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Where does it say that in the Constitution?no if you commit a crime you lose your rights.
Where does it say that in the Constitution?no if you commit a crime you lose your rights.
There was one interview that changed my view on this (forgot who it was with) but the guy was a green barrette or something

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I will pray for all of you
Where does it say that in the Constitution?
nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;
I believe that the word in that context refers to not being imprisoned.Are rights included under liberty?
I believe that the word in that context refers to not being imprisoned.
It's cool man, evil did strike me as hyperbolic.
And it's hard to say this without sounding like I'd ever give a free pass for killing innocent people but collateral damage happens in every war. If you're going to call him a war criminal you'll have to point to all the facts surrounding those cases.
There was one interview that changed my view on this (forgot who it was with) but the guy was a green barrette or something and he described missions in which they had orders to take out well known terrorists who were basically killing innocent people. They ordered a strike on him and the terrorists grabbed innocents because they knew Americans would take care to avoid killing them but they didn't know this so the terrorists and innocents were killed. In that scenario the terrorists used innocents as a shield and that's why they were killed.
Anyway, that's just one story from one dude but the issue is complicated.
And I asked Ultra but someone will have to point to actual crimes that Obama actively prevented investigations into, but I'm confident they don't exist. And the part about him having policies that favor the wealthy over the poor is just flat out wrong and quite the opposite.
People love witch hunts and the democratic party and their affiliates are always looking to attack people.
Taking the public into account. Not "more agreeable" to left-wing ideologues.
First part is obvious bias, but the second part IMO shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the GOP (and the Intercept left).
The vitriol she inspired was solely a function of her position, and if someone else had that position, they'd inspire the same vitriol. Let's be honest: If Clinton had said in 2014 that she was retiring from public life to focus on her charitable work, she'd have 70%-plus approval from the public today, the State Department IT security protocol violation wouldn't have even been covered by Fox, and a lot of Republican voters and the far left would express sadness that we have the evil, corrupt, criminal, warmongering O'Malley or whomever instead of honorable, reasonable, peaceful Clinton. Plus, we'd have heard that, "OMG, Democrats could have nominated someone who was overqualified and super popular, but they chose X instead!"
There are any number of choices, I think. Given the direction the GOP has gone, I think it's vital that they remain reasonable. They do have a fine line to walk--on the one hand not alienating swing voters and the other, not losing their own base. But the far left is simply not a reliable bloc, and they work against their own interests (to get something like, say, single payer requires full Democratic control of gov't and a big majority in the Senate, while the far left refusing to vote Democratic both prevents that and provides them with an unreasonable basis to not vote Democratic).
Good list. You should rank those issues in order of importanceA huge number of things come to mind- and only listing things where there is a fundamental disagreement w/Republicans-
Healthcare should be treated as a human right, workers from the lower-to-middle-class should make a larger share, we should stop redistributing wealth upward, gay/trans people should have the same rights as everyone else, racism and other forms of bigotry should continue to be eliminated, foreign countries should not be allowed to interfere with our democracy, abortion is a healthcare issue and women should have more control of their bodies, people should be allowed to vote no matter what race they are, we should base our environmental policy on scientific knowledge, etc etc etc
What?
On definitional arguments, you seem to be betraying at least one of your own rules with the implication of "bias." Haven't you routinely argued for a more informed understanding of that word?
Secondly, I do not know what the "Intercept left" is, but I've seen you use it with some implicit condescension and scorn before. As far as I can tell, the "Intercept left" would only be moderate liberals with a clear libertarian or anti-imperialist color.
I can't respond to this, other than to say I disagree with your hypothesis. Clinton was deeply unpopular with huge swaths of the electorate on the left and on the right, and this (on the left) peaked with the 2008 primary, wherein Clinton cast Obama as a gun-grabber, a foreigner, and a radical. On the right, it may well be a matter of Clinton's continued presence within the political conversation over the years, but it's frankly ludicrous to presume that the GOP could replicate the vitriol it has fostered in its base toward Clinton over the past 25 years so easily with an alternative opposition.
Do you have any electoral data to substantiate these tired aspersions? Was it not sufficiently shown that a higher percentage of Sanders voters (who I am assuming you are referring to as the "far left," since the communist far left exists in such trivial amounts that its participation can hardly be said to be electorally significant, nor even remotely represented by what ideology you would ascribe to The Intercept) voted for Clinton than Clinton voters did for Obama in 2008?
You have to be privy to the fact that you are epitomizing the cynical and elitist tone that the Clinton campaign itself suffered from.
You shouldn't concern yourself with my skills and instead focus on whether you can articulate the point you're attempting to make.Im still not convinced that reading is within your skillset.