Joke post?
Joke post.
Please be a joke post.
I refuse to believe it's anything but a joke post.
Joke post?
Joke post.
Please be a joke post.
Don't really buy that there is anything that CAN be done other than encourage education so that people can enter service industries or engineering.
The first step is basic income. But that's anathema, at least in the US. Nobody would dream of bringing that up. Not even Bernie "SOCIALISM" Sanders.
I think that's my cue to bounce from this thread.arent hillary and trump pretty close in their overall views? I mean that should be more than enough to explain the hatred. It just trump has got race against him
I like that as an eventual goal. Don't think it is practical currently.
Most industries are not automated yet, and those industries are what will provide funding for a basic income in the future.
Not to mention that it is a waste of time to discuss it in the current political climate.
Yeah it's absolutely not practical at all haha. Besides, we need to address climate change first, or shit won't even matter.
But it is an eventual necessity, and the sooner we start talking about it without people cringing in disgust, the better!
Is there a thread about automation on these forums? 'Cause yo I'd like to read some thoughts on this without further derailing this thread. Though I guess there's unlikely to be a long-lasting thread about it, huh. C'est la vie.
arent hillary and trump pretty close in their overall views? I mean that should be more than enough to explain the hatred. It just trump has got race against him
I meant on a mass-scale, but yeah, I get your point. The time is now!
The first step is basic income. But that's anathema, at least in the US. Nobody would dream of bringing that up. Not even Bernie "SOCIALISM" Sanders.
I like that as an eventual goal. Don't think it is practical currently.
Most industries are not automated yet, and those industries are what will provide funding for a basic income in the future.
Not to mention that it is a waste of time to discuss it in the current political climate.
Yeah it's absolutely not practical at all haha. Besides, we need to address climate change first, or shit won't even matter.
But it is an eventual necessity, and the sooner we start talking about it without people cringing in disgust, the better!
Is there a thread about automation on these forums? 'Cause yo I'd like to read some thoughts on this without further derailing this thread. Though I guess there's unlikely to be a long-lasting thread about it, huh. C'est la vie.
I think the fear of automation has been stifled by people crying wolf on it in the past.
This is not a new topic. People were panicking in the 80's and 90's that machines in factories would lead to mass unemployment.
Instead we are now sitting at sub 5% unemployment as the jobs just shifted to different industries.
I think it will be hard to get people to care for some time.
you sure do love beating that automation drum every thread.
You can say that because you obviously don't live here.I'd probably want to take my ball home too if Hillary bloody Clinton was the most progressive candidate available to my country in 2016.
It doesn't matter. Clearly what I have said in this thread has the majority convinced I know nothing regardless of what research I actually have done.
That aside, I deal with people A LOT and people who THINK they know politcs A LOT. Whether you think I am dumb or not, there are some people who are scary ignorant in this world.
I still have people saying Obama will eventually help the Muslims take over America.
ur just a gamers gate supporter
I know I said I wouldn't pry further, but I can't help myself. I find your response interesting.
While it may not seem practical, if we're going on the concerns of some people - one of which is Alec Ross - the necessity of a basic income will absolutely spike in the next 5-10 years, and Ross was a Senior Advisor to Innovation under then-Secretary of State Clinton. I don't know if it will be that soon - I think 10 is the shortest timetable of massive disruption - but if Ross is right, Clinton might actually inherit this problem in a mainstream way.
It doesn't give any insight on how she will govern. I also don't think a corporate friendly SC justice is necessarily a good thing for this country. What good are civil rights when there is no economical future for 250 million of our citizens?
Clinton is not liberal and not progressive, her legislation record is certain proof. If you think she will govern as such then prepare to be disappointed. Other then that you can expect business as usual: Wholesale decline of the middle class with LGBT rights expansion. War on drugs will continue, militarization of the police will continue and the ongoing police state we live in will tighten. Pipelines will be built and the environment will get kicked down the road for profits as she takes a 4/8 year victory lap as the first female president while things worsen or don't change.
How many of her supporters are ready to fight a ground war in Syria? Best believe that shit is coming June 2017 if she gets elected.
Just.... cut it out guys!
I know right, everyone who doesn't support Hillary is a Gamergate supporter according to some people in this thread!
Sexism is totally a factor. I know people who are life-long democrats who will not vote Hillary because (I swear I am not making this up) they are religious, and according to the Bible, women shouldn't be in positions of power. THIS IS FROM A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY!
Personally, the thing that scares me, that I have stated from the very beginning, was that I feel Hillary & her siding with corporate interests against public interests, whenever the two sides butt heads (which is ever-more frequent), can do as much damage as a republican controlled supreme court. If I had even the slightest inkling that she would look out for the people who make up this country when they need to defend themselves against increasingly powerful corporate interests, then she might have begrudgingly got my vote. But she won't. I know she won't. The amount of corporate backing, and the amount of bias corporate media, has given Hillary (outside of FOX of course) just confirms just how badly they want her in as a candidate, which scares the shit out of me.
arent hillary and trump pretty close in their overall views? I mean that should be more than enough to explain the hatred. It just trump has got race against him
You mean her 93% identical record to Sanders with part of that 7% being more progressive action on gun control?
You can say that because you obviously don't live here.
Honestly baffled at how you think pulling that statistic in is supposed to convince me I'm wrong.
1) The statistic is only based on two years of shared Senate voting.
2) Sanders has been consistent throughout many years of his involvement in politics. Hillary's only consistency is that she votes for something shitty and then later acts like she never did.
3) No but seriously, two years.
