Yeah, I should have said most "divisive", and not necessarily along traditional lines either. Partisan is not correct.Defiant wrote:I'm not quite sure I'd call it *that*, especially when you have many prominent Republicans who so far either have concerns about Trump,GreenGoo wrote:
This might be the most partisan election cycle I've witnessed.
The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
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- GreenGoo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
- Holman
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
The divisions are definitely deeper than usual, but what's unprecedented in recent history is that there is more than one of them. Dems are experiencing a particularly rancorous primary, but you hardly notice it because the Republican primary went from unruly crowd to civil war to full-on insurgency where a huge portion of the party considers itself incompatible with the presidential nominee.
Can anyone even remember the last time this happened? When Obama got the nomination in 2008, it was news when Democratic Governor Zell Miller of Georgia refused to support him. But Miller was only one man, and he was known to be a Republican in everything but name. This is completely different.
Can anyone even remember the last time this happened? When Obama got the nomination in 2008, it was news when Democratic Governor Zell Miller of Georgia refused to support him. But Miller was only one man, and he was known to be a Republican in everything but name. This is completely different.
Much prefer my Nazis Nuremberged.
- GreenGoo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Good point on the Dem nomination run. It's not even a blip on the radar because Armageddon is happening on the Rep side.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
There was some rancorousness on the Democratic side in 2008 ("She's likeable enough", "He's not muslim, as far as I know", etc), but it was more in the beginning part of the primary, and didn't last this long. Also, this time, it's not clear to me that it's within the Democratic party, and not between the Democrats and the Independents that voted in the primary. But yeah, there is some at the Democratic level (eg, Webb refusing to endorse Clinton), and lots of ugliness between the supporters.Holman wrote:The divisions are definitely deeper than usual, but what's unprecedented in recent history is that there is more than one of them. Dems are experiencing a particularly rancorous primary, but you hardly notice it because the Republican primary went from unruly crowd to civil war to full-on insurgency where a huge portion of the party considers itself incompatible with the presidential nominee.
Can anyone even remember the last time this happened? When Obama got the nomination in 2008, it was news when Democratic Governor Zell Miller of Georgia refused to support him. But Miller was only one man, and he was known to be a Republican in everything but name. This is completely different.
I'm trying to think of rancorous primaries, and here's some of the ones I can think of off the top of my head, though I'm probably missing some.
On the Democratic side: 1968, 1980, 2008
On the Republican side: 1964, 1976, 2000
(Of course, there were earlier primaries where they needed multiple ballots at the convention to get a nominee, sometimes many)
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Alan Keyes was robbed.Defiant wrote: On the Republican side: ... 2000
Much prefer my Nazis Nuremberged.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Well, it is partisan, but it's also multipolar: (Clinton vs Sanders) vs ((Trump + Tea Party(?)) vs GOP Establishment), with most (if not all) factions more easily defined by what they oppose than what they stand for, at least in terms of why people support them.GreenGoo wrote:Yeah, I should have said most "divisive", and not necessarily along traditional lines either. Partisan is not correct.Defiant wrote:I'm not quite sure I'd call it *that*, especially when you have many prominent Republicans who so far either have concerns about Trump,GreenGoo wrote:
This might be the most partisan election cycle I've witnessed.
"What? What? What?" -- The 14th Doctor
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It's not enough to be a good player... you also have to play well. -- Siegbert Tarrasch
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I was thinking more along the lines of the attacks on McCain in South Carolina, but either way.Holman wrote:Alan Keyes was robbed.Defiant wrote: On the Republican side: ... 2000
- Rip
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Oh great Trump has Christie building his team up. Guess the couple of months he was "back" in NJ are over. I just want Christie to f'n quit and let someone actually try and run our state. There's so many things broken and he's running around humping Trumps leg instead.
Capitalism tries for a delicate balance: It attempts to work things out so that everyone gets just enough stuff to keep them from getting violent and trying to take other people’s stuff.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
A friend of mine who is a PhD in economics and teaches at Whittier in California is utterly fascinated by Trump's extraordinary lack of knowledge on even the most basic concepts of economics. To be fair, I'm guessing he knows just about as much on the topic as most candidates. The difference being that sensible candidates seek out the advice of experts and avoid talking off the cuff on subjects they're clearly uninformed.
