2024

Ugh.
Overlander
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Re: 2024

Post by Overlander »

TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
I don't disagree with you, but a three party option is never going to fly as long as corporations and mega donors can pour cash into the system.
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twocoach
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Re: 2024

Post by twocoach »

TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
Voting for an incompetent third party candidate will literally never get you a third party option. The notion that the mythical "they" will finally see that there is unhappiness over the current system by seeing a tiny fraction of the vote go down the drain is just so fundamentally flawed.

But hey, if you think Jill Stein is "what's right", go for it I suppose. Just be honest about what it accomplished when the votes are tallied.
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twocoach
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Re: 2024

Post by twocoach »

Overlander wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:58 pm
TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
I don't disagree with you, but a three party option is never going to fly as long as corporations and mega donors can pour cash into the system.
And so long as the third party candidates are not legit, viable options that have zero Congressional support from either side.
jfish26
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Re: 2024

Post by jfish26 »

Something as simple as ranked-choice voting would do so much good.
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TDub
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Re: 2024

Post by TDub »

Overlander wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:58 pm
TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
I don't disagree with you, but a three party option is never going to fly as long as corporations and mega donors can pour cash into the system.
yes, need to get lobbies out
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KUTradition
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Re: 2024

Post by KUTradition »

TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
we’re never going to have a legit 3rd party until the money issue is resolved

until then, we have ambitious 3rd party candidates fucking shit up in ultra-close swing states…which is obviously their prerogative. but, that’s all they ever do
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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Re: 2024

Post by Sparko »

Nader started a war in Iraq. Yay.
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Shirley
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Re: 2024

Post by Shirley »

Sparko wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 8:15 pm Nader started a war in Iraq. Yay.
I'd never looked at it that way but, pretty much.
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twocoach
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Re: 2024

Post by twocoach »

TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
Here you go. I officially voted for a third party candidate this year.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/23/us/p ... scher.html
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randylahey
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Re: 2024

Post by randylahey »

twocoach wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:42 pm
TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
Here you go. I officially voted for a third party candidate this year.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/23/us/p ... scher.html
I'm not from Nebraska so don't know much about your candidate, but I always respect the idea of a third party vote
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twocoach
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Re: 2024

Post by twocoach »

randylahey wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:11 am
twocoach wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:42 pm
TDub wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 2:55 pm oh bullshit. if no one ever votes for a third party we will never have a 3rd party option. Vote for what you think is right..fuck the intimidation shit.
Here you go. I officially voted for a third party candidate this year.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/23/us/p ... scher.html
I'm not from Nebraska so don't know much about your candidate, but I always respect the idea of a third party vote
I was voting against Republican Deb Fischer so there is nothing more to it than that.
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zsn
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Re: 2024

Post by zsn »

Actually, getting rid of the Electoral College would do a lot for candidates choice. No longer will someone have to go State by State. It’s in top 5 reasons of why the Founding Fathers were not really that bright.
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Re: 2024

Post by RainbowsandUnicorns »

twocoach wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:42 am
randylahey wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:11 am
twocoach wrote: Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:42 pm
Here you go. I officially voted for a third party candidate this year.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/23/us/p ... scher.html
I'm not from Nebraska so don't know much about your candidate, but I always respect the idea of a third party vote
I was voting against Republican Deb Fischer so there is nothing more to it than that.
I'm admitting my ignorance. Why is there no Democrat running for Senate?
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Re: 2024

Post by japhy »

Gee Mitch, it's almost like you meant some of this for a hot minute.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell delivered a scathing assessment of the modern Republican Party in an upcoming biography, saying the “MAGA movement is completely wrong” and that Ronald Reagan “wouldn’t recognize” the party today.

“I think Trump was the biggest factor in changing the Republican Party from what Ronald Reagan viewed and he wouldn’t recognize today,” McConnell told the Associated Press’ Michael Tackett for the upcoming biography “The Price of Power” obtained by CNN ahead of its release.

McConnell added that the former president has “done a lot of damage to our party’s image and our ability to compete.”

“Trump is appealing to people who haven’t been as successful as other people and providing an excuse for that, that these more successful people have somehow been cheated, and you don’t deserve to think of yourself as less successful because things haven’t been fair,” he said.
hmmmm.....why does this sound familiar?
Some of McConnell’s strongest comments were focused on Trump’s behavior after he lost the election in 2020, calling him “erratic.”

“Unfortunately, about half the Republicans in the country believe whatever he says,” McConnell said at the time, adding to an oral historian, “I think I’m pretty safe in saying it’s not just the Democrats who are counting the days until he leaves on January 20, but the Republicans as well.” McConnell gave Tackett access to his personal archive, including an oral history he has been recording since 1995, for the book.

The Republican leader eventually voted to acquit Trump during the second impeachment trial, focused on the former president’s involvement in the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. However, Tackett reports that McConnell had leaned towards voting to convict at certain points.

“I’m not at all conflicted about whether what the president did is an impeachable offense. I think it is. Urging an insurrection and people attacking the Capitol as a direct result … is about as close to an impeachable offense as you can imagine, with the possible exception of maybe being an agent for another country,” said McConnell.

“I don’t know whether you can make a conclusive argument that he’s directly responsible for them storming the Capitol, but I think it’s not in dispute that those folks would not have been here in the first place if he had not asked them to come and to disrupt the actual acceptance of the outcome of the election,” the Senate GOP leader said.

The Kentucky Republican did not mince words, calling Trump a “sleazeball,” a “narcissist” and saying that the former president is “stupid as well as being ill-tempered.” He added that Trump is “not very smart, irascible, nasty, just about every quality you would not want somebody to have.”

