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2005 Apr 11, 5:00pm   182,988 views  117,730 comments

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37905   upisdown   2013 Oct 1, 7:31am  

Dan8267 says

The transition from rational party to batshit was from 1955 to 2000. I think
there was still a bit of sanity left in the 1990s, but that's long
gone.

That's because the republican party's base gets smaller by the month, and are as relevant as the Haitian Bobsled Team are in the Winter Olympics. Each paranoid boomer that passes on is one less reliable vote to fear-monger for, but bigotry is across all ages of the extremist right wing.

There only, and last appeal, is to the bigotry of their base, which is everybody that is NOT a plutocrat or direct 1st line employee of one/corporations, but yet thinks tomorrow that they will be.

37906   Vicente   2013 Oct 1, 7:37am  

Isn't the transition a long-term consequence of the Southern Strategy?

Birchers to Birthers.

Inviting in the Southern Evangelicals was a big mistake. The Birchers were at least interested in governing rationally. Barry Goldwater was a far different creature than the Santorum, Bachmann, and Romney types. Religious fanatics believe that drowning the government in the bathtub is a neccessary step to building their theocracy.

37907   edvard2   2013 Oct 1, 7:51am  

upisdown says

That's because the republican party's base gets smaller by the month, and are as relevant as the Haitian Bobsled Team are in the Winter Olympics.

This shift in demographics in favor of democrats has been well-covered over the past few years. Its probably less that the demographic the GOP counted on to win is shrinking and more that the demographic that favors democrats is growing. Even if 100% of the GOP's base continues to vote for strictly Republican candidates, the GOP will lose elections. The math is fairly straightforward.Vicente says

Isn't the transition a long-term consequence of the Southern Strateg

I had mentioned this yesterday: The South is changing dramatically from the effects of domestic in-migration, and a heavy amount of that population comes from the NE. So with that comes more liberal voters, which in turns dilutes the conservative composition of those areas. Its also important to note that not all Southern states are as strictly conservative.

37908   David Losh   2013 Oct 1, 8:14am  

What you just missed was the amount of demand.

The demand was so great it shut down the servers.

Hmmm, having a high demand for a service sounds pretty good.

The other thing you are missing is that Congress is to this very day attempting to shut down Health Care in this country.

The Republican Party hates America so much they want us all dead from lack of Health Care, unless you're rich of course, and can afford a Bull Shit Cadillac Health Care Insurance system with the cash to pay for incidentals.

Why do you hate America?

37909   edvard2   2013 Oct 1, 8:16am  

sbh says

I will light a candle in the window.

Not sure what that's supposed to mean. I am actually originally from there, and have lived on both coasts. So I've had an experience most haven't, which is to say most people in either of those locations seldom migrate to other places other than ones that are the most similar to what they are accustomed to ( Hence why New Yorkers and Bostonians seem to migrate in hordes to California and vice versa).

So I have seen that change. No- I'm not saying the South is going to become the bastion of liberalism overnight. But This more recent im-migration will in time eventually at least moderate things there a bit more so than in the past.

37910   freak80   2013 Oct 1, 8:36am  

Dan8267 says

white color crime

Wait did you mean "white collar crime" (i.e. corporate crime)? What is "white color" crime? I figure it's just a typo.

37911   freak80   2013 Oct 1, 8:42am  

FortWayne says

Capitalism doesn't need saving, it needs less government intervention into it.

Agree. We need less regulation, especially in the financial sector. And we all know that the profit motive will clean up pollution and keep workers safe, all by itself.

37912   edvard2   2013 Oct 1, 8:46am  

FortWayne says

Capitalism doesn't need saving, it needs less government intervention into it.

That's such a bland, meaningless statement. Virtually every single Republican blankly says that same crap and then goes on and grows the gubbermint even bigger. Sorry folks, but government has been "big" since it was formed. Its called "Government"

37913   EBGuy   2013 Oct 1, 9:05am  

Number one rule of political grandstanding: don't close the national parks.

37915   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Oct 1, 9:17am  

Funny to see bulls gloating over a year of gains.

Case-Shiller is from Shiller, the guy who says real RE prices don't change over the long term?

37916   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Oct 1, 9:19am  

hanera says

implies rally to last another four years.

4 years, and then what? An other disastrous crash?
Can you even see the totally futile nature of what you are saying?