4) They disagreed on a few very big issues. Continuing the war and bank bailouts. Hillary loves war and loves banks. She'll tell us now, of course, that she doesn't. (They also disagreed on immigration reform, which Sanders opposed for a very specific reason and not because he wanted to block immigrants. I'm not sure how I feel about this one.)
5) Two years? C'mon.
"Insane." Try again when you've got more than a random statistic that you don't even understand, thanks.
Oh, this old tired argument again. Let's see... FiveThirtyEight on Clinton's political leaning.
OnTheIssues.Org's has an exhaustive list of Clinton's stances and ranks her politics based on comments, voting records and her entire career. The result?
DailyKos on Clinton's liberalism:
And The New York Times?
And if this hasn't already been mentioned repeatedly, her voting record is over 90% identical to Bernie Sanders. "Hillary Clinton is not liberal" is, to be blunt, ignorant bullshit.
It's nice of you to ignore my post addressing this statistic that you're using incorrectly, but I'd at least hoped you would stop using it incorrectly!
Right, and that suggests that they have similar views of the legislation that was being passed during that time window. It has very little bearing regarding how progressive, radical, or whatever the two candidates are, but you keep spamming it in response to people suggesting there are significant differences between the candidates. It's not a particularly useful statistic, and seems mostly to be being used to shut down discussion on the topic.It really doesn't change anything, she had a 93% similar voting record while they were both in the Senate, unless you think those 2 years were just a complete anomaly for her.
There's must be something negative that Democrats have with Hillary since the amount of votes in the primaries are significantly lower than 2008. It shows that people are not as interested in the her compared to Obama, while the Republicans are having record turnouts. People are really underestimating the Republican nominee if Rubio gets the nominee.
There's must be something negative that Democrats have with Hillary since the amount of votes in the primaries are significantly lower than 2008. It shows that people are not as interested in the her compared to Obama, while the Republicans are having record turnouts.
That also makers it pretty clear that Sanders doesn't have this revolution going.
That also makers it pretty clear that Sanders doesn't have this revolution going.
You mean her 93% identical record to Sanders with part of that 7% being more progressive action on gun control?
Is it such a bad thing that Hillary changed her position on the TPP in response to the backlash? Elected officials are supposed to represent the interests of the voters, so if the voters oppose a piece of legislation, I would hope that their representatives would oppose it too. Seems like a weird thing to criticize her for, as if she would be more respectable if she had continued supporting the TPP in spite of the uproar.
True, but what I was trying to say that the current Democratic line-up is not as strong as Obama and might lose this year. I personally expected close to the turnout in 2008 due to Hillary making history as the first woman president.
I remember in '08 when Hillary conceded she made a point to pledge her support to Obama and asked her supporters to do the same because it was important to have a Democrat at the White House.
I hope Bernie will do the same.
There's must be something negative that Democrats have with Hillary since the amount of votes in the primaries are significantly lower than 2008. It shows that people are not as interested in the her compared to Obama, while the Republicans are having record turnouts. People are really underestimating the Republicans if Rubio gets the nominee.
If he doesn't then he deserves nothing but scorn and contempt.
I don't think it will come to that though.
Nope, Sanders didn't vote to send my brother off to die in Iraq. In addition, quit expecting Clinton to become something other then the existing person she is: a 3rd way pro war politician & Walmart board member.
It's pretty clear that they are united against their Republican Opponents. Bernie ran his campaign for the people who wanted to take a stand to traditional establishment politics. He didn't run for personal glory. And he will bow out gracefully and endorse Clinton as the best candidate to represent the interest of the every day person.I remember in '08 when Hillary conceded she made a point to pledge her support to Obama and asked her supporters to do the same because it was important to have a Democrat at the White House.
I hope Bernie will do the same.
There's must be something negative that Democrats have with Hillary since the amount of votes in the primaries are significantly lower than 2008. It shows that people are not as interested in the her compared to Obama, while the Republicans are having record turnouts. People are really underestimating the Republicans if Rubio gets the nominee.
There's must be something negative that Democrats have with Hillary since the amount of votes in the primaries are significantly lower than 2008. It shows that people are not as interested in the her compared to Obama, while the Republicans are having record turnouts. People are really underestimating the Republicans if Rubio gets the nominee.
2008 was after 8 years of Bush. It's a normal thing to have a larger turnout for the opposing party in the primaries after a long run.
There's must be something negative that Democrats have with Hillary since the amount of votes in the primaries are significantly lower than 2008. It shows that people are not as interested in the her compared to Obama, while the Republicans are having record turnouts. People are really underestimating the Republicans if Rubio gets the nominee.
At the same time, a lot of Rubio/Kasich supporters are unlikely to support Trump in a general election.
Nope, Sanders didn't vote to send my brother off to die in Iraq. In addition, quit expecting Clinton to become something other then the existing person she is: a 3rd way pro war politician & Walmart board member.
That's where I think the Democrats have a problem with Hillary - she's such a divisive candidate that plenty from the Republican side will turn out even if they can't stand Trump.
Of course, the effect from the Republicans running Trump is likely to be the same if not greater.
It's going to be a fascinating race.
arent hillary and trump pretty close in their overall views? I mean that should be more than enough to explain the hatred. It just trump has got race against him
I'm sorry for your loss, but your brother died because Bush lied. To everyone. Most Democrats voted for the war, too. And people went from being against the war to being in favor of it when Bush lied to Colin Powell to get Colin Powell to lie to all of us. So never forget who destroyed this country and destroyed Iraq, and be happy his brother didn't even make it past the primaries.