ooofff. awful Freudian slip.UTExan said:
" he's a second father to me and it felt like we just won one of the most phallic victories ever..."
Don't you mean "pyrrhic"?
ooofff. awful Freudian slip.UTExan said:
" he's a second father to me and it felt like we just won one of the most phallic victories ever..."
Don't you mean "pyrrhic"?
my "derangement" comment comes from this.kurt vonnegut said:
I've struggled a little bit with how to respond to the above posts. To be perfectly honest, I'm more than a little caught off guard being called brainwashed and deranged because I think Trump is a bad person. I have a lot of friends and coworkers and family that also voted for Trump, but who tell me that every time he opens his mouth, they want to cry. I recognize that this is a small snapshot of people that voted for Trump, but I didn't think that being adverse to Trump's style and personality was so controversial - even among Conservatives.
There is an initial instinct to create a gigantic list every 'bad' thing he's said or done and ask if we are even talking about the same guy? But, I don't think this accomplishes anything.
Trump Gives $1 Million Matching Grant to United Way of New York CityQuote:
. . . but I cannot find a single redeeming quality about Trump personally.
Good post.c-jags said:my "derangement" comment comes from this.kurt vonnegut said:
I've struggled a little bit with how to respond to the above posts. To be perfectly honest, I'm more than a little caught off guard being called brainwashed and deranged because I think Trump is a bad person. I have a lot of friends and coworkers and family that also voted for Trump, but who tell me that every time he opens his mouth, they want to cry. I recognize that this is a small snapshot of people that voted for Trump, but I didn't think that being adverse to Trump's style and personality was so controversial - even among Conservatives.
There is an initial instinct to create a gigantic list every 'bad' thing he's said or done and ask if we are even talking about the same guy? But, I don't think this accomplishes anything.Trump Gives $1 Million Matching Grant to United Way of New York CityQuote:
. . . but I cannot find a single redeeming quality about Trump personally.
Trump's grants
Trump flies sick kid when airlines refuse
Trump saves farm from foreclosure after suicide
Trump houses Jennifer Hudson after her family's murder
i say derangement in that not being able to find one redeeming quality about somebody personally is just pure hatred. i can't think of anybody i know of that i can't find "one redeeming quality."
maybe you're being hyperbolic, and i would agree with you that her personal misdeeds far outweigh any acts of kindness, but I just don't get "nothing redeeming."
this isn't the poliboard. words matter.
again, i think everything being said here is in good faith, I just think our distaste for the other side makes us ALL a bit hyperbolic
c-jags said:my "derangement" comment comes from this.kurt vonnegut said:
I've struggled a little bit with how to respond to the above posts. To be perfectly honest, I'm more than a little caught off guard being called brainwashed and deranged because I think Trump is a bad person. I have a lot of friends and coworkers and family that also voted for Trump, but who tell me that every time he opens his mouth, they want to cry. I recognize that this is a small snapshot of people that voted for Trump, but I didn't think that being adverse to Trump's style and personality was so controversial - even among Conservatives.
There is an initial instinct to create a gigantic list every 'bad' thing he's said or done and ask if we are even talking about the same guy? But, I don't think this accomplishes anything.Trump Gives $1 Million Matching Grant to United Way of New York CityQuote:
. . . but I cannot find a single redeeming quality about Trump personally.
Trump's grants
Trump flies sick kid when airlines refuse
Trump saves farm from foreclosure after suicide
Trump houses Jennifer Hudson after her family's murder
i say derangement in that not being able to find one redeeming quality about somebody personally is just pure hatred. i can't think of anybody i know of that i can't find "one redeeming quality."
maybe you're being hyperbolic, and i would agree with you that his personal misdeeds far outweigh any acts of kindness, but I just don't get "nothing redeeming."
this isn't the poliboard. words matter.
again, i think everything being said here is in good faith, I just think our distaste for the other side makes us ALL a bit hyperbolic
dermdoc said:I remember the days of Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neil. Very different views but were gentlemen and civil. Voters are going to follow their leaders' behavior.kurt vonnegut said:
What form of reconciliation, exactly, are you looking for? What does it look like? I don't want to put words in your mouth, but it looks like your version of 'peace and reconciliation' is the libs admitting they are wrong and you are right.
