QuoteBut, is it okay to defend fighting the expansion of someone's rights? Basic rights to be able to work and make a living? Be able to live in an apartment? Use the appropriate bathroom?
these are not positions I support. however, I know of no political party which uniformly supports what i support and opposes what i oppose.
Quote
I would like to have my civil rights today thank you. Can you imagine how long it will be before the right accepts the LGBT community to an extent they want to give us all the same rights they have?
And I would like the nation to still exist so that ANY one has ANY rights fifty years from now. It's a matter of delayed gratification.
Now, admittedly the Republicans took only about a decade to lose their focus and start transforming into "Democrat-lite" when it came to big-government, big spending behavior, and for that I am most displeased.
However, in the current political landscape, there is a small - call it maybe 15% - chance the Republicans will get off the stick and find a way to pull us away from the financial precipice that IS looming directly in front of us, and there is a minuscule - call it .05% - chance the Democrats will do so.
In my not-so-humble opinion, if the debt crisis is not averted, our civil rights are moot because there will be no government competent to protect them and our current government may well be replaced with one who oppresses all of us to a far greater degree than the matters which you described.
When we have people in positions of power who master the BASIC concepts of responsible government and the elementary principles of fiduciary judgment - and exercise that ability in the execution of their office, THEN I will take note of which of them is friendliest to the expansion of rights for people like me who deviate from social norms.
I respect your priorities, and do not and will not mock them - I ask that in like manner others respect my priorities.
QuoteYes, this I can understand but this can also be done while we are supporting people that fight for our rights instead of against our rights.
Tis the nature of politics to demonize those who are "across the aisle" from you. The only way people like us are "normalized" to right wingers is when we are not only on the other side.
Quote
In my eyes they are in fact getting useless. This poll is frightening to say the least. I look at this and the way the GOP has just about shut down the government with record breaking filibusters and I think they are totally useless. Sorry.
the WHAT now?
Record breaking fillibusters?
How does that work exactly? Until early this year the Democrats had a fillibuster-proof majority and there hasn't been one single fillibuster since Scott Brown was sworn in.
The Republicans do not have the power to stop anything the Democrats really want to do, even now. Or at least the conservatives don't.
Take, for instance, rescinding DADT - If every Democrat in the senate votes for it, all you need is to get Collins or Snowe or Brown even (who's hardly a flaming right winger) or any of a few other middle-of-the-road Republicans - just ONE - to vote for it.
If it doesn't go through, it WON'T be because of a Republican filibuster.
I fear you are getting too much of your political info from DK.
Oh, and by the way...
Quote
* 63% of Republicans believe Barack Obama is a socialist.
This is the only item in that poll which got close to majority agreement - and there's very good reason for it.
He is.
the only reason it isn't common knowledge is because even Socialists know they cannot gain and keep power if they admit that they are Socialists.
Everything in his background, his admitted prominent influences, his associations, his stated opinions, his policy proposals indicates nothing else.
He is a disciple of Alinsky and the whole point in Alinsky's book was to bring about a socialistic form of government.
Every move Obama has made so far, and every move he has voiced support for, follows Alinsky's plan.
Democrats and left-wingers who deny this are willfully blinding themselves because they find the term pejorative.
Or at least, politically inconvenient.
Not unlike, in fact, the way that many prominent Liberals try to distance themselves from the term "liberal" in favor of "Progressive" - hoping the public doesn't realize that early 20th century Progressives were very enamored of....
Socialism.
Post Merge: March 02, 2010, 11:26:07 PM
QuoteRights, or no rights matter little if your not even making it past simple competence. Our system of governance is broken, and neither side has demonstrated any ability to fix it, far from it, I think both sides are devoted to exacerbating the problem. Indeed, both sides attempt to create the appearance of national leadership, when, in fact, there is none, and there really hasn't been true political leadership in our lifetime (unless you were alive when FDR was president).
I'm with you on pretty much everything in this post EXCEPT if you mean to imply praise for FDR.
YES, he provided assertive leadership - but in all the WRONG directions.
Well, there is this too - love him or hate him, Reagan was in fact a strong leader and moved the entire political conversation in his direction. One may feel that was a wrong direction, as I do about FDR, but one can't realistically accuse Reagan of failing to lead.