- Joined
- Dec 20, 2018
>Dat hairlineShe's been co-opted into a cult. I doubt she wanted this.
But today we are all Bader, so...
Oh also, the one on the right.
View attachment 1614693
pretty sure that’s a dude.
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>Dat hairlineShe's been co-opted into a cult. I doubt she wanted this.
But today we are all Bader, so...
Oh also, the one on the right.
View attachment 1614693
What does it say it is?>Dat hairline
pretty sure that’s a dude.
I'm 50/50 if RBG was a cult leader or not.
View attachment 1614524
Okay. 70/30.
These people are crazy.
The question I have is way the one who was in her 80s and clearly wouldn't be on this earth for much longer?I think it was more a response to Trump being a "larger than life" figure. Since conservatives got a cult of personality, the left needed one too.
Only problem was... Who?
Bernie? Last thing the DNC needed was to give socialists validation.
Hillary? No. Just... No.
Obama? He got them into this mess.
Some Supreme Court Justice that they can spin into being a bulwark against the rise of fascism because no one actually knew who she was or what her record was?
Bingo.
One of the more interesting things is after a century, you are finally starting to see some fragmentation and dividing interests in the American Black population. 2nd Generation Middle Class Suburban Southern Blacks no longer have quite the same world view as Rust Belt Urban Inner City blacks.
The question I have is way the one who was in her 80s and clearly wouldn't be on this earth for much longer?
Greetings, I have been toiling in the vast salt mines of Metafilter. Once a proud bastion of free thought, now a ghost town filled with agoraphobics and soy-flavored NEETs. Keyboard warriors assemble!
Name checking every online boogeyman and a call for everyone else to spill blood in the name of Enlightenment:
View attachment 1613409
It helps that Trump is an ex-Democrat running the show and an asshole as well.
Having former democrats run the GOP is a big boost as the current bunch of cuckservatives would fold on everything.
A'ight, I'ma push back on this a little.View attachment 1614960
Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, Bill Clinton, and John Kennedy were all Democrats who won their elections without winning a majority of the popular vote (IE they won it, but the total sum of voters for other candidates were higher). Woodrow appointed 3 Justices, Clinton appointed 2, Kennedy appointed 2, and Truman appointed 4. Between them, they appointed a total of 11 Justices, but according to you they should all just be thrown off the bench.
Well, one just was, but Breyer is still there. We could always throw him off the court if you'd like, since he doesn't fit your criteria.
If you really want to talk about the biggest mistake that America ever made when it came to Democracy, then you'd need to talk about how we're a bunch of fucking idiots who thought that it would be a good idea to directly elect our Senators into office and expect them to properly represent all of the millions of people in their states, instead of using the system prior that was made-up of local assemblyman and representatives.
Senators used to be chosen by state legislators. The House had districts and you used to be able to look at your local assemblyman and go, "Hey why is that fucking asshole in office?" if the dude that you sent to D.C. wasn't doing anything to benefit you or represent you. You weren't one vote in a sea of millions, you were one vote in a sea of thousands, so if your Senator was fucking up and your local politician wasn't helping, you got to go vote his ass out in two years and shove in a new guy who wouldn't vote for the other guy, ousting your Senator in as little as two years if he's being a cunt.
That was one of the key features of the original Constitution, and then someone lied to us. Someone told us that cutting out the middle man and using a direct Democracy to elect our Senators was a good idea. We believed them, and on April 8, 1913, we ratified the 17th Amendment. It was probably one of the biggest mistakes that America's Republic had ever made, and almost no one knows that it even happened, anymore.
We're not getting less Democratic, we're getting more Democratic, and that's the problem. Direct Democracy does not work. It completely abolishes the government's ability to even see the individual, let alone work in a way that benefits them. I am not the slightest bit interested in a tyranny of the majority.
I remember someone here saying "Today's progressives are tomorrow's Conservatives" and isn't that the truth.Imagine talking to your past self and explaining how the GOP is the sane party in 2020, mostly because they got former Democrats running it.
They probably wish the same thing tbh.
The heavy breathing, the clearing of his throat ...
How much we wanna bet that he's going to test positive for COVID right before the first debate so the DNC can weasel him out of it?
The Electoral College is the system that allows for the Presidency to be obtained through a balanced representation of the Republic, though. Holding an election for your Senator is just a direct Democracy, it's a popular vote and that Senator can very easily ignore very large swathes of their state if there aren't enough voters present.A'ight, I'ma push back on this a little.
My concern about representatives electing other representatives, is that it makes the people in those positions have EVEN MORE of a requirement to be part of "the club".
How did Donald Trump become the Republican Presidential candidate? Because America wanted him. How did Hilary become the Democratic Presidential candidate? Because the DNC decided it was Her Turn. Seems to me that democracy gives better results. (And yes, Trump lost the popular vote. But whether you like Trump or not, nobody should care that he lost a game he wasn't even playing.)
So the point here is, as bad a job as the American public does at picking their representatives, the party guys in the smoke filled room usually manage to somehow do even worse.
