View original postYou persist in the delusion that those numbers have any legal meaning whatsoever. In fact, they are distorted by one state with extreme political views and practices, which is locked down by the Democrats. Republicans were not on the ballot in the Senate race in California, where the Democratic winner received 7.5 million votes, and the loser, ALSO A DEMOCRAT, received 4.7 million votes. That, in case your math skills are no better than your research skills, comes to over 12 million votes, in an election with no Republican candidate. Now let's talk about that 11 million vote majority, if you're done playing moron.
Really? I'm the one who began with the 'record numbers at every level of government' nonsense? Oh wait, that was the author of the article.
Of course Senate numbers don't mean much if anything because there's only races in a limited number of states each time. But 'record numbers at every level of government' manages to put two stupid and instantly disproven hyperboles (also if you interpret 'numbers' as electoral college votes / Senate seats, by the way) in the space of seven words, neither of which was even required for the point at hand. Which I believe I already mentioned in the previous post, so it's funny how you throw in the 'persist in the delusion that those numbers have any legal meaning whatsoever' bit. The whole point is that since the numbers don't matter anyway, why bother to lie about them in such a transparent way? Which, yeah, very much reminiscent of Trump's thing about the Inauguration Day crowd size, and many other things since.
View original postHey, kettle, the pot is filing an anti-defamation suit against you. At this point, "Trumpian" is a step up for you or the people from whom you get your talking points.
Now you're just spouting random insults? I expect better from you than that.
View original postWhich is to the point of the article, that the left is deranged and going to extremes.
Yes, it certainly is. Funny, isn't it, how I actually agree with the parts of the article that aren't nonsense? I'm sure there are other articles on the same general theme that I actually could have subscribed to with few if any disagreements.
View original postAnd that's an obnoxiously disingenuous distinction. Not that Pelosi and co are above using extreme rhetoric concerning Trump & supporters, but they also benefit by the media's extremism and voluntarily undertaking the role of attack dogs for the Democrats. Obama was able to cruise through his campaigns taking the high road, because journalists would do his mudslinging for him. One e-mail was leaked of a journalist in 2008 to colleagues suggesting that they "make an example" of one of Obama's critics, to smear and trash such a person, in order to send a message that strong criticism would not be tolerated, and the e-mail was rife with violent imagery, like smashing their hypothetical victim through a window and hitting him with a cinder block. Republicans are demonized for connections to violence that exists only in left-wing heads, while Democrats and Leftists commit the overwhelming majority of political violence.
Of course Pelosi and the rest of the leadership are mudslinging, and constantly attacking Trump and Republicans in an ugly partisan way. But that is pretty standard fare in American (or other) politics, and still a long way from hoping that someone resorts to violence, much less actually encouraging that. I don't believe for a moment that either party's leadership has the intention of encouraging violence against the other side. I quite agree with the author that unstable individuals may resort to violence as a result of polarization, even so, but as for the leaders' intent, no. And I happen to think that that is a very important distinction.
View original postBut Sarah Palin telling supporter to do research on issues because "I want you armed" for a political debate IS a call to violence, as was her use of a map with crosshairs on Democratic districts the GOP hoped to flip in a coming election.
The 'I want you armed' thing doesn't ring a bell, but as for the crosshairs thing, you're right that she didn't deserve the crap she got for that.
View original postAnd if you can find ANY evidence that Loughner shared actual political principles with the Tea Party, let people know. You'll get a chair at the Columbia School of Journalism, if not a Pulitzer.
I didn't mean to link Loughner to the Tea Party at all, I was just pointing out that 'hates GW Bush' doesn't mean you're left-wing, and taking the first example that came to mind. But okay, your interpretation is reasonable enough, my bad for poor phrasing.
View original postAnd violence in self-defense is not a real solution to violence, I suppose? It was Sophie Scholl who brought down the Nazis, not Patton?
View original postAt this point, it's well beyond calls for civility. It's one thing not to turn the other cheek, but the Right ran out of cheeks more than 50 years ago.
Uh, if you're saying that the right reaction to things like what happened in DC this morning is to have more violence and slowly move towards civil war, then fuck no. If not, and I sure hope not, I'm not really sure what you are trying to say here.
View original postWHAT REPUBLICANS HAVE BEEN DOING THIS STUFF? Aside from an atheistic drug user blowing up the Alfred E Murrah building, there are no acts of political violence by Republicans or Conservatives. Even the only Democratic president ever to be assassinated, was killed by a communist, and it is Democrats who are most supportive of the terrorist demographics. In the haste to protect Muslims, leftists love to point out that most of the terrorism in the US is committed by white people, almost all of whom are Democratic constituents, like environmentalists. To find a Republican committing political violence, you have to go back to President Garfield, who was explicitly killed by a supporter of his more radical vice president.
I was not talking about actual acts of political violence, and neither was the author, having written this article as Joe said about 10 days ago. It's about political demonization and how this can lead unstable individuals into political violence. Which, absolutely, both sides are very much guilty of.
But as for your paragraph, that's basically a long way of saying 'people who do bad stuff aren't on my side therefore my side never did any bad stuff', which while I guess logically sound is also pretty useless. We are fortunately still a long way off from the point where people on one side or the other hear about acts of political violence and go 'oh well done, I really identify with that guy and what he's done!'. Which is one of the many reasons why the Nazi-era comparisons are stupid.