He could be doing better. He could also be hopped up on drugs (prescribed or otherwise). Considering his and his administration's histories of lies, distortions, and "alternative facts", there really isn't any way of knowing for sure.He does have a lot more energy
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Well he could be forcibly restrained and have blood taken for analysis.He could be doing better. He could also be hopped up on drugs (prescribed or otherwise). Considering his and his administration's histories of lies, distortions, and "alternative facts", there really isn't any way of knowing for sure.
Huh, I thought they're would be more mental gymnastics involved in justifying the biden allegations. Little disappointing that it's just a lazy "fuck 'em". The onky good rapist's a blue one I guess. Oh well dems and libs go on claiming to be the good guys.
Really amazing how the liberal establishment's support of the Joe Biden campaign has utterly destroyed MeToo.
Alas, there's no position one can take in this particular election that won't end up benefiting a sexual predator somewhere.Huh, I thought they're would be more mental gymnastics involved in justifying the biden allegations. Little disappointing that it's just a lazy "fuck 'em". The onky good rapist's a blue one I guess. Oh well dems and libs go on claiming to be the good guys.
Hey yeah there's definitely an argument to be made for utilitarianism I get that. But I also think it means the dems will never be held accountable for what they do. Now Biden is the acceptable level to be a dem candidate. Do you think in 4 years we'll get a better one? Voting Trump could also be considered a utilitarian position. Twice elect the man that the dems thought could never beat them to show them that they need to have better standards if they want votes.Alas, there's no position one can take in this particular election that won't end up benefiting a sexual predator somewhere.
And I include non-voting or protest-voting in that: as I've argued for quite a long time, abstention and protest-voting still benefits one of the two main candidates. It benefits the one who needs your vote least, whomever that is.
Absolutely.Hey yeah there's definitely an argument to be made for utilitarianism I get that. But I also think it means the dems will never be held accountable for what they do. Now Biden is the acceptable level to be a dem candidate. Do you think in 4 years we'll get a better one? Voting Trump could also be considered a utilitarian position. Twice elect the man that the dems thought could never beat them to show them that they need to have better standards if they want votes.
I mean because if the plan is "you get a dem who isn't a rapist as soon as the republicans nominate someone who respects women and minorities" then we're gonna get a lot of dem rapists.
Again, absolutely. Though, really, there's lots of possible solutions to the US's political situation, just that none of them are actually going to be implemented.I feel a lot of the issues described above could be solved if the US had preferential voting.
Maybe, maybe not. We have it and we just ended up with 2 right wing parties who swore they wouldn't go into government together doubling up to freeze out the most popular party. The leader of the party that got less than 21% of the vote will be our next Taoiseach. The current Taoiseach (they're literally taking turns at it to hold onto power) is the leader of the party who propped up the previous minority government (led by that first guy) through confidence and supply. Trying to figure out the right way to do representative democracy is a waste of time. The system is designed by the people who control the capital in order to protect the people who control capital.I feel a lot of the issues described above could be solved if the US had preferential voting.
(I understand that it doesn't, correct me if I'm wrong.)
Fair point but when are the repubs not doing shady bullshit like gerrymandering or voter suppression?Absolutely.
Though, I disagree with voting in Trump as a utilitarian position, because he's taking away people's ability to vote. Doesn't matter if the Dems really deserve your vote if they can't get it.
When they're not in power.Fair point but when are the repubs not doing shady bullshit like gerrymandering or voter suppression?
When aren't the Democrats?Fair point but when are the repubs not doing shady bullshit like gerrymandering or voter suppression?
Depends on the primaries. It requires a severe attitudinal shift, and then a realignment during a future primary season.Hey yeah there's definitely an argument to be made for utilitarianism I get that. But I also think it means the dems will never be held accountable for what they do. Now Biden is the acceptable level to be a dem candidate. Do you think in 4 years we'll get a better one?
Yeah, I've seen that position touted, and I think it's hogwash. If the further right candidate wins, that doesn't teach the Democrats to shift left. It's just demonstrated that the country has an appetite for going right.Voting Trump could also be considered a utilitarian position. Twice elect the man that the dems thought could never beat them to show them that they need to have better standards if they want votes.
Here's the issue about Redmap.When aren't the Democrats?
Something that a lot of the Never Trumpers forget or gloss over when they talk about how evil the Republicans are, and how the Dems "need" a complete takeover of the government, is that the Democrats are the party of graft, cronyism, and the political machine far more than they are the party of progressivism. The Republicans have just been more competent and united than their opposition for the last few decades (for all the complaints about REDMAP, that's the sort of thing that's in my field, and I'm telling you, anybody could have friggin' done it, the Democrats were just too incompetent to take up basic computer-driven geography). Biden isn't a compromise or a dissapointment, he is the face of the Democrats' business-as-usual.
I'm still voting for him, but it will be bitter, and I'm certainly not just going to vote the Democrat ticket all the way down.
