by Sixstrings » Wed 09 Apr 2014, 18:05:40
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', 'S')ome of us never were D's or R's, and never will be. Some of us think that partisanship is our biggest problem.
I was a lifelong R, then became a D after the real estate crash and my own personal life was affected by that. So, I'm one of those Republicans that made Obama's elections possible.
I'm like, divorced from the Republican Party. I registered D and vote straight D out of spite. Only thing that could bring me back is national security stuff -- at the end of the day, I can handle my own "domestic policy" but I cannot handle the world. Gotta have a president to do that.
I'm actually a swing voter at the presidential level. I always vote for the winner. Doesn't mean I go with the flow, it's just that wherever that swing vote is going I'm just one of those people and I'm moving that direction for the same reasons.
If I were wealthy, I guess I'd still be a Republican. I guess it really comes down to that, and that's why R's have been losing in recent elections because they're out of touch and the economy is bad. Our country has changed so much. Foodstamps are so common now.

It's not because people are lazy, it really is because the wealth has so shifted to the upper tiers.
Republicans just don't get it. And the only way they can win any more presidential elections is if Putin or someone else scares folks.
Regarding Tanada's OP, I agree and nice post. I do the links just because that's always been the norm on this forum, and I appreciate when people link because it's interesting to see some sources. But I don't care if anyone links, if someone says something I didn't know then I can google it.
As for debate.. I jump into the other's viewpoint, I'm interested in truth, I actually want to be proved wrong. This is what supreme court justices do. It's a good way to reason. You play devil's advocate, you argue both sides, to make sure you really understand the issue at hand.