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rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 03:33 PM Apr 2015

Former Republican Says No One Who Voted for the Iraq War Should Be President—Including Hillary Clint

Former Republican Says No One Who Voted for the Iraq War Should Be President—Including Hillary Clinton
By John Nichols April 10
http://www.thenation.com/blog/203945/ready-hillary-pointed-objection-her-iraq-war-record

Lincoln Chafee just went there, as only Lincoln Chafee could.

The former Republican senator and independent governor of Rhode Island, who is very seriously exploring the prospect of challenging Hillary Clinton for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination, said Iraq should be an issue.
Then Chafee got specific. He brought up the votes that he and Clinton cast in 2002, as members of the US Senate, on whether to authorize President Bush and Vice President Cheney to steer the United States toward war with Iraq.
Chafee, then sitting as a Republican, voted with Senators Russ Feingold, Paul Wellstone, and twenty others to block the rush to war.
Clinton, sitting as a Democrat, voted with Senator John McCain and 75 others to give Bush and Cheney their blank check.
Chafee calls that Clinton’s vote “the biggest mistake of many” on issues of foreign policy by the presumed frontrunner for the 2016 Democratic nomination.


But even those who support Clinton should recognize the lesson of 2008: “Inevitability” does not always translate into reality. And Democrats who believe Clinton will be their nominee should recognize something else: She will face questions about her record. Those questions will either come in a spirited primary process, or they will come in a fall race with a Republican. Lincoln Chafee is raising the toughest questions now. That is not merely appropriate, that is practical and necessary—for Clinton and for the Democratic Party.


I see this as very important from a couple of different aspects. One as John Nichols mentions above, H. Clinton will sooner or later, have to come to terms with her decision in 2002 to join Sen McCain and other war hawks to give George Bush and Richard Cheney a blank check to destroy the country and people of Iraq for some reason yet to be explained. Those that capitulated to the Republicons and shrugged their duties to balance power and hold the Republicons back from waging a very costly war, must share the responsibility.
I think some are in denial about just how terrible this decision was and how horrible the consequences were.