And although I disagree with Clinton on some things, he could appease both sides in a civil manner, I believe there was a big decline in civil behavior with the Bush contested win over Gore.
The biggest problem is lack of common sense and critical thinking. And humility in understanding you represent the entire country. I honestly believe most Americans are more alike than they think.
Quote:
Not talking about Kurt but libs completely lack self awareness as to how they are perceived by non libs. It never changes. They simply do not get it.
And until that changes, we will never be united.
Bannon: Folks, if we had lost on Tuesday, Donald Trump was going to spend the rest of his life in federal prison—10 or 20 years, to die in prison. That was the stakes. Didn’t quite work out, did it, folks? Didn’t quite work out. pic.twitter.com/neWYBFYI1V
— Bannon’s WarRoom (@Bannons_WarRoom) November 7, 2024
Funny that you think I don't vote conservative. This is almost exactly what I'm talking about. People assume that criticizing Trump and those that fawn over him must not be conservative. They can't comprehend that a person can both support the Republican ticket and believe he is not a man of good character to be admired and the only other option is supporting the left.Silent For Too Long said:
I don't think anyone votes for anything "thinking that makes them a good Christian." In fact, Christians are famously bad at getting out the vote.
However our Christ centered worldview should guide ALL of our decisions.
You are simply gaslighting trying to convince anyone the anti theist party of baby murder and child grooming is what a wise and well read Christian should support.
People are flawed and easily manipulated, so of course voting patterns are no more disqualifying of faith then any other decision. But facts are facts. Everyday I read my Bible and it's pretty obvious which party has been more corrupted by The Father of Lies.
I simply refuse to back down to your both sidesism. It's factually misguided.
I agree with you. Both sides are guilty of horrible rhetoric. And cause much division.kurt vonnegut said:dermdoc said:I remember the days of Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neil. Very different views but were gentlemen and civil. Voters are going to follow their leaders' behavior.kurt vonnegut said:
What form of reconciliation, exactly, are you looking for? What does it look like? I don't want to put words in your mouth, but it looks like your version of 'peace and reconciliation' is the libs admitting they are wrong and you are right.
And although I disagree with Clinton on some things, he could appease both sides in a civil manner, I believe there was a big decline in civil behavior with the Bush contested win over Gore.
The biggest problem is lack of common sense and critical thinking. And humility in understanding you represent the entire country. I honestly believe most Americans are more alike than they think.
I very much agree that we've lost our civility. My concern was this post:Quote:
Not talking about Kurt but libs completely lack self awareness as to how they are perceived by non libs. It never changes. They simply do not get it.
And until that changes, we will never be united.
How am I supposed to read this? Pretend I made this exact comment about Republicans. You'd think I was mad, or nuts, or something.
The problem I have with the quote above is that it puts all of the blame for our current political uncivility onto liberals and puts the full responsibility of fixing it on them.
How else am I to perceive your quote?
Surely, you would agree with me that there is plenty of uncivil behavior from the conservative side. I don't think you need me to start throwing out Trump quotes and asking you if you think they are civil. But, I can.
It we are going to unite, we ALL need to change. We have to all accept the personal responsibility of our actions and we have to all accept responsibility for standing up to the leaders we vote for.
Blaming it all on the other side is exactly counter productive to fostering the civility that you miss. And you can say that you don't mean to blame it all on one side. . . . but you kinda just did.
I am curious, though, about this idea that all Dems are arrogant and elitist and hate us Christians on the right. Granted, I'm from and live in Texas, so I have almost zero experience with experiencing that kind of treatment from anyone that voting Democrat and I honestly don't follow enough left media to hear or see that. Not saying it isn't there, I'm sure it is, but I have a few close friends and family that don't resemble any of that. So I have to believe its a much much smaller progressive faction that perhaps controls the Dem party and campaign that are expressing this.dermdoc said:For me it is not. For a lot of people it is.kurt vonnegut said:dermdoc said:
I agree with you. I believe the dems really hurt themselves and shielded Trump by using the media and left wing celebrities to endorse Harris and deride Trump. Came across as very elitist and almost you are dumb if you support Trump. The dems did not identify with normal Americans in my opinion.
