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dawglover05, GMdawg, PitDAWG
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#2105185 03/04/2025 8:05 PM
by OCD
OCD
Just a thread to talk about it. It should be a fact free MAGA wet dream since dems are being told not to disrupt. So there will be plenty of BS to sort through tomorrow. And Fox will put out the talking points asap. Yeah for lies and BS! Trump pwned the dems! Can’t wait to see the idiocy unfold. Meanwhile eggs are at an ALL TIME HIGH, we’re fighting with our allies, and doing what Putin wants. Trump is going after social security, medicaid, VA benefits; but he has done nothing to help the little people. He’s single handedly and illegally crashing the economy with Elon doing who knows what, planes can’t stay in the air as they continue to fire thousands of government employees without cause, and the dumbest people on earth are okey dokey with it all.

Don’t ask me how we got here, but we are damn sure in the upside down.
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#2105320 Mar 5th a 06:27 PM
by OCD
OCD
And I can see how people are falling for Trump’s rubbish. They just can’t figure out the guy lies all the damn time. Even when his lies eat them, they defend him. He told a good story for anyone who isn’t following closely. Hell, 20 years ago I would have been with MAGA on this and would have been lapping it up. But getting your life wrecked by republican policies SHOULD be a wake up call. It was for me.

When you can see the light at the end of the tunnel, and see your goals of finally being financially secure within reach, just to have the rug pulled because Wall Street shanked the world, sucks on a level you could not fathom until it’s you it happens to. I think a lot of people are about to experience this. And a radical but simple shift in priorities is all that will save them. They will NEVER be rich in this scenario, so why do so many protect the elite at every turn? It’s mind boggling when you think about the hold the elite have created by dangling that carrot.

So far, people were able to build a little something, and many want to hold onto that at the expense of others taking the hits. Well, now they will be hitting us all, hard. So we can work together or continue to divide. There really is no other alternative. And when immigrants are gone, they’ll turn toward dems, or blacks, or lgbtq, or jewish and start the get em out process all over again. I been noticing how dems getting tossed from town-halls and the speech last night seems to be the new cool thing for the party of free speech. They’ve been programmed to look at us as less than them. It’s another reason I go hard at the ignorance.
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#2105422 Mar 6th a 05:12 AM
by Clemdawg
Clemdawg
Quote
As it is the dems are against everything as a block. When you take that position it just makes you look like obstructionists and takes away from the issues where you might have valid points. People stop listening.

Amen.



I watched that that same game played out... from 2009 to 2016.

Another example of the heart of the problem.

The system that saw Tip O'Neal and Ronald Regan share drinks after work no longer exists.
We've watched it erode steadily since the POTUS 42 admin. Credit Newt Gingrich* for the change in American political tone... and the current atmosphere that you & I now both occupy.

This dysfunction isn't new, and it wasn't unpredictable.
I was a young man during the 42 Admin, when Newt was House Speaker. He was unvarnished in his political world-view. He was the guy who laid the groundwork for what we see on C-SPAN, nowadays.


I don't know if there is anything that can bring Am politics back to the RonTip dynamic. I'm afraid that ship has sailed- and sunk, somewhere over the horizon.


________________________



* from Wiki:

Quote
Role in political polarization
A number of scholars have credited Gingrich with playing a key role in undermining democratic norms in the United States, and hastening political polarization and partisan prejudice.[5][6][7][67][68][69][70][71][8][72][73][9] According to Harvard University political scientists Daniel Ziblatt and Steven Levitsky, Gingrich's speakership had a profound and lasting impact on American politics and health of American democracy. They argue that Gingrich instilled a "combative" approach in the Republican Party, where hateful language and hyper-partisanship became commonplace, and where democratic norms were abandoned. Gingrich frequently questioned the patriotism of Democrats, called them corrupt, compared them to fascists, and accused them of wanting to destroy the United States. Gingrich furthermore oversaw several major government shutdowns.[74][75][76][53]

University of Maryland political scientist Lilliana Mason identified Gingrich's instructions to Republicans to use words such as "betray, bizarre, decay, destroy, devour, greed, lie, pathetic, radical, selfish, shame, sick, steal, and traitors" about Democrats as an example of a breach in social norms and exacerbation of partisan prejudice.[5] Gingrich is a key figure in the 2017 book The Polarizers by Colgate University political scientist Sam Rosenfeld about the American political system's shift to polarization and gridlock.[6] Rosenfeld describes Gingrich as follows, "For Gingrich, responsible party principles were paramount... From the outset, he viewed the congressional minority party's role in terms akin to those found in parliamentary systems, prioritizing drawing stark programmatic contrasts over engaging the majority party as junior participants in governance."[6]

Boston College political scientist David Hopkins writes that Gingrich helped to nationalize American politics in a way where Democratic politicians on the state and local level were increasingly tied to the national Democratic party and President Clinton. Hopkins notes that Gingrich's view[73]

directly contradicted the conventional wisdom of politics... that parties in a two-party system achieve increasing electoral success as they move closer to the ideological center... Gingrich and his allies believed that an organized effort to intensify the ideological contrast between the congressional parties would allow the Republicans to make electoral inroads in the South. They worked energetically to tie individual Democratic incumbents to the party's more liberal national leadership while simultaneously raising highly charged cultural issues in Congress,
such as proposed constitutional amendments to allow prayer in public schools and to ban the burning of the American flag, on which conservative positions were widely popular – especially among southern voters.

Gingrich's view was however vindicated with the Republican Party's success in the 1994 U.S. midterm elections, sometimes referred to as the "Gingrich Revolution."[73] Hopkins writes, "More than any speaker before or since, Gingrich had become both the strategic architect and public face of his party."[73] One consequence of the increasing nationalization of politics was that moderate Republican incumbents in blue states were left more vulnerable to electoral defeat.[73]

According to University of Texas political scientist Sean M. Theriault, Gingrich had a profound influence on other Republican lawmakers, in particular those who served with him in the House, as they adopted his obstructionist tactics.[7] A 2011 study by Theriault and Duke University political scientist David W. Rohde in the Journal of Politics found that "almost the entire growth in Senate party polarization since the early 1970s can be accounted for by Republican senators who previously served in the House after 1978" when Gingrich was first elected to the House
.[77]
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#2105483 Mar 6th a 04:33 PM
by dawglover05
dawglover05
Jon Stewart made an observation that I agree with. A lot of his diagnoses about where the problems are in the country are spot on. Spot on.

But it then he appears to just use those points as a Trojan Horse to make it into office and then do whatever is best for him individually on the vast majority of issues (not every single one).

Like I've said before with the reduction of spending, that is a valid diagnosis. How he has gone about doing it has made very little to no sense, and there are just countless lies and stretches of truth to go along with it.

It would be like diagnosing someone with being overweight (which would be objectively true), and then sawing their leg off to make sure that they reached their goal weight...and then telling the public that person is healthy again.
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