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#41 |
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Mormon Atheist
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Southern California
Posts: 53,945
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Ego, ain't it a bitch? It is not very unreasonable that the rich should contribute to the public expense, not only in proportion to their revenue, but something more than in that proportion. --Adam Smith |
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#42 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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To me, it seems like the moderates making a deal with some of the devil's minions. I do wish the center would recover, take hold, and take over, but I haven't seen much evidence of that to date. Most of what I've seen (on all sides) is simply more devisive debate, intended to polarize based on somebody or others' perception that they gain that way. |
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#43 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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I think this was about a couple of things. First, what's been discussed already - the Dems, having lost the White House and both houses of congress, and with a moderately conservative majority on the Supreme Court, were trying to keep the appeals court from becoming too fruitful a breeding ground for future conservative Supreme Court justices. Second, this was a testing of limits. When you think about it, theoretically, if a party is in the minority, it could block all legislation and appointments it didn't like, as long as it could round up 41 votes. You could literally have congress go an entire session without a single bill's being passed (and there are of course those who would see this as an unalloyed good). There might be hell to pay the next election, but imagine the joy in Mudville if the Dems could block the Republican agenda for two whole years. Okay, you can't do that. But you also don't want to roll over and die for the GOP. So someone comes up with the bright idea, "Hey, is there any reason we can't filibuster a judge?" And hence, the minidrama of the past few weeks. If it had worked - if Bush had withdrawn the nominees - the Dems would have gone back to their smoke-filled rooms and plotted the next line of attack - filibuster a Supreme Court nominee. It didn't work - the Repubs showed they were willing to go to the mattresses over this issue - so they won't filibuster a Supreme Court nominee, or even an appeals court one. My prediction: if Rhenquist goes and Bush appoints anyone to the left of Ann Coulter to replace him, the Dems will make a big show about how they disagree with the nominee on the substantive issues, but since he's clearly qualified for the job, they will vote to confirm. After all, the balance on the bench won't change anyway. But if one of the liberals goes - Stevens is in good health, but he's also 85 years old - then the shaky 5-4 conservative majority would become a solid 6-3. Look for blood on the water if Bush appoints anyone to the right of Cynthia McKinney. No filibuster - they'll find something else. You can bet your salary for the rest of your life they're already working on it. They're looking at who the likely candidates will be and they're scraping up every bit of dirt they possibly can. It'll be fun. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#44 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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The likes of the Pro Tem or the Majority Leader, by the evidence shown by their extremist statements, are clearly neither moderate nor reasonable. Now, the agreement was between "moderates", but given the present enormous swing to militant right-wing politics in the USA, what defines a moderate seems to be, as you say, anyone to the left of Ann Coulter. By the present-day scale, Barry Goldwater would be an extreme liberal. This is, of course, simple evidence of the unbalanced nature of today's government and political environment. |
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#45 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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And if Goldwater would be an extreme liberal by today's standards, what does that make the likes of Ted Kennedy, John Kerry, Barbara Boxer...? Extreme left wing? Glad to see the scales have fallen from your eyes. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#46 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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I so wish for the upgrade to happen, as it makes quoting more than one deep an unpleasant proposition. Rather, though, than quoting the middle-of-the-road to slightly right-wing quotes that you bring into evidence, I will simply point out that nearly all of the people making them would have been Republicans in 1970, and the push would have been from the other side.
