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Reply to "What exactly is the democratic party going to stand for in 2026 and 2028?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It doesn't seem like democrats are going to adjust their platform at all. They seem to be doubling down, if anything. They are spending millions to learn "how to talk to young men," learning their slang in a "hello fellow kids" way. That means they are going to be consistent with their issues but adjust their messaging a bit. Probably this time, they won't hire a bunch of gay actors to pretend to be straight white men and say hilarious things like "I'm man enough to vote for Kamala Harris." Dem top issues will remain the same: trans, gay, race quotas, the patriarchy, white women as "the problem," Palestine, protesting as the peak expression of politics, and getting more women to have abortions. [/quote] Not a single one of those issues was a significant part of Harris’ platform except for reproductive freedom. Why to you insist on lying?[/quote] All of those issues dominate the democratic agenda. In California, a boy was allowed to compete in and win the women's division of a track tournament. This is what blue state people want. [/quote] If a majority Californians choose to permit biological males playing in female sports, that's their business. No Californian politician will be POTUS anytime soon due to how California is perceived to be too liberal for the taste of too many swing voters in swing states. Based on Trump's history in politics, he will struggle to maintain job approval support from the swing voters who determine national elections and when that support is lacking for the sitting POTUS, the incumbent party has no chance of winning the POTUS election. Odds of Trump maintaining enough swing voter support through 2028 to give the GOP a chance in the next POTUS election is in the 10% to 20% range so while nothing is guaranteed, odds are the strongly in the favor of a Dem being our next POTUS; it just won't be a Californian politician. [/quote] So California for doing whatever it wants and it's "their business", but Obergefell for pushing gay marriage nationally? Do I have that correct, lefties?[/quote] Many social issues being determined on a state level makes sense in our very diverse and politically divided country. That's my personal opinion. If you think most or all issues should be settled in a uniform manner across all 50 states at the direction of our Federal Government, that's ok too. I respect your right to have your own opinion. Americans used to respect each other's opinions and political discourse among folks with differing opinions was possible before the current breed of hyper-partisan freaks came along.[/quote]
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