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Would You Ever Vote For A Democrat? (Is The Author Serious? Never!!!)
Townhall.com ^ | August 19, 2018 | Erich Reimer

Posted on 08/19/2018 9:08:25 AM PDT by Kaslin

There once was a time in American history – in fact perhaps for the bulk of it– when cross-party voting was nothing special but rather the norm. Electoral results would vary wildly as voters deviated wildly from their partisan loyalties and even the power of party on our elected representatives was far weaker.

Nowadays the mere thought of cross-party voting baffles the minds of most on either side of the aisle, as if it were an unspeakable heresy or like a Yankees fan hoping one game that the Red Sox win it.

Part of the reason for this is that the impact of party-line voting has changed as the parties have become more ideologically homogenous. In past decades you could very well vote for a truly pro-Second Amendment and pro-life Democrat or a pro-regulation and pro-welfare-state Republican. In 2018 our parties hold their cards and Overton windows much tighter, for example as we see with regular sieges and fierce purges against remaining pro-life Democrats.

Indeed, the increasing ideological lockstep of our political parties is also a reflection of how our parties have gone from big-tent coalitions, less a representation of beliefs but more of location and culture, to truly seemingly ideas-based organizations.

For example, for much of the Democratic Party’s 20thcentury history, it was based on an urban machine network that essentially supported the communities it was based in through patronage, mutual aid, and protection, particularly for the waves of immigrants that came to our shores during America’s industrial growth years.

In contrast, the Republican Party retained a high-brow core that also united with farmers, businessmen, and the intellectual elites, with its ever-shifting bases also including prohibitionists, isolationists, civil rights advocates, pro-immigration champions, and others.

All of this seems incredible to us today when we think that once upon a time it was the Democrats who were the party of those who wanted to promote, for example, God in our public life, immigration restriction, and an aggressive American foreign policy and it was Republicans who fought for secularism and trust-busting.

As for how this is all relevant to our current debates? It is a historical reminder that our two-party system is constantly evolving and changing, as the natural ‘market’ reaction of the political big tents to the underlying passions and beliefs of the electorate turn and morph.

On one hand, the ideological unity of our political parties makes them much more coherent organizing vehicles for certain worldviews and policy goals. However, I believe the negative effects are far more, due specifically to the way human nature works.

As we’ve seen in other countries, where often parties are less big-tent but more ideological, the organizations experience extraordinary instability in terms of their ability to keep power and relevance in the public square as the issues of today may become irrelevant tomorrow, leading to extensive renaming, rebranding, and reorganizing.

Furthermore, groupthink is powerful and real. When a party adopts a certain ideological stand clearly, it inherently causes the people within it to be pushed to conform to a series of tenets that in the end, few may fully agree with but with whom voicing disagreement is difficult.

This effect stifles debate and disconnects our discourse and policymaking process from actually looking rationally at the most effective laws, regulations, and norms to promote and implement, as well as reflecting what the population actually wants to see done.

We end up with a disconcerted and distorted discourse, with the worst potential results being like in the Soviet Union where the elites would battle endlessly over the tiniest, and fundamentally most irrelevant, ideological line in the treatises of their ‘great leaders and thinkers.

In the Soviet Union, this process became so twisted that entire completely imagined paradigms arose out of it, such as the pseudoscience of Lysenkoism, as the power of groupthink and towing the line took its course.

Ideology has meaning and it seems our current political climate is giving it more power. However, in the end, the world is extraordinarily complex and always changing, making a combination of fundamental values and pragmatic analysis and implementation the best in my opinion – and indeed historically what our country and its people have embraced.

The idea of Conservative Democrats or Progressive Republicans seem like oxymorons to us in our current political climate but there still may be a day when those terms go from the dustbin of history to reality once again. In the meantime, our newly empowered parties who have seemingly won their own internal battles now participate in what is fundamentally a flawed and losing for the country, war against each other.

After all, President Donald Trump smashed ideological orthodoxy to pieces when he ran and won the GOP nomination. Even the most seemingly set-in-stone things can be surprisingly brittle and hollow.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: demonrats; liberals
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To: Kaslin

I did about 40 years ago. I hope you all will forgive my youthful indiscretion.


61 posted on 08/19/2018 10:12:14 AM PDT by Lurkina.n.Learnin (Wisdom and education are different things. Don't confuse them.)
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To: Kaslin

Given the choice of Mark Kirk, Republican who voted the right way about 20% of the time, Tammy Duckworth, Democrat who would vote the right way about 1% of the time, since I couldn’t vote for either, I threw my vote away on a 3rd party candidate.


62 posted on 08/19/2018 10:13:00 AM PDT by bigbob (Trust Sessions. Trust the Plan.)
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To: Kaslin

Swamp dwelling fraud little Marco? He is not qualified to pump out my septic tank.


63 posted on 08/19/2018 10:14:48 AM PDT by cp124 (FUGOPe)
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To: bigbob

I probably would have done the same, or just used the write in option


64 posted on 08/19/2018 10:17:17 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
The only time I voted for a Democrat was after California switched to their "top two" system.

My Congressional district was redistricted in 2010, pitting senile Pete Stark against newcomer Eric Swalwell. Voting for Swalwell against Stark was a no-brainer. At the time, Swalwell was portraying himself as an "aw, shucks... my mom can't believe I'm a Congressman" kind of guy. Now, he's become a typical Democrat attack dog, the way that Anthony Weiner was in his first term.

