• Flying Squid
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    1407 months ago

    And yet people keep telling me that Biden needs to lose so that Democrats can be “taught a lesson.”

    • @SinningStromgald@lemmy.world
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      387 months ago

      Ah yes! Enlightened Centrist and Libertarians. They will always vote GOP no matter how horrible the candidate is with some shit reason to not vote Democrat. OR they will vote for some numbnuts third party candidate with an equally shitty reason.

      • @Telorand@reddthat.com
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        307 months ago

        The common talking points these days are either, “DeMoCrAtS aRe FaScIsTs, ToO!” or, “DeMoCrAtS nEeD tO eArN mY vOtE!”

        And I’m sure the next generation will thank them for taking an ideological stand right as Fascism is trying to take over. /s

        • Setarkus.LW
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          207 months ago

          Democrats are fascists, too

          Special emphasis on “too”, of course

        • Uranium3006
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          15 months ago

          problem is your thinking lead to us getting to this point in the first place. y’all should have learned candidate quality matters in 2016 and it’s your fault if biden loses because he was your idea in the first place

        • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          -17 months ago

          Too many Democrats are to be sure. But not all democrats. Sanders and others have shown the way to fix this. The biggest issue is that we need younger people involved and running. In my state many Republicans run unopposed for several offices. As bad as it sounds. I would reflexively vote for any Democrat over a republican knowing nothing about either of the two.

          • @Telorand@reddthat.com
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            27 months ago

            We’re already seeing the beginnings of that with various candidates, but I agree that we need it to happen more rapidly.

            The issue, in a twist of capitalist fuckery, is that running a campaign is massively expensive, and the barrier to entry is often too high for the people who should be running for office. Thankfully, there’s orgs helping with that, but it’s still an uphill battle.

            • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              37 months ago

              They can be. At the state and national level to be sure. But even with zero budget, running someone against a Republican vs letting a Republican run unopposed. We’ll win infinitely more times just by trying. It should start with smaller offices. And work up from there.

              Also, outside of presidential election years. We should donate to a group or groups that back and fund Democrat opposition to Republicans locally. Even if we have to make those groups ourselves. At the national level they’ve largely given up on many states. So donating to them often does little at home.

              Democrats need a new younger bench. And this is a way to fix both the age and fash friendly issues at the same time. Perhaps then we can start to address things like getting money out of politics etc.

          • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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            07 months ago

            Forget running, they need to be voting.

            Sanders lost both primaries due to Millenials and Zoomers being so allergic to turnout that they even turn their noses up at their own guy in the primary.

            This is easy win territory for young voters, the gap between current performance and just matching their share of the general population alone would push the DNC significantly to the left, let alone if they started showing up with the easy dominating share they could take if they spent half the effort turning out for the cause that they do painting signs and tweeting about it.

            • Uranium3006
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              05 months ago

              primaries aren’t free and fail elections, we saw fuckery in 2016 and 2020. why vote when the party leaders can legally rig it?

              • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                Rigging it by actually turning out for those instead of throwing a tantrum that the other voting blocks who don’t agree with them didn’t do the revolution for them?

                The left’s perennial problem, “well why didn’t you fucking vote in (X previous election or primary) then?”, every time they try to blame it on something else, it flows back to some other primary or general they also vote striked or protest voted in.

                The narcissist’s prayer is a fucking Mayan calendar style political prophecy to the white left and doing even the barest minimum in the way of political participation

                Bernie had the primary win stolen from him alright, by on paper allies who have to be dragged kicking and screaming to do literally the first thing you should have to prove you did to be allowed to talk shit.

                Every single one of you fuckers I see ranting about rigged primaries is just some flavor of Jean Paul Marat wannabe who fantasizes about being able to literally sit but naked in a bath tub all day and pass judgement upon the enemies of the revolution for everyone else to carry out for you.

            • @PopOfAfrica@lemmy.world
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              07 months ago

              I think that Democrats appear very weak right now because they’re not taking the drastic steps that are needed in order to fix a lot of the existential threats that America faces.

              I truly believe that we cannot engage in capitalism as we are currently and still hold on to the planet in the face of global warming. And I don’t see anyone in US politics or even global politics willing to make the drastic changes needed to literally save for the planet.

              So no, I don’t really think they’re doing what they need to be doing right now, and it’s disheartening.

              • Uranium3006
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                25 months ago

                indeed. weak “left” candidates leave the door open for fascism the world over. how the fuck do you tell people to “hold their noses” and expect that to work? like really, think about it for a minute. I’m mad because these idiots are ruining our country. a progressive candidate would both be a safer bet to win vs. trump and some reforms would sap fascism of it’s power, yet we’re stuck with candidates like clinton and biden for no good reason. disappointing if they win, and less likely to actually win

      • @Ranvier@sopuli.xyz
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        177 months ago

        Don’t vote Democrat, vote third party I hear! Me, I’m like well with first past the post voting this is impractical and could help empower fascists to take over, but let’s see what options we got.

        /opens box of third party candidates, before gently closing it and walking away

        Yeah no, Biden still best option, these guys are nutters. It makes sense though, a sensible candidate would run in the democratic primaries, rather than hurting their own purported causes by running in the general in a first past the post election. It’s why you saw Bernie Sanders, an independent, running in the democratic primary, and not out there helping to siphon votes to fascists by running as a third party in the general against Biden.

        Anyways, let’s focus on continuing to empower politicians that want to improve our voting system (usually has been democrats, though with an exception in Alaska). This starts at the local level, but we’re getting more and more federal offices now with ranked choice voting. Once you have that, then better quality third party candidates will follow, knowing they can fairly safely run without harming their own causes.

