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The Think Tank with 50-ish op-ed pieces on Sanders' appeal. Time for a fresh thread. Many of those comments are 500+ words, and tight at that, coming from subject matter experts (including four people who have worked significantly on campaigns, a lawyer, and a dozen people smarter than they are). ... ;- )
Dr. D used to fret about how long Konspiracy Korner could run its course before trolls ruined it for everybody. But the exchanges are actually getting even better: more cool-minded, richer, more diverse.
Okay then. I think I got a good feel for Bernie Sanders' appeal to college kids: We All Wanna Change the World. (But if you go carryin' pictures of Chairman Mao, you ain't gonna make it with anyone any-howwwwww...) Maybe the "raw nerve" Sanders (and Trump) are touching is not income redistribution, but real disgust with Washington D.C and the way it stands on the pitcher's mound and "laughs into its glove" the voters. I can buy that, and on a macro level.
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Q1. However, I didn't get my first question answered. :- ) What is your response to Bill O'Reilly's charge that Sanders' campaign is a "phony deal"? and that the NYT crowd stands to blame for this? If it's a "phony deal" in ANY sense, I don't understand who gains by it. Please put on your "impartial observer" hat and just explain this to me.
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Q2. Also, it was proposed that the DNC and RNC have little power at this point. This kind of makes sense. Whoever the power brokers are, Trump and Sanders have pushed past them based on support from American voters. Power to the People, babe.
But! When Rubio says "they told me to wait my turn," I honestly don't get who "they" are if we're not talking about the RNC. My understanding was that Hillary stepped back, 8 years ago, with the understanding it was "her turn" this cycle.
WHO was this understanding with? When the Clintons or Bushes cut a deal to assign pole positions in this or that cycle, who shakes hands and signs off? I had imagined that the chair of the DNC has the lead in jelling a consensus among the power brokers, acting in that sense as a de facto sports commissioner. (Of course he who controls the money doesn't control EVERYthing in American politics, but it's a lot easier to work with him than without him.)
In any case, if it's not the chairs of the RNC and DNC who liaison these back-room understandings, bringing money to bear on their Petted Favorites, I'd be interested to know how it works.
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POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES
LR, Padna, Moe Dawg, Diderot and others had a neat cut-and-thrust on special interest money. Dr. D does NOT think that we threaten the fabric of free speech by putting some reasonable checks-and-balances on the Robber Barons when they get out of hand. Neither did Thomas Jefferson or John Quincy Adams, I don' think.
We agree, at the far left and right ends of the spectrum, that
(1) There is such a thing as abuse of power, and that it is appropriate for our society to deal with it when we pass the tipping point.
(2) Microsoft has a right to participate in our process just like you and I do.
But:
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Q3. Can you tell me, in like 25 words, exactly how you would reform campaign finance?
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Here's an example of the problem that Diderot brought up. Donald Trump, on Friday, claimed that the U.S. could cut $300 billion per year from its budget, simply by --- > buying drugs from Big Pharma more efficiently, through bulk purchases etc. But Pfizer's* lobbyists line the pockets of Congressmen to prevent this from occurring.
Moe, Padna, other amigos who believe that Sanders and Trump are mischaracterizing the problems, is that specific example feasible? Would so many U.S. congressmen really play party to this kind of "scam?" It's easy for us all to yell bloody murder against Big Phrama; it's harder to deal with a real-world example, because a Senator would certainly have an intelligent reply to this accusation.
LR & amigos, supposing it were true. Exactly how do you prevent this? It's tough to legislate morality, ain't it. Whatever rules are put in place, people can find a way to circumvent the spirit of the law.
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EDITOR'S CHOICE
It's like choosing who goes on Mariners Mt. Rushmore. But Dr. D will honor his fave post from the first thread. :- ) Doesn't imply that I agree or disagree with it. Just a round of applause for a well-stated, interesting take.
Seattle Outsider
THIS [in reference to Grizzly's frustration with lobbyists' influence].
It's all about the money. I get the feeling on both sides of the aisle that the "common people" (or "we the people" on the right) are tired of big powers control our country (whether corporate on the left or government on the right). A few controlling the policy of the nation to benefit themselves.
Free trade deals are seen as cheap goods and services from large corporate owners, taking away jobs from the average American. Piles of profits following loopholes made by Congress out of American coffers and into the pockets of the powerful, with politicians that play along on both sides.
There is a growing opinion in this country that the deck is not stacked fairly (both right and left point out different instances of this) - so it is not about what level of poverty you have relative to the rich and powerful. It is about a perceived notion that the common folk are not as important or valuable.
Commit theft as a rich man? Slap on the wrist and a fine. Commit theft as a poor man? Welcome to jail. Want into the best schools? It helps if your dad went there and also sent you to the best preschool money can buy (or it helps it you are a minority in the opinion of the right). Executive of a large company? Enjoy numerous tax benefits, earn a giant bonus by moving and automating the jobs on the bottom of the period or through deceiving marketing/sales. Average worker? See your job shipped overseas, ask for a raise and be called ungrateful, lose you job and land on welfare and be called a parasite.
This is not a statement of facts, it is a statement of perception. So what we're seeing in American politics right now is the anti-establishment candidates swelling in popularity on both sides. Whoever has been in charge ain't doing it right (both sides), so elect someone who hasn't been in charge. Hence, Bernie on the left, Trump/Cruz/et al in the right.
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Following on just a bit: Hillary's e-mail scandal has been the dominant story in the news for some weeks now. Coming up at just such a political moment (hmmmm.....) it is an extremely visible example of what Seattle Outsider is talking about. You and I would be instantly fired for putting secret military documents on our home computers, and when caught we would be very fearful of prison. But Hillary (who I sort of like on a personal level) seems to be genuinely surprised that she's even getting as much push-back as she's had. Cruz, Rubio, and Trump continue to take it as a given that she'll still be the Democratic nominee.
We all have a sense of this double standard on both sides of the aisle. But it takes a few easy-to-understand situations like this to indeed mobilize voters.
SPEAKING IN GENERAL TERMS again: the American people put up with a whale of a lot. Mosques that are suspect, Corporations that exploit people, Double standards on how France talks to us vs. how we can talk to them. But! Some people then get to thinking that the American people have NO point at which they will react. Many people, Americans and foreigners, don't realize that when you crash your planes into the Twin Towers, we're done putting up with you.
Enjoy,
Jeff