I'm glad I moved away from California into a safely Republican state.

-PJ

65 posted on 08/19/2018 10:20:08 AM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: Kaslin

Under no circumstances.


66 posted on 08/19/2018 10:21:56 AM PDT by I want the USA back (Media deliberately and intentionally chooses to lie, with full awareness and knowledge.)
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To: Kaslin

I think that after the Democrat Party implodes (around 2020), the Republican party will split between Trump supporters and never-Trumpers. There will be some minor parties based on race and sexual perversion.


67 posted on 08/19/2018 10:23:35 AM PDT by Cowboy Bob ("Other People's Money" = The life blood of Liberalism)
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To: Kaslin

I voted for a Democrat once. I switched to the Democrat primary to vote for Claire McCaskill over Bob Holden. Biggest voting mistake of my life. Holden would have lost the general election anyway. That victory paved the way for Senator McCaskill.


68 posted on 08/19/2018 10:23:50 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (<img src="http://i.imgur.com/WukZwJP.gif" width=400><p> zXSEP5Z, xnKL3lW, XywCCJd, hGhstl4.)
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To: Flick Lives

“There once was a time in American history – in fact perhaps for the bulk of it..”

When America was still America. You could still have democrat friends and lovers.

Twice I voted for democrats. In 1984 for senator from Illinois I voted for Paul Simon (D) over Charles Percy (R), Percy had become a terrible RINO. Had voted for the cursed Gun Control Act of 1968 and had been pimping gun control ever since. Also, authored 55 mph speed limit. A thorough prick. Simon was somewhat unknown to me but I took a chance. Turned out to also be a prick. Simon won. Both of these worthies are long since croaked.

In 1998 I voted for Glenn Poshard (D) for Illinois governor over George Ryan (R). Ryan had promise but fell in with ultra corrupt “combine” the filthy Chicago controlled unholy alliance between democrats and republicans. As incumbent Lt. Gov., Ryan had spearheaded a push to ban “assault” weapons. Even went so far as to borrow full autos from Indiana State Police to make a TV ad on the dangers of semis! Poshard on the other hand was from southern Illinois, much more conservative and staunchly against gun control. Naturally, his own party and the “combine” went against him. He lost. Ryan went on as governor to ban capital punishment among other things. Also, went on to prison for 6 years due to filthy corruption.


69 posted on 08/19/2018 10:36:08 AM PDT by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: Kaslin

I consider voting for a baby-killing Satanist to be equivalent to voting for myself to end up in Hell. Literally. There is no sin or no perversion that a ‘Rat will not first condone and then advocate for and then make mandatory.

Vote for them? I can smell the sulfur wafting up from the DemocRat column of the ballot!


70 posted on 08/19/2018 10:37:19 AM PDT by Cincinnatus.45-70 (What do DemocRats enjoy more than a truckload of dead babies? Unloading them with a pitchfork!)
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To: Kaslin

Since the Democratic Party has now become nothing more than a front for the CPUSA, there is absolutely no way I will vote for a Democrat. If there is no Republican opponent, but there is a Libertarian opponent, I will vote for the Libertarian as a protest vote.

Potestas Democratorum delenda est.


71 posted on 08/19/2018 10:37:55 AM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: Kaslin

Only when I’m dead and buried, apparently....


72 posted on 08/19/2018 10:38:51 AM PDT by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
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To: Kaslin

Only for some town offices.


73 posted on 08/19/2018 10:49:38 AM PDT by Raycpa
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To: Kaslin
One of his “pilot witnesses” was a liar and a not a real pilot. The Demonicrats are masters of propaganda.
74 posted on 08/19/2018 10:50:21 AM PDT by mountainlion (Live well for those that did not make it back.)
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To: Kaslin

If they could resurrect Scoop Jackson.


75 posted on 08/19/2018 10:56:09 AM PDT by Zenjitsuman (Y)
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To: Kaslin
My wife asked me to vote for john mccain the last time because the registered democrat opponent was not much better.

So technically yes, I have voted for a damned democrat.

76 posted on 08/19/2018 10:57:22 AM PDT by Caipirabob (Communists...Socialists...Fascists & AntiFa...Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
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To: Kaslin

Only if a Bush was running.


77 posted on 08/19/2018 11:04:47 AM PDT by jpsb
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To: Kaslin
In the first election in which I was eligible to vote, 1972, I voted for Scoop Jackson in the Michigan primary. When he lost to George McGovern, I voted for George Wallace in the general election.

In 1976, I again supported Scoop Jackson in the Michigan primary. When he lost to Jimmy Carter, I voted for Gerald Ford in the general election.

By the next election sequence, I had moved to and was a resident of Texas. Since that time, I have never voted for a Democrat candidate at any level, whether in a primary or a general election.

78 posted on 08/19/2018 11:07:26 AM PDT by BlueLancer (Antifa and Social Justice Warriors (SJWs) = SturmAbteilung)
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To: Kaslin
Would You Ever Vote For A Democrat?

never have and never will

79 posted on 08/19/2018 11:17:58 AM PDT by mjp ((pro-{God, reality, reason, egoism, individualism, natural rights, limited government, capitalism}))
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To: mjp

Ditto here.


80 posted on 08/19/2018 11:19:22 AM PDT by Kaslin
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