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Who thought this recount was proceeding too well/orderly and needed a little...something more to make it Truly Florida-Man worthy?
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:46 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 00:38 |
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The North Koreans will continue forward if there is no actual deal on the table. They clearly aren't going to freeze their program on faith alone.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:47 |
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OAquinas posted:
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:49 |
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It will never be considered by the Senate. My guess is Mitch McConnell never even acknowledges the house passed a single piece of legislation outside of bills to fund the government, because it would hurt Republicans to appear to be the reason for a shutdown.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:51 |
Chilichimp posted:It will never be considered by the Senate. If you read the story, it says that outright. The point is to be on the record saying "Look, we're trying to reform voting and expand your rights, but the Republicans won't even give it an up or down vote."
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:53 |
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eke out posted:If you read the story, it says that outright. The point is to be on the record saying "Look, we're trying to reform voting and expand your rights, but the Republicans won't even give it an up or down vote." That literally did help the Republicans in 2016 with their base, so who knows? Maybe it gets people motivated for 2020.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:57 |
https://twitter.com/MuslimIQ/status/1061429172483092481?s=19
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 15:59 |
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Chilichimp posted:That literally did help the Republicans in 2016 with their base, so who knows? Maybe it gets people motivated for 2020. There is a certain asymmetry for the two parties where Republicans aren't necessarily unhappy when the government doesn't do anything, but Democrats tend to be unhappy. But the point of the bill is probably as ammunition to rile up the Dem's own base.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:04 |
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Chilichimp posted:That literally did help the Republicans in 2016 with their base, so who knows? Maybe it gets people motivated for 2020. Having bills written, passed by the House, and blocked by Republicans gives you something tangible to point to about "yes, we will actually do this if you give us power, and Republicans are indeed opposed to this."
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:05 |
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https://twitter.com/chemishalev/status/1061997607516561409?s=21
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:09 |
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evilweasel posted:Having bills written, passed by the House, and blocked by Republicans gives you something tangible to point to about "yes, we will actually do this if you give us power, and Republicans are indeed opposed to this." Repeal and replace of the ACA is a great example of this
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:11 |
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It’s extremely cool and good that most of the Democratic Senate leadership and prospective presidential candidates oppose BDS and support criminalizing it in the face of poo poo like this!
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:19 |
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Lightning Knight posted:It’s extremely cool and good that most of the Democratic Senate leadership and prospective presidential candidates oppose BDS and support criminalizing it in the face of poo poo like this! I suspect that's going to start going away. Israel for a long time has benefited by being an area of bipartisan agreement (or more accurately, that support for Israel wasn't a partisan issue where Republicans were on one side and Democrats were on the other; there was substantially more dispute within the Democratic party/coalition regarding support for Israel). I think that was always going to start getting more polarized, but Netenyahu basically took a sledgehammer to that by explicitly and openly becoming a Republican partisan. That killed off a lot of the support for Israel within the Democratic party, but the full consequences of that haven't yet rippled all the way through the Democratic party system. It's going to though, and I think in a decade or so Israel's going to look back on it as one of their biggest geopolitical mistakes once that fully takes effect.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:26 |
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I find it infuriating that the implication that finding “thousands of democrat ballots” is bad because it’s votes for democrats and not bad because “thousands of votes for democrats where lost/suppressed and are now just being found/counted.”
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:32 |
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Aahaha you could mine that irony trump_stairs.mp4 https://mobile.twitter.com/emptywheel/status/1061992194951860224
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:32 |
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I'm shocked that once again the things that the true experts said would happen did indeed happen. Just can't handle all of this winning. Just another Lone Wolf, who can guess what motivated him? ratbert90 posted:I find it infuriating that the implication that finding “thousands of democrat ballots” is bad because it’s votes for democrats and not bad because “thousands of votes for democrats where lost/suppressed and are now just being found/counted.” "Vote Fraud" has *always* been about people voting the wrong way (oftentimes for Democrats). See also the old canard of 'dead people voting Democratic' that still gets tossed around.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:33 |
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https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1062005636488142848
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:35 |
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It is an utter embarrasment, getting played by the North Koreans while simultaneously dismantling an Iranian deal that was working. Why bother dealing in good faith with the US if we're going to renege on the good plans and get fooled by the bad deals?
