daws101
Diamond Member
- Banned
- #121
lol! no that's not bigoted at all....and?that's not the best lie you repubs tell but it's close ....well yeah...a majority of your leadership pledged to hinder ,block and interfere with everything he's done.
Kinda like the democrats did in 2007?
How's this: when Bush started in 2001, economy was fine. The unemployment was 4% and we had a record surplus. And we weren't fighting in any wars. When Bush left in 2009 the unemployment was 8% adnd we had a record deficit. And we are still fighting in two wars.
Not so fast, the media was reporting a recession from the first day of Bush's presidency.
Awe just because I'm honest? Look I really don't care what people do. Just keep it to yourself and don't ask me to accept it. Oh and my dog is spoiled rotten, got the run of my house. He just doesn't like people.no need to know you personally, all your posts are tainted with one kind of bigotry or another.Yeah, since you know me so well.only because you taught them too..If a person from peta steps on my lawn my dog would bite him. True story.Who ignores the facts more, Republicans or Democrats?
- As a result, highly-polarized people, such as self-promoting Democrats, Republicans, liberals and conservatives tend to ignore facts that do not substantiate their side. And mainstream media propogates and panders to these flaws, especially via a method of creating "demon" icons like fundamentalist radicalists, Michael Moore, Rush Limbaugh, the ACLU or PETA. These references create such irrational contempt among certain polarized groups that they ignore facts on relevant issues to which they may not even be associated. In other words, you can tell a republican that Rush Limbaugh burned down his neighbor's house and he may suggest the neighbor deserved it, but if someone from PETA steps on his lawn, he might want them arrested for trespassing.
I'll bet there are YAers who will argue with this study!">Director of Clinical Psychology at Emory University, Drew Westen studies the way that psychology and politics intersect, and he says the format of cable TV news -- throwing out a topic to two representatives of opposite sides -- capitalizes on a design flaw in the human brain. People believe what they want to believe, no matter what the facts are.
As a result, highly-polarized people, such as self-promoting Democrats, Republicans, liberals and conservatives tend to ignore facts that do not substantiate their side. And mainstream media propogates and panders to these flaws, especially via a method of creating "demon" icons like fundamentalist radicalists, Michael Moore, Rush Limbaugh, the ACLU or PETA. These references create such irrational contempt among certain polarized groups that they ignore facts on relevant issues to which they may not even be associated. In other words, you can tell a republican that Rush Limbaugh burned down his neighbor's house and he may suggest the neighbor deserved it, but if someone from PETA steps on his lawn, he might want them arrested for trespassing.
I'll bet a few years back you trained them to sic black people