the 2020 democratic candidate (and VP)

2020?

  • kamala harris

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • john hickenlooper

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • tim ryan

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • sherrod brown

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • kirsten gillibrand

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • tim kaine

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • chris murphy

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    18

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Universal healthcare
Universal college
Raising the minimum wage
A living wage
Climate change
Military industrial complex
Private prison industry
Public education
Science
Reproductive rights
LGBT rights
Regulations on marijuana
Civil rights
...

Again, can you name a single thing Sanders doesn't agree with the majority of the American people on outside of gun control and capital punishment?

No, you can't. But I'm guessing you can sure dig up more pointless personal attacks that won't address the points made or provide your own..
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Universal healthcare
Universal college
Raising the minimum wage
A living wage
Climate change
Military industrial complex
Private prison industry
Public education
Science
Reproductive rights
LGBT rights
Regulations on marijuana
Civil rights
...

Again, can you name a single thing Sanders doesn't agree with the majority of the American people on outside of gun control and capital punishment?

No, you can't. But I'm guessing you can sure dig up more pointless personal attacks that won't address the points made or provide your own..
the first two
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
I'll support Sanders if he wins the nomination in 2020. I'll give him the nod as front runner right now given that I know him better than others. I'd prefer a man who is younger for the reason that I'm concerned the Democratic party leadership all looks pretty old and out of touch. Also concerned that Sanders didn't get good support from Black and Latino factions in the Democratic party. That said, I support the policies he ran on last year. No reason why other candidates voicing the same positions can't be as good or better.

And so, I'm open minded right now. Except for Booker. I haven't seen much from him that I like.
I agree he is too old to pragmatically run as a viable candidate in 2020. But if he were to kind of "train" someone to carry his torch who could competently lead the way, I would support them. Sanders should hang it up and go down in American history as the guy that finally shook shit up. Although that entirely depends on how the Democratic party moves forward.

Retards like UncleBuck would have you believe people like me support dear leader unquestionably! When in actuality, that isn't the case at all. I support what he says, what he stands for. If he started saying some bullshit about the white race being superior, I'd seriously begin to question ol' Bernie's mental capacity..
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
You trot that matrix out every now and then. Why should we pay it any attention? I don't see Clinton as being where she was placed there. I agree with it mostly but you seem to think it is something more than a subjective idea of the author.
Authors; www.politicalcompass.org , a group of professionals who do similar matrices for other elections as well. The point is that it supports exactly what you just said above; that Mr Sanders is anything but an extreme leftist.

Rather, it's the American political climate that's so badly skewed to the authoritarian right... also known as fascist.

EDIT: this and other similar analyses are found at www.politicalcompass.org
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
I agree he is too old to pragmatically run as a viable candidate in 2020. But if he were to kind of "train" someone to carry his torch who could competently lead the way, I would support them. Sanders should hang it up and go down in American history as the guy that finally shook shit up. Although that entirely depends on how the Democratic party moves forward.

Retards like UncleBuck would have you believe people like me support dear leader unquestionably! When in actuality, that isn't the case at all. I support what he says, what he stands for. If he started saying some bullshit about the white race being superior, I'd seriously begin to question ol' Bernie's mental capacity.. This shit is bigger than him. It's always been bigger than him. These same sentiments have been brewing inside of me since before Obama became president. Now Trump won. Now it's time for all of us to look at ourselves in the mirror.
I listen to you and I listen to Buck and I listen mostly to myself. I don't find us disagreeing all that much to tell you the truth.
 

ArcticGranite

Well-Known Member
Authors; www.politicalcompass.org , a group of professionals who do similar matrices for other elections as well. The point is that it supports exactly what you just said above; that Mr Sanders is anything but an extreme leftist.

Rather, it's the American political climate that's so badly skewed to the authoritarian right... also known as fascist.

EDIT: this and other similar analyses are found at www.politicalcompass.org
Cool website. Asking questions.
Here's a link, test results.
I'd like to see others.

https://www.politicalcompass.org/analysis2?ec=-0.75&soc=-1.33
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Authors; www.politicalcompass.org , a group of professionals who do similar matrices for other elections as well. The point is that it supports exactly what you just said above; that Mr Sanders is anything but an extreme leftist.

Rather, it's the American political climate that's so badly skewed to the authoritarian right... also known as fascist.

EDIT: this and other similar analyses are found at www.politicalcompass.org
There is a fundamental flaw in the arithmetic behind the scores in the matrix. Going through the questions and scoring answers is fine. Adding the numbers together to generate overall scores is what I'm objecting to.

For example:

do you like oranges Yes 1
do you like apples Yes 1

Total for "likes fruit" 2

The score looks pretty scientific. I got a 2 for liking fruit. The problem is, the numbers aren't continuous. They are categorical values. As such, trying to add them up is nonsense. Just like adding apples and oranges would be.

That matrix gives an impression of a linear x,y grid but the impression is false. While the general relationship between the different people on the matrix is true the picture is misleading. The relatively small difference between Clinton and Trump shown in the matrix does not mean she is "33%" closer to Trump than she is to Sanders. What the matrix shows is that Clinton is less authoritarian than Trump and more so than Sanders. The relative spacing between them on the matrix is meaningless. A ranked order list would produce a more accurate picture:


Leader-------Leadership style-----------------Social policies
Trump--------Strongly Authoritarian----------Hard Right
Sanders----- Centrist---------------------------Moderate Left
Clinton--------Moderate Authoritarian-------Moderate Right

It's not a colorful matrix and doesn't catch the eye but it doesn't pretend that these leaders are classified with the precision implied in the figure you posted. I also agree that the list is fucking ugly and hard to read, which is why political compass doesn't use something like them.
 
