An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Tortoise » Fri Jun 26, 2020 5:36 pm

Cortopassi wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:31 pm
Get docs who agree that masks are worthless and show the proof.
This statement particularly caught my eye. Isn't the burden of scientific proof on people who propose the new recommendation or mandate (e.g., mask-wearing) for everyone? Prior to March, not wearing masks in the U.S. was the norm, and up to that time nobody required scientific proof that it was acceptable.
Cortopassi wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:31 pm
Why instead dumb statements like if we test less we'll have less cases?
Because that's not a dumb statement. It's a simple fact, and he said it in the context of (to paraphrase), "Part of the reason why case counts are rising is because we're doing more testing." It's actually a very important fact for people to keep in mind when they read news stories that disingenuously report case count increases without reporting the corresponding increase in the number of tests.

Regarding the OP, are things really that rosy in European culture compared to US culture? In the UK there's Brexit drama, and various European countries have been committing cultural suicide via unchecked Muslim immigration. Wasn't it just a week or two ago when those armed Chechens were rioting in France's Dijon prefecture, running around with AKs, shooting into the air and setting cars on fire? Come to think of it, aren't Muslim riots a pretty typical occurrence in various parts of France these days?

Maybe the biggest difference is that most European citizens just roll over and let their traditions, history, and culture disintegrate around them, whereas in America at least some of us argue and push back a little to slow it down?
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by I Shrugged » Fri Jun 26, 2020 6:09 pm

flyingpylon wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:22 pm


I point out to people that if we didn't give government so much control in the first place then each election would not feel like such a life or death matter and our politics would be a lot less contentious. But that argument doesn't usually go anywhere.
That is exactly right, and should be repeated much more often!
At a minimum, we could say that about "federal government", and let electoral power devolve to the states, as it was meant to be.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Libertarian666 » Fri Jun 26, 2020 6:31 pm

WiseOne wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:10 pm
I'll chime in here....I also have suspected that masks are largely worthless, and there is certainly zero evidence in support of them.

We had to take an online course in how to don and doff PPE at the beginning of the pandemic. It is not at all easy to get it right and there is a good reason why training is necessary. I regard the mask as mainly a fashion statement.

This is relevant to this thread: if you don't toe the line in the US you can now officially be persecuted in many ways: you can be fired, victimized by violent thugs, singled out for ostracism, etc etc. We used to be able to say we live in a free society, but not anymore!!!
This will get exponentially worse if the left gets into power.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jalanlong » Fri Jun 26, 2020 7:27 pm

I Shrugged wrote:
Thu Jun 25, 2020 6:17 pm
The news and entertainment media and personalities are completely going along with this. I would guess that some of them would like to dissent, but they don't dare.
I hate to be one of those people that blames the media for everything that goes wrong but in this case i do think they shoulder a LOT of the blame for the past 4 years. When people on the right made fun of Obama in a mean-spirited way, the media was quick to tell everyone that they HAD to respect the office of the President. Then when Trump comes along, television programs like Steven Colbert, Samantha Bee and of course SNL spend their entire programs, night after night for almost 4 years mocking the president, calling him all sort of names and trying to demean the office as much as humanly possible. They have made it acceptable to say anything goes when you disagree politically with someone. I mean Samantha Bee called the President's wife a "feckless cunt" on television and the networks didn't blink an eye because it was Trump and apparently since he is often crass, they are allowed to be as well.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jalanlong » Fri Jun 26, 2020 7:39 pm

Cortopassi wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:31 pm
Then I have to ask all of the Trump/right leaning people here:

You just know Trump, and probably Pence want to call bullshit on how things are being handled. So why is there a vacuum of leadership there? Why do they defer to the task force, then either openly or covertly defy them?

Why not decide they are going to take a different tack? Assemble doctors who side with his thinking? He's done it in every other darn circumstance, he fires people left and right for not towing the line, etc.

Get docs who agree that masks are worthless and show the proof. Get ones who agree we have to isolate those at risk and everyone else go on with their lives. And so on.

Tech, others, why?? I actually would welcome this as well. But why isn't it happening? I was just in a meeting where every individual was of this opinion. So it definitely is widespread. Why is it not being done? Why instead dumb statements like if we test less we'll have less cases?
I agree but I am going to assume he does not do it because of the political fallout he would receive. This all happened so quickly that by the time we knew the extent of the shutdowns, the media, and by extension the American public, were already making heroes out of "experts" like Fauci. Some polls show that over 70% of Americans trust Fauci. If Trump were to fire him now he would take an unbelievable pounding from the media and establishment who have already labelled him as "anti-science".

