It's been ages since I was sufficiently naïve to put that much stock in polling data.....Altair said:.... I would imagine ....
Altair said:And to remind people that despite the consistent bashing he gets on here, the greater Canadian electorate seems satisfied with what trudeau is doing.
I don't.George Wallace said:[
You obviously frequent different FaceBook pages than I do.
Altair said:I don't.
Very vocal CPC members being very angry that Trudeau continues to draw breath. Again, very out of touch with what the pollsters seem to be getting.
Vocal minority deluding themselves into thinking they are the majority.
Is this ignoring that fact that income disparity in Canada is far less than in the usa, money in politics is mostly under control and that, at least from my point of view, there hasn't been a increase in privatization?Kilo_302 said:Agreed. He's more in line with most Canadians than Harper ever was. However, I disagree with his neo-liberal approach and would have preferred to see the NDP mount a campaign more in the style of Bernie Sanders.
The simple fact is, most Canadians agree that with science that climate change is an issue, they believe in equality (whatever that means under a neo-liberal government like Trudeau's), they like universal healthcare, and they're quite embarrassed over the Harper years. Just over 60% of Canadian voted for a "progressive party" in 2015.
Bringing it back to the US, Trudeau is I believe, more progressive than Hillary Clinton, but not by much. I agree with Thuc that if Canada continues down a similar path as the US (and this is where we disagree), that is, more privatization, less social spending, more corporate cronyism, the backlash could be severe.
Unfortunately, the backlash will just as misdirected as it is in the US on the right end of the spectrum. Progressivism isn't the problem, neo-liberalism is. That is, an emphasis on "free" market solutions. What we need is TRUE progressivism, ala Bernie Sanders. A real critique of structural problems.
Altair said:Is this ignoring that fact that income disparity in Canada is far less than in the usa, money in politics is mostly under control and that, at least from my point of view, there hasn't been a increase in privatization?
Trump's positions on trade, alliances could roil Asia ties
Matthew Pennington, The Associated Press
The Canadian Press
March 10, 2016
WASHINGTON - China is ripping off America in trade and should be slapped with a fat import tax. U.S. military allies Japan and South Korea are freeloading and need to pull their weight. The pan-Pacific trade pact negotiated by the Obama administration is a "total disaster."
With characteristic brashness, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has staked out uncompromising positions on Asia policy that could potentially roil U.S. relations with the region if he won the White House.
That's already prompted some sharp commentary from usually friendly countries in Asia, and expressions of contempt from Republican foreign policy hands who have vowed to oppose Trump.
(...SNIPPED)
YEAH, “IT’S MY TURN, DAMMIT!” AND “LOOK, I HAVE A VAGINA!” AREN’T GREAT ONES: Clinton’s shaky campaign has the math, but lacks the message.
Related: Four reasons Hillary Clinton lost the Democratic debate.“During their two-hour debate in Miami last night, Hillary Clinton attacked Bernie Sanders for siding with both the Castro brothers and the Koch brothers.”
Thucydides said:This should get out the vote..... >
http://pjmedia.com/instapundit/228763/
You really can believe in six impossible things before breakfast!
Dubai official warns of 'clash of civilizations' over Trump
Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press
The Canadian Press
March 11, 2016
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - A top security official in Dubai warned Friday of a "clash of civilizations" if U.S. Republican candidate Donald Trump becomes president, the latest sign of disquiet across the Middle East over the businessman's comments about Muslims.
Trump refused to back away from his recent statement that "Islam hates the West" during a Republican debate Thursday night in Miami, which came after he called in December for a ban on Muslims entering the United States.
(...SNIPPED)
S.M.A. said:
Ben Carson endorses Donald Trump
By MJ Lee and Eugene Scott, CNN
Updated 12:09 PM ET, Fri March 11, 2016
Palm Beach, Florida (CNN)Ben Carson threw his support behind Donald Trump Friday morning, saying the two men had "buried the hatchet" and praising the Republican Party's front-runner as a "the voice of the people to be heard."
Speaking at a news conference here at Trump's private club, Mar-a-Lago, the retired neurosurgeon echoed Trump's recent calls for party unity and pleaded with the GOP to allow the "political process to play out."
(...SNIPPED)
CHICAGO -- Donald Trump postponed his Friday night rally in Chicago because of "growing safety concerns" created by thousands of protesters inside and outside of the University of Illinois arena hosting the event.
The Republican front-runner's rallies have become increasingly violent in the past two weeks, and Trump's remarks are often interrupted by protesters denouncing his controversial stances, especially those on immigration and the treatment of Muslims. But Trump has never had to cancel a rally because of the threat of protesters.
At about 6:35 p.m. Central time, an announcer told the crowd of at least 9,000 that Trump had arrived in Chicago but decided to postpone the event because of security concerns. The protesters burst into cheers and chants of: "We stopped Trump!" Others chanted the first name of Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.
