God damn, man...What's amazing is they appear to be pictures of screens on the phone screen pictured.
I don't even know why I'm bothering with this, but here goes:
It's bewildering that Christians would vote for someone who tells them to their face that he's not a Christian AND tells them that they won't need to vote again (because once he's in power again, he will remove their right to vote).Just as with Biden, Trump supporters don't seem to realize Kamala Harris is also a Christian & actually attends church.
It is bewildering how Christians in the US support someone who violated the very teachings of their book....
Stories have power.Just as with Biden, Trump supporters don't seem to realize Kamala Harris is also a Christian & actually attends church.
It is bewildering how Christians in the US support someone who violated the very teachings of their book....
Disagree. Harris talked plenty about how the atrocities in Gaza have to stop.Yes, they had a platform, but they still took certain voting blocs for granted and lost those voting blocs as a result.
And all of the rest of the platform, and the criticism of the behavior in Gaza and toward Palestinians, yea. Apart from all that stuff sure.They relied on "we're not Trump" to continue having those voting blocs keep voting for them.
Well that's just them being dumb if they think Trump is in any way anti-Israel.Meanwhile, Trump went to those voting blocs, sold them a pack of lies, and got their vote even if he's not going to do anything he said he was going to do.
As it should have been. And another large part was "Look at the good stuff we'll do".Yes, there was a campaign, but a large portion of that campaign was "we're not Trump."
I don't know what to tell you. Somehow even over here, not in a swing state, I got lots of Harris's actual platform.In Michigan, almost all of the ads that were run focused on how bad Trump is without actually spelling out what Harris would do. Even the billboards and things like "I'm a two-time Trump voter and I'm voting for Harris." We had ads like "Trump gets up and looks at his list of enemies, Harris will get up and work for all Americans" and "Harris will welcome Republicans to the table." In addition, parading deeply conservative politicians like Liz Cheney and Trump's former staff so they could say how awful Trump was played into that strategy, too.
I saw plenty of ads that went out in swing states, and I saw lots of speeches, and I saw the DNC, and I saw billboards, and I disagree.I'm sure it varied from state to state, but the main message in Michigan, at least, was "we're not Trump." It's a sound message that should've worked, but people didn't care.
Doubt.Harris would've had a much easier time had Biden not sought reelection and there had been a primary.
Disagree. I think people had more than enough time.You would've heard up and down which each perspective candidate would bring to the table and there would've been way more time to get the message out there. Harris had a little over 3 months to develop a campaign and tell people about it. That's not enough time,
This is just so... mind boggling to me. That somehow despite all of the noise and information that the Harris campaign made, that if she didn't reach voters who didn't even know Biden wasn't still running, that somehow it's her fault they voted for Trump.Obviously, they didn't do a good enough job reaching those voters. Yes, it was a limited timeline, but if you wanted to better understand Harris at all, you needed to go and research what she'd done as VP and what she was planning to do as a president. Most voters aren't going to research anything or, if they do, they're going to do the bare minimum to figure out where a candidate stands on their specific pet issue.
This is substantive and I'm compelled to point out that it's widely accepted, with only a very online fringe perpetuating the falsehood that the Fake Bake bitch's win was fraudulent. I think there's far more from Rs about how down-ballot D wins are fraudulent, especially focused around Kari Lake for Senate.This. Is. What. America. Wanted.
The president doesn't have the power to legalize marijuana federally. It would have to be an act of Congress. Maybe she could direct a legalization effort more effectively than Biden (I don't think he even wanted to). I don't know if it could have passed, as it would depend heavily on control of the two houses, but I'd still like to see Democrats push for it to expose Republicans' hypocrisy on federalism.She even said she'd legalise marijuana (presumably overturning several of her own convictions).
It just wasn't Arab-Americans, though. The Democrats took for granted blacks, Latinos, and students, all traditionally Democrat voters. Those blocs either didn't vote, or they voted for Trump.Disagree. Harris talked plenty about how the atrocities in Gaza have to stop.
This voting bloc was just dumb.
I mean, I watched football every Sunday and got hundreds of those ads due to the hundreds of commercial breaks the NFL insists on. Trump's go-to was "Harris is giving trans surgery to prisoners" or "illegals are rapists," and Harris's go-to was "look at how terrible Trump is" and "Project 2025 will be the death of us." I got nothing of Harris's platform from the ads other than she'd "be a president for all Americans." To know what she stood for and her plans, I had to actively go out and research her as a candidate. I will concede that she did hammer home that she'd protect abortion rights, so that was a bit of her plan that did seem to make it into the ads.I saw plenty of ads that went out in swing states, and I saw lots of speeches, and I saw the DNC, and I saw billboards, and I disagree.
You're giving people way too much credit for actually knowing or understanding what they voted for, I feel. Many Americans don't even have a functional understanding of the basics of government or the Constitution. Just look at how many people think freedom of speech means they can go online and say whatever they want. Look at how many feel the president controls gas prices or the stock market. Go back to COVID, look at how many people believed whatever the Internet told them over what actual evidence showed them. Look at how many people deny climate change or think the government controls hurricanes. People are dumb and don't care about getting smarter. It goes back to the whole anti-intellectualism movement going on and the fact that stupid people get angry when you call them stupid. Hell, I actively try to be in tune with things, but I'm a long way away from being even remotely an expert.This is just so... mind boggling to me. That somehow despite all of the noise and information that the Harris campaign made, that if she didn't reach voters who didn't even know Biden wasn't still running, that somehow it's her fault they voted for Trump.