Of course, this isn't true in all cases. I wouldn't want the Supreme Court to be elected/, and I wouldn't want the electoral college eliminated (unless there's a better way of giving voice to people outside big cities). You can't have direct democracy for everything, or else the country would become California and I would Minecraft myself. But there's a risk of going too far in the other direction.
For what it's worth, I think the first step is term limits for Senators, since it's then mandatory to fire them occasionally.
From what wikipedia says here, basically corruption and State Legislatures fucking up on sending Senators to congress.View attachment 1614960
Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, Bill Clinton, and John Kennedy were all Democrats who won their elections without winning a majority of the popular vote (IE they won it, but the total sum of voters for other candidates were higher). Woodrow appointed 3 Justices, Clinton appointed 2, Kennedy appointed 2, and Truman appointed 4. Between them, they appointed a total of 11 Justices, but according to you they should all just be thrown off the bench.
Well, one just was, but Breyer is still there. We could always throw him off the court if you'd like, since he doesn't fit your criteria.
If you really want to talk about the biggest mistake that America ever made when it came to Democracy, then you'd need to talk about how we're a bunch of fucking idiots who thought that it would be a good idea to directly elect our Senators into office and expect them to properly represent all of the millions of people in their states, instead of using the system prior that was made-up of local assemblyman and representatives.
Senators used to be chosen by state legislators. The House had districts and you used to be able to look at your local assemblyman and go, "Hey why is that fucking asshole in office?" if the dude that you sent to D.C. wasn't doing anything to benefit you or represent you. You weren't one vote in a sea of millions, you were one vote in a sea of thousands, so if your Senator was fucking up and your local politician wasn't helping, you got to go vote his ass out in two years and shove in a new guy who wouldn't vote for the other guy, ousting your Senator in as little as two years if he's being a cunt.
That was one of the key features of the original Constitution, and then someone lied to us. Someone told us that cutting out the middle man and using a direct Democracy to elect our Senators was a good idea. We believed them, and on April 8, 1913, we ratified the 17th Amendment. It was probably one of the biggest mistakes that America's Republic had ever made, and almost no one knows that it even happened, anymore.
We're not getting less Democratic, we're getting more Democratic, and that's the problem. Direct Democracy does not work. It completely abolishes the government's ability to even see the individual, let alone work in a way that benefits them. I am not the slightest bit interested in a tyranny of the majority.
View attachment 1614960
Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, Bill Clinton, and John Kennedy were all Democrats who won their elections without winning a majority of the popular vote (IE they won it, but the total sum of voters for other candidates were higher). Woodrow appointed 3 Justices, Clinton appointed 2, Kennedy appointed 2, and Truman appointed 4. Between them, they appointed a total of 11 Justices, but according to you they should all just be thrown off the bench.
Well, one just was, but Breyer is still there. We could always throw him off the court if you'd like, since he doesn't fit your criteria.
If you really want to talk about the biggest mistake that America ever made when it came to Democracy, then you'd need to talk about how we're a bunch of fucking idiots who thought that it would be a good idea to directly elect our Senators into office and expect them to properly represent all of the millions of people in their states, instead of using the system prior that was made-up of local assemblyman and representatives.
Senators used to be chosen by state legislators. The House had districts and you used to be able to look at your local assemblyman and go, "Hey why is that fucking asshole in office?" if the dude that you sent to D.C. wasn't doing anything to benefit you or represent you. You weren't one vote in a sea of millions, you were one vote in a sea of thousands, so if your Senator was fucking up and your local politician wasn't helping, you got to go vote his ass out in two years and shove in a new guy who wouldn't vote for the other guy, ousting your Senator in as little as two years if he's being a cunt.
That was one of the key features of the original Constitution, and then someone lied to us. Someone told us that cutting out the middle man and using a direct Democracy to elect our Senators was a good idea. We believed them, and on April 8, 1913, we ratified the 17th Amendment. It was probably one of the biggest mistakes that America's Republic had ever made, and almost no one knows that it even happened, anymore.
We're not getting less Democratic, we're getting more Democratic, and that's the problem. Direct Democracy does not work. It completely abolishes the government's ability to even see the individual, let alone work in a way that benefits them. I am not the slightest bit interested in a tyranny of the majority.
Please, they’ll just quarantine him and do a super virtual thing like the conventionsThe heavy breathing, the clearing of his throat ...
How much we wanna bet that he's going to test positive for COVID right before the first debate so the DNC can weasel him out of it?
and to be fair it's not like every Puerto Rican (tl note Puerto Rican means born in Florida or New York to parents who visited abuela on the island a bunch of times) is firing up the Race War Van to go slaughter Miami, tooLet’s not forget that much like the Asian‘s the various Hispanic groupings often don’t like each other very much.Stuff like national feuds, or enslavement, Rape and genocide Between groups that American Leftists pay little attention to.
skesis is catchy for old swamp creatures, I like itof a "Skeksis" she even looked like one. Her obsession with living forever (like all of the other Skeksis
you can become senator, but after your first loss or five terms then it's time for carouselFor what it's worth, I think the first step is term limits for Senators, since it's then mandatory to fire them occasionally.
Thank God I saw Babylon Bee. I really thought we’d jumped timelines yet again.View attachment 1615092![]()
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Is it possible we may actually see this happen? I'd love for this satire to come true.