Globalism hasn’t helped the average person to the degree it has benefitted the owner class. It hasn’t helped Joe or Jane Blow at all in the good ol’ USA. — Noah Te Stroete
The Dems need to have a clear plan of how they will make Joe and Jane’s life better, and show that Trump has pulled off a con job.
Doesn’t seem like a fitting analogy to compare this situation to Mandela’s, but have at it. — Noah Te Stroete
That's way too broad a brush stroke. — creativesoul
One can be doing many things when mentioning one's attitude towards what counts as justified aggression. — creativesoul
That's way too broad a brush stroke.
— creativesoul
That’s the issue as I see it. If you don’t, then I don’t know what to say. I live in a small town in Wisconsin. That seems to be the issue here. As you may know, Trump won this state by only a few thousand votes mostly from rural areas with his promise of bringing back “millions and millions” of jobs.
He hasn’t delivered and won’t. That was the con job. — Noah Te Stroete
Yet it's obvious that what is infected is the Republican party. It simply cannot shake the Trump disease.Trump is a symptom. — creativesoul
I don’t think Mandela would appreciate your invoking his example in this situation, however. That’s just my opinion. — Noah Te Stroete
Yet it's obvious that what is infected is the Republican party. It simply cannot shake the Trump disease. — ssu
It was sobering to listen (with your own ears) what US politics has become during the age of Trump. — ssu
Trump is not the problem. — creativesoul
It’s useless for people to keep condemning Trump’s racism. It’s one of the things that got him there - he gives voice to things that nobody is supposed to say, but that clearly enough people believe to keep him in office. Trump’s racist comments should just be completely ignored; as long as they’re news, you’re just playing his game. — Wayfarer
If you don't want Trump reelected, push for a centrist Democrat that will appeal to the working class
— Relativist
This is so fucking funny because the Democrats nominated Clinton who was a centrist and she nevertheless lost, but sure let's just try again for a banal centrist Democrat with no actual ideas other than being anti-Trump. Two of the top polling Democratic candidates are Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, and many of the other candidates have had to mimic their Leftist politics to gain traction because that's exactly where the conversation within the Democratic party has been going towards, and needs to lean into.
The GOP will call literally anyone in the Democratic party a socialist. They will say that the Democratic nominee is calling for open borders regardless of the person's actually border proposals. They will say whatever the fuck they want about the Democratic candidate's policies around healthcare and taxation regardless of the actual content of their proposals. Where have you been in the last ten year? The GOP will lie and lie and lie in order to appeal and rally a segment of voters. Literally a decade ago they said that Obama's ACA would lead to "death panels". So are you kidding me? Who the fuck cares about GOP/Trump supporters and what they think? This sort of hand-wringing is what has helped lead to GOP political power despite being an essentially defeated party back in 2008.
The way to win is to animate the Democratic base is with actual progressive policy proposals on issues people actually care about, such as Climate Change, Income Inequality, Healthcare, and Gun Control (and what's interesting is how different the 2018 voter issues are compared with the 2014 issues here....Climate Change and Healthcare have become top concerns now).
Further, Independents need to be inspired. They weren't inspired by Clinton. Only 42% of Independent voters voted for Clinton vs. 46% who voted Trump. Compare this with Obama's inspirational and progressive campaign in 2008 when he won 52% of the Independent vote vs. McCain's 44%.
What's also funny (read: absurd, tragic, rip my eyeballs out) is that NO ONE is telling the GOP be more moderate in order to appeal to more voters. Trump's strategy in the past two years has been to double down in appealing to the voting bloc that elected him to office, at the expense of alienating his more skeptic voters. Attendants at his rally yesterday yelled "Send Her Back" towards an elected congresswoman who is an American citizen for fuck's sake. This is the only president since national polling came about, who has never achieved over 50% approval. We also just had a HUGE rebuke of Trumpism in the form of the Midterms where Democrats won the biggest seat turnover in Congress since the early 70s. — Maw
Biden didn't run in the last campaign but seems to me most electable. — Wayfarer
NO ONE is telling in either of the two parties to be more moderate. That (being moderate) is seen as a losing strategy.What's also funny (read: absurd, tragic, rip my eyeballs out) is that NO ONE is telling the GOP be more moderate in order to appeal to more voters. — Maw
Trump didn't believe he was going to win and he surely doesn't believe at all that he could enlarge his base. — ssu
Conventional wisdom holds that Trump’s “premeditated racism” is designed to energise his base, often white people without college degrees in the industrial midwest. Douglas sees it differently.
“I don’t think he’s after his base. I think he’s after the moderate who’s not yet comfortable with this conversation
“He is positioning these four women as a socialist movement and he did it with Obama as well. So he is creating this not for his base. His base has decided. This is the centrist that he’s after.” — Andrea Douglas
The way to win is to animate the Democratic base is with actual progressive policy proposals on issues people actually care about, such as Climate Change, Income Inequality, Healthcare, and Gun Control (and what's interesting is how different the 2018 voter issues are compared with the 2014 issues here....Climate Change and Healthcare have become top concerns now). — Maw
NO ONE is telling in either of the two parties to be more moderate. That (being moderate) is seen as a losing strategy. — ssu
There are all sorts of problems. Trump is not one of them. He is a symptom. He is the result. — creativesoul
More of the same is enlarging your base? Interesting.It seems some think that enlarging his base is exactly the point. — Amity
Maw, just look at how the vitriolic discourse has gone and will (in reality) go. To argue about getting the moderates or a democratic candidate getting the Trump voters is theoretically logical, but in real terms I wouldn't be so sure.Except for not one, not two, not three, but at least four, regular NYT Op-Ed columnists written just in the last month or so (and in fact both Bret Stephens and David Brooks had to write immediate follow ups that were just as bad as their originals). Similar articles have been written about in the Washington Post and The Atlantic. — Maw
One of the symptoms of genital Herpes (a notable feature of Trump's alternative Vietnam) are small red blisters that break open and cause sores. They are the result of the disease. Funnily enough, like Trump, they are also ugly, painful, and most definitely a problem. — Baden
One of the symptoms of genital Herpes (a notable feature of Trump's alternative Vietnam) are small red blisters that break open and cause sores. They are the result of the disease. Funnily enough, like Trump, they are also ugly, painful, and most definitely a problem. — Baden
One of the symptoms of genital Herpes (a notable feature of Trump's alternative Vietnam) are small red blisters that break open and cause sores. They are the result of the disease. Funnily enough, like Trump, they are also ugly, painful, and most definitely a problem.
— Baden
Well said. Hopefully that'll shut him up from repeating that silly point ad nauseam. — S
Somewhere, out there, is a playground in need of someone to push the merry go round. — creativesoul
Basically corruption has been made quite legal in the US and Americans are totally OK with it. Just like they are with the most expensive health care system in the World. Corruption has likely increased a bit with Trump.
Or at least with inept players as Trump's son-in-law, the corruption is even more evident and straight forward than with others. What was telling is that Trump was himself so surprised that his "drain the swamp" comment got so much response. Trump supporters simply pin totally ludicrous hopes to the guy and are basically unified about their hatred of the democrats. And since any kind of critical view of the doings of the Trump administration is "pinko-liberal media propaganda", anything will go.
Especially if the country stays out of recession. — ssu
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