Do you think that he'll ever get to the point where he declines the nomination ala LBJ?
Do you think that he'll ever get to the point where he declines the nomination ala LBJ?
c_hawkbob wrote:LOL, no. But it'd be sweet if he did, there would actually be a decision to be made.
c_hawkbob wrote:LOL, no. But it'd be sweet if he did,there would actually be a decision to be made.
c_hawkbob wrote:Oh for chrissakes I'm not a lifelong Democrat! I have voted republican in 3 presidential elections, Libertarian once and independent twice. As I have gotten older I have felt myself pushed farther and farther away from the Republican party, but in presidential elections especially I vote for the person, not the party. And I have written all of this right here in this forum, more than once before.
c_hawkbob wrote:Oh for chrissakes I'm not a lifelong Democrat! I have voted republican in 3 presidential elections, Libertarian once and independent twice. As I have gotten older I have felt myself pushed farther and farther away from the Republican party, but in presidential elections especially I vote for the person, not the party. And I have written all of this right here in this forum, more than once before.
c_hawkbob wrote:Oh for chrissakes I'm not a lifelong Democrat! I have voted republican in 3 presidential elections, Libertarian once and independent twice. As I have gotten older I have felt myself pushed farther and farther away from the Republican party, but in presidential elections especially I vote for the person, not the party. And I have written all of this right here in this forum, more than once before.
RiverDog wrote:Sorry, I didn't mean it as a criticism, you just gave me that impression.
My point is that anyone that leans left should not necessarily be hoping that Trump refuses the nomination. Bidens warts suddenly become magnified when not contrasted with Trump's.
chawkbob wrote:... so if you just replace "lifelong" with "registered" you'd be much more accurate.
chawkbob wrote:... so if you just replace "lifelong" with "registered" you'd be much more accurate.
RiverDog wrote:Done. And I don't blame you for getting pissed off at me. I know that I get pissed when someone mischaracterizes me. It wasn't intentional.
obiken wrote:Yup Trump is done, stick a fork in him.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It's so strange to see the differing opinions.
Some think Trump is done.
Others think Biden has no chance.
Aseahawkfan wrote:We'll see in November. I know I wouldn't put money on this election one way or the other. This is going to be the most important VP pick I can recall in history. The Democrats choice of Vice President is more important than it has ever been. The Democrats can't pick some weak, careful, vanilla candidate who can't carry a heavy load this time around. Biden is not up to winning the presidency alone. They need a strong Vice Presidential pick that people feel won't take the country into further chaos or won't be able to support Biden if he goes senile or pushes an extreme leftist agenda that causes even more problems. Maybe the most important Vice Presidential pick in history.
Biden picks a bad Vice President, he is likely to lose. He picks a high quality Vice President, he is likely to win. This is where we're at right now. Even the Vice Presidential pick is of an importance level not seen before.
RiverDog wrote:At least the ones that think Trump is done have some evidence in the form the polls and a very close election in 2016. Those that think he's going to win are basing their assumption more on wishful thinking.
IMO Biden only needs to avoid making a bad pick that would be a distraction. He's already way ahead so he doesn't need them for electoral support. He just needs to avoid putting someone on their that has a track record that Trump can attack, like Elizabeth Warren.
That's why I've been leaning towards Staci Abrams. So long as they do a good job vetting her to make sure that she doesn't have any skeletons in her closet, she doesn't have a legislative track record that could cause a distraction or allow critics to contrast her agenda with that of Bidens.
I-5 wrote:Does anyone think any other past administration would handle a global epidemic with the same level of hubris, scapegoating, gaslighting, denial, and outright lies as this one? I cannot think of a single one of either party that would be this reckless, and the consequences are very real. Back in early June, I was hoping that I could drive across the border to see my family in Seattle, but that now seems like a far off fantasy. I can't believe anyone thinks this president isn't doing any real harm, and that any damage won't last beyond this election cycle. I have friends who actually said that to me about a year ago, but I can't bring myself to talk to them at this point, so I don't even want to hear their excuses. I know they were just happy to get their conservative judges, and they admitted they don't really care about anything else he does. Safe to say, it's hard to consider them friends at this point.
