[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: Does It Even Matter Who Wins the Presidency in 2016? As the crazy protracted carnival of the presidential election rolls forward with ever more outrageous rhetoric, spin, downright lies, and "gotcha" moments, it bears remembering whats on television usually has little to do with reality. For example, despite the blanket television coverage of the killing 129 Parisians by Islamist terrorists, the average Americans chances of ever getting killed by an international terrorist is lower than getting struck by lightning. In fact, Americans statistically have a greater chance of getting killed by disgruntled domestic reactionaries (for example, the shooter at Planned Parenthood) than they do by radical Islamists. The U.S. political campaign is likewise filled with made-for-TV illusions. Journalists, believing optimistically that political campaigns, and their distorted coverage of them, do matter, focus excessively on the horse race of whos coming on and whos fading rather than on the issues or the underlying forces driving an election. Experts on campaigns in universities focus on these underlying forces. It is certainly not out of the realm of possibility that the Republicans could win the presidency in 2016, although the last odds in Las Vegas that I saw on the election (a surprisingly good predictor of past elections) had the Democratic candidate 57-43 edge to win. That is because changing demographics have transferred the intrinsic Electoral College advantage from the Republicans to the Democrats. Also, the Democrats have won the popular vote in five out of the last six presidential elections. This advantage will only increase in the future, as white males continue to shrink as a portion of the population. Also, Donald Trump seems to be hastening the Republican Partys demise by highlighting the immigration issue, which the partys establishment wanted to bury to avoid alienating the fastest growing minority in the country. With birthright citizenship guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, if Republicans wanted to do something to stifle illegal immigration or immigration period they should have done so a couple of generations back. Hispanics have become a growing political force in the voting booth. In other words, regardless of the merits of the immigration issue, politically Republicans seemed to be fighting a battle that has already been lost and shooting themselves in the head while doing so. In Congress and the states, a trend opposite that of presidential elections has occurred; the Republicans control both house of Congress and more and more state governments. However, unfortunately for Republicans and the intentions of the nations founders, over time, power in the United States has shifted away from the states to the federal government and, within the federal government, from the Congress to the president. Thus nowadays, we essentially elect an imperial president but then term limit him or her to eight years. A presidents term can be effectively extended if he or she can get his chosen successor elected (Ronald Reagan was the last to do so in 1988; Bill Clinton almost pulled it off in 2000, except the real state-by-state electoral college election reminded Americans that we dont have a national presidential election). This reality conforms to the election experts conclusion that the presidential election is not usually between two candidates but is instead a referendum on the performance of the administration in currently in power. So voters really will be voting on Obamas record, not the Democratic and Republican candidates running in 2016. What is that record? Both progressives and conservatives will be in denial when the policy record is examined, and it is found that the progressive Obamas record on major policy issues is similar to another recent president the allegedly conservative George W. Bush. Obama was supposed to end Bushs quagmires in Afghanistan and Iraq. U.S. troops will remain in Afghanistan, with the potential of re-escalation when the Taliban begins to again overrun the country (as it already has begun to do). U.S. re-escalation has already begun to occur in Iraq after the Bush-created ISIS began to overrun that country and neighboring Syria. The president has begun attacking Syria and is under Republican pressure to escalate there as well. Obama, not learning anything from Bushs idiotic toppling of Saddam Hussein, overthrew Muammar Gaddafi in Libya again predictably bringing chaos, mayhem, and terrorist sanctuaries and unbelievably is still campaigning for the ouster of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Obama not only continued Bushs illegal and unconstitutional drone wars in several countries outside of Afghanistan, but escalated them, creating yet more terrorist enemies for the U.S. to fight. Also, despite his determination to be a civil liberties president in the wake of Bushs expansion of the illegal surveillance state, torture, and abuse of constitutional rights, Obama continued many of the same policies, except for ending torture. In budgetary matters, Bush spent more domestically than any president since Lyndon Johnson, and Obama continued the spending binge with his giant pork-barrel stimulus program to attempt to trick the country out of its Bush-induced Great Recession. During that recession, Bush bailed out "too-big-to fail" banks, socialized the AIG insurance giant, and finished socializing the failing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage lenders. Obama followed Bushs bailing out of sick