The second reason I think this article is important is that it points out how the Democratic Party is shifting to the Right. With people like Arlen Specter and Lincoln Chafee, switching parties, it shows that they think their ideologies fit with the New Democrats, the Third Way Wing of the Party. It's a win-win for our corporate masters.
We need a strong two party system to have checks and balances. Now we are looking at a Third Way Conservative Democratic Party, with a disenfranchised Progressive Wing vs. the Clown Party.
60 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Former Republican Says No One Who Voted for the Iraq War Should Be President—Including Hillary Clint (Original Post) rhett o rick Apr 2015 OP
K&R marym625 Apr 2015 #1
I enjoyed listening to Chafee when he was in the Senate. napi21 Apr 2015 #2
Difference is all the Democratic candidates admit it was a mistake still_one Apr 2015 #3
Dead people couldn't hear them admitting their mistake. merrily Apr 2015 #42
Vote for whoever you want, that is your right still_one Apr 2015 #44
This message was self-deleted by its author merrily Apr 2015 #45
This Liberal Democrat Will Happily Support Hillary Indykatie Apr 2015 #4
A post perhaps better suited to GD or the Hillary Group. merrily Apr 2015 #25
Well, what's a few hundred thousand dead Arabs, right? Scootaloo Apr 2015 #29
If she admits it's a mistake aspirant Apr 2015 #5
She will have a finger on the big red nuke button. Any room for mistakes? L0oniX Apr 2015 #13
I cannot imagine a single member of the military or their loved ones voting for her after she said merrily Apr 2015 #47
Why are you hostile to Chafee? I welcome him to the Democratic Party. Jim Lane Apr 2015 #6
We need a vibrant two party system. With the conservatives moving into our party rhett o rick Apr 2015 #12
It's too simplistic to label Chafee a conservative just because he grew up as a Republican. Jim Lane Apr 2015 #14
I agree I should be careful generalizing, but I doubt Chaffee is a liberal. rhett o rick Apr 2015 #18
His record poses an issue also raised by Hillary's: the politician who has changed over time. Jim Lane Apr 2015 #19
Members of other groups don't have to keep defending the OPs they post in their group. merrily Apr 2015 #26
"A discrepancy between Senate votes and current positions is also an issue for Clinton." rhett o rick Apr 2015 #36
This message was self-deleted by its author merrily Apr 2015 #46
Mixed reaction. merrily Apr 2015 #43
Their actual motives was they couldn't get re-elected dog catchers.. Historic NY Apr 2015 #51
What a joke, no one who voted for w bush should be president either. BillZBubb Apr 2015 #7
Bullshit. It's a matter of qualifications. She doesn't have them. Neither do many. The problem is whereisjustice Apr 2015 #8
She's more qualified than any republican. BillZBubb Apr 2015 #9
This argument needs to die Scootaloo Apr 2015 #30
save it for the general. The primary hasn't begun yet. merrily Apr 2015 #31
How is holding her accountable for her part in the decision to start a war rhett o rick Apr 2015 #11
Please see Reply 26. merrily Apr 2015 #27
I don't think any Republican running for President voted for the war yeoman6987 Apr 2015 #52
Competition Khaotic Apr 2015 #10
Eventually these groups are going to be forced to block the Hillary worshippers. They want us banned L0oniX Apr 2015 #15
What I find interesting is that it's obvious that the Democratic Party has a ever widening rhett o rick Apr 2015 #16
Yeah and the reframing of Hillary being the liberal progressive populist is making me sick. L0oniX Apr 2015 #17
Some believe if one is progressive on one or two issues, then they are progressive. rhett o rick Apr 2015 #20
I agree with what Loonix posted about groups and then some. merrily Apr 2015 #32
I agree also. nm rhett o rick Apr 2015 #33
Wow, Chafee said that? Good for him, I could not agree more. Anyone with such bad judgement sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #21
Yet, she said she would not have gone to war if she had been President in 2002. merrily Apr 2015 #48
I remember when Chafee voted against that awful war authorization. He was brutally attacked by his sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #22
Please remember, the DLC endorsed that war and the founder of the Progressive Policy Institute, who merrily Apr 2015 #49
Did you vote for Kerry? nt Andy823 Apr 2015 #23
Now why would you want to know that? I will answer if you tell me how you forgive those rhett o rick Apr 2015 #24
It's a pretty simple question Andy823 Apr 2015 #34
We knew Bush was lying, why didn't Hillary? She is asking for the job of POTUS. sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #50
The hosting in here seems rather lax. I thought this was a Autumn Apr 2015 #59
True, sick to death of that kind of 'dialogue' which hopefully won't be allowed in this forum where sabrina 1 Apr 2015 #60
Please see Replies 25 and 26. merrily Apr 2015 #28
Why would this be better on the Hillary board? Andy823 Apr 2015 #35
GD or Hillary GROUP, not Hillary board merrily Apr 2015 #37
All I did Andy823 Apr 2015 #38
Why are you repeating a comment I've already responded to? merrily Apr 2015 #39
Sorry but Andy823 Apr 2015 #40
I replied at least twice. Take your Hillary campaigning to GD or the Hillary Group. merrily Apr 2015 #41
is chafee a populist? gwheezie Apr 2015 #53
Now that you've checked his record, what is your opinion as to whether he is a populist? nm rhett o rick Apr 2015 #55
oops my reply is below nt gwheezie Apr 2015 #57
Ms. Clinton's war vote definitely killed her previous bid for President. ladjf Apr 2015 #54
sadly I think her Iraq vote won't matter gwheezie Apr 2015 #56
sorry I was replying to rhett nt gwheezie Apr 2015 #58

napi21

(45,806 posts)
2. I enjoyed listening to Chafee when he was in the Senate.
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 03:50 PM
Apr 2015

He always sounded like one of the FEW truthful politicians. Something has changed with him. I watched him on TV this AM and I saw his announcement the other day. He now seems stiff, and unfriendly.

