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Only job I'm supporting Ben Carson's getting in 2020 is a cashier position at a Popeye's location in a heart of Baltimore.
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We know conservatives in here love using words they don't know the meaning of.20% counted, Ossoff with 56% of the vote but trending towards down. Hope he can hang on and beat that magic number [emoji]128531[/emoji]
Too bad the carpetbagger can't vote for himself:
How about you look up the definition of carpetbagger, before you start running your mouth
car·pet·bag·gerHow about you look up the definition of carpetbagger, before you start running your mouth
[thread="509493"] [/thread]
How about you look up the definition of carpetbagger, before you start running your mouth
car·pet·bag·ger
ˈkärpətˌbaɡər/
noun
derogatory
noun: carpetbagger; plural noun: carpetbaggers; noun: carpet-bagger; plural noun: carpet-baggers
a political candidate who seeks election in an area where they have no local connections.
historical
(in the US) a person from the northern states who went to the South after the Civil War to profit from the Reconstruction.
a person perceived as an unscrupulous opportunist.
"the organization is rife with carpetbaggers"
Too bad the carpetbagger can't vote for himself:
@AP: BREAKING: Trump administration certifies Iran complying with nuclear deal, extends sanctions relief but says review underway.
[thread="509493"] [/thread]
How about you look up the definition of carpetbagger, before you start running your mouth
car·pet·bag·ger
ˈkärpətˌbaɡər/
noun
derogatory
noun: carpetbagger; plural noun: carpetbaggers; noun: carpet-bagger; plural noun: carpet-baggers
a political candidate who seeks election in an area where they have no local connections.
historical
(in the US) a person from the northern states who went to the South after the Civil War to profit from the Reconstruction.
a person perceived as an unscrupulous opportunist.
"the organization is rife with carpetbaggers"
Congrats, you have showed this entire thread you're just like Ninja and don't read or listen to the **** you yourself post.
He grew up in the district, his family still lives there, he lives a mile and a half away because of his chick.
But yeah, "no local connections"
Go sit down somewhere b
[thread="509493"] [/thread]
How about you look up the definition of carpetbagger, before you start running your mouth
car·pet·bag·ger
ˈkärpətˌbaɡər/
noun
derogatory
noun: carpetbagger; plural noun: carpetbaggers; noun: carpet-bagger; plural noun: carpet-baggers
a political candidate who seeks election in an area where they have no local connections.
historical
(in the US) a person from the northern states who went to the South after the Civil War to profit from the Reconstruction.
a person perceived as an unscrupulous opportunist.
"the organization is rife with carpetbaggers"
Congrats, you have showed this entire thread you're just like Ninja and don't read or listen to the **** you yourself post.
He grew up in the district, his family still lives there, he lives a mile and a half away because of his chick.
But yeah, "no local connections"
Go sit down somewhere b
Progressives really haven't adopted former right wing positions. It is the center left that has adopted (not that they were so opposed to them in the first place) all the old decent policies moderate Republicans used to push/support. I am speaking more of market based solutions.
Progressive want basic income, the center left wants to expand EIC on top of our current welfare system. The left wing might want a federal jobs program where the federal government hire workers directly, the center left might just want a jobs bills that gives money to private sector firms. These are two sides trying to solve an issue, the GOP answer to everything these days just seems to be supply side tax breaks.
At one time their might have been a healthy policy debate in America and both sides contributed but right now serious public policy debates really just happens on the left. Healthcare is a perfect example of this, so is climate change for that fact.. The right is more concern with how can more things turn into commodities and how can more wealth be transferred to the top. And I might be bias but you can see this clearly.
Nothing is scared to the right, not our education system, healthcare system, our infrastructure, hell not even people's water supply.
And the country has moved left in recent. Left wing economic policy is more popular that in recent decades, social justice much more serious issue today that it was for the past couple decades, war is not as popular as it was before the Iraq War. Hell Trump got all those swing voters because they ignored his racism and were attracted to his left wing promises. To interfere in markets with regulation to help their economic situation, jobs programs, and cheap healthcare.
But many things still cloud the judgment of voters. The GOP base still actively votes against their self interest for "cultural reasons", American still think supply side economics work (thanks Reagan), and too many on the left still like to means test and try to discipline the poor too much (thanks Clinton).
The problem is that our electoral system gives the Republican base a disproportional amount of power. The combination of gerrymandering, voter suppression, first pass the post voting, Citizen's United, the electoral college, the cap on House Reps, all help the GOP and should be changed because it would make the government answer to voters more. Hell even Senators need to be increased.
If moved to a system that was truly representative, and we encouraged voting, publicly funded campaigns, and people actually turned out, our government would look much more liberal/Democrat.
Demographic shift will eventually cause this to happen, but we are decades away, and the GOP will not just let it happen.
How do you define the "country at large"? (Think about it)
From an economic, education/innovation, and population POV, the US is like a train, with the areas trending left (large urban centers) as the locomotive while the areas representing the right (small towns, rural areas, etc...) being the cars. The problem is that our electoral system hasn't reflected any of those migratory and economic changes, which is how we end up with an unbalanced congressional body.
Don't count him out yet. He can consolidate the Dem votes, and only needs to garner another 1-2% of the voters out there (Republican, Independent, or Dems who sat out) to win the chip. He's got a damb good chance imo looking purely at the numbers.If there's a runoff, homie gon lose.
Don't count him out yet. He can consolidate the Dem votes, and only needs to garner another 1-2% of the voters out there (Republican, Independent, or Dems who sat out) to win the chip. He's got a damb good chance imo looking purely at the numbers.If there's a runoff, homie gon lose.