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2016/03/16 15:20:24
Subject: Re:The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
It would make him the oldest appointee of the current bunch, but based on pictures he seems to be aging pretty well.
Quick reading seems that he's not a horrible choice. I for one hope that the Senate will play this smartly, and not burn political capital for cheap victories.
Full Frontal Nerdity
2016/03/16 15:36:49
Subject: Re:The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
motyak wrote: So Clinton with 326 to Sanders with 220 so far today, with them both gaining 50% (give or take a few) of the Missouri delegates to come.
So, does that jive with what the Sanders supporters here expected/wanted today? Ahead of the projections? Behind the projections? Where do you sit.
He's certainly done alot better than I would have thought before people started voting. However, it's clear he's not going to win the nomination. I don't know what the right thing to do here for Sanders is. All things being equal, I would like him to stay in and stay on message. But the downside of funding his campaign the way he is, is that he'd be taking "regular" people's money for basically no reason other than getting his message out, which he already has something of podium to do so with his Senate seat.
Now watch him go on to win all the remaining states and prove me wrong.
I don't think you can really compare the coverage he gets as a presidential candidate to that of a member of the Senate.
In the senate he has to compete with a lot more other people vying for attention, giving him less airtime. When it comes down to it, the media is going to run a story about the senator who is calling for a governmental shutdown over the senator calling for free education because the former gets them more ad revenue.
As a presidential candidate, he doesn't have to worry about that. Sure, the media will still cover the idiot with the weird hair but they will also give him some coverage, whereas they would only run a single "Senator says something" story.
Yeah, I agree tha there's no comparison in coverage between a presidential candidate and a sitting senator. So the question in my mind is now that it's becoming more and more certain that Sanders won't be able to beat Clinton, since Sanders has admirably put his money where his mouth is and is totally dependent on small private contributions, what are his contributors getting or their money other than more airtime for Bernie, and is that in and of itself a reason to continue to solicit money from them?
You are paying for a political message you support to be dragged out of the wilderness and put int eh spotlight, thereby moving it onto the stage of relevance and something other candidates have to talk about too. Something about moving the Overton Window? It is a big deal and worth it for people who passionately believe in what Sanders is espousing, because before him their ideas weren't even on the radar.
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2016/03/16 15:50:06
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
djones520 wrote: It would make him the oldest appointee of the current bunch, but based on pictures he seems to be aging pretty well.
Quick reading seems that he's not a horrible choice. I for one hope that the Senate will play this smartly, and not burn political capital for cheap victories.
I had to contact Chuck Grassley today. I got a letter from him this morning... well, it probably wasn't a letter to me personally. Anyway, it was a fundraising letter asking him to "help stay firm against any Obama SCOTUS appointment, so he can defend my second amendment rights". Very irritating, and I am very disappointed by this no-hearings stance. If he doesn't want to vote for an appointee because they think they're too liberal or what have you, well, that's how the game works.
But no hearings, no meetings - that's not how the game works, and I really don't like this stance. Why not just keep doing it for 4 more years if Hillary wins?
So don't worry guys! I wrote a quick email so I guess that's all sorted now.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 15:51:01
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2016/03/16 16:04:53
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
djones520 wrote: It would make him the oldest appointee of the current bunch, but based on pictures he seems to be aging pretty well.
Quick reading seems that he's not a horrible choice. I for one hope that the Senate will play this smartly, and not burn political capital for cheap victories.
I had to contact Chuck Grassley today. I got a letter from him this morning... well, it probably wasn't a letter to me personally. Anyway, it was a fundraising letter asking him to "help stay firm against any Obama SCOTUS appointment, so he can defend my second amendment rights". Very irritating, and I am very disappointed by this no-hearings stance. If he doesn't want to vote for an appointee because they think they're too liberal or what have you, well, that's how the game works.
But no hearings, no meetings - that's not how the game works, and I really don't like this stance. Why not just keep doing it for 4 more years if Hillary wins?
So don't worry guys! I wrote a quick email so I guess that's all sorted now.
@Easy E: Fair enough. I understand your point, I just don't like the idea that there are probably a whole lot of people who will contribute to Sanders thinking their money will help him beat Clinton, which at this point I think it's fair to say is a lost cause.
At this point, I think it would be better for Sanders to admit to his supporters that he's going to lose, and start asking them to eat the chicken even though they can't have the steak.
