Originally posted by: palehorse
Originally posted by: Craig234
Originally posted by: JS80
Without welfare, how else would Democrats get their constituents to come out and vote for them every year?
By offering an alternative to the party that serves the agenda of the richest, the corporatocracy, that sells out to the special interests who harm America like the military-industrial complex, and panders to the fringe groups who want power but are otherwise unelectable like the radical right groups; by offering the better policies on the economy and foreign relations, more fiscal responsibility, more competence in government, actually representing the public interest, protecting the environment, etc.
Without welfare, how would the Repuplicans replace an issue they can exploit and misrepresent to get ignorant, selfish people to vote for them against welfare?
I know plenty of Democrats who also despise the current welfare system. Get off your partisan sybian long enough to see that the system has some large holes that need patching.
People who completely give themselves over to one party, or another, are mindless lemmings or politicians. Which one are you?
Palehorse, the problem is, your posts are too (whatever a nicer word for idiotic might be) to say much in response to, but I'll explain why I say that.
There are different ways to reach the 'I'm in favor of one party over the other' position. Some are wrong, the kind you refer to, but another way is right, the kind you are utterly unaware of, based on your posts denying it exists in your 'list' of explanations why to support one party. That 'right' way is when you look at the issue and let the chips fall where they may - both parties right, both wrong, 2-1 ration of right to wrong, one party much more right than the other, wherever they fall.
You exclude the very possibility that the Democratic Party can be the clearly better party for the reasons I listed and more, not because you have any rational basis for doing so, but because you are a victim of the very closed-minded 'lemming' approach you refer to in your post. You may think that occassionally siding with the 'other party' disproves you are doing so, but you're wrong. Just because you aren't one typ of lemming, on being open to both parties having some good, doesn't mean you are not another type of lemming.
If you have as an *assumption* that the democrats - or the republicans - can't be 100% right, you are wrong. If you *determine* rationally that they're not 100% right, that's fine.
But in these discussion, there's a lot of hot air wasted by posters like you who don't deal with the isues, but throw around attacks and blather. I see nothing 'issuse based' from you.
I provided a list of specific issues. You are welcome to challenge, to discuss - even to agree, ha - with them and that's what the discussion should be based on, not your empty commentary not having anything to do with the issues, but only a knee-jerk, thoughtless attack when someone agrees too much with the democrats for your taste, however good the reason.
For the record, you also are not honest in your summary of my position. I have plenty of issues with the democrats - but few are in favor of Republicans nowadays.
There's nothing wrong with that; it's not for 'partisan' reasons.
In fact, I've gone through the 'oh my gosh the worst thing is to be partisan and agree with one party too much' centrist phase, and outgrown it. It's wrong to reject siding with one party simply for being afraid that that's somehow not being 'objective'. There's nothing magical making the two parties 'balanced' in how right they are on the issues. It's possible for one party to be a lot worse than the orher.
Now, all of this is so simple it's annoying to have to say, but your attack post was that off-base that I wasted the time this time.
Of *course* some democrats have 'issues' with welfare, that run the gamat from almost total opposition to wanting to increase it. Some of the people closely involved with its growth in the 60's, like Bill Moyers, have certainly said 'mistakes were made, lessones were learned' and few would say it's some perfect system. For that matter, some - a few - Republicans are not too opposed to welfare (especially if they needed it). So what? The basic difference in the overall party opinion and policy still exists between the parties.
There are a lot of myths on welfare, and its abuse, *because it's useful for welfare opponents to have a demon to run against, and to distract from their own corruption*.
We can differ on the policy, where I'm in support of the humanitarian and practial and even productive policy, while IMO you are for the inhumane, ignorant, short-sighted policy.
You are welcome to defend your position - but post something based on the issue. Just posting empty hot air attacks is a waste.