While he dismissed Trump’s attacks against him, saying “every time he takes a shot at me, I think it’s good for my reputation,” he added that the former president’s attacks on his wife, Elaine Chao, Trump’s former Transportation Secretary, went too far.

In 2022, Trump referred to Chao as McConnell’s “China loving wife, Coco Chow” in a post on Truth Social. Tackett reports that Chao was “deeply disturbed” by the comments, and McConnell said that his wife is “not used to taking a punch.”

Tackett also reports that McConnell cried while addressing his staff in the hours after the attack on the Capitol. “You are my staff, and you are my responsibility,” he told them. “You are my family, and I hate the fact that you had to go through this.”

He called the rioters who entered the Senate chamber, “narcissistic, just like Donald Trump, sitting in the vice president’s chair taking pictures of themselves,” adding it was a “shocking occurrence and further evidence of Donald Trump’s complete unfitness for office.”

In a statement to CNN about his comments on the former president in the book, McConnell said, “Whatever I may have said about President Trump pales in comparison to what JD Vance, Lindsey Graham, and others have said about him, but we are all on the same team now.”
"But we are all on the same team now".....therefore Mitch you are just as much a sleaze ball as trumpty plumpty.
The Senate GOP leader and the former president have long had a rocky relationship, which Tackett details in the book. However, McConnell has endorsed Trump, and met with him back in June of this year during Trump’s meeting with Senate Republicans off the Hill.

McConnell did not restrict his comments in the biography to the former president. He also criticized Sen. Rick Scott, who led the Senate Republicans’ campaign committee during the 2022 midterms and proposed a highly controversial policy plan that was criticized by both parties, before unsuccessfully challenging McConnell for Senate GOP leader. Scott has announced he is running for leader again this year, though this time he will not be challenging McConnell, who will be stepping down from his leadership post.

“I don’t think Rick makes a very good victim,” quipped McConnell. “I think he did a poor job of running the (Senate campaign) committee. His plan was used by the Democrats against our candidates as late as the last weekend (before the election). He promoted the fiction that we were in the middle of a big sweep when there was no tangible evidence of it. And I think his campaign against me was some kind of ill-fated effort to turn the attention away from him and on to somebody else.”

McConnell will remain in his role as Senate GOP leader through the end of the year until the start of the new Congress in early January.

The Kentucky Republican, who has previously said he is most proud of his legacy in shaping the Supreme Court and leading the efforts to confirm three new conservative justices during Trump’s presidency, acknowledged that Justice Clarence Thomas “exercised pretty questionable judgment,” when he chose to accept trips from a major GOP donor. “But then again, I’m not sure what the rules are,” he added.

In April 2023, when asked about reports on the trips, McConnell accused Democratic senators of launching political attacks on Thomas. “The Supreme Court and the court system is a whole separate part of our Constitution,” he said. “And the Democrats, it seems to me, spend a lot of time criticizing individual members of the court and going after the court as an institution.”

McConnell has previously praised Thomas’ judgment and his work on the Court. “I have total confidence in Justice Thomas’s impartiality in every aspect of the work of the Court,” he said on the Senate floor in 2022, before the reports of Thomas’s travel came to light.

McConnell also expressed support for special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into Trump’s actions around the 2020 election and the insurrection. “I think it was the single most – in a category by itself – of how wrong all of it was and there’s no doubt who inspired it, and I just hope that he’ll have to pay a price for it,” said McConnell. “If he hasn’t committed indictable offenses, I don’t know what one is.”
Expressed support, and obstructing it whenever possible.
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KUTradition
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Re: 2024

Post by KUTradition »

smfh…can’t have it both ways there, mitch

zero fucking spine
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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twocoach
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Re: 2024

Post by twocoach »

RainbowsandUnicorns wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:56 am
twocoach wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:42 am
randylahey wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:11 am

I'm not from Nebraska so don't know much about your candidate, but I always respect the idea of a third party vote
I was voting against Republican Deb Fischer so there is nothing more to it than that.
I'm admitting my ignorance. Why is there no Democrat running for Senate?
Beats me.
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twocoach
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Re: 2024

Post by twocoach »

zsn wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:43 am Actually, getting rid of the Electoral College would do a lot for candidates choice. No longer will someone have to go State by State. It’s in top 5 reasons of why the Founding Fathers were not really that bright.
You can only "forward think" so far. I don't even the best and brightest of our Founding Fathers could envision how the world is today (good or bad).
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DrPepper
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Re: 2024

Post by DrPepper »

Interesting timing for Mitch McConnel's biography to be released (hardback and audible). October 29th. One week before election day.
The Price of Power: How Mitch McConnell Mastered the Senate, Changed America and Lost His Party
https://a.co/d/j4UwCLl
jfish26
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Re: 2024

Post by jfish26 »

KUTradition wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 9:10 am smfh…can’t have it both ways there, mitch

zero fucking spine
I remain fascinated by how the VERY darkest stain on McConnell's career may be that he vastly, vastly overestimated the character of his own party.
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Re: 2024

Post by zsn »

twocoach wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 9:41 am
zsn wrote: Thu Oct 24, 2024 6:43 am Actually, getting rid of the Electoral College would do a lot for candidates choice. No longer will someone have to go State by State. It’s in top 5 reasons of why the Founding Fathers were not really that bright.
You can only "forward think" so far. I don't even the best and brightest of our Founding Fathers could envision how the world is today (good or bad).
They should have seen how the “democracy” they designed can elect a president who didn’t win the most votes. But then again, they were more keen on protecting the rights of slave owners rather than actual democracy. Turns out the system is working exactly as they intended - preserving the interests of the racists!!
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