In your view, what are the social justice issues you talk about talent? Is it gay rights for marriage, trying to help the poor with things like the ACA. I know you don't Black Lives Matter, but if you read the Justice department report on Ferguson, it was pretty damning. Is it telling these constituencies to sit down and shut up because you are offending the silent majority?
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I think Talent is saying "You have to dance with the one who brung ya". These so-called social justice issues (Har) are wedges...they attract some voters, and run off others. The ones they tend to run off are those, in his view, that are critical to consistently winning legislative seats.
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The White House is denying this story strongly but a memo from inside DHS has leaked that shows they are at least considering the use of 100,000 national guard troops to round up and deport illegals
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IMO you bang on financial reform. The facts are easy and tweetable, the solution is just, and it helps everybody save for a very small group of people who are largely not entitled to anyone's sympathy or aid. IMO you give lip service to the narrow interests and pivot back as soon as possible to talking about how you're focused on helping all Americans, and this is the one thing that does it. Find the politically acceptable way to tell people that they can feel marginalized like every other damn group in America, or they can feel marginalized like every other damn group in America but also have some extra bucks in their pockets.
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Keith Oberman said:Our governmental system places a heavy emphasis on geographical location and the Dems voters are concentrated in too few locations. This doesn't change the fact that they are, as of 2016 at any rate, the MAJORITY.
Hillary carried CA by 4.3 million votes.
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Originally posted by froot loops View PostI understand what a wedge issue is, but the question remains the same. Do you tell those constituents to sit down and shut up?
The real question to ask is how you can get a significant-enough portion of both groups under your tent. The answer, as hack has noted, is economics; paying bills trumps social distaste in most cases. Currently, the Ds are losing the "Ohio Vote" on both grounds- economics and social justice issues- and are getting crushed. If they can get some wins on the former, they can pry loose voters and start winning legislative elections again.
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Originally posted by froot loops View PostI understand what a wedge issue is, but the question remains the same. Do you tell those constituents to sit down and shut up?
I think you focus on what unites rather than divide. It's about poverty not white privilege.Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.
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I'd post a link to the WSJ story but it's behind a paywall...but something we don't really talk about with re: The Wall...it would also likely require one of the most widespread uses of eminent domain in US history.
I predict it will be done with a regulatory taking, national defense and all that.
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Originally posted by entropy View PostI think you focus on what unites rather than divide. It's about poverty not white privilege.
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Hack, the Dems have focused on identity politics for at least the last 25 years. Identity politics, by its very nature, pits one group against another and divides. LBJ was the first to split the country, and it has gotten progressively worse since then.
I simply don't remember the Dems ever trying to unite the country, with the exception of JFK. In today's politics, JFK would be considered a conservative, or worse, by the Dems. It is instructive that the last SC nominee that the Dems have "missed" in terms of political leanings was Whizzer White, by JFK.Last edited by Da Geezer; February 17, 2017, 04:07 PM.
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