They ran an arrogant, elitist campaign and it hurt them just like in 2016. Instead of yelling stupid, racist, xenophobe, etc. maybe try to talk to people?
Didn't you just say this wasn't a personality contest?
Dems completely turn off half the country with their arrogance and elitism. And they completely lack self awareness as they obviously do not how they are perceived. They, like Trump, are their own worst enemies.
The difference is that I think Trump is fully aware of what he is doing and is using it to his advantage. The dems really believe they are smarter and better than everybody else and can not understand how the unwashed masses do not understand that. Completely clueless due to their own pride.
When I talk about the "dems", I am talking about their leaders. To me, they continue to show a complete lack of understanding of everyday Americans. And as I stated earlier, I think Trump is a narcissistic jerk. And his rhetoric can be very divisive. But he communicates and gets what I believe are the "normal" Americans.BluHorseShu said:I am curious, though, about this idea that all Dems are arrogant and elitist and hate us Christians on the right. Granted, I'm from and live in Texas, so I have almost zero experience with experiencing that kind of treatment from anyone that voting Democrat and I honestly don't follow enough left media to hear or see that. Not saying it isn't there, I'm sure it is, but I have a few close friends and family that don't resemble any of that. So I have to believe its a much much smaller progressive faction that perhaps controls the Dem party and campaign that are expressing this.dermdoc said:For me it is not. For a lot of people it is.kurt vonnegut said:dermdoc said:
I agree with you. I believe the dems really hurt themselves and shielded Trump by using the media and left wing celebrities to endorse Harris and deride Trump. Came across as very elitist and almost you are dumb if you support Trump. The dems did not identify with normal Americans in my opinion.
They ran an arrogant, elitist campaign and it hurt them just like in 2016. Instead of yelling stupid, racist, xenophobe, etc. maybe try to talk to people?
Didn't you just say this wasn't a personality contest?
Dems completely turn off half the country with their arrogance and elitism. And they completely lack self awareness as they obviously do not how they are perceived. They, like Trump, are their own worst enemies.
The difference is that I think Trump is fully aware of what he is doing and is using it to his advantage. The dems really believe they are smarter and better than everybody else and can not understand how the unwashed masses do not understand that. Completely clueless due to their own pride.
Certainly the problem the Dems had was that they let the progressives pull them way to far left. That's what I think has hurt them the most. The working class weren't going to go along with that. But to assume we can brush an entire voting group as monolithic is naive.
I'll concede, though, that maybe if I lived in a much larger left leaning area, maybe I would experience it.
One last thing about Trump....He had so many opportunities to simply change what people call TDS. He could have admonished those on Jan 6, he could have refrained from demeaning people, and most importantly, when the reporter asked him 'Have you ever asked God for forgiveness for your actions' and he said '"I am not sure I have. I just go on and try to do a better job from there. I don't think so," he said. "I think if I do something wrong, I think, I just try and make it right. I don't bring God into that picture. I don't." That last one said a great deal about the man for me. People can spin that all day long and claim "well Jesus forgave our sins"...that's a cop out because that's not the question and we are all called to repent. You can't keep sinning and just work it out on your own and assume Jesus is cool with it. The degree of respect he could have garnered by just saying, "absolutely I've asked for forgiveness and that's all I have to say about it" would have been incredible.