It's just a train wreck.
It's just a train wreck.
Last edited by hepcat on Mon May 09, 2016 12:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Lord of His Pants
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
"Well, this is a nice way to start off the interview. First of all, you should congratulate me for having won the race,” he said. “I thought, you know, at least there would be a small congratulations, but I'm not surprised with CNN, because that's the way they treat Trump. It's the, you know, they call it the Clinton network and I believe that. So, you know –”
Wait, Trump is referring to himself in the third person?I'm not surprised with CNN, because that's the way they treat Trump.
What doesn't kill me makes me stranger.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I mean really who doesn't? I know Rip does.Blackhawk wrote:"Well, this is a nice way to start off the interview. First of all, you should congratulate me for having won the race,” he said. “I thought, you know, at least there would be a small congratulations, but I'm not surprised with CNN, because that's the way they treat Trump. It's the, you know, they call it the Clinton network and I believe that. So, you know –”Wait, Trump is referring to himself in the third person?I'm not surprised with CNN, because that's the way they treat Trump.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Get that hippy, liberal rag out of here.hepcat wrote:It's just a train wreck.
And in banks across the world
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
- Rip
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Oh man, I just thought of the perfect running mate for Trump.
Vince McMahon.
If you smelllllll what the Trump is cookin!
edit: and a link with reasons to boot.
http://www.therichest.com/expensive-lif ... /?view=all
Vince McMahon.
If you smelllllll what the Trump is cookin!
edit: and a link with reasons to boot.
http://www.therichest.com/expensive-lif ... /?view=all
Last edited by Rip on Mon May 09, 2016 1:04 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Blackhawk
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
So, then. I guess Trump thinks Trump's trump trumps Trump's trumps.Rip wrote:I mean really who doesn't? I know Rip does.Blackhawk wrote:Wait, Trump is referring to himself in the third person?I'm not surprised with CNN, because that's the way they treat Trump.
What doesn't kill me makes me stranger.
- GreenGoo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Meh. It helps with people who already support him. I'm not convinced it helps him gain additional support beyond what he has already experienced.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Home of the Akimbo AWPs
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Home of the Akimbo AWPs
- Smoove_B
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Are we doing polls yet? I heard you guys like polls.
Trump and Clinton in dead heat:
Trump and Clinton in dead heat:
Buckle up for the next six months: Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are effectively tied in the swing states of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania, according to the results of a Quinnipiac University survey released Tuesday.
Maybe next year, maybe no go
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
All of those polls apparently assumes a whiter electorate than in 2012. Unlikely to happen.
Even if they're correct-- which I imagine is freaking out some Trumphobics right now-- they still have Clinton up in Florida. Bag Florida and all the other swing states don't matter... assuming Trump doesn't flip any traditionally "safe" Blue states. But that would change if that Quinnipiac poll is accurate and PA really is in play this year. I'm skeptical.
Even if they're correct-- which I imagine is freaking out some Trumphobics right now-- they still have Clinton up in Florida. Bag Florida and all the other swing states don't matter... assuming Trump doesn't flip any traditionally "safe" Blue states. But that would change if that Quinnipiac poll is accurate and PA really is in play this year. I'm skeptical.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I'm 100 percent skeptical as well. The models are all probably going to be very wrong. There has never been a candidate like this. It is going to be a spectacle on one hand and his organization is so unprepared for the general that it is not even reasonable (shocker I know). I think the only polls that will be useful will be sentiment based ones. I'd be shocked if even one poll comes close to getting the actual voting mix right across the board. Maybe a state here and there but overall? Not a chance.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
NPR released their own study today which shows Clinton with a pretty decisive victory.
We're still far too early to look at polls, but the buzz reminds me a lot of Obama/Romney. Right up until election night there were websites saying the polls were overestimating Obama's support and that Romney had a clear path to victory. I imagine you'll see the same thing this time around, right before Clinton crushes Trump by a landslide.
I'll never forget Karl Rove on Fox News during election night frantically trying to stave off defeat by crunching numbers that didn't exist.
