The Great Debate Megathread! Black Lincoln versus whiter, richer Douglas!

Started by Sheilbh, October 02, 2012, 10:02:37 PM

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Eddie Teach

To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

katmai

Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life, son

alfred russel

Quote from: DGuller on October 03, 2012, 11:39:39 PM
Quote from: alfred russel on October 03, 2012, 11:36:01 PM
What if the polls move 4-5 points in Romney's favor?
What if Obama chokes to death on his nicotine gum while walking to the Oval Office tomorrow morning?

:whistle:

They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.

There's a fine line between salvation and drinking poison in the jungle.

I'm embarrassed. I've been making the mistake of associating with you. It won't happen again. :)
-garbon, February 23, 2014

DGuller

 :hmm:  I have to say that I vastly underestimated the probability of Obama choking to death on his nicotine gum.

Neil

On the one hand, the rage would be awesome if Romney actually won.  On the other hand the real-world consequences would be disastrous.
I do not hate you, nor do I love you, but you are made out of atoms which I can use for something else.

OttoVonBismarck

Quote from: Peter Wiggin on October 13, 2012, 09:44:42 PM
On voting patterns or their implications?

Voting patterns. West Virginia almost always went Democrat in Presidential elections until 2000, but they voted for Bush twice by large margins.

Gore lost in West Virginia because of some big NRA spending (West Virginia is a massively pro-gun state with lots of redneck hunters.) After that I think the declining power of unions sealed the national Dem's fate in WV (the State Dems are still mostly all powerful through inertia.)

WV was never your typical Democrat state anyway, it's always been extremely conservative socially but was dominated by large union concerns. As coal mining has died and various steel refining activity went away the State has become mostly a welfare/tourist state with most people working for the government or Wal-Mart and that means unions are no longer very powerful. All the natural social conservative impulses now are more important than the traditional reason for West Virginia's Democratic allegiance in national elections.

CountDeMoney

Quote from: Neil on October 14, 2012, 02:37:28 PM
On the one hand, the rage would be awesome if Romney actually won.  On the other hand the real-world consequences would be disastrous.

Yes, the gnashing of hopeless teeth and unchanged wailing would be as interesting a spectacle as '92's was, but the running of the Tea Party's tables would be rather unsightly.

Eddie Teach

Ok, looking at the numbers it appears a longer-term trend in WV. Still, they did have as large a vote for McCain who lost soundly as for Bush who won. (And Hilary mopped the floor with Obama in the primary). vOv
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

derspiess

"If you can play a guitar and harmonica at the same time, like Bob Dylan or Neil Young, you're a genius. But make that extra bit of effort and strap some cymbals to your knees, suddenly people want to get the hell away from you."  --Rich Hall

CountDeMoney

Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on October 14, 2012, 03:03:30 PM
WV was never your typical Democrat state anyway, it's always been extremely conservative socially but was dominated by large union concerns. As coal mining has died and various steel refining activity went away the State has become mostly a welfare/tourist state with most people working for the government or Wal-Mart and that means unions are no longer very powerful. All the natural social conservative impulses now are more important than the traditional reason for West Virginia's Democratic allegiance in national elections.

What I find interesting about WV is how the panhandle is in the GS locality pay scale for Washington, DC;  Federal employees have grown there, should be interesting to watch how that part of the state continues to develop into a DC bedroom and commuter region for los federales.

OttoVonBismarck

My understanding is the Eastern Panhandle (the communities with direct transit to DC anyway) is very different from the rest of the state. It's actually a weird region of the country, I've been the Harper's Ferry once but unless you're deliberately wanting to go to the Eastern Panhandle there isn't much reason to be there. The major interstate from Maryland west (68) stays inside Maryland all the way until you're in North Central WV and bypasses the E. Panhandle entirely. I-81 cuts through the middle of the Eastern panhandle N/S but basically you'd have to be coming from southwest Virginia and going to like Harrisburg or central PA to actually use 81 through there as a through route, even going Roanoke-->Philly you'd switch off 81 before WV. I guess if you're driving all the way to NYC you'd stay on 81 too.

The eastern panhandle is also in a really weird, almost gerrymandered congressional district that includes Charleston (and there was legislation over this after the last census--it's one of the if not the largest east-west congressional district east of the Mississippi.) The eastern panhandle has a lot of conflicts with Charleston because the traditional powers in the state are southern coal and there's none of that in the EP.

