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PoliGAF 2016 |OT6| Delete your accounts

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johnsmith

remember me
Jesus there's only ever been one black woman in the senate? And it was back in 99 too.

No Latinas either.

Women still only make up 20% of both houses of congress. This number needs to be 50% and why I think that contrary to what Killer Mike said, Hillary being a woman can and should be considered as a positive reason to vote for her. It is important.
 

benjipwns

Banned
Ha, that led me to a list of censured Representatives:
On July 11, 1832, Stanbery was censured by the House of Representatives for saying of House Speaker Andrew Stevenson that his eye might be "too frequently turned from the chair you occupy toward the White House."
His term in Congress was notable for his censure on May 14, 1866 for an insult to the House of Representatives. The censure stemmed from a resolution he introduced expressing support for the vetoes of President Andrew Johnson, in which Chanler called acts of Congress vetoed by Johnson "wicked and revolutionary," and called House members who overruled the vetoes "malignant and mischievous."
On January 15, 1868, Wood was censured for the use of unparliamentary language. During debate on the floor the House of Representatives, Wood called a piece of legislation "A monstrosity, a measure the most infamous of the many infamous acts of this infamous Congress." An uproar immediately followed this utterance, and Wood was not permitted to continue. This was followed by a motion by Henry L. Dawes to censure Wood, which passed by a vote of 114-39.

Best and most recent (for language):
While a member of the House of Representatives of the Sixty-seventh Congress, Blanton inserted into the Congressional Record a letter purporting to have been written by one Millard French, a non-union printer, to "George H. Carter, Public Printer"; the letter recited a conversation reported to have occurred between French and a printer named Levi Huber who belonged to the union.[2] The letter was said to contain language that was "unspeakable, vile, foul, filthy, profane, blasphemous and obscene", in the words of Representative Franklin Mondell, and the House voted to expunge the letter from the Congressional Record, on a vote of 313 to 1.[2]

The letter itself was an affidavit sent by an employee of the Public Printer on September 3, 1921, and relates to the Government Printing Office. A selection of the letter, which relates what Levi Huber, the corrector of revises, said to the employee:

"G__d D___n your black heart, you ought to have it torn out of you, you u____ s_____ of a b_____. You and the Public Printer has no sense. You k_____ his a____ and he is a d_____d fool for letting you do it."[3]
A motion to expel Blanton failed by only eight votes, and he was unanimously censured by the House of Representatives on October 24, 1921, for "abuse of leave to print." Mondell, the author of the expulsion resolution, claimed on the floor of the House of Representatives that "There is not a member who will not say that it is the vilest thing he has ever seen in print", and that "Any one speaking the words contained in the Congressional Record would be subject to fine and imprisonment under the laws of the land."
 
Anecdotal, I know, but I'm on the UC Davis campus and the Taiwanese/Chinese relations stuff still seems as fierce as ever. Everyone may not care about it but Taiwanese people still seem very protective of their national identity.
 

itschris

Member
Today's Trump Apocalypse Watch: A Little Good News in the Polling Department

Last night, Trump agreed on a whim to debate Bernie Sanders, but then backed out. Slate's Jim Newell thinks he would've benefited from such a stunt; personally, I think Trump was smart to back out, because the debate would have been an opportunity for someone with nothing to lose (Bernie) to attack the exact kind of person he's spent his whole career denouncing (Trump) for two hours on national television. But who really knows, in 2016? Actually, one thing we do know is this: Polls have started to veer back in Hillary's direction. This bounceback was predicted by many people who projected confidence about it in public but harbored a secret fear that it would never actually happen and that we would all be eating lizards in a nuclear wasteland a year from now. But it happened. And that's good news! Let's lower the danger level.

upvCdVh.jpg
 
How did a reality TV star who became famous from pretending he was a good businessman become the guy who might turn the world into Mad Max.

I mean, I understand every step, but then you take some steps back and look at the overall picture, and holy fuck, this is just insane.
 

benjipwns

Banned
A bounceback can only lead to retroactive momentum for Trump.

Where's metsfan with the funding for our explanatory polling firm, it's general election time kids.

Others are already beating us to it right in front of us!
Though Nunberg left Trump’s campaign in August, in a recent poll conducted for another client, Nunberg asked women in Connecticut who opposed marijuana legalization who they respected more: a politician who is also charitable and a world-renowned businessman, father and grandfather or an “Elderly woman who not only openly allows her husband to have affairs but tries to silence the women.” The figure with the favorable abstract framing of Trump beat the figure with the negative abstract framing of Clinton by more than 20 points, according to Nunberg.
 

itschris

Member
I can't believe enoughsandersspam is a place that actually exists on reddit

Chairs fly when you upvote? Lol..

