guru wrote:Prepare for more Washington gridlock the next four years.
Gridlock, while most people seem to consider it a bad thing, is really an integral part of a system of checks and balances.
WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now closed)Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)
Gridlock, while most people seem to consider it a bad thing, is really an integral part of a system of checks and balances.
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)
Eek don't tell Marlow !!
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)I'm obsessed with Fox news
When they're not avoiding the issue by reporting on Tiger Mums, Chris Wallace's wife's book on chicken or School Nurses, they are making excuses In Fox world he won because of 'the touchy feely thing' and because the 'mainstream media were right in their polling and this led to people to follow the polls' :-S It was also a weak win (tell that to Bush 2000) Oh and it's all Bill Clinton's doing !! they're holding him up as some hero of bipartisanship but Obama 'doesn't have a bipartisanship bone in his body'
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)Fox News, the gift that keep on giving
"They're at it again !! BLACK PANTHERS were turning up at polling stations"
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)All of the other, right-of-Romney candidates would have had a stronger base, of which maybe three voted for Obama, (well, maybe half a percent in states that mattered) and would have lost a significantly larger portion of the independent and cross-over Democrats. Palin would have been (one of) the Democrat's dream opponents. It is true that she would have lost less of the female vote, but not really that much and would have significant losses to more than out-weigh that advantage.
Contrary to the right-wing view, the Republicans did not lose the election because they abandoned their principles, but because of those ideological principles. To wit, note that they lost several senate seats in states where Romney had substantial majorities like Indiana and Missouri.
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)
And GOP still has the majority of governors.
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Yes, because there are a bunch of low-population, relatively rural states in the central plains and the mountain areas. However, as populations grow and composition change these things seem to be changing. Arizona might soon be a swing state, Colorado is and New Mexico has gone a half step past that point. Nevada also went for Obama despite having one of the largest Mormon populations. Eventually Texas will also come into play, if you can grasp the implications of that, at least if the Democrats can come up with an effective immigration policy not hamstrung by labor. As an addendum, the popular vote is now 2,500,000 margin (out of 116,000,000, or 2+%) for Obama and may change by another million due to the location of the remaining votes to be counted. So much for a 'narrow' victory without a popular-vote mandate'.
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On the other hand, had Obama won the presidency and actually lost the popular vote, there might have been a bi-partisan movement to get rid of the electoral college. IMHO, that would be a good thing.
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With the exception of the Israelis and the Pakistanis according to polls.
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I think Romney's problem is that the folks in the middle didn't trust him based on his flip-flopping. No one knew why he stood. If he had campaigned for the last two years like he campaigned in the last two weeks, as the governor of Massachusetts who passed healthcare and supported abortion rights and gay rights, he would have beaten Obama, but then he wouldn't have gotten the nomination.
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I don't think you fully understand the American system. During Obama's first two years in office, he had a filibuster-proof majaority. When LBJ pushed through civil rights, segregationists filibustered until the bitter end, and when push came to shove, LBJ called Richard Russell and had this famous exchange with him:
Russell: You may do that. But by God, it's going to cost you the South and cost you the election. LBJ: If that's the price I've got to pay, I'll pay it gladly. The bottom line is that civil rights was 100 times more contentious than healthcare but LBJ was willing to spend all the polical capital he had and put all his chips in the middle of the table IN AN ELECTION YEAR.
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Chris Christie didn't pull any punches when confronting the Islamophobes.
http://www.loonwatch.com/2011/08/gov-ch ... -mohammad/ Why can't Obama be this assertive when dealing with these nutjobs?
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Not a problem at all. I live 1500 miles away. It's not coming to my neck of the woods any time soon. My take-away from this election is the same as kuha's: the Republican Party is broken and, for the common good, needs radical fixing. America's strength is the 2-party system - conservatives and progressives (liberal is a misidentification). The Reps are moribund in the mid-20th Century, which was a good time, but the national consciousness has been irreversibly raised and there's no putting the genie back in the bottle. I want the Reps to have a viable national platform, but as time goes by and their platform stays stuck in the past, they're just going to lose more and more credibility. I could vote for a TRUE moderate Rep (my choice for the House is one) if s/he had some tether to reality, but Mitt drank the Kool-Aid of the wing-nuts of the party and it cost him the election. While Obama is my choice, I am frustrated with his leadership right now, as I was with Jimmy Carter. It's almost as if he's too good a man to be a good President. On the other hand, Mitt offered me zero of substance. America deserves (needs!) strong positive visionary leadership. In my lifetime, Eisenhower, Kennedy, LBJ, Clinton (and to some degree Obama) did that. FDR was that in spades. The rest . . . not so much.
