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The South Carolina Primary & Nevada Caucuses |Feb 20, 23, 27| Continuing The Calm

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The only people that think both parties are exactly the same are people that don't follow the news or policy stances. But people voting in the primaries are hardcore in following what is going on, and just by watching the debates and stump speeches, it is entirely clear that both parties are not the same. All this infighting like its a general election. The freaking issues will be clear as day when the GE comes around.
 
it does surprise me that despite both having racially exclusionary voting bases and issues with minorities, riding the white vote is paying off much more for Trump than Bernie. I guess it just comes down to fear motivating much more efficiently.
 
It's so depressing knowing that Trump will win the Republican nomination. I may have to sit out this general election just for the crazy up and down it will cause.
 
Amen.

Republicans: Down with Planned Parenthood
Democrats: Support Planned Parenthood and women's right to control their own bodies.

Republicans: Deport 12 million illegal immigrants
Democrats: No mass deportations, and reasonable paths to citizenship.

Republicans: Ban Muslims
Democrats: LOLwut you can't be serious

Republicans: Down with Gay Marriage
Democrats: Support and protect gay marriage.

Republicans: Innocent black people are dying? LOL - COPS ARE GREAT
Democrats: Yeah, but maybe they can stop shooting black people a little bit.

"Both parties are basically the same" and all offshoots of that premise is the ultimate argument of the priviledged.

I don't think there are many who argue that both parties are the same in terms of platform, so much as people argue that both parties are similarly willing to engage in legally and rhetorically shady bullshit in order to further their agenda and will rationalize said bullshit as a necessary evil.
 
1) I doubt you fully comprehend what the NSA did and is doing as you use the phrase "spying on Americans under his watch." Nothing the Administration or any member of the Intelligence Community has done is against the law and in fact is explicitly supported by legislation. Second, Snowden didn't just leak the details of the NSA's metadata collection he released classified cables regarding various intelligence efforts including foreign policy negotiations with other nations and intelligence efforts and assessments regarding hostile foreign nations. Information such as that is nothing with which the public has any right to know.

Also, I have no idea where you get this notion that Obama wishes to put him in some "dark hole." First, Snowden fled the country to avoid any potential indictments and as of yet we have no idea if he has been indicted of any charges. Second, he broke the law and going through the legal system is far from "putting him in a dark hole."

2) Again, Bernie has been intentionally vague on what he would do with regards to Syria. Hilary is at least able to lay out a specific plan.

Snowden gave the information to the press, he didn't just post it on wikileaks. That was Julian Assange.

Obama's administration has been exceptionally aggressive in extraditing Snowden to the point where Snowden actively fears for his own safety, hence the reason why he left Hong Kong and went to Russia instead. He did not break any laws as he did not leak any sensitive information and would technically fall under the Whistleblower Protection Act.The administration was embarrassed when they had to apologize to Chancellor Merkel for tapping her personal cell phone. It's technically retribution.
 
Those are isolated incidents. Your argument is the same as when someone laughs off global warming because its cold outside. Sanders and his supporters have been demeaned and ridiculed since the moment bernie began to gain traction. It is what it is, but establishment democrats showed how much they really respect dissent when its aimed them. As a progressive, i find that disheartening.

Lighten up bro/sis...young people are getting educated....this talk show is #15 most watched news show on you tube. I haven't disagreed with anything he has said much ...and believe me that is rare...
 
This is what i mean. Constructive criticism and differing opinion is met with insults and strawman arguments. Even on the left, partisanship and emotion wins out over good faith discussion. So be it.
You asked for a chance to clarify your views a few posts back, but still haven't said anything substantial. If you are clear on what you are arguing, it's much harder for people to make strawman arguments.
 
Who am I insulting?
You just said people who point out money has undue influence on both parties must be priveleged. Its an ad hominem argument designed to get a dig in at those people while avoiding having to address that actual claim.
 
You asked for a chance to clarify your views a few posts back, but still haven't said anything substantial. If you are clear on what you are arguing, it's much harder for people to make strawman arguments.
Go back and look again because i did.
 
