• merc@sh.itjust.works
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    37 minutes ago

    I’d really like to have 100 randomly chosen Trump voters in a room and interview them to find out how knowledgeable they are about Trump, about his policies, about his first term, about the criminal cases, etc.

    My guess is that at least 90% of them are brainwashed. I’m sure there are some that are completely aware of his record and are either single issue voters who are voting only on abortion. Some may be multi-millionaires who are voting just for lower taxes and don’t care about anything else. But, anybody who voted for him because of inflation / the economy has no idea what they’re talking about. Inflation was a worldwide problem and Trump’s policies made / will make it worse. Anybody who voted for him because he’s going to “fix immigration” has no idea what they’re doing because his policies are incoherent and will never work. Anybody who voted for him because of Gaza is an absolute moron because he’s just going to encourage the genocide.

  • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I propose a total halt to any sexual activity with any Trump supporter. This will go on for the 4 years that asshole is in power and until a reasonable president that is not a rapist racist asshole is elected. Sure that guy could be republican but I highly recommend elsewhere.

  • silver_wings_of_morning@feddit.dk
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    3 hours ago

    I could understand Trump in 2016. I could also understand Trump in 2020 but much less. In 2024? Nahh… America voted for him in 2024 and I will judge Americans for it.

    • okamiueru@lemmy.world
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      14 minutes ago

      Could you really understand Trump in 2016? I’m not asking to be mean. Wasn’t his character the same back then? I’ve tuned out of US politics since the DNC screwed over Bernie in 2016.

    • pyre@lemmy.world
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      38 minutes ago

      the only president in over 100 years to lose the popular vote twice. he won it his third time. unbelievable. as a rapist he’s probably used to insisting after rejection until he wears them down.

  • masterofn001@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    The religious fanatic psychopaths behind the scenes of MAGA, if successful in their goals, will ensure there is no history.

    Dark times is an understatement.

  • OwlPaste@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Just something that’s worth pointing out is that trumps voter base didn’t change much. Counting is still happening, but so far it’s trump -1 mil and Harris -13 million from last election.

    So it’s not so much that republicans voted badly it’s that democrats lost a good chunk of votes (16%) didn’t bother to vote this time.

    And while I completely disagree with trumps side, it’s insane, but at least I am happy that people voted. Voter apathy is far more dangerous to me. It’s like saying to politicians, “I don’t care that the nazi party is coming to power”.

    To me that’s the biggest issue this election and honestly I don’t understand why so few people cared. It’s actually same story over here (UK), where we had fewer people voting this election than previous one.

    • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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      2 hours ago

      It sounds like the Democrats just failed to present themselves as a viable alternative, or really inspire or motivate anyone to vote. Their platform seemed to be largely not being Trump.

      • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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        1 hour ago

        Thats the 2020 platform. If you want to be a talking head you’ll need some argument more cogent than that^

  • FrowingFostek@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Regrettably most of these people saw an avenue they thought would benefit them economically.

    They didn’t vote with their brains, they voted with their wallet and based on what they’ve heard.

  • iAmTheTot@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    If I find out you voted for Trump in 2016, I will judge you but I could forgive you.

    If I find out you voted for Trump in 2020, I will judge you and will have a hard time forgiving you.

    If I find out you voted for Trump in 2024, you’re dead to me. Friend, family, doesn’t matter.

    • glimse@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I wish I could say the same but I can’t bring myself to cut my dad out of my life. Yesterday ended our 2 year streak of talking every day.

      He learned years ago not to bring up politics with me because he knows I will destroy all of his arguments and bring receipts. He’s let a comment or two slip at a family gathering but he knows my phone’s coming out of I’m within earshot… No, dad, he was definitely friends with Epstein - here’s a quote saying so from the 90s.

      I’ve thought a lot about bringing it up or at the very least what my response would be if he does. I want to tell him that he has 20 years left at best but I have to live in the world he voted for a lot longer. I want to tell him that I think my sister would be right to never speak to him again. I want to tell him that she may be young, but in 15 years my niece is going to rightfully resent him for what he supported.

      But what I think I’m going to actually tell him is that he fucked up so bad that I HAVE to assume he truly does not understand the implications of this if I ever want to be able to look him in the eye again.

      And every single time Trump does something shitty as president, I will be texting him what it was and why it’s bad whether he likes it or not.

      • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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        2 hours ago

        I am fortunate that there is no real family divide for me. I do have a few relatives who voted Trump, but I am not close to them.

        Given that the rest of the family has cut them out (it was already underway, but this was the last straw), it’s really nothing for me to do so as well.

      • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        The good fight. Keeping majority voters accountable for the choices they impose on everyone else is as much a part of democracy as anything else, especially with candidates who actually deliver on the promises they make during elections.

        God speed. I hope you can be reunited with your family again.

      • iAmTheTot@sh.itjust.works
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        6 hours ago

        My father and I became estranged about a decade before he passed, for reasons other than but similar to politics. Our world views just did not align and in ways that I could not ultimately forgive. We did not really ever reconcile before his passing and I don’t regret it to this day. I don’t believe in unconditional love and he did not earn mine, imho. I am estranged with most of my extended family for similar reasons. I’m not really willing to compromise certain morals.

        • glimse@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          That’s fine. I have no contact with his entire side of the family except one cousin for that very reason, but my dad isn’t like them. I don’t think he understands that he votes R because his family has always voted R. His vote is really the only thing I dislike about him.

        • CLOTHESPlN@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          This might sound bad but I wish I had a similar level of resolve. I tolerate far too much insanity from people in my family.

          • ohlaph@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            I’m cutting them out completely. I can’t stand people who sit back and do nothing or support fascism.

            This will be the first year in almost 20 years that I simply don’t visit the family for christmas, with the exception of the pandemic.

            From now on, if you’re a trump supporter or you “sat this one out”, I’m not wasting any effort on you, continue sitting this one out.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      6 hours ago

      I did in 2016. I was younger and angry at the world. That judgment is deserved. By 2020 I realized that I had made a terrible mistake and was sure not to repeat it. It’s good to read that you can at least understand the perspective of how someone could have at that time.

      Some people never learn. This would appear to be the case for most Americans.

      • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        I think issues are too complicated for uneducated voters to understand when lectured to. People can learn, but many often only in hindsight when they experience something first hand. The educated/uneducated divide sheds light on this so obviously. Which is why it is so frustrating. Not suggesting being educated makes people smarter, but I think people who pursue education are more accepting of lecture. Obviously.

        Democrats have to stop and realize this. It’s why there is no debate to be had with many Republicans. They don’t think about issues through rational extrapolation and curiosity. Everything is an emotional response to the now. They are just wired that way.

        • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          6 hours ago

          This may not be a satisfying answer, but I went through some hard times between 2016 and 2020 and gained more compassion for how close any of us are to destitution. It became really difficult for me to be as selfish after those years because, well, I appreciated that happens to good people and we don’t have a social safety net.

          Experience showed me you can make the right choices and still get fucked. I just wish there was a way to teach that lesson that’s a little less uh painful.

          • Teppichbrand@feddit.org
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            1 hour ago

            That’s something I think about a lot. These people need to be humbled, big time. I don’t wish them all the bad there is in the world, I don’t want them to suffer and die. But I want that fucking selfish arrogance and the entitlement slapped out of them. Experience their fragility.

    • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      I get how you feel, and I desperately want to feel the same way. But we aren’t going to win people over back to the rational side with this attitude. It just feeds into the tribalism and makes the problem worse.

      We need to empathize with the other side, which means start by listening to their concerns, and then the moment they feel listened too, we have to completely repudiate the awful stances they believe in, shut down their flawed logic and force them to face facts and reality: one human being to another.

      This is brain washing remedy 101. Did we all forget the painfull lessons we learned through the first Trump Presidency? I feel like we have all collectively forgotten that period in time.

      • Fridgeratr@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 minutes ago

        Do you understand how many times we’ve tried this already? Yes it would be awesome to compromise and collaborate but they just can’t be reasoned with. They are perfectly fine with hypocrisy, lies, and projection.

        I’m not saying we need to destroy them or anything, but this shit has gone too far. We need to try way harder to fight back against their hateful, regressive bullshit at this point.

  • foiledAgain@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    What about the lack of turnout for KH? Am I reading the results wrong ? Was there not massive amounts on non voters? As much as I hate republicans the fence setters an uninformed have fucked us all outside the US

    • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      John Oliver’s segment on Palestinians really cemented it for me: if your family was killed by a missile sold to them by Biden, it’s really difficult to support his successor.

      Sure you may not want the orange turd either.

      But imagine the heartache of voting for the person related to the one who is responsible for the death of your family.

      I know I can’t. And a part of me feels for them.

      What upset me the most is that Harris used Hilary’s election plan verbatim. No one stopped to tell Harris that Clinton lost.

      Sanders warned her that if she wants a good turn out, she needs to have a plan for the working class.

      Instead she wasted weeks trying to get Republican endorsements instead of trying to shore up her base.

      • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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        2 hours ago

        I chose to vote for Harris despite this because Trump would be no better on this, so effectively the issue wasn’t up for vote and I could only vote on the other issues that were different between them. But very bluntly, I don’t blame Arabs and Muslims for not voting for Harris. They have one of the strongest grievances one could possibly have (i.e. second only to attacks directly on them personally, in the U.S.), and the dismissiveness from Biden (and Harris) was downright insulting.

        A part of me does feel like Biden chose Israel over Americans. I don’t know if changing course on this would have changed the election, and I guess it’s impossible to truly know.

      • Tedesche@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        What upset me the most is that Harris used Hilary’s election plan verbatim.

        She absolutely did not. Hillary leaned into the gender card hardcore. She had her supporters wearing t-shirts saying “I’m with her” with an arrow sign. She said “I’m not saying you should vote for me because I’m a woman, you should vote for me because of my qualifications. But one of my qualifications is…I’M A WOMAN!!!”

        Kamala didn’t lean into any of this demographics, gender war trash. She (wisely) followed Barack Obama’s playbook of leaving the identify politics crap at the door. She lost for other reasons. Hillary alienated voters by leaning too hard into identity politics. Kamala ran a much better campaign than Hillary. They are not the same. Why Kamala lost will be debated for some time at least, but it will not be concluded reasonably that she lost for the same reasons Hillary lost in 2016. I know people want to conclude that women just can’t get elected, but we haven’t yet had a female candidate that ran a great campaign. As someone who wants our first female president, I have to reluctantly admit that we’ve been underserved by our female politicians thus far. I have high hopes for AOC in the future, but we’ll have to wait and see how that plays out. I don’t actually think Kamala did anything wrong in her campaign; I just think she was working against the legacy set by her predecessor, and it was too much. That, and too many American voters are stupid, ignorant, misguided voters. And, probably, some Pro-Palestinian voters had their heads up their asses.

        • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          2020 election saw massive turnout in favour of DNC. Then Biden did as much as he could to clean up Trump’s mess and make things better.

          Kamala trusted that turnout, hoped people will know the work that was done, understand the threat of second Trump presidency, and vote in similar manner again.

          In other words she trusted the people to be informed voters. And they backstabbed her.

  • ohellidk@sh.itjust.works
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    8 hours ago

    they had every right to be frustrated with how things are, but this will not fix anything and they will find out very quickly. its a shame.

    • ProgrammingSocks@pawb.social
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      7 hours ago

      The problem with simply being “frustrated” about current material conditions is that frustration is unproductive. You have to channel it into something. If that “something” is fucking fascism, you’re an evil person without morals. So while I understand how it happens I cannot absolve people of the crime of voting for an open fascist.

      • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        The problem with simply being “frustrated” about current material conditions is that frustration is unproductive.

        In this case it is not just unproductive, it’s destructive. American voters, especially those who voted for Biden last time chose to stay at home.

        Biden administration was stumbling so the voters gave the keys to someone who’s going to cut off both legs.

    • edgemaster72@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      they will find out very quickly

      If they were going to realize it, they would’ve realized it after the first Trump term (and 2020 especially). They’ll continue to eat up lies that blame whatever marginalized group they’re hating that day.

    • HRDS_654@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      The shame is that they won’t care. These people will just find another scapegoat and punt the ball down the line.

  • wander1236@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    Unfortunately I don’t think most of these people care about being judged, especially not by some future people who they’ll never meet.

    As long as they see benefits in the short term, they’re happy, and if the benefits don’t materialize or go away too quickly, then it’s The Other Side’s fault somehow.

  • Jake Farm@sopuli.xyz
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    6 hours ago

    My unfortunate observation is the majority of people who voted for Trump don’t pay any attention to current events and basically get their news via rumor. But if you want the true culprit, it’s the 15 million Democrats that voted last time but not this time. The votes for Trump actually went down compared to last time.

      • Jake Farm@sopuli.xyz
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        3 hours ago

        Well 114 million people who could have voted this year didn’t. It’s a combination of apathy and laziness. We could be like Australia and mandate the vote.

        • Cypher@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          It would be such a game changer for the US, there are still people who ‘donkey vote’ which is either leaving a ballot empty or drawing dicks on it, but it means a far more balanced political spectrum.

      • skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
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        2 hours ago

        Yeah I don’t believe that for a fucking second to be honest with you, and I’m finding it difficult to not go insane with conspiracy theories about MAGA fucking with the vote counts, and becoming the same person I made fun of surrounding Jan 6 - except he has a proven record of being a cheat and all but outright stated his intent to cheat the election. I’m kind of dumbfounded that 3 hours after voting night closes the major news outlets are all reporting a Trump win which they couldn’t possibly know yet, everyone takes this as fact and refuses to investigate any further. Official vote tally and certification isn’t even until mid December by the usual schedule according to .gov sources.

