It's the 30 percent of Democrats I was asking about. I was hoping you'd have a thoughtful answer. — frank
Found it: labor unions want to keep the benefits they've bargained for. That's the main reason moderate politicians backed off from it. — frank
A good percentage of Americans can't identify the US on a world map. — Xtrix
I suspect that it'll be brokered, — 180 Proof
Found it: labor unions want to keep the benefits they've bargained for. That's the main reason moderate politicians backed off from it. — frank
I think the main reason moderates are against Medicare-for-all is that they believe it's too dangerous. — frank
if Republicans start framing Democrats as Socialists. — frank
I agree with most to your post, but I wasn't being facetious: if you know how the process works, what evidence is there that suggests this is most likely to happen? I realize the DNC doesn't want Bernie, but Bernie will end up with most of the delegates in the end. I have a hard time believing that the DNC is stupid enough, given the delegate numbers, to simply hand it over to Bloomberg. That's a disaster.
You could be right, but I need more. Bloomberg plotting against Sanders we knew from the beginning. — Xtrix
March 4th is my guess: the day after Super Tuesday (unless, of course, she emerges with the most delegates, then Bernie should "clear the way" for her ...) — 180 Proof
Here's some of the problems:Sander’s medicare plan seems pretty similar to what Canada and Australia already have. Why Americans are so hysterically frightened of that baffles me — Wayfarer
Approaching a fantasy and actually living in a fantasy are two very different things. Do you understand that?
— christian2017
I understand what you think that implies, yes. But it's complete nonsense. I'm not arguing that because we never achieve some ideal or some concept of perfection that it's not worth aiming for. I'm arguing that the pursuit of this so-called ideal has been used to justify neoliberal policies, which have devised the country for 40 years and has led to astronomical wealth inequality.
Let's stop pushing for this silly ideal to begin with. — Xtrix
China is a state-run economy. America is also a state-run economy, with some nice words about freedom of choice, free markets, etc. All fantasy. The concentration of wealth and power in this country gets everything they want from the government -- in a large degree they ARE in control of it. But even if you don't agree with that, it's impossible to look at the US and not see that the economy is directed by the government. Forget that China says they're "communist" and the US says it's a "democracy." Neither are true in any sense that matters. — Xtrix
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
What point? You asked meL "Why do you say that?" That's my answer. I go on to argue why, and provide evidence. — 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
I really don't see the relevance of that remark. — Xtrix
What becomes of the medical insurance industry? I suspect most Bernie supporters don't care what happens to those fat cats, but keep in mind the industry employs a lot of people, and there are millions of stockholders (including people with a vested pension plan). . What impact will that have on the economy to lose jobs and household wealth? The collapse of this one sector could have huge impact on the economy as a whole. — Relativist
another four years of Trump could just f*** civilization to the point of no return. — Wayfarer
Can you explain how in your mind another years of Trump could just f*** civilization to the point of no return? — Nobeernolife
If you can't see it, there's no point trying to explain it. — Wayfarer
I do not really really see that, but OK, lets just assume it.He's a threat, because he constantly attacks the legal system and uses the justice department in the pursuit of his own political ends (which are his personal ends, he sees no distinction.) IN addition he treats the Constitution, Congress, the State Department, and many of the other organs of government with obvious contempt. So he's a threat to constitutional democracy and the rule of law. — Wayfarer
OK, so you imagine "hugely damaging consequences for the Western democratic order".If he's voted in for another term, this might end up having hugely damaging consequences for the Western democratic order, at a time when numerous other crises, economic, political and environmental, are reaching a peak. — Wayfarer
It’s not a matter of pride, it’s a matter of not just giving in and letting us be forced out of our home so that some rich asshole can move in here instead (or, more accurately, so some super-rich asshole can buy all the housing stock and rent it out for profit).
In telling me that I should move, you’re saying that almost everybody in the entire state of California, the most populous state in the country and one of the largest, also shouldn’t live in the state that they do
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