no hope
Thu Mar 06, 2008 at 12:43:26 AM PDT
Since I've never been considered a real part of this community (haven't contributed much since 04, and not even much then, I guess), there's little point in me saying "goodbye".
Heck, I’m not doing that, actually.
Just riffing. Scraped together from two recent comments.
There's only so much hysteria a human should have to take.
For me, enough time passes where I see enough gaskets blowing while fighting over true Democrats before I start thinking something is actually wrong with the people continually blowing their gaskets.
I am losing trust in the contributors here.
If someone writes a cogent essay of great political import, I'll keep remembering their screed calling for the personal destruction of a fellow Democrat. Making me ashamed to admit my choice of candidate because I don't want to be associated with the insanity.
I'll remember screaming. Lots of that.
And I'll wonder, "maybe this or that person really shouldn't be looked to for fact-based opinion, reality-based commentary".
This may be right or wrong.
I claim no knowledge of another soul here.
But it reeks of destructiveness here.
I do this in spite of a large handfull of a**wipes here
Tue Feb 26, 2008 at 07:32:32 PM PDT
What an interesting ride.
Quick summary.
From the beginning of 2005, the only Congressional members I could count on to vote - almost exclusively - in the way I really wanted were the members of my state's delegation, House and Senate, from Massachusetts.
Yes, that includes the "boring" Ted Kennedy and the absolutely dailyKos-despised John Kerry. Yeah, remember how you all wanted him on a spit? I do.
Anyways, they all made me proud to be from MA since then.
No one else did.
Without question, I absolutely disliked pretty much every vote and positions taken by Clinton. And equally so Obama. Sorry. Come on people, the only person who showed any leadership in 2007 was Dodd. Period. And before you open your mouth to say otherwise, shut it. Stop lying.
Time to stop bickering, kiddies. The war is coming. Now.
Mon Feb 25, 2008 at 05:38:49 AM PDT
OK, I guess I was going to wait until thing were certain – like officially decided.
But, you know what? We don’t have time for that.
As is well documented in this diary by Kossack Shane Hensinger, the fanatical right-wing is already on the attack.


I’ll leave it for others at the moment to comment, organize, and co-ordinate.
My point here is this.
After all the blood spilt here on dKos in the past few months, it’s time for one thing.
It’s time to start patching up each others wounds and set our sights where they rightly belong.
We can not wait a moment longer.
why people come to dKos
Sat Feb 02, 2008 at 03:56:27 AM PDT
Well, I've been here since pre-2004. I think I started even poking around (unregistered) during the primary season before then. But I don't think I remember anything like this.
PS: I'm 50/50, at this point, on whom to vote for.
You're not Democrats
Sun Jan 27, 2008 at 07:22:17 AM PDT
Many of us, even those that have regressed to lurking status, have completely had it.
This is a site that, by definition, a site for Democrats, right?
Well, the problem - in my eyes - is not people arguing, even in pretty nasty fashion, about who should be the Democratic nominee. While a lot are (personal opinion) off your goddam rockers in the bile your spewing, I think it's totally good arguing about policy and substance.
We totally DO want the best possible candidate (or Pres/VP combo) we can possible muster.
*** MAIN POINT OF POST ***
But I have issue with those people - and it seems like thousands here - that insist the will NOT VOTE FOR THE DEMOCRAT if that nominee is [Fill in your personal voodoo doll here].
Really?
I mean, none of them is Adolf Hitler, right?
So... REALLY?
Fine.
The rest of us wish you wouldn't come here any more.
*** End of main point ***
Embryos condemned?
Thu Jul 20, 2006 at 03:16:29 AM PDT
So, the use of embryonic stem cells for life-saving research has been vetoed.
And if I understand correcly, all of those stem cells would have been derived from the left-over results of in-vitro fertilization, right?
And the President vetoed the use of such for life-saving research because that would destroy life.
OK.
But wait a second. Unless those embryos are implanted in a mother's womb they can not lead to a life.
And without every one of those thousands of embryos being implanted in a mother's womb soon, they are - today - headed for one place: incineration.
What the heck? Something doesn't jibe here.
Is this veto condemning these embryos to utter destruction with no purpose?
RedState.org Response: Fend for Yourself. That's right! (Sorry, Sharon)
Sun Sep 04, 2005 at 11:06:08 AM PDT
Update [2005-9-4 14:33:51 by HadIt]: For the record, this refers to the Far-Right-Wing website, Redstate.org. It does NOT refer to residents of states that went for Bush. If I meant it that way, then I would be like those folks at Redstate.org...
I stumbled onto a recent diary at Redstate.org (where I almost never go) which is a summation of the Conservative response to the horrors in NOLA and the lack of competent Federal action.
See the full text below, but the central relevant point is:
If I'm told by authorities to evacuate the area,
I am responsible to see my family safely away from the area.