I think even Trump is smart enough to know that even though he can be successful fighting the establishment at times, in this situation dealing with public health, firing the experts that the people have grown to like and filling their positions with his own experts would give the Democrats and media all the ammunition they need in an election year. If it were me I would do it anyway. Its not like he is going to get positive press by staying with Fauci. Might as well go down swinging!
Last edited by jalanlong on Fri Jun 26, 2020 8:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jhogue » Fri Jun 26, 2020 8:12 pm

@drudge.com:

Dr. Fauci touches his face, mask and glasses with his hands.
“Groucho Marx wrote:
A stock trader asked him, "Groucho, where do you put all your money?" Groucho was said to have replied, "In Treasury bonds", and the trader said, "You can't make much money on those." Groucho said, "You can if you have enough of them!"
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Mountaineer » Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:29 am

WiseOne wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:10 pm
I'll chime in here....I also have suspected that masks are largely worthless, and there is certainly zero evidence in support of them.

We had to take an online course in how to don and doff PPE at the beginning of the pandemic. It is not at all easy to get it right and there is a good reason why training is necessary. I regard the mask as mainly a fashion statement.

This is relevant to this thread: if you don't toe the line in the US you can now officially be persecuted in many ways: you can be fired, victimized by violent thugs, singled out for ostracism, etc etc. We used to be able to say we live in a free society, but not anymore!!!
If masks are largely worthless, why do the operating room staff wear them? Serious question.
DNA has its own language (code), and language requires intelligence. There is no known mechanism by which matter can give birth to information, let alone language. It is unreasonable to believe the world could have happened by chance.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by pmward » Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am

Looks at the title of the thread. Looks at what it devolved into....

We really are a laughing stock to the whole world right now, and here it is openly on display for all to see. This is really what America is like these days ladies and gentleman. Aren't you all just itching to move here???
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by pmward » Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:36 am

Libertarian666 wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:28 am
pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
Looks at the title of the thread. Looks at what it devolved into....

We really are a laughing stock to the whole world right now, and here it is openly on display for all to see. This is really what America is like these days ladies and gentleman. Aren't you all just itching to move here???
Apparently some people still want to move here even if they have to do it illegally. Why is that if it is so horrible?

As for legal migration, if the Democrats win there will be an exodus of people who don't want to live under tyranny and who have the means to leave and somewhere to go.

However, if Trump is re-elected, I'm sorry to say that rich Democrats won't leave, just as they didn't leave after he was elected last time. By the way, why haven't they left already if he is so horrible?
My case in point. I mention nothing about immigration, nothing about Democrats, nothing about politics whatsoever, and still get quoted with a political rant taking my comments totally out of context. You are proving my point. THIS EXACTLY is one small micro scale example of why and how U.S. society on a macro scale is devolving right now. Both sides are so incredibly insufferable right now.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Cortopassi » Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:42 am

pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
Looks at the title of the thread. Looks at what it devolved into....

We really are a laughing stock to the whole world right now, and here it is openly on display for all to see. This is really what America is like these days ladies and gentleman. Aren't you all just itching to move here???
Here's what I've found. If tech and I sit down for a drink, for example, we will be cordial, have a heated discussion and respect, to some level, each other's opinion. (I hope!)

These message boards, social media and the press amplify differences of opinion 100x. It's impossible to get your demeanor, body language, and how you'd actually say the words across without it likely being misinterpreted to some extent. So I always read tech as yelling at everyone who doesn't love Trump and as being this crabby old white guy. He probably reads me as (fill in the blank). But if we got together, we'd likely find we have a lot in common, and just some differences of opinion which we wouldn't bring up very often.

I was in a meeting yesterday with a bunch of tech-type people, and instead of discussing work we talked masks, covid, Trump, etc. My boss would absolutely be a soulmate to tech, and I have known and worked with him for over 20 years. I love the guy. But every now and then we get into these discussions and both he and I get exasperated that we can't understand the other person's opinion. And then we laugh it off, drop it, and get back to work.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jalanlong » Sat Jun 27, 2020 10:35 am

pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
Looks at the title of the thread. Looks at what it devolved into....

