Ovinomancer
No flips for you!
You can't win the argument by fiat. Do the work. HOW does passing the single largest legislation against systemic racism in the US since the abolition of slavery NOT have anything to do with racism. This is a discussion (I thought) where you make a point and then at least provide a modicum of argument to back it up. This is just you stating things.Which has nothing to do with racism inside the Republican party.
Lampshading doesn't make it go away.I knew you'd say that.
Atwater was a racist tool, yes. You get those. When he said that, though, Robert Byrd, leader of the Democratic caucus at the time, was still deeply racist. Racists exit on both sides, in positions of power. That one said something racist is not indicative of the whole party. (And that's my tu quoque to counter your fallacy of composition.)Thing is, the Republicans still need the same voters they did back then. The vocabulary just changed, as Republican strategist Lee Atwater explained:
Further, those words were uttered more than thirty years ago.
I disagree that those are racist. Many other people also disagree. Many would agree with you, but that doesn't mean they are racist. While I'm not a huge proponent of Voter ID, it does seem sensible given that ID is required almost everywhere else except voting -- banking, entering Federal buildings, getting social security and medicare benefits, entering the DNC, etc. While I agree that the laws that do not have provisions for providing ID free of charge have a disproportionate impact, that doesn't prove they are racially motivated. Those that do have free ID provisions have been ruled as acceptable in the places they've been passed into law. Hard to say a law is racist when it's been to court with that argument against it and prevailed in SCOTUS.Nowadays they say things like "voter ID", "anchor babies", "illegal immigrants", "black people want free stuff", etc, and what needs to be defunded are things the Affordable Health Care Act and planned parenthood. Old stuff like states rights is still used though. When it came to the Confederate flag you words like heritage, pride and freedom of speech were used.
Anchor babies and illegal immigration aren't racist unless you use the theory I discussed above and you conveniently snipped and didn't address. If you won't address the arguments, don't keep making the statements the arguments address -- that's just poor form.
And I completely fail to see how defunding ACA or PP is racist in nature. Well, I can imagine an argument, but I try not to imagine other people's arguments when I'm responding, preferring to ask them what they're argument is. So, what's the argument that defunding ACA is racist? Is it the same as the argument for defunding PP, or is that different?
Pet peeve: the word problematic. What a horrid word that is. If something is a problem, say that, using problematic just weasels around and suggests it's kinda like a problem, but maybe it's not exactly a problem, it's just something. That and the word is usually used as code for 'I don't like this and think it shouldn't exist.' Bleh. /rantTimes changed, but the strategy is the same. Which, electorally speaking, is problematic for Republicans as demographics are changing in the US. It will be fascinating to see how they dig themselves out of that hole. Not gonna happen this cycle though, thanks in part to Trump.
As for the coming failure of the Republican party due to demographics -- I'll wait and see. They're doing okay in polls right now that are diverse demographically. I think the claims of doom of the Republican party because of POC are more wishful thinking than anything else.
Huh, so I say that and then actually address your charges of racism in what Carson said, and somehow I didn't do that? What's the next few para's of your response in relation to, if not what I responded to about your allegations of Carson's racism?No. I knew you'd use that distraction instead of talking about Carson's and the Republican's racism.
You're deflecting from the fact that what you said was tinged with racism by trying to claim I'm throwing out a red herring and avoiding your question. It fails because I actually addressed your question. I'm quite sure that any racism was entirely unintentional and merely the result of inflamed passions, but that goes to show how very easy it is to stumble into a racist statement without intent by a simple misspeak in today's hyperaware environment. If a candidate never said anything that someone didn't take as racist, I'd say that candidate was dead (although, that's probably racist in a way I'm not aware of due to my living person privilege).
No. No, it's not. Racism means bigotry based on race, period. Bigotry about other things is colloquially known as bigotry.Colloquially, the word racism is used to talk about bigotries that do not necessarely involve race. But I guess it is easier to dodge than face more proof of the racism in the Republican party.
His argument holds perfectly in that regard, because if Jew held closely to the Talmudic law, he would be against certain fundamental doctrines of the Constitution. And it would be anti-Semitic, not racist, anyway.Lets use your rationalization of Carson's bigotry toward Muslims and see if it wouldn't be decried as racist if it was applied to Jews. Yeah, wouldn't happen.
However, most Jews don't hold tightly to Talmudic law, and that meets his broader discussion of the problem (again, available at the CNN coverage of his remarks) that a candidate he would endorse must at least hold the Constitution as the highest law of the land.
Um, the death penalty isn't in the Constitution. It's, in fact, often challenged as cruel and unusual under the 8th Amendment. Did you have any other examples, because this one is busted. You're trying extremely hard to make what Carson said unreasonable when it plainly isn't if you read the broader context and quotes. You may disagree with him, and think that someone very much dedicated to installing Sharia law would make a fine US President, but that's just, like, your opinion, man.The Pope was in town and he told you that some of your constitution, like allowing the death penalty, was poopie. I guess Catholics shoudn't become president either cause their values are against the US constitution. That is starting to be a lot of people who should be excluded from office. I wonder why he didn't mention all those devout Catholics and Jews? I wonder I wonder... Couldn't be that it isn't about Muslim values and more about getting the votes of racists. Nah. Impossible.
Right, yes, a nationally agreed to racist position is really just about the Republican party.Racism is a problem in the US, but we are talking about the Republican party and how it tries to appeal to the racists found in the US population.
No, again, you don't get to just declare things. Talking about immigration policy cannot be inherently racist because it disproportionately affects Hispanics. That's ludicrous because it's allowing geography to dictate the racist content of policy. Specific statement about Hispanics and/or Hispanic immigrants can be racist, and Trump has done that and been called out by other candidates in the Republican party for doing it. Trump's a jerk (lack of better word choices due to Eric's Grandma), but he's not representative of the Republicans when he says those things. He is representative when he discusses the issue of illegal immigration and what to do about it, but that's not inherently racist.Trump just did away with the abstractions that Lee Atwater was talking about. He exposed why those who talk so much about immigrants are often labelled as racist.
Ah, right, because everyone knew about what he said immediately. He was done within months. He was rejected in favor of a candidate no one liked. At BEST his racist statement didn't hurt him, not at worst.Santorum said his racist remark on Januray the 2nd. The first primaries were held on the 3rd in Iowa and Santorum won. He won others after that and was the second candidate when it came to votes. His racist remarks didn't make him the least popular candidate, as it should have. At worst it didn't hurt him.
I...I....Comparison. If the standards used to say that the Republican party and its base are against abortions are acceptable, the same standards should apply to racism.Lots of candidates say stuff against abortion, propose anti-abortion policies and get base support for saying these things. You agree this means the party is against abortion. Lots of candidates say racist stuff, propose racist policies and get base support for saying these things... but your conclusion is that it isn't a sign of racism. Seems like a double standard.
You can't actually be serious? Being against abortion is part of the national platform, racism isn't, so under your construction there, the Republicans aren't racist.