        Is it not just a little bit ridiculous to anyone else that in one of the most relentlessly politicized elections of the past century 15+ million people who voted last time suddenly didn’t? 15 million people predominantly of the denominations that Trump and his goons particularly hate and wanted to silence? For that matter does anyone else find it strange that 45% of Latinos voted to deport themselves? I mean, some percentage I could expect, even up to like 20, I’d be disappointed but I’d understand, but 45%??

        I am most certainly on some amount of copium here but I am incredibly surprised at the lack of any sort of investigation or push back or god damn anything surrounding what should certainly be contested results, at the very least. This feels very very fishy to me.

        • Captainvaqina@sh.itjust.works
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          2 hours ago

          Ap news had a good article about how our voting machines are completely vulnerable to first hand attacks. I think they figured out how to do it. They had a LOT of help.

  • BigBenis@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I certainly do judge any Trump voter as being either terribly naive or a truly bad person. However, broadcasting that message is going to change nothing and only serves as copium for the anti-Trump crowd.

    What is going to sway people who have voted for Trump in the past and are not completely lost to the cult of personality is being a champion for radical change that benefits the middle class. The Harris platform evidently did not go far enough to convince enough voters they would see any meaningful change. Nor did the Clinton or Biden platforms, Biden was only lucky enough that his policies were effectively irrelevant in contest with Trump’s disastrous mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic response.

    We can’t hope for another deadly crisis to get us out of this one.

    • Montagge@lemmy.zip
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      If champion for radical change that benefits the middle class was that important Trump would not have won.

      • BigBenis@lemmy.world
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        I would argue that he most definitely is a champion for radical change and that’s why he won. “Drain the swamp”, “Dictator on day one”, " He says it like it is" are all things that deviate dramatically from the status quo of political etiquette. Trump is willing to break political norms to get what he wants and evidently voters think his interests align with their own.

        Obviously, this isn’t the kind of radical change you or I are hoping for but it certainly is radical. Meanwhile, the Dems are playing it safe in an attempt to appeal broadly and not upset too many people. And we’ve seen for the last decade that gets us at best legislation which has been gutted to the point where it does effectively nothing for the majority of Americans.

        • Montagge@lemmy.zip
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          4 hours ago

          Student loan forgiveness, ACA, CHIPS act, the Inflation Reduction Act, and the Bipartisan Infrastructure were all huge gains for the majority of Americans

          • BigBenis@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            Most of these accomplishments, while they do benefit the middle class, are largely invisible to the average American who’s not perpetually following politics.

            Student loan forgiveness only directly affects people who go to college, an increasingly less popular/accessible career path amongst the working class. It also has restrictions and has been facing legal challenges, both of which limit its effectiveness.

            Lower prescription drug costs are only really visible to people who are taking prescription drugs long-term and doesn’t prevent the healthcare system from bankrupting you in countless other ways.

            The Affordable Care Act is arguably the single most significant accomplishment for the Democratic party in my millennial lifetime and if it survives to the next election cycle it will be old enough to vote in it.

            As for the rest, improving infrastructure moves too slowly for people to notice in the short-term and despite the efforts to slow them we are still facing record increases to the cost of living and job insecurity.

            The working class is getting desperate, people are worried about how they’re going to keep up with rising grocery prices or whether they’ll get laid off from their job when they’re living paycheck to paycheck. If you don’t own a home yet you’re likely questioning whether homeownership will ever be within reach while your landlord increases your rent for no apparent reason other than greed.

            In a relative sense to the struggles the working class has been facing coming out of the pandemic, the Democrats have thrown them bones, told them the economy is great, in fact it’s the best in the world when you know for a fact you were better off before the pandemic.

            Do we know tariffs and mass deportations aren’t going to make anything better? Do we know things are likely to get a lot worse? Are we the average American? The results of the election prove that we aren’t.

  • crawancon@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    bitch pls. history gonna get over written with trumps magic fucking marker.

    • Sabin10@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      It’s gonna be wild to see how different the American history curriculum is inside vs outside of the US in a few years.

      • ohlaph@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Not just history, science, probably math, etc.

        They don’t want problem solvers or critical thinking skills, they want to create a class of low skilled, low intelligence, baby breeding, obedient working class people.

        The owning class will be educated through private institutions.