can you find her opinion stating she was 'against' it. She was just rather non-committal, as were most politicians. Our system of elections instills a lot of slowness to change. Often, that is good. As to the latter statement, the legislature didn't do anything the courts had not dictated happen.[quotevision wrote:Up until 2013, Hilary Clinton was against gay marriage. We now have gay marriage in a Republican controlled legislature.
which, though never a true independant party, still managed to get representatives elected at all levels. Note, no suggesting we have a Tea Party President, to start out.In 2008 some people didn't like the way things were going and formed the Tea Party.
RINO? Hell, that is evidence of the problem. When some group tries to narrowly define a party in terms of ideology, you start to hear terms like RINO, or DINO, to a lesser degree. That is not how the parties function best. For over a century, both the Dems and Republicans had far more inclusion of thinking, and far less ideological rigidity. That allows for far more productive political discouse, ie--getting stuff done, the function of politics. I was on the ground enough to know that the idea that anyone 'suppressed' Sanders to the extent of preventing his victory, were he capable of it, is ludicrous. Just didn't happen. Did power brokers pick favorites? Sure. But, had Sanders been able to instill an ounce of minority support, or been able to articulate anything pasts a pure economic message, he would have easily been able to carry the day. He didn't.Eight years later the Republican Party nominated a RINO and the Democrats nominated a Neocon while suppressing a candidate to the left of the nominee.
well, maybe your definition of 'fast' differs from mine, but I'll say this much: I've been on this earth for 61 years, and can't think of one example of the US systems changing 'fast'. Perhaps you can cite some examples, so we both know what the definition is here. Actually, our system, as I stated earlier, is designed to be SLOW, almost glacial, to effect serious changes. For a reason, or several, all of them valid.Things can change fast, Slick.
agreed, and if they could learn how to form real coalitions, I think the good ideas could be achieved, or even more hopeful, made even better. However, I've grown rather frustrated with younger 'progressives' who seem to eschew any notion of compromise, consensus building or coalitions, and seem hell-bent on doing the same ideological purity nonsense that is currently killing the GOP.Talking about ideas is the first step to making them happen. Some of the Green ideas are really good and worth pursuing.
I think we see the same core problem though different lenses. As an older person, with a lot of experience with politics actually getting things done at times, I see the issue not as party loyalty, but party purity. When the radical fringes are determined to define a political party narrowly, punishing ideological outliers, we've sown the seeds of utter futility. In some sense, what I see hope for in the Clinton candidacy is a rather clear attempt to rebuild a more centrist and inclusive Democratic party for many of the reasons I laid out above. I think what we might be heading for is a period with a centrist party(the Democrats), a Progressive party, and a more conservative/libertarian party. It would be nice if ALL THREE won a voice in the House and Senate, as well as legislatures nationwide. Still, as I'm aware, change comes real slow to the US, so my vision might not be a reality for a few cycles, but we do seem to clearly be at a watershed moment for at least one and maybe both major parties. And, to return to my theme, Stein is merely going to prolong the process by her lack of intellect, her lack of political instinct and seeming lack of interest in actually reaching out and compromising to achieve some of the goals(which would require far more prioritizing of goals,as one cannot expect everything at once).Not all of course, but some, and that's my whole point. Political parties and elections don't have to be all or nothing. That's what got us in the this ridiculous divide in the first place. Party loyalty be damned.
apologies for the long-windedness, but your post deserved some thought in a response.