Quote:
Originally Posted by rodog
HUH? I was simply correcting your erroneous statements. You could have accepted the truth or not. You provided no statistics of minorities being turned off by the Democratic platform whatsoever, but made a biased deduction based on few black people in Bush's Administration and the voting record of one demographic over the course of 2 years. Therefore there was not much to debate in the first place. Its the Republicans who have an image problem right now not the Democrats (or at least not as much), but you and others are free to believe whatever the hell you want (and I'm sure you will).
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It's pretty clear that you have an attitude problem and are too busy being a blind partisan to see my point. I am not a loyal partisan at all, which is why I'm not disputing the current image problem of the Republicans. And BTW, if you read over my replies, you'll see that I never claimed a noticeable increase in black voters for the right. I've just simply noticed a few more black candidates running under the Republican banner these last few years.
My opinion is that the Republicans didn't make good on opportunity when they had it back in 2004. According to the media, many people were turned away by the liberal stance on gay marriage and stuff like that during the '04 elections, which is why the Republicans not only won the presidency, but gained control of the House that year. For whatever reason, you've come up with a lame excuse that
"They were not turned off by the left, but rather scared batshit crazy by the right."
Gee, could you please show me some statistics that people were scared batshit crazy by the right back in 2004?
