The Pennsylvania Democrat recalled his time serving as a Hillary Clinton surrogate in 2016, even after he supported Bernie Sanders in the primary.

  • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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    10 months ago

    I don’t like Joe Biden, but this isn’t a presidential approval poll, it’s an election, and he’s clearly better than any of the alternatives. And when it comes down to it, he’s been better than I expected. We could have just had an exclusively centrist presidency, and while there’s been plenty of centrism, he has been persuadable to progressive action.

    And frankly even if you can’t bring yourself to express support Biden for some reason, it should be pretty easy to want anyone who willingly associates with Republicans to lose and lose badly, because they’re way beyond stealth-mode fascism now. Even the most jaded “they’re all neolibs” voter from earlier elections can’t possibly ignore that the Republicans are just fash now. There’s a real danger if they win that cities end up with federally tasked jackboots kidnapping protesters like Portland.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      10 months ago

      When the vote is between someone (and a party) who says “climate change is more worrying than nuclear war” and “climate change is a hoax” the choice should be clear for any reasonable person. All the treason stuff aside (though very important, everyone should already be decided on that), climate change is the biggest issue for everyone I know. Probably for any average person under 50 if I had to guess.

      • prole@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        I’ve seen people saying Hexbear users have been brigading politics communities of other instances. Not sure if it’s true, but it would explain the massive influx of idiotic far right morons with a 6th grade writing level making bad faith arguments.

        • thoro@lemmy.ml
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          9 months ago

          Hexbear is leftist and lemmy.world defederated from the instance so you’re speaking of phantoms

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          9 months ago

          Hexbear is communist, that’s you guys. That’s modern day liberals in the US. You are so fucking confused it’s comical.

          • prole@sh.itjust.works
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            9 months ago

            Don’t fucking tell me what I am or who “my guys” are. Tankies are almost just as bad as conservatives.

    • Filthmontane@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Nope. Voting for Cornel West. I think Marianne Williamson is also a significantly better candidate.

        • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Perfect summary of how fucked the two party system and partisan identity in the US is. “Oh you don’t want to get behind a party that supports the Palestinian genocide? Trump lover!” You basically have a moderate rainbow capitalist center right party, and a fashy culture war right party, they have the same donors and corrupt capital directing their policies though. The vote is like picking the aesthetic you want to see things degrade under.

          Biden taking the L for pulling out of Afghanistan was the best thing he’s done. Obama and Trump didn’t want it and he finally went though with it.

          • fubo@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            These two things can be true at the same time:

            1. The two-party system is structurally bad for the country. We really, really need ranked-choice or approval voting, and have needed them for a long time.
            2. If you are a voter in a contested (“purple”) state and don’t vote for Biden, you will be thereby supporting the election of a fascist candidate, which will make you a material supporter of fascism.

            Feel free to vote for West if you live in, say, California. But in a contested state, a vote for West is a vote for Trump (or his replacement as Führer).

            There is an actual, material difference between the center-right big-business party (the Democrats) and the fascist party. If you don’t believe me, go ask a gay schoolteacher from Florida.

            • Brocken40@sh.itjust.works
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              10 months ago

              You can’t blame 3rd party / nonvoters for the faults of republican voters. Mentality like that is why we are stuck with point number 1.

                • Brocken40@sh.itjust.works
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                  10 months ago

                  Who you or I vote for is not going to stop a second January 6th, it isn’t going to change the plans in project 2025, the question is no longer about duely elected politicians, there is a high chance that Trump could be barred from running due to his actions on Jan 6th, but that doesn’t change angry confused people’s minds.

                  If you don’t want to make america Florida convince a Trumper he’s bad don’t attack people who already know it.

              • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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                10 months ago

                Sure I can. Every eligible voter who did not vote for Hillary Clinton in 2016 shares partial blame for Trump winning. Less than people who voted for Trump, but more then none at all.

                • Brocken40@sh.itjust.works
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                  10 months ago

                  Personally I would put more blame on the democrats for not fielding a better candidate that could have beaten trump not the people who didn’t vote for a shit candidate

          • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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            10 months ago

            You basically have a moderate rainbow capitalist center right party, and a fashy culture war right party, they have the same donors and corrupt capital directing their policies though.

            Holy fuck is this insane. While it was still dumb, complaining about lack of differentiation between neoliberalism with social conservative tendencies and neoliberalism with socially liberal tendencies could at least masquerade as a cogent argument, but “fashy culture war” isn’t just another stylistic draping on neoliberalism, it’s storming school boards, skinheads marching through cities, and federally directed jackboots kidnapping protesters.

            • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              That’s all happening now while Biden is in office though, and the police work for the state. Weapons are also being sold to fascists and extremists who repress moderates all over the world. The difference is under neoliberalism domestically, as long as people are equally represented, and the visible oppression is externalized, the structure is strengthened and remains. The Republican model says some deserve to be worse off based on their identity, which is in practice an opportunity for exploitation of all, it’s a way to blame systemic stresses on an internalized other. The stresses remain in either case and the system continues to degrade.

