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Cyburbian
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I read where he was going to concentrate his efforts in the 4 battleground states: Florida, NC, Ohio & __________ (I forgot it).
Nevada was/is the 4th
I read where he was going to concentrate his efforts in the 4 battleground states: Florida, NC, Ohio & __________ (I forgot it).
HEADLINE: People are so stressed by this election that the American Psychological Association has coping tips
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...sociation-has-coping-tips/?tid=pm_local_pop_b
Are you ? and how do you cope ?
like post on Cyburbia on teh Random Thread.![]()
I saw a post on FB that if Bernie wins Vermont with write-in votes and neither Clinton or Trump get enough electoral college votes, Bernie could be 'appointed' president. I have seen several of these what-if things recently.
The only 3rd party candidate that is on the ballot in all 50 dates is Gary Johnson, who might win his home state. Additionally, I am shocked that the election is still this close between Trump and Clinton.
I saw a post on FB that if Bernie wins Vermont with write-in votes and neither Clinton or Trump get enough electoral college votes, Bernie could be 'appointed' president. I have seen several of these what-if things recently.
The only 3rd party candidate that is on the ballot in all 50 dates is Gary Johnson, who might win his home state. Additionally, I am shocked that the election is still this close between Trump and Clinton.
I guess it depends on what you mean by 'close' but my impression is that Trump is in deep deficits in the polls currently and has pretty much been in deficit for 98% of the campaign.
538 has some fairly reliable/accurate info on their averaged polling methodology.
Close as in the electoral college breakup where none of the candidates get 270.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/2016_elections_electoral_college_map.html
Meh. I don't consider that much of a toss-up. Clinton would need to win only two of those states labeled "toss ups" and not also labeled Maine or New Hampshire. Trump would need to basically run the board.
CNN said:A GOP office in Hillsborough, North Carolina, was firebombed over the weekend, with a swastika and the words "Nazi Republicans get out of town or else" spray painted on an adjacent building, according to local officials.
"The flammable substance appears to have ignited inside the building, burned some furniture and damaged the building's interior before going out. The substance was housed in a bottle thrown through one of the building's front windows," according to a statement by the town of Hillsborough.
That's what Trump announced before any sort of investigation started. And you know how she's been whippin' up her supporters hinting they should engage in acts of violence and mayhem. So must be true, huh? Seems to me it could just as easily be a Johnson supporter - or even, believe it or not, a TRUMP supporter (I actually think this the most likely scenario).
That's what Trump announced before any sort of investigation started. And you know how she's been whippin' up her supporters hinting they should engage in acts of violence and mayhem. So must be true, huh? Seems to me it could just as easily be a Johnson supporter - or even, believe it or not, a TRUMP supporter (I actually think this the most likely scenario).
So are you saying that it is possible that Clinton supporters organized and started the violence that the Trump rallies like some of the extreme right wing fringe is claiming.
I highly doubt that it was Johnson supporters and I think it is more likely to be a Clinton supporter than it would be a Trump supporter, but it is possible. Especially when Clinton and her team have been supporters of Saul Alinsky and this seems to be a page out of the book Rules for Radicals more than the book Art of the Deal.
So are you saying that it is possible that Clinton supporters organized and started the violence that the Trump rallies like some of the extreme right wing fringe is claiming.
I was being facetious.
On a side note Trump should take a page out of Hillary's book concerning her response to the incident. She immediately condemned the act. This is what Trump has failed to do repeatedly during this campaign. Hillary provided none of that coy...well, I can't control all those 2nd Amendment people out there. Sometimes people take matters into their own hands. And I wouldn't be surprised if there's an armed insurrection if I don't win on Election Day.....:-{
I thought her response was terrific and you are 100% correct. A democrat group even started a go-fund-me site to raise money to help with repairs.
My point is we have two candidates that are bringing out the worst in society. Neither campaign has positive message and playing off the fears of what the other might do. I fear that your prediction about an armed altercation will be correct. My wife and I plan on voting early to avoid such a conflict.
I'm going to vote on Election Day, mainly to see what's going on at the polls and if there will be any fights.
Same here.
I fear that your prediction about an armed altercation will be correct. My wife and I plan on voting early to avoid such a conflict.