I'm glad Hillary has some competition, and I hope there are more candidates declare that they're running, but Link doesn't seem to be one who would beat her.

still_one

(96,542 posts)
3. Difference is all the Democratic candidates admit it was a mistake
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 03:50 PM
Apr 2015

Not one republican running will admit that, and that does make the difference

Lincoln Chaffee was a republican, but they threw him out of his party.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
42. Dead people couldn't hear them admitting their mistake.
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 06:06 PM
Apr 2015

Anyway, it took Hillary until 2014 to admit her vote was a mistake. Now, why do you suppose she finally did it then?

Besides, Hillary did not only vote for that war. She advocated for it, just as the DLC wanted.

Also, she claimed she did the best she could with the info she had. Every Democrat I know--Democrats who had no NIE (which Hillary did not even read), no access to any special data, knew Bushco was lying. Actress Susan Sarandon took out a TV ad with her own money to try to stop that war. Senator Hillary Clinton, though, was on the side of PNAC and the DLC because she could not figure out what an actress and all my friends had figured out? If that is so, she REALLY should not be President.

I wish people would get that this is not the group to campaign for Hillary. Leave it in GD or the Hillary Group.

Response to still_one (Reply #44)

Indykatie

(3,853 posts)
4. This Liberal Democrat Will Happily Support Hillary
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 04:29 PM
Apr 2015

Hillary may be the only major candidate from either party who was in a position to have to take a vote on Iraq. While I am interested in what she has to say now about that vote it does not diminish my support for her or make me consider a different candidate running for the Dem nomination. It will be interesting to see how much attention a former republican who left his party not to join the Democratic party but to become an independent running for the Dem nomination gets.

aspirant

(3,533 posts)
5. If she admits it's a mistake
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 05:05 PM
Apr 2015

how is she going to rectify that mistake?

We spent TRILLIONS on this mistake so where is she going to get the money to pay the American people back? In addition, what is the cost of lost limbs, American lives and VA support?

It's time she and her Corporate Wall Street comrades pay the total bill for these wars.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
47. I cannot imagine a single member of the military or their loved ones voting for her after she said
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 08:28 PM
Apr 2015

her vote to put troops in harm's way was a mistake.

This is really something. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/06/05/hillary-clinton-on-iraq-vote-i-still-got-it-wrong-plain-and-simple/

How come every Democrat I know knew Bushco was lying and manipulating?

 

Jim Lane

(11,175 posts)
6. Why are you hostile to Chafee? I welcome him to the Democratic Party.
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 07:50 PM
Apr 2015

You write: "With people like Arlen Specter and Lincoln Chafee, switching parties, it shows that they think their ideologies fit with the New Democrats, the Third Way Wing of the Party."

No, it shows that they think their ideologies fit better overall with the Democratic Party than with the Republican Party. That would be true of those who like the Third Way but also true of those who like the Warren Wing.

I don't know Chafee's stands on income inequality and other bread-and-butter issues. I do know that he's with us on social issues (favoring reproductive rights, gun control, marriage equality, and affirmative action, for example). The OP also notes that he was with us on the single most important foreign-policy vote of the last several years -- standing up to a President of his own party to do the right thing.

Yes, he was first elected as a Republican. He was a legacy Republican -- his father was a leading light of the now-defunct wing of the Republican Party that's often called "Rockefeller Republican" (mostly Northeasterners who would be far to the left of any Republican who can hope to win the 2016 nomination).