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:38 |
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tetrapyloctomy posted:It is an utter embarrasment, getting played by the North Koreans while simultaneously dismantling an Iranian deal that was working. Why bother dealing in good faith with the US if we're going to renege on the good plans and get fooled by the bad deals? By shooting ourselves in the foot repeatedly, we have shown the world that we are strong as hell, and we're so strong that we don't even need to be able to walk.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:41 |
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evilweasel posted:I suspect that's going to start going away. Israel for a long time has benefited by being an area of bipartisan agreement (or more accurately, that support for Israel wasn't a partisan issue where Republicans were on one side and Democrats were on the other; there was substantially more dispute within the Democratic party/coalition regarding support for Israel). I think that was always going to start getting more polarized, but Netenyahu basically took a sledgehammer to that by explicitly and openly becoming a Republican partisan. That killed off a lot of the support for Israel within the Democratic party, but the full consequences of that haven't yet rippled all the way through the Democratic party system. It's going to though, and I think in a decade or so Israel's going to look back on it as one of their biggest geopolitical mistakes once that fully takes effect. This seems optimistic. Pro-Israel organizations remain important Democratic fundraisers. Netanyahu will be gone some day, they will not.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:47 |
https://twitter.com/elizashapiro/status/1061990224073498630?s=19 It's nice that there's a small amount of good news these days
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:49 |
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https://twitter.com/srl/status/1061967799025852417
Party Plane Jones fucked around with this message at 16:54 on Nov 12, 2018 |
# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:49 |
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Looks like we're going to be hearing the phrase "Presidential Harrassment" non stop for I guess 2 years then.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:52 |
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here's an article on the chinese labour corps, and their contribution to WW1: https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/long-reads/article/2172435/chinese-labour-corps-first-world-wars-forgotten
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:53 |
knox_harrington posted:Looks like we're going to be hearing the phrase "Presidential Harrassment" non stop for I guess 2 years then. it's a hilarious phrase that is transparently trying to coopt the term sexual harassment and the more they use it the better
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:54 |
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Zwabu posted:Hey Fancy, As I tell everyone who gets into direct campaigning: Welcome To Democracy!™ So, the caveat here is that I'm a straight white male. Annoyingly large amounts of people are going to talk to me about certain issues differently than they'd talk to my teammates, who go all over the gender/race/sexuality spectrum. But they talk to me regardless. There's two types of undecided people in the world - people who care but don't know, and people who don't care at all. The second type of person is a really tough out, and I tend to leave them be more often as not. When it's a young person who doesn't care, and references South Park as they so often do, I make it fairly clear to them what could be at stake. 2016, for instance. I'm out in the sticks and the guy says it doesn't matter who's president. I point out that if we're talking about apocalyptic scenarios, I would have less to worry about. Say the bomb drops on DC, right? I live in DC. I'm a shadow on the wall. I have time to say "welp;" and that's me atomized. He's living out in the sticks, though. He gets the radiation cloud. He gets to live to death. If that sounds attractive to him, yeah, put on the movies and sit it out. (The fact that that got a registration card filled out still blows my mind a bit.) But if you're a true undecided in this climate, you're quite a breed. And they might not know how to turn What They Want into How They Vote. I tend to go with a simple question: "If you were given a chance to change this country in one way, just one way, and it would automatically be implemented that day, that hour, what would you change?" The answers I've gotten are endlessly fascinating. Education based answers, tax based answers, melt all the guns, give a gun to every American, trains to everywhere, cars to everywhere, so on and so on. Most people don't have transformative dreams for their lives, surprisingly; most folks want to go to a job, get a decent day's pay, keep the roof intact and the mouths fed, have a little left over to go out and enjoy themselves. Danica Roem here in VA ran on that - growing up, she was stuck in traffic on one of the major highways every day. Now she's an adult and still stuck in that same traffic. If you're stumping for state/local candidates, it always comes back to travel, I've noticed. And since you're usually canvassing all over creation, you can talk about the roads you took to get to that person. The traffic, the tolls, the disrepair, whatever you notice. Give people a reason