      • @CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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        -37 months ago

        Unfortunately, there are few leftists that push the same narrative, too. And all because Biden (or Obama, or Hillary) are not the pretty pony they think they were promised or something.

        • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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          47 months ago

          Point of fact: Clinton’s centrists were so upset that they didn’t get their very first choice in 2008 that they formed a PAC to try to get McCain/Palin elected. And they’ve been screaming “no matter who” ever since.

          • @CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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            -37 months ago

            I have no special affinity for either of the Clintons. However, it cannot be denied that there is a certain type of leftist (often very loud, and probably the minority, thankfully) that behave like petulant children when they don’t get their pretty pony, whoever that is.

            Don’t get me wrong - I’d like that pretty pony, too. I just realize that even if people don’t love Hillary, she’d still be better than OJ (Orange Jesus) and so once the primaries are over, voting for donnie to really stick it to the man, or sit out, or vote for some completely unserious party like the Green Party is not really teaching anyone the lesson(s) that the people stamping their feet think they are.

            OJ represents a very existential threat. Just because he flubbed the RW agenda the first time around doesn’t mean he won’t succeed in destroying America if given another chance.

            • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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              07 months ago

              Don’t get me wrong - I’d like that pretty pony, too.

              The only thing you want is unquestioning worship of the party from everyone to your left.

              • @CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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                -17 months ago

                LOL, I only vote for them because I have to. What is the realistic alternative? Unless we have something like ranked choice, voting for Green or staying home or writing something in is just a vote for Republicans.

                • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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                  27 months ago

                  And you only choose to constantly belittle anyone who isn’t 100 percent ecstatic with everything the party does because you want to.

    • @orclev@lemmy.world
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      207 months ago

      I do worry that Biden will lose though. He was far from a popular candidate to begin with and his support of Israel’s genocide of Palestinians has made him even less so. In many ways the best outcome might be for him to die in office prior to the election or for him to lose the primary. It would hurt the Democrats to have a non-incumbent running, but possibly less than running Biden. The real wildcard though is if Trump will even end up on the ballot considering his legal issues.

      • @Telorand@reddthat.com
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        397 months ago

        I do worry that Biden will lose though.

        Good. Everybody should think this. Thinking Trump can’t possibly win is how he won in 2016.

        We need to behave as if it’s a real possibility, even if you feel optimistic about next year.

        • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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          67 months ago

          We need to behave as if it’s a real possibility, even if you feel optimistic about next year.

          Party leadership should also be doing this and doing what they can to win voters. Instead, the only message I’m hearing is “if you breathe so much as a word of discontent, it’s because you’re a Russian troll who wants Trump to be dictator for life.”

      • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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        117 months ago

        It would hurt the Democrats to have a non-incumbent

        If Biden were not on the ballot next year, the Democratic candidate would be Kamala Harris. No mainstream Democrat would challenge her in 2024, the optics would be horrible.

        • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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          17 months ago

          Mmm, I doubt it, even other dems don’t like her very much right now

          I’d want Gretchen Whitmer to go for it,

          • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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            27 months ago

            Doesn’t really matter if she is well liked, no other Democrat will challenge her in 2024. For starters, it is too late to get on the primary ballot.

            • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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              17 months ago

              I feel like in most cases “the incumbent croaked” would suffice as an excuse to get some names on the board, also, maybe Kamala turns out to be the second coming of LBJ, so we’ll get some pretty good social programs everyone’s gonna forget about eventually, some significant expansions in civil rights, but also entanglement in an unpopular conflict, venturing a guess I’ll say defending Somalia Eritrea and Djibouti from invasion by Ethiopia.

              Israel is unpopular enough, but being on the side of a dictatorship and a failed state that tries to force its control onto a breakaway that self governs at least better than its former fellow countrymen, all in the name of international law and order, feels like the kind of conflict Kamala would be involved in, and that folks would have misgivings over, most because “why are we sending our troops to defend a dictator?” and that select group everyone loves spouting off how you should withold from voting over it because something something respecting national sovereignty as well as the clear results in favor of independence in a fair referendum run by Ethiopia is colonialism just like how not letting Russia eat neighbors because something something little russians is colonialism.

              • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                I feel like in most cases “the incumbent croaked” would suffice as an excuse

                Primaries aren’t run by excuses, they are run by rules. There are state laws regarding who can get on a ballot, Biden/Harris qualified, and Whitmer did not. Which means that when the primaries roll around, Biden/Harris will be on the state ballots, and Whitmer won’t. Which means that throughout the primary season, Biden/Harris will be racking up delegates who are loyal to Biden/Harris.

                If anything happens to Biden at this point, his delegates will vote for Harris at the nominating convention. Why? Because they were chosen specifically for that purpose. You only get to be a primary delegate for Biden/Harris 2024 if you are a strong supporter of both Biden and Harris. Specifically if you support them a lot more than Whitmer, Newsom, etc. If you have doubts about either Biden or Harris, then the Biden/Harris campaign will find someone else to be a delegate. All this means Whitmer has no chance at becoming the nominee as long as Harris is still around.

                As for the rest: yes, Harris might be a great president. But most people who want a different Democratic candidate do not realize that she is the only alternative for 2024.

    • @agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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      97 months ago

      The way that talking point gets pushed unusually hard by an unusually dedicated few using the same stupid arguments looks an awful lot like the kind of psyops campaigns I’d see when I was on Reddit during the Trump presidency.

      The real long term solution is changing how we vote. Star Voting or some form of Ranked Choice. That’s how I respond along with https://fairvote.org so, in case some impressionable soul happens along, they aren’t taken in by such silliness. I encourage others to consider doing something similar.

    • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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      37 months ago

      My Roman Empire is remembering how the shitheads screamed and yelled denying responsibility on the day Dobbs came down.

      Was grocery shopping with my grammy and had to pull the most hemmeroid passingly determined poker face in history to not break out into cursing them and their obvious waste of what privileges they live with to be in the position of treating this like it’s teaching the DNC a lesson.

      Fucking Priv Shit Vote Karens, every last one of them, “Take me to the party’s manager right now or I’ll let the fascists take away even more of your rights!”

      • Flying Squid
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        137 months ago

        Because the party isn’t going to defy the incumbent president. This should be obvious.

        • @Aabbcc@lemm.ee
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          -27 months ago

          It’s not obvious, please explain why not. He’s worse for their chance of winning.

          • Flying Squid
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            37 months ago

            The why not is that he wants to run again and he’s the president. Why do you think the Democrats would say no to him? He’s the president.

      • Jaysyn
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        117 months ago

        Voting is a chess move, not a love letter.

          • Jaysyn
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            7 months ago

            Tell me you don’t understand how party politics & voting work without telling me you don’t understand how party politics & voting work.

            • @Aabbcc@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              “I’m not owned that’s just how the game is played”

              -person who’s totally getting owned

      • be_excellent_to_each_other
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        7 months ago

        Depends how cynical you feel today.

        IMO it’s either:

        • The DNC believes anyone too progressive will get stomped in the general election

        • Don’t forget, Dems would be conservatives in most other countries. As much as I hate to say it, I’m not convinced most of them aren’t just as beholden to corporate interests as R is.

        OR

        Probably a little of both of those actually. Also, maybe a dash of - boomers are going to control our politics until a bunch more boomer voters and boomer politicians die of old age.

      • @dragonflyteaparty@lemmy.world
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        17 months ago

        They can and I wish they would, but it’s too late this election. Anyone else would have two weeks or so to get on the ballot and get name recognition and get people to like what they’re doing. Not really sure that’s possible.

    • Uranium3006
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      15 months ago

      it’s because of people defending biden’s atrocities. like, there’s more than one person you can run, and most of the options could poll better vs. trump.

    • @crusa187@lemmy.ml
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      Biden needs to deliver on at least one campaign promise - be a 1 term President, and drop out of the race now, so we don’t risk the election.

      His ego, nor the desires of his donors, are not worth sacrificing democracy.

        • @Matriks404@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Is Lemmy really loading whole images when loading a site, even though I can’t enlarge them without actually going to actual image source? What a good way to waste data.

        • Uranium3006
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          15 months ago

          what does “reignited the WHO” mean? some of these are so vauge as to be meaningless.

          • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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            97 months ago

            Only on the internet:one side of the argument posts a lengthy list of facts, and the response is simply “fuck all”

          • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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            87 months ago

            The Inflation Reduction Act was a big deal internationally, but I feel like you and I have already talked about it, so I don’t want to rehash it.

            For everyone else’s safe, I’ll just say that even though it isn’t enough, Biden still achieved a historic level of funding for sustainability with the IRA, to the point that it forced European countries to pass similar legislation so their green energy companies could still be competitive with US green energy companies. I would’ve preferred to see legislation like this 15-20 years ago, but the second best time is always the present.

          • spaceghoti
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            37 months ago

            The man has kept plenty of campaign promises. Pretending he’s done nothing for the American people at every level is just dishonest. People have the right to express bullshit if they choose, and I have an equal right to call it out.

      • Flying Squid
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        77 months ago

        Wait, you not only want him to be a one-term president, you don’t even want him to finish his term? We get President Harris until 2024?

  • Jaysyn
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    Polls a year out are meaningless. Obama was also “losing” at this point before his re-election.

    Nationally, Democrats have been beating polls by 9+ points at the ballot box since Roe v. Wade was overturned.

    Reminder of what an absolute shit-bird Robert Kagan is.

    ‘No rational person would believe a word Robert Kagan says about anything. He has been spewing out one falsehood after the next for the last four years in order to blind Americans about the real state of affairs concerning the invasion which he and his comrade and writing partner Bill Kristol did as much as anyone else to sell to the American public.’ - Glenn Greenwald, Salon.

    Kagan is one of the shitheads that got us to this point. He’s now concern-trolling us about how we shouldn’t bother opposing Trump.

    • OctopusKurwa
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      577 months ago

      I completely agree but I would just like to point out that Glenn Greenwald is also a massive shithead.

      • Jaysyn
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        197 months ago

        Yes, he absolutely is, but he was also correct in that particular assessment.

    • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      67 months ago

      Nationally, Democrats have been beating polls by 9+ points at the ballot box since Roe v. Wade was overturned.

      It’s really surprised to me how quickly this dropped from political discourse and analysis. We’ve had several off year elections and the midterms now where Republicans have underperformed. Polls have largely seemed to miss this trend.

      There’s a lot of reasons to be hopeful right now. Republicans can’t control their messaging on abortion, and it’s very clear voters are unhappy about bans. Yet, Republicans in the House are only barely aware of it, and in the Senate you’d think they hadn’t seen any results at all. Tuberville’s continued hold for abortion reasons, while voters have made it clear anti abortion advocates can go fuck themselves, is remarkably visible. I don’t think it’s a mistake that Republicans are signaling they’ll bypass him if he doesn’t budge. Elections a month ago make it clear it’s a millstone around their necks.

      We have an advantage to capitalize on, but it only matters if we press the advantage. We have to show up en masse to the election.