              Neoliberalism has already had its crisis and essentially died, in the sense that it’s not believed in anymore but still guides institutions.

              • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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                10 months ago

                Where are the DHS (or other federal agents) kidnapping protesters? They didn’t just randomly decide to show up in Portland and they weren’t just randomly chosen from among available federal forces. They were sent there by Trump because they were a young organization with the least inertia to resist the fascist turn.

                As to the other two, I suppose it’s true it’s still happening, no one solved the problem of evil, but they aren’t being called “fine people” and sheltered by the head of the executive branch. Zero chance the Proud Boys go to prison under a fascist president and more than likely they will be pardoned (and given a green light) if that happens. The idea that a fascist president doesn’t make fascism markedly worse is insanity.

                All the flowery words about international relations are just avoiding answering the question of actual fascism, while also basically ignoring that fascist leaders were rising at the same time and supporting each other. What bullshit fake leftism to just hand wave away the rise of fascism, both at home and abroad.

                • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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                  Feds are notorious for harassing and threatening effective protestors, and the police and military in the US are full of organized fascists already, that’s just getting worse in any partisan scenario. International relations is actual fascism, because it’s all about protecting the interests of private US companies who do business in countries with less regulations and labor standards, and forcing those countries to remain friendly to US interests in this manner. So the oppression resulting from this system is externalized and hidden from the American collective conscious which is more involved with a culture war that doesn’t really change the status quo system but gives it moral justification and context. Results are incidents like Coca Cola hiring death squads in Columbia to harass and murder labor organizers, or just exploiting entire workforces. The military industrial complex side of this is basically death for any political organizations left of center in any country the US has interests in, the story of the last half century. Pertinent example, Biden pulling out of Afghanistan ended decades of involvement that basically started with providing insane amounts of weapons to Mujahideen Islam extremists and warlords which culminated in 9/11. Iran is the exception but the US is materially very friendly to repressive Islamic states for these economic reasons, those states aren’t inclusive by any stretch of the imagination and actually murder so-called sexual deviants. As long as it’s not happening in the US neoliberal Democrat supporters can feel like their hands are clean of fascism the system they support inflicts. So I would flip around that last paragraph and say this is a material reality entirely avoided by US Democrat progressives.

          • Zink@programming.dev
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            9 months ago

            It helps to think of it in pragmatic terms of what your vote does, versus whether or not you fully support X or Y. It is undeniable that given the stupid electoral system we were born into, that voting third party effectively supports whichever mainstream candidate you don’t want to win.

            All the rest of the time, whether in primaries or public forums like this, you argue and vote for what/who you really want.

            But once you hit the general election, it is essentially cast in stone that either the R or D candidate will win.

            We need ranked choice voting so that candidates care about what the people really want, versus just getting more votes than one specific other person.

            • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              voting third party effectively supports whichever mainstream candidate you don’t want to win.

              What if you don’t want either to win and see the trend of both parties turning more to the right since Reagan and locked in a death spiral. Corporate tax rates are as low as ever, both parties support the military industrial complex and police state, both support the Palestinian genocide, neither party wants to get rid of Citizens United and Super PACs (regulated less than charities) now control and appropriate political action for corporate interests, neither party supports public healthcare. Like yeah the degradation may happen slower under Democrat but they haven’t shown signs of turning their backs against the corporate interests ruining the country/world.

              • Zink@programming.dev
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                9 months ago

                If you don’t want either one to win, there is no way for you to legally make that happen.

                So if you accept that is true, and you have a preference among the two parties, that is where pragmatism suggests voting against the greater evil.

                But if you honestly have little to no preference, then you won’t care about the so-called consequences of voting third party, and can do whatever.

                I mean obviously you can always do whatever you want. This is just the game theory you’re thinking that means we need to change our voting system before the two-party lock-in would even start to loosen.

                • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  Pragmatism would suggest I spend my efforts being politically active in other ways rather than dedicate it to a bipartisan death spiral. I’m active on the labor, municipal, and environmental front, and none of it is online.

        • Bilb!@lem.monster
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          10 months ago

          You like Trump for 2024. I’ve noted it. It’s in my notes! You’re in trouble now!

      • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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        10 months ago

        He’s clearly not, first because he fell for the People’s Grifter’s Party and second because he’s not even trying to win. Jumping into a presidential race as a third party is just an exercise in self-promotion and maybe a little political grifting along the way. He sure as shit isn’t trying to engage with the political system to induce positive political change because no outcome of his candidacy believably accomplishes that.

        • Crismus@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          You do understand that the parties we have today started as third parties 100+ years ago?

          I would say, one of the most American things to do is to found another party when the original party loses their way.

          We are already in the third presidential election where anyone to the left of corporate-neoliberalism are being pushed to ignore their own principles to keep the party at the status quo.

          As bad as the Republican Party has been recently, slavery would still be around if people in the 1850’s kept voting Whig to keep the slave-loving Democrats in check. The main problem with voting has been voter suppression and how somebody who has to work multiple jobs or extended hours can even find a place to vote.

