Friday's PO ...speak up
- Z is for Zangie
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
The trouble with any kind of reasonable gun regulation isn't that the Republican Party is beholden to the NRA or gun manufacturers. This hasn't been true for a long time, and both the NRA and many Manufacturers are either filing bankruptcy or in poor financial condition.
The real problem is the Republican Party, backed by the NRA decades ago, doubled down on scaring people into arming themselves and linking conservative values to that. This is much the same as the abortion issue, which really wasn't much of an issue prior to the early 70's.
What has happened is the Republican party now has a base that they have carefully cultivated to fear the government taking their guns away, and who they've stoked the idea that a violent overthrow of the government is not just their right, but their duty. These is the same Republican Party that convinced these same people that Democrats are in favor of killing babies.
The consequences of this is the Republican Party can not change direction on issues like abortion, or in this case gun control. Republican politicians decades ago lead with a fear and violence position and that has grown a whole culture of it in this country, and that culture is their "base." Even if they wanted to, they can't back away from that position. They all know that if they support even the simplest or most common sense gun regulations they will be primaried right out of politics. The Republican gun-toting base voting group will simply not allow even the slightest wavering on this issue, and the facts of the the situation have nothing to do with it.
Republican politicians brewed this beer of fear and hatred decades ago, and the current crop of them have no choice but to perpetuate it. The constant gerrymandering of districts only makes it worse, by making the general election irrelevant. This is not a matter of fencing Democrats out, but of making it so that the only real election that matters is the Primary, and in these Republican heavy districts only the most gun-happy anti-abortion right-wing nuts can move forward.
It's a self replicating cycle, which really doesn't have anything to do with politics or political "sides," but staying in power at any cost. And more children will die.
The real problem is the Republican Party, backed by the NRA decades ago, doubled down on scaring people into arming themselves and linking conservative values to that. This is much the same as the abortion issue, which really wasn't much of an issue prior to the early 70's.
What has happened is the Republican party now has a base that they have carefully cultivated to fear the government taking their guns away, and who they've stoked the idea that a violent overthrow of the government is not just their right, but their duty. These is the same Republican Party that convinced these same people that Democrats are in favor of killing babies.
The consequences of this is the Republican Party can not change direction on issues like abortion, or in this case gun control. Republican politicians decades ago lead with a fear and violence position and that has grown a whole culture of it in this country, and that culture is their "base." Even if they wanted to, they can't back away from that position. They all know that if they support even the simplest or most common sense gun regulations they will be primaried right out of politics. The Republican gun-toting base voting group will simply not allow even the slightest wavering on this issue, and the facts of the the situation have nothing to do with it.
Republican politicians brewed this beer of fear and hatred decades ago, and the current crop of them have no choice but to perpetuate it. The constant gerrymandering of districts only makes it worse, by making the general election irrelevant. This is not a matter of fencing Democrats out, but of making it so that the only real election that matters is the Primary, and in these Republican heavy districts only the most gun-happy anti-abortion right-wing nuts can move forward.
It's a self replicating cycle, which really doesn't have anything to do with politics or political "sides," but staying in power at any cost. And more children will die.
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
And now that the depression is out of the way, there's this!
https://kidnappedbygnomes.com/index.php
(I'd play that game.)
https://kidnappedbygnomes.com/index.php
(I'd play that game.)
Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
Well said!Tarmaque wrote: ↑Fri Jun 03, 2022 2:53 amThe trouble with any kind of reasonable gun regulation isn't that the Republican Party is beholden to the NRA or gun manufacturers. This hasn't been true for a long time, and both the NRA and many Manufacturers are either filing bankruptcy or in poor financial condition.
The real problem is the Republican Party, backed by the NRA decades ago, doubled down on scaring people into arming themselves and linking conservative values to that. This is much the same as the abortion issue, which really wasn't much of an issue prior to the early 70's.
What has happened is the Republican party now has a base that they have carefully cultivated to fear the government taking their guns away, and who they've stoked the idea that a violent overthrow of the government is not just their right, but their duty. These is the same Republican Party that convinced these same people that Democrats are in favor of killing babies.
The consequences of this is the Republican Party can not change direction on issues like abortion, or in this case gun control. Republican politicians decades ago lead with a fear and violence position and that has grown a whole culture of it in this country, and that culture is their "base." Even if they wanted to, they can't back away from that position. They all know that if they support even the simplest or most common sense gun regulations they will be primaried right out of politics. The Republican gun-toting base voting group will simply not allow even the slightest wavering on this issue, and the facts of the the situation have nothing to do with it.
Republican politicians brewed this beer of fear and hatred decades ago, and the current crop of them have no choice but to perpetuate it. The constant gerrymandering of districts only makes it worse, by making the general election irrelevant. This is not a matter of fencing Democrats out, but of making it so that the only real election that matters is the Primary, and in these Republican heavy districts only the most gun-happy anti-abortion right-wing nuts can move forward.
It's a self replicating cycle, which really doesn't have anything to do with politics or political "sides," but staying in power at any cost. And more children will die.
I see both survivors of the shooting in Brooklyn and Uvalde are taking steps to sue the gun manufacturers.
There ya go! Let the” invisible hand of the market” solve the problem. Make assault weapons too costly to sell to the general public. The suits are alleging that the marketing targets young people
It’s a sad state of affairs when the second amendment has morphed into a “ you can kill a large group of people anytime you want and the government can’t do anything to stop you”
- GuideToACrazyWorld
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
I've said it before and I will say it again, the beginning of the end of a conservative party was the inclusion of the "Religious right" in the GOP. Since then there have been other examples of the GOP including groups for the sake of beating "' 'dem liberals" while forsaking anything that resembles principle. It's been great from the perspective of holding power, but terrible from the perspective of running a country. What scares me is how many people blindly vote part, where in today's parties you can't assume you know what you are getting based on that affiliation. The GOP is probably worse in this regard then the DNC.Tarmaque wrote: ↑Fri Jun 03, 2022 2:53 amThe real problem is the Republican Party, backed by the NRA decades ago, doubled down on scaring people into arming themselves and linking conservative values to that. This is much the same as the abortion issue, which really wasn't much of an issue prior to the early 70's.
Tarmaque wrote: ↑Fri Jun 03, 2022 2:53 amWhat has happened is the Republican party now has a base that they have carefully cultivated to fear the government taking their guns away, and who they've stoked the idea that a violent overthrow of the government is not just their right, but their duty. These is the same Republican Party that convinced these same people that Democrats are in favor of killing babies
That harkens back to the "Southern Strategy" when the party intentionally cultivated the ignorant. They then melded those ignorant people and created whatever this has become. I will quote Mark Levin, "We don't have a conservative party in this country."
Party above country baby. Is there an echo in here?
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
I think I found your cartoon more depressing then your shots at the GOP. Our culture really sucks.
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
The sequel was better. "Son, you are a walking violation of the laws of nature. But we don't enforce them laws!"GuideToACrazyWorld wrote: ↑Fri Jun 03, 2022 5:41 pmI haven't even thought about that movie in decades.
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
I have a buddy with a lot of tattoos and a shaved head. I keep trying to get him to get a Black Widows tattoo around his belly button, but he won't do it.
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Re: Friday's PO ...speak up
My wife has never seen Smoky and the Bandit. One day I told her that a transam has to be black with gold accents and a gold fire bird on the hood. She didn't know what I was talking about. So I call a buddy on speaker.
"Hey man, what color does a transam have to be?"
"Black"
"Just black"
"No, black and gold."
My wife thought it was a set up. In her defense that is totally something I would do.