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This "I'm a progressive but if Hillary is the nominee, I'm not voting" shit is stale

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Valhelm

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Meh. She's been a party leader for quite some time now and easily has some of the strongest credentials for the job.

Several other politicians have had entitlement complexes without any reason to have them.

See, this is exactly what I'm talking about. Your argument is that Hillary Clinton should be our president simply because she's "been there", even though her record on foreign and domestic issues is very spotty. How important is her tenure as secretary of state, given the destruction she helped wrought in Libya? And how much does non-legislative experience even matter, given the power of policy advisers and cabinetmembers?
 

boiled goose

good with gravy
What does that even mean?

See the OP.
It is the idea that folks have to vote for her when they feel she hasn't earned their vote.

"Fall in line" is basically the worst thing you can say to convince a Sanders supporter. His entire career has been about fighting for what he thinks is right.

There is a difference between compromise and compromising your principles.
 
I must admit even though there are several opposing views being shared, I've enjoyed reading this thread. GAF is increasingly the only place I can have political discourse even though most the people here skew left like me. It's certainly better than r/politics.

r/politics (or popular Reddit in general) does set the bar low for productive discourse.
 

shoplifter

Member
By contrast, Hillary Clinton and her staff really haven't made a serious effort to connect to most of their voters. She's relied primarily on name recognition and her ties to Washington and provincial party leaders, riding on the assumption that this is "her turn" or that she should be president only because she's currently more popular any opposition on the left.


I think the most telling piece of the puzzle is that no one aside from Sanders and O'Malley (who had no chance from the beginning) even entered the race. When your only major opponent in a primary for an office with no incumbent isn't even in the party, that certainly makes it sound like the intent was for her to cruise though the primary races with little to no opposition.
 
^^^ so centrists/center-left. great.




Thank you. What I want to see from her are bold plans. I realize that incremental change may be required, but what we constantly see from the DNC is starting negotiations from a point at which we already give up too much. I have no confidence that she has a long term plan to get to where the left actually wants to go.

the compromise comes from losing the house and senate in midterm elections because progressives stay home for those elections, leaving the democratic president to work against his interests and try to pass legislation with a red congress

Granted, Obama fucked up during his first two years in office by trying to compromise with the right BUT let us remember that he basically ran on a centrist platform of uniting the left and the right. He just underestimated how fucked up the GOP are.

I haven't gotten a sense that Hillary is doing that nor do i get the sense that she gives ten shits about compromise with the right if she had a blue house and senate, either.

and, again, you would rather have a republican president shift the supreme court all the way to the right instead? you're basically taking your ball home at this point if you think that a right wing SC is an acceptable option.
 

Drek

Member
What a silly substance devoid post.
You define progressiveness based on party affiliation.
I define progressivness based on policy.

Which method is less arbitrary?


It has nothing to do with "ideological purity^ but rather a fundamental understanding that the system is inherently broken. You just said the current power structure is fine! The current system is currently working ok for you.

There are no people more progressive than you. Hence you are a centrist. Im not saying it's an invalid stance, it's just a fact.

Buddy, I'm not anything you can define on a political spectrum. I was once described (by an ardent Republican) as the only true Libertarian in the country. He's probably right.

I'm not denying that the system is broken. I'm rejecting the argument that the way to fix it is to break it further because doing so will literally cost lives.

Progressiveness is defined based on the national middle point. You don't get to hold up western Europe and say "look, this is left, so EVERYONE in the U.S. is a right winger!" because I could turn that around and hold up just as many examples radically to the right of the U.S..

The middle point of the nation at this time is to the right of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. They're championing government intervention for the benefit of the body public. That is literally the very basis of "Progressive" in the American political sense as defined by the original progressive, TR, and continued by his cousin and niece a few decades thereafter. That is progressive. Trying to take that title away shows a disingenuous attempt to drive a wedge between moderate and extremist progressives for effectively no gain.

So if given a choice between continuation of that wedge, fracturing a party almost unanimously focused on progressive reform at one rate or another, and in turn empowering a regressive opposition (as was the case throughout the 70's and 80's) I'm sorry but I'll take the slow and steady march over the quick burn and all the risks associated.
 

Caja 117

Member
I see the "if Hillary then no vote at all" people as incapable of compromise.

Which is kind of like the Tea Party. It's just extremism within your rights. But please, if you want to increase the chances of a president that gets into the office campaigning on inexperience and fascist rhetoric, then by all means please, exercise your rights.

Just don't bitch when sticking to your principles contributes pretty directly to Muslim ID bracelets and Geneva convention violations.