The Trump campaign released a statement that said: "Mr. Trump just arrived in Chicago and after meeting with law enforcement has determined that for the safety of all of the tens of thousands of people that have gathered in and around the arena, tonight’s rally will be postponed to another date."
Several of the celebrating protesters clashed with Trump supporters who were disappointed that the event was canceled. Shoving matches broke out, and security struggled to break up one altercation before another started. After the event, the crowds moved outside the arena.
Even before Trump's rally in Chicago started on Friday night, numerous nasty verbal altercations broke out throughout the crowd. An entire section of the arena appeared to be filled with protesters but police and security working the event only removed protesters who were disruptive, like a black man and a young Latino man who screamed at Trump supporters and flipped them off. Others ripped up signs.
A spokesman for the Chicago police said that there were no reported arrests as of shortly before 7:30 p.m. local time.
The spokesman said the department would not release the number of officers who were deployed to the speech or responding to the crowds of people gathered on the street after. Live footage from the scene showed numerous police officers inside the arena as well as lining the streets outside among the protesters who remained after the event was canceled, crowding streets and sidewalks.
Trump later called into MSNBC and said on the air that he did "the right thing" by canceling his rally in Chicago.
"You can't even have a rally in a major city in this country anymore without violence or potential violence," Trump said. "I didn't want to see the real violence, and that's why I decided to call it off."
Trump added, "You have so much anger in the country -- it's just anger in the country, and I don't think it's directed at me or anything. It's just directed at what's been going on for years."
In an interview with anchor Chris Matthews, Trump was defensive and argued that the anger boiling over at his rallies had been building for years and was not spurred by his campaign alone.
"We have a very divided country," Trump said. "We have a country that's so divided that maybe even you don't understand it. I've never seen anything like it."
When Matthews asked whether he would tell his supporters not to engage with protesters, Trump said he wanted them to leave the Chicago arena peacefully.
"I don't want to see people hurt or worse," he said.
Sanders, en route from Toledo, Ohio, to Chicago to address a rally of his own, expressed concern over the incident.
“I hope that we are not in a moment in American history where people are going to be intimidated and roughed up and frightened about going to a political rally. … I hope Mr. Trump speaks out forcefully and tells his supporters that that is not what the American political process is about.”
WHY YOU SHOULD CARE? Because this demographic has predicted the presidency for four straight decades.
The beef between the Don and the pontiff — Pope Francis suggesting that it’s not very Christian to build a wall, Donald J. Trump responding that ISIS will attack the Vatican if he’s not in the Oval Office — has quelled, for now. But if Trump is serious about becoming President Trump, it may behoove him to show a bit more reverence to the man in white. After all …
The candidate who wins the Catholic vote has also won the popular vote in every election since 1972.
That’s four decades of picking the winner, according to exit poll estimates, from Nixon to Obama. What makes the Catholic vote unique is its ability to mimic the trends of the American populace as a whole, says Robert P. Jones of the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute. Add that to the the fact that Catholics make up almost a quarter of the U.S. population — and have a solid history of actually showing up at the polls — and you can understand why the demographic is highly sought by campaigners.
But does the correlation between the Catholic vote and the presidency suggest that papacy can sway an American election?
Yes and no. That record “is a little bit illusory,” Jones says, because the Catholic vote isn’t monolithic, even if its leadership appears to be. The church’s political divide runs along ethnic lines, which, by the way, holds true for the nation, too. In 2012, that split meant white laypeople supported Romney, while their brown brothers in faith overwhelmingly voted for Obama. Catholics might be good predictors because their demographics reflect the general population almost perfectly:
On race: In 2014, 41 percent of Catholics were Hispanic, compared to 38 percent generally.
On education: 26 percent of Catholics held a bachelor’s degree or higher, versus 27 percent overall.
On earnings: 47 percent of Catholics reported income levels under $50,000, compared to 55 percent overall.
The vote has changed — and become less associated with a single party — as Catholics have “become more assimilated into the overall population,” says Steve Krueger, president of the Catholic Democrats advocacy organization. Plus, as the Pew Research Center reported this year, millennials as a whole are less religious than any previous generation, and that reality affects young Catholics, too. (While neither Trump’s campaign nor the Vatican responded to a request for comment, the Pope’s spokesman released a statement after the wall remark, saying that building bridges versus walls is “his generic view, coherent with the nature of solidarity from the gospel.”)
The party gap will only get wider, especially if you’re a Catholic, thanks to a particularly divisive election year. “This is the church that cares about defending life in the womb and immigrants,” says the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Jonathan Reyes, director of the justice, peace and human development department. “Just in those two issues, there is no easy home.” In its official election-year reflection on voting faithfully, the church agrees that its vision isn’t contained in any one candidate or party. Adherents are free to decide — based on their conscience — which priorities most closely align with their faith, which is why it’s hard to round up Catholics, as a whole, into any one party’s back corner.