          Make every state run the Colorado mail-in election process and you will find that we might be able to actually vote away a lot of garbage and have fair elections with large enough voting numbers to possibly spit both parties.

          I always say that personally, voting for the lesser of two evils still has people voting for evil. I still vote, but propping up the two-party system shouldn’t be the only reason to keep the status quo.

      • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 months ago

        I think Marianne Williamson is an excellent candidate. But voting is literally a rigged game and there’s only one answer where we don’t all lose our democracy.

          • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            9 months ago

            Nah voting against Dems has worked on a smaller scale. But in the presidency frankly you’re an ass to vote against Biden on this one. Your loser candidate loses, trump wins, bye bye to many of our rights and freedoms. Neato.

  • randon31415@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    “Support Joe Biden” - Yes.

    “Support particular policies of Joe Biden” - No.

    Democrats are not a cult of personality. We can disagree with particular things the president does without wanting to see him defeated.

        • Pectin8747@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          We need a voting system that eliminates the spoiler effect and allows for showing intensity of preference.

          RCV does neither but STAR voting does both

      • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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        10 months ago

        He specifically said “get behind the policies of Joe Biden”. If it’s just voting I’m with Fetterman, but you don’t need to recalibrate your policy supports because anything less than full agreement is treason.

          • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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            10 months ago

            Sure, and if it’s just voting and saying “voting for Biden is important”, then great, we’re good. Biden is obviously better than any Republican and Republicans not having power is important. But what that doesn’t mean is tabling advocacy for progressive stuff because it’s not what he’s doing or pretending bad policies just didn’t happen.

            • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Sure, as long as it’s put in context. Too many young people are emphasizing the second part of what you said over the first part.

        • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          All the areas that went hard Blue after voting for Trump in 2016 seem to argue otherwise. Lots of people came out of the woodwork that either voted for Trump or didn’t vote at all.

          • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            What areas did Trump carry in 16 that then went “hard blue” (I guess that’s dependent upon your definition of hard, but let’s say, breaking for Biden by 10+ points) in 20?

            No doubt there were places that flipped, but I doubt too many flipped “hard”.

            2020 was decided by three groups:

            1. Moderate Republicans repulsed by what they’d seen through 4 years of trump.

            2. Democrats and moderates who were put off specifically by having Clinton on the ballot in 16 and didn’t vote.

            3. Independents who underestimated how bad Trump would be and voted for him to “shake things up” over Clinton who was the picture of Establishment Politics.

            In 2020 I think you also had the effect of complacency among some of Trump’s far right base. Many of them hadn’t voted for years, if ever, until 2016 and likely didn’t realize the perfect storm that had to happen for him to win.

            Meanwhile in 20, defeating Trump basically required two things: don’t be Trump, and don’t be someone lots of people hate.

            Nobody likes Biden, but nobody really hates him either. That’s how he won the primaries and it’s how he won the general.

            And if 2020 is a rematch, it’s how I think he’ll win again. Biden’s biggest strength is what he’s not.

            • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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              10 months ago

              I’m thinking of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania who flipped back Blue for Biden, but have also flipped other seats that have been long held by Republicans. The PA house flipped, as well as a seat in the Senate in the US Congress. Democrats held on to the governorship of PA for the first time since 1963. Wisconsin’s Supreme Court also flipped for the first time in nearly two decades. I don’t know how many point they won by, but there is a clear direction the states are both going that extends beyond just Trump.

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                  9 months ago

                  Not sure they comment was meant for me, but I agree. People that still say they are independent either aren’t paying close attention or just don’t want to label themselves. Some just love to complain and not take any responsibility for the consequences of their own voting.

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        I would say “Then why would they be considered progressive?” but then I remember Tankies exist.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    It’s not that I don’t support him, it’s that I do not support anyone over the age of 65 being in any position of any power anywhere.

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    10 months ago

    His only redeeming quality is not being Donald Trump. He’s otherwise too fucking old and out of touch with the vast majority of the country like most of our government is.

    • Zoidberg@lemm.ee
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      It’s almost midnight. You just got out of your job, a restaurant in a somewhat seedy location in old downtown. You leave through the backdoor into an alley and suddenly notice you’re not alone. The metal door just closed shut behind you.

      You look to your right. There’s a guy with a knife. He’s looking at you and smiling in a weird manner. He starts walking towards you menacingly.

      You look to your left. There’s a well known old drunk there. He smells bad and likes to hug people who are passing by. If you go that way, you will be hugged by him.

      What do you do?

      If you go right, you’ll get stabbed and killed. If you do nothing and stay put, you’ll get stabbed and killed. If you go left, you will be hugged by the stinky guy. It’s disgusting and not ideal, but you’ll not be stabbed and survive.

      What do you choose?

      I see people all the time with the dumbest arguments to not vote. “He’s not progressive enough”, or “he’s part of the system”, or even “he didn’t do enough for X” (insert your favorite minority here).

