Meanwhile, Fox News appears to have made the editorial decision to keep Trump's statements from the televised gun meeting off of their website entirely. (If you scroll down really far, you can see a few links to GOP leaders (Toomey and Scalise) defending their record and proposals, but no visible headline so much as acknowledging what the President actually said/supported in the meeting.)
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Originally posted by B-Fly View PostMeanwhile, Fox News appears to have made the editorial decision to keep Trump's statements from the televised gun meeting off of their website entirely. (If you scroll down really far, you can see a few links to GOP leaders (Toomey and Scalise) defending their record and proposals, but no visible headline so much as acknowledging what the President actually said/supported in the meeting.)
Like the womens march was not in their news on that Saturday.
To their credit they were the first news organization for call the Doug Jones win but of course that was so they could go on to other things quicker and forget that they were even supporters of Roy Moore.
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Originally posted by B-Fly View PostWhile I don't necessarily trust Trump to stick by the ideas/policies he outlined yesterday to address mass shootings, I believe the Democrats should immediately jump to support them and put the pressure on Trump and the GOP to follow through. This may be an only-Nixon-could-go-to-China moment that should not be allowed to go to waste!
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostI agree. I hope the Dems don't botch this opportunity. Then again, it may not really be an opportunity. If Trump doubles back on this issue, it won't be the first time he seems to have gone against the GOP, only to reverse course back to the party line. He did it during the immigration reform talks, seeming to side with Dems on DACA before reversing course.If DMT didn't exist we would have to invent it. There has to be a weirdest thing. Once we have the concept weird, there has to be a weirdest thing. And DMT is simply it.
- Terence McKenna
Bullshit is everywhere. - George Carlin (& Jon Stewart)
How old would you be if you didn't know how old you are? - Satchel Paige
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostI agree. I hope the Dems don't botch this opportunity. Then again, it may not really be an opportunity. If Trump doubles back on this issue, it won't be the first time he seems to have gone against the GOP, only to reverse course back to the party line. He did it during the immigration reform talks, seeming to side with Dems on DACA before reversing course.Last edited by Bernie Brewer; 03-01-2018, 09:43 PM.I know in my heart that man is good. That what is right will always eventually triumph and there is purpose and worth to each and every life.
Ronald Reagan
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Originally posted by Bernie Brewer View PostSo, if for instance he were to, say, appoint a judge to the SCOTUS who reflects your stances, or get Congress to pass some legislation that is really important to you, like a tax law, some tweak to ACA, or DACA, you still wouldn’t support him or even think any better of him, but you’d see that even a really terrible, maybe even the historically worst, President might serve your purposes in some strange and weird way? Welcome to half of the GOP!
If someone like Trump rose up on the left, I'd have fought against him just as vehemently as I have as someone from the opposing party. More so, if that were possible, because of the danger he would pose to my side of the political spectrum. I think it is possible that of all the Carnage Trump leaves in his wake, none will sustain more lasting damage than the party that raised him up above all the rest to represent them. He is an afront to all that I have ever admired about Republicanism. He has no respect for the sanctity of the unbiased rule of law. He respects loyalty to himself above love of God and country. The fact that Evangelicals did not merely close their eyes and vote for him in the general with begrudging disgust, but largley passionately supported his rise through the GOP ranks is the height of hypocrisy.
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostSure, I get that. It still doesn't excuse the Republican side of things that he won the primaries to begin with. The fact is that the majority of Republican voters supported this terrible person over many more respectable candidates who would have done everything Trump has done in terms if the GOP agenda, but without being a total embarrassment to our country, and without emboldening the most vile elements of the right to sleep up and poison the Republican party.
If someone like Trump rose up on the left, I'd have fought against him just as vehemently as I have as someone from the opposing party. More so, if that were possible, because of the danger he would pose to my side of the political spectrum. I think it is possible that of all the Carnage Trump leaves in his wake, none will sustain more lasting damage than the party that raised him up above all the rest to represent them. He is an afront to all that I have ever admired about Republicanism. He has no respect for the sanctity of the unbiased rule of law. He respects loyalty to himself above love of God and country. The fact that Evangelicals did not merely close their eyes and vote for him in the general with begrudging disgust, but largley passionately supported his rise through the GOP ranks is the height of hypocrisy.Last edited by Bernie Brewer; 03-02-2018, 08:05 AM.I know in my heart that man is good. That what is right will always eventually triumph and there is purpose and worth to each and every life.
