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TnT wrote:
You demonstrated with your response, the very point of the article I posted though. You had been asking me to provide some support for my position, I posted, you responded with a cursory "nice", made no other comment about my position, and laid your egg on me. Now if I play the game, it is my turn to lay another egg, and then it is your turn..... Egg? I don't think so....I was showing you an article that supported another (and not diametrically opposed) point of view. Egg..., by this I mean you have your POV, and I have mine, and we can each find support, not that there is anything wrong with that, just that I prefer the discussion you offer, and I accept. Egg throwing can get messy!!! Now we get to discuss what the articles said. Yours said that the dems are suffering an identity crisis and need to reorganize if they want to play ball. No argument there...but then that's not your point. Your point is that the sweeping success of Bush and the republicans demonstrates a huge shift in the countries morals and values to the right (or at least, a clear demonstration of the stance that had already existed). Negatory, I no where suggested that there has been a hugh shift to the right, but that they won this round, a squeaker yes, but they did win, and the sooner the Dems acknowledge this, and learn to play according to the new game plan, the better for everyone involved. My point is that this is not so, and that you are being far too smug about the election results. Yes I was being smug, about winning, and it did feel good. Now we all get to go back to work, and see if we can work together! As far as I know, we are all still on the same team. Politics is a very strange game! The shift was actually closer to 3% to the right, which closely matched the increase in the fundamentalist vote. I spent 4 years in Israel, and their political system has some interesting aspects which were suddenly mirrored by our last election. The Knesset, the Israeli house of congress, is composed of representatives of all the major political parties, with seats allocated by percent of the popular vote. Whichever party is in control of the Prime Ministership has to scab together enough support from the Knesset seats to hold greater than 50% support...that's what they refer to as 'forming a government'. Inevitably, however, the major players end up splitting the seats with their traditional allies until there is a 49-49 split. Then, this small ultraconservative minority party who holds out until the end, and that holds 3 little seats, finds themselves in an incredibly powerful position....whichever side they choose to go with ends up with the majority. They know exactly where they stand, and it is very influential, and they use it incessantly. Although they represent only a 3% slice of the population, they are very outspoken about how Israel is an ultraconservative country, because their ultraconservative agenda comes to play in practically all the major issues. Of course, absolutely everybody on both sides is learning to despise them, because they insist on pushing their agenda over the interests of the other 98%, but you have to admit that they have clout, as irritating as it is invalid. Yes, your Bush won the election. The riverman finally said it, let the world hear. Bravo! That is still too smug, isn't it? Sorry!! Yes, the Conservative Right has found itself influential because of various reasons. Yes the Democrats are finding themselves disenfranchised and unorganized. No, the US has not suddenly shifted far to the right, and to claim that these election results reflects the opinions and morals of the majority of America is quite self-serving and inaccurate. And with that in mind, the Republicans are quite well-warned to consider their Liberal Democratic countrymen, as there are quite a few of us....practically the same amount, by last count, and we are finding the republicans smug alienation of us and our issues very disenfranchising. And as the Senate Majority leader of Tennessee (R) said: you pass the same people going down as you did coming up Again well said riverman, I have no problem with what you have said here, and indeed the elevator can go down real fast. Let the CFRs take heed!!!!!! And what does any of this have to do with Bush's horrific environmental policy? Well it has everything, if the CFRs had not won, the DUDs would have won! Then we would have been talking about they're plans for the environment, instead of President Bush's. But that is nor reality, and we are hear to deal with reality. BTW definition, DUD - Disenfranchised, unorganized, Dems. --riverman Thankyou for the discussion, we are in amazing agreement. But I would like to go back up in your post and examine your discussion of the Knesset. I have nothing to disagee with you on here either, I am not personally informed of the nature of the Knesset, except by the noble institution of higher education called the public news media, or as some call it, the boob tube. So, at least for this discussion I am more than willing to accept your description, and as far as I know would not be in disagreement with the media observations. Concerning the American political scene, I have heard that it is deeply divided to which I totally disagree. I figure, there are about 75-80% in the great center, with shadings this way or that, but generally very similar, and with common concerns. Around the fringes, are your ultras... whatever their particular issue is. Now, if you take this pie, and cut it in half, you will find half on one side and half on the other, but that does not mean that you have apple pie on one side, and peach on the other. We are much more homogenous than that. The politician game is to attract enough of the fringe to form a coalition government on his side, and all he needs, is 271 electoral votes. Oviously there are areas of difference, but if he wants to survive, he still has to listen to the majority, and not just the fringe. You mentioned the 3% Ultra orthodox, which holds such sway, which in Israel, a religious country, is not a surprise. Here though, I don't believe that the fundementalist are such a force. If than for no other reason, they are as fickle as any other voter, and more than a lot. They can change sides because they get ticked off over a indiscreet act, Nixson's swearing, or lack of acting, Carter's ineptness. Nixson was a Quaker?? Carter, was a born again Christian, but they jumped ship for an actor from the den of iniquity, Hollywood. When you figure that one out, let me know. Then there were a bunch that identified with Clinton, because he was a Christian, and did they get their pants embarassed off. So they swung back to the other side, and supported Bush. If I were Bush, I would sure be careful!!!!! It all sounds like shaky ground to build a legacy on. There are all kinds of issues swirling around in an election. One side takes a stand, to bait the other, and pretty soon you have this hubbub going on, and it may not even be around an issue that is important to either side. But you would never know from the noise. In the mean time, important issues lay lanquid on the table, crying for attention, and no one is listening! Politics is indeed strange. I really don't think that the missing explosives was a significant political issue, or stem cells, or even gay marriage. It was to some, the vocal, but not to the majority in the center. So many of these special interest appeal to a particular fringe. It would seem to me, if you could find the center, ignore the fringe, appeal to the true majority, you could win without scraping up the crumbs. There is nothing more sniveling than a crumb scraper. The coup of the CFR, is that there are Christians throughout the pie. They are not just on the fringe, or easily identified because they wear a certain hat or gown. Granted, there are some out there like that, but most are nondescript. The biggest mistake is to identify all the same, as Fundementalist. In fact by so doing, you perpetuate the myth. The myth is our strength. You give us the power of the 3%. Not that all Christians are fundementalist, but when someone speaks disparaging of one, or Lord help you a bunch, there is a whole lot more that will come swarming to their aid. After awhile the swarm achieves critical mass where they are coming faster than they are falling away, and so it grows. The solution is to certainly not continue making disparaging remarks. That just feeds the reaction. Now, I am a Christian, but I am not a Fundementalist. Do I believe in certain fundementals yes, but you would have a hard time finding many fundementalist that would feel comfortable setting down to a cup of coffee. And certainly by the end, they would be very uncomfortable. So, you want to get together for a cup of coffee? Thats for another discussion. Respectfully Tinkerntom, aka Knesisknosis Life, Live it! |
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