      It’s all true. But the universe is not a perfect or ideal place. Not voting for the imperfect guy gets us a true horrible alternative. It’s a choice between bad and awful.

      Please vote bad and keep the awful away.

      • Enkrod@feddit.de
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        10 months ago

        Gotta move the Overton Window from the far right back towards the center right before you can start moving it to the left.

        • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Tell that to the Democrat PACs funding the most insane fascist Republican primary candidates, so they can point out how insane their opposition is, effectively shifting the Overton Window even further to the right.

      • AeroLemming@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        The United States is not a democracy. In 2016, a man who lost the general election was illegitimately installed as president under the guise of some imaginary lines having more meaning than the actual, objectively factual will of the people as measured through a democratic vote. Unless you’re in a swing state, who you vote for doesn’t matter at all.

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          There are many types of democracies, and we live in a representative democracy which is very much a democracy.

          There is exactly 1 direct democracy on the planet. Costa Rica is close but not quite.

          • AeroLemming@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            Even ignoring how your vote doesn’t matter if it’s not a swing state, your vote is also worth many times more or less both for legislators and the president depending on which state you live in. That’s not a democracy. In order for weighted votes to count as a democracy, you would also have to count much more strongly weighted votes, like if for example, billionaires’ votes were worth a million times that of the average Joe.

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              That’s like saying your vote doesn’t matter if you have a minority opinion so democracy doesn’t exist at all. It’s a bullshit line of reasoning.

              Also your vote is extremely important at the local level. Our housing crisis is entirely a local voting issue.

              A billionaires vote counts for exactly the same as yours. Sorry to break your bubble.

              • AeroLemming@lemm.ee
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                I feel like you skimmed my message instead of actually reading it, so I’ll give you a chance to reread it.

                • SCB@lemmy.world
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                  No your post is just nonsense people repeat as part of the general American zeitgeist of “can’t trust government.” It has no basis in reality.

      • Jeremy [Iowa]@midwest.social
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        Ah, the false dichotomy, neat.

        Abstaining is always an option. You can always just ignore either shady individual - you aren’t required to pick one.

      • 30mag@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        People say perfect is the enemy of good, not good is the enemy of perfect. So, for bad and awful, it would be awful is the enemy of bad. I think that is not what you’re trying to say.

        I hope that drunk isn’t hugging me to make it easier for the other guy to stab me.

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        10 months ago

        I choose neither. Instead, I jump, grab the bars of the fire escape overhead and climb up. Stinky hugs stabby, gets stabbed and dies. Then I jump down from the fire escape onto Stabby, knock him down and stab him with his own knife.

      • r9seng@lemm.ee
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        Your analogy does not work, as the situation presented requires you to either go to the left or to the right.

        In real life, there are many options and gray areas. One of those options is to refuse support to anyone who works against the populace, regardless of their political affiliation.

        The world would be much better off watching the US turn far-right and implode than it would be maintaining the status quo.

        I would rather watch the US die as a Nazi state than support the lesser of two evils. Remove them as a global superpower. Move out of the way and allow other states to bring better systems of government forward. Maybe something salvageable can be found in the wreckage.

        That’s the part Fetterman fails to realize as well: Right now is not okay. Continuing the status quo is not okay.

        Your analogy also equates the death of the nation with the death of the self, which is not even remotely true either.

        Everyone knows not to negotiate with terrorists, until election season.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yeah, I can think of a parallel. The Soviets and the West allied to defeat Hitler but neither wanted to live under the other’s rules.

      “Not GOP” is the best choice, but I’d like to see a different “not GOP” than the current one. Or even better, a system that doesn’t boil it down to two choices and an all or nothing vote.

      • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        The difference there is that they knew eventually the war would be over and they didn’t have to be allies any more. Instead, the DNC pulls out this same rhetoric every election, and they’ll never stop.

        • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, another difference was that the Soviets and the West both wanted to defeat the Nazis. I think the moderate Democrats know that if the right is properly defeated (with election reform that opens up the system), they’ll also lose their power since the “we’re not the GOP” votes will dry up. Though the game is getting more dangerous as the GOP’s base is calling for Democrat blood and they don’t need the Dems like the Dems in power need them.

  • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    In the primaries, I supported progressive candidates like Sanders and Warren because I think their policy prescriptions would make for a better America. In the general, I voted for Biden. That was a harm-reduction vote.

    What I don’t like to hear, in the primary, is the ‘you have to vote for the candidate who can win’ line of argument, which begs the question it pretends to answer- if everyone who says “I’d vote for x but x can’t possibly win” just voted for x, x would actually win. This gives whoever tells you that “x can’t possibly win” the power to get you to give up on voting for what you want, which seems to wag the dog.

    In the general, between dem and gop control, it’s not a close contest for me; it’s between a party afraid to do progressive things the voters want and a party that will do whatever the fuck it wants no matter that nobody wants that.

