One thing I didn't mention regarding your earlier response is this: You have equated any post that you do know agree with as being "obnoxious & offensive". That is a problem in this echo chamber. Any poster who offers a post that does not jive with the group-think is labeled "obnoxious & offensive". That is why practically all conservative posters have gradually left the boards.
You are certainly entitled to your opinion. Have I ever said that you are obnoxious or offensive for not agreeing with me? And it is your right to defend anything you wish to defend. All I have said tonight is that...in my opinion...you are defending actions that are counter-productive to your end goals when you support what the outraged far left is doing now. Here is another opinion on this subject:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...confront-democrats/ar-AAza5C7?ocid=spartanntp
The attempts at shaming have delighted many on the left, particularly following Mr. Trump’s policy of separating migrant children from their parents, and many progressives feel that the president’s incendiary messaging and actions must be met with something far stronger than another round of news releases from politicians. But the social media-fueled confrontations have opened a rift in the party over whether stoking anti-Trump outrage is helping or undermining its prospects in the midterm elections. Many younger Democrats believe that conventional politics are insufficient to the threat posed by a would-be authoritarian — and that their millennial and nonwhite base must be assured that the party is doing all it can to halt Mr. Trump. Older and more establishment-aligned party officials fear the attempts at public humiliation are a political gift to Republicans eager to portray the opposition as inflaming rather than cooling passions in the nation’s capital.
“Trump’s daily lack of civility has provoked responses that are predictable but unacceptable,” Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the House Democratic leader, said Monday, rebuking Ms. Waters, a veteran flamethrower who is enjoying something of a renaissance in the Trump era. This sort of talk infuriates the new guard of liberal leaders, who warn that Washington Democrats risk dampening enthusiasm among anti-Trump activists if they continue denouncing direct action.
Other prominent Democrats, however, are alarmed at those in their ranks who believe these public clashes should be encouraged. The party has found its greatest electoral success by casting itself as the antidote to Republican excess and divisiveness, these Democrats say, not by emulating the most heated talk and behavior on the right. When Republicans have prospered, they warn, it has often been when they can ride a public backlash against Democrats.
“It’s totally counterproductive,” said David Axelrod, the former chief strategist for President Barack Obama. “You’re making Sarah Huckabee Sanders a sympathetic figure.” Mr. Axelrod, who received an avalanche of criticism online over the weekend after tweeting about his unease with how Ms. Sanders was treated, bristled at the criticism and noted his success in winning a pair of presidential elections. “Organize, run for office, donate and most of all vote,” he said. “That’s how you change policy in a democracy.”
The over-the-top rage from the Far Left is playing right into Trump's hands.