Again, youre talking about policy positions and rhetoric. Im talking about representation and financing. Democrats are by and far better for progressives. But they dont represent common voters the way they should in a democracy because they exist in a corporatist polical environment that affects them the same ways it does the Republicans. To someone who does not have a vested emotional interest in the Democratic party, this fact is obvious. Hillary claims she will pursue aggressive campaign finance reform once she is elected by that very system. I hope she will make good on her word, but Im not too optimistic.

Well, you try running for public office of significant worth and see if you get lucky like Bernie with millions of dollars in personal contributions. Fact is, unless you suddenly want the GOP to own practically every significant seat of political power in this country, you need money to run. The average Joe isn't going to finance any happy-go-lucky liberal that decides to run for office at state, local levels. That's why the parties in this country are structured the way they are and that's why money plays such a big deal in politics. It cost money to run and WIN.

You're trying to present me a scenario of a perfect world in politics. Money has influenced American politics since practically its founding. Corporate america always has a vested interest in influencing policy thus the reason to play a hand in politics. You can't wipe out corporate America. The idea that you can restraint their influence? Sure, doing away with Citizens United is one way... but they will always find a way to support their guy... even in a fairy tale scenario of $0 money in politics.

Here is the thing about having an emotional vested interest - or the suggestion of lack there of in some sort of purity vacuum. The reason this country exist (and the success it has been) is because of its political system and its two-party system. I mean I don't think anyone can't be so oblivious to the fact that politics basically shape a nation and society. Everyone at some point or another has a vested interest in a policy issue and thus, an emotional vested interest in a political party. I mean, look around you, walk outside, think of every thing and anything that is made possible today as a result of policy and politics. You start to count to the point where you count over your head and you realize how vested you're into politics, and by extension the political system and the parties that represent that system.

Lets cut the "disgust", "purity" mantle and lets be real.....
 
You just said people who point out money has undue influence on both parties must be priveleged. Its an ad hominem argument designed to get a dig in at those people while avoiding having to address that actual claim.

One party is soundly and almost unapologetically corrupt.

The other party only within the last six months eased up on a self-imposed ban on large corporate campaign contributions, and purely just to make their down-ticket candidates viable.

Even when it comes to big money in politics, both parties are not the same.
 
Snowden gave the information to the press, he didn't just post it on wikileaks. That was Julian Assange.

Obama's administration has been exceptionally aggressive in extraditing Snowden to the point where Snowden actively fears for his own safety, hence the reason why he left Hong Kong and went to Russia instead. He did not break any laws as he did not leak any sensitive information and would technically fall under the Whistleblower Protection Act.

Wow, you must really be ignorant of the laws if you believe any of this. First, giving information to the press does not make it okay. The press is not authorized to receive classified communications/information. And, Snowden doesn't fear for his safety that is complete and utter nonsense dreamt up by paranoid conspiracy theorists, he fears prosecution for the crimes he committed.

I mean just wow, Snowden is not in ANY way covered by the Whistleblower Protection Act. Like, all I can tell you to do is to look up and read the act so you can understand why he isn't covered. I'll give you a hint you cannot leak classified information to the public simply because you disagree with the policies of an administration.
 
Snowden gave the information to the press, he didn't just post it on wikileaks. That was Julian Assange.

Obama's administration has been exceptionally aggressive in extraditing Snowden to the point where Snowden actively fears for his own safety, hence the reason why he left Hong Kong and went to Russia instead. He did not break any laws as he did not leak any sensitive information and would technically fall under the Whistleblower Protection Act.The administration was embarrassed when they had to apologize to Chancellor Merkel for tapping her personal cell phone. It's technically retribution.

Joke post right?

"Highly classified intelligence program"

Sure seems "non-sensitive"...
 
If you want to argue that "money in politics" is a meaningful enough similarly between the Democrats and the Republicans to try to say "both are the same" with a straight face - that means you have to evaluate addressing that issue as more important that reproductive rights, LGBT rights, religious freedom, immigration and racism. You're going to find A LOT of people who vehemently disagree with that.
 
