ChrisBaleBatman
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- Apr 1, 2005
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Well, isn't there really supposed to be like four parties?
If you count Indepents, that is.
If you count Indepents, that is.
So the solution is vote GOP and hope they actually reduce the size of government, even though they had 4 hours of near absolute power to do so and didn't do it?
You are like a wife who keeps on returning a husband who is unfaithful, all he has to do is promise to change and you will believe him and he will cheat again.
But backing neither renders you irrelevant. I am too pragmatic to take any comfort in the delusion of a third path in politics.
I used to back the Democrats and oppose the Republicans. Now I oppose both and back nobody. If that makes me irrelevant, then I welcome it. Screw politicians, they are all filth. I'm just here to watch the fail and the carnage.

But backing neither renders you irrelevant. I am too pragmatic to take any comfort in the delusion of a third path in politics.
The solution is to change the GOP.
Also, that comparison is quite flawed. For example, in your hypothetical the obviously correct answer would be to ditch the cheating husband and try to find another partner out of the billions of other people in the world. In this case, however, there is only one other choice. So it's like choosing between the unfaithful husband and the physically abusive husband. I will take the unfaithful one, thank you.
That doesn't make you pragmatic, it makes you part of the problem.
The GOP won't change. Apparently you're not pragmatic enough to see that.
So you would chose the unfaithful guy over the physically abusive one completely ignoring the nice quiet guy in the back because he's not popular enough to win?
Hardly. You have to work within the reality of the situation, not outside of it.
No, I just have a better understanding of it than you do. I don't expect the GOP to change on it's own - I expect to change the GOP. With a little help, of course, but I do aim to be a player in that change.
No, I ignore the nice quiet guy because he isn't real - he's an imaginary friend that I create to make me feel better about myself.
When Americans want a third party, when a third party candidate is more than just a fantastic idea that everyone talks about improving everything, I will start looking at it. But that day is not today, and it is not tomorrow and it is very unlikely going to be in the near future.
HAHA, right. Way to work within the reality of the situation. How exactly are you going to change the GOP? By continuing to vote for mediocrity? Are you trying to be the next Karl Rove? Maybe you're going to invent the southern strategy of the 21st century.
So you will pay attention to a third party when everyone else does? Way to be a follower. And that is the problem with this country. If everybody who didn't vote, and everybody that believes they have to vote for the "lesser of two evils" actually voted for a third party, it would have a real impact. But everyone won't because no one else does.
Here's an idea, why don't you use your superior political savy to help a third party become a viable option? You claim to be a Libertarian, yet you seem to be perfectly fine with kow-towing to the Republican party. You're not going to change the GOP, you are going to become one of them.
I don't see why not. I have more connections and more experience at my age than Karl Rove did. There are few 20 year olds in this country better positioned than I am right now. If I do the work, if I live up to the potential I have - there is no reason I can't be Karl Rove, or more.
See, this sounds great, but it's purely an idealistic approach - not a practical one. A third party with no support isn't a party - it's a joke. Political power has EVERYTHING to do with numbers, with support. I am not delusional enough to think that sporting a "Party X" bumper sticker on my Alero makes a difference. Or telling my friends about some third party means anything. If there is momentum for another party (mainly finical support, grassroots efforts, etc.), then I will consider another party viable and consider it over the GOP at such a time. But until then, voicing support for a third party is a waste of breath and a threat to your own credibility amongst anyone that knows anything about politics.
Because understanding politics isn't enough. Any possibility I have of influencing others comes from within the GOP. I go outside of it, the benefits I have in politics are gone. I am not going to cut off my nose to spite my face. Again, I am far too pragmatic than to do anything as foolish.
See, this looks like idealism. You sound like a high school guidence counselor.
And really, if you are aspiring to be like Rove, I hope you like not having a semblance of a soul.
Wow, how ironic that your signature says "Those who stand for nothing fall for anything." It sounds to me like you want political job security rather than actually change anything. Again, you claim to be Libertarian, but are willing to play along with the Republicans. Do you really think you can make the GOP any more socially liberal? Isn't everyone laughing at Megan McCain for suggesting the same thing? I see one of two things happening: You're going to try and steer the Republicans to become more Libertarian... and fail; or you are just going to become another Republican lackey.
I don't see why not. I have more connections and more experience at my age than Karl Rove did. There are few 20 year olds in this country better positioned than I am right now. If I do the work, if I live up to the potential I have - there is no reason I can't be Karl Rove, or more. .
See, this sounds great, but it's purely an idealistic approach - not a practical one. A third party with no support isn't a party - it's a joke. Political power has EVERYTHING to do with numbers, with support. I am not delusional enough to think that sporting a "Party X" bumper sticker on my Alero makes a difference. Or telling my friends about some third party means anything. If there is momentum for another party (mainly finical support, grassroots efforts, etc.), then I will consider another party viable and consider it over the GOP at such a time. But until then, voicing support for a third party is a waste of breath and a threat to your own credibility amongst anyone that knows anything about politics.
Because understanding politics isn't enough. Any possibility I have of influencing others comes from within the GOP. I go outside of it, the benefits I have in politics are gone. I am not going to cut off my nose to spite my face. Again, I am far too pragmatic than to do anything as foolish.
See, this sounds great, but it's purely an idealistic approach - not a practical one. A third party with no support isn't a party - it's a joke. Political power has EVERYTHING to do with numbers, with support. I am not delusional enough to think that sporting a "Party X" bumper sticker on my Alero makes a difference. Or telling my friends about some third party means anything. If there is momentum for another party (mainly finical support, grassroots efforts, etc.), then I will consider another party viable and consider it over the GOP at such a time. But until then, voicing support for a third party is a waste of breath and a threat to your own credibility amongst anyone that knows anything about politics.
I think someone is being too optimistic here, you might be in for a rude wake up call from reality.
There tons of would be politicos have connections like you say you do and have the same dreams, but go no where, its like trying to be a rock star, many will try, few will succeed.
Your dreams and a token will get you a ride on a sub way, your dreams won't matter until you have achieved the means that will allow you to succeed in your chosen field and frankly I have seen many people have big dreams, but fail to achieve them. I am far too cynical to care about dreamers, unless I see proof they made their dreams came true.
What's the difference between being pragmatic and just selling out though?
Not everyone intends to sell out what they believe when entering politics, but they often do so for the sake of being pragmatic, just little compromises they need to make get ahead and achieve their dreams. They do it again and again, until it becomes second nature and what they believed in becomes irrelevant, they are just another politician.
The "I can change him" mantra is used by every wife as an excuse to stick with an unfaithful husband. It hardly ever works and is often just an excuse to stick with a partner you know is no good for you.
The fact is the GOP had a 4 year window to reduce the size of government and they didn't do it. Why should anyone believe they ever will?
The only way for a third party to become prominent would be for them to employ a regional strategy for victory. They need to start winning local elections in specific regions and then try to upgrade to winning state elections. As things stand right now, Third parties cant compete on a national scale.
the only way for a third party to break the duopoly is to have elections reform with instant runoff voting and pure public financing of campaigns with strict limits on "in kind" contributions by partisan media outlets. I hate to say it but we would have to limit the advocacy ability of media outlets to control the debate.
limit each candidate to equal coverage by the media and stop these 2 yr long/half billion dollar campaigns.