We're still far too early to look at polls, but the buzz reminds me a lot of Obama/Romney. Right up until election night there were websites saying the polls were overestimating Obama's support and that Romney had a clear path to victory. I imagine you'll see the same thing this time around, right before Clinton crushes Trump by a landslide.
I'll never forget Karl Rove on Fox News during election night frantically trying to stave off defeat by crunching numbers that didn't exist.
- Unagi
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
yeah... what ever happened to Karl Rove's genius ushering the GOP into years of power. (not that I'm interesting in finding it)
- El Guapo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Also you have to bear in mind that, even setting Trump aside, the democrats have a pretty immense built-in electoral college lead at the moment. Any democrat who wins the states that have voted democratic in every election from 1992 on would get ~ 242 electoral votes, while any republican who wins the states that have voted republican in every election from 1992 on would get ~ 160ish electoral votes.YellowKing wrote:NPR released their own study today which shows Clinton with a pretty decisive victory.
We're still far too early to look at polls, but the buzz reminds me a lot of Obama/Romney. Right up until election night there were websites saying the polls were overestimating Obama's support and that Romney had a clear path to victory. I imagine you'll see the same thing this time around, right before Clinton crushes Trump by a landslide.
I'll never forget Karl Rove on Fox News during election night frantically trying to stave off defeat by crunching numbers that didn't exist.
So a democrat winning all of the blue states plus Florida (which is pretty democratic leaning at this point) wins the election. Plus there are a couple other state alignments that get a democrat past 270 even if they lose Florida.
Meanwhile basically everything has to go right for a Republican to win the electoral college with the current map. And that's probably not going to improve in the near term given the growing minority vote and Republicans' adept handling of minority issues.
Black Lives Matter.
- Carpet_pissr
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Buffer post. Write the name that rhymes with 'Yarl Pove' three times in three consecutive posts, and you summon him back from Hell. No one wants that.
Edit: Too late! But thank goodness it wasn't needed. Better safe than sorry.
Edit: Too late! But thank goodness it wasn't needed. Better safe than sorry.
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
The fundraising gap alone is a huge challenge. The Trump camp needs over a billion and have no fundraising machine and a Republican National party not all that interested in helping him. All the free coverage in the world won't compete with the Clintonistas taking the basis of that free coverage and judo reversing it into targeted attack ads.
- Carpet_pissr
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I'm starting to question the effectiveness of attack ads (against Trump) in this campaign. Again, using traditional tools of (political) war against a nontraditional opponent? His base won't care, and he's such a public figure, it's not like people aren't aware of who (and how) he is, so people that are opposed to him don't need any extra hate fuel.
I guess there is value in making sure that the ugliness of his character is so known and publicized, that people become even more ashamed than they already are, that they are Trump voters.
I guess there is value in making sure that the ugliness of his character is so known and publicized, that people become even more ashamed than they already are, that they are Trump voters.
- ImLawBoy
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I think the attack ads may be effective against those traditional GOP voters who are on the fence about whether to suck it up and vote for a GOP nominee who they find really offensive, or to vote for Hillary (or a third party, or not vote). The true believers in Trump are not likely to be swayed, but they're not really the targets.
That's my purse! I don't know you!
- YellowKing
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I think they could also be very effective against late-deciding independent voters who have a general disdain for Hillary but view Trump as an unknown. They might be enough to push them into the "devil you know" camp.
- El Guapo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
And the true believers are presumably baked into Trump's staggeringly bad favorability ratings. If Clinton can keep Trump's support limited mostly to the true believers, then she wins.
Black Lives Matter.
- GreenGoo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I've read mirror articles where one says that Clinton's attacks on Trump are only helping him, and the other said that Trump's attacks on Clinton are only helping her.YellowKing wrote:NPR released their own study today which shows Clinton with a pretty decisive victory.
We're still far too early to look at polls, but the buzz reminds me a lot of Obama/Romney. Right up until election night there were websites saying the polls were overestimating Obama's support and that Romney had a clear path to victory. I imagine you'll see the same thing this time around, right before Clinton crushes Trump by a landslide.
I've also noticed (took me long enough) that some articles write themselves, each election cycle. They are literally (ok, maybe not literally) refurbished articles from previous elections, making the same points about different candidates, using different "facts" to come to the exact same conclusions that were made in the previous election cycles.
