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Will the Republicans please now drop their theocratic crusade?


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2012 Nov 6, 5:50pm   22,220 views  95 comments

by curious2   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

Election results show President Obama got a majority of the popular vote again, in addition to winning the electoral college 300 vs 200. That happened even with an approval rating below 50%, and ObamaCare polling at -10%. Granted, President Obama is an extraordinary campaigner, but the larger issue is that many Americans felt they had no real choice: Republicans devolved into an apocalyptic cult offering only catastrophic Romnesia.

To borrow Bill Clinton's phrase, America built a bridge to the 21st century, and we are not going back. Republicans' bronze-age pact with Pat Robertson is no longer a "winning" formula, if it ever was. Contrary to freak80's delusional and deeply disturbed fears, supporters of same-sex marriage appear to have won a majority in all four states where the issue was on the ballot. That is consistent with polls showing majority support nationally since 2010. In other words, divide-and-misrule holy warrior crusades seem no longer to be a viable electoral strategy.

The issue is, now, will the Republicans even try to convert from a faith-based apocalyptic cult to an evidence-based political party with coherent governing principles? Or, will they blame Satan and persist on their current course?

To remind any Republican readers of American history, the first Republican President (Lincoln) signed the Emancipation Proclamation, championed the 13th Amendment, and rejected proposals to put "In God we Trust" on the currency. (Possibly the pre-eminent lawyer of his generation, Lincoln believed it would raise an impermissible establishment of religion. He also worried about fiat money, but that's another story.) Alas Lincoln's true legacy seems long forgotten now, at least among the party he helped create.

I ask this question because I believe that America needs at least two viable political parties, preferably more. Instead, we have two rival patronage networks, one of which is an apocalyptic cult. Can we please move on to a time when we can have a real choice in elections?

#politics

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18   david1   2012 Nov 7, 2:51am  

YesYNot says

I stand corrected. Higher income voters seem to go for Romney. I wonder if it would look different with more refined income brackets. Income seems to be almost as good of an indicator as religion.

While not income per se, if you look at the vote by education, you get a clearer picture of what you are expecting. Pretty even between high school, some college, and college graduate.

Then when you look at post-graduate....things skew towards Obama.

Given that post-graduates make more than bachelors on the average, one can infer that within that "over 100k" income demographic, those with higher incomes derided from production (and needing that education) probably leaned Obama.

19   david1   2012 Nov 7, 2:52am  

And by the way, to answer the OP -

No, I see a doubling down.

20   curious2   2012 Nov 7, 3:09am  

david1 says

if you look at the vote by education

Interesting - I hadn't noticed it before, but the only education level where Obama lost was bachelor's degrees, 47%-51%. That's also the demographic that opposed ObamaCare by the widest margin, 60%-40%.

I wonder if the connection might relate to age, which was a very clear predictor. Obama won among voters under 40, and lost among voters over 40. The youngest voters haven't had time to get a BA/BS yet. Older college graduates got their degrees at a time when college was cheap or even free, and a bachelor's degree was plenty for a successful career. Since then, probably a larger share of college graduates have gone on to graduate degrees, especially during the recent recession, and may be more likely to be in debt. So, the bachelor's degree cohort may skew older, and possibly with more savings. Fed ZIRP & QE punish savers, but might possibly reward debtors, so that might explain the split too.

21   maxweber21   2012 Nov 7, 3:48am  

Actually, Romney lost because he represents the ultra-wealthy. Not because of a religous/atheistic battle.
No doubt repub's will run that horse again in 4 years. Against Hillary? Who knows. As economy will continue to tick downward, he still will not be able to represent the average American. So, will lose again. Really has very little to do with religion other than a lot of people voted him based on abortion since Mass makes it difficult to have an abortion after 24 mo.s (time at which majority born survive: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_viability). Clearly that one issue was not enought to win - especially since its governed by the states at this time anyways.
Republican party will have challenges going forward. Democratic party just as many. As government comes closer and closer to point of no return on borrowing, the inflation will accelerate. Expect to see massive emigration of young adults as with Ireland et al. Time is ripe for a third party to take the scene. Not one who takes positions on the issues such as Libs and Constitution et al; but one that caters to dreams of the people like Demos and Repubs.