37917   thomaswong.1986   2013 Oct 1, 9:26am  

Heraclitusstudent says

Can you even see the totally futile nature of what you are saying?

can happen... that is the nature of corrections. When we saw prices fall in early 90s .. no one asking about home prices "recovering"... they did recover correctly back to the long term....

Heraclitusstudent says

the guy who says real RE prices don't change over the long term?

seems some have forgotten what prices were for decades before year 2000.

37918   hanera   2013 Oct 1, 9:31am  

thomaswong.1986 says

seems some have forgotten what prices were for decades before year 2000.

Other than realtors and guys like you, buyers don't have the data that far back. Most buyers based their decision on realtors who show comparative study over six months only. That's how I bought my first house, data blind.

37919   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Oct 1, 9:32am  

thomaswong.1986 says

can happen... that is the nature of corrections. When we saw prices fall in early 90s .. no one asking about home prices "recovering"... they did recover correctly back to the long term....

90's to now is still medium term.
It says nothing about what will happen 4 years from now.

37920   David Losh   2013 Oct 1, 10:06am  

FortWayne says

Capitalism doesn't need saving, it needs less government intervention into it.

Yeah, that worked well for the global economic melt down we had.

37922   upisdown   2013 Oct 1, 12:13pm  

Call it Crazy says

Blurtman
says



Hey bro,


Mish poached your post:


http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/10/dnc-is-broke-good-news-or-bad.html


Mish is always late to the party....

No, just a typical right wing hump that tries to capitalize on someone else's ideas or success.

Have you read what Mush posts, it's always from some other source with his bend of moronic libertopian BS added to it. For the life of me, I can't believe that anybody would entrust him with more than 5 bucks. His ideology makes him irrational, which leads to irrational decisions.

Then again, all he does is repost articles all day.

37923   Bellingham Bill   2013 Oct 1, 12:21pm  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

Famous last words. We are doomed to repeat the same mistakes over and over. Greed will never change.

yes, but it will take the events of 2000-2006 to pass out of living memory for the same mistakes to be made again.

Nobody even knows why California is a non-recourse state -- but in fact this law was prompted by the predatory lending of the 1920s and its fallout in the 1930s.

37924   Blurtman   2013 Oct 1, 12:49pm  

upisdown says

Then again, all he does is repost articles all day.

He strikes me as a considerable hypocrite. Always bitching about lazy union members, when he is constantly ripping off other people's material.

37925   upisdown   2013 Oct 1, 1:07pm  

Blurtman says

He strikes me as a considerable hypocrite

That's a given. I always wondered why or how, that he would not be punished by the lack of business by throwing out his extremist and warped ideaology, or at the minimum limiting his potential customer base to the cranks and kooks that find his mutterings gospel. THAT'S why I wouldn't EVER let him control a dime of our money. Never. Ever.

But apparently the cranks and kooks make for a good mark for a grifter that can relate to them.

37926   New Renter   2013 Oct 1, 1:14pm  

Aren't those same condos factored into your $/sqft as well? Given smaller places tend to cost more per square foot aren't those same condo's likely skewing your graph upward as they are Smaulgld's downward?

37927   freak80   2013 Oct 1, 1:24pm  

Mish is a well known crank. I tuned out his noise with the "ignore" feature a long time ago.

37928   CL   2013 Oct 1, 1:24pm  

I guess I should donate to the DNC after all!

37929   New Renter   2013 Oct 1, 2:43pm  

Bellingham Bill says

yes, but it will take the events of 2000-2006 to pass out of living memory for the same mistakes to be made again.

No it won't.

37930   thomaswong.1986   2013 Oct 1, 4:50pm  

freak80 says

Of course the DNC is broke.

Billionaires know which party best represents their interests. Hint: it's not the DNC.

count the number of Billionaires at this table with Obama...i wonder how the ones in NYC and
LA/Hollywood looked like...

http://kellblog.com/2011/02/19/seating-chart-for-president-obamas-silicon-valley-tech-titans-dinner/

37931   thomaswong.1986   2013 Oct 1, 4:53pm  

Blurtman says

Hey bro,

Mish poached your post:

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/10/dnc-is-broke-good-news-or-bad.html

some say there is another word for it.. "Going Viral"

37932   Bigsby   2013 Oct 1, 8:53pm  

Call it Crazy says

Bigsby says

You've been shown to have been consistently wrong. Clearly your ego can't allow you to admit that.