This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2016/03/16 16:13:31
2016/03/16 16:16:48
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
I don;t think his message has to change too much. Sanders has always said he was going the distance, and his main goal was to change the political conversation. His followers probably know this all ready.
However, I suspect his defeats will hurt his fund-raising, but we will see.
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2016/03/16 16:35:00
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
djones520 wrote: I for one hope that the Senate will play this smartly
That isn't how our Senate does things these days.
Automatically Appended Next Post:
Easy E wrote: His followers probably know this all ready.
Not from what I have seen or read from them. Some might but a bunch of them seem to think he can win. I would prefer him over HRC, but that isn't high bar nor does it really deal with her huge lead, as awful as she is.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 16:36:44
Amidst the mists and coldest frosts he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts.
2016/03/16 16:37:31
Subject: Re:The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
whembly wrote: Yup... very savvy move by Obama to put Pressure on the Senate GOPright afterTrump's Primary win.
I presume that is sarcasm, but actually it might be a very savvy move.
We already know the majority public opinion is that a new Judge needs to get appointed. GOP will spend the next 10 months operating "business as usual" politics to refuse to consider Obama's candidate, thus looking like utter knobs. This makes Trump look all the more attractive to anti-establishment Republican voters, so he gets the nomination. However Trump's support, though solid, is limited. As the election comes closer, more and more soft Republicans will realise what a horrible disaster Trump would be, and in the end they will vote for the Clinton-Sanders ticket to keep him out.
djones520 wrote: It would make him the oldest appointee of the current bunch, but based on pictures he seems to be aging pretty well.
Quick reading seems that he's not a horrible choice. I for one hope that the Senate will play this smartly, and not burn political capital for cheap victories.
I had to contact Chuck Grassley today. I got a letter from him this morning... well, it probably wasn't a letter to me personally. Anyway, it was a fundraising letter asking him to "help stay firm against any Obama SCOTUS appointment, so he can defend my second amendment rights". Very irritating, and I am very disappointed by this no-hearings stance. If he doesn't want to vote for an appointee because they think they're too liberal or what have you, well, that's how the game works.
But no hearings, no meetings - that's not how the game works, and I really don't like this stance. Why not just keep doing it for 4 more years if Hillary wins?
So don't worry guys! I wrote a quick email so I guess that's all sorted now.
Glad you got that sorted.
And based on Garland's past cases on the Appellate Ct... he ain't no friend on the 2nd amendment.
Here's how Trump could win my vote, and probably the vote of a lot of former #NeverTrumps:
Give us a list of 3 or 4 names. Swear on all that's holy in such an absolute manner... that you'll nominate to SCOTUS only names from that list.
If all of them are constitutional conservatives, in the mold of, say, Thomas, I'll vote for him.
Otherwise, I don't know whether I'll order the gak sandwich with mustard, or the gak sandwich with pickles.
That'll what it'll be if it's Trump vs. Clinton.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 16:37:47
Live Ork, Be Ork. or D'Ork!
2016/03/16 16:37:48
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
Not from what I have seen or read from them. Some might but a bunch of them seem to think he can win. I would prefer him over HRC, but that isn't high bar nor does it really deal with her huge lead, as awful as she is.
I don't get how she is winning personally, but of the two, I'd rather it be him as well. He may be crazy, but at least he is honest.
Full Frontal Nerdity
2016/03/16 16:38:43
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
djones520 wrote: It would make him the oldest appointee of the current bunch, but based on pictures he seems to be aging pretty well.
Quick reading seems that he's not a horrible choice. I for one hope that the Senate will play this smartly, and not burn political capital for cheap victories.
I had to contact Chuck Grassley today. I got a letter from him this morning... well, it probably wasn't a letter to me personally. Anyway, it was a fundraising letter asking him to "help stay firm against any Obama SCOTUS appointment, so he can defend my second amendment rights". Very irritating, and I am very disappointed by this no-hearings stance. If he doesn't want to vote for an appointee because they think they're too liberal or what have you, well, that's how the game works.
But no hearings, no meetings - that's not how the game works, and I really don't like this stance. Why not just keep doing it for 4 more years if Hillary wins?
So don't worry guys! I wrote a quick email so I guess that's all sorted now.
Not from what I have seen or read from them. Some might but a bunch of them seem to think he can win. I would prefer him over HRC, but that isn't high bar nor does it really deal with her huge lead, as awful as she is.