22   curious2   2012 Nov 7, 3:56am  

maxweber21 says

Mass makes it difficult to have an abortion after 24 mo.s

After 24 months, most babies have not only been born but also are learning to walk. So yes, I think aborting them would be difficult. They keep toddling away.

maxweber21 says

Romney lost because he represents the ultra-wealthy. Not because of a religous/atheistic battle.

Romnesia's current positions on social issues also lost everywhere they were on the ballot. It isn't a battle between religion and atheism per se, it's more about whether to have faith-based government or evidence-based government. Remember the days when people were tried for witchcraft, and innocence or guilt was determined by throwing them into a pool of water? (If they floated, it meant the water had rejected them, and so they must be guilty.) Romnesia's 47% comment hurt his chances too, but Republican social positions also cost them, and the same positions would cost them even more in 2016.

23   maxweber21   2012 Nov 7, 3:58am  

BTW, its worth reminding everyone that Bush was throwing free money to the big companies. I think Obama is credited with the free money to buy a house or trade in a clunker. So, in the world of voting favors from the Treasury, at least the Dem's consider the voters a little. I wonder how much more free education has been doled out too. Clearly the populous is voting for the favors to themselves. ultra-rich to repubs. lower-middle and middle to Demos. And professionals left with no representation. But they always work hard and take care of themselves anyways so nothing new.

24   Dan8267   2012 Nov 7, 4:02am  

maxweber21 says

makes it difficult to have an abortion after 24 mo.s (time at which majority born survive: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_viability).

If it's on Wikipedia, it has to be true!

25   rooemoore   2012 Nov 7, 4:05am  

CaptainShuddup says

I think the Liberals don't want to admit, or people to realize. The republican vote are all of the people that have to pay for the Liberals Bullshit.

You mean the GREEDY people that don't want to pay to keep this country great.

Under Romney's tax plan I would have saved almost 40k a year in taxes (according to my CPA and what we know of Romney's plan) So I clearly voted against my own self-interest.

I have a small business with about 50 employees. I should be the poster child for the Republican's argument to lower taxes. But I understand that my business will be pretty much fucked if the middle class continues to shrink. And it is pretty clear to me that pure greed dressed up as "supply side economics" is the biggest reason - there are others - that our middle class has shrunk.

The trick, as I see it, is not to take away workers rights and lower their pay here in the US so we can stay competitive. It is to get international workers to start organizing so that perhaps someday we can have 50's and 60's style US capitalism all over the world. Then everyone wins.

It's a pipe dream, I know, so I will leave you with one final thought about this election.

26   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 4:16am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says

cheap Chinese AKs in bulk....

Don't those things overheat and jam? When cannibal anarchy takes over the North American continent, the forewarned PatNetters will have an Uzi for each arm to bring home dinner for the entire PatNet floating island.

MMM, Realtor®.

27   Vicente   2012 Nov 8, 5:09am  

curious2 says

forewarned PatNetters will have an Uzi for each arm to bring home dinner for the entire PatNet floating island.

I thought PatNetters would go for Ingram Mac-10:

"Daddy would have gotten us Uzis!"

28   AverageBear   2012 Nov 8, 5:31am  

Curious2, What liberals tend to do is 'project' the average republican as God-fearing and Pro Life which is not accurate. Do they exist in the GOP? Definitely. Are they the majority? (as in, counting all independents/Republicans/libertarian/anyone who votes for the GOP?) Definitely not. I don't have #'s to back up or links to provide (as I'm at work). I do think liberal media tends to project Tea Party supporters as Pro-Life and God-Christ cheerleaders, and that would be inaccurate as well. I went to the Tea Party rally in Boston awhile ago, and didn't get the 'Religious Vibe' at all. (I happened to run into a VERY libreal friend of mine. I asked if he saw any racism that day. He said no, but could 'feel it'. .....I do think the GOP should marginalize or downplay the religious of our ranks? I think Tea Party should be advertised as folks who spend within their means, don't have debt actually expect the gov't to do the same.
As heads of households to do these things (no debt/live within our means), we (ie, GOP/Dem/anyone) are seen as smart and sensible. But when we expect our elected gov't officials to have these same traits that we live by, and admire, we (GOP) are called extreme? Liberal media perpetuates this fallacy, and you eat it up like an ice-cream sundae....One should always remember that the Tea Party is not about religion, but about fiscal sanity.... And speaking of fiscal sanity, I leave you w/ one question. Can you name me a fiscally conservative Democrat Congressman or governor? I'm hoping to find one, and if so would like to read up on him/her....