    Yes, our electoral system of first-past-the-post demands that we hedge our bets and compromise in order to avoid the calamity of electing a fascist in this election cycle, but it’s hard to support with evidence the idea that what makes a progressive candidate “risky” isn’t just a self-fulfilling misperception that causes the party to spend (or not-spend) money to prevent progressives from becoming party nominees. After all, research consistently shows that politicians of both parties routinely overestimate the conservatism of the voters.

    I’m glad to see the Biden admin embracing the progressive changes it has been able to get to, but I’m also sooo tired of being told ‘we can’t nominate a progressive, they’ll be called a communist’ when no matter who we nominate they’ll be called a communist and decades of voting a harm-reduction ticket has rolled back much of the New Deal

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      if everyone who says “I’d vote for x but x can’t possibly win” just voted for x, x would actually win.

      Not really. It means that person does not have the votes to win. Even if every supporter of X exclusively voted for X, plus a few supporters of Y, X would not win against Z. However, if every supporter of Y voted for Y, plus a few supporter of X, he would win against Z. So we should shift our support to Y because he has more supporters and is more likely to win against Z.

      I think what you’re trying to say is that if every Biden voter just voted for Bernie, Bernie would have won. Which…sure, but you could say that about anyone.

      It’s a difference between core voters (“I’m only excited about X”) vs swayable voters (“I like X but I think Y has a better chance of winning against Z”).

      The point is that Biden has more core supporters than Bernie. Biden has a bigger, more reliable group of people who want to vote for him and only him.

      • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        It means that person does not have the votes to win.

        It means that people who want to vote a certain way are being pressured to vote a different way.

        This in turn means the way the votes went is not a measure of what people want, but rather of what they can be pressured into doing. These are different things, even if it’s convenient to dismiss it as a distinction without a difference.

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    10 months ago

    Is it already the time of year to bash progressives in case democrats lose so that they can be blamed for it? The extent of support Joe Biden will get is a vote against the republican party. As a candidate himself, he sucks as does the “democratic” party in general.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        He’s advanced the progressive agenda more than anyone else in modern history.

        And progressives hate him for it.

        You people have issues.

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          10 months ago

          I guess I didn’t just recognize his contribution in my comment. I’ll try harder next time.

        • farngis_mcgiles@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          so progressive of him to shut down striking rail workers and fail to implement the student debt relief. hell i’m still waiting on the universal healthcare dems promised in 2008.

          • EmptySlime@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            9 months ago

            He did shut down the strike yes, but was recently credited by the unions for helping them in the months since to apply pressure to finally get them the sick days they were after.

            Quote from the article:

            "We’re thankful that the Biden administration played the long game on sick days and stuck with us for months after Congress imposed our updated national agreement,” Russo said. “Without making a big show of it, Joe Biden and members of his administration in the Transportation and Labor departments have been working continuously to get guaranteed paid sick days for all railroad workers.

            That’s not even mentioning all the good things happening at his NLRB under Lina Khan. My favorite of which being the new rule that straight up just orders companies found to have engaged in union busting tactics in response to workers trying to get a union election to immediately recognize and begin bargaining with said union.

    • LarkinDePark
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      10 months ago

      So nodbody is actually supporting the Dems, they’re just voting against the other wing of the party? Can you give an example of the “progress”?

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Inflation Reduction Act?

        Student Loans?

        CHIPS?

        Judge and admin appointments?

        I mean every day there’s new news “Biden administration undoes horrible fuck up Trump created” and occasionally there’s news “Biden administration improves system beyond where it was before Trump”.

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    10 months ago

    Fetterman is 100% right.

    He’s basically calling out progressives for essentially not wanting power. Those progressives rather sit on the sidelines and complain about everything than ever gaining even a morsel of political power to where they could actually do something.

    Falling in-line is what has led conservatives to gain enough control of the government to throw out what most considered a done deal. RvW is gone (as well as any hope for reasonable gun restrictions, as well as a host of other no nonsense laws) because Republicans know about playing the long game and know that collectively they can accomplish far more things.

    It’s funny that progressives love to push the idea of collective bargaining when it comes to labor relations and yet they can’t figure out that collectively if they fell behind the leader of the Democrats, their voices would be much better heard.

    • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      Shit that’s a good comparison that frankly I’m embarrassed I hadn’t thought of. 👍

        • Copernican@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I think that’s just what democracy is. Healthy democracies are pluralistic. And governing coalitions don’t have 100% alignment on all issues.

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          Lmao that’s adorable that you think that. You think I was excited about fuckin John Kerry? Get real. My candidate that year famously… yelled loudly… and it ended his entire political career.

          You have no idea the amount of settling I was willing to accept to see Bush not get re-elected.

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            10 months ago

            You SHOULD have been excited about John Kerry. And Hillary. And Biden.

            Those are the candidates that actually have a shot at winning. I was happy to vote for Howard Dean, and Sander and yet I know enough to fall behind the candidate that actually has a shot at winning if the one I vote for doesn’t get the nomination. Dean made the exact same mistake that Sanders did - he had the naivete to count on the Left and the youth vote to get him elected. And like we’ve seen countless times before, those people don’t vote. All the comments and posts and messages and tweets by liberals online about how this person or that person should win, when it comes to election day they don’t show up.