We really are a laughing stock to the whole world right now, and here it is openly on display for all to see. This is really what America is like these days ladies and gentleman. Aren't you all just itching to move here???

Actually this is a pretty civil discussion in my opinion. On Facebook this would have devolved into calling each other “Libtard” or “Trumpkin” already.
Simonjester wrote: i agree this is pretty civil..

i think a lot of the amped up feeling American politics is generating right now is due to a combination of tectonic shifts that are occurring, and it being an election year..
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by WiseOne » Sat Jun 27, 2020 3:21 pm

Mountaineer wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:29 am
WiseOne wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:10 pm
I'll chime in here....I also have suspected that masks are largely worthless, and there is certainly zero evidence in support of them.

We had to take an online course in how to don and doff PPE at the beginning of the pandemic. It is not at all easy to get it right and there is a good reason why training is necessary. I regard the mask as mainly a fashion statement.

This is relevant to this thread: if you don't toe the line in the US you can now officially be persecuted in many ways: you can be fired, victimized by violent thugs, singled out for ostracism, etc etc. We used to be able to say we live in a free society, but not anymore!!!
If masks are largely worthless, why do the operating room staff wear them? Serious question.
You can't compare these two situations. In the OR, a surgical mask designed for the purpose is being worn by a trained person who is also wearing hair and shoe coverings, gloves, and gown while keeping hands above waist etc. And, your face is inches away from the inside of the patient. It's bacterial contamination of the surgical wound from your breath that the mask is protecting against. With COVID, you have random cloth items worn in all kinds of ways by untrained people, ostensibly for the purpose of preventing a viral exposure. Totally different.

BTW yes this is a pretty civil discussion but that's because everyone is essentially of the same mindset. The distance between the individual positions you see here is much smaller than that between, say, AOC and Ted Cruz. Here's how I see it: Trump pushed the conservative party to shift attention from the traditional talking-point issues of abortion and religion to economic and social issues. Everyone knew that nothing of any relevance would ever happen on the abortion and religion front, so the Republicans were always political wallflowers with little in the way of accomplishments since the Reagan tax cuts. The new focus on dealing with long-neglected issues such as immigration, offshoring, and global trade deals was a direct challenge to policy areas that the Democrats thought they had locked down for decades with virtually no opposition. At the same time, the Democrats have veered to an extreme left position bordering on fascism that frankly scares many people, and has certainly served to increase the fervor on the right.

So you could say Trump is polarizing, but not for personal reasons. It's because he has made the Republican party a political force to be reckoned with, and no one saw it coming.
Last edited by sophie on Sat Jun 27, 2020 3:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jalanlong » Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:36 pm

So the last few posts before mine have compared the Democrats to terrorists/fascists that scare a lot of people and are out of tune with the average American. However, as of today Biden has a double digit lead over Trump in the election polls. So does the avg American really agree with the Democratic party on these issues indicating that America has turned hard left? Or are they unaware how far left Democrats have become? Or is it just an anti-Trump vote and a potted fern could beat him at this point?
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Mountaineer » Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:55 pm

WiseOne wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 3:21 pm
Mountaineer wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:29 am
WiseOne wrote:
Fri Jun 26, 2020 4:10 pm
I'll chime in here....I also have suspected that masks are largely worthless, and there is certainly zero evidence in support of them.

We had to take an online course in how to don and doff PPE at the beginning of the pandemic. It is not at all easy to get it right and there is a good reason why training is necessary. I regard the mask as mainly a fashion statement.

This is relevant to this thread: if you don't toe the line in the US you can now officially be persecuted in many ways: you can be fired, victimized by violent thugs, singled out for ostracism, etc etc. We used to be able to say we live in a free society, but not anymore!!!
If masks are largely worthless, why do the operating room staff wear them? Serious question.
You can't compare these two situations. In the OR, a surgical mask designed for the purpose is being worn by a trained person who is also wearing hair and shoe coverings, gloves, and gown while keeping hands above waist etc. And, your face is inches away from the inside of the patient. It's bacterial contamination of the surgical wound from your breath that the mask is protecting against. With COVID, you have random cloth items worn in all kinds of ways by untrained people, ostensibly for the purpose of preventing a viral exposure. Totally different.