I don't get how she is winning personally, but of the two, I'd rather it be him as well. He may be crazy, but at least he is honest.
Sanders has a misguided heart of Gold.
Clinton is an influence peddler...
Trump is an influence buyer...
It's no wonder that Sander is enjoying some support.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 16:40:46
Live Ork, Be Ork. or D'Ork!
2016/03/16 16:46:44
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
Not from what I have seen or read from them. Some might but a bunch of them seem to think he can win. I would prefer him over HRC, but that isn't high bar nor does it really deal with her huge lead, as awful as she is.
I don't get how she is winning personally, but of the two, I'd rather it be him as well. He may be crazy, but at least he is honest.
She basically has the minority vote locked up. Sanders can't penetrate this voting block in any meaningful way. I'm not sure if this is the total story of why Sanders isn't Winning, but it is certainly a big part.
He said he was suspending his campaign during his FL concession speech. It was his best speech of his entire candidacy. Not being flip here, it was a good speech and suggested he could have been a strong general election candidate.
Just watched this. I agree it was a decent speech. After seeing it, you might even allow yourself to forget that it was Rubio who turned the Republican Primary into a literal D-measuring competition.
This message was edited 5 times. Last update was at 2016/03/16 16:59:17
2016/03/16 17:07:00
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
'We' don't create jobs. 'We' create demand. Someone has to pony up the capital to start a business to generate product/services to meet the demand. That business provides/creates the jobs."
You just said "we" create the jobs, contradicting yourself.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 17:07:49
Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh.
2016/03/16 17:07:31
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
Interesting article on some of the reasons behind Trump's success in the polls, specifically relating to which of his policies people support.
Basically, among those republicans polled (I think at the voting stations) between 64-73% of them support the proposed ban on muslims entering the country. In Florida, 60% of those that supported the ban voted for Trump, whilst only 24% that opposed it voted for him.
Kilkrazy wrote: However Trump's support, though solid, is limited. As the election comes closer, more and more soft Republicans will realise what a horrible disaster Trump would be, and in the end they will vote for the Clinton-Sanders ticket to keep him out.
I'd suggest that the idea that Trump has limited support could be on the verge of wishful thinking. If news outlets are to be believed, he is drawing from Republicans, Democrats, and brand new voters.
2016/03/16 17:52:59
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
She basically has the minority vote locked up. Sanders can't penetrate this voting block in any meaningful way. I'm not sure if this is the total story of why Sanders isn't Winning, but it is certainly a big part.
Bernie has had no real traction with minorities or southern voters. She also has a huge advantage in funding.
Just watched this. I agree it was a decent speech. After seeing it, you might even allow yourself to forget that it was Rubio who turned the Republican Primary into a literal D-measuring competition.
One of Rubio's strengths was that he could articulate reasonable positions. Rubio was at his worst when he got in the mud. It cost him dearly.
Oh, and Kasich said no too, so that probably had a huge impact.
So Trump is at 652/1237 with Cruz holding 406 and Rubio potentially putting 169 delegates into play. With Rubio out, I would guess most of those would be voters go Cruz or Kasich in the next round of states. I would also guess Kasich could play spoiler in some of the moderate states. And Trump has struggled some in western states, though his numbers rose, on average, this round. It is looking like Trump is going to struggle to get to 1237 before the convention.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 17:53:38
-James
2016/03/16 18:37:54
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
She basically has the minority vote locked up. Sanders can't penetrate this voting block in any meaningful way. I'm not sure if this is the total story of why Sanders isn't Winning, but it is certainly a big part.
Bernie has had no real traction with minorities or southern voters. She also has a huge advantage in funding.
Just watched this. I agree it was a decent speech. After seeing it, you might even allow yourself to forget that it was Rubio who turned the Republican Primary into a literal D-measuring competition.
One of Rubio's strengths was that he could articulate reasonable positions. Rubio was at his worst when he got in the mud. It cost him dearly.
Oh, and Kasich said no too, so that probably had a huge impact.
So Trump is at 652/1237 with Cruz holding 406 and Rubio potentially putting 169 delegates into play. With Rubio out, I would guess most of those would be voters go Cruz or Kasich in the next round of states. I would also guess Kasich could play spoiler in some of the moderate states. And Trump has struggled some in western states, though his numbers rose, on average, this round. It is looking like Trump is going to struggle to get to 1237 before the convention.
