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Will the GOP Go Back to Being an Anti Working Class Establishment Party Like the democRATS

Started by Anonymous, November 15, 2020, 07:14:45 PM

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Odinson

We have moved our "upstream" worker jobs to places where the labor is cheaper.





We are left with the "downstream" workers who lack practical smarts and thats why they vote for policies that are just dumb.





This is our new working class... The dude who passes the product to the consumers.



He is a heroin addicted monkey who is barely able to work the cashier and supports BLM and legalizing the "holy sacrament".





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Anonymous

Quote from: Odinson post_id=401441 time=1612987554 user_id=136
We have moved our "upstream" worker jobs to places where the labor is cheaper.





We are left with the "downstream" workers who lack practical smarts and thats why they vote for policies that are just dumb.





This is our new working class... The dude who passes the product to the consumers.



He is a heroin addicted monkey who is barely able to work the cashier and supports BLM and legalizing the "holy sacrament".





">


 ac_wot

Anonymous

The GOP must get rid of Wall Street prog globalist stooges like the Bush family who sellout working class voters. The GOP is now a blue collar party. Go join the democRATs and take Mitt Romney with you.



George Bush Calls Republican Party 'Isolationist, Protectionist, And To A Certain Extent Nativist'

https://dailycaller.com/2021/04/20/george-w-bush-republican-party/?utm_source=piano&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2360&pnespid=0e5yu.oHCAWNHx.zUOyJr8A4xgZfsW2Am8nBXtBy">https://dailycaller.com/2021/04/20/geor ... 2Am8nBXtBy">https://dailycaller.com/2021/04/20/george-w-bush-republican-party/?utm_source=piano&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2360&pnespid=0e5yu.oHCAWNHx.zUOyJr8A4xgZfsW2Am8nBXtBy

Former President George W. Bush commented on the present-day Republican Party on Tuesday and said it wasn't what he had envisioned.



"I would describe it as isolationist, protectionist and to a certain extent nativist," Bush said on "The TODAY Show." The former president said that the GOP's platform is not what he had envisioned now that he is not actively engaged in Washington, D.C., politics.



"Well it's not exactly my vision, but you know, I'm just an old guy they put out to pasture so just a simple painter," Bush said.



Bush proposed solutions to the current migrant crisis, including revamping the U.S.' asylum system and retooling worker visas, as there are a plethora of unfilled jobs across the country many hard working immigrants could fill.

Anonymous

North Carolina's first black Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson criticized Democrats' opposition to Georgia's voting laws at a House Judiciary Subcommittee hearing Tuesday.



Robinson said that black Americans are more than capable of acquiring an ID to vote. "The notion that black people must be protected from a Free ID to secure their votes is not just insane, it's insulting," he said.

Anonymous

What will the GOP midterm narrative be? It's a simple one, which can be called the California platform: the idea that if, in 2022, you vote for Democratic majorities in the House and Senate, you are in effect voting to make the whole nation look like California.



While California progressives see such a goal as vindication and a badge of state pride, middle America — the independents and center-left moderates in Arizona, Georgia, and even the "blue wall" of the Upper Midwest and the Rust Belt — need to be enlightened as to what the Californianization of the country would look like.



One of the best places to start is environmental policy. For the green left, in California and nationally, it is a window onto one of two things: elite disdain for the middle and working classes, or, alternatively, total elite delusion as to the devastating economic effects that many green policies would have for the quality of life and standard of living of everyday Americans.



Biden has already done much to help Republicans in their effort. By voluntarily announcing the aspiration to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030 from 2005 levels, Biden is energizing the environmental activist left while exposing a vulnerable flank of voters who pulled the not-Trump lever thinking it was also the not-Green New Deal lever. GOP activists and Senate and House campaigns need to go on the offensive right now by telling persuadable moderates what the mini-Green New Deal already looks like in California: $4 dollar gas, hundreds of dollars more in vehicle registration and registration renewal fees, a bullet train to nowhere and electric vehicles that do little more than virtue signal to the sensibilities of the climate woke wealthy. Meanwhile, a GOP which takes the interests of the middle class to heart can offer a stark choice: "environmental justice" (in the words of Biden's press release) or an affordable middle-class way of life. Voters must understand, as California demonstrates, that you don't get to have both.

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