Ivanka doesn't have your support Benji?You'd vote for Trump?
Where did France or Spain get the title to sell or transfer ownership of the Louisiana Territory? Or Jefferson the authority to purchase it?
The Mexican cession was gained through a war sold on lies!
Where did Russia get authority to sell Alaska to the U.S.?
Come see the violence inherent in the state!
New GOP Iowa numbers from PPP:
Trump 28%
Cruz 26%
Rubio 13%
Carson 8%
Bush 6%
Trump is TOO good at this.
Trump is TOO good at this.Our poll findings show the Birther Issue could actually cost Cruz Iowa, Tom Jensen, Public Policy Pollings director, told Business Insider in an email.
Overall, when respondents were told that Cruz was born in Canada, the vast majority 65% said it wouldnt make a difference in whether they support him or not. But 24% said it makes them less likely to vote for Cruz. Jensen argued that in such a close race, that could end up being a difference maker.
Q16
Given the choices of just Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Ted Cruz who would you support for the Republican nomination for President?
33%
Donald Trump
9%
Jeb Bush
18%
Marco Rubio
36%
Ted Cruz
Q17
Given the choices of just Donald Trump, Marco Rubio, and Ted Cruz who would you support for the Republican nomination for President?
32%
Donald Trump
22%
Marco Rubio
38%
Ted Cruz
Q18
Given the choices of just Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Ted Cruz who would you support for the Republican nomination for President?
11%
Jeb Bush
24%
Marco Rubio
54%
Ted Cruz
Q19
Who would you prefer as the Republican candidate if you had to choose between just Jeb Bush and Donald Trump?
29%
Jeb Bush
60%
Donald Trump
Q20
Who would you prefer as the Republican candidate if you had to choose between just Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio?
59%
Ted Cruz
26%
Marco Rubio
Q21
Who would you prefer as the Republican candidate if you had to choose between just Ted Cruz and Donald Trump?
54%
Ted Cruz
37%
Donald Trump
Q22
Who would you prefer as the Republican candidate if you had to choose between just Marco Rubio and Donald Trump?
46%
Marco Rubio
45%
Donald Trump
Q28
Did Carly Fiorina rooting for Iowa over her alma mater of Stanford in the Rose Bowl make you more or less likely to support her for the Republican nomination for President, or did it not make a difference?
7%
More likely
15%
Less likely
Are you offended by bilingual phone menus where you press 1 to continue in English and 2 to continue in Spanish, or not?
52%
Offended by bilingual phone menus
40%
Not offended by bilingual phone menus
President Obama teared up while announcing an executive action on gun control this week. Do you think his tears were sincere, or do you think he faked them?
16%
Obamas tears were sincere
69%
Obamas tears were fake
Sanders wins the support of MoveOn, a Democratic PAC initially set up to support Bill Clinton, taking 340,000 votes in a closed membership only poll. That gives the Sanders campaign direct access to 7,000,000 people and a lot of funding - plus MoveOn are strong on the ground in Iowa, Obama used their resources a lot.
Man, Iowa is going to be so exciting.
Talking of which, interesting sneak peak at the Sanders ground game:
http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/v...the-foot-soldiers-in-sanders-iowa-ground-game
That was expected, Hillary declined to even appear on their forum and seemed salty they supported Obama last time around.
Trump is like the best mirror ever held up the republican party ever.
Fame, eh? 8)Anyone else think Makai has gone mad with fame?
I think the biggest factor people aren't talking about is the question of how undecided voters will break and where people affiliated with minor candidates will go once the field narrows. Trump is at 28% in the poll you quoted and he doesn't have anything close to a majority in any poll.It's actually impressive. If he weren't such a fuck, I'd applaud him for playing everyone in the media and the party perfectly. If he wins Iowa and NH, it's over correct? No question?
I think the biggest factor people aren't talking about is the question of how undecided voters will break and where people affiliated with minor candidates will go once the field narrows. Trump is at 28% in the poll you quoted and he doesn't have anything close to a majority in any poll.
In a wide range of recent polls, Cruz has looked to be in the best position for the actual primary voting conditions. He does well in one-on-one match-ups, his favorability is high across the party, and he ranks high in "second choice" votes. That said, to return to your actual question, his standing could take a big hit if he doesn't actually win Iowa.
Fame, eh? 8)
http://www.vox.com/2016/1/12/10749984/hillary-clinton-pander
I encounter this attitude a lot and its frustrating. It amazing how adept the grassroots on both the left and right can expend vast amounts of words and effort criticizing politics for their actions but spend zero time contructing an alternative beyond magical thinking.