We on DU inveigh against Republican craziness, but we're preaching to the choir. When an actual Republican who's not crazy switches parties, that's the kind of thing that will turn the DU consensus into election victories.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
12. We need a vibrant two party system. With the conservatives moving into our party
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 05:32 PM
Apr 2015

they bring their conservative ideologies with them and we are losing our Democratic values. They may be progressive on social issues but if we don't get Wall Street under control, the NSA/CIA Security State under control, and the MIC under control, we will continue to lose our liberties.

 

Jim Lane

(11,175 posts)
14. It's too simplistic to label Chafee a conservative just because he grew up as a Republican.
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 06:15 PM
Apr 2015

Ronald Reagan was a registered Democrat until past his 50th birthday.

To take just one of your examples, that we must "get...the NSA/CIA Security State under control," here's Chafee from his website:

Recently certain of our rights have been wrongfully infringed upon. Particularly the Fourth Amendment forbids the tapping of our phones without a warrant. And the Eighth Amendment outlaws cruel and unusual punishment or torture. I will never allow our liberties to be diminished.


I note the delicacy of the phrasing through the use of the passive voice: "our rights have been wrongfully infringed upon." We all know the name, and more to the point the party affiliation, of the President under whose aegis this infringement has occurred. So, on this issue area, who's more faithful to what you rightly describe as "our Democratic values" -- the lifelong Democrat or the former Republican?
 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
18. I agree I should be careful generalizing, but I doubt Chaffee is a liberal.
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 06:59 PM
Apr 2015

From my memory he voted with the Republicons most of the time and occasionally voted with the Democrats. He might be a good choice over HRC but I will have to investigate some more. He gets a lot of respect from me for being a Republicon and voting against Bush's War.

 

Jim Lane

(11,175 posts)
19. His record poses an issue also raised by Hillary's: the politician who has changed over time.
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 07:13 PM
Apr 2015

While in the Senate, he was pretty much the most liberal Republican, but your recollection is correct that he cast some fairly conservative votes. He has moved somewhat to the left since then.

A discrepancy between Senate votes and current positions is also an issue for Clinton.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
26. Members of other groups don't have to keep defending the OPs they post in their group.
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 02:42 AM
Apr 2015

This is not GD.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
36. "A discrepancy between Senate votes and current positions is also an issue for Clinton."
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 06:30 PM
Apr 2015

She hasn't been very forthcoming about her "current positions". If you have any evidence that Clinton as "changed over time" and moved left on the issues of the economy, the MIC, the heavy handed NSA/CIA Security State, regulating Goldman-Sachs and the big banksters, foreign policy, etc., plez share.

Response to Jim Lane (Reply #19)

merrily

(45,251 posts)
43. Mixed reaction.
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 06:24 PM
Apr 2015


Specter--starts as a Dem. Switches to Republican when it looks like he can't win as a Dem. Stays Republican for forever---until his polling for an upcoming (R) primary looks bad. Then he trades Obama his vote for Obama's support and switches back to Democratic. Meanwhile, Sestak, who might have been able to win against the teabagger, got squeezed out. If Specter were alive now, he could take a hike, as far as I;m concerned.

Similar deal with Crist in Florida, though maybe Meek was not as strong a candidate as Sestak. If we're going to lose to a teabagger, at least let us lose with a Democrat.


Chafee, I don't know. Switches shortly before he thinks he has a shot at challenging Hillary based on an Iraq vote. (Obama challenged her based on a 2002 anti Iraq speech, so why not challenge her on an actual vote?) That seems opportunistic.

Then again, Sanders is saying he might switch to Dem in order to challenge Hillary and I just decided to support him. So......

Mixed reaction.

Historic NY

(37,859 posts)
51. Their actual motives was they couldn't get re-elected dog catchers..
Sun Apr 26, 2015, 12:09 AM
Apr 2015

as Republicans that why they switched. Chafee didn't become a Democrat until he quit his chance at re-election as Governor, in fact a Democrat took his independent seat.

BillZBubb

(10,650 posts)
7. What a joke, no one who voted for w bush should be president either.
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 08:00 PM
Apr 2015

I'm not a big Hillary fan, but this attack is pathetic. About the only republican who could get leverage from this would be rand paul. All the others were cheerleaders for bush and cheney.

If Hillary wins the Democratic nomination, she is the best available choice for president. Anyone not voting for her in that case would be as dumb as she was voting to support the Iraq invasion.

Plus, she made that mistake, so she won't repeat it in Iran. All the republicans are frothing at the mouth for an attack on Iran. Hillary wins that hands down.

whereisjustice

(2,941 posts)
8. Bullshit. It's a matter of qualifications. She doesn't have them. Neither do many. The problem is
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 09:48 PM
Apr 2015

the Democratic and Republican Party have both become so intolerant of anything but a conservative viewpoint, the only people capable of surviving the process will be unqualified to act in the best interest of ALL Americans.

The rich, however, are well represented regardless of who wins and Hillary has shown she is ready to represent rich before poor.

BillZBubb

(10,650 posts)
9. She's more qualified than any republican.
Sun Apr 12, 2015, 11:20 PM
Apr 2015

In the real world, our next president will either be the Democratic nominee or the republican. THAT IS A FACT. You can play the bullshit false equivalency game all you want, but I want a Democrat in the White House and no republican. If that Democrat is Hillary, so be it.

To foolishly claim the Democrats and republicans are the same is pathetic.

 

Scootaloo

(25,699 posts)
30. This argument needs to die
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 03:38 AM
Apr 2015

"She's better than a Republican"? Yeah, no shit. is that really our bar? Our only standard of consideration for a candidate, is "better than a Republican"?

merrily

(45,251 posts)
31. save it for the general. The primary hasn't begun yet.
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 04:18 AM
Apr 2015

While you're at it, save it for GD or the Hillary Group. This group is neither of those.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
11. How is holding her accountable for her part in the decision to start a war
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 12:38 PM
Apr 2015

that ended up with approx 1 million dead and 5 million displaced, not to mention the damage to our economy and liberties, pathetic. An you say she won't make that mistake with Iran. First of all, she shouldn't get a second chance. She should be held accountable for the consequences of her Iraq mistake. Second, why do you think she won't do it again? She knew what she was doing, she didn't like the outcome.

And his statement has absolutely nothing to do with her qualifications vs. Republicons. Where did you get that?

And if you think Chaffee's statement was bad, as he is saying, it's only the beginning. Why not choose another Democrat.

 

yeoman6987

(14,449 posts)
52. I don't think any Republican running for President voted for the war
Sun Apr 26, 2015, 12:14 AM
Apr 2015

So it's good to have her speak on it now rather then during the general.

 

L0oniX

(31,493 posts)
15. Eventually these groups are going to be forced to block the Hillary worshippers. They want us banned
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 06:16 PM
Apr 2015

We will eventually have to STFU. On DI I'm actually finding people on the other side that agree with me about the 1%.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
16. What I find interesting is that it's obvious that the Democratic Party has a ever widening
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 06:21 PM
Apr 2015

rift between the Progress/Populist Wing and the pro-Wall Street/ Third Way Wing. And yet the Third Way Wing will deny that there is a rift and some even claim to be progressive all the while disparaging the Left. Seems like denial to me.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
20. Some believe if one is progressive on one or two issues, then they are progressive.
Mon Apr 13, 2015, 11:33 PM
Apr 2015

They can support the MIC, the NSA/CIA Security State's domestic spying, drone killing, torture, Wall Street domination of our economy, etc. but if they support LGBT rights, then they are progressive. They don't understand that if we become paupers with zero Constitutional rights, the social gains we've made will soon evaporate.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
21. Wow, Chafee said that? Good for him, I could not agree more. Anyone with such bad judgement
Wed Apr 15, 2015, 10:19 PM
Apr 2015

should not be in a position where s/he could make another fatal decision like that.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
22. I remember when Chafee voted against that awful war authorization. He was brutally attacked by his
Fri Apr 17, 2015, 12:32 AM
Apr 2015

own party airc. That I think, is when he decided to leave that party. I also remember wondering why ANY DEMOCRAT could possibly give ANYTHING to Bush/Cheney who were clearly lying.