29   AverageBear   2012 Nov 8, 5:39am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says

Koch Brothers are probably buying cheap Chinese AKs in bulk to deliver to teabaggers and militias to start skirmishing in the provinces and provoke full-bore civil war.
There's nothing left for the middle class to do. They might as well provide entertainment for their overlords.

--------------------------
For every Koch Bro, there's a Soros. For every Limbaugh, there's a Chris Matthews...and on and on and on....What a boring topic of conversation. Next....
Why do liberals fall back on the fallacy of Tea Party folks 'clinging to guns and religion'? It's getting tedious to say the least. The majority of us who are fiscally conservative don't own a gun, and most likely are Pro-Choice. You eat up the liberal media shite sandwich, as if it were a sundae. Give it a rest. Fiscally conservative GOPers and Independents are more 'normal' than you think, or will admit. I'd vote for fiscally conservative Democrat, but I haven't found one in quite some time....

30   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 5:41am  

AverageBear says

Can you name me a fiscally conservative Democrat Congressman or governor?

http://bluedogdems.ngpvanhost.com/content/blue-dog-membership-1

Can you name a fiscally responsible Republican President? The last times we had a balanced budget were during the Clinton administration. The Reagan deficits were enormous despite the tax increases that he signed, and then each Bush broke all deficit records. (Bush the elder raised both taxes and deficits, Bush the Younger "cut" taxes while increasing spending, shifting the cost onto future taxpayers.) BTW, since your avatar says Boston, how's that RomneyCare working out for you?

If Republicans had nominated a secular candidate like Ron Paul, who actually outpolled Barack Obama nationally, or former Governor Gary Johnson, we could have had a real debate about the role of government and fiscal responsibility. Former Governor Bill Weld would have been a fine candidate, or Mayor Bloomberg if he had been encouraged. Instead Republicans chose multiple-choice Romnesia, and their runner-up was "frothy" Santorum.

31   tdr   2012 Nov 8, 5:47am  

Typical Liberals. Nasty when they lose, even nastier when they win. This is why there is so much contempt.

To quote Democrat Hillary Clinton:

"I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you're not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration."

Well?

32   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 5:50am  

tdr says

Well?

What are you even talking about?

33   AverageBear   2012 Nov 8, 5:51am  

curious2 says

Can you name a fiscally responsible Republican President?

--------------------------
I asked you first. Can you name me any current Democrat who is fiscally conservative. For the record, I wasn't happy voting for W, as he wasn't conservative. (SCHIP, no child left behind, etc). But the alternative to me, was alot worse...I'll play the 'history game' with you another day, but please stick to the question I posed. I'm not trying to be a dick; i'm honestly interested in knowing if a fiscally conservative democrat currently exists, who at the same time, won't get chastizes by the DNC. I think Liebermann comes to mind, but he got thrown under the bus by the DNC. People of CT 'get it'.... I'd vote for him, and anyone like him. Can you give me the name of someone like Lieberman? Thanks.

34   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 5:52am  

AverageBear says

I asked you first.

And I replied with a list. You still haven't named any.

35   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 5:52am  

Hey man don't talk down Bush Sr. : ) He and his team bit the bullet going with the Dem's major tax rise, totally breaking his "Read My Lips. . ." campaign promise.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=cCu

When the 1990 recession hit, revenues tanked, but they were trying:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=cCv

red is outlays, green is revenue

36   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 5:55am  

AverageBear says

Can you name me any current Democrat who is fiscally conservative

All of 'em who want to raise taxes.

None of them are conservative enough, but the bottom line is that taxes have to double in this country.

http://patrick.net/?p=1218608&c=895053#comment-895053

for the math behind that.

Now, if you'd like to cut spending to replace these tax increases, I'm all for that, too. Name your cuts!

Being a "fiscal conservative" without actually making the policy to get you to a balanced budget is just living on Conservative Bullshit Mountain.

37   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 6:11am  

Vicente says

I thought PatNetters would go for Ingram Mac-10:

"Daddy would have gotten us Uzis!"

Great reference to Night of the Comet :)

How about some of each? That way, PatNetters will have something to argue about, while carrying compatible ammunition in case of real(tor) Zombie attacks.