      • @Mirshe@lemmy.world
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        27 months ago

        Moreover, the Democrats need to get their messaging together. Hammer in that THESE ARE THE PEOPLE who overturned Roe, who are currently cratering Florida and Texas, who allowed COVID to run rampant. Hammer in Tuberville blocking military promotions, hammer in Johnson and McConnell both effectively refusing to do any of their jobs, hammer in Trump nearly getting us into a shooting war with Iran (remember that assassination we carried out during a peace conference?) Remind the voters who exactly Trump is, what exactly he’s done, and what exactly he’s stated he’s going to do.

    • @Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      57 months ago

      At this point, I think it’s advantageous for anyone who is set in their decision to lie on polls and say you’d vote for the opposite candidate in the hopes of making that side complacent and light a fire under your side.

    • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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      17 months ago

      Just because he’s a neocon piece of shit doesn’t mean he can’t be right. Also, dude, Glen Greenwald is no fucking saint either. That guy is a certified scumbag. At least with Kagan there’s a chance that he actually believes his bullshit, whereas with Greenwald, we know he’s an intellectually dishonest grifter.

    • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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      Obama was also “losing” at this point before his re-election

      Obama was about 46% and trending upwards at this point, Biden is 37% and trending downward. This is a pretty nice visualization of historical presidential approval ratings plotted with Biden’s. Takeway is while other presidents have tanked way harder (Nixon, Dubya, HW), Trump and Biden are basically tied for historical unpopularity on a consistent basis. Biden did hit mid 50s as he came in to office where most presidents get a bump, Trump didn’t even reach 50.

  • be_excellent_to_each_other
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    627 months ago

    Same paper that just ran the “Women should stop shunning Trump supporters in their dating pool” article. I guess that’s so they’ll be less likely to abused under the pending dictatorship?

      • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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        147 months ago

        Really wish people would stop posting / up voting garbage opinion pieces here. I want facts, not hot takes.

        • @Dave@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          117 months ago

          Big, solid, nuanced take against the 11 page opinion piece.

          Maybe tell the other folks reading the same online conversation platform as you are what you thought made this specific link you decided to comment on “garbage”.

          • I am someone who is against opinion pieces in general, regardless of the content. Nate Silver also has an argument against them: the main difference with an opinion piece and normal journalism is that opinions don’t need to be fact checked. In which case there’s no reason for them to exist. If the argument cannot survive fact checking, it shouldn’t be published.

            • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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              Opinions, columns, and editorials are all traditional news formats where a known personality gives their take on current events. Basically you can’t “fact check” someone’s commentary because they’re not reporting factual takes on current events, and you can’t really objectively say “your analogy to this historical event is not analogous enough” for instance because there isn’t really measures for these things. Nate Silver’s argument against them is itself an opinion that can’t be fact checked. “Fact checking” itself is also determined by the ideology you’re choosing to determine facts by or even which specific facts are chosen to be highlighted in an article. What is and what ought isn’t something that you can simply fact check.

              • The fact that it’s “traditional” is not a good reason to keep something around despite the negative consequences. The fact is, most news consumers do not know about the lower editorial standards of opinion articles, so opinion pieces have been a significant source of misinformation. This is how we get Jim Carey writing about climate skepticism in a major newspaper.

                What’s so impossible about a fact-checked journalistic article entitled: “Should opinion pieces be eliminated?” Seems possible to me!

                • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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                  47 months ago

                  I think it’s just a silly proposal that’s hardly worth debating so I can see why it appeals to someone like Nate Silver. The notion that you could control misinformation by removing certain writing styles from circulation is incredibly stupid. Plus on social media everyone is an opinion writer now.

            • spaceghoti
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              37 months ago

              Did you notice how this opinion piece is littered with links sourcing what Kagan is talking about? This article is easily fact-checked. It’s not the author’s fault if you’re not willing to do your due diligence.

              • Then you are also intellectually lazy, because there is no way you are verifying the truth of every claim made in the articles you read. The role of newspapers is to inform people, not make random claims of dubious truth and have readers “do their own work”. It’s astounding that people are actually against basic fact checking.

              • You seem to think my objection has something to do with whether it’s obvious that this particular piece is an opinion piece? I have no idea why you think this. Completely bizarre, and what an unnecessarily aggressive tone.

                I am against opinion pieces because most consumers do not know that they have lower editorial standards, making them a big source of misinformation. If opinion pieces had the same journalistic standards, I would not be opposed to them.

                • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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                  27 months ago

                  That sounds like a media literacy problem, not a problem with opinion pieces themselves. I have a degree in journalism and the idea that anyone could somehow not know the difference between a straight news story and an opinion piece is baffling. Do we not have basic critical thinking skills anymore?

          • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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            -27 months ago

            No thanks. I do not want to talk about or critique an opinion piece. I want objective political news from this channel. Leave opinion for the comments.

              • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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                27 months ago

                24 hour news networks need to fill their time with opinion pieces. We have plenty of other content in other communities to fall back on. We don’t need filler content promoted here.

      • be_excellent_to_each_other
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        7 months ago

        Good point and probably not, but I’m too lazy to look right now.

        Edited to add: Presumably same editorial team, so the seeming dissonance between the two articles isn’t lessened much by having different authors.

        • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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          57 months ago

          It really depends a lot. If it’s something by the editorial board itself, then it’s a very jarring difference. But you can have writers with polar opposite viewpoints in editorials. It used to be nice from a reader perspective to get that variety, but then the right went wacko.

          That said, I do think it’s weird the section editor would approve something like “women need to date more conservatives”. Maybe they take the approach of not being responsible for what their authors say, but that crosses enough lines that it’s odd they didn’t step in.

          • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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            27 months ago

            No, these are op-eds, which are written by contributors and are different from editorials which, as the name suggests, are written by the editorial board. Op-eds traditionally were printed opposite of the editorial page --hence the name-- and were meant to be a space for subject matter experts or other thought leaders to publish opinion pieces that may or may not reflect the views of the editorial board.

            I know these things because even though I’ve never worked for a newspaper, I am old enough to have gotten an undergrad degree in journalism back in the 90s before the newspaper industry died.

          • be_excellent_to_each_other
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            07 months ago

            Good points, thanks for the peek into the industry. Without the usual sarcasm I will say you sound like you know what you are talking about. 🙂

            • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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              27 months ago

              Heh, I should clarify, I’m talking from my experience on my high school paper – which was a damn good paper that we worked our asses off on! But it’s a worthwhile stipulation to make. I’m pretty sure our processes were the same as industry for a lot of things, but I could always be wrong.

              Consider it a peek into what’s probably maybe what it’s like. I think it probably does work the way I’ve described, fwiw

            • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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              37 months ago

              That’s good to know, thanks. I’ll have to keep a close eye on it. I subscribe to the NYT as well but I’ve been souring on them lately too.

        • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          47 months ago

          Same author?

          Nah this is Robert Kagan, a Brookings Institute neocon, Republican who left in 2016, advisor to McCain for his presidential run in 2008.

        • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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          27 months ago

          Neither of these were written by the WaPo’s editorial board. They are both op-eds meaning they’re written by contributors and in the old print format would be placed opposite from the editorial page, hence the name “op-ed.”

          Your comment shows a deep misunderstanding of how these things work and what function newspapers are trying to fulfill with them, but it’s probably not your fault since media literacy tends to be pretty abysmal in the US.

          • be_excellent_to_each_other
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            7 months ago

            So the editorial staff has no say in what is published in their newspaper? That’s definitely a different view of what the word “editor” means than I’ve had in the past, you’ve got a point there.

            Having said that, I got a much less snarky answer explaining some things already, so your sideswipe wasn’t necessary. Thank you sir and I hope the rest of your day is as lovely as you are.

            I know these things because even though I’ve never worked for a newspaper, I am old enough to have gotten an undergrad degree in journalism back in the 90s before the newspaper industry died.

            Maybe it’s not my abysmal media literacy but the fact that you know these things because you have a degree in journalism. Huh. Guess I’ll find something where you have a less than perfect understanding of my area of expertise or where I’ve had some secondary education, and be sure to point out how abysmal your literacy in that area is.

  • @cosmicrookie@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Non English speaker: inevitable means it will happen no matter what. They way i see it, its used wrong here correct? It should maybe have been ‘increasingly realistic’ or maybe ‘increasingly plausible’ but inevitable assumes that voting for someone else won’t stop it from happening

    • @Pretzilla@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      The title is a bit clickbaity, but the subtext is that if he is elected, dictatorship is increasingly inevitable.

      And the ‘increasingly’ modifier further shows it’s only a potential outcome.

      • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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        127 months ago

        The author isn’t the most self-aware… Robert Kagan was a Republican strategist until 2016, he’s an interventionalist neocon, thinks the GOP “lost it’s way” rather than contributed to this by design.

      • AutistoMephisto
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        37 months ago

        I agree. I think that if Trump is elected and puts an end to democracy as we know it, but it won’t be a dictatorship of Trump, alone. Trump is but a mortal man. And whoever replaces him will be worse.

    • @dangblingus@lemmy.world
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      77 months ago

      One of the many examples of how English is manipulated and massaged to mean whatever you want it to mean. A more accurate phrase they should have chosen is “increasingly likely”.

    • Doc Avid Mornington
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      57 months ago

      Technically, I’d say “increasingly inevitable” is a meaningless phrase. “Inevitable” is an absolute - an outcome either is, or is not, inevitable. Like they say, “you can’t be a little bit pregnant”, outcomes cannot be a little bit inevitable, or somewhat inevitable, or mostly inevitable, so the degree of inevitability cannot be increasing.

      However, I think most native English speakers would not think twice about it, and would read it as something like: “a Trump dictatorship is approaching inevitability.” That’s how I read it, at least.

    • @Broax@lemmy.world
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      37 months ago

      This is just the usual polarising fear mongering bullshit. Even “increasingly plausible” is a stretch.

      Maybe the democratic party should focus more energy trying to understand what is that that makes so many people even considering trump.

      When people turn the other side into a one dimensional caricature they just ignore the real world problems that make them lose elections.

    • @Pratai@lemmy.ca
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      217 months ago

      As a free-thinking human being, I can’t understand how anyone could vote for him once.

    • spaceghoti
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      217 months ago

      As an American I can’t understand how anyone could vote for him once.

      • @rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        As a Canadian, I can absolutely understand how someone less informed in politics and (rightfully) angry at the political establishment would vote for Trump in 2016 just to flip the bird to Hillary. Americans need to understand why he won to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

        • spaceghoti
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          57 months ago

          I apparently have difficulty empathizing with people who aren’t paying attention to what they’re voting for (or against).

        • @Shadywack@lemmy.world
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          57 months ago

          After seeing how the super delegates worked against Sanders, and how blatantly undemocratic our process of selecting candidates truly is, a lot of people fell into the trap of “fuck it, burn the world down then”. I know a lot of people reacted that way when the Republican party’s obvious rigging of the 2012 nomination worked against Ron Paul even though the votes were tallied in some states that he was the actual victor, but the derailment of his campaign by announcing Mitt Romney as the winner did enough damage…even though the Republican party chairs for several states had to resign due to the obvious false declarations and ignoring of the votes counted in primaries happened.