Also, there's chicken when you downvote, as a reference to this:

Holy shit. My mom came into my room to bring me a plate of chicken nuggets and I literally screamed at her and hit the plate of chicken nuggets out of her hand. She started yelling and swearing at me and I slammed the door on her. I'm so distressed right now I don't know what to do. I didn't mean to do that to my mom but I'm literally in shock from the results tonight. I feel like I'm going to explode. Why the fucking fuck is he losing? This can't be happening. I'm having a fucking breakdown. I don't want to believe the world is so corrupt. I want a future to believe in. I want Bernie to be president and fix this broken country. I cannot fucking deal with this right now. It wasn't supposed to be like this, I thought he was polling well in New York???? This is so fucked.
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
Heh, solid Daily Show tonight, with Michelle Wolf going on a rant about how no one needs to like Hillary Clinton. She's running to be boss of the country, not your fucking friend.

And they played more interview footage from 1994 of Donald Trump talking about his thoughts on his then-wife working...

Nancy Collins: You have said that you don't want Marla to work, you actually said that...
Donald Trump: No...
Nancy Collins: Yeah, on the day of the wedding, actually.
Donald Trump: I think I'm probably mixed. I have days where I think it's great, and then I have days where if I come home and you know, [laughs] I don't want to sound too much like a chauvinist, but when I come home and dinner's not ready, I go through the roof, okay.
 
Heh, solid Daily Show tonight, with Michelle Wolf going on a rant about how no one needs to like Hillary Clinton. She's running to be boss of the country, not your fucking friend.

No, this is stupid and offensive as fuck. Hillary is plenty likable. We really need to have a conversation about the rampant misogyny that's painfully apparent in this election. Hand waving that shit away with "no one needs to like you" just prevents us from having that conversation.

Not that I expect we will address the issue one way or another, since half the country won't admit there's a racism problem directed at Obama.
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
No, this is stupid and offensive as fuck. Hillary is plenty likable. We really need to have a conversation about the rampant misogyny that's painfully apparent in this election. Hand waving that shit away with "no one needs to like you" just prevents us from having that conversation.

It's possible to dislike a woman and it not be misogynistic. I mean, obviously a segment of the dislike for Clinton comes from misogyny, but given the disparity between her favourables and favourables of other prominent female politicians who would also be affected by misogyny (I mean, you can look at Warren's from very early polling from last year before she confirmed she wouldn't run), a large part of Clinton's favourables are down to Clinton alone and not her gender. It's not really a controversial statement that many people do not find Clinton, on a personal basis, excluding Clinton's gender, likeable. Obviously this doesn't apply to everyone - I'm sure Adam and her would have a whale of a time - but it is generally speaking true.

I mean, it really doesn't matter in terms of the quality of the governance, as Wolf correctly points out (although I think she doesn't discuss how likeability can aid in negotiation; people persons often achieve better deals), but sadly quality of governance is not only or even most significant determinant of why people vote.
 

Maledict

Member
It's possible to dislike a woman and it not be misogynistic. I mean, obviously a segment of the dislike for Clinton comes from misogyny, but given the disparity between her favourables and favourables of other prominent female politicians who would also be affected by misogyny (I mean, you can look at Warren's from very early polling from last year before she confirmed she wouldn't run), a large part of Clinton's favourables are down to Clinton alone and not her gender. It's not really a controversial statement that many people do not find Clinton, on a personal basis, excluding Clinton's gender, likeable. Obviously this doesn't apply to everyone - I'm sure Adam and her would have a whale of a time - but it is generally speaking true.

I mean, it really doesn't matter in terms of the quality of the governance, as Wolf correctly points out (although I think she doesn't discuss how likeability can aid in negotiation; people persons often achieve better deals), but sadly quality of governance is not only or even most significant determinant of why people vote.

The issue comes from the fact that a large amount of dislike is based on 30 years of absolutely mysogneistic smears. Whether it's her ambition, her lust for power, the fact she didn't stay in the kitchen - Hillary Clinton has been subject to sexist attacks for almost as lone as I've been alive, and that's resulted in people disliking her for the same things they tolerate in other people (including female politicians newer to the political scene).
 

quantico

Banned
It's possible to dislike a woman and it not be misogynistic. I mean, obviously a segment of the dislike for Clinton comes from misogyny, but given the disparity between her favourables and favourables of other prominent female politicians who would also be affected by misogyny (I mean, you can look at Warren's from very early polling from last year before she confirmed she wouldn't run), a large part of Clinton's favourables are down to Clinton alone and not her gender. It's not really a controversial statement that many people do not find Clinton, on a personal basis, excluding Clinton's gender, likeable. Obviously this doesn't apply to everyone - I'm sure Adam and her would have a whale of a time - but it is generally speaking true.