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Not exactly true. It's not like Joe Lieberman (CT), Ben Nelson (NE) or Blanche Lincoln (AR) who was looking at the demographics in Arkansas were "on board" from the beginning. Add in Bart Stupak and others in the House and Obama presided over a majority of democrats who were not "loyal" to his agenda. (Stupak retired after holding "Obamacare" hostage to make abortion tougher even thouh Hyde was still law). Also, remember that Kennedy passed and they no longer had the votes.
Realistically, yes, but metaphorically no. Healthcare to the fringe is no different than civil rights because they're STILL fighting that war. I read yesterday a theme that I've read several times over the last few years: the belief that President Obama is not legitimate. One woman is quoted as saying that she is "tired of him flying in MY airplane!" Comparing LBJ and Obama and the situations they faced is night and day, imo. One other thing: it is easy to blame the Republicans but I put the blame squarely on Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes. They created a nihilism among republicans that Limbaugh and talk radio could never reach; making the Fox view point legitimate, but woefully inacurate at the most liberal definition of the word acurate. Add in Drudge, Red State and others ... in shorter: the republicans will be under no compulsion to be civil or compromise. Sensible republicans will have to break away from the hate meanstest imposed upon republican candidates.
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I do understand the system but he was trying to be conciliatory as he had run his campaign on that basis. I totally agree in hindsight he should have gone hell for leather but he obviously thought that the Reps might want to act like grown ups !!
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Yes, he flip-flopped a lot, as did the previous losing candidates McCain and Kerry. All three won the primaries in part because they were considered the mainstream candidate, all three kept flip-flopping, all three lost the general election. Maybe there's a pattern there.
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You summed up my sentiments exactly. Amen Marlow!
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Kennedy, may he rest in peace, was given a lot of credit for things he didn't do - it was a benefit of being assassinated (and I don't mean "benefit" that it was good). We now know that he taped everyone's conversations in the White House; he wasn't nearly as strong on Missiles in Cuba; and he MLK and other civil rights leaders were incredibly frustrated by his pace. Again, he wasn't the strong President some make him out to be. My point, I guess, is that all of these men must make compromises because it's the essence of a strong democracy. Obama needs to be cut a little slack (though I agree with jazz and Marlow).
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)I don't know if it means anything, but I think it is interesting that neither Romney nor Ryan carried their own state.
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Well stated. The Repub party is just severely damaged now and desperately needs to reinvent itself. Think about it: We have a 7.9 unemployment rate; something like 55% of the population says the country "is on the wrong track"; and depending on how you measure it, more than 50% of the public claims to "hate" the ACA. The incumbent is a black man with a weird name who perhaps 20% of the population "thinks" is a radical Muslim, business-busting, nation-hating, illegitimate alien. And there are media outlets that enthusiastically feed these pathetic delusions. AND YET, the Repub nominee still fails! If there was ever a "gimme" election, one would have THOUGHT it was this one. These were not "normal" circumstances, and this can't be seen as a "normal" loss. The Repubs are an ill-fitting coalition of plutocrats, honest small businessmen, (rhetorical, at least) budget hawks, military adventurers, Any Randian Libertarians, anti-science folks, nativists, religious fundamentalists, racists (yes), extreme social conservatives, and a few other odds and ends. A good percentage of this amalgamation is either very backward looking or pretty purely ideological. I'm all for a sane and responsible "conservative" party, but we haven't had one in quite a while. And that's a real loss for the country. I'm certainly less disappointed than Marlow with O's performance to date, given the astonshing barriers he had to deal with. But I certainly would like to see a more efficient and effective process in the next 4 years.