This is my biggest issue, the non-voting camp don't realize that the non-vote is equal to giving a vote in for Trump/Cruz, so technically, your non vote is a vote in support a platform based on hate.
 
See, this is exactly what I'm talking about. Your argument is that Hillary Clinton should be our president simply because she's "been there", even though her record on foreign and domestic issues is very spotty. How important is her tenure as secretary of state, given the destruction she helped wrought in Libya? And how much does non-legislative experience even matter, given the power of policy advisers and cabinetmembers?

She's been a leader, not just "there".

As far as her spotty record goes, I do agree it's not perfect.
I do think it's fair to give her a listen to explain the past.

Her stance on crime in the past isn't necessarily how she would govern today. And that can apply to a multitude of issues.
 
I've only made two posts in the thread so I've dodged nothing, thank you.


Quite honestly, I'm not entirely positive that Secretary Clinton will select actual leftist justices or whether she will select more centrist justices like Pres. Obama has done with this most recent appointment. I have serious concerns about Garland's record on privacy.

I'll grant the president that he is trying to call the GOPs bluff here, but what will a President HRC do?

Hillary is and always has been more liberal than Obama and Obama put liberal justices on the bench.

Hillary has a personal vendetta against Citizen's United, so she's going to make that a major issue for her candidates on the bench.

There should be no concern at all she won't be liberal justices. She'll pick as liberal of a justice as the Senate will allow.
 

Anoregon

The flight plan I just filed with the agency list me, my men, Dr. Pavel here. But only one of you!
There is a difference between compromise and compromising your principles.

This swings both ways. Anyone who supports the ideals and policies of Bernie Sander is absolutely, unequivocally compromising their principles if they don't do everything they can this November to prevent Cruz or Trump becoming president. That means voting for Hillary Clinton even if you'd prefer Bernie.
 

Steel

Banned
^^^ so centrists/center-left. great.

The hilarious thing is, Hillary was considered the "too liberal" choice in the last election in all but foreign policy.

Why do people think Hillary is what a centrist looks like? So people like Bernie are the only ones that can possibly be liberal? Sounds like the shit that Ted Cruz goes on about on how he's the only conservative left in the Republican party.
 

Lothars

Member
How so? A lot of Sanders supporters have been very crass in their belief that black voters were ignorant for preferring Clinton, but the campaign has worked pretty hard for every vote they've received. By contrast, Hillary Clinton and her staff really haven't made a serious effort to connect to most of their voters. She's relied primarily on name recognition and her ties to Washington and provincial party leaders, riding on the assumption that this is "her turn" or that she should be president only because she's currently more popular any opposition on the left.
It doesn't seem like they have, to me as an outsider looking in shows extremes on both Clinton supports side and Sanders supporters side where if you don't vote for the chosen candidate than you are wrong and stupid. It's been about a 50/50 split.

It's probably a vocal minority of each side but it doesn't seem that Clinton is just riding on name alone.
 
The hilarious thing is, Hillary was considered the "too liberal" choice in the last election in all but foreign policy.

Why do people think Hillary is what a centrist looks like?

because she was running against an openly socialist atheist candidate who has had limited success in the primaries, someone who would just about make any democrat look like Reagan in comparison
 

shoplifter

Member
the compromise comes from losing the house and senate in midterm elections because progressives stay home for those elections, leaving the democratic president to work against his interests and try to pass legislation with a red congress

Granted, Obama fucked up during his first two years in office by trying to compromise with the right BUT let us remember that he basically ran on a centrist platform of uniting the left and the right. He just underestimated how fucked up the GOP are.


When DNC congressional candidates run on largely centrist platforms, they're not going to get support from progressives. They essentially disavowed the slightly further to the left policy goals of the President in favor of being 'we're not republicans.'
 

Steel

Banned
When DNC congressional candidates run on largely centrist platforms, they're not going to get support from progressives. They essentially disavowed the slightly further to the left policy goals of the President in favor of being 'we're not republicans.'

But she's not running on centrist platforms in anything but foreign policy, so...... Where are you getting this shit?
 
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?
 

Clefargle

Member
The 'let's jump down Bernie supporters throats" is stale too.

Sounding more and more like conservatives every day. That "shoving shit down our throats" is directly out of the Fox News / Runio playbook and its stale too. If people telling you why you should do things in voluntary conversations you have online is "shoving things down your throat" then you have a super sensitive gag reflex.
 

shoplifter

Member
The way I personally see it is that her economic platform is largely 'the system is barely broken' with no large end goal in sight other than minor corrections.
 

