If I was to characterize your points - it'd be constantly missing the big picture and oversimplifying the outcomes. Instead of your feelings based analysis. Let's get to at least tearing up one of your arguments with hard facts.Little Raven wrote: Mon Oct 26, 2020 1:17 pmI mean, if you look around the country, the Democrats are winning. We've been winning for the last 30 years. The country is farther to the left than it has ever been. Weed is legal in lots of states - and Biden may well repeal the Federal ban. Gay marriage is the law of the land. Trans rights are more widely respected than ever. The ACA is far from perfect, but it's the closest to a national health care plan we've ever managed. Online providers are finally deplatforming right wing groups. Republican power games have destroyed their party and gotten them virtually nothing in the way of substantial policy gains. Republicans have to go back to Reagan to find an example of a successful Republican president, while Obama and Clinton are both looked at fondly by much of the country.
For example, seeing ACA as a victory. That "victory" came at massive political cost and has been whittled down to its core. Ten or so years later it has been under constant attack even though it was hardly sufficient to solve the healthcare crisis of uninsured Americans. Uninsured Americans peaked in 2008 at about 18% (makes sense!). ACA was instituted in about 2012-2013 when about 16% of the population was uninsured. It dipped to a low of 9% in 2015. Then Trump came into power, and since 2016 the number of uninsured in America has risen in a steady line back up to near 1999 levels. (reference the left side of the chart).
So to put it in focus, 20 years later and the American system essentially hasn't improved much at all covering Americans. In fact, we're near the levels before the century began. And this year isn't recorded yet but is going to be worse on top - probably at or worse than 1999 levels. I won't even dig into the costs and health outcomes because there is no better story there. That isn't winning. That is a broken system.
And its ridiculous to think that Republicans haven't gotten substantial policy gains. They have broken the regulatory environment. They've undermined political institutions. They've delivered the wealthy the biggest tax cuts in history and delivered obscene wealth and income inequality. You are living in a parallel universe if you think that some social gains -- long overdue one at that -- balance out the equation. This is a deeply sick country. Again that is not the winning that Democrats or the majority of Americans who vote for them want.
Edit: Fixed a link to the 2016+ data