          The real problem is the lack of confidence in our democracy and the rampant apathy that works against constructive progress.

          • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            After seeing how the super delegates worked against Sanders

            Especially because he was almost guaranteed to win against Trump, but they know where the money comes from and decided to go with Hillary, who was historically unlinked as a candidate. I think this ought to have demonstrated that real change cannot come from within the Democratic party and that they are not willing to be the left party people wish they were, they’re part of the downward spiral. (And yes they’re better than the GOP, always have to get that in for the concerned voters out there.)

            lack of confidence in our democracy

            It’s funny how this idea of “free and fair elections” has recently come up in such a historically corrupt system, it’s true that elections today are better than they’ve ever been in this respect, 2008 onward were incredibly tight on this. Seems like people forget how the 2001 election was stolen. Historically it’s almost a joke how bad they were. It was routine for busses to drive around picking up people and dropping them off at voting stations in exchange for a bit of money. It hasn’t even been 60 years since everyone in the US could vote! At first you basically needed to be a landowner and even produce from your land to be able to vote. The men’s suffrage movement was like a century before women’s suffrage.

            • @Shadywack@lemmy.world
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              47 months ago

              I’m really glad you mentioned some of the progress, while it’s not ideal, it does remind me that we ended the Gilded Age, and we can continue to confront the robber barons of our time. In US history we’ve already had a few near misses where we almost went the road the Romans did by giving a wealthy person absolute authority. We have to stay aware and be ever vigilant.

              • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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                37 months ago

                That’s really when America as it exists today was created too, between the Civil War and WW1. Often glossed over in the popular mythology of America.

        • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          47 months ago

          Americans need to understand why he won to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

          It’s been estimated that 13% of Trump’s voters were Obama voters. The degree to which this impacted his victory is debated, but this group is almost invisible in the way Trump is understood in the popular discourse, which is almost entirely determined by… Trump’s own spectacle of rhetoric and the feedback it generates. The degradation of civic institutions and disenfranchisement is a major factor, experiencing this while you’re exposed to political marketing like, Kamala Harris doing a happy and smiley scripted bit where she tells children if they’re “authentic” they will succeed, not only does that not connect with the reality of people’s struggles but it’s a slap in the face to them.

        • @dangblingus@lemmy.world
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          37 months ago

          I don’t. What was there to be mad at Hilary about that made people want to vote for a child raping, tax fraud committing, racist crook?

          • @rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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            17 months ago

            You have to understand that most people don’t pay that much attention to politics. They see a woman who embodies everything they hate about the US government establishment, and they see a guy who is raging against said establishment. If Dems had let Bernie win Trump would have been crushed.

      • @oxjox@lemmy.ml
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        87 months ago

        I was working at this business owner’s home. Smart, genuine, kind guy in his mid-40s with a beautiful “nuclear” family. He said he was going to vote for Trump because his sister in law worked at one his properties and she spoke well of him. That was it. That’s how a seemingly respectable upstanding well-to-do member of the community chose the president of the United States. Or, at worst, that was the reason he felt compelled to tell others.

        • @dangblingus@lemmy.world
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          17 months ago

          People in the US don’t understand what political ideologies are and literally vote for someone based off of “I’d like to have a beer with that guy!”.

    • @ickplant@lemmy.world
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      177 months ago

      My in-laws voted for him twice. They are pro-life, and that’s all that matters to them. Otherwise they support progressive policies like single-payer healthcare. But when it comes to abortion, they will vote for a literal anti-Christ to make it illegal. Funny that they are Catholic.

      • Kaity
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        177 months ago

        People who say they are pro-life will vote for the most pro-death policies, it’s crazy.

        • @ickplant@lemmy.world
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          17 months ago

          They kind of are, no college education and they don’t take the time to self-educate. Their support for single payer healthcare is something that both me and my husband have been working on with them for a while. I don’t think they are completely lost - they never showed the kind of hate I’ve seen from other Trump supporters. So I’ll keep trying.

        • Doc Avid Mornington
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          27 months ago

          If murder was legal, and somebody who was known to have committed murder was running, and you were confident that person would make murder illegal, and you were convinced that their opponent (who may have never committed murder themselves) would actively encourage more murder, maybe even pay poor people to commit murder, which candidate would you vote for?

        • @ickplant@lemmy.world
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          07 months ago

          Trust me, we’ve tried to reason with them. It’s maddening because they are otherwise mostly reasonable people, just ignorant politically and scientifically.

    • Lemminary
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      87 months ago

      They’ll vote for him a third time. Believe me, folks. *accordion hands*

    • Art35ian
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      47 months ago

      As a non-American I can’t understand how Bernie wasn’t voted in decades ago.

    • @ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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      37 months ago

      If there’s anything the last few years taught the world, stupid people are far more numerous and far more stupid than we thought.

  • @Locuralacura@lemm.ee
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    417 months ago

    There are graduating seniors in high-school this year. That group of unregistered voters needs to be coaxed to register, and vote. They need easy, step by step directions. They need to understand their new power of citizenship. They can be tried as adults. They should know who the sheriff is. They should know its an elected position. They need to learn this shit, and most likely it’s not gonna happen in school. Please ticktock or whatever. Make it viral.

        • @cosmicrookie@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Honestly I don’t

          I live in a country where everybody who is entitled to vote, gets a vote in their mail box and a dedicated place where they can go and vote. They can even send in their votes before hand or vote in the local library.

          I don’t see how one side or the other or any can benefit by low voting percentages

          • @Soggy@lemmy.world
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            97 months ago

            Republicans do better in elections with low voter turnout because old white people vote at disproportionately high rates.