So we're cool with calling someone a Communist B*#ch ? And lets not forget the victimhood many on the right tried to invoke by claiming they were going to be made to wear 'yellow starts' like the Jews during the holocaust. What's ironic is either side claiming the high ground on the demeaning language used the past couple of years.nortex97 said:
There is just a tad bit of irony in the 'let's just unify now and be civil' argument from the left after they quite literally campaigned on 'the other guy is Hitler/nazi/racist/hates Puerto Rico' a week ago as their closing argument (and repeated 'very fine people' lies), also after threatening to imprison the conservative candidate for life if he lost.Bannon: Folks, if we had lost on Tuesday, Donald Trump was going to spend the rest of his life in federal prison—10 or 20 years, to die in prison. That was the stakes. Didn’t quite work out, did it, folks? Didn’t quite work out. pic.twitter.com/neWYBFYI1V
— Bannon’s WarRoom (@Bannons_WarRoom) November 7, 2024
Other than LGBT issues, in what ways are Democrats today more liberal than they were 10, 20, 30, or 40 years ago? Support for marijuana legalization, I guess? But support for that isn't just the far left. On just about everything else, Democrats have stayed about the same or moved towards the center.Quote:
Certainly the problem the Dems had was that they let the progressives pull them way to far left. That's what I think has hurt them the most.
Agree 100%. And I think thats a big reason they lost. The economy and the big progressive pull further left has cost the Dems many voters. The infighting among them to blame each other has already begun toodermdoc said:When I talk about the "dems", I am talking about their leaders. To me, they continue to show a complete lack of understanding of everyday Americans. And as I stated earlier, I think Trump is a narcissistic jerk. And his rhetoric can be very divisive. But he communicates and gets what I believe are the "normal" Americans.BluHorseShu said:I am curious, though, about this idea that all Dems are arrogant and elitist and hate us Christians on the right. Granted, I'm from and live in Texas, so I have almost zero experience with experiencing that kind of treatment from anyone that voting Democrat and I honestly don't follow enough left media to hear or see that. Not saying it isn't there, I'm sure it is, but I have a few close friends and family that don't resemble any of that. So I have to believe its a much much smaller progressive faction that perhaps controls the Dem party and campaign that are expressing this.dermdoc said:For me it is not. For a lot of people it is.kurt vonnegut said:dermdoc said:
I agree with you. I believe the dems really hurt themselves and shielded Trump by using the media and left wing celebrities to endorse Harris and deride Trump. Came across as very elitist and almost you are dumb if you support Trump. The dems did not identify with normal Americans in my opinion.
They ran an arrogant, elitist campaign and it hurt them just like in 2016. Instead of yelling stupid, racist, xenophobe, etc. maybe try to talk to people?
Didn't you just say this wasn't a personality contest?
Dems completely turn off half the country with their arrogance and elitism. And they completely lack self awareness as they obviously do not how they are perceived. They, like Trump, are their own worst enemies.
The difference is that I think Trump is fully aware of what he is doing and is using it to his advantage. The dems really believe they are smarter and better than everybody else and can not understand how the unwashed masses do not understand that. Completely clueless due to their own pride.
Certainly the problem the Dems had was that they let the progressives pull them way to far left. That's what I think has hurt them the most. The working class weren't going to go along with that. But to assume we can brush an entire voting group as monolithic is naive.
I'll concede, though, that maybe if I lived in a much larger left leaning area, maybe I would experience it.
One last thing about Trump....He had so many opportunities to simply change what people call TDS. He could have admonished those on Jan 6, he could have refrained from demeaning people, and most importantly, when the reporter asked him 'Have you ever asked God for forgiveness for your actions' and he said '"I am not sure I have. I just go on and try to do a better job from there. I don't think so," he said. "I think if I do something wrong, I think, I just try and make it right. I don't bring God into that picture. I don't." That last one said a great deal about the man for me. People can spin that all day long and claim "well Jesus forgave our sins"...that's a cop out because that's not the question and we are all called to repent. You can't keep sinning and just work it out on your own and assume Jesus is cool with it. The degree of respect he could have garnered by just saying, "absolutely I've asked for forgiveness and that's all I have to say about it" would have been incredible.
For people who seem to think they are the smartest people in the room, they seem very ignorant about basic human nature.