Wow, you must really be ignorant of the laws if you believe any of this. First, giving information to the press does not make it okay. The press is not authorized to receive classified communications/information. And, Snowden doesn't fear for his safety that is complete and utter nonsense dreamt up by paranoid conspiracy theorists, he fears prosecution for the crimes he committed.

I mean just wow, Snowden is not in ANY way covered by the Whistleblower Protection Act. Like, all I can tell you to do is to look up and read the act so you can understand why he isn't covered. I'll give you a hint you cannot leak classified information to the public simply because you disagree with the policies of an administration.

Joke post right?

"Highly classified intelligence program"

Sure seems "non-sensitive"...

He didn't give classified information to the public, he gave it to the press. We can argue semantics all day but that doesn't make him a traitor.

I'll walk back and concede he may have broken the law, but it was not willful malice against the US. He didn't sell the information to another country or attempt to overthrow the government. He publicly exposed a massive spying program that may have had some sensitive materials along with it.
 
He didn't give classified information to the public, he gave it to the press. We can argue semantics all day but that doesn't make him a traitor. I'll concede he may have broken the law, but it was not willful malice against the US. He didn't sell the information to another country or attempt to overthrow the government. He publicly exposed a massive spying program that may have had some sensitive materials along with it.

Sorry man, you are wrong.

This thread isn't about Snowden or that program (which I don't agree with btw), so I'm backing out to let others argue politics, keep believing what you want on this one, but the law is clear.
 
I don't think there are many who argue that both parties are the same in terms of platform, so much as people argue that both parties are similarly willing to engage in legally and rhetorically shady bullshit in order to further their agenda and will rationalize said bullshit as a necessary evil.

Even that should be absurd to anyone who noticed that the Republicans threatened to ruin America's credit rating several times in the past 8 years, shut down the Federal government, and said that passing any budget was a bargaining chip in unrelated disputes with Obama.

If people think that Dems inability to overcome Republican obstructionism is the Same as Republican obstructionism, then their tactics really worked. What a fucking shame.
 
He didn't give classified information to the public, he gave it to the press. We can argue semantics all day but that doesn't make him a traitor.

I'll walk back and concede he may have broken the law, but it was not willful malice against the US. He didn't sell the information to another country or attempt to overthrow the government. He publicly exposed a massive spying program that may have had some sensitive materials along with it.

I didn't call him a traitor, look back at my post. He did, however, unequivocally break the law. That is the only thing at issue with regards to Snowden. And, what he exposed is not a program that "may have had" some sensitive materials with it, the entire program was classified and he leaked more than just the NSA's metadata collection efforts as I described above.
 
Well, you try running for public office of significant worth and see if you get lucky like Bernie with millions of dollars in personal contributions. Fact is, unless you suddenly want the GOP to own practically every significant seat of political power in this country, you need money to run. The average Joe isn't going to finance any happy-go-lucky liberal that decides to run for office at state, local levels. That's why the parties in this country are structured the way they are and that's why money plays such a big deal in politics. It cost money to run and WIN.

You're trying to present me a scenario of a perfect world in politics. Money has influenced American politics since practically its founding. Corporate america always has a vested interest in influencing policy thus the reason to play a hand in politics.

Here is the thing about having an emotional vested interest - or the suggestion of lack there of in some sort of purity vacuum. The reason this country exist and the way it's is because of its political system and its two party system. I mean I don't think anyone can't be so oblivious to the fact that politics basically shape society. Everyone at some point or another has a vested interest in a policy issue and thus, an emotional vested interest in a political party. I mean, look around you, walk outside, think of every thing that is made possible today as a result of policy and politics. You start to count to the point where you count over your head and you realize how vested you're into politics, and by extension the political system and the parties that represent that system.

Lets cut the "disgust", "purity" mantle and lets be real...
Im not saying democrats are evil or that they are immoral people. Simply that they are beholden to a corrupt finance system that undermines our democracy. Im not disgusted with Hillary, i understand that its nearly impossible to get where she is without playing the game. I just dontvwant to support that system if i dont have to, and bernie gives me that shot. I should be able to voice that opinion without being part of a group thats accused if unjustly dividing progressives.