And I admired Chafee for his courage, because it took far more courage for a Republican to oppose his own rabidly war supporting party at that time than it would have for Democrats.

I think the Dems who voted for the AUMF did so for one of two reasons, or for both, one, they AGREED with Bush/Cheney's neocon Foreign Policies, OR they misread the Left. The looked at polls after 9/11 and saw the support for Bush and mistook it for political and personal support, when in fact it was for the country. And those who had political ambitions, the WH eg, thought, wrongly, that it would help them.

When that support for Bush from some on the Left began to crumble after they realized he was taking advantage of a great tragedy, those who voted for the war, many with Presidential aspirations, realize they had made a mistake.

Politically it sure was a mistake, as those who wanted to run for the WH as Dems realized pretty quickly when they found themselves faced with so much anger from Dem voters. Most rushed to apologize for it.

In Hillary's case I think she supported the neocons FP, which she proved as SOS. And she probably thought it would benefit her when she ran for president. Instead it probably lost her the presidency in 2008, once voters had a candidate who had opposed it.

This time she seems to realize what a disaster that vote was for her politically, and she has finally, way too late, apologized. It took a dozen years so it doesn't sound very convincing to me, just politically expedient. Not buying it at all.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
49. Please remember, the DLC endorsed that war and the founder of the Progressive Policy Institute, who
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 08:58 PM
Apr 2015

worked for the DLC, signed the PNAC letter.

Hillary did not simply vote for that war. She advocated for it. I think that was because of the think tanks--and, even though we are supposed to pretend Bubba never existed--I would be very surprised if she and the think tanks hadn't consulted with him.

And, having just seen Bubba win two Presidentials, which had not happened in a long time, the DLC penny was still shiny and bright in the minds of Democrats (who may have forgotten about Ross Perot).

In their minds then, Third Way was THE way to get elected and re-elected, at the Presidential level as well as their own. That was the DLC gospel and people are still trying to sell it on DU, even though Republicans hold so many local, state and federal offices now it literally is not funny.

Plus, the nation was reeling from the shock of 911 and frightened and media was helping Bushco.

I think they thought they might not get re-elected if they did not vote that war and the Patriot Act. Nothing more and nothing less than that. That, and maybe higher office some day, is what drives their lives.






 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
24. Now why would you want to know that? I will answer if you tell me how you forgive those
Thu Apr 23, 2015, 11:18 PM
Apr 2015

Democrats that bowed down to Republicons in 2002 and authorized Republicons to kill in our name 1 million Iraq citizens. I understand why Republicons don't care about the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi children, but can't figure out how Democrats can rationalize that. Do you think the deaths of those children is just collateral damage? How do you forgive the betrayal of those Democrats that were afraid to stand up to Republicons?

Andy823

(11,527 posts)
34. It's a pretty simple question
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 03:44 PM
Apr 2015

DID you vote for Kerry?

I think the Iraq war was a total disaster, and I don't condone the deaths of the children, or the innocent people who died. Bush lied us into that war and he has to live with what he did. Now if you voted for Kerry, you must have forgiven him, right? I know Manny said he voted for Kerry, so will you ask him the same question you are asking me about that war?

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
50. We knew Bush was lying, why didn't Hillary? She is asking for the job of POTUS.
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 11:59 PM
Apr 2015

Either she made a terrible and fatal error, or she supported Cheney/Bush.

I'm not sure which is worse, the end result for one million human beings would be the same.

Either way it was horrendously bad judgement. A vote for war is the most important vote an elected official will be asked to make, and she failed that test. If I made a mistake one hundreth times less serious than that, I would not have the gall to ask for a job where I could do it again. I spend the rest of my life being haunted by those innocent people.

