It's not true?
Well, shit. I thought it was cool that they would do so... — creativesoul
No worries. It would be cool though. — creativesoul
Well that certainly proves you read right-wing trash. Not that there was doubt.
...pledging to increase access to capital in Black communities by nearly $500 billion...
Good to see the GOP spending their time upon what's most important right now...
Nevermind eliminating and/or at least easing all of the economic, emotional, and physical injury to everyday Americans as a result of the pandemic, which was not at all a result of anything that the average citizen has done, but is most certainly the result of government.
Aren't these fears a little too... well... crazy? If Trump loses, he loses. The biggest problem is surely American patriotism. A vote against a sitting President, even one as demonstrably moronic and owned as Bush Jr, is no sure thing. — Kenosha Kid
The Trump-campaign legal adviser I spoke with told me the push to appoint electors would be framed in terms of protecting the people’s will. Once committed to the position that the overtime count has been rigged, the adviser said, state lawmakers will want to judge for themselves what the voters intended.
“The state legislatures will say, ‘All right, we’ve been given this constitutional power. We don’t think the results of our own state are accurate, so here’s our slate of electors that we think properly reflect the results of our state,’ ” the adviser said. Democrats, he added, have exposed themselves to this stratagem by creating the conditions for a lengthy overtime.
“If you have this notion,” the adviser said, “that ballots can come in for I don’t know how many days—in some states a week, 10 days—then that onslaught of ballots just gets pushed back and pushed back and pushed back. So pick your poison. Is it worse to have electors named by legislators or to have votes received by Election Day?”
The narrative seems to be that mail in ballots "rig the election" in a close call, so that launders support for the Republicans making that anti-democratic power play. — fdrake
in person voting is deemed to skew in favour of Republicans — fdrake
The problem is an electorate that can see what's happening and still vote him into a position where he can contest an election and the SC potential could read the result as a win for Trump. — Kenosha Kid
Well, there's more than one problem then. Whether people are stupid is a different concern from encroaching fascism and the risk of it. — fdrake
The problem is an electorate that can see what's happening and still vote him into a position where he can contest an election and the SC potential could read the result as a win for Trump. — Kenosha Kid
The system could be better, but I think it protects against outright fascism, although it's easy to see how that can be inverted over time. If and when fascism properly takes hold, it won't be some dark coup: the people will vote it in. That's what I'd bet on were I betting man. — Kenosha Kid
We had a similar thing in the UK with Brexit. The leavers won 51:49%. Because David Gammeron was too thickly cut to consider the possibility that the majority might be comparable to the sort of result variance that would be time-averaged out, we were stuck unable to contest what ought to have been a highly contestable result. — Kenosha Kid
So if Republicans didnt do anything else, they have already succeeded in creating fear and confusion which works in their favor. They have given some the impression that it's either risk getting covid (which will be death for some) or don't bother voting. As Hanover points out, it's politics. — frank
We had a similar thing in the UK with Brexit. The leavers won 51:49%. Because David Gammeron was too thickly cut to consider the possibility that the majority might be comparable to the sort of result variance that would be time-averaged out, we were stuck unable to contest what ought to have been a highly contestable result.
So if Republicans didnt do anything else, they have already succeeded in creating fear and confusion which works in their favor. They have given some the impression that it's either risk getting covid (which will be death for some) or don't bother voting. As Hanover points out, it's politics. — frank
don't buy it. If the postal vote is more significant this year, I think that makes it much less likely that the SC will dismiss it. — Kenosha Kid
A Republican acquaintance thinks the GOP will be looking for technicalities that were overlooked in years past. She will vote in person because she wants to "make sure they get my vote." I think a conservative SC would steer clear of the bigger picture and focus on minutiae. — frank
I wonder how they'll rationalise fending off any challenge to Trump's election, which would be the obvious response. The use and misuse of voting machines in 2016 was astounding. — Kenosha Kid
It is common to blame Trump in undermining the trust in the integrity of the upcoming elections, and, consequently, destroying democracy. It is impossible to deny that Trump plays politics of fear and replaces rational political conviction by the appeal to inchoate feelings and emotions. Yet , we must admit that another side shares equal responsibility. Thus, Hillary Clinton called Biden not to concede ‘under any circumstances'. Also, on August 3rd, TIP, primarily pro-Biden institute, published report. It should be considered as the self-fulfilling prophecy information operation: any result of the elections will probably be regarded as illegitimate and lead to civil unrest.Casting doubt on the election result at all prior to the election constitutes election meddling. And Trump is a fascist, that is clear. — Kenosha Kid
It is common to blame Trump in undermining the trust in the integrity of the upcoming elections, and, consequently, destroying democracy. It is impossible to deny that Trump plays politics of fear and replaces rational political conviction by the appeal to inchoate feelings and emotions. Yet , we must admit that another side shares equal responsibility. Thus, Hillary Clinton called Biden not to concede ‘under any circumstances'. Also, on August 3rd, TIP, primarily pro-Biden institute, published report. — Number2018
What are you saying here? That when the POTUS declares he will contest the election if he loses, he intends to discount votes that don't tend to go the desired way, he even incites his own voters to commit voter fraud, everyone else has to pretend that it's going to be business as usual? — Kenosha Kid
I am not saying that it is going to be business as usual. I am saying that all sides play politics of fear and affect: there is almost no place for reasoned positions built around rational interests. — Number2018
You're not the only one that made the mistake, some newspapers seem to have made the error also. The building is is next to George Square and hence it is named 40 George Square, which is right next to 50 George Square.My mistake. The university cites the killing of George Floyd in the same statement regarding the renaming to George square. I made a false connection. — NOS4A2
(See article)'His (Hume's) views served without doubt to fortify the institution of racialised slavery in the later eighteenth and early nineteenth century.
'More importantly, the fact that he was involved in the slave trade is now a matter of record. He was not deferential to social convention and he was aware of the widespread denunciation of slavery by his contemporaries.
'Anyone possessed of Hume's talents would recognise the obvious enormity of slavery. But Hume endorsed slavery; indeed, he justified it.
You and others didn't get my point, but anyway, must be my walnut-sized brain.I can see how it would be difficult to consider two facts together if you have a walnut-sized brain. — Maw
Yet hard to understand why this urge to divide people, to make an event that had widespread condemnation at first into a polarized issue. — ssu
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