That whole post is ironic. Explaining that many people in each party share a common property is not an explanation of my own personal beliefs, which are irrelevant. Surely reading comprehension cannot be this bad.
Now if I mistakenly lumped you as part of a group you don’t belong to then I’ve made an error.
Anyways if I do vote for Trump, which is irrelevant, than that is my business and for my own reasons. I didn’t for McCain so don’t make assumptions about my behavior that you have no way of knowing.
How would you nationalize a global automotive industry? How will tired ol’ Hillary nationalize the automotive industry? Besides, Mexico needs jobs, too. Especially American jobs. It’s the only way to keep ILLEGAL aliens out of the U.S.A… :smack:
On what basis do you make the claim that voters went for Kennedy on “tribal loyalty”? By all accounts, Ted Kennedy was not just some random schlub or low-impact rando. He’s not exactly Joaquin Castro (“who?” “exactly!”) here. Rather, he was an extremely active and influential member of congress, who fought tirelessly to push liberal and bipartisan legislation for almost as long as my parents have been alive. Expunge Chappaquiddick from his record, and what you’re left with is a great man.
Just for comparison. The person you’re comparing him to has never been a politician, never been active in public life, and has shown absolutely no ability, competence, or interest in learning anything about the act of governance. He’s constantly made statements that led to even members of his own party calling him out as deplorable or racist or what have you. What’s more, his approval ratings clearly show that most people kinda hate his guts. A lot. It really couldn’t be more of a poor comparison, really.
I can’t speak for Barry, but Cynthia McKinney clearly has a (small) national constituency of people that like her. She ran for president in 2008, after all (IIRC on the Green Party line).