a generation of young Republican staff members appears to be developing terminal white nationalist brain. And they will staff the next Republican administration.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I wish the Dem party compromised as much with Dem voters as they did with trump supporters.

    That’s the best way to get Biden the votes necessary to prevent Trump.

    Not the current strategy of:

    Fuck you, you’ll vote for me or get the fascist again

    Like, this should be an easy victory for any halfway decent candidate. Instead we get an 82 year old that won’t stop shit talking his party’s voter base for not wanting to fund a genocide rather than social services.

    • someguy3@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Ok I’ve had this conversation and realized that people can’t do the math. So lets do it:

      Let’s evaluate the last say 24 years and when the Dems had all 3 of the House of Representatives, Senate, and Presidency. Obama had it for 2 out of 8 years. Biden had it for 2 out of 4 years. Let’s add it: That means Dems had control for 4 out of 24 years. Read that again, they had control for only 4 the last 24 years.

      And that can still be filibustered. So if you want the filibuster proof majority, then Obama had it for 4 months. Not years, MONTHS. Biden never had it. Add it up: Dems had filibuster proof control for 4 months of the last 24 years.

      Look at those stats again: Dems had control for 4 years of the last 24 years. For filibuster proof control, Dems had control for 4 MONTHS of the last 24 years.

      This is why Dems compromise, because they basically never have control. To get literally anything done they need to compromise. Take your pick, either 4 years of the last 24 fucking years, or the 4 months or the last 24 years. And you wonder why they have to compromise? And why they go to the centre?

      If you want progress you have to give Dems overwhelming and consistent victories.

      [Want to add Bill Clinton? That goes to 6 years of the last 32 years, and still 4 months for filibuster proof for the last 32 fucking years. Want to add Bush senior? Then it’s 6 years of the last 36 fucking years. Want to add Reagan? Then it’s 6 years of the last 44 years. That’s right, 6 years out of the last 44 fucking years that Dems had control. And for filibuster proof majority they had 4 months of the last 44 fucking years.]

      • rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        This is good context. Do you have any idea how much time republicans controlled all 3 houses in the same time frame? (Not arguing with you, just wondering if anyone’s really had any control this century.)

        • someguy3@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          The thing with stagnation (or regression) is that you don’t need to actually do much of anything. So the GOP doesn’t need all 3 in order to sit on their ass and block things. They can do that with 1.

      • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        It’s almost like the source of our nation’s most pressing problems is conservatism itself.

        A plague of conservatism has never been cured by pacifism. Conservatives are doing their absolute best to oppress or kill the normal people. This disease is long overdue for a cure.

        • someguy3@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Besides that they can’t because Manchin says no, that would mean congratulations Dems had control for 4 years of the last 24 years (/s). Are we still wondering why they have to compromise?

        • Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Unfortunately, the conservative Dems have already said they will not allow the filibuster to be abolished. Maybe next term, though, as Sinema and Manchin won’t be with us anymore.

      • OccamsRazer@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I’d be curious to see similar math for republicans. It’s probably a similar amount of time where they had full bully powers to do whatever they wanted, right? Maybe it’s just me, but I’m fine if that kind of power from a single party is rare. If it happened more often we would get much more volatility as laws were changed back and forth. This way change happens more slowly, but it’s generally objectively good change rather than reactionary or populist.

        • someguy3@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          The difference is that the left needs legislation for progress to happen. The right is more or less happy if nothing changes. The right wants to stop things like universal healthcare, good public schools, new environmental policies, etc etc. That’s their main objective, to keep things status quo. So the left needs all three to pass legislation. The right need any 1 of those 3 because all they want to do is block things from happening. Very different.

          • OccamsRazer@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Yep, and so we get very gradual change. It’s not like the political environment is actually broken into left or right anyway. If the Republican party disappeared overnight, conservative Democrats would immediately become the new hurdles to progress, albeit shifted a bit to the left. “Progressive” policies would be more left, and the new “conservative” policies would as well, but they would still be conservative relative to the others.

