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Will respond later to this post.Yes, elect a Clinton instead. Because that worked out so well for the rich and the banks as well:
The rate of uninsured of Americans has dropped dramatically since the passage of the ACA, and is now at an all-time low:
"The percentage of Americans that do not have health insurance now sits at 8.6%, the lowest on record, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)."
http://www.businessinsider.com/americans-without-health-insurance-all-time-low-uninsured-rate-2016-9
Very few companies have been forced to "downsize" as a result of Obamacare. This is more a (false) right-wing talking point than reality. Those that have had to do so, generally only had to let a small percentage of their employees go. And if a few firms had to downsize a little for more Americans to become insured and gain access to critical health services, so be it.
Not every claim is true. The election hasn't even taken place yet and the Trumpets are already shouting it's "rigged". Quite a ludicrous accusation at the state and national level in a developed country like America with a very long history of democracy. The shameful 2000 election fiasco aside, American elections have largely been controversy-free when it comes to actually counting the votes.
The vast majority of Sanders' supporters are going to vote for Hillary over Trump. That's a fact. You can look it up, any poll will show you this. Though many of them hate her too. And many, like me, won't be voting for either candidate.
He doesn't get pushed around by anyone. If you look at the political positions he's taken throughout his lengthy career as political servant, this is quite apparent. He's been remarkably consistent for a politician, and has almost always been on the "right" side of issue.
He's endorsed Hillary because he wants to stop Trump and because he wants protect himself from her supporters and the detestable people in her campaign/DNC. In January 2017, he will become unchained and will go back to being himself. If Clinton is elected President, he will likely be her foremost critic on economic issues. An area in which she will inevitably come up well short, and will even renege on the promises she made in her campaign (like on the TPP/banks/minimum wage).
There are very, very few instances of voter-fraud on record. The amount is negligible. No one actually tries to do this. If a sizable number people tried to do this, it would become obvious rather quickly. It's a non-issue brought up by Republicans to help suppress voting. All that these so called "Voter-ID" laws do is prevent many eligible voters from voting when they show up at their polling locations to vote.
I routinely forget my wallet when I travel, and so do others. Would it be right to deny them the right to vote simply because they forgot to bring an acceptable form identification with them? And what if what they did bring with them was deemed insufficient or outdated at the polls? What then? Most people vote on election day after work. Many don't have the time to go home, find the necessary identification if they have misplaced it, and then make it back in time to vote. It's a solution to a non-existent problem.
It's not about race. It's about poor and less-reliable voters. Would you support a strict voter identification system in India that would presumably unfairly affect poor/rural/inner-city voters? The wealthy and urban middle class and elites would have an out-sized influence on the election, if so. Is that true democracy?
Probably more like 45%+, actually. Hillary is that bad, unfortunately.
I have to disagree. Lots of people are telling pollsters that they will be voting Trump. They have little to lose by telling a pollster their preference. Though they may not always tell those around them.
However, as I've discussed before, polls may be overstating her support somewhat due to potential turnout problems.
Agreed.
Thank you for your kind words, my friend. But I am far more concerned about the long-term political and economic problems in this country than 4-8 years of Hillary or Trump. If we got through Dubya's Presidency, we will get through this too.
It's just hard to see us moving in the wrong direction yet again. Especially when we finally had a chance to start addressing the economic issues that plague this country. Income inequality is reaching near-disastrous levels not seen since the 1930s during the Great Depression.
The economy has grown dramatically since 1980, and yet, middle and working class Americans have seen their incomes and wealth decline slightly. Even though they have grown astronomically for the wealthiest 1-10% of Americans. What's the point of any economic growth at all when it is quite literally only the wealthy that benefit? Why should they get all of the income growth, if productivity per worker has increased dramatically too?
With Bernie Sanders, we finally had a candidate that would take real steps to reverse these trends and return the economy to what it used to be before the 1980s/1990s. He had the unique ability to get working-class white voters, middle-class voters, political independents, true progressives, and economically disadvantaged non-voters, lifting the slowly drowning Democratic Party with him.
Alas, he was passed over for a rich political opportunist with terrible political positions on economic and foreign policy issues, who is far less electable and is detested by the American public. Not to mention the poor judgment she has shown throughout her career and the innumerable amount of times she's changed her positions on issues. She has even lied outright to voters multiple times.
What the upside to Hilary is, I still don't know. Even her supporters can't tell us. They have resigned themselves to bashing Trump because they know that getting people to like Hillary herself is a losing proposition. If Sanders was the nominee instead, it would be a different picture politically and economically. We can only hope for better candidates next time. Though I don't see a light at the end of the tunnel. At least in the near future.
Seems to have a pretty decent anti corruption blueprint there, too bad their media are not going to help get it out, they'd rather obsess and manufacture outrage over some silly scandal.In other news,Trump gave a speech in Gettysburg,PA(note the significance of the location) where he laid out his 'contract with the American People'.
Some things are obvious like he doesn't care much about Climate Change....(Does he even believe in it??)+he is determined to do something about lobbying carried out by govt.. officials of special interests & other nations(check the 4th and 5th points below)
@Nilgiri @T-72 @boomslang @RabzonKhan @KAL-EL Have a look
I read a few weeks back that together with Chris Christie he is working on legislation to get rid of many bureaucrats & officials who he suspects to be pro-Obama & pro-Democrat.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/vi...burg_term_limits_energy_immigration_more.html
I've got a really tough choice, vote Libertarian, or write in George Washington whose been dead for a while........
He doesn't get pushed around by anyone. If you look at the political positions he's taken throughout his lengthy career as political servant, this is quite apparent. He's been remarkably consistent for a politician, and has almost always been on the "right" side of issue.
