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  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.

Newsome pushed back against Democracy to achieve his political goals

Bradskii

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This is what I meant when I had other values that went into my moral equations and determine my moral priorities. Civil rights and voting rights for all is one of those.
You mean that denying universal suffrage is not objectively wrong?
 
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Hans Blaster

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That's nice, but I really don't see how voting rights for all is a universal good. So your personal preference is rather uninteresting to me, though of course that is no reason for it not to be important to you. But since morals aren't real according to you, there's no way to settle the question.
Morals are real, they just aren't absolute or objective. Let's keep it in the other thread. I just wanted to know what my principles are and that I am judging your anti-democratic statements.
 
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Bradskii

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That's nice, but I really don't see how voting rights for all is a universal good. So your personal preference is rather uninteresting to me, though of course that is no reason for it not to be important to you. But since morals aren't real according to you, there's no way to settle the question.
From here: The Bible as a Tool · Beyond Supply & Demand: Duke Economics Students Present 100 Years of American Women’s Suffrage · Duke University Library Exhibits

'Women viewed the right to vote as not only a political and social but a moral issue — as did their opponents. The items in this section showcase how pro- and anti-suffragists used God and interpretations of biblical teachings and writings to reinforce their arguments.'

Yeah. Kind of weird. Two groups of Christians using the bible to support diametrically opposed moral views. But yeah, off topic...
 
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Fervent

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Morals are real, they just aren't absolute or objective. Let's keep it in the other thread. I just wanted to know what my principles are and that I am judging your anti-democratic statements.
I don't mind being judged, particularly when someone has no real footing to make any kind of judgment. All you're telling me is your personal preference, and your opinion is really none of my business.
 
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A2SG

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Texas fixed a district based on race. Good for them.
Texas redrew the districts to increase the number of Republican representatives, on direct order from Trump. The excuse given doesn't change that.

Is it your contention that gerrymandering is a good thing? Then you shouldn't have a problem with California doing it.

-- A2SG, not sure how race figures into this, but that's your point, not mine....
 
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A2SG

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I'm not particularly interested in TX politics.
Maybe not, but you admitted you were not "fully informed" on the issue, I thought some information would be beneficial.

Democracy is 2 wolves and a sheep deciding what to have for dinner. If the democrats cared about free and fair elections,, they wouldn't be moving to gerrymander an already gerrymandered state. Abbot isn't being punished by Newsom gerrymandering CA, voters in CA whose local issues are going to be drowned out by the inclusion of voter bases whose interests are far removed from the localities are the ones who are going to lose. Saying that Newsom went to the voters doesn't excuse it, because his sole intent in the plan is to make elections in CA less fair.
Hey, if legislation were proposed to eliminate partisan gerrymandering, I'd support it 100%. But no one wants to do that. So, either gerrymandering is legal, or it ain't. If it is, then Texas has every right to do it, as does California. If you have a problem with one state doing it, but not the other, then your problem isn't with the concept of gerrymandering, or its effect.

-- A2SG, playing the "blame game" is just partisan sniping.....
 
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A2SG

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And Newsom's act got rid of that bipartisan commission...for what purpose?

He didn't get rid of the commission.

-- A2SG, you may want to research this stuff before you comment.....
 
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Fervent

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Maybe not, but you admitted you were not "fully informed" on the issue, I thought some information would be beneficial.
I appreciate it, but I don't really see it as connected since it seems to just be a pretext to me.
Hey, if legislation were proposed to eliminate partisan gerrymandering, I'd support it 100%. But no one wants to do that. So, either gerrymandering is legal, or it ain't. If it is, then Texas has every right to do it, as does California. If you have a problem with one state doing it, but not the other, then your problem isn't with the concept of gerrymandering, or its effect.

-- A2SG, playing the "blame game" is just partisan sniping.....
I never said I don't have a problem with other states doing it, but if the response to it is "well, let's do it!" then clearly the Democrats don't have a problem with it and only have a problem with it because Republicans are doing it. The judicial rulings on the issue appear to me to be entirely in the wrong, but my issue is with the governor of my state proving he's a partisan hack since he's more concerned with how his party performs than with protecting the voting rights of the citizens of his state.
He didn't get rid of the commission.

-- A2SG, you may want to research this stuff before you comment.....
I've since been corrected, he simply bypassed the commission in order to institute blatant gerrymandered districts. Either way, it shows a lack of integrity on his part and those who are defending the move while bemoaning Republican gerrymandering.
 
