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Gamemako View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2016 at 14:54
Originally posted by TeleStrat TeleStrat wrote:

I've seen the breakdown of votes and I hear what you're saying, Mick.
My point is that it's more than old white men that prevent the left from having it's way. It is Conservatism that has prevented that.
According to a Gallup survey in January, 2015, Conservatives were at 38% while Liberals were at 24%. As time goes by these numbers could change.
As far as the old white men thing, my two sons are 38 and 39 years old and they are Conservatives by their own choice. My grandson is 19 years old and he didn't talk to his girlfriend for three days because she supported Clinton.


Two important factors: the conservative base is shrinking, especially social conservatism; moderate ideologies are overtaking conservatism even as liberalism grows. Most importantly, as large as conservatism has been, liberalism cannot oppose it without overwhelming support from the middle. Moderates are what keep liberalism and conservatism both in check. The center has always been the most important sector, even when they are a minority. God help us all if this election portends an end to that balance.

You also have to remember what the election results actually say, and how it meshes with the country at large. Most Americans view immigration positively. You can bet that Trump got a significant portion of those who disagree, and he collected about 60 million votes in an election with 240 million eligible voters.  When 25% of people polled say immigration is a bad thing, and anti-immigration Trump wins votes from 25% of eligible voters, you might imagine how unpopular opinions can drive policy as long as they drive voters to the polls in asymmetric fashion. The public at large do not control elections. The electoral college has been unpopular for as long as anyone has been measuring (I think it was near two thirds against last I saw it polled), but it has no chance of being overturned because the states that would have to ratify an amendment are those who have disproportionate representation under the current system.

After all, we are not a democracy, we are a federal republic.
Hail Eris!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2016 at 15:31
We are a republic and a representative democracy.
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TeleStrat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2016 at 15:37
Originally posted by Gamemako Gamemako wrote:

Originally posted by TeleStrat TeleStrat wrote:

I've seen the breakdown of votes and I hear what you're saying, Mick.
My point is that it's more than old white men that prevent the left from having it's way. It is Conservatism that has prevented that.
According to a Gallup survey in January, 2015, Conservatives were at 38% while Liberals were at 24%. As time goes by these numbers could change.
As far as the old white men thing, my two sons are 38 and 39 years old and they are Conservatives by their own choice. My grandson is 19 years old and he didn't talk to his girlfriend for three days because she supported Clinton.


Two important factors: the conservative base is shrinking, especially social conservatism; moderate ideologies are overtaking conservatism even as liberalism grows. Most importantly, as large as conservatism has been, liberalism cannot oppose it without overwhelming support from the middle. Moderates are what keep liberalism and conservatism both in check. The center has always been the most important sector, even when they are a minority. God help us all if this election portends an end to that balance.

You also have to remember what the election results actually say, and how it meshes with the country at large. Most Americans view immigration positively. You can bet that Trump got a significant portion of those who disagree, and he collected about 60 million votes in an election with 240 million eligible voters.  When 25% of people polled say immigration is a bad thing, and anti-immigration Trump wins votes from 25% of eligible voters, you might imagine how unpopular opinions can drive policy as long as they drive voters to the polls in asymmetric fashion. The public at large do not control elections. The electoral college has been unpopular for as long as anyone has been measuring (I think it was near two thirds against last I saw it polled), but it has no chance of being overturned because the states that would have to ratify an amendment are those who have disproportionate representation under the current system.

After all, we are not a democracy, we are a federal republic.

My comment to Micky had to do with the fact that the term "old white men" kept coming up and that my opinion is that there is more to the right than old white men. 
Nice post though, keep it up.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2016 at 22:06
I've been following this old-white-men discussion, struggling frustratedly to look past the rhetoric, and frankly I don't understand it at all.

How can anyone, looking at all the different voter groups (male, female, age, ethnic groups, social backgrounds, education, political party leanings, and a multitude of others) possibly look at the 'old-white-men'-group and say: 'It was them!'.