He's endorsed Hillary because he wants to stop Trump and because he wants protect himself from her supporters and the detestable people in her campaign/DNC. In January 2017, he will become unchained and will go back to being himself. If Clinton is elected President, he will likely be her foremost critic on economic issues. An area in which she will inevitably come up well short, and will even renege on the promises she made in her campaign (like on the TPP/banks/minimum wage).
What you're talking about is "hard rigging" which is one of two types of rigging (the other being a "soft-rig"), something @gambit explained very well in this post: https://defence.pk/threads/us-presi...6-news-and-views.374363/page-118#post-8837591There are very, very few instances of voter-fraud on record. The amount is negligible. No one actually tries to do this. If a sizable number people tried to do this, it would become obvious rather quickly. It's a non-issue brought up by Republicans to help suppress voting. All that these so called "Voter-ID" laws do is prevent many eligible voters from voting when they show up at their polling locations to vote.
RCP's tracker result is not what one imagines from following US media reports.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/latest_polls/elections/
In some polls, Trump is shown to be leading.
The above contradicts this below:
A lot of which Bernie opposed Trump opposes too, and Hillary stands for, though granted Trump and Bernie do have their many differences, but not to the same extant Bernie has with Hillary and thus his endorsement of her was really shameful.
What you're talking about is "hard rigging" which is one of two types of rigging (the other being a "soft-rig"), something @gambit explained very well in this post: https://defence.pk/threads/us-presi...6-news-and-views.374363/page-118#post-8837591
"rigging" doesn't always imply in the voting sense, for example Hillary Clinton was provided with questions ahead of a debate with Bernie Sanders, thus it is safe to say the debate was rigged in her favor because Bernie wasn't getting such favors:
Yes it does. You stated he did it out of fear. Endorsing someone who he said "has a very bad judgement", on top of disagreeing with her on many issues does show a serious contradiction in his stance. I never implied that he should have endorse Trump or that he had to, but neither did he have to endorse a woman whom he said "has a very bad judgement" because then that just shows a serious contradiction in him.No, it does not. I don't think you understood what I said.
Bernie has not changed his positions on any issues. Not one. And yes, he endorsed Hillary. Because, as bad as she is, she is still better than Trump. If only by a little bit. Unfortunately, our choices in this election are "bad" and "worse", because of our two-party system. Bernie, like most of his supporters who will vote for one of the two, has chosen "bad" (Clinton), because he doesn't have much of a choice. He has made his thoughts about Hillary's political positions very clear throughout the primary. He continues to disagree with some of them. And if she is elected President, he will fight her when he needs to as a Senator.
No i'm not. I don't see why you are making this a personal issue.False. You seem to be deliberately avoiding the fact that Bernie and Hillary, for all their differences, have more in common than Bernie and Trump do. They are both Democrats. You can cherry-pick some positions (like on trade), to show where Bernie and Trump agree. But the fact of the matter remains that they disagree far more than agree. Look up their political positions. I will be glad to point out the differences if you are unable to see. They're very apparent, especially on social issues.
I was merely responding to the article you posted that seemed to focus on this "hard-rigging", as you call it. Look through your post again:
US Presidential Elections 2016 News and Views
And as for "soft-rigging", there is no party apparatus like there was in the Democratic Primary between Sanders and Clinton. Trump too may have been a victim of this when he was running in the Republican Primary, but he won nonetheless.
For the general election, however, there is no DNC/RNC to mess with things behind the scenes. The media pointing how crazy Trump can be sometimes is not evidence of "soft-rigging".
Yes it does. You stated he did it out of fear.
He's endorsed Hillary because he wants to stop Trump and because he wants protect himself from her supporters and the detestable people in her campaign/DNC. In January 2017, he will become unchained and will go back to being himself. If Clinton is elected President, he will likely be her foremost critic on economic issues. An area in which she will inevitably come up well short, and will even renege on the promises she made in her campaign (like on the TPP/banks/minimum wage).
Endorsing someone who he said "has a very bad judgement", on top of disagreeing with her on many issues does show a serious contradiction in his stance.
No i'm not. I don't see why you are making this a personal issue.
this is a much bigger issue compared to something like abortion, free education, or immigration since the implications will be far reaching.
And yes, their differences are VERY significant, even if they might agree on a couple of things. For example, along with their differences on trade, Hillary is very pro-interventionist and a war-hawk while Bernie is not...
EDITED: You quoted two of my posts, and the article i posted was merely to expose the hypocrisy of the Democrats and their media arms who accuse Trump of inciting doubts in the election system when they did the same exact thing in the past.
But if the media does not allocate the equal efforts and resources to investigate HC's unethical, if not outright illegal, acts, then it is a soft rig. So far, as much as it is funny to say this, Fox News seems to be the real journalist in this. But ultimately, because FN is outnumbered, the soft rig is favorable to HC.The media pointing how crazy Trump can be sometimes is not evidence of "soft-rigging".
Enough Libertarian votes could potentially lead the libertarians to have a seat in the national debates next electionand secure more funding, so if you are serious, vote libertarian.
But if the media does not allocate the equal efforts and resources to investigate HC's unethical, if not outright illegal, acts, then it is a soft rig.
So far, as much as it is funny to say this, Fox News seems to be the real journalist in this.
Why is 'crazy' deemed more newsworthy than 'unethical' ? In the criminal justice system, being mentally ill will reduce your punishment considerably, but the harshest condemnation from the public will always be for those who are of sound mind and uses his/her intelligence and insider knowledge for personal gains.
We judge someone not on whether he/she is technically guilty but more on intent. If I leer at your little girl, how would you feel being around me, even though I have not done anything technically criminal ?
. Likewise, the MSM often pointed out Chump's paying zero taxes, even though seemingly every tax loopholes he used were legal, and insinuate that he enjoys skirting the boundaries of legality, that is a soft rig against him.