The internet has raised voice but the alternate decline in social groups, unions, civic groups has completely elimiated the populous compacity to actually do politics. This whole article is about how clinton hasn't forcefully appoligized enough for her criminal justice policies and hasn't proposed a fix for everything. But offers no attempt at demanding anything of her. She mentions there are "policies" that could end mass incarceration but doesn't list any examples. This isn't how politics works and its frustrating to constantly see people complain complain and complain, and indict every person for their crimes but refuse to really do the work of forcing politicians to act, that's what lobbyist have filled.
I think its a failure of how we teach history. We teach it in terms of inevitability and good hearted politicians that were guided by their good soul instead of the same kind we have now who were guided by the desire to get elected.
This happens on the right too with all their complains about RINOs
I don't even remember what that wasDon't mind me. I'm just still salty from that tweet I stole from you a few weeks ago.
I'm incredibly sympathetic to her.
But a willingness to sabotage the possibility of future progress? That will always strike me as remarkable.
She written in the past about how she won't vote for Hillary. Unless I misread her intent, she doesn't seem like she intends to support whoever the nominee is.Why is she willing to sabotage the possibility of future progress? She's probably intending to vote for the more electable candidate with the stronger racial justice program, which seems fair.
She written in the past about how she won't vote for Hillary. Unless I misread her intent, she doesn't seem like she intends to support whoever the nominee is.
I'm incredibly sympathetic to her.
But a willingness to sabotage the possibility of future progress? That will always strike me as remarkable.
In 1997, Michael Wayne Haley was arrested after stealing a calculator from Walmart. This was a crime that merited a maximum two-year prison term. But prosecutors incorrectly applied a habitual offender law. Neither the judge nor the defense lawyer caught the error and Haley was sentenced to 16 years.
Eventually, the mistake came to light and Haley tried to fix it. Ted Cruz was solicitor general of Texas at the time. Instead of just letting Haley go for time served, Cruz took the case to the Supreme Court to keep Haley in prison for the full 16 years.
The case reveals something interesting about Cruzs character. Ted Cruz is now running strongly among evangelical voters, especially in Iowa. But in his career and public presentation Cruz is a stranger to most of what would generally be considered the Christian virtues: humility, mercy, compassion and grace. Cruzs behavior in the Haley case is almost the dictionary definition of pharisaism: an overzealous application of the letter of the law in a way that violates the spirit of the law, as well as fairness and mercy.
Traditionally, candidates who have attracted strong evangelical support have in part emphasized the need to lend a helping hand to the economically stressed and the least fortunate among us. Such candidates include George W. Bush, Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum.
But Cruzs speeches are marked by what you might call pagan brutalism. There is not a hint of compassion, gentleness and mercy. Instead, his speeches are marked by a long list of enemies, and vows to crush, shred, destroy, bomb them. When he is speaking in a church the contrast between the setting and the emotional tone he sets is jarring.
Ted Cruz is evil.
David Brooks has never read The Old Testament.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/12/o...-ted-cruz.html?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=1
"If we have 4 percent a year of GDP growth, all these problems would get solved," PayPal billionaire Peter Thiel told me when I quizzed him about inequality.
A plurality of founders agree: Among 33 founders I surveyed, 48 percent said that mediocre growth was more problematic than financial inequality, while 42 percent believed the opposite. Among the general population (as represented by 595 people polled on SurveyMonkey), 59 percent of people believe inequality is more important.
After dozens of interviews with new and big-name tech startup founders, I designed a structured battery of political and philosophical questions and randomly selected people from an exhaustive database of funded companies (more details on the methods here).
What emerged from my interviews and survey results was a set of views that are somewhat more nuanced than Grahams, but also in agreement with his fundamental view of the world. Founders believe that equality of opportunity is crucial to a fair and healthy economy, while equality of outcome is economically paralyzing.
They believe that a relatively small slice of geniuses advance humanity more than the combined efforts of everyone else, and that economic growth is better at improving the overall quality of life than burdensome redistribution schemes.
And many believe that the best long-term solution to inequality may be a guaranteed basic minimum income, which minimizes regulation on innovation but ensures that the masses are well-off.
"An uninspired population is a stagnant population. Inequality breeds creativity, and fosters motivation to change one's situation," wrote Byron Morgan, founder of the music startup Vinylmint. "Mass change starts with one person inspiring another."
