luke warm, on Jun 30 2009, 04:43 PM, said:
ok, but it seemed that your original point only referred to certain voters of a certain party (those "who do this kind of thing")... in any case, going by your "Voters who always vote one way ... " criterion, it should be relatively easy to see what groups of voters in what percentages vote a certain way - and thus are voting more on emotion than reason... agree?
You forgot to include the part of my post that noted that not just right-wingers ignore reality to gain political points.
PassedOut, on Jun 30 2009, 09:01 AM, said:
Yes, this type of thing is not only found among right-wingers, and I've certainly seen it elsewhere too. But in the US these days it seems that the republicans are hell-bent on forcing anyone capable of reason out of the party.
What bothers me most is that voters here are so poorly educated that politicians who do this kind of thing can be elected.
There certainly are significant groups of voters who always support democrats or always support republicans because of social ties, or of tradition, or of a sense of belonging, and so forth (or say they do, anyway). Things will never be perfect on that score. The voters who swing elections are those of us who can get beyond that stuff and decide based on reason.
At one time there were many principled republicans willing to adopt positions based on reason, reality, and common sense. In fact, on the local and state levels, there still are quite a few, in my experience.
But on the federal level, it seems to me that the republican party is forcing out everyone who puts reason ahead of rigid ideology, or who puts the common good ahead of the current version of republican party.
Eight republicans supported the Waxman-Markey bill rather than kowtow to the (ridiculous) positions espoused by republicans during the debate. Now the nutjobs in their own party have unsheathed the knives and are trying to force them out.
Forty-four democrats voted against the bill, some because it was too weak and some because democrats, too, can be delusional. Is there a strong effort to push them out? No.
Just saw these articles:
Conservative Ire Rains on 8 Republicans Who Voted for House Climate Bill
Quote
In the wake of last week's landmark passage of the House climate bill, conservatives have focused their fury on the handful of Republicans who voted in favor of the sweeping legislation.
Inslee, Reichert play key roles in energy bill
Quote
Only eight Republican congressmen voted for the bill. One of them was Rep. Dave Reichert, R-Wash.
"Energy independence and our national security are critical issues for America. These issues transcend politics. The future of this country is on the line and we can spare no effort when it comes to leading on these issues at a global level," he said in a statement. "Teddy Roosevelt was the true example of a Republican engaged in conserving resources for our children and grandchildren, but he also had the foresight to seek a brighter future for them."
So the republicans want to keep the dope who called global warming a "hoax" and the idiots who applauded, but want to get rid of the representatives who recognize the (no longer deniable) need for action now.
That's what I'm talking about.
This post has been edited by PassedOut: 2009-June-30, 17:11
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. — Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell