If you know the answer to your own question, you should answer it. I'm not your errand boy...
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The cause of voter participation is a very important one. But I think the outrage is misdirected in this particular instance. When you have a good cause there should be no need to manufacture a casus belli where one doesn't exist. If some good is to come of this, I hope it will be in the form of deterring other states from taking action that actually makes voting more difficult.
Just MLB virtue signalling. I'm checked out on baseball. Have been since the end of last year. At best it's a broken game where a few clubs have ridiculous advantages, at worst it's rigged. But if I needed another reason to abandon the game, this certainly is one.
I find it interesting that Cuomo killed old people and covered it up and not a peep about punishing businesses in that state.
If it were based on literally anything real, I'd understand it somewhat.
This is a complete fabrication of reality. Makes me want to move on from baseball as well. What a joke
The cause of voter participation is a very important one. But I think the outrage is misdirected in this particular instance. When you have a good cause there should be no need to manufacture a casus belli where one doesn't exist. If some good is to come of this, I hope it will be in the form of deterring other states from taking action that actually makes voting more difficult.
AKA...the whole point.
If this bill was only about the adjustment to the absentee ballot that requires an ID and shortening the runoff time (which, BTW: Shafer's complete and total clown car operation that made him and his crew look like absolute clowns only led to the GA GOP shooting themselves in the foot massively with the relative long period before the runoff in this case anyway), I really wouldn't have any issues with it at all. But it's not. There are two specific reasons why I think the bill sucks, and I am still not going to give those reasons away, as I am just going to be called a leftist.
The Atlanta area is still very likely to be turning into Georgia's version of North Virginia. Unless you see some reversion back to where it was before in places like Cherokee and Forsyth voting wise (still red counties but not as red as they were, which is a huge blow to Republicans in the state because of how big the counties are), elections going forward are going to be tough at best, and if some of the areas surrounding Atlanta continue to shift away from voting GOP, which is very likely given the shifts you're seeing across America (there are plenty that don't like the right-wing populist game that live in the suburbs), that's the ballgame.
And given what you're seeing, there's not much that can be done to stop it.
Georgia has some interesting aspects. The metro Atlanta area has a lot of moderate conservatives in it. Ones that didn't like the...unpredictability of Trump. These are affluent, educated, business conservatives. This is also where I think the GOP struggled in the last election. They either stayed home or voted for Biden and I think they definitely stayed home in the Senate runoffs after Trump's antics.
It will be interesting to see how things go moving forward. A more stable candidate could bring these people back into the fold as they're not likely to appreciate the free spending of Biden. Another Trump type and you'll even worse struggles for Republicans ahead.