10/16/2019 12:11:05 PM
So Beto, Tulsi and Castro are not advancing to the next debate yet. I want Tulsi.
10/16/2019 2:57:42 PM
10/16/2019 3:32:46 PM
https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/16/politics/elizabeth-warren-medicare-for-all/index.html
10/16/2019 7:52:49 PM
https://twitter.com/aaronblake/status/1185161952374542336?s=21See, part of me just wants Biden to go away and drop out because this nonsense is just playing into Trump grievance bullshit. But the other part of me knows the right and the MSM (because of the hack gap) will absolute pull this on any one of the candidates whether or not there is a story there and allowing them to do it is just capitulation.If you are a Warren fan, Sanders fan or any other the right WILL get the MSM to bite on a story about your candidate. Just hope they have the guts and wherewithal to tell them to fuck off. In all honesty, from what I’ve see, the only campaign that would have the balls to do that is Bernie’s.[Edited on October 18, 2019 at 8:00 AM. Reason : X]
10/18/2019 7:59:29 AM
if you want a laugh, look at what buttigieg said about m4a before and after healthcare lobbyists bought his campaign
10/18/2019 8:21:55 AM
10/18/2019 9:29:58 AM
10/18/2019 9:50:49 AM
^Well of course they changed it after being called out and exposed but what kind of new source edits stories after release them? no credible one. and if these aren't intentional, why do they always seem to be in favor of their own narrative and against bernie?Also, how low can Hillary go? The most shameful loser of all time.
10/19/2019 1:55:32 PM
10/19/2019 3:57:30 PM
Pretty sure it takes credibility and accountability to print a retraction. As apposed Trump and his far-right media propaganda machine who lean into their lies after being called out.
10/19/2019 11:38:03 PM
Huge rally for Sanders today, 25k people
10/20/2019 12:21:24 AM
The point is that real journalism involves a strict editing and vetting process that takes place before information is put out. Having to retract something after potentially millions of people read it and processed it as fact should be considered a complete failure. People don't usually return to articles multiple times after reading them once so the damage is done. These large media outlets have entire teams of editors who should be reading articles and carefully checking their accuracy before anything goes out. This means they are either a.) entirely incompetent in terms of editing or b.)intentionally spreading misinformation knowing that they can retract it later and still retain credibility with their viewers. This is a long time pattern from MSM and people who don't align with the agenda of their mistakes know this. Trump, of course took advantage of this environment by using it to completely discredit the media and replace it with his own set of "alternative facts. Media integrity was eroded enough that the Trump crowd could easily throw it all out of the window in favor of Trump's lies.You can't view the #FAKENEWS trend as a two way battle. Just because Trump is fighting against these media outlets doesn't mean you have to blindly support their faults. Holding them accountable would actually erode away the ground Trump's entire strategy stands on.
10/20/2019 12:52:48 AM
I’m worried about sanders heart issues. Odds are very against him
10/20/2019 2:18:18 AM
rEtTRaCTiOnS aRe bAd[Edited on October 20, 2019 at 10:25 AM. Reason : ^ common procedure, clinton had it done in his 60's]
10/20/2019 10:24:33 AM
What kind of person who’s working to undercover the facts and truth would publicly admit they made a mistake ‘after-the fact’?What world am I living in where it’s OK to admit to making a mistake and then correcting it???
10/20/2019 1:07:00 PM
Tulsi is a real-life Captain Marvel. Her war against Hillary heats up.
10/20/2019 2:59:03 PM
Its hard to tell who is being disingenuous so i'll just assume everyone is sincere and that my point was not clearly communicated. The problem is not that they admit to publishing a mistake and retract it. The problem is that they continue to publish these mistakes in the first place. Anyone who watched the debate would have been able to catch that mistake before giving it the go ahead. This isn't some internet message-board. Journalistic integrity involves an effective editing process before anything is published. For an article like this, someone on the editing team would read that part and pull up the clip from the debate to verify that the quote was written word for word. At that point, they would have easily noticed that it was inaccurate. Somehow, this process broke down or was non-existent. What would have happened if the public hadn't seen the debate and been able to call out the mistake?Its like if someone does something to you that they regret and apologize but then continue to do the same thing and continue to apologize. At some point, you realize that the apology itself is insincere. Retractions are meaningless if they aren't taking action to prevent them from being needed in the future.[Edited on October 20, 2019 at 3:45 PM. Reason : it gives the impression that they aren't really sorry.... but they are sorry they got caught]
10/20/2019 3:43:22 PM
TSB is basically unreadable with these guys ^ ^ everywhere
10/21/2019 3:59:51 AM
10/21/2019 7:57:21 AM
sanders: still kiling it fundraising, good performance in the debate, hosts the largest campaign event, collects important endorsementnbc:https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/bernie-sanders-struggles-rebound-staffing-strategy-health-n1068571lol
10/21/2019 8:50:02 AM
despicable use of right-wing talking points from klobuchar:https://twitter.com/thehill/status/1186098527211929600
10/21/2019 8:59:58 AM
^^ He's raising more money than his competitors (notably from regular people, not from huge donors iircc) yet he's losing in the polls?
10/21/2019 10:05:04 AM
he's also still polling well
10/21/2019 10:15:27 AM
got it, classic selective polling to fit your narrative.
