"Lots of people" who weren't the key people in the key states. That is, this is yet another symptom of the problem!
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Replying to @emptywheel @fpgeek
All your defenses keep reinforcing the case that Hillary simply ignored the people who knew. That is, anti-democracy.
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Replying to @emptywheel
Without hindsight, you don't know who knew. The people she was listening to also talked to voters, just the wrong ones.
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Replying to @fpgeek
WTF!!! The people in states Hillary chose to ignore were all screaming that. It took no hindsight. It took local knowledge & respect
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Replying to @emptywheel @fpgeek
I mean I've heard reps fr all big Dem institutions in MI bitching. They don't have local knowledge?
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Replying to @emptywheel
Of course they do, but they also have other reasons to lobby for attention and resources on their states.
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Replying to @fpgeek
All of which take second fiddle to "if you ignore basic shit about my state we'll lose it big." But you want to blame Stein.
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Replying to @emptywheel
Let's try this again. That it was close = fragility of democracy. That a close election was lost = campaign.
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Replying to @fpgeek
HAHAHAHAHAH. No. That it was close = someone taking most important election in recent history and STILL running arrogantly. Done.
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Replying to @emptywheel @fpgeek
That condescending people like you then want to blame democracy rather than competence is anti-democratic. And fragile.
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This entire convo has been a good example of problem: Don't listen. Talk down to people like they're idiots. That was what lost this
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