BTW yes this is a pretty civil discussion but that's because everyone is essentially of the same mindset. The distance between the individual positions you see here is much smaller than that between, say, AOC and Ted Cruz. Here's how I see it: Trump pushed the conservative party to shift attention from the traditional talking-point issues of abortion and religion to economic and social issues. Everyone knew that nothing of any relevance would ever happen on the abortion and religion front, so the Republicans were always political wallflowers with little in the way of accomplishments since the Reagan tax cuts. The new focus on dealing with long-neglected issues such as immigration, offshoring, and global trade deals was a direct challenge to policy areas that the Democrats thought they had locked down for decades with virtually no opposition. At the same time, the Democrats have veered to an extreme left position bordering on fascism that frankly scares many people, and has certainly served to increase the fervor on the right.

So you could say Trump is polarizing, but not for personal reasons. It's because he has made the Republican party a political force to be reckoned with, and no one saw it coming.
Thanks WiseOne. I appreciate your response; as I understand it, the worthless comment has more to do with the improper behaviors of the wearer than the partial effectiveness of the hardware. Close?
DNA has its own language (code), and language requires intelligence. There is no known mechanism by which matter can give birth to information, let alone language. It is unreasonable to believe the world could have happened by chance.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jalanlong » Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:58 pm

pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
If the Democrats gets into power, the best outcome is a civil war in which they are completely vanquished. The worst case is tyranny that will make the Soviet Union look pretty good by comparison.

I don't want this question to turn into a partisan thing, rather one of just observations or opinions. But could we look back on 2020 as a watershed moment for the US making the jump to a more authoritarian society? Throughout the last few months, polls have consistently indicated anywhere from 65-70% of respondents supporting mandatory face masks and forced shutdowns/shelter in place ordinances. Regardless of how we may feel about the shutdown personally, if someone would have told us last year at this time that the US government (Fed, State and Local) was going to decide which businesses were essential and which were not, order the shutdown of the non-essentials, order mandatory temperature checks and facemasks and arrest people who went to the beach or went to get a haircut, I feel like most of us would have said no way would a huge % of Americans stand for that. Land of the free, Boston Tea Party, Don't Tread on me and all that. But not only have most Americans stood for it, most have actually supported it. Is this just a unusual series of events (dealing with people's health) that has made people more accepting of government orders or is this a sea change in American's trust and relationship with a strong government?
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by vnatale » Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:36 pm

jalanlong wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:58 pm
pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
If the Democrats gets into power, the best outcome is a civil war in which they are completely vanquished. The worst case is tyranny that will make the Soviet Union look pretty good by comparison.

I don't want this question to turn into a partisan thing, rather one of just observations or opinions. But could we look back on 2020 as a watershed moment for the US making the jump to a more authoritarian society? Throughout the last few months, polls have consistently indicated anywhere from 65-70% of respondents supporting mandatory face masks and forced shutdowns/shelter in place ordinances. Regardless of how we may feel about the shutdown personally, if someone would have told us last year at this time that the US government (Fed, State and Local) was going to decide which businesses were essential and which were not, order the shutdown of the non-essentials, order mandatory temperature checks and facemasks and arrest people who went to the beach or went to get a haircut, I feel like most of us would have said no way would a huge % of Americans stand for that. Land of the free, Boston Tea Party, Don't Tread on me and all that. But not only have most Americans stood for it, most have actually supported it. Is this just a unusual series of events (dealing with people's health) that has made people more accepting of government orders or is this a sea change in American's trust and relationship with a strong government?
What was your reaction to after 9/11 where we got the Patriot Act, all we have to go through when we fly through this day, all the protections in Washington D.C. and elsewhere, and all everything else the American people have accepted as permanent way of life after 9/11?

Vinny
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by jalanlong » Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:58 pm

vnatale wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:36 pm
jalanlong wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:58 pm
pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
If the Democrats gets into power, the best outcome is a civil war in which they are completely vanquished. The worst case is tyranny that will make the Soviet Union look pretty good by comparison.