I realize I'm slow in discovering this, but it was disheartening. I mean, these articles could be about anyone, during any period of time. Talk about political filler.
- GreenGoo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Watching an early investigative report in the heartland of Trump support, it was very clear that most people see him as an outsider (as per Rip's view) and that he's "pretty good at business" so that must mean he's smart.Carpet_pissr wrote:I guess there is value in making sure that the ugliness of his character is so known and publicized, that people become even more ashamed than they already are, that they are Trump voters.
And that's it.
Showing these people who he really is would have an impact, I like to think. Maybe not.
Everyone they showed in the report was just your average everyday American. Not dumb, not smart, not overly partisan. Just regular people who think Trump would make a good president based on knowing his name and that he's "pretty good at business".
- El Guapo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Both Trump and Clinton are pretty widely disliked, so there's some logic to trying to make your attack ads without linking them to you. Which I suspect would mean that a lot of the attack ads would be outsourced to Super PACs and the like.GreenGoo wrote:I've read mirror articles where one says that Clinton's attacks on Trump are only helping him, and the other said that Trump's attacks on Clinton are only helping her.YellowKing wrote:NPR released their own study today which shows Clinton with a pretty decisive victory.
We're still far too early to look at polls, but the buzz reminds me a lot of Obama/Romney. Right up until election night there were websites saying the polls were overestimating Obama's support and that Romney had a clear path to victory. I imagine you'll see the same thing this time around, right before Clinton crushes Trump by a landslide.
I've also noticed (took me long enough) that some articles write themselves, each election cycle. They are literally (ok, maybe not literally) refurbished articles from previous elections, making the same points about different candidates, using different "facts" to come to the exact same conclusions that were made in the previous election cycles.
I realize I'm slow in discovering this, but it was disheartening. I mean, these articles could be about anyone, during any period of time. Talk about political filler.
Black Lives Matter.
- El Guapo
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
You wonder whether attack ads along the lines of "Trump's business deals screwed over these specific people" (like what was done against Romney re: Bain Capital) might have some effectiveness at dislodging a few supporters.GreenGoo wrote:Watching an early investigative report in the heartland of Trump support, it was very clear that most people see him as an outsider (as per Rip's view) and that he's "pretty good at business" so that must mean he's smart.Carpet_pissr wrote:I guess there is value in making sure that the ugliness of his character is so known and publicized, that people become even more ashamed than they already are, that they are Trump voters.
And that's it.
Showing these people who he really is would have an impact, I like to think. Maybe not.
Everyone they showed in the report was just your average everyday American. Not dumb, not smart, not overly partisan. Just regular people who think Trump would make a good president based on knowing his name and that he's "pretty good at business".
Black Lives Matter.
-
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
I personally think attack ads are going to be *more* effective than ever. Assuming that people target them properly of course. Sit with any half competent marketing person and see the data sometime. Marketing works. And we have more data than ever to support it. Pairing the right demographic with the right message with the right platform is unbelievably powerful and I believe the Clinton camp will do that right. Especially since there will be so much idiocy to leverage.
- Rip
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Easy ladies, let's not get your knickers in a wad.
I know Trump is hard to swallow but it is for your own good.
I know Trump is hard to swallow but it is for your own good.
- Carpet_pissr
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
Good point. With such a character, the attack ads would seemingly write themselves, but those obvious points would not work for supporters or straight R ticket voters probably. Will have to use a different angle for them, like 'Trump is neither a conservative, nor a Republican', 'Trump has farther left positions on X and Y than Hillary', 'Trump is a New York City elite socialite!', 'Trump hates Jesus', etc.malchior wrote:I personally think attack ads are going to be *more* effective than ever. Assuming that people target them properly of course. Sit with any half competent marketing person and see the data sometime. Marketing works. And we have more data than ever to support it. Pairing the right demographic with the right message with the right platform is unbelievably powerful and I believe the Clinton camp will do that right. Especially since there will be so much idiocy to leverage.
- Carpet_pissr
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Re: The Art of the Donald Trumpocalypse
No argument there. My first mental image on reading that was a humanized version of those disgusting orange Circus Peanut chewy candies that no one likes (also notoriously difficult to swallow).Rip wrote:I know Trump is hard to swallow