IMstoned420, actually (surprisingly,) hit the nail on the head(no duke, EVERYONE does not fall into that pattern, but it is the OVERWHELMING trend)I've seen it hundreds of times, in fact, nearly every democrat or republican I know is a one or two issue voterthat doesn't mean that they only care about one or two issues, it means that those issues are SO important,that they can't allow themselves to vote against a candidate or party that supports them, that's allthe problem with 420's thinking, (as well as MANY, MANY others that oppose the 2-party system,) is the electoral collegeit has almost nothing to do with the 2-party system, as many believe (even I made this mistake in the past)it is simply there because the president is the president of the country and of the states, not of the peopleindividual people have mayors and governors, and that's plenty; they don't need a federal leaderthe president is for foreign, federal, and state-federal issues, not individual peopleuntil recently, the federal government has had little involvement in the lives of individuals; (now that's changed, and is a problem)we DON'T need to encourage the idea that the federal government should have anything to do with individualsa national popular vote is thus a stupid idea; and it completely negates the entire purpose of having two legislative bodiesunless you think we should scrap the entire senate, and just have the house (sorry small states) then opposing the electoral college doesn't make any sense imagine this with three or more parties
4/9/2008 9:21:06 AM
^"PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS ARE NOT ABOUT INDIVIDUALS; STATES ARE SOVEREIGN AND THEIR PREROGATIVES MATTER"I agree with you in principle, but I'm a deeply idealogical kinda guy. Pragmatically its all about individuals these days. Its about "what can the government give me this year".Breaking from the comment above,I wonder if part of the political stability in the US stems from having a 2 party system. Is part of the reason other countries have violent election times because these smaller factions get their hopes inflated. Here in the US they pretty much know there is no chance to beat the dems and reps.[Edited on April 9, 2008 at 10:57 AM. Reason : .]
4/9/2008 10:54:56 AM
^right, well, silencing dissent and debilitating democracy has always been socially and politically stabilizingthat's the whole idea behind a one-party state; (our 2-party state being only one party away from that)
4/9/2008 11:25:29 AM
bumpbased on a few posts in the Copenhagen thread:
12/12/2009 1:10:34 AM
Meh people want to belong more than they want to understand. Generally people I've met who think extensively about the world will surprise you with some of their positions. On the other hand, the loudest cheerleaders tend to be emotionally attached to the issues and lacking in logical consistency.WRT politics, the question probably is, "does politics mirror life, or does life mirror politics, or are they simply hideous caricatures of one another?
12/12/2009 10:17:48 AM
12/12/2009 10:29:24 AM
I'm very liberal on social positions and very conservative on economic and international issues.I don't really understand how anyone could disagree with me.
12/12/2009 10:58:09 AM
^ b.c people are retarded and think they can push their morals onto you or take your money to support lazy fat welfare queens.
12/12/2009 11:24:52 AM
12/12/2009 12:05:35 PM
12/12/2009 12:15:43 PM
12/12/2009 12:19:26 PM
Which makes him a hypocrite, which we all are to certain degrees. I think the most we can do is recognize and attempt to minimize it.Man, at his core, is an animal interested in his own survival. All the talk about ideology is a luxury of civilization.]
12/12/2009 12:53:49 PM
You would be shocked (OK maybe many of you wouldn't) just how much religion affects the way people vote. I mean, I think it is a safe assumption that most conservative Protestant religions are pro Rebublican. But until you have been to some of these churches you might not realize just how much they can influence their membership.I used to go to a very very strict Southern Baptist church. The kind that forbids watching TV or women wearing pants. I remember the preacher continuously talking about how great George Bush was, and how everyone needed to go out and vote for him (this was when he was facing off against Jon Kerry). He even said that if you weren't voting for Bush that you needed to go out and get "right with God" and pray about the bad decision you were making.That was a huge factor in me leaving the church, because a big chunk of what he said just did not make any sense to me. Not just about politics of course, but about religion in general. I didn't particularly despise gays like the church wanted me to. I didn't think alcohol was so bad. I thought women in leadership positions was OK. I dunno, I guess what they were telling me just didn't jive.Oh, I recommend watching that movie Jesus Camp. I know 99% of churches are nothing like the ones depicted, but wow. It's crazy to think places like that exist.
12/12/2009 1:18:08 PM
^^ i should also point out that he has a 1yr old son (and wife) and in that situation, you’re always going to do what’s best for your family, even if it means being a “hypocrite.” At some point in his life though, when he hears a politician rail against welfare, i would hope his experiences would give him pause to think about what’s being said to him.
12/12/2009 1:31:23 PM
that's so typical for a liberal to assume that a person should always put his individual self-interest above the interests of his nation.
12/12/2009 3:21:33 PM
12/12/2009 5:14:45 PM