this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2024
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[–] ulkesh 12 points 10 months ago

What a shocker, garbage people hiding out in the cesspool of America.

[–] hypnotoad__@lemmy.ml 12 points 10 months ago

They've probably had a wonderful past few years, what with the living on the lam, no gainful employment, inability to live a regular life, etc. Bless 'em

[–] remington 10 points 10 months ago (1 children)

The statistics being kept on January 6 is astounding.

More than 1,265 defendants have been charged in nearly all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

[–] Atelopus-zeteki@kbin.run 3 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Let's ponder this. Say for the purpose of discussion that this number (1265) is a fraction of the total that would support #45 no matter what. So lets think population curves, can we infer 10X (12,650) or even 100X supporters (120,650), or even 1000X (1,206,500). According to (https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/registered-voters-by-party) there are 210,000,000 registered voters. Simple math tells us this is approximately 0.57% of the voting populace. What is with the tyranny of the minority? They aren't the "Silent Majority", but rather The Vocal Minority. Why do we care? Get you and your friends, family, colleagues, neighbors to the polls. The GOP minority hates this one simple trick, VOTE.

[–] survivalmachine 8 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Simple math tells us this is approximately 0.57% of the voting populace.

That's basically a meaningless statement when your math is based on a number you completely pulled out of thin air.

[–] Atelopus-zeteki@kbin.run 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Not thin air, just people committed enough to trump to get convicted. It's a round figure guestimate, for the purpose of discussion, as I said, Mate. You got a better number, heck you got a worse number, throw it out there, and we'll talk about it. Or, as you've already demonstrated, you aren't interested in talking about it. All good, either way, with me, Mate.

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[–] FlashMobOfOne 4 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Voting doesn't really matter much. The fascists have won.

Dems had the White House and Congress for two years. They didn't do anything meaningful to stop the resurgence of fascism, but they did raise a lot of money ($80 million in fact) when it was leaked that Roe was being repealed.

Now, Idaho is all set to fully criminalize abortion. Within a year or two, it'll be almost half the states.

How does voting help exactly? Your basic human rights shouldn't depend on what state you're born in, but now they do, and it's because the Democrats in the Federal Government are more concerned about getting rich than fulfilling their campaign promises.

[–] psudo 24 points 10 months ago (1 children)

If voting didn't matter the fascists wouldn't be trying so hard to prevent it.

I definitely don't want to excuse how ineffective a lot of Democrats have been, but not voting isn't how you change that behavior; getting more involved is.

[–] FlashMobOfOne 2 points 10 months ago (2 children)

I definitely don't want to excuse how ineffective a lot of Democrats have been, but not voting isn't how you change that behavior; getting more involved is.

30 years ago maybe. It's too late now.

[–] averyminya 10 points 10 months ago (1 children)

So we just stop and let the rest control? Apathy is how evil wins. If you get 3 people who wouldn't normally vote and they all get 3 people who wouldn't normally vote suddenly there are a lot more people voting in humanitarian minded politicians who can make effective change.

Don't normalize not voting. There are so many meaningful changes that can be made locally that aren't just the Presidential election. If people paid more attention to that instead of apathy voting maybe there wouldn't be so many terrible people in boards of education across the U.S.

[–] FlashMobOfOne 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

So we just stop and let the rest control?

Democrats already did. Fascism didn't happen overnight. It's been progressing for 40 years.

When Clinton passed NAFTA and 'Don't Ask Don't Tell', and you voted for him anyway, you helped fascism take root.

When Obama had a supermajority and all he did was tack on more wars, make health care more expensive, and enrich his wealthy donors and Democratic partisans voted to reelect him anyway.

Now we're watching Biden, who is ignoring school shootings, police violence, escalating housing scarcity, a 12% jump in homelessness, stagnant wages, criminalization of abortion, and also doing nothing meaningful to stop the people who perpetrated 1/6, and you're going to tell me that I have to vote for this person as a moral imperative. Biden's time is eaten up by figuring out ways to add hundreds of billions more to the war budget instead.

The kind of apathy that killed this country is the apathy of the partisans, who voted for team color and just ignored the corruption.

