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#101 | |
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I'm gay for the Broncos!
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: San Francisco
Posts: 2,588
Adopt-a-Bronco: All @ same time |
Quote:
![]() http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes...2E52943E2B2B8D also, lol @adamkotsko #DoesAnyoneKnowWhereICanFind liberals concern-trolling Republicans on strategies they should use to be competitive again? Last edited by Blart; 11-08-2012 at 04:37 PM.. |
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#102 |
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Mo' holla fo' yo' dolla!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: In a bunker in an undisclosed location
Posts: 52,694
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#103 | |
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Partisan
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Twixt Hell & Highwater
Posts: 48,791
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Quote:
If that doesn't wake those dopes up, nothing will. Keep in mind that Obama almost won North Carolina. It's actually kind of beautiful and validates the founders' design. In a sense, trusting in the good sense of the American people, the system ensures that extremism can't gain control over all, even if it does take over some states, or even a region. You've got to come to the table and compromise at some point if you wish to garner enough electoral votes to win the highest office.Last edited by Rohirrim; 11-08-2012 at 04:46 PM.. |
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#104 |
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Mo' holla fo' yo' dolla!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: In a bunker in an undisclosed location
Posts: 52,694
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Out of all the data in the exit polls, nothing should scare Republicans more than the chart above. President Barack Obama won the 18-29-year-old vote 60-37. He lost the 65 and older vote 56-44. Guess who will be around longer?
And for Republicans hoping that young voters would stay home, the opposite happened—in 2008, the 18-29-year-old vote was 18 percent of the total. It was 19 percent this year. Political science dogma states that partisan preferences get baked in after voting in two elections. I'm not sure I've ever seen a study proving that, but Republicans better hope that conventional wisdom is wrong, because after 2008 and 2012, millennial voters are giving Democrats massive advantages, and they'll need that to change to stay competitive over the long haul. But this will be particularly hard for the GOP because the youth vote overlaps with another problem demographic for Republicans—non-Anglo voters. Latinos, in particular, are significantly younger than the overal population, but African Americans and Asians are also growing at higher rates than the white vote. ![]() Latinos grew by 15 million between 2000 and 2010, while African Americans and Asians both grew by 4 million. Meanwhile, the white vote grew by a stunningly small 2 million. Asians voted for Obama by a 73-26 margin. Latinos did so by a 71-27 margin. And African Americans did so by a 93-6 margin. Democrats may have only won 39 percent of the White vote, but that's all we need these days. Smart Republicans will spend the next two years talking about how they need to better appeal to non-white Americans. Problem is, they're a tiny minority in their party. Can they embrace comprehensive immigration reform in the face of their xenophobic wing? Can they suppress their base's racist instincts in order to present a more tolerant facade to millennials? Can they cast aside their anti-gay bigotry and push for equality? The obvious answer is no. Heck, most of the GOP base don't even consider non-Whites to be "real" Americans! But the winner of that intra-party civil war will determine whether Republicans can remain a viable national party in the cycles to come. |
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#105 | |
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Partisan
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Twixt Hell & Highwater
Posts: 48,791
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Quote:
BTW, Rocky Anderson took in over 35,000 votes. ![]() |
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#106 |
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Host
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: As if I'd tell you crazies!
Posts: 14,146
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Alec Baldwin: "You know your party is in trouble when they ask you if the "rape guy" won, and you have to ask, "which one?"
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#107 |
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24/7 Broncos
Join Date: Apr 2001
Posts: 49,697
Adopt-a-Bronco: Peyton Manning |
I agree, and the Republicans have been on the wrong side of this issue for almost a decade now. They lost this battle a LONG time ago, but have opted to lose it in SLOOOOOOOOOOW motion.
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#108 | |
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24/7 Broncos
Join Date: Apr 2001
Posts: 49,697
Adopt-a-Bronco: Peyton Manning |
Quote:
I'd be one of the ones who gave the tea party low favorability. It was co-opted by disparate interests and turned into something completely different than what it started out as. That happens on both sides. The truth of the future is that libertarianism is the new centrism - fiscally conservative, socially liberal. The Republicans have the best shot at winning this new race to the center because Democrats are incapable of being fiscally conservative. The question is whether or not they are ready to jettison their socially conservative baggage in favor of the way forward. We'll know this question when its Republicans who are calling for States rights in such cases as marijuana legislation. |
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#109 | |
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www.dailydickpunch.com
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Steamboat Springs
Posts: 9,766
Adopt-a-Bronco: "Debo" Franklin |
Quote:
And yes, it really is that simple.
