2022 elections. The steady march for sanity continues.

hanimmal

Well-Known Member

THIS^^^....this is what every democrat in washington should have been doing for years now, continuously calling bullshit on the republican bullshitters, loudly...DO NOT let them think they're getting away with a damn thing, let them know in no uncertain terms that we're onto their bullshit, and are going to make sure the entire country is aware of every bit of it
No question this is exactly what everyone should be screaming nonstop. It is the voter suppression of these (mostly gerrymandered) communities that are what is the true issue with what the insurrectionist Republicans are going to our democracy right now, and what all of the Republicans (+2 of the Democrats) in the senate are allowing to occur.

Suburbia and Rural Americans need to step up and vote out these Republicans that would destroy our nation because they want to make sure that the Rich don't have to pay their taxes for another generation.

(Reposting it incase someone can't see it in your post)
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/mike-durant-senate/Screen Shot 2022-01-22 at 8.30.32 AM.png
Michael Durant, an Alabama Senate who describes himself as a "pro-Trump Republican," is facing accusations leveled by his sister that he helped cover up incestuous abuse by their father.

In a statement sent to Alabama Political reporter, Mary Ryan claims that Durant and other family members "chose to support my father and mother as they attempted to avoid the consequences" of years of sexual abuse that she said "occurred throughout my childhood."

"They all tried to silence me," Ryan said of her family. "It is unfortunate for my brother that he participated in this behavior, as it is currently causing his character to be called into question."

In an article earlier this week, Alabama Political Reporter provided some background to the dispute between Ryan and Durant.

"Durant’s sister, Mary Durant, filed a federal civil lawsuit against their father, Leon Durant, in New Hampshire in 1994," the website wrote. "In that filing, Mary Durant accused her father of sexually assaulting her from the time she was a toddler until she was 19... When interviewed on a TV news show in 1994, Michael Durant claimed that his sister was only trying to 'grab headlines' by suing their father for $5 million. "

However, Ryan would subsequently share private letters with reporters that Durant wrote her that indicated that he believed her allegations and said that his father even confessed to abusing her.

Read Ryan's full statement below.

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CatHedral

Well-Known Member
To be fair, it is mainly consensual sex that the Republican party seem to have a issue with.
I am reminded of the stricter Protestant sects that quietly teach that sex is a necessary evil, and pleasurable sex is entirely evil. It seems to me like such a perversion of our humanity.
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
I am reminded of the stricter Protestant sects that quietly teach that sex is a necessary evil, and pleasurable sex is entirely evil. It seems to me like such a perversion of our humanity.
To further develop the argument: since all sex is evil, there is no added detriment to rape, pedophilia, and the other sex crimes known to the unholy rest of us.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Federal judges reject Alabama's congressional map
A federal court on Monday shot down Alabama’s newly proposed Congressional district map over concerns it underrepresents minority voters, WBRC reports.
The three-judge panel sided unanimously with plaintiffs in redistricting lawsuits by ruling that they're likely to prove "Black voters have less opportunity than other Alabamians to elect candidates of their choice to Congress." As it currently stands, the newly-drawn map likely violates a section of the Voting Rights Act, the court stated.

Evan Milligan, a plaintiff in one of the lawsuits, argued the proposed congressional map "fails Alabama's voters of color," according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama.

Milligan added, "We deserve to be heard in our electoral process, rather than have our votes diluted using a map that purposefully cracks and packs Black communities."

The federal judges have given the state two weeks to draw up another map that "will need to include two districts in which Black voters either comprise a voting-age majority or something quite close to it."

If the state legislature doesn't meet the Feb. 11 deadline to provide a new map proposal, the court will provide "an eminently qualified expert" to do so.

Alabama’s Attorney General reportedly says he plans to appeal the court's decision, notes WBRC.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Biden leading Trump, DeSantis by similar margins in new poll
The survey, conducted by Marquette Law School, found that 43 percent of adults nationwide would support Biden if the 2024 presidential election were held today, while 33 percent would vote for Trump in a one-on-one match-up.

Sixteen percent said they would choose a different candidate, while 6 percent said they would not vote.

In a hypothetical race against DeSantis, however, Biden polls slightly better: 41 percent of adults nationwide said they would throw their support behind Biden, while 33 percent would support DeSantis.