One party is soundly and almost unapologetically corrupt.

The other party only within the last six months eased up on a self-imposed ban on large corporate campaign contributions, and purely just to make their down-ticket candidates viable.

Even when it comes to big money in politics, both parties are not the same.
I disagree. SuperPACs are new entities yes, but democrats have been closely linked with private corporations and lobbyist groups for a very long time. Again, this doesnt mean that democrats are evil or akin to republicans in ideals and policies. But it does mean that they have very little accountability to their average constituents. This disrupts the political process in profound ways and it was this problem that spurred many to support sanders. Portraying them as pie in the sky fools or ignorant noncomnformists is unfair and insulting. Not saying you did that, but many others have, and that was my original point.
 
That's somewhat true, but it's also somewhat of an oversimplification. In the past, the Republican and Democratic parties were fairly ideologically diverse coalitions of interests from different regions of the country. That diversity enabled the parties to compromise. Starting in 1994 with the retirement of a lot of the southern democrats in congress and their replacement with Republicans, the parties began to become much more ideologically polarized. They now more resemble ideologically organized parties in parliamentary democracies than political parties as they traditionally existed in America. That is a problem because, as you suggest, our political system wasn't set up for political parities to behave this way.

Sorry for the oversimplification; these threads move quickly and the conversation becomes heated.

What you state is all true, but to be fair, the technocratic answer would be to mitigate the negative effects of free trade on the distribution of incomes in the U.S. with re-distributive policies exactly like those Sanders supports. Unfortunately, the same moneyed interests that disproportionately benefit from free trade agreements fight the enactment of those programs. I don't support protectionism, but the answer of Democrats to this problem can't be to tell voters to "suck it up". That's one of the reasons why the Democrats are losing ground in the Midwest.

Unfortunately, since the mainstream of both parties supports free trade, blue collar voters voting against Democrats for NAFTA and the TPP in retaliation is ultimately futile. I do support redistributive policies and retraining programs.
 
Im not saying democrats are evil or that they are immoral people. Simply that they are beholden to a corrupt finance system that undermines our democracy. Im not disgusted with Hillary, i understand that its nearly impossible to get where she is without playing the game. I just dontvwant to support that system if i dont have to, and bernie gives me that shot. I should be able to voice that opinion without being part of a group thats accused if unjustly dividing progressives.



I disagree. SuperPACs are new entities yes, but democrats have been closely linked with private corporations and lobbyist groups for a very long time. Again, this doesnt mean that democrats are evil or akin to republicans in ideals and policies. But it does mean that they have very little accountability to their average constituents. This disrupts the political process in profound ways and it was this problem that spurred many to support sanders. Portraying them as pie in the sky fools or ignorant noncomnformists is unfair and insulting. Not saying you did that, but many others have, and that was my original point.

What are the profound ways in which the political process is disrupted?

If people exercised their voting rights there is accountability. These people are elected.
 
It's great that Hillary won Nevada, she needed it. As for South Carolina, if Rubio does end up winning the nomination somehow, Democrats will need to really show how far right the guy is; he's no moderate.

If you're gonna bring up invading Iraq, keep in mind Hillary was all for it, voted to extend the Patriot Act, thinks Edward Snowden's a traitor, and wants to intervene in Syria while enacting a no fly zone.

When it comes to military philosophies, Hillary's very hawkish.
What Hillary voted for was a 'maybe use force if negotiations break down' bill; it was not a 'war on Iraq' bill. She wrongly believe Bush's lies that he's only attack if necessary, if negotiations failed and the search for WMDs was stopped. Of course, he was lying, and went to war anyway. I saw that coming and thought that Hillary and the other Democrats voting for it were making a big mistake, but she believed him, unfortunately, and has since said that she was lied to and the vote was a mistake. That's not as good as opposing it from the start, but is much better than nothing.