U.S. auto makers with a round of his own socialism with government takeovers of Chrysler and General Motors. Combined with his massive domestic and war spending increases, Bush initiated huge tax cuts during a war, thus exploding federal budget deficits to record levels; Obama continued most of Bushs tax cuts but has gradually reduced the budget deficit. Although during post-World War II presidencies, the American economy has performed much better during the Democratic administrations, perhaps the reason is counterintuitive. Contrary to politicians rhetoric and popular perception, Democratic presidents have generally had more conservative spending policies that actually slowed government spending growth as a percentage of GDP more than did Republicans and have had lower budget deficits than their Republican counterparts. Obamas lame economic recovery might have been better had he followed the more fiscally conservative policies of his Democratic predecessors. To cover a greater percentage of the American population with health care insurance, long a gleam in the eye of Democrats, Obama did so inefficiently by creating the Obamacare monstrosity that created a government guaranteed market for insurance companies products by requiring near-poor people to buy such health insurance but not subsidizing the full cost of the coverage. Even if adding people to the health insurance rolls was a government responsibility, more efficient and less costly ways of doing it were available. But Bush didnt do much better in health care, creating the first new entitlement program since Lyndon Johnsons Great Society by adding a costly prescription drug coverage benefit to a Medicare system that was already in deep financial trouble all this to get political points with seniors, the wealthiest age group in the American population. Bush continued the federalization of education, traditionally the responsibility of state and local governments, with his "No Child Left Behind" policy that rewarded schools for doing well on federally standardized tests. So far, Obama has continued this ill-advised federalization process. So despite the political theater of overheated rhetoric by both political parties on the campaign trail and in Washington, when governing, both parties come up with similar policies mostly detrimental to the country. Unsurprisingly, in a two-party system, the parties behave as do two giant companies when they are the only competitors in an industry (called a duopoly) they pretend to compete but collude under the table. This phenomenon happens behind-the-scenes frequently in Washington and will continue no matter who wins the presidency in 2016 with voters becoming justifiably angrier and angrier. However, without systematic reforms that would require amendments to the Constitution, the voters will get more of the same. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Yes, it matters. It's a diet of bread and water for 4 years vs one of just water :-8
So which party is which?
Neither, but Prez Trump will I predict offer Wonder Bread and everybody will call it a trip to Delmonico's.
Unless Trump is elected, no, it will make zero difference. He's the only one who is not bought, paid-for, and controlled. The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
Well, not entirely :-)
Trump, in my eyes, is a ringer. He knows the outlandish shit he's saying won't fly with the MSM, and without their support, you aren't going to win. He's trashing the GOP. He doesn't want to win, he's running interference for the Clintons.
Heretic :-3
He didn't have to join the (R)s to run this kind of campaign. He could have just as easily done it as a (D) or (I). (and no, those are not Hillary's ass cheeks.)
pshaw A rainbow coalition against Jews doesn't require Whites or Pro-Whites. It can be just as brown or anti-white as you like.
Because, you know, Reagan had so much MSM support. He's trashing the GOP. The GOP trashed itself. That lots of white folk are supporting Trump is the GOP's fault for not supporting white folk. He didn't have to join the (R)s to run this kind of campaign. He might yet run as an independent, but the Republican party is the default party for white people, so running as an (R) makes a helluva lot more sense than running as a (D). A rainbow coalition against Jews doesn't require Whites or Pro-Whites. It can be just as brown or anti-white as you like.
You weren't brain dead last time I was here. What happened? ;)
A rainbow coalition against Jews doesn't require Whites or Pro-Whites. It can be just as brown or anti-white as you like.
As long as the person kisses jew land ass and do what they are told.
You may be correct, but I don't think so. I think Trump's serious about wanting to win. He's spending his own money and he seems way too strong a personality to be willing to be used for what he knows will be the destruction of this country. Hell, the fact that he's killed Jeb is a huge plus!
You're right; Trump's not jerking around with this. If they don't kill him, he will be our next POTUS.
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
We tried a party switch here in SC. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Conley If Trump thinks he can go independent and make it to election day, he doesn't know his precious Jues very well. I really don't think he's very deep at all.
If just 1 in 7 professedly conservative republicans in South Carolina had had the integrity to vote for the truly conservative Bob Conley in 2008, Lady Lindsay Graham would be unemployed today.
|
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|