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ttystikk

Well-Known Member
There is a fundamental flaw in the arithmetic behind the scores in the matrix. Going through the questions and scoring answers is fine. Adding the numbers together to generate overall scores is what I'm objecting to.

For example:
ans score
do you like oranges Yes 1
do you like apples Yes 1

Total for "likes fruit" 2

The score looks pretty scientific. I got a 2 for liking fruit. The problem is, the numbers aren't continuous. They are categorical values. As such, trying to add them up is nonsense. Just like adding apples and oranges would be.

That matrix gives an impression of a linear x,y grid but the impression is false. While the general relationship between the different people on the matrix is true the picture is misleading. The relatively small difference between Clinton and Trump shown in the matrix does not mean she is "33%" closer to Trump than she is to Sanders. What the matrix shows is that Clinton is less authoritarian than Trump and more so than Sanders. The relative spacing between them on the matrix is meaningless. A ranked order list would produce a more accurate picture:


Leadership style, Social policies
Trump Strongly Authoritarian Hard Right
Sanders Centrist Moderate Left
Clinton Moderate Authoritarian Moderate Right

It's not a colorful matrix and doesn't catch the eye but it doesn't pretend that these leaders are classified with the precision implied in the figure you posted. I also agree that the list is fucking ugly and hard to read, which is why political compass doesn't use something like them.
You don't see me doing such ruler gazing, do you? I think the points are pretty accurate in general terms. I also think they're pretty good to see how close their positions are.

Sometimes it is useful to generate a map, even if the points aren't precise.

What it shows, as an example, is that Mrs Clinton was every bit as conservative as her political opponents in terms of corporate freedom, money policy, etc- but not as authoritarian as the Republican candidates, whose positions were so close by and large as to have lots of outright overlap.

In other words, the very distinction without a difference that @Padawanbater2 and I have been saying cost her the election with a disaffected citizenry who wanted CHANGE! -and didn't believe her for a minute when she promised she'd bring it.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
You don't see me doing such ruler gazing, do you? I think the points are pretty accurate in general terms. I also think they're pretty good to see how close their positions are.

Sometimes it is useful to generate a map, even if the points aren't precise.

What it shows, as an example, is that Mrs Clinton was every bit as conservative as her political opponents in terms of corporate freedom, money policy, etc- but not as authoritarian as the Republican candidates, whose positions were so close by and large as to have lots of outright overlap.

In other words, the very distinction without a difference that @Padawanbater2 and I have been saying cost her the election with a disaffected citizenry who wanted CHANGE! -and didn't believe her for a minute when she promised she'd bring it.
Just saying the graph isn't as informative as it looks. Those locations on the x,y grid are not what they seem to be. They are an addition of apples, oranges, tomatoes, giraffes and platypuses or is it platypussies? I'll have to go look that up.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Just saying the graph isn't as informative as it looks. Those locations on the x,y grid are not what they seem to be. They are an addition of apples, oranges, tomatoes, giraffes and platypuses or is it platypussies? I'll have to go look that up.
I'm not saying it's perfect, I'm saying it's helpful. Did you take the test?
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
Of course, but you present a false dichotomy; 'incremental progress' or 'regressive regime'

We had the option of radical change, something history shows us is what is supported by a majority of voters. People who voted for Obama wanted radical change. Didn't get it. They wanted radical change again in 2016, Clinton offered more of the same. Trump pushed to "Make America Great Again", that message resonated. Clinton lost the same pivotal states Trump won to snag the election to Sanders during the primary, his critics condemning him for only attracting "white, middle-class voters"..

Hindsight, right..?
The biggest problem is a very uninformed and stupid electorate that falls for stupid slogans and fake news.

You see it here every fucking day.

How else do you elect a president with 46.1% of the vote that has a 40% approval rating before he starts?

People wanted change? Sounds like a change from a common cold to terminal cancer to me.

I think Obama did well. People forget how horrible things were when he took office because people in this country are very self centered with an 'all about me' attitude. And I don't see that changing.

And nobody is bringing lost jobs back, who the fuck even believes shit like that?
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
The biggest problem is a very uninformed and stupid electorate that falls for stupid slogans and fake news.

You see it here every fucking day.

How else do you elect a president with 46.1% of the vote that has a 40% approval rating before he starts?

People wanted change? Sounds like a change from a common cold to terminal cancer to me.

I think Obama did well. People forget how horrible things were when he took office because people in this country are very self centered with an 'all about me' attitude. And I don't see that changing.

And nobody is bringing lost jobs back, who the fuck even believes shit like that?
"We relocated and reduced our costs 90% in Asian "intensive factories" (sweatshops)...yeah we totally want to move back to the US..." said noone, ever.

Last time I bought an American flag I noticed a while later...

"Made in China"
 

st0wandgrow

Well-Known Member
I agree, shouldn't that go for any politician?

If Trump opposes TPP, why would I oppose him on it? That doesn't make sense. You support the guy you oppose when he supports or opposes the same things you do. You don't obstruct and try to block everything he does like Mitch McConnell did with Obama just to do your part in ensuring he fails. If you do that, you look like a little bitch who supports party over country, like McConnell. If you support Trump in places you actually agree with him, and oppose him in places you don't, you look like the level headed, pragmatic politician people want to reelect. We get to look back on Obama's administration and actually have a legitimate reason to point to when we say he didn't accomplish everything he said he was going to because the Republican congress' first priority was to obstruct progress.
I see what you're saying Pada, but did the Republicans obstruction of Obama hurt them this election? I'd say no. They own all 3 branches of the federal govt, and have absolutely destroyed Democrats in state and local elections.

Trump has a historically low approval rating coming in to office. I'd hate to see the dems cooperate with him and flip that approval rating over the next 4 years. Worst case scenario would be a popular President Trump going in to 2020. 4 more years of Trump? No thanks
 
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