Eighteen percent of respondents said they would vote for a different candidate, and 8 percent said they would not cast a ballot.
Only 29 percent of those polled said they want to see Trump run for president again in 2024, while 71 percent said they did not want to see him seek a second term.

A Wednesday poll from Politico and Morning Consult found that 45 percent of registered voters would support Biden if the election were held today, and 44 percent would support Trump, which would make for a tight rematch. Eleven percent said they would not vote.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Was thinking that this belongs in the evangelical thread, but for real Republicans need to lose hard in the next couple elections so that they can hopefully move past the hate mongering propaganda that they have ran on for the last half century (at least).

https://www.rawstory.com/garrett-soldano/?cx_testId=6&cx_testVariant=cx_undefined&cx_artPos=3#cxrecs_sScreen Shot 2022-02-02 at 6.07.17 AM.png
Garrett Soldano, a Republican gubernatorial candidate in Michigan, said this week that rape victims shouldn't get abortions because God may have intended for them to give birth to the next president of the United States.

In a video captured by progressive talk radio station WCPT 820 AM's Heartland Signal Twitter account, Soldano told conservative former meterorologist April Moss the story of a person he knows whose mother was the victim of a gang rape and who nonetheless gave birth to him.

This person's mother, Soldano continued, should serve as a positive example to other rape victims who get impregnated by their attackers.

"And so what we must start to focus on is not only the DNA when it's created, but, however, how about we start inspiring women in the culture to let them understand how heroic they are," he said. "God put them in this moment. And they don't know, that little baby inside them may be the next president, may be the next person who changes humanity."

Soldano concluded by saying, "We must always protect that DNA and allow it to have a voice."

— Heartland Signal (@Heartland Signal)1643665411
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printer

Well-Known Member

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member

printer

Well-Known Member
Florida Senate advances bill to create election police force
A Florida state Senate committee has approved a new overhaul of election laws that would add new requirements for voters who want to cast a ballot by mail and create a special law enforcement department dedicated to investigating election-related crimes.
The measure is the latest effort by a red state to make changes to voting laws to address what Republicans say is a lack of confidence in the outcome of a presidential election that former President Donald Trump has sought to undermine.

The new bill, which passed the Senate Ethics and Elections Committee on Tuesday, would create an Office of Election Crimes and Security within the Department of State. Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), widely thought to be considering a presidential run of his own in 2024, called for the establishment of an election crimes division last year.

DeSantis, who faces reelection later this year, said at an event in November that the new office would give Floridians an avenue to report suspected election-related crimes.
“There’ll be people, if you see someone ballot harvesting, you know, what do you do? If you call into the election office, a lot of times they don’t do anything. If you know that, there’s, you know, in Florida, it’s constitutionally mandated, only citizens are allowed to vote in Florida, and yet you see examples of people, they’ll even check they’re not citizens, and they’ll still be given ballots,” DeSantis said at the time, according to The Associated Press.
A database of voter fraud convictions maintained by the conservative Heritage Foundation lists a total of 14 cases since 2017, only one of which was an instance of an ineligible voter casting a ballot. That case, from 2016, involved an inmate at a county jail.
DeSantis said last year that audits of Florida’s elections in 2020 found no glaring errors.
“It passed with flying colors, in terms of how that’s going,” he said in October.

The new law enforcement agency would “create a chilling effect on voting, and sow even more distrust in our elections,” Diaz said.
Hutson’s bill goes beyond establishing a new police force. It would also block Florida elections departments from using private donations to pay for election-related expenses.

That provision, which mirrors proposals in other states like Texas, Arizona and Georgia, comes after Republicans in many states were critical of a nonprofit group, the Center for Tech and Civic Life, backed by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, that helped underfunded local elections divisions pay for regular expenses ahead of the 2020 elections.

Hutson’s measure would increase penalties assessed against third-party voter registration groups which run afoul of state rules. Organizations that collect voter registration forms have 14 days to turn them in to a local elections division, at the risk of a $1,000 fine; the measure would increase potential fines to $50,000 a year.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Could be that I'm yet again showing confirmation bias. That disclaimer said, the following survey from Pew Research doesn't seem very promising for them going into mid term elections


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A good chunk of the GOP show little enthusiasm for the party in its current state. No wonder they are trying to sign up more Faith and Flag voters.

Even those Ambivalent Right who are Republicans or lean Republican are about twice as likely to say they dislike a leader who asserts Trump won as they are to say they like such a leader (41% vs. 20%).
 
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