gtn130 wrote:People just identify as independent to feel smart...
The two-party system has effectively stymied our democracy. But most people aren't enlightened enough to even see it.
Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart

gtn130 wrote:People just identify as independent to feel smart...
gtn130 wrote:dckingsfan wrote:They need to have a solid defense against the right wing talking points.
The solid defense against right wing talking points is ***NOT*** to cave to them!
Bernie Sander is a Socialist
Nancy Pelosi is a Socialist
Joe Biden is a Socialist
It literally does not matter at all what policies people are putting out. Republicans are going to call it whatever they want regardless of how accurate that descriptor is. Castro making his policies more appealing to conservatives so they won't call it Open Borders or Socialism is completely asinine because they will do it anyway.
This again goes back to what I've been saying the last few pages: the ship has sailed on changing people's minds. Either you've bought into conservative propaganda or you haven't. What matters is driving turnout among the people who already agree with you. Independents are mythical and do not matter as a voting bloc.
gtn130 wrote:Independents are mythical and do not matter as a voting bloc.
dckingsfan wrote:gtn130 wrote:dckingsfan wrote:They need to have a solid defense against the right wing talking points.
The solid defense against right wing talking points is ***NOT*** to cave to them!
Bernie Sander is a Socialist
Nancy Pelosi is a Socialist
Joe Biden is a Socialist
It literally does not matter at all what policies people are putting out. Republicans are going to call it whatever they want regardless of how accurate that descriptor is. Castro making his policies more appealing to conservatives so they won't call it Open Borders or Socialism is completely asinine because they will do it anyway.
This again goes back to what I've been saying the last few pages: the ship has sailed on changing people's minds. Either you've bought into conservative propaganda or you haven't. What matters is driving turnout among the people who already agree with you. Independents are mythical and do not matter as a voting bloc.
Let's agree with you here for a moment. The ship has sailed - no one can be convinced.
Therefore: D volunteers - just stay home - people have already made up there minds. No need to prep on the issues. Just leave those folks that are teetering in the middle and are misinformed.
I wonder if you have ever walked precincts? So, which state do you live? Do you work voter registration? Which candidate do you support? Or - do you just sit at home and say no one can change?

dckingsfan wrote:gtn130 wrote:Independents are mythical and do not matter as a voting bloc.
Link? Study? Or is this more fake news?
Last year, 42% of Americans, on average, identified as political independents, erasing the decline to 39% seen in the 2016 presidential election year. Independent identification is just one percentage point below the high of 43% in 2014. Twenty-nine percent of Americans identify themselves as Democrats and 27% as Republicans.
With a nearly record-high proportion of Americans identifying as independents in 2017, it follows that identification with the two major parties is near the historical low for each.In fact, the 29% of Americans who identify as Democrats ties 2015 as the lowest in Gallup's trend for that party. Republican identification (27%) is two points above its low of 25% in 2013.