10/21/2019 11:31:31 AM
He's still top 3, hes just stagnant compared to Warren. It also looks like that article cherry picked his worst national poll from the last few weeks. And they went way back to September for the NH poll. More recent polls show a much closer race there. So its selective use of polls, yes, but by nbc[Edited on October 21, 2019 at 11:53 AM. Reason : E]
10/21/2019 11:43:42 AM
Polls are just a snapshot in time, are not betting odds, change as new information comes in, etc, etc.But you’re right in that Bernie has essentially been at 15 since late April in the RCP average. Biden was at his peak of 43 then. I’d say Bernie’s biggest problem is that practically NONE of the 15% that abandoned Biden in that time have broken towards Sanders and almost all have broken to Warren.I understand Bernie supporters don’t even want or like centrist Biden voters but he also NEEDS them to win a Democratic primary.[Edited on October 21, 2019 at 12:53 PM. Reason : X]
10/21/2019 12:51:57 PM
10/21/2019 12:59:49 PM
10/21/2019 1:06:30 PM
https://twitter.com/JulianCastro/status/1186297637823234049Castro on verge of dropping out?
10/21/2019 2:57:50 PM
so the bernies will vote for warren and the bidens will vote for warren. whats the problem?[Edited on October 21, 2019 at 3:35 PM. Reason : simple]
10/21/2019 3:33:42 PM
dab!
10/21/2019 3:35:45 PM
bernie bros are really annoying and dumb.
10/21/2019 3:38:18 PM
What are your opinions on anything other than how me and dtr and others are shitty? I'm sure you've expressed some, but 99% of your posts seem to be short comments about how someone, usually a tdubber, is dumb.[Edited on October 21, 2019 at 4:44 PM. Reason : E]
10/21/2019 4:44:05 PM
10/21/2019 6:52:39 PM
So this weekend I had a chance to catch up with some friends I haven't seen in a while. One comes from a pretty heavy democrat family and the other is fairly right wing, and was strongly against Clinton.While they both despise Trump, and refuse to vote for him, they also said they would abstain from voting if either Bernie or Warren were to win. The conservative, actually plans to vote for Sanford or something, but I asked the democrat why and he isn't a fan of the strong anti-business takes both of them have. It was really interesting to hear since this is a concern I have but not so much so that I would abstain from voting. But overall the conversation concerned me because even people who claim to despise Trump and want him out of office immediately, who are both even fans of impeachment, may not vote this time around. Sure it is a small sample, but it was 100% of the people with whom I was present and definitely makes me question the strength of a democratic turnout.
10/22/2019 9:59:47 AM
10/22/2019 10:12:11 AM
Lol, anti-business
10/22/2019 10:42:24 AM
It means that there are policies of both those campaigns that conflict with both macro and micro economic theory, such as talking points about forcing companies, e.g. GM, to hire back and increase the wages of employees, when in fact the issue with GM is that there was no demand for the products those workers were building. It means they have approaches that even conflict with behavioral economics, when considering whether or not the plan could work on a personal incentive model, such as having employees vote for who sits on the board, as if those people are going to be equally versed in running a company or as if these appointed people's objectives and goals won't change once how they are being incentivized changes. It means they have policies that are designed with the intent of being punitive for businesses for the sake of pointing businesses as a boogey man or the problem with our social structure, such as breaking up businesses for the sake or breaking them up because those businesses are vaguely too big, despite the fact that those companies do not currently break any established laws around monopoly or compete practices. Basically, it means exactly what was said. Both of those candidates have policies that weaken businesses as a major part of their platform.
10/22/2019 10:43:18 AM
I'm for stakeholders (which employees often are) of companies (of a certain size at least) having some say on who runs them. I don't think it should be mandated for all companies (small businesses already often do a better job of serving those employee stakeholders when there aren't layers and layers of management between workers and senior management), and Bernie's policy already only applies to companies with > $100M annual revenue. I'm also not sure I feel Bernie's proposed 45% of board positions being elected by workers is the right balance, but it's not a dealbreaker for me
10/22/2019 11:06:53 AM
Not every company has a board, especially smaller ones, so with that I believe the threshold for board approval will apply to larger, and likely publicly traded companies. I'm not sure there is a good justification for the employees to have a say, when really it is the owners of the business (shareholders) who are responsible for determining how a business is run.And while I see your point by rephrasing my position in the terms of democracy, I'd say that there isn't a solid argument for businesses to be a democracy. Thus, the same rules need not apply. I'd also say the comparison is small since businesses are developed to generate a profit and government is betterment o the people. In this case I would say that the people may not be the best to identify how to generate a profit, but they are reasonable source for how people should be governed.
10/22/2019 11:27:24 AM
i too have questions about this anti strong anti business voter. would you describe them as low information?
10/22/2019 11:42:19 AM
10/22/2019 12:20:10 PM
It was more a statement around how I could see a logical argument for shareholders because they own the company and are at least therefore responsible for how the company should be run. I don't see a valid case for run of the mill employees.
10/22/2019 12:40:27 PM
But employees, whose livelihoods depend on the well-being of the company, aren't responsible for how the company should be run?
10/22/2019 1:02:30 PM
Workers with no financial stake other than salary are already running businesses all over the country. Yes, the owners and stakeholders ultimately have the final say, but they are usually not the ones overseeing day-to-day operations.
10/22/2019 1:14:18 PM
10/22/2019 1:41:55 PM
^You are really just explaining how capitalism works and this comes down to how much capitalism we want to allow. I think the anti-business characterization is an accurate one because all labor issues come down to the struggle between businesses and worker.In the pure form of this struggle, a policy can either be anti-business or anti-worker. To deny that you are anti-business is to deny that you are pro-worker. I think Warren tries to skirt the edges and deny this ideology by reiterating that she is a capitalist who is only in favor of "good capitalism". Both of these candidates do want to weaken businesses and that should be seen as a good thing because it also means that both candidates want to strengthen the power and well-being of workers by shifting some of the power to them.
10/22/2019 2:09:07 PM
Does anyone actually read Earl's posts?
10/22/2019 2:15:15 PM
naw
10/22/2019 2:55:18 PM