RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (Full Version)

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pahunkboy -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/10/2008 7:33:07 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

quote:

ORIGINAL: pahunkboy

The main media HATEs his movement and what he stands for.

Obama caught my attention -- but then he made comments/ mannerisms that told me he is "more of the same".

Ron Paul is about "less empire".    Obama and McCain  =  "more empire"

so anyone who considers a 3rd party is now fringe.  

I think this is a good move.    All 50 states likely will have more then D and R to choose from...but not all 50 will necessarily have Paul, Barr, Green or what have you.

Look at Polosi.  Look what she ran for...all the Dems..  they were going to "change"...and it has been 2 years... so what "change"  have they done??

nothing.

Being that we are so entwined in bail outs, and business as usual--  let both parties wonder of these "fringe"  Ron paul and other voters are going to give the election to the other party.

Both want endless empire..an endless bail outs for Wall Street.

The election is once again a 24 hour, info-mercial.   with the product being  about as useful as an infomerical gadget.....



I agree with almost all but I don't understand how you think the media is to blame.  I watched Blitzer interview Paul and Nader today and ,I might have missed it, but I didn't see him seething with hatred toward either of them.



I do blame the media.

Most all of it.

I no longer pay for TV reception into my home.  I have seen Wolf Blitzer in the past.  He is good at anouciating intrigue over a puff of air.

Media consolidation.  The fact the GE owns NBC, and makes bombs. Heck they all make weapons are connevted to - a subsidariy of... even now as we speak GE is doing business with Iran.

So ownership is a factor.

Next- lack of investiagtive reporting.

ratings go for glitz.. news must now pay for itself.  [ie ratings]

If I watch 100 hours of news.  Maybe 1 minute is actually ....hard news. 

I dont know how to say this without sounding rude....    ................xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
anyhow-  journalism is dead in America.




OneMoreWaste -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/10/2008 7:56:28 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol
I will quote Bethnai from another thread:
quote:


Fuck Ron Paul.



Whoah.
Dude.
That was deep. Your insightful commentary is muchly appreciated. [:-]




Archer -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/10/2008 9:44:12 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy

The electoral, winner-take-all college pretty much limits the US to a two party system. Votes to the green or libertarian parties are pretty much throw aways. Perot who won 28% of the vote had zero to show for his efforts in the end, other than energizing the national debates. I still remember that my mom voted for him.


Didn't change anything???????
Put Clinton in office with something like 46% of the vote lowest vote percentage in history.
Certainly Perot's 28% would not have split evenly it drew votes heavily from the Republicans.
Republicans got the message that their base was upset (although their response has been off target quite a bit in responding to it) Then they pulled together the "Contract with America" which ballanced the budget and lasted until Bush took office and they felt comfortable that they could do as they wished.

Slavehandsom,

"H.W. Bush left NAFTA on Clinton's desk, which Clinton promptly brought to Congress, which promptly a Republican Congress passed."

Talk about revisionist history.

The vote in the house was: 132 R and 102 D voting in favor; 43 R, 156 D, and 1 I against (if you do the math that shows a Democratic party controled house of reps in 1993. The Republicans didn't gain control of the House until 94
(175 R to 258 D in 1993 when it was passed)

The vote in the Senate was 34 Republicans and 27 Democrats voting in favor; 10 Republicans and 28 Democrats against (one D was absent but on record as being against) Which makes the Senate controlled by a Democratic majority of 56 to 44.






meatcleaver -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/11/2008 12:25:22 AM)

The problem is that the USA isn't a democracy, its a democratic Republic, the constitution was designed to build in an advantage for the establishment view, Britain has the same. The fact that a third party influences the outcome of the election is just tough for the loser but since both parties try their hardest to sit on the centre ground to get most votes, it really only cosmetic on the whole who wins. Unless someone like Bush gets elected who has a mind set for starting a war. 