True or not, my perspective is that LGBT issues and DEI have been progressively pushed downed peoples throats and considered more extreme. Expanding out from those things are events like Me Too movement and all of these have been perceived as attacks on men, Christians, etc. Certainly the internet has exacerbated things by allowing anecdotal incidents, like drag shows etc, to be front and center but most Americans do not want to be guilted into living their lives a certain way or made to feel threatened. And then when the economy sucks and the working class are also made up of those who historically voted Dem but are now feeling like they may lose a job to meet a diversity quota or be forced to call people by changing pronouns, then they don't feel part of the same party they once did.Rocag said:Other than LGBT issues, in what ways are Democrats today more liberal than they were 10, 20, 30, or 40 years ago? Support for marijuana legalization, I guess? But support for that isn't just the far left. On just about everything else, Democrats have stayed about the same or moved towards the center.Quote:
Certainly the problem the Dems had was that they let the progressives pull them way to far left. That's what I think has hurt them the most.
Rocag said:
You kind of just proved my point. I asked for anything other than LGBT issues and almost all of what you want to point to is LGBT issues. I'll certainly admit a more permissive shift on that subject over the past several decades on that issue, but that's one topic.
And is the modern DEI hysteria anything but a new face on the panic about affirmative action? I'm not seeing a shift on the position of the left here. We've been arguing about this subject for decades.
Regarding immigration, I'd argue that here the movement has been from the Republicans. It was Reagan who passed the Immigration Reform and Control Act which granted amnesty to millions of people. The Democrats could never get something that "liberal" passed today. Even George W Bush's proposed immigration reforms would be considered liberal by today's Republicans.
Agree.AGC said:Rocag said:
You kind of just proved my point. I asked for anything other than LGBT issues and almost all of what you want to point to is LGBT issues. I'll certainly admit a more permissive shift on that subject over the past several decades on that issue, but that's one topic.
And is the modern DEI hysteria anything but a new face on the panic about affirmative action? I'm not seeing a shift on the position of the left here. We've been arguing about this subject for decades.
Regarding immigration, I'd argue that here the movement has been from the Republicans. It was Reagan who passed the Immigration Reform and Control Act which granted amnesty to millions of people. The Democrats could never get something that "liberal" passed today. Even George W Bush's proposed immigration reforms would be considered liberal by today's Republicans.
This is disingenuous and anachronistic. LGBTQ issues are driving educational reforms, religious realignment, military hiring and decisions, corporate policy, healthcare, etc. So are DEI initiatives, and no, they're not the same as affirmative action. It's massive social engineering hollowing out institutions for that sole purpose. That's what makes your argument lacking - if these were simple one off policies instead of massive worldview shifts associated with personal identity, you might have ground to stand out, but they're not. Many of the terms and ideas used, such as privilege and intersectionality, were not around or shared by the party at that time in a meaningful way to conflate with today.
Cesar Chavez wouldn't be handing out vouchers or welcoming these immigrants.
Edit: totally left out the anti-globalist / free trade protests, anti-endless war sentiment. How much do you remember about that party?
Rongagin71 said:
nm
Quote:
Back then, what seemed to be coalescing around me was a kind of post-Marxist anti-capitalism. It was a political melting-pot of anarchism, localism, indigenous perspectives, radical environmentalism, liberal commitments to democracy and various other strands, all of it uncoordinated and fervently anti-hierarchical. It was a mess, but it was an exciting mess. There was an optimistic energy about it. And though a lot of people involved, including me, were allergic to labels and boxes, there was no doubt that this was a movement of the left. You wouldn't see any conservatives on the barricades at the anti-WTO protests. Most of them were either inside hymning the virtues of 'free' trade, or over in Washington or London ginning up the next Middle East war.
How times have changed. Here in the early 2020s, the most incisive opponents of corporate globalisation can often be found on the right; or at least, not from any identifiable sector of the left. Conservative and 'post-liberal' critiques of the impact of globalisation on local communities, nation states, social cohesion, family formation, working class prospects, culture and even (though not often enough) the natural world are pouring out daily. The post-working class left, meanwhile, has veered into an identity politics cul-de-sac, dictated largely by its commitment to the elite class war and the associated culture of inversion that I wrote about in my last two essays. And because this 'progressive' left, which dominates the elite strata of Western countries, is drawn from the beneficiary class of globalisation, it is overwhelmingly supportive of the process.
