Please don't take this as snark -- I make plenty of my own typos. But I love it when a typo has a meaning of its own: To whom does one lease evils? |
Jeff--you would be far more credible if once in a while you could cease throwing another spear for your beloved party. The post was yet another "pox on both houses" over lack of compromise and you again go small. Yeah, we get that Ryan isn't too credible either. Plenty of blame to go around--are you really so unable to see a bit of the other side? |
AGREE. X1000 |
See, the problem is you post that clip EVERY TIME you want to make this point. Get some new material, otherwise you can't use it as a proxy. |
NP. I think he quite accurately described the votes on thie bipartisan commission result. But in a thread started by a republican about republicans, it is noteworthy to point out that he budget architect for the party voted it down. Maybe you lost track of the OP's topic. |
well, first of all, change "pro-life" to "anti-abortion" for starters. You're not "pro-life." You want abortion abolished as a legal procedure. That's the issue. Otherwise, you wouldn't have listed "anti-capital punishment" as a separate line item. The issue is abortion, not "life" or "choice." second of al, you sound pretty much like a Republican down-the-line until you get to the anti-capital punishment thing. |
Repubs aren't usually pro-animal rights or pro-environment, are they? They are pro-business and businesses need animal testing, animal products, and don't want to protect the enviornment at the expense of profits, right? |
Do I have to read multiple pages of posts to make a comment that Jeff, yet again, is playing small ball? My broader point, which it seems you're choosing to ignore, is that I would hope there's room around here for some balanced discourse and acceptance that either side has some good points. That's so hard? More practically, isn't it far more effective, when trying to make a point, to say "hey, I agree with you there and there but..." Sorry to rag, but his posts so often are akin to schoolyard "oh yeah, well you're double xyz" and I think it would be lovely if our moderator took, if not the high road, at least a slightly elevated path. Now as for this thread, which I read some days ago, I do recall much of it was around center republicans yearning for a party of fiscal responsibility sans the social nonsense. There were some good replies and, of course, those who donned cleats and stomped hard. I just think anytime a thread wanders into the subject of looming fiscal catastrophe it defies credulity to try to attach to one party. A great example is our own midwest version of Greece--Illinois. I'm not blaming any party here, just wondering aloud (my Rodney King moment) if we can't make progress among a bunch of anonymous overeducated wonks, is there any hope more broadly of averting a crisis? |
you sure do go on and on for a person who can't be bothered to read the subject line on a thread. I think he accurately described the votes and that's enough. His use of bold was appropriate given the subject header. If you were being fair you would have acknowledged that he did in fact identify the demicratic vote on Erskine Bowles. You didn't, you chose to focus on one aspect. Does that mean I can say you are playing "small ball" which btw does not mean what you think it means? |
I would actually talk to those people. The right-wing, willfully stupid, fundie nutjobs are not worth the time or effort. |
You are a total conservative, if all you can claim is gun control and energy. If you want to keep spending gobs on defense and cut social welfare programs, you are in no way a Democrat. |
You are a Republican. You're welcome. |
+1 I just can't understand how people who claim to want smaller government and value personal liberty think it is any of their business what I do or don't do with my reproductive organs. If you are a fundie Christian then feel free to either pray for me/condemn me to hell (whichever floats your boat) but mind your own effing business and stay out of my bedroom/doctor's office! |
Well, this Democrat absolutely believes that we should raise the retirement age for people 50 or 55 and under and use means testing to determine who can actually draw benefits from SS. I don't believe the program was supported to provide supplemental income to the extremely wealthy. I would be willing to offer up tax deductions for dependent children if your side would stop waging a war on access to reproductive healthcare including free birth control (a policy that was supported by none other than George HW Bush, a Republican I actually LIKED for the most part). What else do you want? |
I think that "pox on both houses" is often a lazy argument. For example, saying that "no one really wants to be the first one to start making those cuts" is inaccurate in that Republicans would be willing to start making those cuts. It is actually my fear that Democrats would be willing to make those cuts as well, but I hope they won't. The Republicans didn't vote against Simpson-Bowles because of cuts, but because of tax increases. If you want to cast stones at both parties, at least do it for the correct reasons: The Republicans are willing to cut entitlements, but they aren't willing to raise taxes; the Democrats might (hopefully not) be willing to cut entitlements, but not without tax increases. That is the root of the intransigence. The basic issue I have with you self-declared centrists who think you sit squarely in the middle of every issue is that you aren't really in the middle. You are just as partisan as everyone else, but simply much less self-aware. If you consider the political options, the far left position is not "raise taxes but don't cut entitlements", but rather "raise taxes and launch a massive stimulus program, accepting that this will increase the deficit." "Raise Taxes but don't cut entitlements" is center-left. "Raise taxes and cut entitlements" is center-right", and "Don't raise taxes but cut entitlements" is far-right. I believe Obama is firmly in the center-right position and more than willing to cut entitlements in exchange for a tax increase. I'd accept the argument that Obama is in the center-left position. But, there is no argument about Romney/Ryan. They are squarely in the far-right position. So, when you getting ready put a pox on both houses, be sure to apply it in the correct measure. |