I think the chances for assassination attempts and rebellious brawls are going to be very high over the next presidential term.
You've now changed your mind on this huh?
As a courtesy to electors wishing to vote their absentee ballot in person, the Grand Rapids Clerk’s Office will provide extended office hours to accommodate the public interest. The dates and times are as follows...
I voted yesterday. No waiting, didn't need to remember my precinct number.
As a courtesy to electors wishing to vote their absentee ballot in person, the Grand Rapids Clerk's Office will provide extended office hours to accommodate the public interest. The dates and times are as follows:
Tuesday, Oct. 18 5 - 7 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 20 5 - 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 25 5 - 7 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 27 5 - 7 p.m.
**SUNDAY, OCT. 30** Noon – 5 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 1 5 - 7 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 5 8 a.m. – 2 p.m.
For the first time in years, the doors of City Hall will be open on a Sunday -- Oct. 30 -- to provide an additional opportunity to the community for in-person absentee voting.
"This is a historic moment in the City of Grand Rapids, as the doors are usually closed and quiet on Sundays," City Clerk O'Neal said. "Recognizing the importance of this Presidential election, compounded with busy schedules, voters are seeking for a more convenient time and ways to vote, so we're waking up City Hall. We are happy to extend this unusual occurrence to members of the voting community and we encourage voters to come out," O'Neal added.
I voted yesterday. No waiting, didn't need to remember my precinct number.
Just absentee voted. Held my nose and went with Hill-Dog. I feel SICK to my stomach doing so but I am that scared of trump.
- Something that I found really interesting, there is only one state that has mandatory computer classes to graduate high school, so I am thinking why can’t we do that in North Carolina.
Why?! Kids learn that stuff almost from the womb now. A kid in high school will know how to do that, and all that will come of that class is general debauchery and terrible grades because no one will be interested in it.
- I read a study by a German company that said by 2030 80 percent of the world’s population will live in an urban metropolitan center. So we either have to become that urban metropolitan center or find a way to slow down that process.”
Really? That's your big answer? To either come up with nearly 783 thousand people in our county in just shy of 14 years or "slow down the process". Why even comment at that point? You're basically saying rural communities are dying, and to get over it.
Just so I'm clear, the non-italics were the actual answers and the italicized portions were your thoughts? 'Cause I first read that as the candidates going back and forth with each other, which would've been amazing!
Do you have yours -
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If Hilldog wins it'll be 4 more years of Obama in the sense the GOP will just continue to obstruct everything like spoiled children who can't get their way.
If Hilldog wins it'll be 4 more years of Obama in the sense the GOP will just continue to obstruct everything like spoiled children who can't get their way.
If Hilldog wins it'll be 4 more years of Obama in the sense the GOP will just continue to obstruct everything like spoiled children who can't get their way.
Except I think you'll see a constitutional challenge to SCOTUS if, by some strange miracle, the Senate is still controlled by the GOP and obstructs SCOTUS nominations. I get a distinct sense from some of the comments of SCOTUS judges that they are none too happy with an empty seat.
Strangely, I think a GOP held Congress is actually our safest bet here. The GOP won't do anything in Trump's favor because he's pissed off the majority of their leaders, and they despise Hillary and will block anything she tries to put through. The entire House is up for re-election this year and the Senate could shift power as well.
How is the "Affordable Care Act" working out for all of you? Has it made healthcare affordable yet? I can tell you that the increase in health insurance cost (not including copays or anything like that) is greater than the cost of living raises that we received. Factor in the increasing cost of energy and heating, food, water, child care, and drygoods, our buying power is decreasing by 10% to 15%.
Insurance premiums have risen to a far greater % than cost of living before the Affordable Care Act was passed. Being in the (official) workforce for over 33 years, I have seen this repeatedly at every employer. One particular increase I still remember was 13% in the early 2000s. I remember it because the economy was humming right along but our insurance was slapped hard. HR couldn't explain it except that the insurance companies were requiring it.
Insurance premiums would have increased without Obama Care too, so it's really a moot point. Medical insurance and the medical industry as a whole is nothing but a major scam. The whole idea that was "Obama Care" was destroyed by partisan politics anyways.
