Comment by bigstrat2003
2 days ago
The article doesn't mention parties because it's irrelevant. A bad bill is bad on its merits, not because of who has brought it about.
2 days ago
The article doesn't mention parties because it's irrelevant. A bad bill is bad on its merits, not because of who has brought it about.
It’s relevant, because you shouldn’t vote for politicians who make bad policies, and most party members tend to vote with their party.
Unfortunately, the Democrats haven’t demonstrated themselves to be much better (at least, I’m not aware of them opposing copyright).
> the Democrats haven’t demonstrated themselves to be much better
Some introduce awful stuff, but the party isn't run like the mafia, so they fail to pass nearly as much. Republicans are handed down orders and they follow. No attempt to represent the people that elected them. Vassals to the end.
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The identity of the people who crafted the bill is the second most relevant thing besides the bill itself.
Agreed, it's a signal of intention based on past behaviors of the "authors" (quoted because it's often lobbyists who write the bill).
Ignoring power politics doesn't make them go away
But calling them out in a partisan may disincentivize half of the people to understand the issue.
If those people want to treat political parties like sports teams then they aren't likely going to contribute much to the discussion
I love not informing the electorate!
A large portion of that half will continue to want the wrong thing anyway.
1 reply →
In 2026, a discussion of a bill proposing to make an existing position into a presidential appointee is very different if that bill was proposed by Democrats or Republicans. To pretend otherwise is to ignore virtually all of the current administrations actions.
For those of us at home who need to decide which team to root for its very much relevant when and what bills a party sponsors.
their point was that both parties pass those laws. TPP and first-to-file passed under Obama.
it's so tiring.