But importantly, basically, there is no way that the Iraq War would ever have happened under a Democratic administration. That war only happened because the Bush Administration was determined to attack Iraq to make up for Bush I not taking out Saddam, for oil, etc. No Democrat would have done what Bush did, with the lies about Saddam's (nonexistent) connections to 9/11, the lies about WMDs, etc., all designed to get support for an unnecessary war. With the full intelligence picture that only the Executive Branch had, anyone not determined to start a war there would have known that there was not reason for it. And only Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and co. were so determined. Hillary and other Democrats certainly were not. Even if she voted for a bill that resulted in the war happening, she'd never have started that war herself, and I do think that matters.

Further, if you watch the debates, Bernie is no pacifist; on foreign policy, Bernie and Hillary agree on almost everything -- the main disagreements on our foreign policy issues today are issues like 'what tone should we have with Iran' and the like. Watching the debates, their near-total agreement on foreign policy is striking. Bernie has to constantly bring up that he voted against Iraq because it's one of the only things that separates them on foreign policy -- he voted for most all the other military actions that she also supported, in Kosovo, Libya, etc. Bernie wants to cut the military budget more than Hillary, yes, but he's not a full-on pacifist.


On the Patriot Act and Edward Snowden, though, yes, I would say that she's on the wrong side of those issues. On Syria, I'd probably agree with her that we need to do more.

Gerrymandering doesn't apply to the Senate.
Well, no, but the Senate has a built-in Republican bias since there are more right-leaning states than there are left-leaning ones. More of the left-leaning states have larger populations, which matters for the House and the Electoral College, but not for the Senate. If all states voted with their current partisan alignments, the Senate would be Republican and would probably stay that way for a long time.
 
I think some Sanders supporters are focusing too much on getting money out of politics as being the key to fix many current issues. Getting money out of politics is nice, but politicians won't start suddenly working for the workers interests once you remove it.

A corporation/industry is not inherently evil. (Not to say that none are.)

They aren't inherently "evil", but the hierarchical nature of many corporations benefits the people on top that feed off of the working class. Outside of that, a fair amount of large corporations exploit the third world and have owners that shift politics for their benefit.
 
Complete BS congratulating psychopathy and immoral behaviour....is that really the American Way?

Yes it's. Politics and economics are intertwined. You can't break that bond. As long as that bond exist, policy decisions will be made with/for vested (special) interest - that at times align with good policy. The absence of money doesn't eradicate influence from special interest towards some sort of policy aka lobbying. Just because one policy decision (made as a result of lobbying) fails to have a favorable outcome doesn't mean that all of the sudden vested interest are bad for politics - how many have been good and no one bats an eye? Yep. Trade policy is a perfect, easy example to pull. But it's everywhere in some form or another. Somehow you add money into the mix and it changes everything? There is a fine balance to play by the politicians elected for office and the degree to which they value special interests request and/if in their judgement should pursue in policy form. The problem is that lobbying is out of control (due to the amounts of money being poured) and thus policy decisions made with vested interest in mind fail to represent the general populace at large or push any public good in certain visible areas.That's what excessive money in politics can do. So you limit it or take it away but you can be damn sure economic power players will always have a say in policy - in one way or another. And that, is the american way. Now if you're solely referring to Citizens United... we can have a conversation about why it's aggravating the relationship between vested (special) interest and elected representatives and moving that relationship to a dangerous realm.
 
I like capitalism. I just think it needs very strict government regulation.

Unfettered capitalism isn't good for anyone except the already rich.

I don't disagree with the bolded at all. Capitalism and Socialism at their extremes suck. It's just the sense I'm getting from some posters here is that they'd like to get rid of capitalism all together. Have I misunderstood? If not then the issue is that most voters aren't interested in getting rid of capitalism at this point in time. If the voters don't care, its hard for the parties to care since its their job to represent the interests of the voters.

I think some Sanders supporters are focusing too much on getting money out of politics as being the key to fix many current issues. Getting money out of politics is nice, but politicians won't start suddenly working for the workers interests once you remove it.

