Benn Roe wrote:Solid, reliable, gets the job done, but ultimately unexciting? I'm not sure what you're getting at here. She seems more like Science to me.friendship wrote:AOC is the Peavey amps of politicans

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Benn Roe wrote:Solid, reliable, gets the job done, but ultimately unexciting? I'm not sure what you're getting at here. She seems more like Science to me.friendship wrote:AOC is the Peavey amps of politicans
That's why you pass Medicare for All and Green New Deal bills - to force the opposition to vote down or veto these very popular policies.Bassist_Diver wrote:As I've said before, AOC needs to learn two very important things if she wants to stay around for a while:
1. Demanding Congress adopt every single platform RIGHT FUCKING NOW never works and often breeds resentment and fractures/averts alliances. Especially if you do it in a situation where there's no way in hell the opposition-controlled sister chamber and White House will hop on board.
The forces behind the Tea Party effectively control the country today and rendered 3/4 of Obama's years as moot.It didn't work for the tea party
In 2009-10, Obama failed to lead from the front and enforce party discipline, which is why it was historically ineffectual for a single-party government.nor did it work with the alt right or Obama's first term, both of which were situations where the same party controlled Congress and the White House!
Her policies are very popular, even among Republicans. This is standard "you have to be measured and moderate" hand-wringing that has no relationship to reality.2. Her district is very left-leaning. My district is not. The blue districts that turned their backs on Hillary in 2016 are not. What she wants may very well work for her constituents, but as we saw in the 2018 election it does not mesh well with other parts of the country, even those that are younger and more left-leaning than their parents.
Okay, seriously.jirodreamsofdank wrote:Her policies are very popular, even among Republicans. This is standard "you have to be measured and moderate" hand-wringing that has no relationship to reality.
Inconuucl wrote:You can't kill Strymon, it'll just resurrect 3 days later.
BitchPudding wrote:Despite all my rage, I am still just eating tacos in a cage.
Inconuucl wrote:Welcome to ilf, we have three jokes and twelve posters. <3
The sweet leaf of... reality.jrfox92 wrote:Okay, seriously.jirodreamsofdank wrote:Her policies are very popular, even among Republicans. This is standard "you have to be measured and moderate" hand-wringing that has no relationship to reality.
I need to know what you're smoking.
Inconuucl wrote:You can't kill Strymon, it'll just resurrect 3 days later.
BitchPudding wrote:Despite all my rage, I am still just eating tacos in a cage.
Inconuucl wrote:Welcome to ilf, we have three jokes and twelve posters. <3
Jiro already said virtually everything I wanted to respond with, and then some, but the above quoted phrase needs some attention too. Are you implying that people stayed home in 2016 because Hillary was too far to the left? If anything, many people stayed home because she has historically been such a textbook moderate, she doesn't really stand for anything. Bernie forced her to the left, but nobody seemed to be buying it. But that's really the thing about this myth of the level-headed moderate, swooping in to enact sensible bipartisan compromise: what counts as "the middle" is constantly moving to the left, so moderates just come across as disingenuous and noncomittal to most people. I think you'd be surprised how many leftists "turned their backs on Hillary", by way of just not voting at all.Bassist_Diver wrote:The blue districts that turned their backs on Hillary in 2016 are not.
That will get shot down in the Senate or vetoed by the dipshit in chief. All that does is delay implementing extremely important legislature. If they were separate bills this wouldn't be a problem, but doing everything in one-fell swoop has never worked.jirodreamsofdank wrote:That's why you pass Medicare for All and Green New Deal bills - to force the opposition to vote down or veto these very popular policies.Bassist_Diver wrote:As I've said before, AOC needs to learn two very important things if she wants to stay around for a while:
1. Demanding Congress adopt every single platform RIGHT FUCKING NOW never works and often breeds resentment and fractures/averts alliances. Especially if you do it in a situation where there's no way in hell the opposition-controlled sister chamber and White House will hop on board.
Nice strawman. None of those have anything to do with trying to implement legislation that pushes a majority of a platform in a single bill.The forces behind the Tea Party effectively control the country today and rendered 3/4 of Obama's years as moot.It didn't work for the tea party
In 2009-10, Obama failed to lead from the front and enforce party discipline, which is why it was historically ineffectual for a single-party government.nor did it work with the alt right or Obama's first term, both of which were situations where the same party controlled Congress and the White House!
