LittleRaven wrote:Exactly. It's a conflict of long-term vs short-term interests. The establishment types were trying to look 20 years down the road with things like immigration reform, but the base just would not have it. Their current strategy is only going to work for a decade or so before their base literally dies out, and what they're doing with that window risks poisoning an entire generation of young people against them.
But the short term pull is just too strong, I guess.
As I said, they're gambling that they can suppress the vote of everyone who isn't their base. So not just stupid and short-sighted, but undemocratic and morally bankrupt.
Yup. What the Republicans did in 2010 should serve as a stark warning to whichever party gets to draw the boundaries in 2020. Sure, gerrymander things enough and you can guarantee huge legislative gains....but at the risk of putting the inmates in charge of the asylum. Choose wisely.
Indeed.
Build a political base on pandering to extremists, and sooner or later, they own you.
You know, before 2016, I would definitely have agreed with you on this. I probably still would, but...given our current President, and talk of Democratic candidates like Oprah and Kanye...doesn't the possibility of Rule by Celebrity concern you at all? (this is kind of a general tangent...I don't think that should actually be a concern when it comes to writing things like primary rules)
I believe that its better to err on the side of more people voting and being politically aware, not less.
In any case, Oprah would make a much better President than the Orange Rapist, and in any case, celebrity candidates is thus far mostly a Right-wing phenomenon.
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Well, sure, I didn't think that had to be explicitly stated. But there's no law that says that have to impeach a President for anything other than a conviction for bribery or treason.
The impeachment provision also references other "high crimes and misdemeanors" IIRC. I don't think they have to list every single one for the intent to be clear.
No, their is, as far as I know, no legal requirement to impeach (though I would argue that their is a moral duty if the evidence is their). But the point still stands that Congressmembers do have duties beyond simply being sock-puppets for whatever the polls say a majority of their constituents want today.
And as to consciences....man, I've been working with politicians for 20 years now. I don't think most of them lose their conscience or anything....but it gets rewired, over time. I worked some people that were, in my mind, trying to do what I would consider horrible things. But as far as I could tell, they honestly, truly believed that what they were doing was for the good of the country. It's amazing what the conscience will permit with sufficient time to build a justification.
Maybe, but it doesn't change the fact that what they're doing is wrong. And its a scary level of rationalization that allows self-styled patriots and Christians to claim that Donald Trump is what's best for the country.
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Oh come on, RR. Did 206 Democratic representatives (including Pelosi) really reduce themselves to mindless, self-serving cowards in 1998? Did Schumer, Snowe and Biden, along with 52 other Senators, really fail in their duty by allowing a criminal President to continue to serve? Or did they do exactly what the country clearly wanted them to do, given the results of the 1998 elections?
You know, as ridiculous and partisan and hypocritical as the Republican investigations of Bill Clinton were... if the evidence could be found that he committed a crime, then he ought to have been impeached.
Let's just say I'm no friend of Bill Clinton's.
But I would also say that any crimes he might have committed, and still more any threat he might have represented to the country and the world as a whole, pale compared to what is alledged against Trump.
And yes, I love 1776 as much as the next man.
Probably a great deal more, actually. Remember this quote?
"These men, no matter how much we may disagree with them, are not ribbon clerks to be ordered about - they are proud, accomplished men, the cream of their colonies. And whether you like them or not, they and the people they represent will be part of this new nation that YOU hope to create. Now, either learn how to live with them, or pack up and go home!"
I've had to remind myself of that quote a lot lately.
You do know that the quote I posted predates
1776 referencing it, I presume?
As to your quote, well...
Bipartisanship is a lovely thing, to a point. But there is a limit. And I would remind you that the disagreement to which that quote in the film refers was
slavery, that the compromises attempted on that issue ultimately failed because the slaver holders themselves
refused any compromise, and that the issue was only resolved by a civil war that killed six or seven hundred thousand Americans, when the slavers attempted to secede and attacked the federal government rather than accept an election that they fairly lost.
The Trumpian Republicans (the contemporary political successors and heirs to the slaveholders of the Confederacy, in some respects), are likewise unwilling to compromise or work with the other side in good faith.
I certainly hope that we will be able to resolve these disagreements without a civil war this time around, but I'm wary of compromise with people who will not compromise or deal with us in good faith.
Why is it always the Left who are told that the burden is on us to "compromise"? Compromise has to go both ways, by definition. "Compromise" with those who have no interest in compromising with us is no compromise at all. It is simply another name for surrender.