This is perhaps a more artful way to articulate the point Graham was trying to make when he wrote, "Most people who get rich tend to be fairly driven. Whatever their other flaws, laziness is usually not one of them."
As an active example of this: black voters have consistently voted Democrat in every recent election and in recent elections have had the highest turnout as a racial demographic. Despite this, the Democratic party (not all members, by many) makes almost no active progress on racial justice issues and continues to simply defend the status quo. Now suppose that every single eligible black voter in America said "I am not going to vote Democrat unless you get x issue passed", and supposed that Democratic politicians genuinely believed them. That issue would pass so fast the bill would be on fire.
Despite this, the Democratic party (not all members, by many) makes almost no active progress on racial justice issues and continues to simply defend the status quo.
By this metric you are obliged to vote for a serial killer over a genocidal maniac if those are your two candidates because one is less bad.
There's almost no limit to the compromises that can be made in the name of electability if the mere possibility of future good is the decider: you can run the same as your opponent but hint maybe you'll do better in the future and that'd be sufficient.
There's also no reason for candidates to actually do future progress if they are never punished for its lack. That centrist block is mighty attractive if you have nothing to fear.
Someone gets it. Good lord, I've felt so alone in this group.If politician knows, without a doubt, they have your vote, then they don't have to work for you. You have no leverage over them. There always has to be the threat you could vote for someone else. Whether you carry through with that threat is another thing, but the threat has to be believed.
Are you talking nationally or locally? Because there hasn't been a lot of progress on *anything* by *anybody* and a de facto lock on the status quo for the last 6 years.
If you mean locally, I think you have to build a case for that.
The case reveals something interesting about Cruz’s character. Ted Cruz is now running strongly among evangelical voters, especially in Iowa. But in his career and public presentation Cruz is a stranger to most of what would generally be considered the Christian virtues: humility, mercy, compassion and grace. Cruz’s behavior in the Haley case is almost the dictionary definition of pharisaism: an overzealous application of the letter of the law in a way that violates the spirit of the law, as well as fairness and mercy.
Ummm... How are Democrats going to overcome Republican majorities in the House and Senate to do this? In your scenario Republicans would benefit hugely, so why in the world would they agree to this? This is the classic Green Lantern theory of politics, which everyone agrees is completely flawed:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blog...antern-theory-of-presidential-power-persists/
Mass movements are notorious for not knowing the how. They're there to put pressure on the more politically savvy, not write plans or strategies for fulfillment. And honestly, expecting them to be able to do so is a bit ridiculous.The thing about her case that strikes me as asinine: Hillary has reached out, and has asked for policy suggestions from movement representatives, has stated that she will continue to work on this and meet with them in the future, etc - this is all documented - and the author brushes that aside because it's apparently, magically not good enough.
It honestly makes me wonder if there's an ulterior motive on the part of the author.
We see an apparently sympathetic politician asking for policy suggestions. Her ears and mind are open. And this author instead decides to snipe.
What do you expect from a Social Democrat?David Brooks has never read The Old Testament.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/12/o...-ted-cruz.html?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=1
Why infuriating? 24-hour news channels gonna 24-hour news channel.CNN going all-in on HRC trailing Bernie in NH/tied in IA, damn. Pushing that horse race narrative to an extreme.
This is gonna be a crazy (infuriating) next few weeks.
NH Monmouth
Sanders 53
Clinton 39
NH Monmouth
Sanders 53
Clinton 39
Fuuuuuck. Monmouth is one of Clinton's most favourables!
Unskewing the polls.Bernie was always going to win NH. I still don't think he wins by that much.
Not particularly. She's never lead in their poll outside the MOE.
It's not just a matter of the federal level, it's a matter at state levels as well. There are many Democratic governors with Democratic state senates who do not sufficiently focus on racial justice. Even beyond that, in e.g. 2008-10, when the Democrats had absolute control, the obfuscation of Blue Dog Democrats prevented significant reforms happening. I think that's partly why liberals then did go on to refuse to vote for them, although in that instance it backfired because of redistributing taking place immediately after - enthusiasm was just so low [I'm not saying I defend this, I just say I empathize with why people acted the way they did]. Racial justice issues aren't just failing because of Republican obstructionism (although that plays a part), they also fail because in all honesty only a small portion of the Democratic party actually cares about them.
So this makes vilifying and blowing-off potential allies a logical and good thing to do then?Mass movements are notorious for not knowing the how. They're there to put pressure on the more politically savvy, not write plans or strategies for fulfillment. And honestly, expecting them to be able to do so is a bit ridiculous.