This is a concise summary, right here.pic.twitter.com/kooL8Bt5jI
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1. Example of the perils of team-player thinking: Stephen Douglas backed "popular sovereignty" to decide if Kansas should be slave or free. The South cheered. The fraudulent Lecompton Constitution would have made it a slave state over the obvious objections of the state's voters.
2. Douglas, recognizing that the force & fraud used to fabricate a pro-slavery result made a mockery of his entire theory of popular sovereignty, drew the line & opposed it. Southern Democrats burned him in effigy & walked out on the party when he won the nomination.
3. Douglas was an amoral, calculating, race-baiting politician, but even he had his limits in flagrantly disregarding his own stated principles. His erstwhile Southern supporters didn't care about the principles, just the outcome. So they couldn't understand him.
The problem is that attitude is incapable of defeating the left. It makes for a poor ally. And, worst of all, it engenders an attitude that losing gracefully is preferable to winning by any means. That’s why you’ve been unable to conserve two genders let alone a women’s bathroom
The big issue - I think - for a lot of people with the balls/strikes thing, is that sometimes the infraction is big enough to get you ejected from the game.
If you don't have that line, then eventually "calling it as you see it" starts to sound like the old "well at least he made the trains run on time" thing.
Please. Don’t use “team players” for “sheep”.
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