• @mightyfoolish
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    12 months ago

    I don’t understand what you mean by “feel” then but I do apologize for putting words in your mouth. I watched some videos on the overton window effect but I could have a misconception of how it works.

    Rights for LGBT and abortion have been put out there for a while. I can’t see how Hilary who thought both of these sets of rights as state issues was going to help? How would Hilary move public opinion on these issues to the left? Is it because she would have picked more moderate judges? But at the same time, it seems this overton window idea says the politician is not the one shifting the window (the majority of the time).

    • @someguy3
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      2 months ago

      You don’t know what feel is? You think Hillary would have appointed judges that overturned Roe (that’s what would have been necessary)? Hillary vs trump and you don’t understand how things would have wound up more progressive over time with Hilary winning, when they went off the cliff to the right when trump won? Yeah I have a hard time thinking this is a good faith discussion.

      • @mightyfoolish
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        22 months ago

        You don’t know what feel is?

        Do you mean they felt other people lose interest in Biden and felt pressured to move on as well. I think people had to have some resentment towards him to get to this point anyways.

        How would Hilary move public opinion on these issues to the left? Is it because she would have picked more moderate judges?

        I did mention the more moderate judges.

        Yeah I have a hard time thinking this is a good faith discussion.

        I looked up this idea of overton window. I have never heard of it before. You said people here have a lack of knowledge about it. It’s supposed to be the area where a law can be acceptable. But how do you move the window left? The videos say the politician usually doesn’t affect the window itself, they just read where it is placed.