JCTarheel82
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Those are substantial examples? New York's bail reform to address the inequities associated with poor people being unable to make bond for low level crimes while people with money can? And something that a city council member in one city said?So, the original question was whether or not Democrats harbor and responsibility for the rise of Trump. The implication by Snoop was no, Dems have no responsibility. I pointed out that there is some actual basis for the belief that Dems are soft on crime... and a couple were pretty substantial examples..... one bordering on crazy.
That was just one example. I have others. There aren't 72 million nut cases like MTG/Lindell in the country. There are a lot of reasonable, sane people who voted for Trump and it very likely wasn't because they saw him as a great choice or even a good choice, any more than the 82 million Biden voters were voting FOR Biden because he was such a great candidate. Clearly he wasn't.
First, I never claimed political persecution. I'm not a victim of differing opinions.It is not arrogance for a professional to understand that he is better at his profession than non-professionals. To the contrary, the real arrogance comes from the non-professional who thinks his opinion is just as good.
You are right that whataboutism would be more accurate than bothsides. This might be the first time in board history that you've admitted you made a mistake. I'm not conceding that whataboutism is accurate, but at least it's in the realm of plausibility. It's not definitionally false.
If you think politics was the reason that people were pushing back on your false contention that abnormal is a factual description, then I don't know what to say. Maybe some people objected because they thought it was mean. My objection was based on semantics and logic. Normal is a judgment, end of story. Just like norms and normative. They all come from the same root (normal in math is different and comes from the Greek). I'm not going into this again.
Chalking up your errors to political persecution is pathetic. People weren't correcting you because of politics. They were correcting you because you were wrong.
You referring to when Trump was president during Covid?First, I never claimed political persecution. I'm not a victim of differing opinions.
Second, while I'm sure you are educated and reasonably intelligent, that doesn't mean you're flawless or unbiased. To me, your bias seems clear.
During the COVID pandemic/George Floyd riots, over 1,000 medical professionals signed a document saying that the protests should not be shut down due to the pandemic. Do you think those professionals were educated in their field? Do you think they were intelligent? Do you think they were reasoning based on the best available scientific information about the pandemic and believed that walking shoulder to shoulder, in huge groups, was a good idea during a pandemic or do you think they were biased by political views.
Obviously... something you already knew.You referring to when Trump was president during Covid?
I don’t know anything. I am not as informed as you are. I also need someone to tell me what to care about.Obviously... something you already knew.
More Obama
Rightfully so, because the other side is a precipice. It’s not that we get a person whose policy we disagree with, it’s a threat to the actual system.
Meanwhile, democrats are fretting. Because yes, that's what Democrats do. Democrats are probably still nervous, somewhere, about Josh Stein
There are no Democratic positions/policies that drive people to Trump.There are some Democratic positions/policies that, I believe, drive people to Trump.
What do you mean by "modern" Democratic Party that is different from the prior Democratic Party?There are no Democratic positions/policies that drive people to Trump.
You may be - and are likely - able to make a list of Democratic positions/policies that would push folks to the Republican Party as the alternative to the Democratic Party. But nothing the Democrats did made Republican voters choose Trump via the primary process twice over other reasonably (and often better) qualified Republican candidates.
The choice to leave the relatively moderate conservatism of the past Republican Party and turn to fascist authoritarianism under Trump was a choice made entirely by the Republican Party.
To be sure, they did so, in part, in reaction to the modern Democratic Party, but it was wholly a choice the voters of the Republican Party made and was in no way, shape, or form forced upon them by anything Democrats did.
Nothing specific, except that we know parties change in both big and small ways over time.What do you mean by "modern" Democratic Party that is different from the prior Democratic Party?