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bullets13

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Everything posted by bullets13

  1. Another first down to the 10
  2. Pick up the 1st on a 1st down run to the 24
  3. 55% of the country identifies as pro-choice currently. That number is going up, not down. I'm really not trying to get into a debate about right or wrong, simply pointing out how poorly the right timed it. But like you said, defeating democrats at the ballot box is the way to do it, and waiting 4 months on the R v W deal would've greatly helped that happen.
  4. The problem is that’s about 1/7 of the number of votes he’s gonna need to win.
  5. Without a doubt there are a lot of stupid voters out there. That said, I think there are a lot of folks like me, who have strong views that go both ways. You and I closely align on some things, but are miles apart on others. At this stage in my life, I feel that A) many of the social views I feel strongly about have been addressed, and B ) things like the economy, taxes, and gun rights are at the top of my list when it comes to importance. i only make this point because I believe that there are plenty of voters who can make an informed vote in either direction, depending on which issues are most important to them at the time. And in that scenario, when given a candidate on one side or the other that they completely can’t stand, they’ll simply vote the other direction if they think both sides are addressing issues that they strongly believe in. The reversal of Roe vs. Wade was also a huge player in these midterms. Many swing voters who were going to vote based on the economy suddenly had another issue that they felt very strongly about. I would’ve liked for the right to have waited until after the midterms to address this issue, as I think it likely played an even bigger role in their struggles at the polls than Trump did. Abortion was the 2nd biggest current issue behind the economy among those polled, and it wasn’t an issue for republicans at all, since they’re happy where it stands. This means that the right created an issue that negatively affected them in a massive way just a couple of months before the elections. I understand that the right wanted it done as quickly as possible, but the best way to keep it that way is to gain as much political control as possible, which they failed to do.
  6. Most of the hardcore Trumpers I know aren't stupid. Given the choice between DeSantis and Biden pt. 2 or someone else, I think most of them will get out and vote for DeSantis. The dems will also not benefit from people getting out and voting against DeSantis the way they did when the left mobilized and voted heavily against Trump rather than for Biden.
  7. Horns are going to be really good this year as well.
  8. If Trump wins the nomination then democrats will win the election, regardless of who they trot out, just like in the last election. I'm praying that DeSantis runs and the Trump brigade realizes that DeSantis is Trump without the God complex and more conservative policy. Yes the media has destroyed Trump over the past six years, and yes they've unfairly portrayed Biden in a different way. That said, all the media had to do to destroy Trump is report the things he did and said. Anyone watching the way he acted generally developed a well-founded dislike of the guy, even folks like myself who will vote for him next election as well if he wins the nomination. I hope it doesn't come to that, and that the powers on the right will convince him to back out (unlikely since he thinks he's the king of all), or that he somehow loses the primary (I don't see this happening unless DeSantis runs, and then it's still a toss-up).
  9. I voted for Trump twice. If he secures the nomination this goround, I'll be (grudgingly) voting for him again. I don't have TDS. I've stated many times on here that I thought he did a decent job as president. But I don't like him, and he's destroying the republican party to the advantage of the left, and yes, that bothers me a lot. When Kari Lake was dumb enough to publicly say that she didn't want any "McCain Republicans" at her rallies, I wrote her off. Apparently so did a lot of the McCain republicans. You can't really protect some people from themselves, I guess. It's just shocking to me that she insulted the most popular Arizona politician of the last several generations and his supporters, WHO'S VOTES SHE NEEDED TO WIN, and then she somehow lost. But we all know the election was really stolen from her, I saw it on twitter.
  10. That really hurt your feelings, did it? I figured you guys would consider that a compliment.
  11. It's the easiest fix in the world! Quit nominating buffoons. That's literally all it takes. When a moderate feels the left is too far left, and the right is too far right, you know what a great tiebreaker is?? Likability. Again a post from you that places all the blame on everyone but the republicans, while complaining about how terrible the left is. Which makes MY point from earlier: there's a prevalent attitude amongst certain conservatives that appear much more content to refuse change and gripe about how dumb and terrible the left is than to demand change from their own party to secure victories.
  12. 4 players that should provide key minutes off the bench, but the five players the horns are starting now will likely not change when the football players return. at most maybe one change.
  13. Yes, clearly. In areas where it's 50/50 or close to it, that is literally all it takes when nearly 70% of the country isn't happy with how things are going under the current president. It's hard for me to even wrap my head around how badly the republicans screwed these midterms up, and how some people still defend them and blame it all on the left somehow. One only has to look at how likeable republican candidates in those areas have performed vs. unlikeable candidates. Georgia elected a very conservative, but likeable, republican governor by an 8% margin. Herschel Walker is going to a runoff with an opponent that should've been easy to defeat. Arizona elected a likeable republican governor by FIFTEEN points in 2018, but chose not to vote for Donaldina Trump in 2022. Voters in Pennsylvania chose to elect someone with a traumatic brain injury over Trump's TV Doctor buddy. These midterms were littered with instances like these, and unfortunately nearly all of them went against the right.
  14. whatever it takes to keep republicans in office. clearly what the right is trying currently isn't working well. a great start, without giving up any ground at all, would be to provide electable candidates. You guys continue to say over and over "feelings over policy", and the "idiots in the middle voted wrong" without acknowledging the right's shortcomings. It's now well-established that subpar candidates running on the "the election was stolen" and "insult everyone who doesn't agree with us" platforms do not perform well, yet the right continues with the same old nonsense: how could those idiots not pick our person with no experience who's peddling conspiracy theories and being a jerk? Anytime someone points out that the republican candidates are garbage in many cases, it's all excuses and justifications. According to you guys the left is ridiculous for voting for Fetterman, but we ran a TV doctor against him. Our ex-republican, ex-democrat, current-republican news anchor candidate who tries to be just like donald lost, and things don't look good for our bumbling football player who's anti-abortion (when he's not paying for them), and can barely string two sentences together. I just can't believe things didn't turn out better for these sparkling candidates. And now here comes Trump again, who's got considerably less support than he did when he lost the last election. But it'll be someone else's fault when he loses the election, no doubt.
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