__________________
Nobody puts Jay-bee in the corner. |
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#110 | |
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Pro Bowler
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 612
Adopt-a-Bronco: None |
Quote:
A good portion of the GOP are extremely hypocritical. "Don't tread of me" they say. But you can sure as hell tell women, gays, pot smokers, and non Christians what they can or cannot do. Until they change these awful attitudes that lead into this hypocrisy and reach out to more Latinos, African Americans, and other minority groups, they will not be able to win another election. There just aren't enough christian men and women to make up for it. The number of Latino's and young people that vote each election cycle will continue to increase, and the GOP better as hell figure out how to come to the middle more to appeal to these groups. Unfortunately, they're so tied to the evangelicals that it is going to be really tough. But if you ask Fox News or its viewers, it was because Chris Christie said something nice about Obama, Hurricane Sandy helped the dirty liberals, and the dirty liberal media influenced viewers overwhelmingly by failing to criticize Obama.. ever. It had nothing to do with the lacking appeal to independents like myself, Latinos, African Americans, Women and other minority groups whatsoever right? Last edited by Dexter; 11-09-2012 at 12:34 AM.. |
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#111 | |
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Pro Bowler
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 612
Adopt-a-Bronco: None |
Quote:
Libertarians with social values would demolish Democrats, if they could get the red states to vote for them. |
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#112 |
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Pro Bowler
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 612
Adopt-a-Bronco: None |
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#113 | |
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WHAT IS YOUR PROFESSION
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Lansing, MI
Posts: 5,010
Adopt-a-Bronco: Demon Eagles |
Quote:
Although I see a shift more toward libertarianism as a potential game changer for the republican party, it does concern me that every person I've ever known who claims to be a libertarian puts fiscal issues ahead of social issues. Every one I've known, if given a choice between, say, spending money to make sure everyone who is eligible to vote can do so, and lowering taxes, they take the money every time. To me, social issues should almost always come before fiscal issues. Again I'm not saying all libertarians are like this, but the 5 or 6 I know have that opinion. |
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#114 | |
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Pro Bowler
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 612
Adopt-a-Bronco: None |
Quote:
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#115 | |
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Mo' holla fo' yo' dolla!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: In a bunker in an undisclosed location
Posts: 52,694
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Quote:
The red staters who vote GOP already embrace libertarian economic philosophy, which is about as extreme as it gets (Ayn Rand is the model.) ![]() |
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#116 | |
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Just Draughted
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,873
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Quote:
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#117 | |
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Ring of Famer
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 12,315
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Quote:
Reagan, Bush 41, and Bush 43 were all kings of deficit spending and those are the idols the current GOP prays to. The days of Teddy Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower are over. Those republicans are long gone. Now fiscal conservatism is nothing but a talking point, and when office they rush to flood money into corporate coffers via military expansionism, massive tax cuts, and irresponsible gov't. contracts. At this point the mature path towards fiscal stability as a nation is an "all of the above" approach that Obama is currently championing. He is more of a fiscal hawk than the vast majority of the current GOP. And if we see Schweitzer run in 2016, a dem governor from Montana who took the state's historic average of $50M annual surpluses and turned them into $400M annual surpluses, that argument is going to get a LOT harder for the GOP to make. The democratic party is already moving at a healthy clip into true social liberalism. If people like Obama, Schweitzer, and Bill Clinton have their way the party will reign in government spending quite effectively in the near term. What does that leave for the GOP who right now can't stop talking about abortion, rattling sabers towards Iran, and giving fiscal reform ideas that consist of closing down entire branches of the government (DoE, EPA, etc.)? Not much. If Obama strikes a deal with Boehner before the fiscal cliff he's going to go down as one of the greatest Presidents of all time and will galvanize the U.S. in a way like we haven't seen since FDR. That was a 36 year period with only 8 with a republican POTUS who was the supreme commander in Europe for WWII and was such a moderate that he actually expanded New Deal programs and launched the highway system. The only path to relevance the GOP has, as far as I can see it, is Neo-Confederacy. They need to throw out the party platform and start over with one centered on state's rights across the board on social issues. That is how they can appease the base without completely scorching the earth with moderates. Gay marriage? If your state wants to allow it. Legal dope? If your state wants to allow it. States get to pick their social stances and with 50 states you can bet that one of them will meet your personal views. |
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#118 |
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Franchise Poster
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Mid-Atlantic
Posts: 15,544
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Wow. To believe the first comment begs the question as to whether or not you've been paying attention to politics over the last several years. The GOP, in its current state, winning a race to the center? And being fiscally conservative? That's laugh out loud funny stuff right there. And then "the question" you reference in your second point? I think the answer to it is rather clear right now. Think about it. You'd expect 2008 would've woken the party up. 2012 proves that it clearly didn't.
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#119 | |
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Just Draughted
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,873
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Quote:
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#120 |
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Mo' holla fo' yo' dolla!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: In a bunker in an undisclosed location
Posts: 52,694
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#121 | |
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www.dailydickpunch.com
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Steamboat Springs
Posts: 9,766
Adopt-a-Bronco: "Debo" Franklin |
Quote:
They're ****ing hypocrites. The lot of em.
__________________
Nobody puts Jay-bee in the corner. |
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#122 | |
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Mo' holla fo' yo' dolla!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: In a bunker in an undisclosed location
Posts: 52,694
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Quote:
Today's GOP is nothing more than organized crime. Republicans' use the power of government to siphon the contents of the treasury into the coffers of banksters, fat cat corporations, oil companies, war profiteers, and Wall Street grifters. Can you think of the last time republicans did anything for working people or the middle class? |
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#123 | |
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Franchise Poster
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Mid-Atlantic
Posts: 15,544
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Quote:
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#124 |
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Ring of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: denver
Posts: 4,326
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Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone: |
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#125 | |
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I'm gay for the Broncos!
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: San Francisco
Posts: 2,588
Adopt-a-Bronco: All @ same time |
Quote:
Where was the libertarian-right during the great struggles for individual liberty? Civil rights for nonwhites, women, gays and lesbians? I see the left fighting with their bodies and wallets, but I don't see many right-libertarians. I do, however, see right-Libertarians fighting for privatized highways and corporate rights. What about voting rights, abuses by police and the military, and religion taking over politics? I see the left fighting, but am waiting on those socially liberal/fiscal conservative folks to join. Libertarians are more likely to apologize for social abuses. "It cannot be denied that Fascism and similar movements aimed at the establishment of dictatorships are full of the best intentions and that their intervention has for the moment saved European civilization. The merit that Fascism has thereby won for itself will live on eternally in history." - Ludwig Von Mises, after Mussolini seized Italy. |
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