38   mell   2012 Nov 8, 6:23am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says

The GOP is going to go into Full-Bore Crazee from here on out:

Here is the 2016 platform:

RAPE is a SACRAMENT!

-RNC will propose a Rape Amendment that will repeal all rape laws in the US.

The 13th and 14th Amendments are unconstitutional.

-RNC will propose returning the progeny of runaway slaves to their rightful owners - or to those who can prove to a court or sheriff they will make good use of their labor.

JESUS is Lord and God.

-Fire trucks will be dispatched with ministers to mass baptize everyone encountered outside in a municipality.

SUFFRAGE is SATANIC:

-Women's eligibility to vote will be outlawed in the name of God.

Epic!

Sad that the GOP in mostly unvotable which is sad because there is a real niche for a fiscally conservative and socially liberal party that would put an end to the fiscal destruction of the nation being orchestrated since bush and continued unabated by Obummer.

39   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 7:10am  

mell says

continued unabated by Obummer.

When you're handed a bag of flaming dog poo all you can really do is just put out the fire.

Taxes need to double from here. Nobody who tries to do that will be reelected.

We're going to be living in "interesting times" this decade.

40   Vicente   2012 Nov 8, 7:14am  

AverageBear says

What liberals tend to do is 'project' the average republican as God-fearing and Pro Life which is not accurate. Do they exist in the GOP? Definitely. Are they the majority? (as in, counting all independents/Republicans/libertarian/anyone who votes for the GOP?) Definitely not.

If you think God-Fearing Pro-Life are NOT the majority, it's curious that the Party Platform clearly was written for them:

- We support a human life amendment to the Constitution, and we endorse legislation to make clear that the Fourteenth Amendment’s protections apply to unborn children.

- We affirm every citizen’s right to apply religious values to public policy and the right of faith-based organizations to participate fully in public programs without renouncing their beliefs, removing religious objects or symbols, or becoming subject to government-imposed hiring practices.

I went back and looked at the GOP 1980 platform, they felt no need to include religious language. Abortion was there but at least the language recognized that there was internal division. There's no question that the current GOP does not believe in the Big Tent only in useful fools, which is among the reasons I left.

41   mell   2012 Nov 8, 7:35am  

Bellingham Bill says

mell says

continued unabated by Obummer.

When you're handed a bag of flaming dog poo all you can really do is just put out the fire.

Taxes need to double from here. Nobody who tries to do that will be reelected.

We're going to be living in "interesting times" this decade.

This cannot be solved with taxes alone even if you tax at 90%. It can be a part of it, but the majority has to come from cuts to spending across the board, math doesn't lie. Sure, they all need to lie to get (re-)elected, but he has now free reign in his second term and there won't be a third and cut finally become serious about cutting the deficit.

42   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 7:43am  

Vicente says

if you think God-Fearing Pro-Life are NOT the majority,

There's no need to engage in hypotheticals. We have the exit polling data now.

http://elections.msnbc.msn.com/ns/politics/2012/all/house

Should your state legally recognize same-sex marriage?
No: (D): 26% -- (R): 71%

Abortion should be Illegal
Yes: (D): 18% -- (R): 57%

There you have it.

43   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 7:49am  

Curiously, the white evangelical bloc broke 78% Republican. This is the same result from 2004.

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/results/states/US/P/00/epolls.0.html

They were 23% of the electorate then and 26% now. Interesting, in a bad way.

44   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 7:53am  

Vicente says

There's no question that the current GOP does not believe in the Big Tent only in useful fools, which is among the reasons I left.

The Robertson Republican coalition depended on useful fools voting against their own interests, frightened and deluded into redistributing wealth upwards to the top 1%. I've edited the OP to put "winning" in quotes, as in Charlie Sheen, because even when Republicans were "winning" most of them were losing. The Republican record deficit spending results partly from faith-based voting: use fear to divide and misrule people, then rob them blind in the name of protecting them. Its antecedents go back to Nixon's southern strategy and the drug war, but the "family values" crusade became even more invasive, thus more distracting.

45   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 7:54am  

mell says

but the majority has to come from cuts to spending across the board, math doesn't lie

Thing is, government spending doesn't actually go into a black hole. Every dollar goes to somebody, who then buys something, keeping the economy going.