            So with that losing strategy proven time and time again, why the fuck should Democrats go to the Left, when voters are clearly showing them that they want more centrist candidates?

            The news media ripped Dean apart for having the gall to be emotional after his primary win, but nothing stopped his Base from following up his victory with supporting him in subsequent primaries. And yet they didn’t. Because liberals don’t WANT to win. They want to complain.

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              I was very excited about Hillary and Biden. I volunteered for their campaigns. I’m a liberal. I love liberal candidates, in general

              John Kerry is the political equivalent of plain vanilla ice cream. Sure it’s ice cream. But it isn’t anything to get worked up about.

              My post is about how I will generally vote for people I don’t necessarily like to be President if it means a liberal gets in. I’m not blindly loyal, but I’m sure as shit not allowing a Trump or Ramaswamy in over like, Sanders, if he’d won.

              I hope our President in 28 is Buttigieg. Dude lights a fire in me. If he loses the primary, I will still almost certainly be voting for the Democrat, because insane felons dont win the Democrat primary, so I’m unlikely to have an ethical crisis over it. I’ll take a full on Sanders progressive over any Republican these days.

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                10 months ago

                Hillary is a fantastic government worker, policy nerd, etc. I wish the Presidency wasn’t such a popularity contest because she’s the kind of person that can get things done. Same really goes for Kerry. Both fantastic Secretary of States.

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                10 months ago

                Putin? Don’t you usually get your poorly paid troll army to do this, or have you sent them all to die in Ukraine?

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        10 months ago

        When you bring with you almost no votes or support, then what do you expect?

        So the groups that vote reliably for the Dems should get no attention, but the Left should get to dictate policy when it can’t bring up any support?

        That’s the most liberal thinking I’ve ever heard… waaaaa, give me attention, even though I won’t lift a finger to support you!

        • triclops6@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          All this is incorrect. Sanders votes converted to establishment votes 80-90%, both rounds. Despite a party that pulled dirty tricks both times to undermine the progressive candidates.

          Also you don’t get your agenda based on “but I voted for you” that’s not how power works. You get your agenda based on “do it or I won’t vote for you”

          In both, 2016 and 2020, the progressive vote was recieved, and the progressive voice was promptly discarded.

          They’re right to be jaded AND they should still vote blue. Both of those things are true.

        • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          When you bring with you almost no votes or support, then what do you expect?

          You need to make up your mind. Either progressives aren’t bringing enough votes to care about, or you need their votes to win. You can’t have it both ways.

          If you need their votes to win, you better start addressing their issues. If you don’t, then stop blaming them for your losses.

          • Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Democrats have won plenty of elections with little support from the left already.

            But when elections are decided by a few percentage points, every vote counts. And if the left can be bothered to put down the bong and get off the couch long enough to go vote, it can be enough to win again Republicans in tight races. But the Left never represwnts a majority of Democratic votes. But it sure seems like liberals want to hold their votes hostage until Democrats give them a disproportionate amount of attention. You know what that’s called? It’s called entitlement.

            • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              It’s called entitlement.

              Expecting progressives to vote for you while at the same time insulting them? Entitlement indeed.

        • ALostInquirer@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          I’m confused, doesn’t what you’re saying apply just as much, if not more, to Democrats that some of the progressives reluctantly do end up supporting and voting for despite knowing from their explicit policies and if a career politician, voting record, that they’ll barely represent them? What do those longstanding Democrats expect when they continue to betray, or clumsily compromise away, those positions or policies that more progressive demographics voted them in to office hoping they might defend, or at a minimum compromise on in a way that is in fact progressive and beneficial to folks?

          On that last point, you may argue they do that, but I’d argue that those cases are rare, and instead they more often compromise in such a way as to either hand more over to their opposition, or make moves that are more of a temporary provision that may be cast aside with the next majority and/or administration.

    • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      the idea of collective bargaining when it comes to labor relations and yet they can’t figure out that collectively if they fell behind the leader of the Democrats, their voices would be much better heard.

      Laughs in railroad workers

      • Shazbot@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        As a Californian and with regards to Pelosi that blame is on us–the voters. Incumbents with mediocre records can still win reelection on name recognition alone. Getting progressive challengers in California isn’t hard. But getting progressives that can build their brand and base to a competitive size to match incumbents, while surviving the mudslide of bad press from establishment outlets? That’s hard.

        Hell, my home town despised the previous mayor. Still won his reelection in 2016 by nearly 2/3rds despite a progressive challenger who has been active in city politics and community outreach for over a decade. Had to wait until he termed out in 2020 before we could get the current progressive mayor in office.

        • Deftdrummer@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Or… Maybe your perception of political candidates’ popularity is only what you want to believe.

          Unfathomable that others support who you do not?

