that kind of statement elides the actual struggle that produces the "best option available"we strive for the best but usually have to settle for the best option available
OK... but I feel that there was a long Democratic selection procedure. And after that they picked Biden, and we all had our moan about that. And that was in the past and then there was an election and the choices were between Biden and Trump... and, the best one won, so I'm happy.And that the distance between Biden and what we want is a large enough as to register as genuine tragedy
The lads are just an imaginary chorus with the same opinion as you, I don't find your invocation of them particularly convincing except when I agree with you.I agree with the lads In that there's nothing to cheer about
dude it ain't a recent thing thoJust seems like the difficulty consists of remaining outspoken against the dominant party, now that such outspokenness has been designated as deplorable
that's a ridiculous analogy. winning a sports title isn't actually an important thing, besides to people directly involved.I didn't cry (again) about England losing when that finished
Come on Padraig,, you surely understand how analogies work.that's a ridiculous analogy. winning a sports title isn't actually an important thing, besides to people directly involved.
Though I wasn't talking about what you were saying so much as Luka.this isn't "having a moan" it's a fully qualified "it's great the Trump lost, almost everything else about the election is terrible"
it's not about being happy or unhappy, it's about degrees of unhappiness. I would be much unhappier if Trump had won, but I'm not happy with this.
Biden sucked when he won the primaries and he sucks now. we don't have to stop saying he sucks just cos we said it during the primaries.
what's recent - but well predating George Floyd - is an energized segment of the American left saying fuck this, we're sick of not being represented by the Democratic Party, we're going to try to force the party to represent our beliefs. and to some extent they've managed to drag the corporate Democratic establishment - kicking and screaming every step of the way - left, but they've been more successful doing that on social than on economic issues, i.e. ones not directly opposed to corporate and other major donor interests. what hasn't changed at all is the attitude of the Democratic establishment to those efforts to drag it left, which is as bitter as it's ever been if not more - that partly manifested in the refusal of the Democratic establishment to run on progressive issues, i.e. running scared from the kinds of redbaiting that was a huge factor in Trump winning Florida.I guess I'm just not quite convinced that it isn't recent
I do. it was a bad analogy.Come on Padraig,, you surely understand how analogies work.
fwiw I agree with that. there's a lot of devil in the details but the scope of it is accurate.And that the distance between Biden and what we want is a large enough as to register as genuine tragedy
exactly - those things of themselves are good as ideas (whether they turn out well depends on the execution)very emphatically geared toward establishing "engagement cultures" and spaces wherein everyone feels their voice is heard