Depends on if you define majority or plurality as "most votes". — Nobeernolife
You seem overly worried about homelessness. — Xtrix
If Bernie shows up in Milwaukee with a plurality but not a majority of the votes, then the superdelegates will have their way. — fishfry
Hillary is Humphrey, the centrist beating back the challenge from Bernie in 2016; and Bernie, if he wins, would be McGovern. — fishfry
The state of California generally recognizes that there is a homelessness crisis here... finally, after I’ve been screaming about it for well over a decade, ever since I first had to pay for my own housing, nearly couldn’t (spending a month homeless soon thereafter) despite making a median income already, did the math to figure out how long it would take to get free of that danger entirely, and realized the answer is “possibly never”. I’ve also been watching my elderly mother wavering on the edge of homelessness for years. I’ve been screaming about how can nobody see this doom coming for themselves and why isn’t anybody doing anything about it for all that time, and only now that said doom is actually starting to befall large numbers of people are they finally starting to acknowledge the problem. — Pfhorrest
Shooting for the moon when we cant even get a ride downtown just undermines our ability to get anything done. — frank
An argument that has been given for decades. — Xtrix
Medicare for All is a good idea and has majority support. — Xtrix
An argument that has been given for decades.
— Xtrix
The first American to "give" it was Benjamin Franklin — frank
who edited Jefferson's Declaration of Independence to avoid pissing off the south while they were trying to run a revolt. Do the revolt first, then worry about slavery.
The next famous giver of the argument was Frederick Douglass, who argued that women's rights should be put aside to pursue black citizenship post Civil War.
It's an argument that makes sense and deserves more than "it's old." — frank
MFA is a distraction from the more pressing issue: save Medicare period. — frank
Medicare for All is a good idea and has majority support.
— Xtrix
Sure, but it's not going to happen. — frank
What influence does the political leaning of a state have on the cost of its housing? — Pfhorrest
Why is fiscal conservatism always given a bad name by many (not all) of the liberal elite? I fully understand that many republicans shouldn't be called republicans because they have no intention on embracing a truly free market. — christian2017
The idea of a free market is a fantasy. It doesn't exist and never has. — Xtrix
Why do you say that. I assume you know what a spectrum is. Yes you are right an absolute free market has only ever existed when we had a band of 20 people living 500 miles from another 20 people, so by and large an absolute free market has never existed. Asking our society to move much closer to that end of the spectrum would be the best solution. — christian2017
Towards a fantasy, and one that always justifies eliminating Big Government "interference", always excepting the corporate masters, of course.
I say it because it's nonsense. All the so-called examples of free-market capitalism (including the US) all turn out to be shaped by very heavy state intervention. — Xtrix
Towards a fantasy, and one that always justifies eliminating Big Government "interference", always excepting the corporate masters, of course. — Xtrix
I say it because it's nonsense — Xtrix
All the so-called examples of free-market capitalism (including the US) all turn out to be shaped by very heavy state intervention. — Xtrix
Approaching a fantasy and actually living in a fantasy are two very different things. Do you understand that? — christian2017
In China the government is the corporate master and the government at the same time. In America there is so much red tape that we approach the threshold of being like china. — christian2017
I say it because it's nonsense
— Xtrix
You realize most people who oppose a view on this forum will claim they opposed it because its nonsense. That doesn't prove your point. — christian2017
All the so-called examples of free-market capitalism (including the US) all turn out to be shaped by very heavy state intervention.
— Xtrix
That last sentence i would agree with for the most part, its actually many republicans who are shooting themselves in the foot, they want their taxes lowered but at the same time want to keep certain types of people out of their neighborhoods and they want their counties looking a certain way. These Republicans may as well call themselves Democrats. — christian2017
↪frank Do you mean voters or politicians?
If politicians, because their corporate donors tell them to be, because medicare for all weakens corporate power and threatens many big (medical and insurance) corporations’ profits.
If voters, because those politicians and the media tell them that medicare for all will bankrupt the country and implicitly make them pay taxes through the roof and so bankrupt them, and make them wait in literal lines outside the hospital while dying of cancer instead of... not getting any treatment at all, like they probably do now.
You know, the normal ways that people are made to support things against their or their constituents’ interests. — Pfhorrest
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