The math here is actually rather hard to understand. This is how the satanic socialist nordic countries are still keeping their economies together. Their big secret is trade surpluses, after that, it's just a matter of keeping the money moving to everyone, and not wasting money on stupid crap so actual capital concentration -- wealth accretion -- can continue.

We did in fact throw ~$1T of wealth into a hole in the ground, 2003-2010.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_cost_of_the_Iraq_War

46   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 7:58am  

mell says

but he has now free reign in his second term

Obama's main power is vetoing legislation that hits his desk, actually.

This is, constitutionally and mechanically, the House's job to tackle.

Obama does have some power in the "public enlightenment" sphere, given that people will actually listen to him more, but his megaphone has to compete with the vast array of conservative media propaganda mills, from AEI, USCOC, Reason, etc etc etc etc through the actual media outlets like Fox and talk radio.

47   curious2   2012 Nov 8, 8:03am  

Bellingham Bill says

Thing is, government spending doesn't actually go into a black hole. Every dollar goes to somebody, who then buys something.... We did in fact throw ~$1T into a hole in the ground, 2003-2010.

The policies of 2001-2012 have wasted a lot more than $1T. In addition to the Iraq costs detailed in the article, there were the "aid" payments to our "allies" in the "coalition of the bribed," e.g. Pakistan. How much of that went into building a nice house for Osama and sheltering others from al Qaeda? And, we bought a huge amount of overpriced oil, to the Saudis' delight. (The Bush tax shift giving special deductions for 3-ton Escalades helped the Saudis more than GM. Note that GM went bankrupt after selling more Escalades, while the Saudis didn't go bankrupt after selling more oil.) And the relentlessly increasing medical spending, butchering and poisoning Americans for power and profit, soon to increase even further with ObamaCare.

I understand the multiplier effect as a valid theoretical argument. The problem is, it assumes ceteris paribus, which is never true. To borrow an old phrase, "to err is human, but to really foul things up requires a computer." Government spending has unrivaled ability to waste huge amounts of money, literally thousands of times more than Webvan.

Military spending has a special multiplier all its own, as our military-industrial complex creates enemies all over the world, resulting in more wars and more military spending. Medicaid can be similar, as our medical-industrial complex puts Medicaid kids on so many pills that many develop lifelong side effects by their teens.

This is why I think the Republicans might actually have won with a candidate like Ron Paul.

48   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Nov 8, 8:17am  

Bleach Curious2, your arguments are a tangled mess confusing things that can't realistically be done(amending the Constitution) and then citing stuff that has nothing to do with the point I made(that presidential candidates discussing social legislation is irrelevant).

Then again, you do very well prove my point as to the merits of using such conversation and promises in order to stir emotional people into a frenzy so that they will vote,

49   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 8:18am  

curious2 says

Government spending has unrivaled ability to waste huge amounts of money, literally thousands of times more than Webvan

while I agree with most of what you wrote, waste is a tricky word. I think the main problem here is that we don't really have an economy of scarcity.

We have a fake economy of scarcity -- productivity has doubled since 1960 IIRC, anyway:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=cD1

is per-capita real GDP. This is double the wealth output of 1970. Thing is, we have a distribution problem, too much of this surplus is either going off to money heaven overseas or being siphoned off by rent-seekers here at home.

Housing is a massive rent-suck. Health care, $5000 per capita of economic rents, easily (Israel's socialistic system provides service for $6000 less than ours).

Prosperity is only limited by hard -- physical -- wealth consumption. Stuff we have to dig up and burn, or throw away and not recycle. We actually don't consume all that much hard wealth each day!

The problem is our structure, and how much attritive rents pull hundreds if not thousands of dollars out of everyone's pockets each month.

This is what the 99% movement was on about, but few of them could figure it out.

50   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Nov 8, 8:20am  

Btw, government waste is epic.

Must be some reason the division I work in lost 20% of its staff over the last 4 years, yet has increased output.

I know we're not supposed to call names here, but the situation warrants it.

If you truly beleive the local, state, and Fedeal governments in the US are not wasteful, you're an idiot.

51   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 8:24am  

dodgerfanjohn says

If you truly beleive the local, state, and Fedeal governments in the US are not wasteful, you're an idiot.

I only see waste where hard wealth, or existing capital, is lost.

