Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call them what they are and you know the POV of the author:
Article
Editorial
Column
Op-Ed
Satire
So what exactly do you consider to be an "article?" As opposed to the others which are all self explanatory. In my opinion the others are all types of articles.
I never call an opinion piece an article. I use article to refer to a news story that presents the facts and identifies the source of any opinion or commentary that is quoted or cited in the article.
An op-ed is definitely not a WSJ, WP, NYT [insert newspaper name] article.
As for the Wall Street Journal, the reporters are actually quite good and often expose things in articles that the WSJ editorial board and columnists later deny and ridicule. The editorial page is complete garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they were going to indict her, they would have already. Do you really think Obama will let her be indicted?
If you want an indictment, you know who to vote for.
Always interesting to see people admitting that she should be indicted and yet, she will not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call them what they are and you know the POV of the author:
Article
Editorial
Column
Op-Ed
Satire
So what exactly do you consider to be an "article?" As opposed to the others which are all self explanatory. In my opinion the others are all types of articles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:takoma wrote:Unfortunately, I could not get the article to come up. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I presume it pointed out that after Tuesday HRC and BS will each have enough votes so that it is mathematically impossible for either to win without superdelegates. That means that if something happens to make Hillary an untenable candidate, an indictment, for example, it is within the convention rules for the superdelegates to vote against her, either giving Sanders the nomination if enough vote for him, or going to a second ballot if they vote for someone else. Once past the first ballot, all delegates are free to vote as they wish, for Sanders, O'Malley, Biden, Kerry, Warren, Klobuchar, ...
I don't claim this is at all likely as a scenario, just that it is an option for the party if the need arises -- an option that the GOP does not have.
Your analysis would be logical, but that's not what the piece said. It said that if Clinton loses at all in California, it might confirm to some superdelegates that she is a bad nominee (plus the email server stuff). It doesn't necessarily say they will choose Sanders, it actually suggests Kerry or Biden might swoop in.
I do not understand why certain part of the media is still trying push the idea that some other candidate will be nominee. At this time it is 90% sure that Clinton is the presumptive nominee and after Tuesday it would be 100% sure. Presumptive means that she would be the official during the convention, but it is equivalent to Trump being the presumptive republican nominee. I do not understand how we are still arguing about it.
Anonymous wrote:If they were going to indict her, they would have already. Do you really think Obama will let her be indicted?
If you want an indictment, you know who to vote for.
takoma wrote:Unfortunately, I could not get the article to come up. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I presume it pointed out that after Tuesday HRC and BS will each have enough votes so that it is mathematically impossible for either to win without superdelegates. That means that if something happens to make Hillary an untenable candidate, an indictment, for example, it is within the convention rules for the superdelegates to vote against her, either giving Sanders the nomination if enough vote for him, or going to a second ballot if they vote for someone else. Once past the first ballot, all delegates are free to vote as they wish, for Sanders, O'Malley, Biden, Kerry, Warren, Klobuchar, ...
I don't claim this is at all likely as a scenario, just that it is an option for the party if the need arises -- an option that the GOP does not have.
Anonymous wrote:takoma wrote:Unfortunately, I could not get the article to come up. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I presume it pointed out that after Tuesday HRC and BS will each have enough votes so that it is mathematically impossible for either to win without superdelegates. That means that if something happens to make Hillary an untenable candidate, an indictment, for example, it is within the convention rules for the superdelegates to vote against her, either giving Sanders the nomination if enough vote for him, or going to a second ballot if they vote for someone else. Once past the first ballot, all delegates are free to vote as they wish, for Sanders, O'Malley, Biden, Kerry, Warren, Klobuchar, ...
I don't claim this is at all likely as a scenario, just that it is an option for the party if the need arises -- an option that the GOP does not have.
Your analysis would be logical, but that's not what the piece said. It said that if Clinton loses at all in California, it might confirm to some superdelegates that she is a bad nominee (plus the email server stuff). It doesn't necessarily say they will choose Sanders, it actually suggests Kerry or Biden might swoop in.
takoma wrote:Unfortunately, I could not get the article to come up. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I presume it pointed out that after Tuesday HRC and BS will each have enough votes so that it is mathematically impossible for either to win without superdelegates. That means that if something happens to make Hillary an untenable candidate, an indictment, for example, it is within the convention rules for the superdelegates to vote against her, either giving Sanders the nomination if enough vote for him, or going to a second ballot if they vote for someone else. Once past the first ballot, all delegates are free to vote as they wish, for Sanders, O'Malley, Biden, Kerry, Warren, Klobuchar, ...
I don't claim this is at all likely as a scenario, just that it is an option for the party if the need arises -- an option that the GOP does not have.
Anonymous wrote:Call them what they are and you know the POV of the author:
Article
Editorial
Column
Op-Ed
Satire
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I know you have consistently stated that you prefer Clinton to me, but here me out: Why don't you vote against your own stated interest in order to disenfranchise all the voters who agree with you?" Brilliant.
Well when you consider HRC only has about 4% more pledged delegates than Sanders, the Sanders camp would only need to persuade 4.1% of the superdelegates to vote against their constituents. Not unheard of when you consider they routinely do this on other issues that go against the majority.
There are a lot of things wrong with this math, but let me just point out one glaring one: There are not as many superdelegates as there are pledged delegates. 4% of a large number is bigger than 4.1% of a small number.
Yea, that's some funny math right there. Bernie would have to get at least 75% of superdelegates to win.