I mean, it really doesn't matter in terms of the quality of the governance, as Wolf correctly points out (although I think she doesn't discuss how likeability can aid in negotiation; people persons often achieve better deals), but sadly quality of governance is not only or even most significant determinant of why people vote.

She's been the subject of decades of endless smear campaigns which have affected what the general public thinks of her, those smear campaigns are largely based on misogyny...If Warren had faced the same thing I doubt that her favorables would be where they are.
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
The issue comes from the fact that a large amount of dislike is based on 30 years of absolutely mysogneistic smears. Whether it's her ambition, her lust for power, the fact she didn't stay in the kitchen - Hillary Clinton has been subject to sexist attacks for almost as lone as I've been alive, and that's resulted in people disliking her for the same things they tolerate in other people (including female politicians newer to the political scene).

Also, I don't think, true - her favourables were relatively good coming into this campaign, and there's been a significant difference between the start and now that can't be explained by what happened in the last thirty years. I think what's more probable is just that she's run a really bad campaign so far, and has been saved by the fact she's running against an independent 74-year old socialist and Donald Trump.
 

B-Dubs

No Scrubs
Also, I don't think, true - her favourables were relatively good coming into this campaign, and there's been a significant difference between the start and now that can't be explained by what happened in the last thirty years. I think what's more probable is just that she's run a really bad campaign so far, and has been saved by the fact she's running against an independent 74-year old socialist and Donald Trump.

She's never been popular when running for office. Her numbers do a flip when she has an actual job though. Not popular when running for the Senate, popular as a Senator. Super popular as the head of the State department, not so much when running for president.
 

Maledict

Member
Also, I don't think, true - her favourables were relatively good coming into this campaign, and there's been a significant difference between the start and now that can't be explained by what happened in the last thirty years. I think what's more probable is just that she's run a really bad campaign so far, and has been saved by the fact she's running against an independent 74-year old socialist and Donald Trump.

Hillary has high favourable so when she is doing a job, but low favourables when she is running for a job, Given that one of the most frequent criticisms of her is her ambition and lust for power I don't really see how that exemots it from my point.

(As if anyone running for office doesn't have ambition or want power, but somehow it's wrong for her).
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
She's never been popular when running for office. Her numbers do a flip when she has an actual job though. Not popular when running for the Senate, popular as a Senator. Super popular as the head of the State department, not so much when running for president.

right, and this is related to likeability vs. competence - you're much more in the public eye during campaigns so it comes down to personal charisma and you're rarely doing much with your office if you hold it, so people forego judgement on competence. I think that therefore supports the idea that the average person does not find Clinton especially likeable.

Which is fine, once in office! The UK's best prime minister was Clement Attlee, and Churchill was remarked of him that he once saw Attlee get out of an empty taxi, such was his sense of charisma. The only trouble is that it can damage election performance, which I think we're seeing right now with Clinton's figures much lower against Trump's than they should be considering, well, Trump is Trump.
 
Judgements on "likeability" and "competence" and "leadership" and "authenticity" are inherently coloured by a degree of unconscious bias with regard to gender (and other) expectations.

Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump are still old white cis straight men. Even if one's a self proclaimed socialist and the other's a buffoon.
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Judgements on "likeability" and "competence" and "leadership" and "authenticity" are inherently coloured by a degree of unconscious bias with regard to gender expectations.

yes, but you would expect them to be relatively the same across women in politics, given that any woman in politics will be associated with ambition and the like. For example, I reckon Sarah Palin's favourability in PoliGAF will be something close to 0, and I think most of you would probably react quite defensively if I suggested that was because you were all misogynist, and that Palin actually possess likeability, competence, leadership and authenticity in bundles.
 

Makai

Member
We should let them pull a Monroe doctrine and shift our alliances. China has earned every inch of power it has. I see no reason why it shouldn't be the dominant power in the region. Someday, China will be the most powerful nation in the world and we will be happy we're on their side as their older, but less significant, brother - just like the happy relationship we've had with Great Britain.
Not looking so likely anymore.
 
yes, but you would expect them to be relatively the same across women in politics, given that any woman in politics will be associated with ambition and the like.
I'm not sure how this follows at all. As women ascend further into leadership they attract increased animosity. The behaviours one must engage in to reach and hold leadership positions are often perfectly acceptable for men but are disliked in women. The degree to which they're attacked with this frame of reference is not the same.
For example, I reckon Sarah Palin's favourability in PoliGAF will be something close to 0, and I think most of you would probably react quite defensively if I suggested that was because you were all misogynist.
Sarah Palin's favourability could be low, I don't know if I consider that the same as "likeability".

