FireNexus wrote:You don't know a whole lot, do you? Congressional democrats were further right on average in the 1970s. And Sanders has been saying the exact same shit since then, and he was considered even more radically liberal then. I don't know where you got the idea that he was an ideological fit with the average 1970s Democrat, but if it wasn't right from your ass it was from somebody who got it from theirs...
Wrong. That analysis is skewed by the simple notion that back in the 70s the Democrats were still split between liberal northern Dems and more conservative southern dems. Someone with Bernie Sanders current positions would not be considered far left. We would be smack in the middle of the liberal Democrats back then. Now Bernie Sanders is by far the most liberal Senator.
I wanted you to prove this at the time, he asked you to, and you never did. Are you seriously arguing that Sanders is 'center-left' by the standards of 1975 Democrats?
So today we don't have true "conservative" Democrats. Particularly since the Blue Dogs were wiped out in 2010 by the Tea party. But the party as a whole has shifted to the right.
In case you've forgotten, travel further back in time, even during the days when conservative Democrats were still a powerful force (ruling the entire south) the liberal arm of the party was still able to push through the New Deal. Or for that matter Civil Rights legislation. Yes in the past the liberal democrats were more effective even when half of their party were staunch conservatives!
Because half the Republican Party was as liberal or more liberal than they were.
It turns out that two parties, each half liberal and half conservative, is more conductive to getting liberal reforms in play than two parties that are 100% ideologically defined and constantly battling for dominance. Who could have guessed?
Completely irrelevant to whether a public option could have been passed if Obama had pushed for it. The fact is he didn't. He didn't really want the public option. Furthermore I would argue that if they did vote for a public option they would have a much better chance of keeping their seats.
How is adamant opposition from conservative Democrats "completely irrelevant" to whether Obama could get the public option just by 'fighting for it?' The
entire point here is that Obama would have had to fight for conservative Democratic votes almost as hard as he had to fight for Republican votes, because at that time, there was still significant Democratic opposition to the public option.
As to "if they did vote for a public option they would have a much better chance of keeping their seats," thing is,
they didn't believe that. I'm not saying you're wrong, but it honestly doesn't matter because at the time the conservative Democrats saw their best electoral strategy as trying to oppose Obamacare.
Lord MJ wrote:I would also add that that chart scores offers little to indicate how a liberal score of -1 in the 112th congress compares in anyway to a liberal score of -1 in the 93rd congress.
The entire political spectrum has shifted to the right. So therefore the Democrats position relative to the entire spectrum might be more left leaning within that spectrum today than it was 5 years ago or 40 years ago. But since the spectrum itself has shifted right then the party itself has shifted right.
Can you prove that the entire political spectrum has shifted right? On social issues it has shifted sharply left in many ways. On economic issues it has mostly held steady.
The big difference is that with an ideologically conservative Republican Party gaining access to massive power from donations, the conservatives have been able to dominate the terms of political debate. It's not the actual positions of the Democratic Party that moved, it's the
noise that moved.
maraxus2 wrote:And as far as being Obama's third term, that strikes me as a pretty good bargain. I'd vote for him over Hillary in a heartbeat if he could run again, and I think most Dems are the same.
The man has close to a 90% approval rating among Democrats, after all. Personally, I think Obama's been one of the greatest Presidents since Reagan, and we're going to miss him a whole lot when he's gone.
To be fair, "one of the greatest since Reagan" is equivalent to saying "one of the top two out of four."
Grumman wrote:I don't need to tie myself in knots to justify thinking those 70% to 80% of congressmen are fit to be President because we only need one new President every four to eight years, not a hundred. We can afford to be picky, because we only need to find the best five to ten people out of the entire United States before the pool of eligible candidates rotates.
Except that realistically, we will NEVER have one of the saintliest five to ten people in the US actually running as presidential candidates. It's just not going to happen, because the list of candidates is limited to people who have political experience, decide to run, and gain the support of a large organized political party.
So the only consequence of saying "I will never support anyone who voted for anything I think is Very Bad in hindsight
EVER, regardless of the historical context of their actions" is, well... total disengagement from politics. You're neutralizing your impact by trying to condemn the very existence of politics as it actually exists.
Terralthra wrote:"In retrospect" implies there weren't people warning about the massive civil liberty infringements in the USA PATRIOT Act, and about the deceptive rationale for going to war in Iraq, not to mention the negative consequences thereof.