It isn't a matter of " if they are republican they are a rapist, if they are a dem they are not", Not at all. I don't think every single allegation against Trump was true, but I think the credible allegations against Trump are true. It is that Tara's allegation isn't credible. She outright told people repeatedly there was nothing sexual about her complaints against Biden. When no one wanted her story like that and saw that as non news, she changed her story later, and then she changed her story again. The problem with Tara that only one of her stories can be true, so which one did she lie about here? The only story she had that was the same repeatedly and documented as such said there was nothing sexual. There is no way to take what Tara has said and not see that she had to have lied somewhere, so before I am willing to call someone a rapist, I have to at least believe the person who is telling me this happened. I was raped, I do not think that this woman was due to what she herself has said and done. Completely non relate to Tara however, I think it is creepy how he randomly smells girl's hair, that is a weird, creepy quirk he has. That does not make him a rapist however.Huh, I thought they're would be more mental gymnastics involved in justifying the biden allegations. Little disappointing that it's just a lazy "fuck 'em". The onky good rapist's a blue one I guess. Oh well dems and libs go on claiming to be the good guys.
Not at all. Me too isn't impacted by people like Tara, as false allegations like Tara's are a small amount of the actual true rape allegations made. Read the post above for clarification, including the links. We have no reason to actually believe Tara's story due to Tara's story itself and her actions here. Tara herself is not credible and everyone else is telling us it didn't happen, including the people Tara tried to manipulate into lying for her in the first place.
Really amazing how the liberal establishment's support of the Joe Biden campaign has utterly destroyed MeToo.
I feel like that's only true if you look at the results of a single general election in a vacuum and ignore mountains of evidence. If the Democrats are ignoring that they lost votes every general election since 2008, ignore which candidates get the most grassroots support, ignore popular policy, and so on, then they can just look at Trump winning as "the country going right". But they ignore the context for why their voting is depressed at their own peril.Yeah, I've seen that position touted, and I think it's hogwash. If the further right candidate wins, that doesn't teach the Democrats to shift left. It's just demonstrated that the country has an appetite for going right.
Abstention doesn't tell us a damn thing about why people don't vote, so Democrats aren't going to look at all those withheld votes and conclude they would have won them with a left-wing candidate. Abstainers are typically unengaged, less valuable targets.
The right winning an election still does not inherently teach the Democrats to move left. They just assume they're not being centrist enough. Doesn't help that the donor class pays the establishment to think that way.I feel like that's only true if you look at the results of a single general election in a vacuum and ignore mountains of evidence. If the Democrats are ignoring that they lost votes every general election since 2008, ignore which candidates get the most grassroots support, ignore popular policy, and so on, then they can just look at Trump winning as "the country going right". But they ignore the context for why their voting is depressed at their own peril.
Which could also be explicable by a country shifting to the right, if further right-wing candidates continue to win.I feel like that's only true if you look at the results of a single general election in a vacuum and ignore mountains of evidence. If the Democrats are ignoring that they lost votes every general election since 2008 [...]
Grassroots support in terms of an activist base doesn't really translate into a country-wide support or a national willingness to vote for somebody. I'm not saying there's necessarily a disconnect-- I believe Sanders would have commanded quite a lot of support on a national scale (quite possibly more than Biden). But the two don't always go together. Case in point would be Corbyn's tremendously strong, enthusiastic grassroots activist base., ignore which candidates get the most grassroots support [...]
Unfortunately, elections aren't decided on policy alone-- or the country at large doesn't ascribe the same importance to those areas of policy. It's easy to fall into patterns of thought which convince us that if only the parties did what we want them to, they'd win.[...] ignore popular policy, and so on, then they can just look at Trump winning as "the country going right". But they ignore the context for why their voting is depressed at their own peril.
What if their candidates are shifting to the right and losing votes though? That's what happened in 2016 and revealed in 2012, 2012 in particular lost 5 million votes for Obama after his left wing image got trashed as a cover for right wing policy.Which could also be explicable by a country shifting to the right, if further right-wing candidates continue to win.
Meanwhile over here we have the Democrats throwing wrenches into their own primaries. One of the most prominent fuckups is Amy McGrath who the DSCC (Chuck Schumer's group of the DNC) endorsed early and poured funds into making sure she won the primary.Grassroots support in terms of an activist base doesn't really translate into a country-wide support or a national willingness to vote for somebody. I'm not saying there's necessarily a disconnect-- I believe Sanders would have commanded quite a lot of support on a national scale (quite possibly more than Biden). But the two don't always go together. Case in point would be Corbyn's tremendously strong, enthusiastic grassroots activist base.
Well not following policy has caused their voterbase to shrink twice while successfully tricking people into believing you'll work left wing policy got the single largest turnout for a general election ever. And it's taking finance margins of 5 to 1 to win against left wing policy in primaries. I think there is substantial evidence that the Democrats focus on right wing policy to appeal to centrists isn't working.Unfortunately, elections aren't decided on policy alone-- or the country at large doesn't ascribe the same importance to those areas of policy. It's easy to fall into patterns of thought which convince us that if only the parties did what we want them to, they'd win.
Biden is the candidate for one primary issue:When aren't the Democrats?
Something that a lot of the Never Trumpers forget or gloss over when they talk about how evil the Republicans are, and how the Dems "need" a complete takeover of the government, is that the Democrats are the party of graft, cronyism, and the political machine far more than they are the party of progressivism. The Republicans have just been more competent and united than their opposition for the last few decades (for all the complaints about REDMAP, that's the sort of thing that's in my field, and I'm telling you, anybody could have friggin' done it, the Democrats were just too incompetent to take up basic computer-driven geography). Biden isn't a compromise or a dissapointment, he is the face of the Democrats' business-as-usual.
I'm still voting for him, but it will be bitter, and I'm certainly not just going to vote the Democrat ticket all the way down.