There's also the fact that money isn't the primary root cause for issues some groups are experiencing. Racism being one big example.
 
Well, no, but the Senate has a built-in Republican bias since there are more right-leaning states than there are left-leaning ones. More of the left-leaning states have larger populations, which matters for the House and the Electoral College, but not for the Senate. If all states voted with their current partisan alignments, the Senate would be Republican and would probably stay that way for a long time.
That's not strictly true, Obama won 26 states in 2012. The problem is that Democrats don't turn out in mid-term elections. Democrats are quite capable of winning Senate majorities in presidential election years.
 
I apologize. I really do. This is just so extremely important. I know you know that. But it's literally something that can affect the lives of millions. So I get amped up. I really am sorry if I come across as a self-important or haughty asshole.

I have to get to sleep anyway, but I wanted to leave with one final plea to anyone, whether Hillary or Bernie supporter, who thinks about skipping the election or voting third party or whatever if their chosen candidate doesn't win the primary.

Right now, both houses of Congress are Republican. We may get a Republican president. That president would then nominate whatever extremely conservative Supreme Court justices he wishes, which the Republican Congress will confirm right away. Every branch of government will be Republican, and the dismantling of what we've fought so hard to build will begin in earnest, with nothing to slow it down.

Every non-rich man, woman, and child in the country would be affected. Hell, children who won't be born for another decade or two will feel the effects of a hard right judiciary. Please don't let that happen. Do your part. Yes, it sucks to see your perfect candidate lose. But do you really want to be fucked by the devil if you can't kiss Jesus? There's no middle ground?

Finally, a personal appeal:

My older brother suffers from a few emotional and developmental disorders. He's got Aspberger Syndrome, he's OCD, and has severe Social Anxiety Disorder. He doesn't work, can't leave the house (except to see his doctor, and only because that's become part of his routine). He relies on government assistance for his antidepressants and most everything else, which he's openly told me are the only things preventing him from suicide. He feels he's a burden on society and doesn't think he has anything worth living for because he adds nothing to anyone's life and stares at the same walls day in and day out.

The thing is, he's a good person. He's loving and caring and has an amazing heart. And he does have a purpose. He loves and is loved by his family. He didn't ask to be born as he is, but he gets by. And he means the world to me. Besides just by being my brother, he was my rock growing up. We had an abusive father (I'm talking closed fist punches and being choked unconscious before I turned 12). We weren't allowed to have friends growing up, and were required to be indoors with the curtains drawn at all times (which I believe led to my brother's Social Anxiety because I also have that, but to a much lesser degree). We were each other's friends. We were our only emotional support. We had each other. Now that we're adults, I don't want to lose him. I can't. He's my best friend.

Why am I brining this up? He's one of the "takers" the Republicans are always talking about. He can't work, so he collects government benefits (he's hardly living large. He's 38 and lives with my mom in the single-wide trailer we grew up in). But these benefits (mostly the drugs and access to a doctor) keep him fighting. And he's always somewhat hopeful (despite the odds) that some miracle drug will come along and clear away the fog and make him okay.

If Republicans take the presidency and hold every other branch of government, I'm scared they'll take away what little he has. I know how alarmist it sounds to say "vote for _______ or they'll kill my brother," but I literally feel as if his life may depend on the outcome of this election. Particularly if we get someone like Cruz, who wants to demolish damn near every social safety net in existence.

I'm not asking you to care about my brother. That's my job. But please realize that there are millions of others out there like him who are stuck in situations they didn't ask for and didn't create, and for whom a Republican win in November may literally mean the end of everything.

I know Bernie's supporters just hate the phrase 'there's too much at stake!', but there really is. I'd rather not see us roll all the way back to the 1950s due to a temper tantrum by a bunch of young white liberals who won't be adversely affected (at least not directly) by a Republican President. There are far too many marginalized people who teeter on the brink as is (like your brother), and it disgusts me to think about what a conservative President, Supreme Court and Congress could ruin in just a few short months.

