Posted on May 27, 2015
SGT Darryl Allen
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With the current state of our government constantly in a push/pull for a majority vote, do you think that the addition of a third major party would have any affect on the stalemate stance we often find our house and senate in?

It seems that having two parties is having a polarizing affect on our nation and constantly pitting Democrat vs. Republican and vice versa with little wiggle room for personal opinion. It seems that, with the way our media reports, our country is becoming extremely divided between these groups and, rather than encourage debate and discussion, simply causes people to alienate those with different political and social views in favor of people with identical views.

Would having more major parties allow people to be more comfortable to reconsider their stance on their political and social views without fear of being ostracized from their peers?

(By major party I mean a party with the ability to contend for seats in the house, senate and presidential office)
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Responses: 7
LCpl Steve Wininger
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I don't think it will make much difference If other parties seek to divide. I like the idea of more than two parties because it can make special interests less effective. We need a party that can unite the people and not alienate them. This can only happen when the media quits influencing public opinion about what issues they think are important.
We are sinking fast, the government on both sides of the isle are corrupt but yet they continue being reelected.

I think the new mindset has started, but the electorates mindset has to change more.

The fact two of the main contenders for 2016 are a Bush and a Clinton says many voters still have their heads in their ass.
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SGT Darryl Allen
SGT Darryl Allen
9 y
I'm with you on our disgrace of a media industrial complex. We need news sources that don't exist to further their own agenda. As it stands, the media is a business, and it sells a product, not the truth, but a sort of truth that will appeal to its base.

How can we expect a population of informed voters if they're not being fed all of the facts?
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LCpl Steve Wininger
LCpl Steve Wininger
9 y
We had discussions like this in my journalism classes. The problem is straight news is boring to most. News is an entertainment industry and drama sells. Drama is conflict.
I do not totally agree with what the masses are fed. The facts are out there. The problem is most do not want to do the work to get the real food. They want the processed, packaged quick junk the MSM feeds them.
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COL Ted Mc
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Personally I see the Democrats and Republicans as two wings of the same party.

The socio-economic background of the "movers and shakers" in each of them is remarkably similar and their sources of finances are equally similar. It's like trying to tell the difference between "The Party of Big Business" and "The Party of Big Money" - poor analogy, but (hopefully) you'll get my drift.
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Capt Seid Waddell
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Edited 9 y ago
I think the divisions in government reflect the divisions of the public dating back to the '60s counter-culture movement. The counter-culture rebelled against the traditional culture and thought that they could re-invent society - they gave us the drug culture, the breakdown of law and order, the breakdown of the family structure, and the rejection of personal responsibility, among other similar improvements.

The hippies of the '60s became the teachers and reporters of today, and that has given rise to today's liberals. The traditional culture of those times gave rise to today's conservatives.

The two ideologies have less and less in common as time goes on, and have formed mutually exclusive views of the world.

See: Thomas Sowell and a Conflict of Visions
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGvYqaxSPp4

Our politics reflect those differences in ideology, and the divisions are increasing with time.

See: Political Polarization in the American Public
http://www.people-press.org/2014/06/12/political-polarization-in-the-american-public/
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Capt Seid Waddell
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