It will be a struggle, but the upcoming primaries are going to be winner take all. Trump needs about 55% of the remaining delegates to get the magic number. With Cruz and Kasich still splitting the anti Trump vote, he could do it with a plurality, not a majority. Also, he is the only one to have cleared a basic rule the GOP has for their nominee: winning a majority of at least 8 primary's delegates. It won't be easy, by any means, but I think last night and the calendar made it easier for him.
Help me, Rhonda. HA!
2016/03/16 18:40:14
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
It will be a struggle, but the upcoming primaries are going to be winner take all. Trump needs about 55% of the remaining delegates to get the magic number. With Cruz and Kasich still splitting the anti Trump vote, he could do it with a plurality, not a majority. Also, he is the only one to have cleared a basic rule the GOP has for their nominee: winning a majority of at least 8 primary's delegates. It won't be easy, by any means, but I think last night and the calendar made it easier for him.
I just want to point out that plurality doesn't matter.
If he can't get to 1237 delegates (50%+1 majority) in the first round, then, everyone get's a mulligan.
Automatically Appended Next Post: Is anyone surprised by this Trump ad?
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/03/16 18:58:53
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2016/03/16 19:00:49
Subject: Re:The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
Thinking of all the jobs opening that would come from building the wall. South and North
ICE is going to plus up being we removed the extra Brigades per division....more jobs
USCIS hiring on Vet's more then Peace Corp
Trump going to find legal loop hole to get the US out of debt...
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2016/03/16 19:02:52
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
It will be a struggle, but the upcoming primaries are going to be winner take all. Trump needs about 55% of the remaining delegates to get the magic number. With Cruz and Kasich still splitting the anti Trump vote, he could do it with a plurality, not a majority. Also, he is the only one to have cleared a basic rule the GOP has for their nominee: winning a majority of at least 8 primary's delegates. It won't be easy, by any means, but I think last night and the calendar made it easier for him.
I just want to point out that plurality doesn't matter.
If he can't get to 1237 delegates (50%+1 majority) in the first round, then, everyone get's a mulligan.
I think you are misunderstanding me here (I could have been more clear, but it wasn't a gaffe ). He can get pluralities in the primaries of winner take all states and still win all of the delegates of those states. Yes, he needs a majority overall, but he can get that with pluralities in individual primaries.
As to your earlier post about what it would take for you to back Trump: really, just a list of Supreme Court nominees? You don't strike me as a one issue voter. What about nearly every other issue on which Trump has graced us with his well developed thoughts? His ideas of ordering American troops to commit war crimes? His nonsensical idea to round up millions of people and send them packing? His pie in the sky notion that somehow he will magically get Mexico to pay for a huuuuge beautiful wall across the southern border? His idea of increasing tariffs of goods coming from China to 45% (regardless of how much that will cost consumers of said products) is fine? His economic plan that the CBO says will increase the deficit by 10 trillion dollars in the next ten years is fine? The very idea of allowing this man to have his short stubby finger on the nuclear button doesn't automatically make you say "no way, no how"?
Edit: made some grammatical fixes and added a few question on trumps ridiculous ideas.
This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at 2016/03/16 19:10:25
Help me, Rhonda. HA!
2016/03/16 19:15:27
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
Automatically Appended Next Post: Is anyone surprised by this Trump ad?
Seems like a dumb move to try and make the argument about foreign policy. This is one of Trumps biggest downsides...no foreign policy experience.
Also, his admiration for Putin is unbecoming a potential US President. It's one thing to get all giddy over the dude in private, but does anyone seriously believe Putin would not use this to his advantage in US-Russia relations?
This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at 2016/03/16 19:35:34
2016/03/16 20:20:02
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
I would have thought that the fact that Drumpf has the emotional maturity of a seven year old would preclude rational voters from considering him.
We were once so close to heaven, St. Peter came out and gave us medals; declaring us "The nicest of the damned".
“Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'”
2016/03/16 20:23:14
Subject: The Political Junkie™ Thread - USA Edition
'We' don't create jobs. 'We' create demand. Someone has to pony up the capital to start a business to generate product/services to meet the demand. That business provides/creates the jobs."
You just said "we" create the jobs, contradicting yourself.
You missed the word don't between we and create.
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