I'm half pacific islander and half white.
I was trying to be vague but Pacific islander is apparently the wrong term. I was born in the Philippines. I guess that's classified as asian.
I don't care. I just want to fuck Charmane Star.
I'm half pacific islander and half white.
I don't think it'll ever be reduced to irrelevancy, even with an influx of immigrants from south of the border. There are too many people (not enough IMO) in this country who reject the left's agenda for the GOP to ever become irrelevant. With the exception of Mark Warner in Virginia and Ben Nelson in Florida, the GOP hold all U.S. senatorial seats and governorships in the south.
And the republicans hold the highest majority they've had in the house since 1946. The democrats are closer to being irrelevant than they've ever have. But the pendulum swings both ways. I learned that in 2006.
As in gay marriage? Obama was against gay marriage while candidate and president. Didn't the majority of California voters vote against it? You can hardly accuse them of being conservative.
Regarding the voters in California....depends which side of the electorate is more energized on any given issue. I know a shitload of Californians who are hard-core conservative just as I know plenty of Texans who hold liberal views. Hell, you're a conservative living in Oregon so you are clearly aware of what I speak. :quack:
Most of California's Black Voters Backed Gay Marriage Ban
By Karl Vick and Ashley Surdin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, November 7, 2008
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 6 -- Any notion that Tuesday's election represented a liberal juggernaut must overcome a detail from the voting booths of California: The same voters who turned out strongest for Barack Obama also drove a stake through the heart of same-sex marriage.
Seven in 10 African Americans who went to the polls voted yes on Proposition 8, the ballot measure overruling a state Supreme Court judgment that legalized same-sex marriage and brought 18,000 gay and lesbian couples to Golden State courthouses in the past six months.
Similar measures passed easily in Florida and Arizona. It was closer in California, but no ethnic group anywhere rejected the sanctioning of same-sex unions as emphatically as the state's black voters, according to exit polls. Fifty-three percent of Latinos also backed Proposition 8, overcoming the bare majority of white Californians who voted to let the court ruling stand.
I appreciate that you think you're conservative, and You Might truly be, but the current GOP only uses conservatism as means to an end and I would suggest to you that you're better than that. Show me a conservative that's a true conservationist and I'll show you a fish out of water.
So minorities, and especially blacks, are at odds with white liberals on this issue.
OK. That surprises you? Does every conservative march in lockstep on every issue?
As the great Will Rogers once said, "I don't belong to any organized political party. I'm a democrat".
Oh...and sorry, I thought you lived in Oregon. My bad....
No, but my point was opposition to gay marriage doesn't apply to just conservatives. How can you single out republicans for being against gay marriage when a major voting bloc of the democrat party including the president himself was against it?
Allow me to clarify this for you. I am not singling out republicans....I am singling out conservatives regarding social issues. The bloc of black voters who voted against the proposition aren't liberals on that issue, they are conservatives.
But that's convenient.
In what manner is that being convenient? It's just the truth.
It wasn't the conservative base that sunk gay marriage in california, it was the liberal base. The irony.
But switch labels as you see fit.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/06/AR2008110603880.html
Most of California's Black Voters Backed Gay Marriage Ban
By Karl Vick and Ashley Surdin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, November 7, 2008
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 6 -- Any notion that Tuesday's election represented a liberal juggernaut must overcome a detail from the voting booths of California: The same voters who turned out strongest for Barack Obama also drove a stake through the heart of same-sex marriage.
Seven in 10 African Americans who went to the polls voted yes on Proposition 8, the ballot measure overruling a state Supreme Court judgment that legalized same-sex marriage and brought 18,000 gay and lesbian couples to Golden State courthouses in the past six months.
Similar measures passed easily in Florida and Arizona. It was closer in California, but no ethnic group anywhere rejected the sanctioning of same-sex unions as emphatically as the state's black voters, according to exit polls. Fifty-three percent of Latinos also backed Proposition 8, overcoming the bare majority of white Californians who voted to let the court ruling stand.
So minorities, and especially blacks, are at odds with white liberals on this issue.
Your error is to automatically connote "liberal" with "democrat" and "conservative" with "republican".
However, overall, the republicans have painted themselves into a corner that is guaranteed to make them a minority so I think your claims about the demise of the liberal viewpoint are greatly exaggerated. Gay? Conservatives don't want you. Black? They don't want you. Hispanic? They don't want you. Non-Christian? They don't want you
We'll see what happens in the presidential election in 2 years but I will concede that, typically, old, white rural people are more likely to vote than younger, ethnically and racially diverse and urban constituents are. It's the greatest hope the republicans have going forward and, all things considered, not at all an unlikely outcome for them to prevail. It's happened before....it'll happen again.
I'm less engaged and interested now
You made the same correlation in your earlier post:
The old, white rural conservative. But in California, it was 7 to 10, the black, urban liberal who voted against gay marriage.
Your claim was opposition to gay marriage was a hallmark of conservatives (read: white conservatives). My claim is that it wasn't exclusive to them.
When I "switched sides" so to speak I went all in. I'm less engaged and interested now but I'm telling you, at no point did I get from the right that minorities weren't welcome. But then I was looked at as an individual instead of as part of a group.
That's actually an understatement.
To the OP, sorry for derailing this thread earlier. Back on topic, yeah, presidents get too much credit and blame for gas prices (youtube democrats blaming bush for gas prices). OPEC is hurting and Putin has to be hurting. $2+/gallon was a shock to me at the time. Getting below that would be another shock.