And there was a ton of sexism levelled at Palin regardless of views on her politics.
 

royalan

Member
Hillary's favorable are bad now, but I think they'll return to normal when Bernie Sanders goes a way for a few reasons.

1) Her favorables are good when she's not running for something.

2) The narrative for this primary, for better or worse, is Establishment vs. Anti-Establish. And against Bernie, Hillary simply is the Establishment candidate. That'll settle once he's out.

3) Her favorables are down more because of what people are doing to her, and less what she herself is doing. She's run an incredibly clean, positive campaign (especially compared to '08). She's navigated her run-ins with BLM well, immediately apologized for the Nancy Reagan thing, hasn't referenced any assassinations or invisible sniper fired, and has mostly refrained from throwing dirt at Bernie. And the world is so fatigued by the emails thing that nobody really cares anymore either way. But well, at the moment she's taking character blows from both sides. That would do a number to anyone's favorables.
 

royalan

Member
Almost all your points are still a problem in a GE v Trump.

How? She won't be facing attacks from both sides once the primary is well and truly over, and I really don't think the Establishment vs. Anti-Establishment narrative will continue to play in the general when both sides have consolidated their support. Especially since Trump seems keen to make more of a character/tabloid argument against Hillary, and Hillary will base her attacks around Trump being...well, a contemptible moron.

"Anti-Establishment vs Establishment" seems like a narrative more attuned for primaries. The nominees of the Republican and Democratic party are as establishment as it gets.
 
It's hard to say how Sanders impacts Hillary conclusively because it's still problematic to separate which fraction of his supporters are progressives (will go to Hillary) or populists (will go to Trump / Green). Just has to be a wait and see thing.
 

thebloo

Member
How? She won't be facing attacks from both sides once the primary is well and truly over, and I really don't think the Establishment vs. Anti-Establishment narrative will continue to play in the general when both sides have consolidated their support. Especially since Trump seems keen to make more of a character/tabloid argument against Hillary, and Hillary will base her attacks around Trump being...well, a contemptible moron.

"Anti-Establishment vs Establishment" seems like a narrative more attuned for primaries. The nominees of the Republican and Democratic party are as establishment as it gets.

1. She'll be running for THE something.
2. Even with the nom, Trump is running as an outsider that just managed to "destroy" the system. He still claims he's not a part of it and he'll hit her with that.
3. It won't be a clean campaign.

I don't see her favorables rising so much come July.
 
People are forgetting the Libertarian candidate, who will also steal votes.

In which direction though? I would have naively assumed "never Trump" would either be silent this election would be the largest flock of Libertarian party conversions, but anecdotally I've seen many Bernie-or-bust acquaintances also flirting with the party now too.
 

Bronx-Man

Banned
I just realized that when Hillary wins the presidency, we're gonna get a shitload of "America has entered the post-sexism era" thinkpieces. Ugh.
 

B-Dubs

No Scrubs
I just realized that when Hillary wins the presidency, we're gonna get a shitload of "America has entered the post-sexism era" thinkpieces. Ugh.

We got "America has entered the post-racism era" thinkpieces when Obama was elected, so it wouldn't surprise me.
 

Hindl

Member
I just realized that when Hillary wins the presidency, we're gonna get a shitload of "America has entered the post-sexism era" thinkpieces. Ugh.

I feel like the people that would write those thinkpieces already believe that though. I agree they'll be written, but it's a common sentiment already.
 

Cipherr

Member
I know people are high on Warren, but how will she be sold as ready to take over the Presidency at a moments notice? That not really what her experience is about.

Having experience and qualifications is not what's hot right now. Those people are the >>Establishment<<.
 
In which direction though? I would have naively assumed "never Trump" would either be silent this election would be the largest flock of Libertarian party conversions, but anecdotally I've seen many Bernie-or-bust acquaintances also flirting with the party now too.

If someone is able to switch their vote from Bernie to the Libertarian Party, then I don't think they're "reliable" democratic voters.

They're certainly not voting based on policy.
 
I kind of want to make thread about Bernie's Univision interview. Although if the Trump Sanders debate thread is anything to go by, the thread will become a dumpster fire.
 
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