            • @cosmicrookie@lemmy.world
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              27 months ago

              But it has always been like this no? Have Americans ever not had to register to vote? Why cant all just be automatically registered to vote?

              • @Soggy@lemmy.world
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                47 months ago

                Republicans are currently making it harder for left-leaning populations to vote, by closing polling stations in urban areas or opposing vote-by-mail. Automatic voter registration is being actively resisted. That is “why”.

                Voter registration became a thing in the 1800s to limit the voice of immigrants, adopted state by state.

                Oregon first, and about a dozen other states since, have made registration automatic when you get a driver’s license or state ID.

                So yeah it’s pretty much always been like this.

          • @Resand@lemmy.world
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            37 months ago

            Central registered of all citizens with ID-number. I’m pretty sure your nation has it, as does mine. So the government knows where you live, and where you can vote. If you move these things are automatically updated. So it’s easy to make sure everyone can vote in the “correct” ballots ect.

            None of this is true with the US

    • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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      157 months ago

      Is anyone honestly confused as to whether or not it’s an opinion piece? I find that very hard to believe, but I guess you never know…

    • @Charlatan@lemm.ee
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      17 months ago

      Yeah LOL. It’s just sooo over the top. Garbage like this I expect on Twitter. Gotta filter the noise on lemmy too I guess.

    • GladiusB
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      27 months ago

      I think that is a bridge too far for many reasons. First off I hate the Cheeto. He is a mudstain on used panties from a crackhead pornstar.

      However, we have Hitler in recent history. We have many forms of media that they did not have to see how it’s going with everyone else. And let’s not forget that Hitler was smarter than Trump ever will be.

      I don’t glorify Hitler lightly. He was a force that needed to be stopped and so does Trump. But that is were the comparison ends. Nazis became so huge because people were afraid of what would happen to their family if they didn’t. Here we will fight the morons back. Stop giving this man so much power and admiration. He’s a conman. A shitty leader. And a dumbass.

      • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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        77 months ago

        And let’s not forget that Hitler was smarter than Trump ever will be.

        Not really. Hitler’s (supposed) “genius” exists in the same way Trump’s does - as propaganda and nothing else.

        • GladiusB
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          27 months ago

          I didn’t call Hitler a genius. I called him smarter than Trump. Trump copies him. He at least (for the most part) came up with the strategies to inspire the changes in Germany. Even though they were shitty as fuck.

          • @masquenox@lemmy.world
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            37 months ago

            I didn’t call Hitler a genius.

            Fair enough - you didn’t. But calling him smarter than Trump is still a stretch. Hitler wasn’t very smart at all. You don’t have to be smart to serve the interests that puts you in power… which is the only real function politicians serve at the end of the day.

            Fortunately for the US, it’s actually very difficult to be a dictator in the White House - the US president is a cog for those “interests.” He takes his orders from them and not the other way around. That’s why Trump became so ineffective once he stepped into the White House and became isolated from his adoring MAGA crowd.

    • @thechadwick@lemmy.world
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      Basically, this coming election will be decided by the margins because almost everyone who follows politics–at all–knows who they’re voting for already.

      Think about the number of people who follow politics and then understand that those people are already not the demographic that will likely decide the outcome. It’s the people who are surprised they Joe Biden and Donald Trump are on the ballot that matter.

      It isn’t worth trying to pressured persuade either the right or the left. What we need is to activate and engage the non-participating section of the electorate. This is hard, but achievable. It’s people who work multiple jobs and don’t have time for politics that need to know it matters if they vote. Civil rights are not a given and 2024 will be hugely consequential.

      Take your friends with you on election day! Register for vote by mail and bug your friends too! Take about it and don’t leave easy points on the table. Yes the options are terrible. Yes one of them will make the possibility of improving it ever infinitely more difficult.

      The people saying it doesn’t matter do not understand what they stand to lose. It is so so much harder to build something than tear it down and our imperfect institutions will not save us. Politics matters and the luxury of not caring, will lead to co-optation and the loss of rights that are easy to take for granted now.

      • @TheHighRoad@lemmy.world
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        47 months ago

        Target reluctant republicans that don’t like Trump but so far are only willing to abstain. I’m pushing hard for them to send the strongest message they can by voting for Biden. I think if we plant enough seeds they may go for it in the privacy of the voting booth, even if they won’t admit it.

          • shuzuko
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            57 months ago

            Technically it’s spelled curmudgeon, but your spelling makes me think of Kermit as a grumpy old frog-man so I think I prefer it 😆

    • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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      107 months ago

      That’s it. That’s the best we have short of organizing mass mass protests and raids. Which definitely isn’t going to happen.

      Maybe Trump will have a heart attack before the election…

        • @CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          What’s interesting is that if there really was a “deep state” that works like the radicalized right wing imagines, it begs the question - why didn’t this so-called “deep state” find a lone wolf/patsy like Oswald for OJ (Orange Jesus)?

        • @CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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          07 months ago

          I’d rather he lives the rest of his life in prison, personally, and completely cut off from any kind of mass media platform.

    • @orcrist@lemm.ee
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      87 months ago

      Fight disenfranchisement and jerrymandering. Fight voter suppression. Be loud and get in the way of people doing bad things.

      • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        Fuckin’ privs drive me up the damn wall. They act like they’re taking some noble stand for the palestinian people, meanwhile me the actual fucking palestinian am staring down the barrel of having to go without my Keffiyeh in public lest I get beaten, called a Sand N****r, and told to be grateful the bastards who did it to me didn’t bring a rope, all on the back of their militant refusal to lift a finger in solidarity and vote against Trump.

