc., etc., etc. And I think if Hillary were a man, Trump would have been beaten like a drum. TM |
Re: I used to be disgusted, and now I try to be rediculous
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https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/01/o...imes&smtyp=cur If it makes you feel worse, I think this part of the editorial is as off as much of what you wrote: 'The Obamas are starting a foundation whose work will include “training and elevating a new generation of political leaders in America,” Eric Schultz, an Obama adviser, said in a statement. “President Obama will deliver speeches from time to time. Some of those speeches will be paid, some will be unpaid, and regardless of venue or sponsor, President Obama will be true to his values, his vision, and his record.” But why not elevate a new generation of political leaders and stay true to his values by giving his speech fees to his foundation and other charities focused on those goals?' This supreme focus on what they don't like and the short shrift given to his plans for public service is just irresponsible. TM |
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