I am responsible.
I was not raised to expect help from anyone but myself.
And you know what? I think I agree completely!
See what I mean below the fold...
Keep the Drumbeat Rolling: The GOP Dropped the Ball
Fri Jul 08, 2005 at 05:33:05 AM PDT
I am continuing the drumbeat begun by
fas on 7/7
("
Bush has MISMANAGED war on terror")
I feel the same dread and anger as I did on 9/11.
My anger is mainly at the terrorists who have ripped innocent lives from the face of the Earth.
We should have chased the terrorists down after 9/11 and prevented this travesty in London from happening.
But now we must face facts:
The GOP has DROPPED THE BALL.
They stopped caring about terrorism YEARS AGO:
And in The United States:
The Republican leadership has now been proven incompetent as they neglected security and safety for civilians and have NOT COMBATTED REAL TERRORISTS.
Glenn Beck: I'd Kill Michael Moore. Jesus might, too.
Wed May 18, 2005 at 03:57:19 PM PDT
Wow. Republicans and their Culture of Death.
From Media Matters:
From the May 17 broadcast of The Glenn Beck Program:
BECK: ...I'm thinking about killing Michael Moore, and I'm wondering if I could kill him myself, or if I would need to hire somebody to do it.
No, I think I could.
I think he could be looking me in the eye, you know, and I could just be choking the life out -- is this wrong? I stopped wearing my What Would Jesus -- band -- Do, and I've lost all sense of right and wrong now. I used to be able to say, "Yeah, I'd kill Michael Moore," and then I'd see the little band:
What Would Jesus Do?
And then I'd realize, "Oh, you wouldn't kill Michael Moore. Or at least you wouldn't choke him to death."
And you know, well, I'm not sure.
(addition of spacing and emphasis mine)
Read more about him at Media Matters.
Reid Smear in Bullet Points!
Fri May 13, 2005 at 09:34:36 AM PDT
The most recent Armando post
summarizes everything.
Might be too long for reporters to understand, though ;)
I thought I'd provide a concise bullet-point version.
I'll just leave out the Miranda part. Kos and everyone else have covered that nicely.
If you like it, please pass to any news agency as a cheat sheet.
(below the fold)
Patrick (Gov, MA). Should Governor candidates post on dKos?
Wed May 11, 2005 at 07:25:29 PM PDT
Just came back from a meetup for
Deval Patrick, running for governor in MA. And I'm asking you guys here for advice.
I can be kinda slow, so my question is below, in boldface so you can skip to it.
"Ultra-liberal MA!" you say? What help do they need? It's Dem through and through!"
No, Massachusetts has an ultra-conservative streak running though it, with no one higher local offices to show us that that is WRONG. This conservative bent is evidenced by having Republican governors for the past 14 years. Trust me, it's not because they've done great things. They haven't. The Dem contenders just, well, sucked.
Patrick appears to be a real progressive. He also was part of the Clinton admin. (assistant AG), which has earned him useful friends. And he seems to be wowing people with speeches lately. (I'll have my first chance to hear him at the MA Dem convention this Saturday.) These together bode very well for him to be a viable or even unquestionable alternative to that numbnut, Romney.
more - including the question(!!!) - after the fold...
On Kerry: We risk our own defeat.
Mon May 09, 2005 at 05:08:02 PM PDT
(An experimental riff on a quote by Laura Roslin.
On the battle-filled diaries of
Friday and
Monday, and also Americablog
Friday and
Monday. And elsewhere, I'm sure.)
-------
This has now stopped being a matter of freedom of expression.
It isn't political, it's personal. For all of us.
In the matter of Senator John Forbes Kerry, neither the side that likes him nor the side that dislikes him can let go of arguing so vehemently about him.
This is mostly because he is our last link to an election which almost overturned the evil now remaining in power.
We've lost perspective.
Myths of "Myths of Democratic Renewal". Why Bother?
Wed May 04, 2005 at 05:44:43 PM PDT
This drives me nuts! All these good ideas out there and we're shooting each other down.
Ruy Teixeira pretty much blasts a wide swath among Dems searching for ways to bring about our success.
First, he says (as I horribly oversimplify):
- Framing is Useless
- Unity is Mindless
- Mobilization is Futile
What I think he MEANS is none of these things alone will be Our Savior (ah-ah-ahhh-MEN!).
The final take-down of all those nutty ideas others might actually find useful is:
Sorry, Democrats, there's just no substitute for good ideas and fresh approaches. It's time to jettison these myths and buckle down to the real work of change--serious change--in what Democrats say to voters.
The implication is anyone who even THINKS about "framing" or "unity" doesn't also want to "buckle down to do the real work".
He points out some quite useful ideas for Dems, but tosses out ANY possible usefulness of those concepts above.