        These so called allies of my people seem to like me much more as a potential martyr for their cause than as an agent for my own.

  • spaceghoti
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    277 months ago

    It’s a good piece and I think the analysis is largely accurate. But there’s one thing I think Kagan missed: Trump isn’t the only would-be dictator who could take power. He lists DeSantis and Haley as the closest competitors to Trump within the Republican Party, but he doesn’t point out that even if, by some miracle, one of them becomes the party nominee, they would assume the very same dictatorial powers Trump is threatening to wield. Neither of them is going to defend democracy when offered the reins of tyranny, and both could easily hold power for decades. Trump maybe has a single decade at most.

    The problem isn’t simply Trump wanting to be President for Life. The problem is that the path has been cleared for any Republican to assume that role the next time one is elected. Project 2025 won’t work for Trump only. The next time we have a Republican President, expect it to be the last time we have a fair election.

    • @1stTime4MeInMCU@mander.xyz
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      67 months ago

      Not to run interference for those shitbags cause most of them are just as evil but I wouldn’t say they all equally threaten democracy. For one I’m not sure their base would allow a woman to be dictator lol even if she won due to institutional fuckery

      • spaceghoti
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        47 months ago

        Anyone who thinks she wouldn’t try is deluding themselves. They’re both cut from the same cloth, but they’re not afflicted with dementia yet.

    • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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      17 months ago

      No, none of the other GOP candidates have anything even remotely like Trump’s grip on the base. Without that none of the above can happen. Trump got where he is through a long series of steps that Kagan details in the piece. There is no world in which some other candidate steps in and immediately plugs into the same kind of power that Trump has amassed as a result of Republican cowardice. Every one of them would have to start over with consolidating power in a party that’s swarming with amoral power-hungry grifters.

    • Uranium3006
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      15 months ago

      Trump isn’t the only would-be dictator who could take power.

      honestly I think only trump has what it takes to form the cult of personality necessary to take over. he’s got the charisma to entrance 35% the country. DeSantis is more temperamentally fit to be the lieutenant you send in to do massacres than a figurehead leader

  • @yesman@lemmy.world
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    177 months ago

    As with Napoleon, who spoke of the glory of France but whose narrow ambitions for himself and his family brought France to ruin, Trump’s ambitions, though he speaks of making America great again, clearly begin and end with himself.

    As the author keeps comparing Trump to Napoleon and Hitler, I can’t help but wonder if maybe the US is due a conflagration. At what point do we admit that the American experiment returned a null result?

    • @Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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      167 months ago

      In the cases of France and Germany, the answer was violence. Oppression has never been defeated with pacifism. If history is our guide and conservatives are our oppressors, soon we may have to make some very difficult life and death decisions.

      Conservatives have already embraced violence as part of their ideology, which I think makes the path out of their oppression more clear.

      • Uranium3006
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        25 months ago

        the choice of weather there will be violence isn’t ours to make, the conservatives have made it for us, and they chose violence. our choice is to resist or concede to fascism. conceding won’t make the violence stop, it will only make it worse and don’t let anyone convince you otherwise

      • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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        27 months ago

        Oppression has never been defeated with pacifism.

        I was taught that Gandhi helped India defeat the oppression of the British Raj with pacifism.

        Is that not the case? I mean I wouldn’t be surprised if Power taught me peaceful protest works every time.

        • @orrk@lemmy.world
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          137 months ago

          as Orwell stated:

          “As an ex-Indian civil servant, it always makes me shout with laughter to hear, for instance, Gandhi named as an example of the success of non-violence. As long as twenty years ago it was cynically admitted in Anglo-Indian circles that Gandhi was very useful to the British government. So he will be to the Japanese if they get there. Despotic governments can stand ‘moral force’ till the cows come home; what they fear is physical force.”

        • Magical Thinker
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          I was taught that Gandhi helped India defeat the oppression of the British Raj with pacifism. Is that not the case?

          You couldn’t have Martin without Malcom and you couldn’t have Ghandi without Ghadar.

    • @Lomeshag@lemmy.ca
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      167 months ago

      I think it’s more that human societies are very rarely stable across 3 or more generations. The US has had a number of major crises through its history, it’s definitely due for another. Repeating the dead line about a failed experiment is kind of needlessly deaf to that history.

      All you can do for now is stand up and fight it.

  • Binthinkin
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    137 months ago

    Polls are meaningless when nobody answers the phone and/or they call people who don’t actually vote. Kids today know to shut up and beat the shitbags at the polls. We are collectively punishing the Republicans for 40 years of attacks against our society.

    • Jaysyn
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      7 months ago

      There is a reason that no poll I’ve ever responded to has ever straight up asked me who I plan on voting for in the next election.

      They can spin your feelings, They can’t spin a simple yes/no question.

      • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        17 months ago

        Dang I didn’t notice that before. I was polled once and they only asked me what I thought of my current elected officials not who I planned to vote for.

        Guess it wouldn’t get clicks if they were honest

      • Nougat
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        17 months ago

        Push polls are the only ones I’ve ever gotten, and those seldom and not for a long time.

  • @InternetPeon@lemmy.world
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    67 months ago

    Are people really going to vote for a 80’ish year old would be dictator? For notionally a 4 year term? And no coherent succession plan?

      • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        97 months ago

        Actually if you go by percentage Trump basically won nobody new, he just picked up more votes total because vote by mail made the poles more accessible to more folks who would have voted for him anyways.

        What changed was that people weren’t fucking around and voted solidly against him, giving Biden an absolute majority of the popular vote.