to vent. They'll inevitably vent about whatever the news and the feeds have in our heads - I swear to you, I have enough relevant experience to take a job as a therapist after this year - and they'll talk about it. And I can't stress this enough: allow yourself the possibility that they'll surprise you. I had an NRA backer out in the woods last year, and he talked about how he always voted local GOP because they hunted and he hunted. But I'd knocked on his door the day after the Vegas massacre. And you could tell the world had changed him. "Look, you don't need what that guy had to kill a deer. You need an automatic rifle to hunt, you need to go back to the range." He pledged to vote for a Latina immigrant, the GOP's challenger in that district. People become undecided when they get a crossroads moment. And you may not be there for the epiphany, but you may catch them just before and just after. If you're looking to convince someone to chase that feeling and change their world with it, it has to be personal. Like I said earlier, it comes back to travel. It also comes back to that job security. If there's no work to be had, find that sweet spot in your area. In Virginia, it's bringing tech work into the area, but it's fixing roads too! And if you've got an outdoorsy type, you can nerd out like I do and talk about the Civilian Conservation Corps. Old New Deal program that built and maintained all our national parks, and it taught a generation how to camp and live with nature. You say that to the right person, and their eyes light up, because they remember their camping days, or they're thinking of their kids playing RDR2 instead of going outside. They can get brought into the movement on feelings. And once the feeling is accessed, that elusive loving hope, they're gonna want to know more. They'll want to feel it more. And that's how undecided becomes leaning. A good conversation is one that makes them think about something, or look something up after you've left. If you leave even the slightest impression, they'll remember what side you were with. One last anecdote: so when I stump, I stump as a member of the labor movement. I went to a house this year and the lady who answered yelled to her tea-sipping friend, "Nah, it's just a Democrat! He thinks we're Democrats, but we're Republicans!" And I got into my feelings a bit on that. "Ma'am, I'm a labor man. I stump for working people. We talk to every candidate, and we see who holds true to working-class values. That means we've endorsed Republicans. We've endorsed Republicans in living memory. We've endorsed Republicans this decade, in fact. Am I stumping for all Democrats here? Yes I am. And that's because the Republicans who have office here have gone after people's retirement funds and pensions. They've gone after health care for the needy. They've blocked Medicaid expanding in your town. If they hadn't done that, I'd probably be unloading trucks at a stadium instead." I don't know if I got through to her, but she offered me a bottle of water to make peace. So that's not nothing. Anyway, if you wanna get into deeper dives, it might be worth having a direct-action deep-dive thread, for people like us who knock on doors. It might be a bit of a stretch for the direct-action threads here or in C-SPAM. But I hope that was helpful! e: what on earth are we playing tug of war with my av AGAIN Lightning Knight posted:The State/Local thread here in D&D would be a great place to discuss how to get involved for the first time in things like that. And it shall be done. Thanks LK! Your Boy Fancy fucked around with this message at 17:05 on Nov 12, 2018 |
# ? Nov 12, 2018 16:59 |
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The State/Local thread here in D&D would be a great place to discuss how to get involved for the first time in things like that.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:00 |
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Squalid posted:This seems optimistic. Pro-Israel organizations remain important Democratic fundraisers. Netanyahu will be gone some day, they will not. Netenyahu's open interference in favor of the Republican party is only about six years old. But I think you underestimate the absolute rage in a lot of parts of the Democratic party about what Netenyahu has been doing - parts of the Democratic party that used to support the pro-Israel consensus. Now it's sort of an issue of national sovereignty. Realignments take time, but I think people are (understandably) just looking at the past 40 years and assuming all will continue as normal, when I think that's no longer the case. And many of those fundraisers will indeed be gone as well; heavy-handed intervention into American politics in favor of the Republican party is one of the things splitting off a number of American Jews from supporting Israel.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:03 |
