Your interpretation of Agema's explanation suggests that Republicans are delusional morons. If it's true that Republican turnout was motivated by 'defund the police', then Republicans are just completely detached from reality.Democrats didn't do poorly based on apathy for their mediocre talking points. They lost because Republicans turned out. Your explanation doesn't make sense. Agema's does.
I remember 2016 when we thought we were going to win that. WILL. NOT. MAKE. THAT. MISTAKE. AGAIN.
It's ok, man. Anger is boiling.Democrats didn't do poorly based on apathy for their mediocre talking points. They lost because Republicans turned out. Your explanation doesn't make sense. Agema's does.
Edit: unrelated side note. I'm enjoying the internet celebrating Steve Bannon's (perfectly reasonable) ban for suggesting beheadings, largely for the irony that the same internet was celebrating the mock guillotine outside the whitehouse a couple months ago. We've had 4 years of people acting like they want to be the French Revolution, one right-wing voice says heads on a pike and the whole world explodes.
Democrats did turn out.No, the reason democrats didn't turn out was cause Biden was the candidate and everyone dislikes him. Out of the republicans who remain, they all like Trump. If Bernie had won the primary a lot more people woulda turned out.
Of course they did, they all voted in the mail before the elections! Don't tell me you think that there was any foul play here... That's a conspiracy!Democrats did turn out.
After losing her statewide election? Seems like a stretch.So apparently one of the big reasons why Georgia is so contested was because of stacy abrahams. She apparently had a big part to play in getting people to vote there
BECAUSE she lost her statewide election that was ran by her opponent who openly flaunted him purging voters.
After losing her statewide election? Seems like a stretch.
The Yale Law School graduate, tax attorney, and former Georgia state representative became a rising star when she ran for governor of her home state in 2018, but she also lost that election to Brian Kemp under a cloud of what appeared to be racially motivated voter suppression. According to an Associated Press investigation on the eve of the election, Kemp, then Georgia’s secretary of state, mass-canceled more than a million voter registrations between 2012 and 2018, and in the run-up to the tight gubernatorial race, froze an estimated 53,000 registrations, a majority of them belonging to African American voters.
When Abrams lost by just shy of 55,000 votes, she told Vogue: “I sat shiva for 10 days. Then I started plotting.”
Abrams had long rejected the oversimplification of her state as solely populated by white conservatives. She’d advocated to turn out and protect the vote in Georgia for years: In 2013, as a member of the state legislature, she created a voter-registration nonprofit called the New Georgia Project, which completed 86,000 new voter applications. But after her 2018 loss, she doubled down and became one of the country’s preeminent voting rights activists, launching the nonprofit Fair Fight to combat voter suppression. Riding the wave of support—celebrity, even—she won during the governor’s race (Oprah and John Legend campaigned for her), Abrams traversed the state, hoping to replicate the electoral feats she achieved in her own bid, in which she tripled Latino, Asian American, and Pacific Islander voter turnout and doubled youth participation in Georgia. As Vogue noted in its profile of Abrams last year: “She inspired 1.2 million Black Democrats in Georgia to vote for her (more than the total number of Democratic gubernatorial voters in 2014)” and “gained the highest percentage of the state’s white Democratic voters in a generation.”
“We didn’t fail,” Abrams told one consortium of voters. “In the state of Georgia, we transformed our electorate.”
That work continued, to triumphant effect, into 2020. Building on the efforts of New Georgia Project and others, Abrams and Fair Fight registered a staggering estimated 800,000 new voters since 2018 and helped squash suppressive policies like “exact match,” which had required registrations to precisely match voters’ licenses down to the hyphen, or else risk being tossed out. Abrams told NPR on November 2: “45% of those new voters are under the age of 30. 49% are people of color. And all 800,000 came on the rolls after November ’18, which means these are voters who weren’t eligible to vote for me but are eligible to participate in this upcoming election.”
Trump didn't cause the pandemic. Without the pandemic, Trump would have won in a landslide. That's not karma, that's genuine misfortune. But I think even a narcissist like Trump would agree that election impacts are the least important downside of a pandemic.Just a random unrelated fact I want to bring up about Georgia. The Corona pandemic killed a total of 8500 people there. People who usually die from Corona are old people. Old people usually vote Republican. About 5000 votes are left to count and Biden will get a majority of those.
Karma's a *****
No. I don't think Trump would agree with that.Trump didn't cause the pandemic. Without the pandemic, Trump would have won in a landslide. That's not karma, that's genuine misfortune. But I think even a narcissist like Trump would agree that election impacts are the least important downside of a pandemic.
the reason I'm saying this is because Trump handled the pandemic horribly. purposely downplayed it's causing much unnecessary death. less people would have died if Trump took this more seriously and now he possibly lost Georgia because of itTrump didn't cause the pandemic. Without the pandemic, Trump would have won in a landslide. That's not karma, that's genuine misfortune. But I think even a narcissist like Trump would agree that election impacts are the least important downside of a pandemic.
No, there's nothing exceptionally different anyone would have done about the pandemic. I know people are stuck on this idea that Trump did terrible and made lots of people die, but that's not true. it's just half the country got stuck in the first two stages of grief.the reason I'm saying this is because Trump handled the pandemic horribly. purposely downplayed it's causing much unnecessary death. less people would have died if Trump took this more seriously and now he possibly lost Georgia because of it
I guess you are doing a good example of denialNo, there's nothing exceptionally different anyone would have done about the pandemic. I know people are stuck on this idea that Trump did terrible and made lots of people die, but that's not true. it's just half the country got stuck in the first two stages of grief.
"Anyone"?No, there's nothing exceptionally different anyone would have done about the pandemic
I've sadly lost two friends in this election. They have both voted for Trump. And I can't have them in my life.Just a random unrelated fact I want to bring up about Georgia. The Corona pandemic killed a total of 8500 people there. People who usually die from Corona are old people. Old people usually vote Republican. About 5000 votes are left to count and Biden will get a majority of those.
Karma's a *****