MatureDSinNY -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/11/2008 12:45:09 AM)

This may may not be absolutely germaine to this thread but, like a good politician I'll find a way to segue from the topic to what I want to say... LOL.  Our governmental structure may have been designed as a Democratic Republic and we may have been hoodwinked into thinking our vote is important... but it has become clear to me that that is not the structure we live with anymore.  I can't take credit for this concept but I can't remember who I heard it from so I can't attribute it properly...  BUT... our system of government is our system of economy.  We are a capitalist state.  Not a democratic anything...  I offer as an example the economic stimulus package of this past spring.  The government sent us our $600 or $1,200 bucks and the "message" that came along with it was "be a good citizen - take this money to the mall and spend it - don't save it - don't use it to decrease your debt - spend it.  Be a good citizen and contribute to the corporate well-being."  Most govt. decisions these days are not about service to the people - but about service to the economy.  Bail out the investors of Freddie and Fannie - solve the housing crisis not by helping people keep their homes but by salvaging the banks who made bad investments - create a health care system that revolves around Insurance companies, HMOs, and members of the AMA and the Pharmaceutical companies.  Good citizenship these days is not about exercising your vote but exercising your wallet.  We are not viewed as "citizens" but "consumers".  To be a good American these days means to spend beyond your means....not to vote.




meatcleaver -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/11/2008 12:58:07 AM)

"Most govt. decisions these days are not about service to the people - but about service to the economy."
 
"To be a good American these days means to spend beyond your means....not to vote."
 
So true and its not confined to the US. Democracy is just a propaganda label, there is nothing democratic about the west. I've always said, if enough people vote against the interests of the rich and powerful, the troops will be on the street within 24 hours.

The evidence is that government bails out capital time and again but when it comes to ordinary people losing their home and all the possessions they have, the government sits back and says tough, the economy is going to a bad time.




MatureDSinNY -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/11/2008 1:06:09 AM)

Exactly - I remember hearing an interview when the earthquake hit China and the quote "The measure of a good goverment is how it reacts to a natural disaster..." and thinking man, we are in trouble...thinking about how our goverment, with all the resources at it's disposal reacted to the people (not the casinos - the people) of New Orleans during Katrina! 




Brain -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/11/2008 2:59:42 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

"Most govt. decisions these days are not about service to the people - but about service to the economy."
 
"To be a good American these days means to spend beyond your means....not to vote."
 
So true and its not confined to the US. Democracy is just a propaganda label, there is nothing democratic about the west. I've always said, if enough people vote against the interests of the rich and powerful, the troops will be on the street within 24 hours.

The evidence is that government bails out capital time and again but when it comes to ordinary people losing their home and all the possessions they have, the government sits back and says tough, the economy is going to a bad time.




nothing democratic about American stolen elections, watch it, especially what Kennedy says about 'conservatives'!

Greg Palast and RFK in NYC- MayDay 2007



Greg Palast author of Armed Madhouse (now out in the expanded edition paperback) and Robert Kennedy Jr. speak Rove And Rove’s Brain, ‘Should Be In Jail,’ Not In Office-RFK Jr Read the article at www.gregpalast.com
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3954858769441262005




pahunkboy -> RE: Ron Paul rejects the 2 party system, (9/11/2008 6:03:19 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy

The electoral, winner-take-all college pretty much limits the US to a two party system. Votes to the green or libertarian parties are pretty much throw aways. Perot who won 28% of the vote had zero to show for his efforts in the end, other than energizing the national debates. I still remember that my mom voted for him.


Didn't change anything???????
Put Clinton in office with something like 46% of the vote lowest vote percentage in history.
Certainly Perot's 28% would not have split evenly it drew votes heavily from the Republicans.
Republicans got the message that their base was upset (although their response has been off target quite a bit in responding to it) Then they pulled together the "Contract with America" which ballanced the budget and lasted until Bush took office and they felt comfortable that they could do as they wished.

Slavehandsom,

"H.W. Bush left NAFTA on Clinton's desk, which Clinton promptly brought to Congress, which promptly a Republican Congress passed."

Talk about revisionist history.

The vote in the house was: 132 R and 102 D voting in favor; 43 R, 156 D, and 1 I against (if you do the math that shows a Democratic party controled house of reps in 1993. The Republicans didn't gain control of the House until 94
(175 R to 258 D in 1993 when it was passed)

The vote in the Senate was 34 Republicans and 27 Democrats voting in favor; 10 Republicans and 28 Democrats against (one D was absent but on record as being against) Which makes the Senate controlled by a Democratic majority of 56 to 44.


I agree. A third party vote  --something more then the typical 1-2% will get noticed. In the case that is sways an election  ...the effect intense.


The lesser of the 2 evils this time.   is almost as evil.   

I dont know if the result will be as much as Perot.  w/o Perot, I doubt Clinton would have balanced the budget....




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