It makes no sense to me at all, even if it is 'supported' by a plethora of numbers that seem to come from God-knows-where.

Could you at least do me a favour and, when you quote them, give the sources of where these numbers come from. Generally, I have a huge mistrust of any statistics, and I'd like to at least to be able to check them myself and see if they're reliable, or at least as reliable as possible.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2016 at 22:34
Crybaby millenials do that every vote anywhere that they lose, it's nothing new
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2016 at 23:20
^ Us aging, bedwetting progressives too
"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 00:41
Dave Chappelle is tearing it up on SNL -
"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 01:00
Originally posted by npjnpj npjnpj wrote:

I've been following this old-white-men discussion, struggling frustratedly to look past the rhetoric, and frankly I don't understand it at all.

How can anyone, looking at all the different voter groups (male, female, age, ethnic groups, social backgrounds, education, political party leanings, and a multitude of others) possibly look at the 'old-white-men'-group and say: 'It was them!'.

It makes no sense to me at all, even if it is 'supported' by a plethora of numbers that seem to come from God-knows-where.

Could you at least do me a favour and, when you quote them, give the sources of where these numbers come from. Generally, I have a huge mistrust of any statistics, and I'd like to at least to be able to check them myself and see if they're reliable, or at least as reliable as possible.

Well, I get my data from NY Times, NBC, CNN, WashPost, 538 basically all the major places. 

Going off the NY times http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/11/08/us/politics/election-exit-polls.html?_r=0 it seems a majority of white people, males, and people over 45 supported Trump. So it's not inaccurate to say older white males were Trump's strongest backers, and this is seen in the data. However I agree it's a bit misleading to say "thats why!" Clearly Trump had lots of support from all types of people. Except minorities, though from that same data we see Trump actually did better than Romney with minorities.

But yeah, I dont think its unfair to say. Misleading, yes. Ignoring class issues, yes. But older white male voters were a strong bloc for Trump. Guess if you wanna just not believe the data, OK but that's a dangerous place.
Thing is, this isn't totally unusual.  White people, males, and older voters tend to vote Republican...the real difference in 2016 is the where. The rust belt broke for Trump. This is why ignoring class/economics is a bad idea. 

OH! And Independents. The "old white guy" thing also ignores independents. They are currently the largest bloc of voters, and they went pretty solidly for Trump. 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 05:50
Originally posted by TeleStrat TeleStrat wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

car collisions... train wrecks... airplane crashes.... 

you cant turn away from those...  taking the numbers from what they are worth.. regardless of who showed up at his rallies to see what he might say.. or what brownshirted Trumpian thug might do...

the voters seemed loud and clear that the minorities.. educated whites.. and the youth overwhelmingly were NOT Trump supporters.i.

and Trump lost women decisively worse than any Republican candidate in years.. if ever.. and Republicans do not normally do notthat. 

His core support was angry old uneducated white guy.. such as was thought.. such as they voted this week.. seems a very fair point to make in these discussions Gary.

I've seen the breakdown of votes and I hear what you're saying, Mick.
My point is that it's more than old white men that prevent the left from having it's way. It is Conservatism that has prevented that.
According to a Gallup survey in January, 2015, Conservatives were at 38% while Liberals were at 24%. As time goes by these numbers could change.
As far as the old white men thing, my two sons are 38 and 39 years old and they are Conservatives by their own choice. My grandson is 19 years old and he didn't talk to his girlfriend for three days because she supported Clinton.


no doubt man.... and there were blacks and latinos that voted for Trump.  Obviously the point being made is that it was angry old white guys that provided his core support. It was who he appealed to...