Anoregon

The flight plan I just filed with the agency list me, my men, Dr. Pavel here. But only one of you!
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

Because the things you like about a likely Sanders presidency are actually not very different from a likely Clinton presidency, whereas a Trump/Cruz presidency would actively damage/remove those things.

This is of course assuming there are specific policy issues you care about, and not just "Bernie is cool and I don't trust Hillary."
 

boiled goose

good with gravy
Buddy, I'm not anything you can define on a political spectrum. I was once described (by an ardent Republican) as the only true Libertarian in the country. He's probably right.

I'm not denying that the system is broken. I'm rejecting the argument that the way to fix it is to break it further because doing so will literally cost lives.

Progressiveness is defined based on the national middle point. You don't get to hold up western Europe and say "look, this is left, so EVERYONE in the U.S. is a right winger!" because I could turn that around and hold up just as many examples radically to the right of the U.S..

The middle point of the nation at this time is to the right of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. They're championing government intervention for the benefit of the body public. That is literally the very basis of "Progressive" in the American political sense as defined by the original progressive, TR, and continued by his cousin and niece a few decades thereafter. That is progressive. Trying to take that title away shows a disingenuous attempt to drive a wedge between moderate and extremist progressives for effectively no gain.

So if given a choice between continuation of that wedge, fracturing a party almost unanimously focused on progressive reform at one rate or another, and in turn empowering a regressive opposition (as was the case throughout the 70's and 80's) I'm sorry but I'll take the slow and steady march over the quick burn and all the risks associated.

So yeah, if you are a libertarian, then you are definitely not a progressive. Why are you then arguing labels? Just own it.

So I agree that progressive vs conservative can be defined by policy. You are defining this by politicians, not the electorate. That is our difference.

For example, is universal background checks progressive, centrist, or conservative? Is it an extreme position? I would argue it's and extremely moderate centrist position. ~90% of people support this including like 80% of gun owners. Yet, it is considered an extreme leftist position in Washington.

Issue by Issue, the American population is center left, not to the right of Hillary/Obama.
 

Future

Member
When DNC congressional candidates run on largely centrist platforms, they're not going to get support from progressives. They essentially disavowed the slightly further to the left policy goals of the President in favor of being 'we're not republicans.'

Then they make their voice heard during primaries to land the nominee

They don't ignore the election because a centrist left is the candidate. Any progressive running, including sanders, would want you to vote Clinton if she's the nominee. He sure as hell wouldn't want you voting trump, and he wouldn't want you staying home
 

Valhelm

contribute something
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

Trump would be worse than Clinton, pretty substantially. I can't tell you how to vote, but it's pretty important to keep Trump out of the White House.
 

DrArchon

Member
I would've loved for Bernie to go the distance, but sadly it doesn't look like it'll be the case. So I'll vote for Clinton even if she isn't my candidate of choice. Why? Because the republicans are all batshit crazy and scare the piss out of me, and I'm not so much voting for Clinton as I am voting against Trump.

Remember guys, it's not just about getting who you want in the White House, it's about keeping out people you fear.
 

Caja 117

Member
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

Because maybe you wouldn't want to see someone like trump In power? because I assume, if you are a sanders supporter, that you wouldn't want Someone like trump to be in power? your vote matters, vote is more than just electing someone, is a a statement, and taking sidelines to see what Happens is the worst option you could have, when you could help for the greater good or the lesser evil.
 
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?
Because you might have empathy for someone other than yourself who would be severely negatively impacted by a Trump presidency.
 

Drek

Member
Go to antiwar.com. You'll find all the receipts you want.

So a site full of op eds devoid of any real facts is your idea of proof. That explains a lot on how you can get roped into thinking someone who was a staunch anti-war advocate for most of their life is now a warmonger.

Maybe try something with real facts backing it up next time?
 

boiled goose

good with gravy
This swings both ways. Anyone who supports the ideals and policies of Bernie Sander is absolutely, unequivocally compromising their principles if they don't do everything they can this November to prevent Cruz or Trump becoming president. That means voting for Hillary Clinton even if you'd prefer Bernie.

I agree, with this.

What I don't agree is the idea that Sanders supporters should just fall in line now. No, I want them to fight for what they believe all the way till the ballot box in November. If no one is pulling Hillary left she will massively swing further right.

No vote is guaranteed, every vote has to be earned.

Come November, regardless of where each candidate stands, folks have to vote for the least worst option. That is fair.

i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

Voting is good. Vote for the least worst option, write in, third party, whatever, but vote.
 
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

dont vote for a president then but, please, vote for members of congress and on local initiatives. the worst thing you could do is simply not vote, that's weak as fuck.