gtn130 wrote:dckingsfan wrote:gtn130 wrote:The solid defense against right wing talking points is ***NOT*** to cave to them!
Bernie Sander is a Socialist
Nancy Pelosi is a Socialist
Joe Biden is a Socialist
It literally does not matter at all what policies people are putting out. Republicans are going to call it whatever they want regardless of how accurate that descriptor is. Castro making his policies more appealing to conservatives so they won't call it Open Borders or Socialism is completely asinine because they will do it anyway.
This again goes back to what I've been saying the last few pages: the ship has sailed on changing people's minds. Either you've bought into conservative propaganda or you haven't. What matters is driving turnout among the people who already agree with you. Independents are mythical and do not matter as a voting bloc.
Let's agree with you here for a moment. The ship has sailed - no one can be convinced.
Therefore: D volunteers - just stay home - people have already made up there minds. No need to prep on the issues. Just leave those folks that are teetering in the middle and are misinformed.
I wonder if you have ever walked precincts? So, which state do you live? Do you work voter registration? Which candidate do you support? Or - do you just sit at home and say no one can change?
No, I'm literally saying the voter turnout is what matters, so generating that turnout is massively important.
Jamaaliver wrote:More likely, he just doesn't know what he's talking about. Or worse, is actively lying.
This is why you can't trust partisan sources who pledge undying fealty to a particular political party.
dckingsfan wrote:verbal8 wrote:dckingsfan wrote:
Sorry, this doesn't prove your point other than if we have another Obama we would crush it.
Why shouldn't we expect at least Obama-level political talent from the nominee?
Any of these strike you as Obama-level? If so, that's the one to vote for. I am still trying to figure out which one to work for...
Biden (25)?
Warren (16)?
Sanders (12)?
Harris (11)?
Buttigieg (6)?
pancakes3 wrote:in a vacuum, i don't think having a large number of independents is a bad thing, but in the context of Trump sitting in office, the fact that there is a plurality of the nation who are "on the fence" and "need convincing" is f'ing depressing.
but i also don't think someone identifying as independent means they're on the fence. it could just be that they're republicans but are also nevertrumpers so they don't feel like identifying as republican at the moment.
also re: canvassing, i think that's got to have diminishing returns as we move forward. information is as readily available as ever and we don't need people to go door-to-door to spread the good word. in a pre-internet world, i get it, but now? how do you even insulate yourself to the point where you don't know the rough outline of what's going on?
sure people can stand to be educated more on the policies, but you're not going to get that from a doorway conversation either. not anymore than what facebook/twitter is going to teach.
verbal8 wrote:pancakes3 wrote:in a vacuum, i don't think having a large number of independents is a bad thing, but in the context of Trump sitting in office, the fact that there is a plurality of the nation who are "on the fence" and "need convincing" is f'ing depressing.
but i also don't think someone identifying as independent means they're on the fence. it could just be that they're republicans but are also nevertrumpers so they don't feel like identifying as republican at the moment.
also re: canvassing, i think that's got to have diminishing returns as we move forward. information is as readily available as ever and we don't need people to go door-to-door to spread the good word. in a pre-internet world, i get it, but now? how do you even insulate yourself to the point where you don't know the rough outline of what's going on?
sure people can stand to be educated more on the policies, but you're not going to get that from a doorway conversation either. not anymore than what facebook/twitter is going to teach.
I think canvasing drives turn-out more than convincing people or providing them additional information.
Also I think most people are on a "turn-out spectrum". Regular voters in a presidential election might be 95 to 85% chance. Casual or less engaged voters might be 40 to 60% for a presidential election and 20 to 30% for midterm or local election. If make personal contact, you are likely to move things in the direction of your preference.
Jamaaliver wrote:dckingsfan wrote:gtn130 wrote:Independents are mythical and do not matter as a voting bloc.
Link? Study? Or is this more fake news?
More likely, he just doesn't know what he's talking about. Or worse, is actively lying.
This is why you can't trust partisan sources who pledge undying fealty to a particular political party.
January 2018:Last year, 42% of Americans, on average, identified as political independents, erasing the decline to 39% seen in the 2016 presidential election year. Independent identification is just one percentage point below the high of 43% in 2014. Twenty-nine percent of Americans identify themselves as Democrats and 27% as Republicans.
With a nearly record-high proportion of Americans identifying as independents in 2017, it follows that identification with the two major parties is near the historical low for each.In fact, the 29% of Americans who identify as Democrats ties 2015 as the lowest in Gallup's trend for that party. Republican identification (27%) is two points above its low of 25% in 2013.
gtn130 wrote:dc, my comments about independents aren't really about you or jamaaliver or any politically engaged person who would be posting about politics on message boards. I know you personally voted for Hillary in 2016 and have voted R in the past. You are an exception to what I'm saying here. My point is that there are very few people who are actually like you, and I think you tend to superimpose your own thinking onto huge swaths of people who simply aren't thinking about things the same way you are.
The vast majority of people who self-identify as Independent still wind up voting for the same party every time. Everyone likes to believe they are too smart for partisanship and they are objective and rational thinkers, yet every presidential election is split along party lines despite 42% of voters claiming they're independent.
Most people are completely apolitical and just vote based on their own identity and which party they believe best aligns with that. The people who would actually care about political outcomes because they need essential government services often don't even vote.
dckingsfan wrote:So, from out discussions I decided to try something (not sanctioned). I asked folk if they were registered as usual. But then instead of asking if they were going to vote - I asked them what they thought about the two parties. At least half were disenchanted. To those I then asked if they thought either party was doing any good. Then if it was worth voting for either party.
An amazing number of those folks that weren't registered then didn't take the voter registration information packet. I am usually able to convince most to vote with a different tactic.
I haven't completely figured out what this means.
Fascinating.