[–] averyminya 4 points 10 months ago (1 children)

How convenient to leave out the surplus we had from 1998 lost by Bush which onset part of the events you described. Which I will never disagree about how unjust the drone strikes were, nor the continuation of the deportations.

How convenient to leave out the progress in education and notably more importantly, the social progress made for queer and PoC communities which made huge strides in acceptance and it was interesting how there were far fewer open Nazi rallies from 2008-2015, I wonder what was up with that. Hm.

How convenient to ignore how quickly protection programs were dismantled after 2016, from dismantling the EPA, shutting down hundreds of CDC sites not including his terrible FEMA responses, the huge setback in education with Betsy DeVoss as Sec. of Education. Let alone the way with which both Trump and the media rallied up hatred as a political play? How there were multiple attempts at voter suppression, some of them physical? The immense rise in police brutality, and again, Nazi rallies which conveniently never seemed to have police at them like the peaceful protests did.

But okay, go on about how Democrats are the same slow burn to fascism. That's not the point. The point is that with one party there's somewhat of a semblance of a chance that we get our generation into politics and not these dinosaurs. But the more we let them influence the youth by having shitty education and breeding hatred as a political play then yeah, you're right, we are screwed and there's no hope. Because that's what happens when you give up.

From the last 25 years to me, it looks like we had a surplus, a huge deficit, almost came out of that after 8 years, back to extreme deficit and now we're dealing with the fallout of the onset of a war (which has its own historical connotations). In the midst of all of those there were huge shifts in social values.

I don't disagree with you that Democrats commit evil. The drone strikes inspired a generation of youth who hoped to be hard leftists. That is no excuse to vote for Republicans, nor is it any excuse whatsoever to not vote. If anything, it should encourage people to vote more, because if every single person who was capable of voting voted for the same thing in their area, guess what? Things would change. So why in the world would we stop voting?

It makes no sense. Democrats may be the slow burn but defeatism is just how everyone loses. Saying there is no point would be true if everyone believed you. Saying vote for X if you live in Y because I believe in their ability to do the right thing. And if they don't do the right thing then vote them the fuck out and get someone in there who will.

We are in a bad spot but turning a blind eye by pretending that not voting is somehow a solution is not the mindset to have. So again, kindly, stop being defeatist and stop spreading defeatism. You don't like Democrats or Republicans? So find the closest person who is running that encompasses your values and vote for them, because at least then there's one person who might have a chance to do the right thing. There's nobody? Find someone and campaign for them. Change starts at the state.

[–] FlashMobOfOne 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Change starts at the state.

If only people could eat all of these excuses that partisans make. No one would go hungry in this country.

[–] averyminya 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Getting your flash mob to vote instead of making snide remarks about your fellow Americans, thanks.

Have a nice day.

[–] Arkham 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

What exactly is your plan for the future, if you really believe it's too late now? Just let the fascists take over and hope they don't come for you?

[–] FlashMobOfOne 1 points 10 months ago

I'm going to do what I already do, take care of myself and do what I can to take care of my friends. The only real impact any of us can have now is local, because the fascists have already won at the Federal level and I live in a very red state.

The only real plan I have at the moment is just to get a vasectomy sometime this year. I don't want to risk fathering a child when it's likely my state will criminalize abortion in the near future.

[–] LallyLuckFarm 5 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

To echo @Psudo's point, higher engagement and turnout is key, even (and especially) when it feels like it's meaningless. Paying attention to local and state politics and politicians is an avenue to support the kinds of representatives you'd like to see setting more national policy. It's also a way to improve your state and local politics. Maine had some great turnout and engagement around getting ranked choice voting instituted as our way of electing most of our politicians, and now the debate is on improving it and how hard we're allowed to mock the folks supporting the 937^th attempt to overturn it. RCV, STAR, and other alternatives to FPTP elections help to keep political extremes from setting policy, which can in turn improve how effective local votes are. It'll never happen from disengagement though. And gerrymandered systems can be brittle, sometimes requiring only a small increase in turnout to be overcome.

[–] reverendsteveii@lemm.ee 3 points 10 months ago

may they also catch fire