He was obsessed with reasonable Republicans and bipartisanship, if he just proved how rational he was eventually the Republicans would come around.
Obviously, this was bullshit. The only bipartisan consensus this country has reached in the last 60 years has revolved around bombing people of color on the other side of the world, overthrowing people of color who get uppity and incarcerating people of color at home.
LOL no. See above repliesHer policies are very popular, even among Republicans. This is standard "you have to be measured and moderate" hand-wringing that has no relationship to reality.2. Her district is very left-leaning. My district is not. The blue districts that turned their backs on Hillary in 2016 are not. What she wants may very well work for her constituents, but as we saw in the 2018 election it does not mesh well with other parts of the country, even those that are younger and more left-leaning than their parents.
Our public discourse is ruled by some vague idea of "socially liberal and fiscally conservative" moderation being the common sense middle ground - thing is, there is no constituency for that. There are far more economically liberal and socially conservative voters than vice versa - and most fall into lib/lib or con/con.
Refer back to my first point. Make it a separate bill and DON'T include all the other state-funded pieces that still scare the shit out of enough people to make the bill unpassable in the Senate.Climate change is a guillotine hanging over all of our heads by a rapidly fraying rope. The political class's plan is, at best on the establishment Democratic side, to ignore it and continue kicking it down the road.
No, I'm implying a huge number of people voted for Donald Fucking Trump because Hillary is on the ticket. You're in Philly, which is traditionally very left. The midwest, however, is not. Look what happened when Bernie and AOC stumped for the hard left candidates in the more rural great plains - not a single one was elected. The country is indeed moving left, nobody is denying that, but there IS still a very large chunk of the population that is moderateBenn Roe wrote:Jiro already said virtually everything I wanted to respond with, and then some, but the above quoted phrase needs some attention too. Are you implying that people stayed home in 2016 because Hillary was too far to the left? If anything, many people stayed home because she has historically been such a textbook moderate, she doesn't really stand for anything. Bernie forced her to the left, but nobody seemed to be buying it. But that's really the thing about this myth of the level-headed moderate, swooping in to enact sensible bipartisan compromise: what counts as "the middle" is constantly moving to the left, so moderates just come across as disingenuous and noncomittal to most people. I think you'd be surprised how many leftists "turned their backs on Hillary", by way of just not voting at all.Bassist_Diver wrote:The blue districts that turned their backs on Hillary in 2016 are not.
Yes, that's what I said: you force the opposition to deny people the policies they support.Bassist_Diver wrote:That will get shot down in the Senate or vetoed by the dipshit in chief. All that does is delay implementing extremely important legislature. If they were separate bills this wouldn't be a problem, but doing everything in one-fell swoop has never worked.
What strawman? You said "it" - staking out a position considered radical - didn't 'work out for the Tea Party. I explained how it worked out incredibly well for the Tea Party. You may have missed the entire era between 2010 and 2018, but I didn't. I explained how failure to do anything like that rendered Obama's first two years with a Democratic Congress ineffectual - rather than lead he sought bipartisan consensus that was never going to come, neutering his signature 'achievement' (Obamacare) in the process. When you negotiate with yourself before you even start negotiating with the other side, you're going to lose.Nice strawman. None of those have anything to do with trying to implement legislation that pushes a majority of a platform in a single bill.
The ones with polling that illustrates exactly what I said? Or the quadrant map I showed you that illustrated where the electorate actually lies?LOL no. See above replies
I don't know what the fuck you're even talking about...Refer back to my first point. Make it a separate bill and DON'T include all the other state-funded pieces that still scare the shit out of enough people to make the bill unpassable in the Senate.
More important than leftists, people of color. Somehow a person directly linked to the 'tough on crime' era of Democratic politics had relatively limited appeal to people who have borne the brunt of mass incarceration.Benn Roe wrote:Bassist_Diver wrote:I think you'd be surprised how many leftists "turned their backs on Hillary", by way of just not voting at all.