Is that why you have 12 people ignoring YOU??

Perhaps you should ask Daryl and his many alter egos that question.

37933   HydroCabron   2013 Oct 1, 11:08pm  

I would go to Gitmo to fight the sale of the Lincoln Bedroom to Marxist donors, and the defilement of the White House Travel Office.

37934   marcus   2013 Oct 1, 11:11pm  

When you think about it, it strange. In a way those radical republicans are the ultimate true patriots.

They are willing to commit political suicide, to save us from the evil Obamacare.

If they were selfish, they would just let Obamacare roll out, and then later the high cost, and the death panels and the total obliteration of America's AWESOME health care as we know it would ensure their political dominance for decades.

But instead they are willing to forgo having everyone find out how bad Obamacare is, because they are true patriots that are only in public service to help America.

37935   Tenpoundbass   2013 Oct 1, 11:50pm  

Oh Really!?

Can I rent your time machine?

37936   marcus   2013 Oct 2, 12:00am  

Boehner: "This is part of a larger pattern: the president's scorched-Earth policy of refusing to negotiate in (a) bipartisan way on his health care law, current government funding or the debt limit."

The amazing thing is that all the dimbulbs will believe that !

The republicans say we'll blow up the government if we don't get our demands. And then when it happens, "it's the democrats fault for not being willing to negotiate."

37937   FunTime   2013 Oct 2, 12:33am  

There's a lot of talk of "right" and "wrong." Some seem to think being right for a year or two is being "right." Good luck to you.

37938   indigenous   2013 Oct 2, 12:45am  

What does Nate Silvers say?

37939   Tenpoundbass   2013 Oct 2, 12:48am  

Well while we're NOT over looking polls...

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is the most unpopular of the top four Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress, according to a Gallup poll that suggests the American people might support them more if they got along better.

Just 33 percent of voters approve of Reid's performance, compared with 53 percent of Gallup survey respondents who disapprove, which amounts to a net approval rating of -20. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, fares only slightly better; his 37/54 percent favorable/unfavorable numbers give him a net rating of -17.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., both have a net approval rating of -12. McConnell's approval rating (35 percent) is lower than Pelosi's (39 percent), but Pelosi's disapproval rating (51 percent) comes in higher than McConnell's (47 percent).

Gallup reported Monday that, heading into a congressional debate about defunding Obamacare or shutting down the government, 53 percent of Americans polled support compromise, compared to 25 percent who say its "more important [for legislators] to stick to their principles."

37940   Analyzer   2013 Oct 2, 1:32am  

Maybe Jesse Ventura is right on some things, the government is controlled by a 2 party system that can stifle attempts for alternate parties to succeed. He called them gangs that are fueled mainly by bribery..........at this point I cannot disagree with this.

37941   Bigsby   2013 Oct 2, 1:53am  

Call it Crazy says

Bigsby says

Call it Crazy says

Bigsby says

You've been shown to have been consistently wrong. Clearly your ego can't allow you to admit that.

Is that why you have 12 people ignoring YOU??

Perhaps you should ask Daryl and his many alter egos that question.

What does Daryl have to do with anything, We were referring to YOU and YOUR fans!!

Daryl was a massive troll with multiple (and I mean multiple) accounts. I got into (one of many) arguments with him about a year and half ago. On that one day, my ignore number went from zero to twelve and Daryl made a great deal of noise about it - it was pretty obvious he was the one doing all or most of the ignoring using his accounts. That is what it has to do with.

37942   FortWayne   2013 Oct 2, 2:25am  

Everything is negotiable.

And that's not new, our rights have been negotiable for quite some time... especially where NSA is concerned. So if rights are negotiable, laws are negotiable too.

37943   mell   2013 Oct 2, 2:28am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Comptroller says

Wow, what assholes. Housing valuations have never ever fallen. Everyone knows that.

Right on, everybody needs an empire fortress from which they can fire their mounted gatling guns at starving neo-nazis!

37944   FunTime   2013 Oct 2, 2:39am  

egads101 says

meanwhile some seem to think being wrong for 2 or 3 years is still right!

Yeah, there does seem to be some of that. I don't know why people insist on making predictions about a certain year.

I just won't buy a house where I live unless the cost becomes a much smaller portion of what I make. Over 30 years, I'm convinced I'll be way ahead of the "leveraged."

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