      • Doc Avid Mornington@midwest.social
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        6 months ago

        This is nearly a complete non-sequitur to the comment you are responding to. If Biden laid it out like you have, said “look we’re in a bad position here, we need to compromise with the fascists even though they are wrong”, if he presented a strong platform with goals people could get excited about, and make it clear who and what are the obstacles voters have to overcome to get there, he could bring out the voters to get those overwhelming and consistent majorities. The same goes for every Democratic president you named. Instead, Biden is absolutely obstinate about it. He acts like the fascists are decent and reasonable people, like the only hope the left can have is to slow down the slide to the right, and like we’re the problem - not the Republicans, not the right-wing Democrats, no, the only problem is that some of us would like less murder and more food, housing, healthcare and education. That’s exactly why the Democrats have only had control for four of the last twenty-four years.

        And the filibuster isn’t real. It’s literally just a made up rule they all agree to pretend matters. It can be ended at any time by a simple majority. Doing so at the beginning of a session would look more legitimate, but frankly, the so-called “nuclear option” is far more legitimate in itself than the routine abusive use of the filibuster. They choose to let it restrain them specifically so that they can blame inaction on it.

        • someguy3@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          It’s not a non-sequitur. It’s exactly why they compromise in Congress. They never have control so to do basic things like pass a budget they need to compromise. It’s literally why they compromise. And why they go to the centre to win elections.

          What you’re doing is closer a non-sequitur by ? demanding that Biden saying they have to compromise? And by saying ? he’s not getting people excited? Like talk about a non-response just so you can say “bring out voters” (like Fox doesn’t exist) and “obstinate” and a whole bunch of other insinuations. And so you can try to turn it around and blame Dems. It’s so twisted around there’s not much responding to it.

          And wow you think the filibuster isn’t real. Well I think that say it all.

          • Doc Avid Mornington@midwest.social
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            6 months ago

            Your comment was, as I stated, nearly non-sequitur because you only responded to one word of the first sentence of givesomefucks’ comment:

            I wish the Dem party compromised as much with Dem voters as they did with trump supporters.

            You responded to the word “compromised”. You responded as if you were responding to a general senseless rant against the very idea of compromise at all, a position which is not even present in that first sentence, and has nothing to do with the rest of their comment, or the overall point they were making about the belligerent and dismissive attitude Biden takes toward Democratic voters, and what different approach would actually win elections - I’ll quote the rest so you don’t have to scroll back:

            That’s the best way to get Biden the votes necessary to prevent Trump.

            Not the current strategy of:

            Fuck you, you’ll vote for me or get the fascist again

            Like, this should be an easy victory for any halfway decent candidate. Instead we get an 82 year old that won’t stop shit talking his party’s voter base for not wanting to fund a genocide rather than social services.

            In my comment, I attempted to clarify and expound on what would work, what they are actually doing, and the great gulf between these, trying to bring it back to givesomefucks’ actual comment, rather than what you imagined to respond to. Instead, you’ve responded, again, to a comment not actually made - accusing me of somehow “demanding” something. Where did I demand anything?

            And yeah, the filibuster isn’t real. A simple majority of the Senate can pass anything they want. They can drop the filibuster as a rule; they can carve out a general exception; they can even just choose to suspend it for that single piece of legislation. If a simple majority can pass any legislation they want, given that they actually choose to, then the filibuster is absolutely not real. It’s smoke and mirrors so they can blame the other guys. In fact, it’s probably not even constitutional - there’s no constitutional support for it, and the founders were explicitly against including any kind of supermajority requirement.

      • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        They could have done away with the filibuster for good with a simple majority vote.

        The filibuster is an excuse.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Dems had control for 4 years of the last 24 years. For filibuster proof control, Dems had control for 4 MONTHS of the last 24 years.

        And for half that time we had it, we didn’t get much done and instead wasted that time “looking into” stuff…

        And two years later, you’re surprised turnout is going to be low?

        Do you not remember what we were promised if we got the Georgia runoffs?

        How does this not make sense to you?

        Biden and Dem leadership squandered a chance we get every few decades

        • someguy3@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I love this “they had control for 4 of the last 24 years, and we don’t have the Jetson’s life!! Why don’t they do anything!?”

          Dude, 4 fucking years in the last 24 (or 4 months if you want filibuster proof) and you’re complaining about lack of Jetson’s life. Do you hear yourself? It’s unbelievable. I’m glad that I cracked the code to what you expect because now everyone can see it.

          Actual progress takes time and effort to work out policies and get votes from your own party (you know, the party whip). The world can’t change direction on a dime like you insist. So they need consistent and overwhelming victories.

          • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Dude, 4 fucking years in the last 24

            Why go back so far?

            We’re talking about Biden’s first term, and he had it for two years, during which nothing was actually done because he didn’t “look into” anything until taking office apparently.

            He just won the election and took a vacation.

            In case you couldn’t tell from midterms, voters didn’t appreciate that…

            • someguy3@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              “so far”? Dude that’s not that far.

              We’ve talked (pretty sure it was you) and I finally realized that I had to hammer home to you that Dems need consistent and overwhelming victories. So I’m looking at recent history of say 24 years.

              I added to my previous comment, you have to figure out what your own party supports and will vote for. This is why you have a party whip. Dems presidents are not dictators that their own party will just blindly support. Not to mention that the bill usually starts in Congress, not the president. Congress needs to write it.

              So you’re back to expecting The Jetsons life out of two measly years. Dude. It’s not how it works. Actual progressive legislation requires actual time, effort, and work. 2 years is next to nothing. The world can’t turn around on a dime.

              Took a vacation LOL. He’s been doing absolute fuckton. But it’s not enough for you, thus you wanting Jetsons. I cracked the code.

              • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                “so far”? Dude that’s not that far.

                You’re having a different conversation than everyone else, I think that’s what’s frustrating you.

                We are talking about the last four years, two of which Biden had majorities, u til the inaction during those two years led to republicans taking the House.

                I have zero idea why you’re insisting we talk about the last 24 years.

                I’m also not sure why you keep talking about the Jetsons.

                Like, I’d try to explain this better, but it’s impossible when you refuse to talk about anything rather than what you want.

                It’s like if two people were talking at a party and you walked up and screamed:

                Blake Bortles is the best professional foosball player in Australia!

                Sure, those people could try and explain all the ways your wrong and why it has nothing to do with what they were talking about.

                Or they could just smile and nod politely and walk away.

                The problem is you seem to think that is “winning” some “argument”…

                • someguy3@lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  Actually I think you’re the one having a different conversation, or at least refuses to see anything except “but 2, or 4, years”.

                  First thing, Biden is doing a fuckton, but it’s not enough for you. So I’m pointing out that you demand Jetsons life/tech/change.

                  This is not limited to the last 4 years. You really want it to be, but it’s not. None of this is one and done. If this is about effecting significant changes, real changes, real movement of the Overton window, over multiple aspects of life, that requires a ton of time, work, and effort. 2 years or even 4 years is nothing. Real, significant change requires consistent and overwhelming victories. This means by definition it is over several elections and over several Presidents.

                  I’m getting some serious “I’m 18 and think the world can change on a dime” vibes. 2 years is a long time for a 18 year old, I get it. But when you start working trying to effect serious change, you’ll realize serious change requires a ton of time, effort, and work. Thus requires consistent and overwhelming victories. Thus far longer than 4 years or 8 years or one presidency.

    • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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      6 months ago

      Which is exactly why it’s important that they not be allowed to hold any kind of power.

          • Optional@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            As a wackadoo absolutist, I find Biden has not given us free energy and stopped all violence in the world. Therefore he obviously will not get my vote. The fact that trump will benefit from my ignorant obstinance is of no concern to me.

          • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            Of course I agree with you, we can’t let trump win again by any means.

            But that shouldn’t completely erase the problems or legitimate criticisms. Mainly, right now, the criticism against Biden isn’t that he hasn’t given us a Jetsons future. It’s…the genocide thing.

            And yes, we all still understand that trump would not be any better. It’s just really hard to hold your nose and be, once again, forced to vote for someone doing something as objectively awful as full-throated support for a genocide. This is just another election in a long history of elections where we are forced to support something we can’t in good conscience support.

            Again, we get it, trump can’t be allowed to win. But hand waving away the legitimate problems with what is happening is just disingenuous. Not to mention, as we keep having to be the ones to sacrifice our morals, things continually do get worse. As they have been for the last 40+ years. It’s just hard to square the “we need to vote for Biden” with the fact that he’s doing something objectively awful. We’re always the ones that need to be the bigger people and just give in. When our firmly held beliefs are screaming in our ears that this is a bunch of bridges too far.