It's a really sorry state of affairs that our two choices are progressive neoliberalism and bigoted neoliberalism

we had primaries and the primaries are bearing out the public's opinion on who should be candidates or not. bernie had money and a pretty great political machine behind him and he's not going to be the candidate because the public has spoken. It is what it is.

When DNC congressional candidates run on largely centrist platforms, they're not going to get support from progressives. They essentially disavowed the slightly further to the left policy goals of the President in favor of being 'we're not republicans.'

Seems like progressives have made their choices already. Those who do not feel like the progressives are being properly represented: feel free to start an offshoot. If the Tea Party can do it for the right then why can't progressives do it for the left?

the fact is, progress is often a slow and frustrating thing to watch play out. You can vote for incremental progress or not, it's entirely your call. But not voting for incremental progress is also a sign that you're not interested in true progress at all.
 

Future

Member
So yeah, if you are a libertarian, then you are definitely not a progressive. Why are you then arguing labels? Just own it.

So I agree that progressive vs conservative can be defined by policy. You are defining this by politicians, not the electorate. That is our difference.

For example, is universal background checks progressive, centrist, or conservative? Is it an extreme position? I would argue it's and extremely moderate centrist position. ~90% of people support this including like 80% of gun owners. Yet, it is considered an extreme leftist position in Washington.

Issue by Issue, the American population is center left, not to the right of Hillary/Obama.

You define 90% of people wanting it as centrist. It is a leftist position because it goes against the rightist view of guns should be easy for everyone to get. People on the right can hold leftist views from time to time.
 

CrazyDude

Member
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

Because a republican administration would make the country go backwards. Because minorities will suffer under a republican administration. Because a republican administration will put Scalia types judges onto the court causing any Bernie like candidate in the future to getting his stuff implemented for the next 40 years, plus a very big possibility the abortion would be outlawed by the court, gay marriage could be overturned, obamacare overturned, any environmental laws to be overturned, ect.

But yeah, who care about this election? If we can't get someone now, lets burn the country down.
 

HylianTom

Banned
I've only made two posts in the thread so I've dodged nothing, thank you.


Quite honestly, I'm not entirely positive that Secretary Clinton will select actual leftist justices or whether she will select more centrist justices like Pres. Obama has done with this most recent appointment. I have serious concerns about Garland's record on privacy.

I'll grant the president that he is trying to call the GOPs bluff here, but what will a President HRC do?

There are plenty of people in this thread who have seen my posts and, despite having no problem voicing their feelings on this topic, they avoid offering a response to my point. Their silence and lack of response speaks volumes. It's a dodge.

As far as picking leftist judges, I don't know what to say to convince you. Her senate voting record is strongly liberal. Her emails show her to be a liberal. Hell, her "moderate/DLC/corporatist" husband's first nominee in the comparatively conservative climate of 1993 was the general counsel of the friggin' ACLU, and she's been more liberal than he ever was. This idea that she won't pick lefties for the court.. I find that remarkable, and quite a reach. It'd be well out of character for her record.

And FYI: Sotomayor and Kagan were portrayed as moderates when they were nominated. They've ruled as consistent liberals.

i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?
It's very simple: when another candidate like Sanders comes along and wins in 2020 or 2024, do you want their policies to be viable? A Republican will see to it that, even if we elect another Sanders, he will be met with failure. A Hillary Presidency, while not ideal, will keep that vision alive.

Aside from shoplifter, most folks have been avoiding this question.
 

Drek

Member
So yeah, if you are a libertarian, then you are definitely not a progressive. Why are you then arguing labels? Just own it.

So I agree that progressive vs conservative can be defined by policy. You are defining this by politicians, not the electorate. That is our difference.

For example, is universal background checks progressive, centrist, or conservative? Is it an extreme position? I would argue it's and extremely moderate centrist position. ~90% of people support this including like 80% of gun owners. Yet, it is considered an extreme leftist position in Washington.

Issue by Issue, the American population is center left, not to the right of Hillary/Obama.

What the hell are you even talking about at this point?

So if background checks are a moderate/centrist point of view and 90% of the people support it how does that make the American people left of Obama and Clinton, who both are generally in favor of them?

It isn't an extreme leftist position in Washington. It is presented as an extreme leftist position by a segment of ardent GOP politicians backed by a very strong gun lobby.

I mean, do you even understand the political process here? Progressivism isn't something you bandy about for only the most left candidates. It is a very real, defined, political viewpoint that was established by sitting Presidents and the actions they took to achieve it. Real people have already defined this term. It existed before you were even born. You don't get to come along and change it because you aren't happy with the people it lets into the tent.