did he appeal to the youth?  provide any notion he cared about whatever troubles them.
did he appeal to hispanics?  provide any notion he values their contribuations to making this country great
did he appeal to blacks? provide any notion he values their rage at the continued systematic racism theyfight?
did he appeal to women?   hahahhah..  ahh no

his whole campaign centered around speaking to old white guy who is very angry .. some at the economics.. some at the social/racial.  I'm sure there were some youth, some hispanics, some black, or women that agreed.. but he did not give any of them any reason to support them otherwise.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 06:01
another interesting policy fight I'm looking forward to seeing how it plays out..

in fact... I haven't seen much mention of it.  Obamacare seems to be dominating thought.. but I'm quite certain the holy rollers haven't forgotten it..LOL

planned parenthood... does Trump roll over on that one.. or veto that sh*t...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 06:05
The way we hear it in Europe is that Obama won with over 57M votes over the Reps' 50M and Hillary lost with 51M over Trump's 48M... Soooo, that's -6M for the Dems and -2M for the Reps from 2012 to 2016

So abstentions played the biggest role (on both sides)... the Reps didn't win, the Dems lost it

But still one can only wonder how the US system can call itself a representative and proportional democracy

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Micky, it's been a couple of days that I've been trying to figure out which band's piccie that is in your sigConfusedWink


Edited by Sean Trane - November 13 2016 at 06:06
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 06:11
balletto di bronzo man.... Thumbs Up

as far as our electoral system... the less said the better from me. ie.. don't get me started. 

I am in the minority opinion on that LOL


Edited by micky - November 13 2016 at 06:11
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 13:58
Absolutely the Dems lost it. 
Unemployment is low, confidence is growing, Obama's approval ratings are over 50%, Trump is the worst candidate in decades, the electoral map was favorable (all they needed was to win NM and CO). It was set up for success. 

No doubt non voters were huge, but then again they always are. 
These were, after all, two of the least popular candidates in modern history. No surprise enthusiasm was so low. Like I've been saying, let's just hope the Dems learn from this. In a sick way....it may be good in the long run. With Clinton as PotUS there really was no hope for change. Now we basically are in the GOP's spot 2008....time to purge and purify

And yes, minority voters seem to have gone up for Trump this year....Honestly I'm not completely shocked. Minorities are increasingly making up the working class after all. And ya know, they can be racist like anyone else


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 14:02
On a high note (Wink), recreational cannabis passed here in California. 
That alone should help in dealing with the election results.
That is unless you prefer an adult beverage.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 14:05
The Wikipedia page has a pretty enlightening discussion behind the history of the "electoral college".  I knew what it is now, of course, but I did not know that in the past you didn't even vote for president, but rather for an elector who would decide who to vote for.  I know we technically vote for electors even now, but the ballot lists the actual presidential/VP candidates, not the electors.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electoral_College_(United_States)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 14:20
When will liberals stop using f---ing buzzwords to describe a whole group of people YOU DON'T EVEN KNOW?!

Edited by garfunkel - November 13 2016 at 14:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 14:22
^^  I always thought the electors were chosen by the state.
I certainly could be wrong because I never took a poli sci class (even if I had, I wouldn't remember after all these years).
I read awhile back that the Electoral College was the least understood part of the election process.


Edited by TeleStrat - November 13 2016 at 14:22
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 20:59
Originally posted by garfunkel garfunkel wrote:

When will liberals stop using f---ing buzzwords to describe a whole group of people YOU DON'T EVEN KNOW?!


Probably when Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert stop doing it, because that's the only grasp of "politics" most of these people have
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2016 at 22:47
^

The most ridiculous thing I've ever seen on CNN:
CNN commentator Angela Rye calls Sheriff Clarke a terrorist

Is this real life?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2016 at 04:25
Trump has named Reince Priebus, whose name rolls off the tongue as either Rice Primus or Prince Penis, as Chief of State with the divisive Steve Bannon as his head council. Now the Secret Service has to secure the  perimeter of the park bench that Bannon retires to every night.
This will either be a marriage made in hell for the Republicans or for the Democrats. Only time will tell.

Edited by SteveG - November 14 2016 at 05:05
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