Dear GTGT:That's a fair comment. I've always claimed to be a true moderate. I have no party affiliation (I think I'm actually a registered Republican but I'm not certain) and I don't "identify" as one party or the other necessarily. I don't find who I am or my identity in partisanship like some here do. I'm not on a "team" and don't buy into the "if ya ain't for us yer against us" stuff. I've always found that to be an exceptionally bizarre way of existing.
I always try and be fair.
There is no way you don't vote straight ticket Republican (if not straight ticket..all R's in races you participate in) in every election you participate in.Dear GTGT:
I officially have no party affiliation. Several years ago -- after being a Republican for many decades -- I abandoned the GOP (and re-registered as an Independent) when they kept caving in on key issues, including financial ones. And when I did so, I had no intention of ever again voting for a Republican candidate for state or national office. However, when Trump entered the race, he wasn't a typical Republican -- or a politician, for that matter -- and I supported him from the time he announced his candidacy. And of the original 17 GOP primary hopefuls, the only ones I could have supported and voted for were Trump and Ben Carson.
Dear GTGT:There is no way you don't vote straight ticket Republican (if not straight ticket..all R's in races you participate in) in every election you participate in.
Give me some examples of good Democrats at the state and national level you find to be decent.Dear GTGT:
Not true at all. For years, I voted for Congressman Jim Haley, a Democrat who represented my district. And I voted for, and strongly endorsed, Democrat sheriff Ross Boyer, plus numerous other local officials, and I did so in the most-recent election as well.
Dear Good Times Good Times:Give me some examples of good Democrats at the state and national level you find to be decent.