I don't want this question to turn into a partisan thing, rather one of just observations or opinions. But could we look back on 2020 as a watershed moment for the US making the jump to a more authoritarian society? Throughout the last few months, polls have consistently indicated anywhere from 65-70% of respondents supporting mandatory face masks and forced shutdowns/shelter in place ordinances. Regardless of how we may feel about the shutdown personally, if someone would have told us last year at this time that the US government (Fed, State and Local) was going to decide which businesses were essential and which were not, order the shutdown of the non-essentials, order mandatory temperature checks and facemasks and arrest people who went to the beach or went to get a haircut, I feel like most of us would have said no way would a huge % of Americans stand for that. Land of the free, Boston Tea Party, Don't Tread on me and all that. But not only have most Americans stood for it, most have actually supported it. Is this just a unusual series of events (dealing with people's health) that has made people more accepting of government orders or is this a sea change in American's trust and relationship with a strong government?
What was your reaction to after 9/11 where we got the Patriot Act, all we have to go through when we fly through this day, all the protections in Washington D.C. and elsewhere, and all everything else the American people have accepted as permanent way of life after 9/11?

Vinny
I am not sure I find them comparable. First of all, flying is a choice. You can always get somewhere another way or not go at all. Things like phone surveillance and some of the reporting that banks now have to do with applications and wire transfers etc. don't really affect the average American in a tangible way that they think about. But a local official (some of whom are unelected) suddenly deciding the business you work for is non-essential and forced to close, taking away your livelihood,affects people in the most profound way possible. And I am shocked at how quickly it happened, with very little debate over it and how easily most people seemed to go along with it and really still accept it to this day. I think most of us would have suspected a bit more pushback from the citizenry on it.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by vnatale » Sat Jun 27, 2020 6:11 pm

jalanlong wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:58 pm
vnatale wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 5:36 pm
jalanlong wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:58 pm
pmward wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 9:18 am
If the Democrats gets into power, the best outcome is a civil war in which they are completely vanquished. The worst case is tyranny that will make the Soviet Union look pretty good by comparison.

I don't want this question to turn into a partisan thing, rather one of just observations or opinions. But could we look back on 2020 as a watershed moment for the US making the jump to a more authoritarian society? Throughout the last few months, polls have consistently indicated anywhere from 65-70% of respondents supporting mandatory face masks and forced shutdowns/shelter in place ordinances. Regardless of how we may feel about the shutdown personally, if someone would have told us last year at this time that the US government (Fed, State and Local) was going to decide which businesses were essential and which were not, order the shutdown of the non-essentials, order mandatory temperature checks and facemasks and arrest people who went to the beach or went to get a haircut, I feel like most of us would have said no way would a huge % of Americans stand for that. Land of the free, Boston Tea Party, Don't Tread on me and all that. But not only have most Americans stood for it, most have actually supported it. Is this just a unusual series of events (dealing with people's health) that has made people more accepting of government orders or is this a sea change in American's trust and relationship with a strong government?
What was your reaction to after 9/11 where we got the Patriot Act, all we have to go through when we fly through this day, all the protections in Washington D.C. and elsewhere, and all everything else the American people have accepted as permanent way of life after 9/11?

Vinny
I am not sure I find them comparable. First of all, flying is a choice. You can always get somewhere another way or not go at all. Things like phone surveillance and some of the reporting that banks now have to do with applications and wire transfers etc. don't really affect the average American in a tangible way that they think about. But a local official (some of whom are unelected) suddenly deciding the business you work for is non-essential and forced to close, taking away your livelihood,affects people in the most profound way possible. And I am shocked at how quickly it happened, with very little debate over it and how easily most people seemed to go along with it and really still accept it to this day. I think most of us would have suspected a bit more pushback from the citizenry on it.
I'd agree with you with what we are undergoing now is far more drastic. However, it feels like they are both on the same continuum.

Vinny
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by WiseOne » Sun Jun 28, 2020 10:26 am

jalanlong wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:36 pm
So the last few posts before mine have compared the Democrats to terrorists/fascists that scare a lot of people and are out of tune with the average American. However, as of today Biden has a double digit lead over Trump in the election polls. So does the avg American really agree with the Democratic party on these issues indicating that America has turned hard left? Or are they unaware how far left Democrats have become? Or is it just an anti-Trump vote and a potted fern could beat him at this point?
There is no "average American". There's conservatives & liberals who will always stay on their end of the spectrum and vote accordingly, and a centrist population straddling the two sides. It's that centrist population that decides the election (voter turnout among the other groups is a factor too, yes).