I-5 wrote:I'd like to believe your optimism, but just based on what's happening with one issue, COVID, it's unbelievable to watch the level of denial not just in the president, but in the huge gatherings of people that are driving the numbers higher and higher. Only if the ultimate goal is to lower the population, then maybe it's working. Right now, no one wants to see any americans in their country, Mexico, Canada, Europe, even Asia (where there is currently a second wave, but they actually do contact tracing to mitigate it, along with universal mask wearing). One of our friends in Vancouver posted a photo of a car parked on her street that had California plates, and she was freaking out that someone may be in her area exposing her family to what potential disease. We calmed her down and told here there are multiple legit scenarios why a car with those plates might be on her street, but what's remarkable is the level of mild panic it raised, just because it was an American license plate. Who woulda thunk?
The economy won't be allowed to fail, until it does. Every empire has its day. Why should we be any different?
I-5 wrote:I fully agree things will be better after he's gone. One thing I'm hoping for is new requirements for incoming presidents, like full financial disclosure, if not to the public, then to both parties in the Senate and House, mental (and physical) health exams. Trump never really divested from his companies, it was all lip service.
Yes, the BLM movement has taken root, and appears to have staying power that it never had before....but police brutality has been building up through every modern president regardless of party. If you want to say that Trump's piggishness has accelerated it, then I'll give him 'credit' for that. Not a good reason to have someone as president, though. I haven't forgotten the #metoo movement either.
Maybe one more thing we can 'thank' him for is the complete destruction of the Republican Party. That might be a good thing too if a more centrist party emerges from the rubble. I might even consider being a part of it.
Seems there no nation that can resist eventually becoming dependent on large institutions whether public or private. How do you remain a free people if this is your reality? I don't know.
Seems there no nation that can resist eventually becoming dependent on large institutions whether public or private. How do you remain a free people if this is your reality? I don't know.
NorthHawk wrote:Some are suggesting splitting up some of these large companies who have a virtual monopoly on their products/services and are gobbling up smaller companies
who challenge them fairly often. Would that fix it? Probably not in and of itself, but it might be a start.
c_hawkbob wrote:Campaign reform. Prohibit campaign donations from corporations and special interest groups (PACs and Super PACs). Let the people decide on the merits of the candidates without the millions of dollars worth of misinformation ad campaigns coming from all sides.
c_hawkbob wrote:Campaign reform. Prohibit campaign donations from corporations and special interest groups (PACs and Super PACs). Let the people decide on the merits of the candidates without the millions of dollars worth of misinformation ad campaigns coming from all sides.
c_hawkbob wrote:I said special interest groups, that should be inclusive. Pacs and Superpacs wasn't meant o be the entire list.
c_hawkbob wrote:I said special interest groups, that should be inclusive. Pacs and Superpacs wasn't meant o be the entire list.
RiverDog wrote:OK, just wanted to make sure. So even if a union has written authorization from their membership, they should not be allowed to use union dues they collected, in many if not most mandatory union dues, to contribute to a politician's campaign as they are, at least by your definition, a special interest group. Is that what I am hearing you say?
c_hawkbob wrote:I said special interest groups, that should be inclusive. Pacs and Superpacs wasn't meant o be the entire list.
RiverDog wrote:OK, just wanted to make sure. So even if a union has written authorization from their membership, they should not be allowed to use union dues they collected, in many if not most mandatory union dues, to contribute to a politician's campaign as they are, at least by your definition, a special interest group. Is that what I am hearing you say?
c_hawkbob wrote:Wherever you're going with this it sounds like you've got an agenda. why don't you just say what's on your mind.
trents wrote:A lot of Americans are just too immature to see past the obnoxiousness of Trumps persona to see that his policies have been good for America.
And if Biden wins the election, he won't be leading the nation, his handlers will because Biden is not capable intellectually and cognitively to handle the job. Either way, the age of the two individuals concerns me. IMO, we need younger candidates to vote for who still have some gas in the tank.