The facts of this are not in dispute, they are clear and evident from history. The fact that you deny this shows that either you do not want to do the necessary research, that you are unwilling to accept the results, or something less complimentary that I need not mention at the present. As to what I call Ted Kennedy, well, my thoughts go first to his ethics, that are nearly as bad as those of Bush, Rove, Gingrich, Delay, and the heros of the fascist right. Like Bush, he's stolen an election. Like Bush, he's snowed the public about his past. They are really very similar in many ways. That's not answering what I call him, but I believe that civility prevents my saying such directly. |
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#47 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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You claimed, "By the present-day scale, Barry Goldwater would be an extreme liberal." Prove it. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#48 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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The problem with history is that it's no longer testable and verifiable, and so I will not convince you with any amount of evidence, in my experience, unless you're ready to realize that the world isn't quite how you think it is. Evidence? How about the fact that the Arizona Republican Party threw Barry Goldwater out of the party a few years before he died. I used to have a cite to that, but frankly I don't much care, it is common knowledge, it was announced in the papers, and if that doesn't speak clearly enough, nothing ever will. |
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#49 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#50 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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It's a matter of public record. Calling a matter of public record an "evasion" is an abuse of language. |
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#51 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,003
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Regarding the Bolton filibuster: initially, I regarded this as a different situation than the threatened judicial filibuster. With the judicial filibuster, the Dems' argument was over the extremist nature of the appointee - clearly a political argument. And while I kind of like the idea of needing a supermajority to make lifetime appointments, I think something like a constitutional amendment would be much more appropriate than using Senate rules. On the other hand, with Bolton's debate, two key Dems - Biden and Dodd - wanted the continued debate because they hadn't received some information from the Bush administration:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/05/...ate/index.html
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Which is basically the problem with filibusters in general it seems now. Before when they were used on nominations, it was because the nominee was somehow involved in a scandal, like Abe Fortas, and those doing the filibustering transcended party lines. That certainly wouldn't have been the case with the judicial filibusters, and judging by the party-line vote on the Bolton cloture, neither is it. When the filibuster is politicized, it goes into that great big trash bin of 'politics as usual' that I think skeptics both Left and Right generally regard as neither right or wrong but simply unfortunate that they couldn't do better. And true to form the Republicans are not squeaky clean on this. Dems will point to the lack of commitee hearings on Clinton's nominations and say that that started the politicizing of not necessarily filibusters but nominations in general. Maybe so; I'm not an expert and I don't know who "started it." It all becomes a bunch of finger-pointing and not hardly worth debating skeptically. I want to believe that a filibuster should not be used as a political weapon, but only in extreme cases that (should) go beyond party affiliation. But that's not really true to history, at least not when it comes to legislation - we just have to go back to the filibustering of the civil rights legislation. I guess the claim is, "it's okay to filibuster for legislation but not for judicial nominees." Frist said as much during the weeks leading up to the threatened judicial filibuster showdown. That doesn't make much sense to me, though - why is it okay for a minority to hold up legislation but not nominees? Sorry, this is rambling on. Getting a hold on the what and why's of the filibuster is tricky (for me). Comments and corrections appreciated. regards ps - Biden's argument was not a "Dems versus GOP" thing but a "Senate vs. executive branch" thing. Which makes sense and I understand why a senator would want to 'check' the executive branch if he felt like that branch was withholding information. But is the filibuster the right tool? Surely if enough senators agreed with him, they could have voted for cloture and then voted down the Bolton nomination on those grounds. That didn't happen, of course. Did the Senate republicans cave into Bush and consequently diminish the Senate, or have the Senate democrats held the wishes of the majority hostage and subverted the 'will of the people'? I guess without knowing what that information that Biden wants is, I'll never know. Sorry for the continued rambling... |
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Freedom is self-responsibility; nothing less, nothing more. Finally, proof!: "Republicans = evil fundie criminal warmonger vampires" - (BPSCG, 5/11/06) |
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#52 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Now if you're saying the man who ran against Lyndon Johnson in 1964 and, among other things, talked about nuking Vietnam and making Social Security voluntary would be an extreme liberal by today's standards, you need to point out which extreme liberal of today would support either of those positions. If, on the other hand, you're saying someone who supported Bill Clinton for president in 1996 is perforce an extreme liberal, well, jeeze, are you kidding? |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#53 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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#54 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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Quote:
I supported Goldwater. If he were alive today, I still would. The lying right-wing lunatics here insist I'm a far-leftie. Why? Because they want to keep crying persecution while they take away more and more civil rights and try to create a theocracy. |
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#55 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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And again, you haven't identified what issues and what positions Goldwater took that only the extreme liberals of today would support. Wild claim + zero proof + demand that others do the work to prove your claim = typical JREF Challenge WooWoo Applicant behavior. You're keeping some pretty bad company. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#56 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,003
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Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/05/...lls/index.html
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Freedom is self-responsibility; nothing less, nothing more. Finally, proof!: "Republicans = evil fundie criminal warmonger vampires" - (BPSCG, 5/11/06) |
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#57 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,003
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Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/TheNote/story?id=789890 edited for missing apostrophe. |
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Freedom is self-responsibility; nothing less, nothing more. Finally, proof!: "Republicans = evil fundie criminal warmonger vampires" - (BPSCG, 5/11/06) |
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#58 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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[derail] In any case, I see this issue (embryonic stem-cell research funding) as a red herring. It is not illegal, a number of individual states are funding it, and a lot of private biotech firms are doing the research. The current law simply says that you can't use federal dollars for the research. I personally have no objection to federal funding, but I can also understand why the government would be unwilling to use federal money to fund something that large parts of the population believe is morally wrong. Remember the hoopla about how the U.S. and several European governments were all working on mapping the human genome? And finally, when the project got done, years ahead of predictions, it was done by a biotech, not any government consortium? [/derail] |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#59 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,003
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Re: Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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And if you don't mind being put on the spot, I'll quote you from this thread:
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Freedom is self-responsibility; nothing less, nothing more. Finally, proof!: "Republicans = evil fundie criminal warmonger vampires" - (BPSCG, 5/11/06) |
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#60 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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The fact that a Republican would try to filibuster a veto override doesn't change any of this.