How many of those centrist voters can see through all the propaganda to understand what the Democratic party stands for? It is very difficult right now with Trump's unerring instinct for saying the wrong thing plus the massive media effort against him. Effectively Biden has him outgunned because he has the entire mainstream press effectively as part of his campaign.

If Trump can start laying out a more positive message and get it past the media tirade, he might have a chance. Realize that there's been so little direct exposure to Biden that people don't really know who he is at this point. Things may change quite a bit depending on how he is presented - especially at debates. Also, it is possible that people's view of BLM will gradually cool as they realize how destructive their demands would be if implemented. Right now they're kind of the cool kid on the block due to press promotion and everyone's fear of being labeled as a racist, but that only gets you so far.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by flyingpylon » Sun Jun 28, 2020 10:32 am

WiseOne wrote:
Sun Jun 28, 2020 10:26 am
There is no "average American". There's conservatives & liberals who will always stay on their end of the spectrum and vote accordingly, and a centrist population straddling the two sides. It's that centrist population that decides the election (voter turnout among the other groups is a factor too, yes).
And you could probably narrow that down further to the centrist population in a handful of states. Maybe even select counties in some cases.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by pp4me » Sun Jun 28, 2020 11:14 am

I think Biden is playing it pretty smart by staying out of sight and keeping his name out of the news as much as possible. Also wearing a mask whenever he does go out in public. In other words he's being the perfect antidote to what people don't like about Trump right now.

Whether that's a winning strategy or not and if he'll be allowed to keep doing it (obviously the MSM will let him) remains to be seen.

In the meantime he's got lots of time to prepare for his acceptance speech at the convention and the three debates while Trump is having to run the country.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by I Shrugged » Sun Jun 28, 2020 6:37 pm

jalanlong wrote:
Sat Jun 27, 2020 4:36 pm
So the last few posts before mine have compared the Democrats to terrorists/fascists that scare a lot of people and are out of tune with the average American. However, as of today Biden has a double digit lead over Trump in the election polls. So does the avg American really agree with the Democratic party on these issues indicating that America has turned hard left? Or are they unaware how far left Democrats have become? Or is it just an anti-Trump vote and a potted fern could beat him at this point?
It's definitely an anti-Trump vote.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by WiseOne » Tue Jun 30, 2020 4:35 pm

Libertarian666 wrote:
Sun Jun 28, 2020 11:46 am
I think one of the reasons he hasn't started rolling out the big guns yet is that he doesn't want to make it more likely that the Democrats replace Biden at the convention by destroying him before that point. Of course I'm not privy to his thinking or what his inner circle is saying; this is just my opinion.
Good point! Totally agree. I guess we just have to wait until the convention to see how this is really going to go.

Pugchief, I wonder how exactly the Democrats will manage to do away with debates? I can understand the motivation but that would hardly go unnoticed.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Tortoise » Tue Jun 30, 2020 6:19 pm

MangoMan wrote:
Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:14 pm
WiseOne wrote:
Tue Jun 30, 2020 4:35 pm
Pugchief, I wonder how exactly the Democrats will manage to do away with debates? I can understand the motivation but that would hardly go unnoticed.
My guess is some kind of COVID excuse, like Biden can't leave his basement. It won't look good tho; Biden will look weak.
TV shows and podcasts have remote interviews between people in different places all the time. So it would be kind of silly to claim that the presidential debates can't happen unless the candidates are in the same room together.
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Re: An outsiders perspective of the politcal turmoil

Post by Libertarian666 » Wed Jul 01, 2020 2:30 pm

MangoMan wrote:
Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:14 pm
WiseOne wrote:
Tue Jun 30, 2020 4:35 pm
Libertarian666 wrote:
Sun Jun 28, 2020 11:46 am
I think one of the reasons he hasn't started rolling out the big guns yet is that he doesn't want to make it more likely that the Democrats replace Biden at the convention by destroying him before that point. Of course I'm not privy to his thinking or what his inner circle is saying; this is just my opinion.
Good point! Totally agree. I guess we just have to wait until the convention to see how this is really going to go.

Pugchief, I wonder how exactly the Democrats will manage to do away with debates? I can understand the motivation but that would hardly go unnoticed.
My guess is some kind of COVID excuse, like Biden can't leave his basement. It won't look good tho; Biden will look weak.
Anyone who hasn't noticed how weak he is already probably won't notice that either. The lamestream media will cover for him, of course, as they have been doing all along.
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