


grammatron wrote:And, of course, we could afford to pay teachers more if we'd do something about the fucking horribly bloated DOD budget, but you know, that's pussy talk.





grammatron wrote:And, of course, we could afford to pay teachers more if we'd do something about the fucking horribly bloated DOD budget, but you know, that's pussy talk.
fox & hedgehog wrote:I don't think obama's a centrist per se, just a pragmatist
at least not in the way that clinton was, what with the New Democrat agenda
unlikely that obama would have pushed welfare reform or said something like "the era of big government is over"

handsome brute wrote:grammatron wrote:And, of course, we could afford to pay teachers more if we'd do something about the fucking horribly bloated DOD budget, but you know, that's pussy talk.
Defense is 15% of the Federal Budget. Interest on outstanding debt is 14%. Should probably do something about that interest payment ...


Frank wrote:oh god welfare reform. obama wouldnt have pushed such a shitfuck clusterstorm because he's not a Clinton-level asshole .

texasme wrote:powderfinger wrote:sordid affair wrote:i don't buy that the public option was unpopular. in polls it was unpopular when it wasn't explained, then popular when people knew what it meant
The popularity of the public option was of virtually no importance once the left seized on it as their #1 priority, framing a bill with a strong public option as the most liberal of possible outcomes in the eyes of the political press. Lieberman was going to get his pound of flesh in the most painful way possible (remember he singlehandedly killed the Medicare buy-in compromise that the rest of the moderates liked, which was a great idea on its own terms) and Nelson, Lincoln, Landrieu, etc. were always bound to arbitrarily find some way to move the bill to the right in exchange for their vote. Obama has no leverage over any of them whatsoever, so the public option was dead on arrival. That it stayed "alive" for so long is actually, in my opinion, an example of good strategy on the part of Pelosi and Reid because it took heat off the rest of the bill.
Maybe if the netroots had decided that free abortions was their ideal endgame the public option would have made it in.
you forgot to mention that lieberman himself supported and even suggested it as an alternative to the public option, which the democratic leadership and the president never once pointed out
the netroots had nothing to do with this, the whole outcome was planned out in advance. the administration never once publicly pressured lieberman, but jumped all over kucinich for airing (legitimate) doubts that the bill did nothing to reduce the deficit, which was a stated goal of the whole fucking thing
the obstinacy of public opinion vis a vis the myths around healthcare reform (e.g. continuing to believe in death panels and rationing, even when both had been conclusively disproven by the msm) made it tough for anyone to get anything through with public opinion on their side, but the administration and the senate leadership made it clear that they weren't willing to take a real political risk for the public option, even when it was obviously the best policy

mites wrote:kennedy wasn't a very good president. lbj is the best president post fdr
Mechanical Birds wrote:I probably can't express verbally this as well as I actually understand it



i need to get a date with this BEER so i can tickle torture my inhibitions!!
grammatron wrote:And, of course, we could afford to pay teachers more if we'd do something about the fucking horribly bloated DOD budget, but you know, that's pussy talk.
Mechanical Birds wrote:I probably can't express verbally this as well as I actually understand it

mites wrote:yea vietnam was awful and he certainly made it worse, but kennedy has some fingers in that honey jar too. but the great society and civil rights are both amazing accomplishments
Mechanical Birds wrote:I probably can't express verbally this as well as I actually understand it

texasme wrote:the corporatism is what kills me
i knew he'd be more moderate than i'd hoped, but his gleeful willingness, or insistence, on letting corporate america do the heavy lifting for his policy goals is detestable and far less than i'd hoped