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I remember when Mickey Mantle was dying of liver failure, there were people who were offering to donate their livers to save his life. I have no doubt that there are many people who have no idea what the term "embryonic stem cell research" means, but support it because they've been told it could mean Christopher Reeve will walk again someday. People's lack of understanding of medicine is appalling. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#61 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,003
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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Freedom is self-responsibility; nothing less, nothing more. Finally, proof!: "Republicans = evil fundie criminal warmonger vampires" - (BPSCG, 5/11/06) |
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#62 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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Again, I myself am not opposed to it in principle, and I'm not even opposed to federal funding for it. But I also understand the ethical and moral reservations of those opposed to it. And when more than 30% of a representative sample say they're opposed to it, you can't chalk it all up to evangelical Christians. I'd be interested to see what would happen in a poll where the question was, "Do you believe embryonic stem cell research should be made legal?" with the results showing not the "yes" or "no" breakdown , but the breakdown of people who recognized it was a trick question, that it was already legal, just not funded by federal tax dollars. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#63 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,003
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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regards ps - I'm still derailing here, so I'll try to steer this discussion back to filibusters for now on.... |
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Freedom is self-responsibility; nothing less, nothing more. Finally, proof!: "Republicans = evil fundie criminal warmonger vampires" - (BPSCG, 5/11/06) |
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#64 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Senator Brownback (R) embraces the filibuster?
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This statement may be wildly out of context, but he makes it sound like there's been no progress on the cancer front since Nixon was president, which is utterly ridiculous. But people hear the word "cancer" and they react the same way a swimmer reacts when he hears someone yell "Shark!" He jumps out of the water without stopping to think that you don't usually find sharks in swimming pools. Heart disease kills a lot more people than does cancer, but google "heart disease insurance" and then google "cancer insurance" and see what the insurance companies will sell you. People react emotionally to cancer and for Spector to use his own personal case as a way to gin up support for his position is reprehensible; it's pandering to the emotions and the fears of the ignoranti - something politicians are expert at. The drugs I was taking when I had Hodgkins' were manufactured by drug companies, not Uncle Sam. My doctors came from my HMO, not Uncle Sam. The hospital was a private hospital, not a government one (when you're sick, do you want to go to a private hospital or a public one?). Spector's making a statement that's entirely hypothetical, with not a shred of evidence to back it. And he's using it to support his position on stem-cell research? If appeal to emotion is the best argument he can muster for his position, I have to wonder if there isn't something wrong with it. |
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#65 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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A falsehood. Many people here have accused me of being an "extreme liberal". While I frankly don't recall if you have said that, it's been said enough to at least offer some validity from the POV of the fascist rightwing here. I would support Barry Goldwater. Ergo, your question is illicit and disputive, since I can trivially produce one person alleged to be a far-leftist who would gladly support him were he alive and kicking.
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I found the Goldwater thing without a great deal of trouble once, it was somewhat deep in a long, long article, but that's not a problem, I read fast. I provided concrete, incontrovertable proof that at least one person who has been accused of being a far-leftist would gladly support Goldwater. The knowledge of Goldwater being tossed out made the front page of the Newark Star Ledger, at the time, as well as the Times, so it's hardly a "wild claim", and your suggestion otherwise is simple ad-hominem on your part. Finally, by using the words "wild claim" in such a dishonest and punitive fashion, you have taken on the mantle of fascist right-wing liar. I require that you retract your "wild claim" and "no proof" falsehoods immediately. You are caught in a lie about my producing someone allegedly from the left who would support Goldwater were it possible (visions of "Equal Rights for the Dead" from Kentucky Fried Movie notwithstanding), and that in and of itself shows the sheer bankruptcy of your claim, and also your attempt to move the goalposts. Btw, if you want to know one bellwether issue, just for your own enlightenment, try "gays in the military". |
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#66 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Puget Sound
Posts: 7,261
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I agree with your prediction of how it will play out. |
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To survive election season on a skeptics forum, one must understand Hymie-the-Robot (and/or Fat Jack) |
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#67 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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#68 |
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grumpy old skeptic
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Deep in the rain
Posts: 18,718
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Yep, you're trying to shift the goalposts. More ironically, you're trying desparately now to take me to task for that. I would, since you don't believe a word I say, urge you to research Goldwater's planks for yourself.
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#69 |
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Cannibal
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Looting Fafner's Cave
Posts: 17,556
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Philanthropist (n.) - Someone who spends his own money to advance his version of Utopia. Socialist (n.) - Someone who spends your money to advance his version of Utopia. |
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