True. I'm convinced ObamaCare, whose insurance markets are actually a GOP idea, was designed to demonstrate that the insurance companies are a critical part of the problem and that single-payer is likely the only method by which medical cost reduction can be achieved.
The bones for it are already there with Medicare and Tricare.
With or without Obamacare the insurance companies seemed to make a profit and I can't think of a year that my premiums didn't go up in one way or another. I think we need some oversight and regulations that work to control the health care industry and their grab for money just like we do with the banks. Oh wait, bad example.
Are you willing to admit that it is a failure and is doing more harm than good?
Insurance companies also saw a golden opportunity to jack up premium rates and disguise them as Obama Care related issues. Health care should be simplified to two paths. 1) Publicly funded similar to Canada or 2) private health care paid for by the individual. These options would cover all Americans. Either you have government provided care, or you can opt to pay a premium for your own services (and likely receive premium care). Insurance lobbyists will kill any attempt at a public system though.
Health care and medical related bills are easily the largest contributor to bankruptcies in the United States, and further depress the lower middle to lower class individuals, who overwhelmingly comprise of the bulk of those needing regular medical care (largely due to diet inequality, but that's a whole separate issue). Our health should not be at the whims of our elected officials or some fool who decides he needs a new Lambo so he jacks up the price of critical AIDS drugs overnight to fund it.
Furthermore, if the federal government really wanted to help people be healthier, they would restructure the farm bill to encourage farmers to grow produce crops (not corn, soy, or wheat), would make things like gym memberships and other healthy activities tax deductible *assuming they want to continue to complicate the tax code*, they would restructure the FDA requirements on what farmers can use on their crops and what can be categorized as food and what can't, and really focus on health prevention programs. The problem is none of these are profitable to major corporations and regardless if Hillary or Trump gets elected, Wall Street and corporations will still control the WH.
Going after farmers and the family farm (which by and large doesn't exist any longer) is not going to solve many problems. If people think that GMO free is going to save the world, good luck to you. Here is a pill with no gluten that will save your life.
Going after corporate banks and CEO compensation probably could. Restructuring the tax code to tax purchasing, instead of saving, or making money, would also help. Double and triple taxing people, doesn't help. I think that hurts the ability of the government to have people truly support the tax system. Taking 60% of the $10 million that my dad earned (he didn't but I wish he did) that he didn't spend and wants to give to me, because the government needs a second cut, makes my dad want to cheat the system so he can give it to me. He will spend up to $5.99 million to assure that he doesn't have to pay any of it.
Tax spending. Tax at a higher rate the more money you make. But do it once. The tax code would be much simpler if we all just paid a single tax. Paying sales, income, payroll, etc. just makes things confusing and allows for lots of loopholes.
Hink, I apologize if I was not clear about my farm comment. Currently most of the farm subsidies go to non-produce based agricultural projects, mainly corn and soy which are used in other products such as high fructose corn syrup, ethanol, and about 1000 other things. Instead, I believe that if the government is going to fund farms, then they should require that it be a direct to consumer produce product such as fruits, nuts, and vegetables. This would substantially reduce the costs of high nutrient based foods. It has nothing to do with GMOs or gluten free. It has to do with lowering the consumer cost of produce and increasing the availability.
I agree with your tax idea. I think it would be awesome.
I'm no farmer, so I have no clue, but do direct consumer products like you describe cost more to farm? Interestingly, it looks like corn costs quite a bit per acre to farm (nearly 700 dollars according to http://ageconomists.com/2015/08/03/...ts-point-to-more-of-the-same-for-u-s-farmers/).
You also have to think of the crops like a diversified investment portfolio. We do a lot of wheat in Kansas because we do it better than anyone else, but at the same time they usually double crop with soy or have some fields of milo. Some other crop in case one fails. This year we had an amazing crop of wheat. [Trump Voice] So amazing. [Trump Voice] Sadly the prices fell out of the market because of the excess supply and a lot of people didn't recover their costs to plant the stuff. Good thing most farmers had a back up crop. This of course hits at least the local economy pretty hard. No one is buying that new barn or F-150. I notice bad harvests with a distinct decline in building permits.