Chris Bowers seems a bit astonished. For what it's worth, I'd agree, I think this whole thing is a bit bizzaro. But that's me.
"The Passion of the Frist" - Who's the persecuted?
Fri Apr 29, 2005 at 07:04:41 AM PDT
This is really terrific rundown on who the persecutors are and who are the persecuted in the brewing Holy War.
From "The Passion of the Frist":
Sixty years ago this month the advance of Allied troops into Germany stopped the guards at the Buchenwald concentration camp from turning Jews, queers, and political dissidents into lampshades and soap long enough to pack as many of us into railcars as they could and send us deeper into the countryside to Dachau.
...
Three weeks after the 40-odd railcars left Buchenwald, the American forces that liberated Dachau discovered them sitting on the tracks outside the camp and opened them, finding all 2,000-3,000 prisoners in an advanced stage of decomposition.
It is the sight of what is now known as the "Dachau death train" that is said to have caused the Americans, who had just accepted the surrender of the Waffen-SS soldiers stationed in the garrison next to Dachau, to break all conventions of civilized warfare by lining their POWs up against a wall and shooting them.
Stop the ANALYZING! Kos is right, so say what we fucking MEAN!
Wed Apr 27, 2005 at 06:58:34 PM PDT
Kos (and others) have proposed a
simple message to describe Democrats:
Democrats are the party for people who work for a living
And I was thinking, that's about it, really - we just haven't gotten around to REPEATING IT that simply, PROVING IT with action, and SHOVING IT in the arch-conservative's faces.
It really is what we believe, the GOP isn't using that motto much at all, and more and more, people can see that the Republican ACTIONS are against that Democratic motto.
But... we are once again told that there's no way to have a simple Democratic message. Kos' statement has been analyzed and run through multiple computer simulations and a multiple PhD panel has concluded that the statement is not worth trying.
You see, we want too many good things that the GOP will say THEY want, too. There is NO simple statement that we, as Democrats, can put out there that will not be laughed at by conservatives.
So why bother?
Except for the last bit, so say some academic, liberal, bloggers.
Maybe American Law Should Be Christian
Fri Apr 22, 2005 at 06:53:27 PM PDT
Gosh, that sounds so darned simple, huh?
But something bugs me about the whole thing. Can it actually work?
Who's "Christianity" Will Write the Laws?
Which form of Christianity will form the basis for the rules?
There's a lot to choose from.
A multitude of denominations (at least 24) have over a million adherents in America, each having a major beef with all the others in how they interpret the Bible and how they practice their faith.
Which one gets to dictate the rule of law in the US?
Roman Catholics are by far the largest Christian community in the nation. And there's a handy new Pope who is a real stickler for the Catholic rules. Probably they should make the laws, right?
Or will a lot of Protestants have a problem with that?
OK, fine, if Catholic Christianity is excluded, maybe one of the larger Protestant groups, like the United Methodists should make the laws.
Would that make any of the 288 million non-Methodists in America nervous or upset?
Would it have been better if I had chosen Greek Orthodox?
Mormon?
Jehovah's Witnesses?
Probably not.
(oh god, there's more...)
Kerry: GOP is "crossing lines that should never be crossed"
Thu Apr 21, 2005 at 09:21:49 AM PDT
Kerry's on a roll.
Sen. Kerry is beginning to put into words what many of us here have said for a long time.
Building on his earlier quote, mentioned here,
I am sick and tired of a bunch of people trying to tell me that God wants a bunch of conservative judges on the court and that's why we have to change the rules of the United States Senate...
He has now sent a video to everyone. His prelude is this:
There are moments in our work together when it's important to step back, look each other in the eye, and decide what we need to do next.
This is one of those moments.
The Republican Party's leaders have set America on an extraordinarily dangerous path. We are no longer just debating the merits of one policy over another. It's far more fundamental than that. The far right seems set on a path that challenges the fundamentals of how we make our democracy work best for all of us.
The message
is here or available for
direct download.
Please pass the link for this video around.
more after the break...
All Religious Dems Should Leave dKos
Mon Apr 18, 2005 at 06:51:34 PM PDT
Update [2005-4-18 22:55:47 by HadIt]:Sorry if my writing was awkward and it wasn't obvious that I don't believe the title of my diary. I added a boldface in a spot to emphasize that. Also, I absolutely WANT discussion to continue. I would just like people to focus on the one repetitive line in the diary before they come to blows.
---------------
Even if you just have a passing acquaintance with a faith, which you keep in your life like an old comfortable couch, your are anti-intellectual and a bit irrational and so have no part in being here?
Is that, in the end, what the majority here want?
It damn well better not be.
But I'll have a poll at the end, just to check.
Until then, let me say the obvious:
We're all on the fucking same side!