As a whole, the country is starting to tilt further leftward, though not quite as fast as Bernie's supporters want it to. I fully expect a Bernie-like candidate to receive enough support to become President in the next 10 to 20 years (honestly, I'd be thrilled if it happened sooner, but it *will* happen). It would be an absolute shame if that candidate's policies were completely ignored or destroyed by a Supreme Court that became conservative due to the spiteful actions of a relatively small segment of the electorate way back in 2016. A Social Democratic President will have a much easier time enacting his or her agenda if they're actually backed up by Congressional and judicial support.

If wanting to ensure that future Presidents have their backs covered when they put their Bernie-like policy bills on the line is somehow me 'supporting the establishment' or being a shill for the oligarchy, then that's fine with me. By supporting Hillary now (which I do absolutely enthusiastically, by the way - we're not all 'unexcited' supporters), I know that we're paving a path forward to enacting the policies of a future Bernie Sanders, rather than setting the clock back for potentially decades. Note that I'd still gladly vote for Bernie if he were to win the nomination, but I'm pretty sure that won't be necessary at this point.
 
There's a few of us here, yes.

The problem with doing away with capitalism altogether is that it does indeed drive innovation in a lot of areas. It just happens that big companies allow innovation to drive their processes far less than profits. But small business and small ideas can both become big because of innovation, and that innovation can help society. So I don't see how you completely remove capitalism from society, as it provides incentive to try things in a new way that is theoretically better.
 
Wow, you must really be ignorant of the laws if you believe any of this. First, giving information to the press does not make it okay. The press is not authorized to receive classified communications/information. And, Snowden doesn't fear for his safety that is complete and utter nonsense dreamt up by paranoid conspiracy theorists, he fears prosecution for the crimes he committed.

I mean just wow, Snowden is not in ANY way covered by the Whistleblower Protection Act. Like, all I can tell you to do is to look up and read the act so you can understand why he isn't covered. I'll give you a hint you cannot leak classified information to the public simply because you disagree with the policies of an administration.

This is bullshit. Snowden exposed unconstitutional policies by the Obama administration. He's a whistleblower by any reasonable definition. Yes, he released some details which were not unconstitutional (spying on allies, for instance) but he deserves protection from prosecution.

I'm ashamed of my fellow Americans that the majority want to charge him with treason or what the fuck ever. It's a travesty.
 
The problem with doing away with capitalism altogether is that it does indeed drive innovation in a lot of areas. It just happens that big companies allow innovation to drive their processes far less than profits. But small business and small ideas can both become big because of innovation, and that innovation can help society. So I don't see how you completely remove capitalism from society, as it provides incentive to try things in a new way that is theoretically better.

Market socialism. Not the ultimate goal, but preferable to capitalism, and certainly one that could feasibly be argued in the US later on down the line.

You don't need the means of production to be privately controlled to still have a market system.
 
did you guys listen to Sanders' speech tonight? the guy is almost conceding South Carolina and moving to Super Tuesday states instead

he has given up on the South all together
 
I think some Sanders supporters are focusing too much on getting money out of politics as being the key to fix many current issues. Getting money out of politics is nice, but politicians won't start suddenly working for the workers interests once you remove it.
Politicians have very little incentive to listen to voters when 90+% of their funding comes from corporations and other private organizations. If money did not buy influence in this way, the interests of the people would matter much more to politicans because they cant rely on established donors to support their re election. This is why there used to be limits on how much businesses and individuals could contribute to campaigns. When most influence comes from money, the wants and needs of average voters mean less and less. This means oil companies can block environmental legislation with ease. Health insurance companies and pharmaceuticals block or neuter serious aytempts at healthcare reform, investment groups and banks can overturn regulations which will eventually crash our economy, gun manufacturers can block gun control reform in the midst of a gun violence epidemic that leaves thousands dead per year, and yes, the interests of workers and consumers are undermined by corporatist influence in the system (paid leave, minimum wage, equal pay for women, tax reform, social services etc.). So yes, some issues like gay marriage or abortion or systemic racism arent really impacted by money in politics, but many of our other biggest issues are.
 
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