Re: Too Soon To Start Thinking About 2020?
Posted: Fri May 03, 2019 11:50 pm
It's hard to like someone who strangles kittens, no matter how personable he is, when not strangling kittens.
That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons bring us some web forums whereupon we can gather
http://garbi.online/forum/
As long as you don't go hunting with him.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 11:56 pm Cheney is the biggest American war criminal since Kissinger. But I'm sure he's a nice guy if you get to know him.
Biden's whole strategy appears to be to win Republican voters by flattering them. He thinks the country is hungry for bipartisanship and that the MAGA movement will dissolve into amity and comity when offered a hand across the aisle.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 10:45 pm Well, this is a deal-breaker for me: Watch Biden praise Dick Cheney.
Yeah...I don't care how generic Democrats feel about it, praising Cheney is a bridge too far for me. Joe is now in the same zero-enthusiasm bucket that Hillary occupied.Holman wrote: Sat May 04, 2019 11:21 amBiden's whole strategy appears to be to win Republican voters by flattering them. He thinks the country is hungry for bipartisanship and that the MAGA movement will dissolve into amity and comity when offered a hand across the aisle.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 10:45 pm Well, this is a deal-breaker for me: Watch Biden praise Dick Cheney.
He was VP from 2008-2016, but apparently he thinks it's still 1992.
To say "Dem voters are old and not liberal" is what??? Is this an attempt to undermine more 'typical' democrats from participating??
Shrug. To me this is just saying that Cheney isn't a comic book villain - he was someone who did what he thought was best for America. I know lots of decent people with terrible beliefs.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 11:56 pm Cheney is the biggest American war criminal since Kissinger. But I'm sure he's a nice guy if you get to know him.
MMV. Having the blood of 460,000 people on one's hands (Cheney) clears most bars. Overlooking said blood (Biden) clears mine.El Guapo wrote: Sat May 04, 2019 10:31 pmShrug. To me this is just saying that Cheney isn't a comic book villain - he was someone who did what he thought was best for America. I know lots of decent people with terrible beliefs.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 11:56 pm Cheney is the biggest American war criminal since Kissinger. But I'm sure he's a nice guy if you get to know him.
YMMV, but this seems low bar for something completely disqualifying.
There are fiscally conservative Democrats as you suggest. There are socially conservative Democrats (See, for example, religious African Americans that were very slow to support marriage equality). There are Democrats who aren't what we would normally consider Democrats, but register as Democrat for other reasons (eg, if Republicans have no power in their locale, and you need to register as a Democrat to get a say during the primary, etc) and don't vote Democrat in the general election. And there might be conservative Republicans who have left the Republican party in recent years because they could no longer support it.Holman wrote: Sat May 04, 2019 8:42 pm "Conservative Democrats" are what we usually call moderates. They're fiscally conservative and embrace fair capitalism as they understand it, but they can't embrace the GOP because they're not socially reactionary.
By any scale that makes sense, Republicans no longer include conservatives at all. The Trump GOP spectrum runs from reactionary to fascist.
I assume that you're referring to the Iraq War? I may be more sympathetic because I supported that war at the time (mostly on the grounds that it seemed like a good idea to replace a tyrant with democratic institutions). It was a mistake, but I think it makes me somewhat more forgiving of those involved in it.Kraken wrote: Sun May 05, 2019 12:17 amMMV. Having the blood of 460,000 people on one's hands (Cheney) clears most bars. Overlooking said blood (Biden) clears mine.El Guapo wrote: Sat May 04, 2019 10:31 pmShrug. To me this is just saying that Cheney isn't a comic book villain - he was someone who did what he thought was best for America. I know lots of decent people with terrible beliefs.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 11:56 pm Cheney is the biggest American war criminal since Kissinger. But I'm sure he's a nice guy if you get to know him.
YMMV, but this seems low bar for something completely disqualifying.
Politically, I'm still open to (if skeptical of) the centrist argument that Americans crave a return to normalcy more than a transformation. That's a different topic, and candidates other than Biden are trying to sell it. I would encourage my centrist friends to look elsewhere.
