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Gaazy wrote:Now vonk on the other hand, is one of the most self absorbed know it alls in my memory of this site. Ive always thought so, and I still cant understand why in gods name he is here
Gaazy wrote:Now vonk on the other hand, is one of the most self absorbed know it alls in my memory of this site. Ive always thought so, and I still cant understand why in gods name he is here
Haylo wrote:Yea when I read that I became even more convinced that McCain ran this race as a big fuck you to his party for what Rove and crew did to him in 2000. Otherwise I just can not fathom what the fuck he and his staff were thinking when they picked this chick.
Additionally, there has to be a way to separate from the Anti-Intellectualism that has soaked into the Conservative movement. Its wildly unhealthy and stifles new ideas.
You guys are Over Limbaughed. Rush has his place and can be valuable in that he acts as an anchor that prevents the Party from drifting too far off core principles... but in recent years its been Hannity, and Levin and Ingraham Savage and Gibson and Beck and Medved and at least one local clone in every AM talk market. Each version more intellectually watered down than the last.
Conservative Talk Radio is going through the same progression as Rap Music. You start out with Run DMC and LL Cool J (William F Buckley/Goldwater) Hit its high point with Biggie and Tupac (Rush and Reagan) and now wallow in the utter crap that it's become in Lil Wayne and TI (pick your moron talking head).
Oh yea.. and Neo Conservatism = "Gangsta Rap". It's massive oversaturation has pulled the center mass to the far right and it shrinking the party down to the "Angry White Christian Male".
Haylo wrote:Yes but can the Republican party get far enough away from the extreme right in 4 years? The current Republican party is just as much too far to the right as Pelosi/Reid are too far to the left. The Republican party needs to get back to being the party that they bill themselves as. For instance, when did it become a bad thing to be intelligent. When did people who are folksy and down home become preferred to those who actually had the drive and motivation to do more. I don't see the Republican party winning in 2012 unless Obama truly tanks it. Even if he does just ok, I think he gets re-elected.
Haylo wrote:Diekan that's a good point about most minority communities being socially conservative. It's 100% true.
The problem the Republican party is facing is that they are losing the vote of the young people of all colors, the "brown" people and the smart people of all colors. What's left? The old white people and the stupid white people. If they can not find a candidate that appeals to ALL people and somehow manages to project the same message that Obama did this year, than they are on borrowed time.
Obama is the politician of the future. He appeals to many different groups, because he projects the message of unity and togetherness. You can't win as a McCain or Palin anymore, I really believe that. Divisiveness failed and failed BIG. People didn't give a crap about all of the "He's different" stuff unless they fell into the previously mentioned pro-current republican party lines. They had better find a way to turn things around, that way is not to focus on what makes us different and special little snowflakes or "real rural americans" vs those dastardly city dwellers.
I'm firmly of the opinion that one party maintaining power for too long is a bad thing. One good thing that could come from a splintered Republican party though could be a third party that appeals to fiscal conservatives and social liberals. Or fiscal moderates and social liberals. Or whatever, but things do need to change.
Edited to add, I don't know if he's going to get a second term, I thought I put in the first post if he did. I just used 2016 as the example because I figure it takes that long to get things straight.
Haylo wrote:
As far as the talk radio thing, most of the stations are dominated by conservative shows right?. I don't listen to talk radio so I can't really speak to it, but as far as websites, neither extreme side is right. The problem becomes when the party as a whole seems to echo that extreme. I believe that is a fault more of the Republican party than the Democrat party, your opinion may vary. Fox News was the worse of the bunch, even they themselves must have realized it because sure enough after Obama called them out their tone changed. Now I don't listen to MSNBC, because I think they lean to far left, but were they ever near to as bad as FOX was throughout this election? I don't think so, but again opinion will vary here.
Arlos wrote:That was the thing about Palin, really. She was immensely appealing to the ultra-right wing "base" of the party, the ones in bed with the radical religious right, etc. The problem is, she was a huge turn-off to everyone ELSE out there, and that "base" won't even come close to winning you an election, especially given the changing nature of our society.
In all seriousness, while we'll need to see how it really unfolds, but I think this election could mark the fact that the US is moving back to the left, and finally at the end of the "Reagan Revolution", and at the start of a new era. The country has seen what was the result of the GOP having unfettered control for 6 years, and how much a mess it has made of our economy, world standing, etc. Indeed, Bush's policies were much the same as Reagan's, if you really look at them: adventuresome military, massive deficit spending (just look at what happened to the deficit under Reagan), and complete devotion to trickle-down economics, and a complete hands-off attitude towards the markets. Obviously, as we have seen this year, the end result of such policies is disaster.
If Obama and the Democrats in congress can deliver even half of what Obama has promised, hell, if they can even just get the economy turned around, we could be looking at a real long-term shift of power. In all this, if the GOP doesn't wake up and start being more inclusive instead of exclusive, they are going to, at best, end up a minor party as a vigorous new party that IS inclusive rises up.
-Arlos
Gaazy wrote:Now vonk on the other hand, is one of the most self absorbed know it alls in my memory of this site. Ive always thought so, and I still cant understand why in gods name he is here
brinstar wrote:plain
Diekan wrote:While the GOP has filibuster power, NOW is the time for them to pull their heads out of their collective ass and return to their more conservative roots. Bush, as you know was a RINO – that is a “republican in name only.”
ClakarEQ wrote:Diekan wrote:While the GOP has filibuster power, NOW is the time for them to pull their heads out of their collective ass and return to their more conservative roots. Bush, as you know was a RINO – that is a “republican in name only.”
I havn't checked the numbers and I've not read the rest of this thread yet, but do they still have filibuster power? I thought enough D's won seats to trigger the 'nuclear option'.
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