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Hans Blaster

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-- A2SG, not sure how race figures into this, but that's your point, not mine....
I believe one of the districts carved up was a majority black district that they "legally" sliced and diced to put everyone in it in new "GOP majority" districts under the guise of "legal" partisan gerrymandering. (This is a fiction created by John Roberts and the lesser justices.)
 
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A2SG

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I appreciate it, but I don't really see it as connected since it seems to just be a pretext to me.
The pretext given is one thing, but the fact remains: Trump said do it, and Abbott obeyed. If you consider gerrymandering to indicate that a governor "lacks integrity or principles," then the criticism would be the same for Abbott as for Newsom. If you're willing to criticize one, but unwilling to criticize the other, then your issue isn't with integrity, principles or gerrymandering.

I never said I don't have a problem with other states doing it, but if the response to it is "well, let's do it!" then clearly the Democrats don't have a problem with it and only have a problem with it because Republicans are doing it. The judicial rulings on the issue appear to me to be entirely in the wrong, but my issue is with the governor of my state proving he's a partisan hack since he's more concerned with how his party performs than with protecting the voting rights of the citizens of his state.
A criticism that would apply to both governors, then. My point was that you're fully willing to criticize Newsome, but seem unwilling to levy the same criticism toward Abbott. Which would indicate to me your issue isn't entirely with the concept of gerrymandering.

I've since been corrected, he simply bypassed the commission in order to institute blatant gerrymandered districts.
He didn't do that either. He put it up to the voters, and they decided.

Either way, it shows a lack of integrity on his part and those who are defending the move while bemoaning Republican gerrymandering.
As I said before, if there were legislation banning gerrymandering, I'd be fully behind it. But SCOTUS has ruled otherwise, so it remains perfectly legal and within the rights of any state to engineer it. Which means that, if one state doing so, purely for partisan reasons on orders from an authoritarian leader, is entirely legal, then another state doing so with the full consent and support of the voters is also perfectly legal.

Whether or not you like one, but not the other, is entirely your business. But don't try to pretend you're applying the same standard across the board, because you ain't.

-- A2SG, and that's the truthhhpppth....
 
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Postvieww

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Texas redrew the districts to increase the number of Republican representatives, on direct order from Trump. The excuse given doesn't change that.

Is it your contention that gerrymandering is a good thing? Then you shouldn't have a problem with California doing it.

-- A2SG, not sure how race figures into this, but that's your point, not mine....
Both side have done it but Republicans are playing catch up.
 
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A2SG

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Both side have done it but Republicans are playing catch up.
True enough, both Republicans and Democrats have gerrymandered districts before. But never before has a president explicitly told a governor to do so specifically to increase the representation of one particular political party. That's new.

-- A2SG, and California responded to that with some gerrymandering of their own...but this time, with the consent of the governed....
 
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Fervent

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The pretext given is one thing, but the fact remains: Trump said do it, and Abbott obeyed. If you consider gerrymandering to indicate that a governor "lacks integrity or principles," then the criticism would be the same for Abbott as for Newsom. If you're willing to criticize one, but unwilling to criticize the other, then your issue isn't with integrity, principles or gerrymandering.
Sure, and I have no problem extending that criticism since I'm not celebrating Abbot gerrymandering.
A criticism that would apply to both governors, then. My point was that you're fully willing to criticize Newsome, but seem unwilling to levy the same criticism toward Abbott. Which would indicate to me your issue isn't entirely with the concept of gerrymandering.
No, I am not unwilling I'm just not invested in TX politics because Abbot is not my governor.
He didn't do that either. He put it up to the voters, and they decided.
Only because he was required to, and he spent outlandish sums to disenfranchise a portion of his voters. As I have said elsewhere, I don't find democracy to be a particularly compelling form of governance. Two wolves and a sheep voting over what to have for dinner, nothing but mob rule.
As I said before, if there were legislation banning gerrymandering, I'd be fully behind it. But SCOTUS has ruled otherwise, so it remains perfectly legal and within the rights of any state to engineer it. Which means that, if one state doing so, purely for partisan reasons on orders from an authoritarian leader, is entirely legal, then another state doing so with the full consent and support of the voters is also perfectly legal.
Legal and moral are not the same, and Newsome showing he is nothing but a party hack who has no integrity is not contingent on his actions being illegal.
Whether or not you like one, but not the other, is entirely your business. But don't try to pretend you're applying the same standard across the board, because you ain't.

-- A2SG, and that's the truthhhpppth....
I am, other than the fact that I am not invested in TX politics as I am not in TX. Newsome is my governor, and he has chosen party loyalty over the interests of voters in his state. I already knew he had no integrity, but this is just a cherry on the pie.
 
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