            It’s not a unique position. But it’s really fucking hard to live with yourself when you know what you’re voting for, just so you can vote against something worse. We all have to do it, it just feels terrible. And wrong. Because it is wrong. For all intents and purposes, a vote for Biden is a supportive vote for the genocide in Gaza. It’s…despicable. But we all have to do it. And that fuckin sucks.

    • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I do. Let them register in as a party so we have a list of names of people who we can publish and remove from jobs and shun for the rest of their lives. I think we can all agree that they should be unmasked.

  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    To answer the question… No, I don’t. But, as an LGBT+ solidly liberal voter they don’t really care about my opinion. I’m not the intended audience.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    6 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Last July the Ron DeSantis campaign fired a speechwriter and former National Review contributor, Nate Hochman, for promoting a pro-DeSantis video featuring Nazi imagery; and scores of Republican aides on Capitol Hill have been outed by reporters as “groypers” — a term used to describe fans of Mr. Fuentes.

    The presence of so many extremist elements in positions of power and influence is the price to be paid in the party’s bargain with MAGAism: Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar addressed a white nationalist conference in 2022, and an investigative report from 2020 found that at least 12 Trump administrative aides had ties to neo-Nazi and anti-immigrant hate groups.

    The contemporary American right might not be a monolith, but it functions like a “popular front,” which traditionally refers to the broad coalition between leftists and liberals in the 1930s unifying against a common fascist enemy.

    In fact, the right-wing popular front gave birth to modern conservatism, unifying a disparate group of right wingers, including luminaries like Senator Joseph McCarthy, Gen. Douglas MacArthur and William F. Buckley Jr. and more obscure — and more radical — figures like the magazine owner Russell Maguire, the classics professor Revilo Oliver and the American Nazi Party chief George Lincoln Rockwell.

    Mr. Maguire, a Connecticut businessman and arms manufacturer, purchased The American Mercury magazine in 1952 and turned it into one of the most influential conservative journals of its day, inveighing against the threat of international communism, creeping liberalism and collectivism.

    And unlike in decades past — where the far right was an important part of the right-wing popular front but did not exert hegemonic control — MAGAism is today the dominant strain in conservative politics.


    The original article contains 1,333 words, the summary contains 282 words. Saved 79%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • masquenox@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    That “mind-set” has been in the Waffle House since it’s construction… and the only way that it can not be obvious to you is if you are delusional enough to believe that the US was really “defending” itself in all those third-world countries it has brought so much misery and suffering to.

    • pachrist@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      You’re getting downvoted, but this is true. 13 colonies were able to fight the British better than each one doing their own things. Reich means realm, or more specifically empire. Germany unified as a single country in the mid-late 1800s. Hitler then came along and decided Germany needed more space, lebensraum, and prestige to do all the things they wanted to do. They killed millions for it. Manifest Destiny, from sea to shining sea, all that is what this is. The US has done it too. We murdered and moved native Americans for decades for white immigrants to have “living space”.

      However, I don’t think any of the dumbasses who made this stupid video know any of that. It was a joke to them. Right now, I’m not scared of Nazis in the White House. I am scared of people who think Nazis are a funny joke being in the White House, because that leads to Nazis in the White House.

      • masquenox@lemmy.world
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        I am scared of people who think Nazis are a funny joke being in the White House, because that leads to Nazis in the White House.

        The thing about Nazis in the Waffle House is that US foreign policy would barely change - it would literally just look like foreign policy under Kissinger.

        As for domestic policy… there are problems with this (perceived) “fascism” that everyone imagines Trump is going to bring to the Waffle House (ie, fascism that isn’t already there). The “other” (ie, Jewish people) that Hitler used as traction to set Germany on it’s genocidal colonialist path was a very small and very disempowered segment of Germany’s society - this is not the case in the US. The US military (for instance) literally cannot function without the mass-participation of the very marginalized people the fascists are openly trying to repress. They are essentially clamoring for what will soon be a minority regime - like those of Apartheid-South Africa and Israel… except there won’t be a fascist-loving US “big brother” to prop them up and stuff them full of handout money because it is the US itself we are talking about.

        I’m aware that this won’t stop them from trying - and the violence they will be using to do so is only going to escalate. Where this will end I have no idea - there is no historical precedent for it. The one thing I do know is that the Dems will not be stopping it.