Lastly, like I said, I was referred to as a libertarian. My actual views are too nuanced to fit any real description adequately, as should everyone's. But since many want to have a political weathervane to guide their half-baked opinions we wind up with terminology based on partisan division. Then we all act surprised when our political structure become divided along partisan lines.
 

Future

Member
Because a republican administration would make the country go backwards. Because minorities will suffer under a republican administration. Because a republican administration will put Scalia types judges onto the court causing any Bernie like candidate in the future to getting his stuff implemented for the next 40 years.

Not just any administration, trump administration

Hell, Supreme Court nominees alone should be answering the question. Even if you hate trump and Clinton EQUALLY, you should still vote Clinton if you want a more left Supreme Court that will actually vote in favor of future progressive legislation. Republicans actually are USING that fact to get people to vote for them, using fear tactics that a left Supreme Court would take guns away, rip up the constitution, and drive America to the ground

Anyone who can't see past the actual candidates to the global effects on US government that will occur depending on who is elected is just being ignorant. And if it's due to you being for sanders only, then you are being s crybaby
 
This is my biggest issue, the non-voting camp don't realize that the non-vote is equal to giving a vote in for Trump/Cruz, so technically, your non vote is a vote in support a platform based on hate.

I think that's the most blunt way of looking at it. Not taking part in something, or at least being willing to come to the fucking table to compromise and move/keep the needle more in your direction is approaching the height of entitlement.
 
i want sanders. i don't like trump (or any of the repubs for that matter) and i don't like hillary. if it comes down to one of them, why should i vote?

Because even though Hillary may not be what you want (It isnt what I want Id rather have sanders.) Its way better than Cruz or Trump.
Lots of people stand to have a lot of their rights trampled over with a republican president. Im bisexual and hispanic and it scares me what could happen to people like myself in the next few years with a republican government. Even then I hardly have it as bad as many Muslim Americans would probably have it or any other non-white immigrant cause at least I was born here.

It's fine to be upset that Sanders lost, but it isn't okay to take your ball and go home when a ton of stuff is at stake that could affect minority populations in this country for decades
 

Pork

Banned
The two types I know:

1. Old misogynists

2. Young Bernie-ites who seriously don't understand what 8 years of Bush did to this country.

Jesus fuck, this rhetoric is getting so old. So as a liberal, the only reasons I have to not like Hillary are either a) I'm old and a misogynist or b) I'm young and ignorant? Really?
 

Cybrwzrd

Banned
Hear, hear! Many of us are fatigued with the narrative- "Vote for the lesser of two evils or DOOM!" Ok, but we've still been voting for evil. The last presidential election I missed was in 2000, and since 2004 I've voted in both presidential and midterm elections. I've seen my social causes advanced, but on fiscal issues, on foreign policy, on domestic surveillance, on the social safety net, we have made very little progress. And these issues matter.

Not only do they matter, but they are the issues that matter the most. The thing is they are not "sexy little starlets that look nice in a low cut dress in the media spotlight" like social issues are. Fixing an endemic economic issue takes years to pay off - and you risk not getting a payoff as a politician. When a majority supported social issue is address/fixed you get a great photo op and easy publicity for your next campaign.
 

pigeon

Banned
What a silly substance devoid post.
You define progressiveness based on party affiliation.
I define progressivness based on policy.

Which method is less arbitrary?

You define progressiveness based on one policy, the policy you personally think is most important.

If your definition of progressive is "only people who agree with me on issue X" then it shouldn't be surprising that your definition is both out-of-step with and offputting to the rest of the world. That is not how anybody else uses the word!

The answer above was fair.
I just want an honest debate. I explain some of the problems with Hillary and the responses attack Sanders or defend Obama.

But your post doesn't explain any problems with Hillary. It's purely a suggestion that people who support Hillary are not as progressive as you. That's the point of my critique.

Now, obviously you got the black swan response of somebody who accepted your dishonest framing and posted "you're right, I am not as progressive as you." So sure, no surprise that you liked that answer. But I don't think you should expect a lot of those!
 

Future

Member
Jesus fuck, this rhetoric is getting so old. So as a liberal, the only reasons I have to not like Hillary are either a) I'm old and a misogynist or b) I'm young and ignorant? Really?

In all honesty, are there better reasons to not vote Hillary if she gets the nomination. Why else would you not vote if the election was trump versus Clinton. If you don't value a democratic supreme court nominee, or a government that didn't both have a right president and right congress that can actively repeal progress towards a more liberal point of view..... Then yeah, pretty ignorant if you are a liberal. And I'd guess young too
 
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