I was talking about income there, as apparently the mean personal income (which I approximately make) falls at around the 75th percentile of personal incomes, i.e. 75% of people make less than that.
About Elizabeth Warren... as great a candidate as she may indeed be... when would it become advantageous to the “progressive movement” (for lack of a better term) for her to clear the way for Sanders, and to unite forces?
— 0 thru 9
March 3rd is my guess: the day after Super Tuesday (unless, of course, she emerges with the most delegates, then Bernie should "clear the way" for her ...) — 180 Proof
Saving 1/3 of your income is really good. Bravo. — BitconnectCarlos
I don't know how much houses cost in your area — BitconnectCarlos
I was talking about income there, as apparently the mean personal income (which I approximately make) falls at around the 75th percentile of personal incomes, i.e. 75% of people make less than that. — Pfhorrest
What's so essential about a house and a car? You don't need either to find someone to love, or to raise a family.
— Xtrix
You need a home big enough for two people to live in if they're going to be a family, even if they're not planning on having kids (which we're not). — Pfhorrest
We're scraping by because she lives with family on super-discounted rent and I own a tiny one-room mobile home in a shitty trailer park that's also rent-controlled; when either of us visits the other, we can at most bring a backpack full of stuff to the other's place, and even that just sits on the floor in the way and constantly needs to be moved to get about, so there's no way we could actually live together on a long-term basis unless one of us was just living out of a backpack indefinitely. — Pfhorrest
An apartment big enough for two would leave us scraping by paycheck-to-paycheck, not saving anything for the future, and so when we're too old to have paychecks to pay toward that rent anymore, would leave us out on the street. The interest alone on a mortgage on the cheapest available house in the area would be just as bad, never mind paying down the principle. — Pfhorrest
Anyway, I wasn't meaning originally to contradict your point, but to emphasize that things were even worse than you're already making them out to be, to double down on your original point. — Pfhorrest
Mortgaging a house is in many ways the better alternative because you are at least paying down the mortgage and building equity as opposed to simply giving away money every month and owning nothing. — Xtrix
How so? — 180 Proof
(I live just down the street from his presidential library — 180 Proof
but when it's not my personal fault that I can't afford to stay here, and the vast majority of my compatriots, the hundreds of thousands of people who can afford to live here even less than me, aren't getting out first, I'm not just going to accept defeat.
A home in the sense of some kind of dwelling place, yes. Not necessarily a house. — Xtrix
Once you get to the second round and the superdelegates take over, Bernie is certain to be screwed.
— fishfry
Explain why you think this is true. I don't see it. — Xtrix
What happened in 1972? — Pfhorrest
I moved (back) to Atlanta in 2015. However, looking forward to relocating to Portland, Oregon this fall. Left coast "blue state" for the duration - putting down roots finally. — 180 Proof
By 1972 the leftists took back the party and nominated George McGovern. Nixon got reelected in a historic landslide, winning 49 out of the 50 states. — fishfry
This was nearly 50 years ago, under vastly different conditions and with a set of voters who are now mostly dead. Not at all analogous. — Maw
Tell it to the DNC insiders plotting to stab Bernie in the back. 1972 is very much in the minds of the Dem insiders. I'm not making this stuff up. It's in the news. I can assure you that the professionals who run the campaigns are acutely aware of historical precedents. — fishfry
Apt analysis, which reminds me of a couple of maxims: "History doesn't repeat itself but it often rhymes" & "Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce"; and the status quo "insiders" attempting to ham-fistedly avoid the rhyming farce will inadvertantly double-down on national tragedy. :shade:In 1968 the centrists won and the Dems nominated centrist Hubert Humphrey, who had even refused to come out against the Vietnam war. The leftists were marching against the war every day.
Humphrey lost to Richard Nixon in what was at that time the closest election history.
By 1972 the leftists took back the party and nominated George McGovern. Nixon got reelected in a historic landslide, winning 49 out of the 50 states.
Hillary is Humphrey, the centrist beating back the challenge from Bernie in 2016; and Bernie, if he wins, would be McGovern. The Democratic party powers that be are damned if they are going to let that happen. No other candidate can win. That leaves Bloomie as the great centrist hope. — fishfry
it's a vapid analogy — Maw
The Atlantic article, which I did happen to read early today, despite offering a simplistic overview, unequivocally concludes that the analogy is not valid (despite the clickbait headline). Did you actually read the article? — Maw
I don’t understand those who decry “big business” and lobbying. The only reason people buy out politicians and bureaucrats is because politicians and bureaucrats can be bought. We should decry the politicians and bureaucrats for setting the conditions. If they didn’t accept bribes and certain lobbying that sort of business would become untenable within a few years. — NOS4A2
the candidate with the most votes should receive the nominatio — Maw
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