Barbara Lee had excellent judgement, on that and on the The Patriot Ace, on every decision they were asked to make at that time.

THAT's what I want in a leader. Someone whose judgement I can trust.

Autumn

(46,321 posts)
59. The hosting in here seems rather lax. I thought this was a
Tue Apr 28, 2015, 03:53 PM
Apr 2015

"safe house for DUers interested in the progressive, populist reform of our Democratic party.", but it seems people can come in here and get rude with the posters in here with no repercussions.

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
60. True, sick to death of that kind of 'dialogue' which hopefully won't be allowed in this forum where
Tue Apr 28, 2015, 04:02 PM
Apr 2015

the quality of discussion has been relatively free of that kind of childish insincere disruptive behavior. Actually I thought the entire forum was supposed to be free of it to be honest. I initially came to DU to get away from what is now taking over DU it seems.

We should not have needed this Group, but the decline of the dialogue in the main forums necessitating somewhere to go to just have a discussion without the constant nagging and disruption, is a statement in itself.

Andy823

(11,527 posts)
35. Why would this be better on the Hillary board?
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 03:45 PM
Apr 2015

I just asked a question. Did you vote for Kerry? I did.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
37. GD or Hillary GROUP, not Hillary board
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 10:05 PM
Apr 2015

Populist Reform of the Democratic Party (Group)
This is a group, not a forum. Groups often serve as safe havens for members who share similar interests and viewpoints.



But you knew that.



I just asked a question.




Andy823

(11,527 posts)
40. Sorry but
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 04:18 PM
Apr 2015

I have not had a reply to my question, by you or rhett o rick. I admit I voted for Kerry.

merrily

(45,251 posts)
41. I replied at least twice. Take your Hillary campaigning to GD or the Hillary Group.
Sat Apr 25, 2015, 04:36 PM
Apr 2015

Last edited Sat Apr 25, 2015, 05:12 PM - Edit history (1)

Not the reply you sought perhaps, but the appropriate reply for this group.

And please spare me another wide-eyed blinking "I'm only asking an innocent question. What's wrong with asking an innocent question?" post. You and I both know better. Besides, I replied to that, too.

Here's that reply again.

BTW, Rick replied, too. Not getting the reply you demand does not equal not getting a reply. So, you've been disingenuous as well as disrespectful.







gwheezie

(3,580 posts)
53. is chafee a populist?
Sun Apr 26, 2015, 01:43 AM
Apr 2015

I know this is the populist board so I checked chafee's voting record since I don't know that much about him.

ladjf

(17,320 posts)
54. Ms. Clinton's war vote definitely killed her previous bid for President.
Sun Apr 26, 2015, 09:38 AM
Apr 2015

The question now is, does it still matter to Americans?

gwheezie

(3,580 posts)
56. sadly I think her Iraq vote won't matter
Sun Apr 26, 2015, 03:44 PM
Apr 2015

We have in some ways decreased our involvement in actual combat in the mid East and I recognize Obamas efforts to avoid war with Iran and his reluctance to invade other countries but we have expanded a military role into so many other countries and I just don't see it as s big campaign issue. Most Americans don't seem to care.
I voted for Hillary in 08 and just had to ignore her iraq war vote. I'm being frank. I ignored Kerry's vote in 04.
I looked at chafees voting record and he seems to be a free trade guy. He did vote to support some dem issues but I don't see him in the same populist light as Bernie who has been consistent in his votes.
To me opposing Iraq is not the only populist issue. Look at Webb he opposed Iraq but I wouldn't call him a progressive or populist. Warrens recent fight for the middle class and consumers is populist. Both she and Bernie have the advantage since they are both in the middle of the fight and people like chafee only have their voting record in the past to go on. He would have to make a compelling argument for me to call him a populist.

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