But the bigger issue than the man or any of the other personalities involved in the political theater is the disparity between the two party's platforms. And IMO, the Republican party platform is far superior to the Democratic party platform. If you want to slide faster and faster into full blown socialism, if you want more and more government control over your everyday life, more money taken out of your paycheck, further erosion of public morality and more chaos, then vote for dems in November.
RiverDog wrote:Where I am going with this is that there are a number of people, mainly from the Democratic/liberal side of the spectrum, that do not like individuals or corporations donating to political campaigns as most of them tend to favor Republican/conservative causes, yet they are OK with unions financing mostly Democratic/liberal agendas.
I'm delighted that you are not one of those individuals.
RiverDog wrote:Where I am going with this is that there are a number of people, mainly from the Democratic/liberal side of the spectrum, that do not like individuals or corporations donating to political campaigns as most of them tend to favor Republican/conservative causes, yet they are OK with unions financing mostly Democratic/liberal agendas.
I'm delighted that you are not one of those individuals.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Is this true? Corporations tend to fund both parties and lobby both parties. No one likes to pick the wrong horse and end up screwed. So they tend to fund and lobby both parties to always keep their foot in the door. Privately that may be different. Publically corporations seems to play the careful game.
Unions tend to solely fund and vote for Democrats as Republicans are clearly anti-union.
trents wrote:A lot of Americans are just too immature to see past the obnoxiousness of Trumps persona to see that his policies have been good for America.
trents wrote:And if Biden wins the election, he won't be leading the nation, his handlers will because Biden is not capable intellectually and cognitively to handle the job. Either way, the age of the two individuals concerns me. IMO, we need younger candidates to vote for who still have some gas in the tank.
trents wrote:But the bigger issue than the man or any of the other personalities involved in the political theater is the disparity between the two party's platforms. And IMO, the Republican party platform is far superior to the Democratic party platform. If you want to slide faster and faster into full blown socialism, if you want more and more government control over your everyday life, more money taken out of your paycheck, further erosion of public morality and more chaos, then vote for dems in November.
RiverDog wrote:Where I am going with this is that there are a number of people, mainly from the Democratic/liberal side of the spectrum, that do not like individuals or corporations donating to political campaigns as most of them tend to favor Republican/conservative causes, yet they are OK with unions financing mostly Democratic/liberal agendas.
I'm delighted that you are not one of those individuals.
c_hawkbob wrote:I really wish you would stop trying to fit me into one of your preconceived categories based on how you can redirect whatever I actually say. Reality is not that simple.
c_hawkbob wrote:In this case I think in a perfect world only individuals should be allowed to contribute to political campaigns and that those donations should have a very low cap, as low as $10 or $100. All qualified and carefully vetted candidates should get free and equal air time and print media coverage. completely eliminate corporate and special interest group donations and lobbyists.
No I don't have the answers to a bunch questions about details, suffice it to say there would be a lot of work to be done implementing such a system.
RiverDog wrote:I agree, but the problem is that we start bumping up against the 1st amendment of free speech. The Supreme Court has been pretty consistent in the concept that money equals speech. Placing a monetary restriction limits what a person or group can say about a particular candidate or initiative, especially if it is as low as ten bucks. I wholeheartedly agree that there's too much influence of special interest groups in our political process, but like you said, there are no easy answers. I'm not sure how we can regulate it and still stay within the framework of the 1st amendment.
But IMO the much greater threat to our democracy is the gullibility of the American public to believe what they want to believe. We are truly a country of idiots and morons if 30% of us can't find the Pacific Ocean on a world map. I do not believe in one person, one vote as it stands today where all you have to do is prove your age and citizenship. I believe that a voter should demonstrate some degree of competence before being allowed to cast a vote. If an immigrant has to pass what is basically a civics test before they are granted citizenship, then something similar should be administered to a prospective voter before they are allowed to participate in our political process. But of course, that concept runs counter to our Constitution as well.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It's maddening for someone like me who spends a great deal of time consuming information from quality primary or secondary source material, preferably absent an agenda.
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