There's a lot of threads on progressive politics specifically, St. Louis city politics, and specific issues that often spiral into political topics, but I figured it would be good to start a general politics thread with the 2016 election cycle really kicking off last night. This forum has proven to be a great spot for intelligent, passionate, and respectful debate and I greatly admire many of the people that I have sparred with on a host of issues over the past year. As a conservative, I know I'm in the minority on this board, so I don't always enjoy jumping into the progressive threads and stirring up debate, but I also know many here take a great interest in national politics and the impact that it has on "urban living".
I found the Republican debate last night entertaining, and here are my observations that I wrote down while watching it:
- Donald Trump was hilarious at first, but act has grown tired.
- Jeb Bush is a really smart guy who isn't good at soundbites, and isn't afraid to embrace non-mainline positions.
- Ted Cruz is an absolute imbecile.
- Marco Rubio is more impressive than I gave him credit for, but doesn't leave much of an impression.
- Chris Christie has balls and ideas.
- Rand Paul is disappointing and desperate (criticizing Christie for hugging Obama during a natural disaster is lame red meat).
- John Kasich probably has some good ideas if they actually asked him a question. I don't know.
- Mike Huckabee is pandering for the votes of Breitbart comment trolls.
- Scott Walker is more fake than a cartoon politician.
- Ben Carson is a philosopher, not a politician. And not in a good way for a presidential candidate.
- Carly Fiorina should be on the stage.
After reflecting on what I heard last night and doing some more research, the candidate I am most impressed with is Kasich (I was a Paul guy, but he disappointed me last night). To me, he should be the Republicans' best candidate, but I don't know if he'll get enough attention. However, he:
- Opposes gay marriage, but admits that it's time to move on and answered that question perfectly last night.
- Gives credit to climate change and supports protecting the environment, to an extent to remain economically competitive, and puts it in the right context for conservatives to get behind ("God gave us the responsibility to take care of the world")
- Pro-life
- Pro-Second Amendment
- Is strong on national defense and the military
- Strong track record of low taxes and economic growth
- Realistic in his solutions to illegal immigration (pay a fine and receive legal status, supports massive immigration overhaul)
- Has a heart for the poor (accepted Medicaid expansion in his state to cover 275,000 low-income Ohioans)
These positions, if he can get through the primary, I think have the perfect balance of lining up with the GOP's historic cornerstone positions (low taxes, strong military, pro-life) while reaching out to the left on issues such as gay marriage, immigration, and climate change to try to build some form of consensus and unity while winning votes.
I found the Republican debate last night entertaining, and here are my observations that I wrote down while watching it:
- Donald Trump was hilarious at first, but act has grown tired.
- Jeb Bush is a really smart guy who isn't good at soundbites, and isn't afraid to embrace non-mainline positions.
- Ted Cruz is an absolute imbecile.
- Marco Rubio is more impressive than I gave him credit for, but doesn't leave much of an impression.
- Chris Christie has balls and ideas.
- Rand Paul is disappointing and desperate (criticizing Christie for hugging Obama during a natural disaster is lame red meat).
- John Kasich probably has some good ideas if they actually asked him a question. I don't know.
- Mike Huckabee is pandering for the votes of Breitbart comment trolls.
- Scott Walker is more fake than a cartoon politician.
- Ben Carson is a philosopher, not a politician. And not in a good way for a presidential candidate.
- Carly Fiorina should be on the stage.
After reflecting on what I heard last night and doing some more research, the candidate I am most impressed with is Kasich (I was a Paul guy, but he disappointed me last night). To me, he should be the Republicans' best candidate, but I don't know if he'll get enough attention. However, he:
- Opposes gay marriage, but admits that it's time to move on and answered that question perfectly last night.
- Gives credit to climate change and supports protecting the environment, to an extent to remain economically competitive, and puts it in the right context for conservatives to get behind ("God gave us the responsibility to take care of the world")
- Pro-life
- Pro-Second Amendment
- Is strong on national defense and the military
- Strong track record of low taxes and economic growth
- Realistic in his solutions to illegal immigration (pay a fine and receive legal status, supports massive immigration overhaul)
- Has a heart for the poor (accepted Medicaid expansion in his state to cover 275,000 low-income Ohioans)
These positions, if he can get through the primary, I think have the perfect balance of lining up with the GOP's historic cornerstone positions (low taxes, strong military, pro-life) while reaching out to the left on issues such as gay marriage, immigration, and climate change to try to build some form of consensus and unity while winning votes.








