hubris that they had a mandate to do whatever the fuck they wanted?hubris that big government really is the answer?
11/3/2010 9:13:47 PM
Perhaps, it is an open ended question. Regardless of whether or not you agree with Obama, Reid, Pelosi et al, a strong case can be made that they utterly failed to explain their case to the American public.
11/3/2010 9:24:15 PM
11/3/2010 9:27:50 PM
11/3/2010 9:33:47 PM
11/3/2010 9:57:47 PM
To be quite honest, I think a lot of it was due to Fox News and their disinformation and general rhetoric. Most Tea Partiers Republicans don't really know what they're voting for, only that they're voting against Obama. I'm sure it's not all of them, but a large number of them cite incorrect information when asked about specific policies and when they are asked where they get their information they overwhelmingly reply "Fox News." I also saw a stat that said 23% of voters in this election were over the age of 65. A lot of older folk watch Fox News and as I'm sure anyone with grandparents can attest to, older people are generally more apt to be confused by the picture box.^ I don't think the Democrats lost the middle so much as the Republicans were extremely fired up and a lot of the people that went out to vote for Obama in '08 sat this one out. Seems like the middle was as exasperated as the Democrats base was. Two more years of extremely weak conservative leadership and that middle will be locked up as the new left-wing base.[Edited on November 3, 2010 at 10:02 PM. Reason : ]
11/3/2010 9:59:09 PM
http://www.thirdway.org/publications/348worth a read if you have the time
11/3/2010 10:04:07 PM
11/3/2010 10:05:27 PM
Repugnicans are stoopidDumbocrats hate America.blah blah blah.
11/3/2010 10:08:49 PM
11/3/2010 10:20:51 PM
11/3/2010 10:30:03 PM
Have you contemplated they sold the message as hard as they could and the people just stopped buying it?I mean, there is only so much "were going deeper in debt, were going to tax the rich, and health care reform will create jobs (wtf?)" that the public can take before they call BS.
11/3/2010 10:38:45 PM
I'm not really that amazed by it. The House is fickle and that's how it was set up to be. I think it's a pretty accurate representation of America at the moment. The Senate is still in Democratic control and that's an accurate portrayal of the past 3 election cycles.Personally, I think Republicans are better at winning election because just about every single one of them is willing to do and say anything to win (as opposed to Democrats who this only applies to like 75%).People didn't listen to the message because it wasn't sexy politics. Go back and listen to Obama try to explain why people should vote for Democrats again. It takes him at least two minutes to do the abridged version. It's all boring policy details and things that effect people in their lives behind the scenes. It's a very far cry from the, "Yes We Can" of 2008. That was a damn good message and it worked. The best slogan I heard from the Dems this year was "Don't give them back the keys." Getthefuckouttahere. Are you kidding me? I saw a town hall deal with Obama trying to sell that message and even he wasn't buying it. It's fucking lame and obviously playing on the young voters they're trying to grab.Whereas the Republicans were giving off the message of "Vote out the incumbents." Well, just so fucking happens that a majority of incumbents are Democrats this year. They used the Tea Party as a front to deflect any attacks that the Republicans were incumbents and with the exception of a few races, it worked. Were it not for Sarah Palin and her dumb meddling ass, they would possibly have taken the Senate. Republicans are excellent at winning elections.[Edited on November 3, 2010 at 10:52 PM. Reason : ]
11/3/2010 10:44:31 PM
^^^ you're overestimating the average voter.And it's not just the kenyan thing, it's the idea that he's a muslim, and the he also hates white people. And the idea Obama is a muslim has grown over time, not faded, like the belief in the 9/11 conspiracy. This coincides with the rise of the tea party.It's easy to think other people believe things for the same reason that you do, but this is simply not the case. The average soap boxer is more informed and more intelligent than the average american (i'm probably even a little conservative with my estimate there). The average American doesn't ascribe deeper philosophies to their political opponents or the people they support like we do, they boil it down to simple phrases (that person wants a terrorist mosque at ground zero, that person wants to take our guns, that person loves Jesus, that person is secretly a kenyan born muslim that hates white people, etc.).You and I might just think this is political pandering, but there are people out there, large amounts of people, who take this seriously.Just think how dumb we are, and then imagine that the vast majority of people are dumber than us. It's scary, isn't it?Overall, i'm actually content that the power is split between democrats/republicans. I think Rand Paul is less intelligent than his father, but he's far better than the average politician. What scares me is that people like Ellmers, Palin, Bachmann, Christine ODonnel, Paladino, and many others are gaining prominence and recognition in mainstream politics (worse yet, Palin is probably the most tolerable of that bunch).[Edited on November 3, 2010 at 10:47 PM. Reason : ]
11/3/2010 10:47:03 PM
11/3/2010 11:08:54 PM
you people
11/3/2010 11:17:50 PM
there's a difference between CNN and the other network news organizations being somewhat left of center and Fox being right.even if we ignore that the CNN/network leftward bias is subtle and sometimes barely detectable while Fox's is blatant and in-your-face.because Fox actively engages in purposeful disinformation. and multitudes of examples abound. it's really pathetic.as for the left biased media, MSNBC is the worst offender and even they are not the maliciously deceptive shills that is Fox News.
11/4/2010 11:54:21 AM
11/4/2010 11:57:49 AM
Chris Cillizza of the WaPo is reporting a 36 point shift in the independent vote from (D) to (R) . . . that is rather substantial in only two years.
11/4/2010 12:07:16 PM
11/4/2010 1:28:45 PM
11/4/2010 3:19:13 PM