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It depends on which principles you're talking about. The GOP candidates in Missuori and Indiana lost because of their social conservative views on abortion. The GOP candidate in Arizona, on the other hand, may be one of the most consistent fiscal conservatives, based on his opposition to earmarks; and he won.
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I am one of those "really disappointed" (more by the Congress than the President, but both), but I fully agree with everything you said above.
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Isn't that inherent in a two party system?
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I don't think folks like Liberman and Nelson were any more recalcitrant than folks like Ross Barnett and George Wallace, who IMO were even more dug-in, but LBJ still broke them. In March 1965, LBJ called Wallace up to the White House for some "recalibration" on the issue of voting rights. Of course Wallace went in with the attitude that nothing LBJ could do would make him back down. However, at the end, Wallace backed down just like all the rest and when he got back to Alabama he told an aide that if LBJ had kept him in the Oval Office any longer he would have had him marching for civil rights.
I agree with there not being a comparison, because Republicans today are only working to overturn a healthcare law through the democratic process, they aren't openly defying the U.S. Constituion and federal laws and court orders. Even their voter suppresion efforts are being done using the tools of democracy, not at by violence the way it was done in in the 1960's. Remember, civil rights often had to be enforced at gunpoint by sending in federal troops and U.S. Marshalls and it wasn't uncommon for entire counties to be put under de facto military occupation to enforce the law.
There may not have been any right-wing media riling up the rejectionists the way FOX News and Limbaugh do today, but it wasn't needed since the segregationist politicians themselves did it themselves in stadiums and convention halls that would make Hitler blush.
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You should have quit while you were pondering...
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Well said. I let my parents and an uncle listen to some of those tapes once it made them nauseous when they got to hear firsthand how weak he was on civil rights, and how willing he was to accomodate the segregationsts in the interest of maintaining/restoring calm.
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Sarah perplexed? Again? Say it ain't so.
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Totally disagree. The electorate is moderate with fringe elements. None of the GOP candidates looked moderate in the primaries, and Sarah would have looked right of them. Romney had to move to the middle (etch-a-sketch) to win. Any Presidential candidate has to! The GOP doesn't get it, yet, but Clinton did and hence the recent Democrat successes. Congress on the other hand can be filled to the brim with whackos.
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That should have happened in 2000 but didn't. Why? Small states love it. You can be a game breaker! Without it the media would focus on the North East, West Coast, Great lakes, and leave out the south and the mid west.
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Four years ago they said that about McCain, four years before that they said it about Kerry, and it keeps not working out too well. Now at least three consecutive elections were lost by the candidate who was more of a flip-flopper than his oppponent. Maybe voters would appreciate some consistency in a candidate's opinions. In terms of strategy, Obama's biggest weakness was the unpopularity of his healthcare law. And Romney was the one candidate who couldn't focus his campaign on that issue, because he did essentially the same back when he was Governor.
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)Now that the election is over, I really hope that Obama will quit treating Benjamin Netanyahu with kid gloves. If ever there was a world leader who needs to be put in his place, it's him. To quote Bill Clinton after his first encounter with Bibi, "Who the fuck does he think he is? Who's the fucking superpower here?"
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_ ... mney_.html
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ABSOLUTELY! He's up for election in about 3 months, it would be wise for Israel to vote him out.
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The problem with the GOP is they either move from right field to the middle or as McCain, Romney from the middle to the right to the left. Kerry never moved much. As to the health care law or stimulus, or bank bail out, or most of Obama's programs they were very poorly sold to the public. In fact what surprises me most about this election is that Obama won while doing a p poor job of selling his position, and that could only be due to Romney being viewed as even vaguer.
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Israel has sold out to the far right and Bibi needs them and they need him. I agree that now that Obama has won he needs to get bolder. Israel for one, Cuba another (end the sanctions), and a bold plan to cut the deficit while keeping the necessary military cuts, a plan to shore up medicare (everybody pays more, rich opt out).
Re: WHAT'S YOUR TAKE ON THE ELECTION? (now open)
Miss Half-Term! The funniest thing here. We all need a laugh...
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