Archie Moses
Well-Known Member
You guys can be condescending all you want but the things I've said are facts and can easily be looked up.
Btw, I'm not a republican nor am I Trumpster.
Btw, I'm not a republican nor am I Trumpster.

. . . None of the professors lauded the state of political civility today, but two periods were cited most often for having the least civility:
The 1850s, which saw passions over slavery split families and fracture the nation, eventually led to the Civil War.
The 1960s, which were marked by divisions over the Vietnam War and civil rights, and the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.
In the 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama faced false claims that he was a Muslim and wasn’t born in the U.S. But those attacks "were nothing compared to what was said about Barry Goldwater in 1964," said Jeansonne, who wrote a biography of Obama.
Foes of Goldwater, an Arizona senator who was the Republican presidential nominee in 1964, turned his campaign slogan -- "In your heart, you know he’s right" -- into one of their own: "In your guts, you know he’s nuts."
Obama, at a memorial service for the Tucson victims, characterized today’s public discourse as "sharply polarized." But the experts we consulted said the level of political civility has often been considerably lower.
Some examples:
In 1856, U.S. Sen. Charles Sumner of Massachusetts gave a speech criticizing pro-slavery southerners. Three days later, he was beaten so badly -- on the Senate floor -- by U.S. Rep. Preston Brooks of South Carolina that he didn’t return to the Senate for three years.
In 1950, Republican U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin entered the national spotlight by claiming Communists had infested the U.S. State Department. A special Senate committee found the allegations groundless, but McCarthy’s Communism crusade continued for several years, until he was officially censured.
And in 1963, a month before President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, anti-United Nations demonstrators struck U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson on the head and spit on him following a speech he gave in Dallas.
By the time Kennedy arrived in the city, recalled Lawrence University history professor Jerald Podair, people were circulating handbills with a picture of the Democratic president that read: "Wanted for treason."
"It’s always good to step back and look at what we’re saying about each other," Podair said of political rhetoric today, "but I don’t think what we’re saying is so markedly different from the past."
In the past several years, and particularly in the wake of the Tucson shootings, Obey and other citizens have decried the current state of public discourse. One reason is that many people don’t know history, said Janairo, whose specialties include political rhetoric and politics and the media/Internet.
Another key reason, she said, is the nation is exposed to round-the-clock news and instant communication through the Internet.
"Things get echoed loudly, so it seems like there’s more and it’s more intense," Janairo said.
The instant communication -- and the increased tendency of politicians to take extreme positions and demonize their opponents -- have put political civility at its lowest ebb in the past 25 years, according to University of Wisconsin-Whitewater communication professor Richard Haven.
You guys can be condescending all you want but the things I've said are facts and can easily be looked up.
Btw, I'm not a republican nor am I Trumpster.![]()
Article was written in 2011 after Gabrielle Giffords was shot.
https://www.politifact.com/wisconsin/article/2011/jan/16/political-vitriol-bad-these-days-experts-say-its-b/
Oh ya, you're a beacon of rationality. You just say it as it is.
Can you tell me what I posted you have a problem with? You disliked a post I made because I said this was the second Bernie supporter to go on a mudering rampage in the last month or so. Is that not fair to say or did it hurt your feelings?
Everything. From the nonsense about him being a Sanders supporter, as if it's causal. To that garbage about liberals being supportive of the shooter.
And don't worry about my feelings. I'll be okay. I expect you, on the other hand, to storm out and disappear for a few months.
So you'd rather that it not be discussed and pretend like what I said isn't true or worthy to note? If so, it's cool. Facts don't care about your opinion or feelings or bias.
Also, I don't care if you make fun of me for leaving for a while. I needed it and it was good for me. I was dealing with a lot in my life and needed to make some changes. Mock it, but it helped.
The only thing that needs to be discussed is your utter lack of understanding of such elementary concepts as selection and confirmation biases. It is outrageous and embarrassing. You need to rectify that, before letting others suffer thru what you have to say. Get on it ASAP.
yes govenrment is evil and we should reduce it's power and moneystream!I was going to point to a lot of these. The "civil divide is at an all time high" line is utter nonsense. Hell, we used to have prominent figures duel each other. Whiskey Rebellion? Battle of Blair Mountain and all the other coal miner protests such as the Ludlow Massacre where the U.S. Government came to the aid of one of the richest people of all time (that one's especially heinous since the government didn't do a damn thing until the miners got the upper hand). Even the treatment of the early LDS.
Point is, the list goes on and on, and political division has always been around and always will be.
I feel like you are over reacting and are putting way more thought into what I posted. I didn't mean to upset you by what I posted, dude. Sorry if it rubs you the wrong way. I also didn't post my opinion on the matter either. I posted what I read and was seeing online that I found noteworthy.
Haha. That part about not having stated an opinion was gold. Thanks. I guess we can find common ground in the fact that we both read some stupid ****ing **** on the internet today.
I quickly (and maybe poorly) skimmed this and didn't see anyone mention that if not for some armed man packing there today, this scene would've been infinitely worse.
Perhaps this story was later refuted? Otherwise, I'm not sure how it could go unmentioned.
Didn't hear anything about that, do know that Scalise is high enough up that he pretty much always has armed security with him.
How often do any of you see people walking around town carrying a gun?
I'm just curious because the laws here are pretty lax.
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