The left anti-globalism that I once thought was the movement of the future is today barely in evidence anywhere. When it does rear its head its proponents stand a good chance of being labelled 'red-brown' crypto-fascists by an online mob of supposed radicals which cheers on government vaccine mandates, Big Tech censorship, the freezing of protestors' bank accounts, and the demonisation of the problematic working classes of their own nation.
As for NAFTA: the treaty that drew the Zapatistas' ire as a symbol of all that was wrong with the imperial project of corporate globalisation was eventually torn up, not by indigenous guerrilleros or a socialist Mexican government, but by a reality TV star-turned Republican US president, who believed that globalisation was a con-job which empowered transnational capital at the expense of nations and their people. Whatever else he may have been wrong about, he was right about that. Unfortunately, the left were too busy calling him a Nazi to notice the irony.
Rocag said:
The primary goal of affirmative action was to address discrimination in education and employment. DEI initiatives do the same thing with the only difference being that we now recognize that discrimination often happens based on things other than race and gender. And I'm not just talking about sexual orientation here either as things like preventing discrimination based on physical disabilities is a big part of it.
I don't have much sympathy for the argument that not being able to discriminate against someone is inconvenient and forcing us to make a lot of changes in the way things work. A couple of generations back people used similar arguments to the ones found in your post to protest desegregation efforts. They complained that desegregated military units would be less effective. The complained loudly about the affect it would have on education. The clutched their pearls in horror thinking about the sexual immorality of interracial marriage. Sounds like a "massive social engineering" effort to me.
I also take issue with the claim that the "sole purpose" of opposing discrimination is to hollow out institutions. We're never going to be able to have civil conversations if you keep ascribing nefarious motives to your political opponents without good cause. It's the equivalent of me opening a debate on gun control by saying the only reason people oppose it is because they want more school shootings. Do you think any real exchange of ideas is going to happen after that?
Rocag said:
That's absolutely the intent. Now I am sympathetic to the argument that in many cases the way those policies have been implemented are either ineffective or counter productive because there's a lot of truth to that.
Either way, the idea that modern DEI initiatives are an outgrowth of previous affirmative action policies isn't controversial. Yes, they didn't originally include things like sexual orientation but the original conception of affirmative action didn't include sex either so we've clearly been adding things to the list all along.
Which goes back to the original point that when people talk about Democrats moving to the far left what they are primarily taking about LGBT issues and little else.
While I agree that LGBT issues have hurt the Dems popularity, particularly among Hispanic men, the issue also hurt them because they went much further with surgery on children in America than Europe was willing to go.Rocag said:
That's absolutely the intent. Now I am sympathetic to the argument that in many cases the way those policies have been implemented are either ineffective or counter productive because there's a lot of truth to that.
Either way, the idea that modern DEI initiatives are an outgrowth of previous affirmative action policies isn't controversial. Yes, they didn't originally include things like sexual orientation but the original conception of affirmative action didn't include sex either so we've clearly been adding things to the list all along.
Which goes back to the original point that when people talk about Democrats moving to the far left what they are primarily taking about LGBT issues and little else.
Do you have evidence to support this argument?Silent For Too Long said:
You are speaking about DEI as if they only impacted hiring practices but we know they go much further then that.
They are used as a litmus test to ensure ideological good thinkers are hired, and use various initiatives to shame and drive out those who aren't. This is how you get companies that are almost 100% staffed by hard left progressives when at best they make up 30% of the population.
"Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves."
— Riley Gaines (@Riley_Gaines_) November 10, 2024
Matthew 7:15 https://t.co/2u2J076H5P
Unfortunately, there are conservative pastors and clergy preaching the same thing about libs.nortex97 said:
LOL. I hope everyone can laugh at this."Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves."
— Riley Gaines (@Riley_Gaines_) November 10, 2024
Matthew 7:15 https://t.co/2u2J076H5P