BiggDick wrote: ↑Mon Jan 20, 2025 10:45 am
OK, this is actually pretty good commentary now.
If a voter/pols board poster here is instead metaphorically a patron at a breakfast diner, and ordered a dish with a side of fresh fruit, and got served soft brown apple plus moldy leggy orange, I think the appropriate response for a voter to make would be something other than to send back the orange but stubbornly slurp down soft brown apple anyway while maintaining, "well at least it ain't growing legs!"
Either way, that apple is prob gonna give the runs to anyone who eats it...short of, like vultures and crocodiles and other creatures from the animal kingdom with stomachs designed to ingest rot.
Now, as far as "bothsides everything," yea, I do do that, I suppose. Cuz I think both sides are rotten here!
What I don't do tho, is call absolutely everything a partisan issue.
That's what I'm afraid you're doing here, by trying to shame voters who hesitate to pick and choose what amount of fruit rot should be rejected, and what amount of fruit rot should be eaten anyway, as if the apples and oranges aren't both rotten.
(oh, and picking and choosing what amount of fruit rot is acceptable here sounds like it could be less some objective conclusion and more a matter of opinion, and as such, quite prone to partisan bias)
and that's not even to get started on whether this fruit was served as the side on an egg dish!
That an opinion is related to partisanship does not make it
partisan.
Yes, it is my opinion that of the two viable candidates for the office, one of them was like an apple that is a bit soft and has a brown spot, the other like an orange that has been sitting in the sun for so long that it has molded over and is growing legs.
And, in the frame of that opinion, yes, I believe that one who would select the orange is making a demonstrably-worse choice than someone who would select the apple.
What would be
partisan is if the roles were reversed, and I selected the apple-with-legs over a modestly overripe orange, because I am blinded by my preference for apples over oranges.
That is, essentially, MICH.