BearGoggles said:
sycasey said:
BearGoggles said:
sycasey said:
BearGoggles said:
sycasey said:
BearGoggles said:
sycasey said:
BearGoggles said:
sycasey said:
BearGoggles said:
sycasey said:
BearGoggles said:
clearly and intentionally take things out of context or post maliciously edited clips.
Seems to me like that's just playing the Twitter game.
Perhaps yes. But unlike other troll accounts, they were affiliated with Kamala's campaign.
They were so bad that Daniel Dale at CNN (!!) called them out.
https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/14/politics/fact-check-harris-campaign-social-media/index.html
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/us/politics/2024/09/15/kamala-harris-social-media-misleading-videos/
Certainly nothing they should be proud of.
I can't believe a political campaign would say misleading things about their opponent! Truly unprecedented.
You're on this schtick lately that everything bad a democrat does is just "normal bad" behavior. Why is it so hard for you to just agree its bad?
Beyond that, what this group did was beyond what ever norm you are suggesting. That is the larger point which for some reason you want address.
Is it really beyond the norm? You're saying the Trump campaign didn't run any ads about Kamala Harris that didn't stretch or exaggerate claims about her? Be honest now.
Of course it's all "bad" on a moral level, but for most of my life it's also been the norm in political advertising for all sides. Why single out the Harris team here?
I'm saying the official trump campaign twitter did not routinely and intentionally edit video clips in a false and misleading way and then present it for public consumption in a way that was completely out of context.
I know that because if they had, the media would have justifiably ripped them a new one.
To be clear, I'm sure lots of people on the right did that. But not the official campaign. Honestly, Daniel Dale is a trump hater, 99% of his articles are anti republican/trump. He has probably written 5 articles in his entire life criticizing the left (yes that's an exaggeration, but likely not by much). The fact that he is calling out this group speaks volumes.
Maybe if you're referring specifically to the official Trump twitter account then they didn't. I don't know; I haven't followed that. But I highly doubt that the Trump campaign never did anything like that. Trump tosses around lies like Halloween candy. It's just that everyone is inured to it now, so it's not a story.
You (and lots of your tribe) just cannot call out bad behavior by your candidates without minimizing or saying "but trump." It diminishes your credibility.
My argument is that it is bad but also that it is standard practice on all sides. Was that not clear? Should I say it again?
Yes. Try to say it again without "but . . . . . "
That is my point - you insist on minimizing it because it is your tribe.
Sorry, I'm not going to limit my commentary to only what you would like to hear.
And anyway, you made a specific claim that the Harris Twitter was doing something "beyond the norm." Hence my further commentary that it is not.
Don't do it for me. Do it for yourself. The truth will set you free.
And I already explained to you why it was beyond the norm. A point you did not refute. You're just talking in circles now.
As I recall, you also insisted Kamala was a strong candidate. I believe you said we'd circle back on that after the election. Care to revise your assessment?
Yes, you gave a kind of explanation about it being beyond the norm. I just don't agree. Was that not clear either? It's okay to just respectfully disagree on this.
On to the next point: I also don't believe I ever said Kamala was a great candidate; most of my commentary here has been along the lines of "she's fine." But if you want my full assessment:
She's about average for a Democratic nominee. Not terrible, not great. Certainly better than Biden would have been at his current advanced age. I know, you're going to come at me with "but she lost to a terrible candidate like Trump!" So I'll elaborate:
First off, I don't think we should keep thinking of Trump as a terrible candidate. He has plenty of weaknesses, but clearly something about him drives turnout from parts of the electorate who are ordinarily not engaged with politics. It's happened three times now, and other Republicans who try to copy his approach don't do the same. I don't personally get the appeal, but it's there.
Secondly, I think in thinking Kamala could win, I was underestimating just how much the national environment was tilted against the ruling party. Just about every county or state shifted right vs. 2020, including places where neither party spent much time campaigning. Given that Harris was only the nominee for about three months, I don't think that can all be laid at her feet. The poor popularity of the Biden administration, global anger about the lingering effects of COVID (inflation, etc.) . . . these were pretty rough headwinds for any Democratic nominee.
But if you look at the swing states and districts where Harris actively campaigned (like in the Rust Belt), you saw less of a red shift than elsewhere, which indicates that her campaign was at least somewhat effective at blunting the damage. The polling went from looking like a sure Biden loss to roughly a dead heat during her short campaign, and the ultimate results do look like those toss-up polls were basically correct: if one candidate wins by 1-2 points then that was a legitimately close election. So yes, she lost, but her campaign did make up ground in a short period of time.
Again, don't think she's great. Probably wouldn't nominate Kamala Harris again; she had to be pushed in this time as an emergency measure because Biden took too long to drop out. But she also wasn't terrible.