Escaraxe, you seem to have a very different perspective on things compared to others in your political group. I'm curious why that is.
Do I, or are you trying to identify me in accordance to political archetypes rather than respond to my opinions as an individual?
On the statement that if we're talking about platforms and electoral strategies, we cannot divorce that from the election? Well, yes; that's not in any way counteracted by whatever nonsense the DNC has come out with. It doesn't even address it.
Then explain how exactly it is "coalition building" for the DNC platform committee to expressly reject at least five election-defining policy positions (the three I mentioned, plus GND and CJ reform), three of which are of existential import, that are supported by between 70-80% of its own voters. Because the way I see it, that is the complete opposite of "coalition building" to fail to represent three-quarters of your own party.
I referred towards social security because that's the topic that's often cited on this forum as evidence of Biden being equivalent to Trump.
It's also one I have taken as a complete wash, social security won't be around by the time I'd be old enough to draw from it regardless who's in office. All it is, is a carrot and stick to bring olds to go to the polls.
You don't want to admit it, but
I am talking about the election. My argument is past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior, Biden is a key architect of the very socioeconomic conditions that allowed Trump to win -- hell,
run -- in the first place, it's the same people making the same mistakes who allowed Trump to win once and expecting different results, and the Democratic party is by and large a completely lost cause. Period.
Because... I'm not disputing that, and never have been. My argument is surrounding electoral choices. And how if you take the balance of his shoddy record, it doesn't come close to matching the sheer monstrousness of the only other option in that choice.
Trump's your average shit tier Republican President, there are approximately two things different about his Presidency: one being he's honest about what he does and that's really why other Republican pundits and politicians are pissed, and for the first time since Bush the media actually reports on the fucked up, monstrous shit our own government does. Frankly, Trump isn't even half as bad as Bush on his
best days.
But I am on the left flank, for crying out loud. Are we really at the point where even trying to analyse the strategic and demographic reasons for failure is seen as evidence of betrayal and disloyalty?!
We are when they're not honest analyses that prop up "right flanks" and run interference for wholesale moral, ethical, organizational, and strategic failures.
Yes, that guy. He's trying to actually accomplish something through the only system through which anything can currently be accomplished; I'd say that decades of actual political experience have given him some appreciation for the fact that it's a more effective method than encouraging people to write-in "revolution" on their ballots.
And again, wish in one hand, shit in the other.
Nope! And you didn't wake up in an alternate dimension in which the 2016 election validates all of your own conclusions through selective description, either.
I guess not blaming Bernie supporters, and inventing elaborate conspiracy theories about the FBI and Russia, is "selective description", now. Because Chuck Schumer sure as fuck didn't have the first idea what we was talking about when he said there were more votes to be gained tacking right to appeal to white suburbanites, than Rust Belt voters.
But necessary context isn't "fucking around". A much more solid and demonstrable statement would be; "cable news viewers are not locked-in Democrats". Most of everything since then has been a protracted tangent from that original false assumption.
That's not my argument. You're pretending it is. My argument is cable news viewers are polarized into locked-in Democratic and Republican blocs. Democratic-leaning viewers are voting Democratic, Republican-leaning viewers are voting Republican. They're not cross-party voters, which is the definition attributed to "moderates" to propagate this fantasy of appealing to the center. They either turn out to vote for the party with which they identify, or they stay home.
That's where Schumer and the Clinton campaign fucked it, they tried to appeal to people who don't vote Democratic and won't vote Democratic, least of all this year. The best Democratic strategists can hope for is for them to
stay home. You tell me, with a 91% approval rating among Republicans, do you think they're going to stay home?