One legislator even talked secession a year or so ago:

Linky

QuoteWest Virginia Legislator Hatches Plan to Secede
—By Tim Murphy| Tue Feb. 1, 2011 4:00 AM PST
29

First Tunisia, then Egypt, now...West Virginia? Well, no, not exactly. But delegate Larry Kump has had it up to here with his state's government. "I take pride in being a Mountaineer," says the freshman legislator—but he'd rather break his beloved state apart than see it suffer on as an economic backwater.

"Our per capita income in West Virginia is 47th in the United States; it's one of the few things we're not 50th in," Kump says. "We've lost 10,000 manufacturing jobs over the past three years. Gross Domestic Product is 49th in the nation."

"One of my favorite sayings here in West Virginia is 'Thank God for Mississippi,' because if it wasn't for Mississippi, we'd be fiftieth in everything."
He adds, "I'd prefer West Virginians stay together and just get their act together—but if they don't, I think it's a good idea to go elsewhere."

Elsewhere, in this case, means moving back in with the ex. Last week, Kump, a self-identified "libertarian grassroots populist" with tea party ties, introduced a bill in the state legislature calling for a non-binding referendum on secession. Specifically, Kump suggests that the three counties of the state's eastern panhandle break away from the mother ship and become a part of Virginia (as they were prior to 1863). His reason is simple: Kump believes the state government has created an economic climate that's holding its citizens back. West Virginia's almost heaven, in other words, but it's an awful big "almost."

"One of my favorite sayings here in West Virginia is 'Thank God for Mississippi,'* because if it wasn't for Mississippi, we'd be fiftieth in everything," says Kump (who clearly hasn't seen this map). "All you need to do is cross the border in any of the surrounding states and they're all doing much better than we are."

Kump's hardly the first person to contemplate leaving West Virginia, but his grievances are noteworthy in part because of what inspired him: Unleashing Capitalism, a 2007 pro-business manifesto edited by West Virginia University economist Russell Sobel. The book, supported by funding from the energy conglomerate Koch Industries, has become a must-read for the state's reform-minded conservatives, who tout it as a blueprint for economic growth. The state's GOP chairman called the book "our party platform" when it was first released; it's spawned a sequel (about South Carolina), and been honored by the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, a Washington-based think tank backed by Exxon-Mobil.

"A lot of people want to blame West Virginia's poverty on things like our climate or our geography or our weather," says Sobel. "The argument in the book is that our policies aren't as good as the states around us."

To wit, Kump (and the book) take dead aim at his state's regulatory structure and tax code, decrying West Virginia's tax on business inventory, for instance, as well as a sales tax on groceries. Among other things, Unleashing Capitalism makes the argument for the abolition of the state's minimum wage law and the easing of mine safety regulations.

But some of Kump's complaints could have broader support. For instance, he cites a report from Americans for Tort Reform, which calls the state a "judicial hellhole." Frivolous lawsuits might not be the job-killers business groups make them out to be, but Kump's call for an end to the election of judges isn't without merit. Judicial elections in West Virginia have helped corporations stock the bench with friendly jurists—just take it from John Grisham.

If nothing else, Kump has geography on his side. Sobel, who did not advocate secession in the book or consult with Kump about the bill, explains: "The eastern panhandle of West Virginia competes in the DC labor market. It's so different than the rest of the state."

That poor place—I feel bad for them," he continues. "They definitely deserve to be a part of one of those other states, you know? I think it's really funny that he's doing that."

Still, hatching a plan to detach your legislative district from the rest of the state is usually the kind of thing you'd want to run by residents first. Kump, who took office three weeks ago, concedes his constituents seemed "taken aback" at first. As one woman told the Charleston Daily Mail, "What would we do? Return to England?" People are starting to come around, Kump says. But his colleagues in the capital? Not so much.

"Quite frankly, I'd be surprised if we even get a committee hearing," Kump concedes. "But if we do, I'll go in with both guns blazing."

*This is not, apparently, just a West Virginia thing. Arkansans do it too—so much so that Gov. Mike Beebe recently had to tell his constituents to knock it off.

CountDeMoney

Quote from: OttoVonBismarck on October 15, 2012, 06:34:30 AM
My understanding is the Eastern Panhandle (the communities with direct transit to DC anyway) is very different from the rest of the state. It's actually a weird region of the country, I've been the Harper's Ferry once but unless you're deliberately wanting to go to the Eastern Panhandle there isn't much reason to be there.

I've applied to a position in Martinsburg recently, and man, now I know why so many GS-14s would want to relocate there, you can live like a prince on that scale, the home prices are ridiculously low.  You ought to see the spreads you can score under 200K, and that's not including short sells.

But yeah, unless you have a reason to be there, there's no reason to be there.  Whole lot of nothing between Charles Town and Harper's Ferry.  But if you want to get away from it all, that's your destination.