bamacre
Lifer
- Jul 1, 2004
- 21,029
- 2
- 61
The question is: how long this liberal moment goes."
I think the question is: where will this liberal movement go.
The question is: how long this liberal moment goes."
Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Arkaign
The 'base' has been trained to flip the (R) switch regardless for the GOP, just as there is the (D) base that always votes the straight Dem ticket.
Sure, there is some of that but before Palin - the massive rumblings were about the "base" not coming out for McCain. Go back and look it up. All the reporting was about if McCain stood a chance without picking someone to get the "base" to the voting booth.
And it was a load of crap. Please find me an example from history of the party NOT getting the base 30% or so. All the hype was just zealots whining, but they still would have pulled the lever.
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Arkaign
The 'base' has been trained to flip the (R) switch regardless for the GOP, just as there is the (D) base that always votes the straight Dem ticket.
Sure, there is some of that but before Palin - the massive rumblings were about the "base" not coming out for McCain. Go back and look it up. All the reporting was about if McCain stood a chance without picking someone to get the "base" to the voting booth.
Originally posted by: Arkaign
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Arkaign
The 'base' has been trained to flip the (R) switch regardless for the GOP, just as there is the (D) base that always votes the straight Dem ticket.
Sure, there is some of that but before Palin - the massive rumblings were about the "base" not coming out for McCain. Go back and look it up. All the reporting was about if McCain stood a chance without picking someone to get the "base" to the voting booth.
Allright, to be honest I do remember that, but I remember thinking, well that's just as stupid as the Hillary acolytes voting Republican because she lost the Primary. Sure it sounded like something, but it was really just temporary frustration that quickly faded back into party loyalty. The loyalists always pull the switch for their party. Those voters are a waste of time pandering to.
Now I can respect your position and your opinions, even if I disagree. All I ask is that you do the same and not try to pretend like this isn't going to be a legitimate issue. I'd be willing to bet dollars to doughnuts that in the coming weeks, you'll see the EXACT same question posed by Fox talking heads and other far-right pundits like Savage, Beck, Rush, etc.
Originally posted by: Vic
Unfortunately, I see the Republican party moving farther right towards the religious fundies and nationalism, essentially marginalizing themselves.
Originally posted by: Arkaign
Originally posted by: Vic
Unfortunately, I see the Republican party moving farther right towards the religious fundies and nationalism, essentially marginalizing themselves.
That's entirely possible. That would be a shame, and I'm not all that trusting of the Democrats to keep spending under control, and taxes in line. Though at this point in time, this conservative feels fully that the continuation of recent GOP policy would be a total disaster for this country. I hope Obama proves worthy of this chance, and I have a good feeling he will be.
Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Neither of the parties is worth a shit. If we can't redo it from the ground up the next best would be to split parties along theory lines.
Republicans should split to Libertarians, Republicans, and Constitution. Libertarians are looking for individual rights above all, Republicans looking for state rights over all, and Constitution wants a theocracy.
Democrats should split to Green, Socialist, and Democrat. Greens are environmentalists, Socialists are, well, socialists, and Democrats are looking for strong, proactive central government without the socialist economic overtones.
Those splits would allow a MUCH closer fit with individual political stances and greatly strengthen each segment.
Originally posted by: Lemon law
In terms of the future of the republican party, and its choices of more right or left, the NYT, on yesterday had a depressing OP ED written by Paul Krugman predicting a sharp right turn. The OP ED had a title of the republican rump of something like that, a cursory search today and I can't find it, so I will give a synopsis of what I remember.
But basically the Krugman reasoning was, the GOP candidates who survive the election of 2008 are far more likely to come from far very conservative States and be the most far right, and those who lose will be the more moderate of the GOP in more typical States being somewhat unfairly punished for the excesses of the more far right elements in the GOP, net effect, an even more far right GOP leadership post 11/5/2008.
And with Limbaugh and others leading the cheers, the GOP may sadly but cheerfully reach the goal of complete extinction in the election of 11/2010.
Originally posted by: Genx87
Not sure where it goes from here. Ideally we need to get back to small govt, low taxation and fiscal conservatism.
The problem presented however is I dont believe the American populace believes in that anymore. Which means the Republicans are going to head right along with it. They will continue to publish their own brand of big govt. Probably some kind of neo-con branch.
The thing that truely gets me right now is the disconnect between blacks+hispanics and republicans. All of them are typically socially conservative. The republicans have completely dropped the ball with these demographics. At this point the only way they can look to the future is to dump the extreme right bigots. If they dont, the democrats will continue to dominate. There is definately a place for fiscal conservativism among these demographics. Not all of these people want to leech off the system.
I think one of the best ways for republicans to get this going to is to openly talk immigration reform over the next 2-4 years. McCain while not the ideal candidate did have a comprehensive immigration policy. One that I believe if tweaked could sit well with hispanics. The bottom line is we are making it entirely too difficult for people to legally come here. The only option they have is to jump the fence and live in the under culture. The under culture helps nobody. Push a legitimate and realistic path to legal status. And make the case logically and I think the conservatives will come around while opening up a line of communication with the 2nd largest demographic in the country.
The people who hold onto their racial bias we dont need in the party anyways. It hurts your campaigns to have dipshits screaming racists comments at a rally. It conjures up images of the Nazis at the Nuremberg rallies. That doesnt sit well with the moderates.
They have 2 years to align themselves or we are looking at a possiblity of a single party govt. Which is terrifying imo.
Originally posted by: Snoop
For me, I would love to see the repubs move to the center on social issues and a swing FAR to the right on fiscal policy. Also, dump the religious right.
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
I could give a shit less about the GOP. They have abandoned my ideals and core beliefs on the fiscal side. I am hoping a new party emerges from the ashes of the GOP that can truly hold to the conservative ideals that so many "Republicans" hold dear.