I love how you keep saying I hate moderates and conservatives when nothing could be further from the truth. I DO dislike most of the GOP, but they stopped being Conservatives in the classic sense a LONG time ago. As a good friend of mine who is so far to the right that one of his favorite political speeches ever was that famous Pat Buchanan speech at the republican convention many years back has said several times: "To be conservative means you have to actually be interested in CONSERVING something." In all seriousness, at this point he hates the GOP even worse than I do.
Hell, I was actually really impressed by that recent David Frum article recently.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/03/22/f ... index.html So much so, in fact, that I emailed the link around.
It was intelligent, well written, and while I didn't agree with him on much of it, especially his belief that it is a foregone conclusion that the taxes in there would be expanded to hit more and more people, I had vast amounts of respect that he was able to clearly articulate his positions, argue for them with non-histrionics, and make very persuasive points. The piece was clearly written with the assumption that people reading it were capable of independent thought, and was highly respectful to BOTH sides even as he disagreed, and it was actually self-critical of mistakes his own side made, which is VANISHINGLY rare these days. If all conservatives were more like him, this would be a far better country.
Now, what was his reward for actually attempting to argue a point using reason and not dogma, and to actual;y be somewhat self-critical when necessary? In short, to act like a real adult having a political discussion? He got FIRED from his conservative think-tank position the next day. Kicked out on his ass.
Now you try and tell me that the political establishment of the Right these days is interested in actual policy discussions and reasoned, learned debate. And I will laugh in your face because there is manifest, crystal clear evidence that that is absolutely untrue. Period.
Oh, couple other things where your "facts" are utterly wrong.
You have your timeline screwed up on the health care votes. It passed the senate with 60 votes long before the special election put Brown in office. They were in process of doing the committee negotiations to reconcile the two bills between the house and senate when the special election happened. If you will actually look at the history, at the time, they discussed having a vote to merge the two bills while the appointee was still in office, but before Brown was sworn in, to get it passed before Brown could join a filibuster. The Democrats decided against that though, as that WOULD have been shady. To repeat, though, the initial vote was WELL before the special election ever happened. So you can't say the new senator waiting in the wing opposed it, as the democrat "waiting in the wings" certainly did not, and could very well have been elected over Brown.
And "the dems had enough seats in the senate to stop any real votes"???? Excuse me? Barring a filibuster, all the GOP needed during Bush's terms were 50 votes to pass ANYTHING in the senate. So, how, exactly, could the Democrats stop ANY vote, real or otherwise, unless they were in a majority, which they WEREN'T in the time period I'm discussing? Riddle me that, Poindexter?
Oh, and I love how the GOP changed terminology to fit its talking points. Remember back in 2005, they were threatening to do away with the Filibuster altogether, and that was termed the "nuclear option"? (while at the same time, they had passed multiple GOP initiatives, including Bush's deficit exploding tax cuts using Reconciliation.) Suddenly, when the Democrats were poised to use reconciliation, the talking point on Fox, across right wing radio, and by the GOP were suddenly referring to RECONCILIATION as the "nuclear option"? Now that was pure comedy. Funny how reconciliation wasn't worth commenting when the GOP was using it to vastly expand the deficit, and suddenly is "ARMAGEDDON" on a bill that's going to reduce it by over a trillion dollars, eh? Oh yeah, intellectual honesty, that's the GOP bylaw. absolutely. really. definitely. uh huh. riiiiiiight.
-Arlos