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evilweasel posted:I suspect that's going to start going away. Israel for a long time has benefited by being an area of bipartisan agreement (or more accurately, that support for Israel wasn't a partisan issue where Republicans were on one side and Democrats were on the other; there was substantially more dispute within the Democratic party/coalition regarding support for Israel). I think that was always going to start getting more polarized, but Netenyahu basically took a sledgehammer to that by explicitly and openly becoming a Republican partisan. That killed off a lot of the support for Israel within the Democratic party, but the full consequences of that haven't yet rippled all the way through the Democratic party system. It's going to though, and I think in a decade or so Israel's going to look back on it as one of their biggest geopolitical mistakes once that fully takes effect. Schumer's trouble with this is that New York Jewish coalitions have been a major part of his power base for a long, long time. I don't think he's going to change regarding BDS, and it's gonna take retirement for him to be unseated. I don't think anyone is going to argue that Chuck Schumer is the greatest impediment to his party's evolution and flourishing at this juncture. Nobody wants to follow a weak leader, and he's the weakest leader I've experienced.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:04 |
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The most powerful human being alive crying about HARASSMENT SO BIGLY, SO UNFAIR is the perfect illustration of how the big tough Republican he-men umbermenchen are almost invariably huge cowards. I mean we all knew this anyway, but Trump just keeps taking it to new extremes.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:05 |
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Your Boy Fancy posted:Schumer's trouble with this is that New York Jewish coalitions have been a major part of his power base for a long, long time. I don't think he's going to change regarding BDS, and it's gonna take retirement for him to be unseated. Why IS he leader? I assume some combination of seniority and fundraising prowess?
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:12 |
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Hellblazer187 posted:Why IS he leader? I assume some combination of seniority and fundraising prowess? Yup
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:13 |
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"Presidential harassment" makes me think of the president's sexual harrassment, so I don't think it will be a very effective phrase for me and those like me (college educated white men) but i'm probably not the platonic ideal of that particular group.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:14 |
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Tibalt posted:"Presidential harassment" makes me think of the president's sexual harrassment, so I don't think it will be a very effective phrase for me and those like me (college educated white men) but i'm probably not the platonic ideal of that particular group. It's loving brilliant. What could possibly be less presidential than having to invent a new term to describe your hurt feelings at people investigating your corruption?
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:22 |
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https://twitter.com/SimonMaloy/status/1061995429192261633
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:33 |
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Your Boy Fancy posted:Schumer's trouble with this is that New York Jewish coalitions have been a major part of his power base for a long, long time. I don't think he's going to change regarding BDS, and it's gonna take retirement for him to be unseated. I don't see him changing either, he'd either need to lose a primary or retire. But I expect the next Democratic presidential nominee to be considerably cooler on the Israel support and ultimately the President has far greater power over foreign affairs than the Senate Majority Leader. And in 2020, Chuck Schumer isn't going to be any sort of national leader, it'll be the 2020 dem nominee who will matter for inspiring voters.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:34 |
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https://twitter.com/RawStory/status/1062003066675908609
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:36 |
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Hellblazer187 posted:Why IS he leader? I assume some combination of seniority and fundraising prowess? Those, plus willingness to do the work (he'd been putting in the work needed for a long time); lack of Presidential ambitions (which really matters for all the circumstances where you have to be the bad guy); broad support in the caucus because he's sort of acceptable to everyone and is generally willing to work with people. Very little of what goes into someone being majority/minority leader is about having the right policy positions or being popular with the public.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:37 |
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America deserves to burn.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 17:37 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 00:38 |
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evilweasel posted:Netenyahu's open interference in favor of the Republican party is only about six years old. But I think you underestimate the absolute rage in a lot of parts of the Democratic party about what Netenyahu has been doing - parts of the Democratic party that used to support the pro-Israel consensus. Now it's sort of an issue of national sovereignty. Realignments take time, but I think people are (understandably) just looking at the past 40 years and assuming all will continue as normal, when I think that's no longer the case. On Twitter, a good example is David Simon, whose Twitter after the Pittsburgh shooting is a non-stop tirade against Bibi and his way of doing business. He does not mince words.
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# ? Nov 12, 2018 18:00 |