People need jobs. Problem is the 1% have all the money now and are only willing to lend it back to the 99%.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/TCMDODNS

"It's the money, stupid" : )

52   mell   2012 Nov 8, 9:59am  

Bellingham Bill says

We did in fact throw ~$1T of wealth into a hole in the ground, 2003-2010.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_cost_of_the_Iraq_War

Agree, that and much more as curious points out. Cuts need to be made everywhere, and that would include the the military sector and stop going into useless and unconstitutional wars. We may be able to learn from the nordic countries, but their population is far more homogenous, smaller, and some do have natural riches like norway has a boatload of oil - so it is very hard to compare them to the US.

53   Bellingham Bill   2012 Nov 8, 10:33am  

mell says

and some do have natural riches like norway has a boatload of oil - so it is very hard to compare them to the US

their per-capita oil wealth is nice, 170 bbl/yr per capita while we're at 9.

170 bbl at $100/bbl is a $17,000/capita hard-wealth tailwind (gross) for their economy.

We do own the most productive part of a pretty big continent so we can close the gap in other production. We have $430B in gross farm income, that's $1400/capita.

We're doing good with natgas, with 24 tcf of production. At $5 per mcf, that's, hmm, $120B, only $400 per capita, not as much as I was expecting, LOL.

But we produce $1.7T of value via our manufacturing sector, that's another $5000 per capita. (We *do* need to expand this, LOL, it makes no sense to have millions of people sitting around doing nothing when our trade deficit with China, Germany, Japan, and Mexico is so high).

http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/top/dst/current/deficit.html

Plus if we ever monetize our insolation:

we'll be doing a lot better, energy-wise, exporting (or further productizing) our fossil fuel wealth instead of just turning it into carbon.

The background point with all of the above is, though, we need to zero out our trade deficit. That's sucking $600B/yr of money out of our economy (and I think it's no accident that the Fed is adding just about that much via QE3).

I agree with the points about smaller, more homogenous and socially integrated nations. Never hurts. My point of analysis with all of this is that we can easily produce more wealth than we consume, and I think we are, but the problem is the wealth creators here are only seeing or keeping a fraction of their value-add, so much of our labor is being captured by the corporations that employ us ($1.6T after-tax profits) and/or extorted from us via multi-thousand dollar per-capita rents in real estate and health care.

>Cuts need to be made everywhere,

That's nice, now stop using the passive voice and make them.

I wouldn't mind cutting the DOD $400B, but I just probably made 10 million people unemployed doing that.

54   Dan8267   2012 Nov 8, 10:42am  

Bellingham Bill says

Should your state legally recognize same-sex marriage?
No: (D): 26% -- (R): 71%

I don't care if 99% of the people think that slavery of the other 1% should be legal. It's a human rights issue. Same for same-sex marriage.

55   AverageBear   2012 Nov 8, 11:01am  

curious2 says

And I replied with a list. You still haven't named any.

------------------------------
Oooooh. 24 Reps. yes, I know I asked for Congressman. I should have asked for Senators. 24. I wonder how many have been run under the bus by the DNC by now. So you give me 24 Reps, and ask for a conservative GOP prez? I'd say Reagan, and you'll probably whine about massive military spending. Well, some presidents don't have to worry about trying to end a cold war w/ a super-power. He also happened to pass on one of the healthiest economies off to Clinton via tax cuts. SPeanking of tax cuts and fiscally conservative democrats. I would definitely vote for JFK if he ran today. But you know what? He'd never be nominated by the DNC. Too defense-minded, liked tax cuts, etc. Aaaand if he didn't have his family name? Fuggedaboutit....

56   AverageBear   2012 Nov 8, 11:25am  

curious2 says

Election results show President Obama got a majority of the popular vote again

Election results show that the GOP got a majority of the popular vote in the House of Reps again..... Ain't "Balance of Power" a bitch?

57   AverageBear   2012 Nov 8, 11:33am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says

Rape needs to be taught in schools.
Otherwise America will have no meaning and make God angry.

Rape doesn't need to be taught. Any family w/ two working parents making over 100K, and trying to raise a family on either coast knows what rape is all about, especially around April 15th.....You want to talk about anger? You'll see plenty of anger if those EBT-lovin' folks stop 'getting their's when they have no money for their booze, lottery scratch tickets, lap dances, bail and nail salons. HAHAHAHA..

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