Ronald Reagan
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostSure, I get that. It still doesn't excuse the Republican side of things that he won the primaries to begin with. The fact is that the majority of Republican voters supported this terrible person over many more respectable candidates who would have done everything Trump has done in terms if the GOP agenda, but without being a total embarrassment to our country, and without emboldening the most vile elements of the right to sleep up and poison the Republican party.
If someone like Trump rose up on the left, I'd have fought against him just as vehemently as I have as someone from the opposing party. More so, if that were possible, because of the danger he would pose to my side of the political spectrum. I think it is possible that of all the Carnage Trump leaves in his wake, none will sustain more lasting damage than the party that raised him up above all the rest to represent them. He is an afront to all that I have ever admired about Republicanism. He has no respect for the sanctity of the unbiased rule of law. He respects loyalty to himself above love of God and country. The fact that Evangelicals did not merely close their eyes and vote for him in the general with begrudging disgust, but largley passionately supported his rise through the GOP ranks is the height of hypocrisy.
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Normally, Bernie and I are pretty well-aligned, but I disagree with him a bit on the response to Sour Masher's post...
Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostThe fact is that the majority of Republican voters supported this terrible person over many more respectable candidates who would have done everything Trump has done in terms if the GOP agenda,
I had serious doubts Trump would deliver on the key issues that are meaningful to me as a conservative-leaning libertarian, but I've been pleasantly surprised. He's done vastly better than either Bush did.
If someone like Trump rose up on the left, I'd have fought against him just as vehemently as I have as someone from the opposing party. More so, if that were possible, because of the danger he would pose to my side of the political spectrum.
I think it is possible that of all the Carnage Trump leaves in his wake, none will sustain more lasting damage than the party that raised him up above all the rest to represent them.
The fact that Evangelicals did not merely close their eyes and vote for him in the general with begrudging disgust, but largley passionately supported his rise through the GOP ranks is the height of hypocrisy.I'm just here for the baseball.
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Responding to Chance, I need help seeing how a conservative Republican like Cruz or Rubio would not have been able to do everything Trump has, with much less of a Carnival sideshow, given that any candidate would have had the full support of a Republican controlled Congress. Saying Trump has delivered on the conservative agenda more than either Bush is setting the bar pretty low. I have little doubt a staunch conservative would have been appointed to the SC if either of those candidates were elected. And either would have gotten tax reform done, although I concede neither may have been so bold as to lower the corporate rate quite so low.
For me, "like Trump" means anyone who is highly divisive, dismissive of the rule of law, unqualified to the extreme, racist, misogynistic, xenoophobic, a bully who constantly punches down in a way that denigrates his office and position, etc. I'm curious who fits that bill on the left. Not saying a vile candidate could not emerge on the left, but I don't see anyone on Trump's level on the national stage at the moment, though concede many have noteworthy faults of their own.
As far as Evangelical support, I should have specified my remarks were directed to those who supported Trump early in the crowded field of other candidates who could actually name Bible verses. Polls I've seen suggested that while Evangelicals who identified as very religious and those that went to church frequently did not come around on Trump until late in the game, many less religious Evangelicals, and especially white Evangelicals supported him early and passionately (although, I must admit to not understanding how one can identify as both Evangelical and "less religious"--if you believe the doctrine is tied to the fate of your immortal soul, I'd think being a follower of the faith would be all in on).
Here is breakdown of the early support for Trump among Evangelicals: http://www.christianitytoday.com/new...r-tuesday.html
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostFor me, "like Trump" means anyone who is highly divisive, dismissive of the rule of law, unqualified to the extreme, racist, misogynistic, xenoophobic, a bully who constantly punches down in a way that denigrates his office and position, etc. I'm curious who fits that bill on the left. Not saying a vile candidate could not emerge on the left, but I don't see anyone on Trump's level on the national stage at the moment, though concede many have noteworthy faults of their own.
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Originally posted by chancellor View PostInteresting. I'd have to know better what "like Trump" means. My point of view is your party had someone like that - much less public in terms of tweets and stuff - but even more underhanded and devious. But you have the gender wrong, and it's not Hillary.
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostYes, good example. If Farrakhan rose to become the face of the Democratic party, I'd be completely appalled. But he is a fringe figure at the moment.Last edited by The Feral Slasher; 03-02-2018, 01:10 PM.---------------------------------------------
Champagne for breakfast and a Sherman in my hand !
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The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
George Orwell, 1984
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Originally posted by The Feral Slasher View PostSo if he ran on a platform reflecting positions that you agree with, would you vote for him or Mike Pence for president ? Or Mitt Romney ?
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