I think by and large the country is hungry for bipartisanship. At least the majority of the country.Holman wrote:Biden's whole strategy appears to be to win Republican voters by flattering them. He thinks the country is hungry for bipartisanship and that the MAGA movement will dissolve into amity and comity when offered a hand across the aisle.
I fell for the neocon line, too. Cheney ginned up the justifications and deceived us, and nearly half a million died. I don't think he's ever expressed remorse. Hard to forgive that. But we're evaluating Biden, not Cheney. By itself, his admiration for the man is not a knockout blow...but I already had other reservations about Biden, so it's enough to put me over the edge.El Guapo wrote: Sun May 05, 2019 7:53 amI assume that you're referring to the Iraq War? I may be more sympathetic because I supported that war at the time (mostly on the grounds that it seemed like a good idea to replace a tyrant with democratic institutions). It was a mistake, but I think it makes me somewhat more forgiving of those involved in it.Kraken wrote: Sun May 05, 2019 12:17 amMMV. Having the blood of 460,000 people on one's hands (Cheney) clears most bars. Overlooking said blood (Biden) clears mine.El Guapo wrote: Sat May 04, 2019 10:31 pmShrug. To me this is just saying that Cheney isn't a comic book villain - he was someone who did what he thought was best for America. I know lots of decent people with terrible beliefs.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 11:56 pm Cheney is the biggest American war criminal since Kissinger. But I'm sure he's a nice guy if you get to know him.
YMMV, but this seems low bar for something completely disqualifying.
Politically, I'm still open to (if skeptical of) the centrist argument that Americans crave a return to normalcy more than a transformation. That's a different topic, and candidates other than Biden are trying to sell it. I would encourage my centrist friends to look elsewhere.
I'm just trying to guage your degree of 'deal breaker' here.
I would vote for a box of feces over Trump, so it's only as far as the primaries go.Unagi wrote: Sun May 05, 2019 8:28 pmI'm just trying to guage your degree of 'deal breaker' here.
Are you saying in a Trump vs Biden 2020 Presidency you would not vote for Biden? Or is this only in regard to a primary vote situation?
OK. Sanity check. whewKraken wrote: Sun May 05, 2019 9:39 pm I would vote for a box of feces over Trump, so it's only as far as the primaries go.
(1) As already noted, Biden’s “praise” for Cheney has nothing to do with Cheney’s policies. All he said was Cheney was gracious to the Biden’s during the transition of power and he took time to talk with Joe about the office of VP. And he said he believes he is a decent man. Yep, total dealbreaker stuff there.Holman wrote: Sat May 04, 2019 11:21 amBiden's whole strategy appears to be to win Republican voters by flattering them. He thinks the country is hungry for bipartisanship and that the MAGA movement will dissolve into amity and comity when offered a hand across the aisle.Kraken wrote: Fri May 03, 2019 10:45 pm Well, this is a deal-breaker for me: Watch Biden praise Dick Cheney.
He was VP from 2008-2016, but apparently he thinks it's still 1992.
https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1124667509242777600
I got to see Pete at a small fundraising event this morning and he was fantastic as usual, pretty much exactly what you see and hear in larger rallies but with a more intimate feel (about 50 people I'd guess). He answered questions from the audience for about 40 minutes straight. Interestingly not a single mention of him being gay or anything having to do with that, everything was about policies and strategy, etc.
Well, this is an interesting question. If someone is honestly and selflessly carrying out what he/she thinks is best for the country, but their (honest) beliefs are horrible, are they a decent / good person? Like, Paul Ryan in particular has incredibly noxious political beliefs, and in pursuing them has done a lot of harm to the country and to the people of this country. However, as far as I can tell he genuinely believes that his beliefs were best for the country, and I haven't seen any indication of him being corrupt or anything. So would Paul Ryan be a "decent man"? I feel like you could argue either side of that question.Holman wrote: Thu May 09, 2019 11:57 am Can we at least agree that Dick Cheney is *not* a decent man?