It's nonsense. I won't sit here and watch you people blame democrats and Harris for running a solid campaign while Trump made every mistake he could and rambled like an 80 year old while praising Nazis. It's more than I can tolerate.
What's happening in this country is that people are embracing authoritarianism. It's not Harris, it's not Democrats, it's that they actually like the hatred and dehumanization coming from the right. You need to come to terms with that.
This. Is. What. America. Wanted.
The idiots in this country want their own version of Putin. They idolize assholes.
Pro-Gaza anti-Harris protestors really stuck it to the man.Israeli Minister Uses Trump Win to Propose Complete West Bank Takeover
A far-right Israeli minister congratulated Trump—and then announced that now is the time to annex the West Bank.newrepublic.com
Umm. Yeah.
Law in US is product of democracy. If you don't like it, you should obey it in the moment and vote for candidates that would change it at next elections. If political party creating situation when committing a crime becomes norm - its, basically, coup against democracy.What is it about the law that makes it "correct"?
Like Jan 6.If political party creating situation when committing a crime becomes norm - its, basically, coup against democracy.
That doesn't actually answer the question that I asked. That's just tautological; the law is the law.Law in US is product of democracy. If you don't like it, you should obey it in the moment and vote for candidates that would change it at next elections. If political party creating situation when committing a crime becomes norm - its, basically, coup against democracy.
I do believe, that immigration is vital for Western countries. What I don't believe is that uncontrollable immigration is somehow better than controllable one.
I’ll take, “what a reasonable person would do/think..” for $1That doesn't actually answer the question that I asked. That's just tautological; the law is the law.
What makes the law "correct"? Why is passage, in whatever manner and however democratically, a condition of law's purported correctness?
I think you're giving them too little. The crux of your argument is that the democrats need to manipulate sheep better, and the sheep are incapable of making decisions on their own, so it is the political party that is to blame if they're not sufficiently manipulative.You're giving people way too much credit for actually knowing or understanding what they voted for, I feel.
As we all know, Hitler famously kept Germany out of wars and brought world peace.
I've found this pretty confusing. There will always be an element of sales pitch in a democratic system but for it to work at all requires voters to be capable of rational decision making. It is always fair to ask how a message could have been presented better, but when people vote for an objectively worse choice without doing the bare minimum of evaluation the problem lies with them.why would you even been supportive of democracy in the first place? This view tears the American concept apart just as much as any authoritarian push.
Got a link to that article? I wouldn't mind sharing that elsewhere.
Democracy is the will of the people. If we assume the people have no will, and that it comes from political party manipulation, then democracy becomes the will of the manipulative. If people are sheep, democracy is idiotic.I've found this pretty confusing. There will always be an element of sales pitch in a democratic system but for it to work at all requires voters to be capable of rational decision making. It is always fair to ask how a message could have been presented better, but when people vote for an objectively worse choice without doing the bare minimum of evaluation the problem lies with them.
Here you go.Got a link to that article? I wouldn't mind sharing that elsewhere.
I think I was unclear. I agree completely. What has confused me was standing by democracy while implying that manipulation is the key to winning. At that point democracy no longer makes sense, exactly as you said.Democracy is the will of the people. If we assume the people have no will, and that it comes from political party manipulation, then democracy becomes the will of the manipulative. If people are sheep, democracy is idiotic.
Maybe I'm overly cynical, but while this view of humanity is awful, I think it's pretty accurate. A large part of Americans (and I assume elsewhere in the world) are idiots and will continue to be idiots. Trump and the Republicans have figured out how to speak to idiots, whereas the Democrats have not. Should the Democrats have to cater to the stupidest people? No, in a perfect world, they wouldn't have to, but we live in a world populated with morons.I think you're giving them too little. The crux of your argument is that the democrats need to manipulate sheep better, and the sheep are incapable of making decisions on their own, so it is the political party that is to blame if they're not sufficiently manipulative.
It's an awful view of humanity, an awful view of the function of political parties, an awful view of voting, and if its your view, why would you even been supportive of democracy in the first place? This view tears the American concept apart just as much as any authoritarian push.
America wanted an asshole bully. They know that's Trump, and they know it's not Harris. That's about it really. They want that, because they are drawn to authority, like all human beings are at some level. Authoritarianism is a scourge in politics, in corporations, and in family. It crops up continually.
This is the point of contention. Either they're capable of rational action or not. If they aren't democracy is not viable. If they are it is, but steps may need to be taken to ensure that it works. I'm in the latter camp and if you're saying that a lack of education is responsible for poor decision making, it sounds like you're in the same camp.Yes, voters should be informed before heading to the polls and should take the time to actually figure things out, but very few do. Of those who do research, many are duped by manipulated media or things that are straight-up lies. Of those who aren't tricked, even fewer actually understand what it all means, and when they go searching, they end up being at risk of being duped or manipulated again. The number is likely shockingly small when you get to the informed voter who understands and wasn't duped.
I still believe much of this goes back to schools not teaching critical thinking skills. People have lost the ability to look at something and use reason to wade through the information.
You cited a possible reason above. It will take time to fix a cultural problem, but I don't see it as impossible at the moment. We haven't even tried.And the thing is, I have no idea how you can fix this or if it can be fixed without destroying the country's founding principles. I don't think it can be, so we need to learn to live with stupid people.