Not really. That's not even the point of the article, but you understood that in a later post so no reason to comment.Simon_Jester wrote:What, Gigaliel, do you think that if I'd read the article I would suddenly become a Ron Paul supporter?
Frankly the economic argument is silly as Obama already approves of austerity measures, SS and medicare cuts, no financial regulations, and so on and so forth. Dismantling of federal departments IS valid as it is a thing the President could actually do without too much interference from congress.Weighing the two sets of consequences against each other, I have to make my decision as an American citizen who wants my country to not collapse or suffer huge recessions, and who is conscious of just how much something like a depression really costs in surplus mortality and lost opportunities for useful labor.
And from that perspective, Ron Paul would make a terrible president and I would never consider voting for him.
Ron Paul is the optimum conservative/GOP candidate is either A) impossible to get by Congress or B) already shared by the other candidates (as somewhat established by Elfdart's post.)
Paul vs. Obama is a more interesting as there is an actual choice. More than anything it highlights how Obama is an awful president and that it is hilarious that the the Republican candidate is more "liberal" on key progressive issues than he is.
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Third Party discussion:
Here's some numbers dispelling this sadly common myth:Crossroads Inc. wrote:People tried that in 2000 with Ralph Nader and we all know how wonderful THAT ended for America.
also:The Review tested the widely held Democratic assumption that Nader caused Gore's loss by checking changes in poll results. Presumably, if Nader was actually responsible for Gore's troubles, his tallies would change inversely to those of Gore: if Gore did better, Nader would do worse and vice versa.
In fact, the only time any correlation could be found was when the changes were so small - 1 or 2 percentage points - that they were statistically insignificant. On the other hand when, in September of 2000, Gore's average poll result went up 7.5 points over August, Nader's only declined by 1 point. Similarly, in November, Gore's average poll tally declined 5.7 points but Nader's only went up 0.8 points.
In the close Florida race, there were similar results: statistically insignificant correlation when the Gore tally changed by only one or two points, but dramatic non-correlation when the change was bigger. For example, in nine successive surveys in which Nader pulled only 2 or 3 points, Gore's total varied by 7 points. As late as two weeks before the election, Gore was ahead by as much as 7-10 points.
This is what the Democratic establishment thinks of primary challenges (Daily Kos quoting things]:Crossroad wrote: The point is they ARE changing the Republicans, they voted out moderates and moved in more and more nutcases. You want to change the way things are? Then do the same. Get active, get angery, vote in the primaries for people who arn't wussy or spinless and you may just begin to change things.
Also corporate money has Zero benefit from supporting leftist candidates versus the Tea Party has some overlap with their interest. It's going to be a bit difficult.As Sam Seder tweeted:
and when Blanche loses? MT @benpolitico Sr. WH Official: Labor just flushed 10 mil of its members $ down the toilet in a pointless exercise
This post is getting a little long and quote heavy so I'm going to summarize my positions a little:
1.) There will be no liberal victory in 2012. Paul will probably lose when the GOP is scared enough and starts to rally. The primary difference will be that the GOP is fairly honest about their beliefs. I mean do I really have to post the evidence of Obama contradicting nearly every liberal position he has ever said he held? Also Obama will probably win because the GOP candidates are pretty awful but that doesn't really matter.
2.) Following from 1.) it is my personal belief that every left leaning person needs both and not vote Democrat. Also not Republican but that's kinda obvious. I am personally voting Green but socialist or whatever is fine too.
I think a few people in this thread share this opinion or lean towards it? And that is a major point of discussion in the thread? Maybe?
P.S.
I'm not really sure what I'd do if, miracle of miracles, Ron Paul actually won the GOP candidacy. Presumably I would be dead as my head had exploded, but you never know!