I don't care how sincere you are in your efforts when you do the level of damage that those two have done you are not a good person. When your policy decisions cause way more harm than good AND you make no effort to fix any of that harm then you are certainly a bad person in my eyes. If you do not see the harm it just make you blind as well as bad.El Guapo wrote: Fri May 10, 2019 9:52 amWell, this is an interesting question. If someone is honestly and selflessly carrying out what he/she thinks is best for the country, but their (honest) beliefs are horrible, are they a decent / good person? Like, Paul Ryan in particular has incredibly noxious political beliefs, and in pursuing them has done a lot of harm to the country and to the people of this country. However, as far as I can tell he genuinely believes that his beliefs were best for the country, and I haven't seen any indication of him being corrupt or anything. So would Paul Ryan be a "decent man"? I feel like you could argue either side of that question.Holman wrote: Thu May 09, 2019 11:57 am Can we at least agree that Dick Cheney is *not* a decent man?
Similarly, Dick Cheney's political beliefs have caused a lot of harm to the country. As far as I know he genuinely believes them (I don't think he pursued them as cover for personal gain). Is he a decent man? Maybe, maybe not. Also I don't care all that much about that anyway, since I think we ought to focus on what policies are good or bad and less on the state of any given politician's soul.
In general, I agree that you can argue both sides. But there must be a limit somewhere, I'm just not smart enough to see it. After all, Hitler. Or more topically - Thanos.El Guapo wrote: Fri May 10, 2019 9:52 amWell, this is an interesting question. If someone is honestly and selflessly carrying out what he/she thinks is best for the country, but their (honest) beliefs are horrible, are they a decent / good person? Like, Paul Ryan in particular has incredibly noxious political beliefs, and in pursuing them has done a lot of harm to the country and to the people of this country. However, as far as I can tell he genuinely believes that his beliefs were best for the country, and I haven't seen any indication of him being corrupt or anything. So would Paul Ryan be a "decent man"? I feel like you could argue either side of that question.Holman wrote: Thu May 09, 2019 11:57 am Can we at least agree that Dick Cheney is *not* a decent man?
Similarly, Dick Cheney's political beliefs have caused a lot of harm to the country. As far as I know he genuinely believes them (I don't think he pursued them as cover for personal gain). Is he a decent man? Maybe, maybe not.
Where's the fun in that?Also I don't care all that much about that anyway, since I think we ought to focus on what policies are good or bad and less on the state of any given politician's soul.
But Cheney entirely fails your "honestly and selflessly" standard. There's no doubt that he intentionally manipulated secret intelligence, thwarted diplomacy, and interfered with good-faith international inspections in order to take advantage of the post-9/11 climate and build the case for the Iraq War.El Guapo wrote: Fri May 10, 2019 9:52 amWell, this is an interesting question. If someone is honestly and selflessly carrying out what he/she thinks is best for the country, but their (honest) beliefs are horrible, are they a decent / good person? Like, Paul Ryan in particular has incredibly noxious political beliefs, and in pursuing them has done a lot of harm to the country and to the people of this country. However, as far as I can tell he genuinely believes that his beliefs were best for the country, and I haven't seen any indication of him being corrupt or anything. So would Paul Ryan be a "decent man"? I feel like you could argue either side of that question.Holman wrote: Thu May 09, 2019 11:57 am Can we at least agree that Dick Cheney is *not* a decent man?
Similarly, Dick Cheney's political beliefs have caused a lot of harm to the country. As far as I know he genuinely believes them (I don't think he pursued them as cover for personal gain). Is he a decent man? Maybe, maybe not. Also I don't care all that much about that anyway, since I think we ought to focus on what policies are good or bad and less on the state of any given politician's soul.
Since we live in a world where Cheney isn't held responsible for the catastrophe he engineered, Biden is in the clear, sure.YellowKing wrote: Fri May 10, 2019 12:50 pm It really depends on how you're defining "decency."
Are you defining it as the sum of all your actions? Or are you defining it as to whether you're a friendly colleague who is gracious enough to have you over for dinner even though you're from opposite ends of the political spectrum? From that conversation, I felt like Biden was defining it mostly by the latter.