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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (971713)10/11/2016 6:12:28 PM
From: J_F_Shepard  Respond to of 1572635
 
He sure as hell does.........



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (971713)10/11/2016 8:30:38 PM
From: longnshort1 Recommendation

Recommended By
FJB

  Respond to of 1572635
 
Hillary is for fracking how's that gonna taste



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (971713)10/11/2016 8:41:36 PM
From: longnshort3 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
garrettjax
Old Boothby

  Respond to of 1572635
 
LEAKED EMAIL: Clinton Team Bashes 'Backward' Catholics 8 hannity



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (971713)10/12/2016 12:14:44 AM
From: i-node  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1572635
 
>> You do know who will win.

It is 80/20 Hillary, but the variance (standard deviation) is extremely high at this point. It could be 50/50 by election day, or it could be where it is today. If they have more offensive language he could still lose votes.

If Wikileaks future emails are anything like the last couple days it really has to hurt her some.

The big unknown is turnout. The huge rallies he is having versus the nothing crowds she is drawing has to have her concerned.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (971713)10/12/2016 12:33:34 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572635
 
Donald Trump's son Eric chalked up his father's 2005 conversation about groping women, which drew fire from both sides of the aisle and comparisons to advocating sexual assault, to "locker room banter" that "alpha personalities" sometimes engage in.

Donald Trump's son Eric is the first of the Republican nominee's children to talk about the recording since it surfaced on Friday.

While he said that he was "glad" that his father apologized and maintained that "I'm not saying it's right" he appeared to explain the behavior.

"I think sometimes when guys are together they get carried away, and sometimes that's what happens when alpha personalities are in the same presence. At the same time, I'm not saying it's right. It's not the person that he is," Eric Trump said at an event in Colorado on Monday, according to The Colorado Springs Gazette.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (971713)3/10/2017 4:22:03 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1572635
 
“Democratic Party has found a way to be even less liked than” Donald Trump

Posted by William A. Jacobson Friday, March 10, 2017 at 2:30pm

EXERPT:

Stein highlighted this portion of the column:
At a time when Donald Trump is the least liked President ever measured at this point in his first term, the Democratic Party has found a way to be even less liked than him. This is how Donald Trump wins a second term. This is how congressional Republicans win the next midterm elections. This is how conservatives not only maintain their current power from coast to coast, but also expand it.

The Democratic Party is deeply unpopular – period. It’s a fact. Don’t look away. Don’t call me a Bernie Bro. It’s a problem that must be seriously addressed.
Now you’ve got my attention. The lamentations of progressives gets me every time.

The King column was based on a recent Suffolk University – USA Today poll, as summarized by King:

A troubling new poll was just released showing that the Democratic Party is significantly less popular than both Donald Trump and Mike Pence. My gut tells me that Democrats will ignore this poll, or blame it on bad polling, and continue down the same course they are currently on: being funded by lobbyists and the 1%, straddling the fence or outright ignoring many of most inspirational issues of the time, and blaming Bernie Sanders for why they aren’t in power right now….

This new poll from Suffolk University illustrates just how that’s possible. Here are the base results of the poll with favorable/unfavorable ratings.

Pence: 47%/35%
Trump: 45%/47%
GOP: 37%/48%
Media: 37%/50%
Dem Party: 36%/52%
Hillary: 35%/55%
Congress: 26%/52%

In other words, the Democratic Party has a favorability rating 11 points lower than Pence, nine points lower than Trump, and even one point lower than the GOP.

Their unfavorable rating is 17 points worse than Pence, five points worse than Trump, and four points worse than the GOP.


This is a disaster.

Here are some of the stats from the poll tables ( pdf):



(Aside, who is the person who has never heard of Hillary Clinton or the Republican Party, and the three people who’ve never heard of the US Congress?)

King’s answer to the problem is for Democrats to move even harder to the left to bring the Bernie-base into the party:

But let me break it to you – the establishment has almost no grassroots momentum. Virtually every progressive grassroots movement in America right now is fueled by people outside of the Democratic Party establishment and this is a huge reason why the party is so outrageously unpopular.

Huge grassroots movements, made up of millions and millions of people, are fueling the fight for a $15 minimum wage, fighting back against fossil fuels and the Dakota Access Pipeline, fighting to end fracking, fighting to remove lobbyist money from politics, fighting to end senseless wars and international violence, fighting for universal healthcare, fighting for the legalization of marijuana, fighting for free college tuition, fighting against systems of mass incarceration, and so much more. But mainstream Democrats aren’t really a central part of any of those battles, and, to be clear, each of those issues have deep networks, energized volunteers, and serious donors, but corporate Democrats virtually ignore them.

Obviously, the Democratic Party has not yet healed from the stunning losses of the past several years which have left Democrats “ basically extinct” in the South and out of power in a majority of state legislatures and governorships.



The failed attempt to elevate Keith Ellison to DNC Chair both reflected and exacerbated that divide in the party.

The Democratic Party establishment knows that going farther to the left will be the coup de grâce for the party in the essential swing states and among independent voters. Yet the base wants what the base wants, and what the base wants is a more severe push to the left.

I certainly don’t have an answer for Democrats, and if I did I wouldn’t tell them. They are going to have to figure it out on their own.

In the meantime, I’m just going to sit back and watch the further implosion.