RiverDog wrote:I agree, but I do think that every generation has always had these types of complaints about the succeeding generation. I know my dad thought that my generation was infected with a bunch of drug addicted, long haired, dirt foot hippies.
I'm talking about the earlier generation is the one I miss. My grandparents, not my parents. Them stoic, community-minded, church going old folks who fought WW2 and survived The Great Depression. That group. That group was the last to have that American masculinity and toughness that other nations learned couldn't be defeated. The 60s was terrible for this nation's culture and identity. That group tossed out the baby with the bathwater as far as I'm concerned ushering in the drug era. I believe you could show quite clearly that the drug culture we see now started with the 60s drug culture movement. I bet you could also clearly show if we had statistics dating back far enough, it also started the erosion of the family culture of America.
Even the women seemed kinder and more motherly before that 60s generation. They helped take care of each other's children and made cookies for people during the holidays. They made sure their family's came together around the dinner table. Cooking dinner to them wasn't some form of social control or toxic masculinity, it was a way to show love to your family, appreciation, and bring them all together to enjoy time together.
That's the generation I miss. Not my parents, but that World War 2 and earlier generation. I wish we had those values again absent the racism.
The "safe harbor" deadline is Dec. 8th. That's when states that have contested elections have to have settled their issues. It's the deadline that the 2000 election was up against and why SCOTUS stepped in when it did. If all the state's elections have been certified on the 8th, then there is nothing legally that anyone can do about it. The 14th is when the actual vote is taken:
Federal law (3 U.S. Code § 5) frees a state from further challenge if it settles legal disputes and certifies its results at least six days before the Electoral College meeting (Dec. 8th), which occurs this year on Dec. 14.
If the electoral vote was within a couple of electors, then the 14th would be more interesting due to the possibility of a faithless elector(s). But with Biden expected to have a 36-vote lead, the odds of enough faithless electors defecting that it would flip the election is pretty remote. What occurs on the 14th is a mere formality.
I think you have that reversed myself. The "safe harbor" deadline is a formality. The electoral college vote is the final official vote on who is president with the electors expected to do what they have sworn to do. If they do not do this, then problems could arise regardless of the aforementioned deadline. Once everyone sees the electors cast their votes as expected, the whole "Trump might try to launch a coup" or "Trump is looking to install faithless electors" should end.
Any other year none of this would matter and it would all be decided. But this is Trump. I read the left leaning stories talking about "faithless electors" and Trump launching a coup and the Trump faithful believing the electoral collage will save them from a Biden presidency. Once that vote is cast, all the stupid will hopefully, finally stop.
December 14. The left will have one less story to tell about faithless electors and the Trump faithful will finally realize he lost and that nothing barring a real Civil War or military coup will change anything. So that's my date in this stupid time.