          • Shazbot@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Not really, we’re dealing with a city that slides between 15~23% voter turn out with a bias towards older voters who previously leaned center/center right. So even if 4 in 10 of the total population dislikes the incumbent, the odds were still in their favor due to self selection and name recognition. For the challenger to get over 30% on the first try shows our previous mayor was already experiencing dissatisfaction from swing voters.

            At least that’s how it was in 2016, as of 2022 we now have a progressive super majority on city council plus the mayor.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Pelosi has been phenomenal for Democrats and Progressives both. You just hate her because she’s old and you’re probably in the “it’s not a phase, mom!” age range.

    • Deftdrummer@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Y’all are so focused on who sticks their what where that is going to cost you an election… again.

      The progressive ideology is dangerous left unchecked.

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        9 months ago

        Oh yeah, those darn progressives are always telling people what is OK to stick where and into whom, and freaking out about bathrooms and sports teams. I find their desire for genital checks especially gross.

        It’s the conservatives who value individual freedom, privacy, and give each person the liberty to live how they want to, with whoever they want to. Just accepting people as they are without prejudice.

        Or maybe I’m completely fucking backwards on that…

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    10 months ago

    I don’t get it, either. Unless and until we have something like ranked choice voting, purity ponies that lodge “protest votes” only help the fascists. And these purity ponies seem to revel in creating more division within the left (and create more Republicans in the process), wanting to excommunicate each other over ivory tower orthodoxy, with the Oppression Olympics being one of the more egregious versions of that…

    • GodlessCommie@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Even with ranked choice voting we will not support your war monger capitalist owned dinosaurs. A 3rd party vote is not the protest vote, voting against something like Democrats voting against Republicans is the protest vote. The act of voting for something like a 3rd party candidate is how democracy is supposed to work.

          • private_ruffles@kbin.social
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            10 months ago

            The time for that vote is in the primaries. THAT’S when you make your stand, have your protest, and try to move the party left. Otherwise you are ignoring someone that you agree with 50% of the time and helping someone you agree with 0% of the time.

            • chakan2@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Who’s our primary choice against Biden? Remember when the DnC fucked Bernie?

              The choice between a soft R vs a hard R is hardly a choice.

              • prole@sh.itjust.works
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                10 months ago

                The DNC didn’t “fuck over” Bernie. He lost. I voted for him in the primary, and would have loved to see him win the nomination. But he didn’t, so I voted for the next best thing (and, you know, the non-fascist).

            • GodlessCommie@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Move the party left? Unless you have the ability to own our own politicians, there is no ‘move the party left’

          • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            This is exactly what I’m talking about. Keep putting more people in power that have zero interest in democracy and possibly plan to end it, and then…what?

          • prole@sh.itjust.works
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            10 months ago

            That’ll teach em!

            Too bad they’ll never have another chance when the GOP finally seizes power as they intend and finishes off what’s left of our democracy.

            But at least you made your point!

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              10 months ago

              How many decades have we heard Democracy is on the line? Or Democracy is on the ballot? There is no democracy in the US, money has a say in our government and policy, the plebs do not. Youve been sold a bill of fear, and you paid full price for it

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                  10 months ago

                  Thats not an indicator theres US democracy. Dems are just as crazy with stolen elections as republicans are.

                  Bet you dont remember the riots the night Trump was inaugurated do you?

            • LarkinDePark
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              10 months ago

              But you people said this last time. If you truly believe your democracy is that shit you should be protesting against it instead of being some kind of willing hostage.

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                9 months ago

                We did say this the last time. You do know there was a coordinated plan to overturn that election right?

                • LarkinDePark
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                  9 months ago

                  Well the Feds rigged the election anyway. Both sides of the party are trying to rig the election. Doesn’t say much for your democracy.

      • CrayonRosary@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The act of voting for something like a 3rd party candidate is how democracy is supposed to work.

        Which is exactly why we need ranked choice voting because otherwise your not expressing your choices accurately. You should be allowed to vote for your candidate of choice and also pick your poison.

        Don’t fight against the one thing that will help third party candidates the most.

        • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          So much this…the Democratic Party is hardly perfect, and I don’t think even most Democrats would claim they are. But, again, the alternative, with the way we vote right now, is…what? Sitting this one out, hoping this time we’ll really show those corporate Democrats? Voting for the Greens, which is barely even a serious party in the United States, and probably is compromised anyway?

          What is the realistic option, I wonder? Sure, propose alternatives during the primary, but in the general…

        • zkfcfbzr@lemmy.world
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          It’s still a bit of a Catch-22 for people who take your view. You think people should vote for the major party candidate they find least bad, while hoping for ranked choice voting so people can instead vote for the candidate they want most.

          But as long as everybody votes the way you do, the parties in power have no electoral incentive at all to change the voting system. It’s only when they start losing a significant portion of their voters to third parties that ranked choice starts being an appealing option to them.

          I say this as someone who voted Green in 2016 (Clinton state), learned my lesson, and voted for Biden in 2020 (Trump state) and will again in 2024. I’ve also been much happier with Biden’s presidency than I expected to be.

          I am a bit encouraged that ranked choice has seen some implementation lately anyways. Hopefully it’ll continue to spread. Anyone know if any new states are considering it soon?

      • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        voting against something like Democrats voting against Republicans is the protest vote

        And most of the “vote Dem or your fascist” people think political action is about voting rather than being the bare minimum. Democrat PACs fund fascist Republican candidate’s primary campaigns too so…

        • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Yes, but those are the choices that it comes down to in the general, really. What do you propose people do?

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            Well it depends on your own politics and goals so I can only speak from my own perspective. It’s a bleak time to be a socialist because we don’t have any political representation in NA really. The route I see is more mimicking what civil rights leaders were doing in the 50s-60s which was organizing labor unions. We don’t have a big cultural moment like they did though and the labor movement isn’t what it used to be, partly because of bipartisan views against it, union busting and policies watering it down, and we’re fragmented, there’s no class consciousness in today’s political dialogue. Huge demonstrations like the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom (where the famous “I have a dream” speech was delivered), or direct actions like the freedom rides, I don’t think is really possible in today’s cultural setting.

            I think if you’re just a regular working person you can begin by organizing and trying to unionize your workplace, but even that has risks. Maybe that just means finding coworkers who share your sentiments, but ultimately it’s talking to people. I’m in a unionized workplace so what do I do next, I try and get involved and do what I can. I’ve also joined my workplace’s DEI committee to input more solidarity and political economy-aware notions of what that means opposed to the default corporate diversity industry’s ideas, I saw an opportunity there and it’s been very well received by some key coworkers… So assuming you’re doing what you can in your job setting, the one thing that will define your “success” in life, the embodiment of your relationship to capital and the economy. Next you can get involved politically. For me that has been things like canvassing for someone who was running for office who shared my political ideology and goals, for the most left wing party in my country. At one point a close friend ran for office so I got a glimpse of that world, and we were able to increase the party’s share of the popular vote in that riding, a highly contested riding between the dominant 2 parties who spend millions of dollars there, so we all considered that a success for a third party candidate there.

            I think meaningful political action is really about the context of your own life and what you’re able to do. No matter what it is, it really comes down to unglamorous work and talking to people. Maybe that’s collecting enough signatures for a motion against a proposed bylaw to be accepted by your municipality, canvassing your own representative by organizing people, volunteering for a candidate you agree with. It could be cultural too like supporting events and causes that your politics aligns with. I have a few direct actions I do personally on the environmental front which involve restoring habitats and bit of civil disobedience (not law-breaking). It’s all work though, it’s not about liking some social media post or saying “agree” under a post like this, that’s all meaningless distraction. Anything done online is meaningless basically.

        • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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          Most people don’t do the bare minimum, so that’s what we’re screaming about. Gotta crawl before you can walk.

    • thoro@lemmy.ml
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      The conditions that allow someone like Trump to come to power are manifested by the neoliberal policies extolled by the Democrat and Republican establishment, alike. Your party leaders are Reaganites/Thatcherites. The biggest policy win for Democrats in recent history was a Heritage Foundation plan that acts as a de facto subsidy to private health insurance.

      And most people do not live in swing states so most “protest votes” do nothing to tip the scales.

      creating more division within the left

      Liberalism isn’t the left.

      create more Republicans in the process

      Create more leftists, actually.

      ivory tower orthodoxy

      It’s the Democratic establishment that abhors populism and typically walks in ivory tower circles. Liberalism and neoliberalism are the dominant ideologies in the Ivy League schools, not socialism.

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      10 months ago

      Joe Biden is still objectively awful, no lack of alternatives is going to change that.

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      10 months ago

      For its victims outside the USA there is no difference which party is in power. Some argue that the Dems have been the most destructive and murderous.

      • uberkalden@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        People argue alot of things. Like giving Ukraine to Russia being a good idea. It doesn’t make them right.

        • LarkinDePark
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          10 months ago

          No it makes them tell on themselves as colonial supremacists who think that it’s within their gift to decide such a thing. These same people deny others their right to send determination.

      • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I’ve heard Chomsky utterly excoriate both Democrats and Republicans (and rightly so, IMHO), especially on matters of foreign policy, however, even he does not take the maximalist position like this.

        • LarkinDePark
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          10 months ago

          Chomsky is a tame and controlled contrarian. I can’t think of a single group on the left that he hasn’t pissed off, even his own cult of anarchism disown him. Recently he’s been found to be inveigled with Epstein. He’s what liberals imagine someone on the left looks like.

  • maporita@unilem.org
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    10 months ago

    The key to getting progression policies passed is voting for Congress. Having a democratic President, whether it’s Biden or someone else, doesn’t matter if we only have a razor-thin majority. We just get held hostage by people like Manchin. We need solid majorities in both House and Senate to achieve anything.

    • KillAllPoorPeople@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Not even needed to be honest. Blue states need to swing their dick around and demand shit, but blue state politicians aren’t doing anything. I know this isn’t the most palatable comparison, but slave states, leading up to the Civil War, swung their dick around and got concession after concession from free state politicians even if they didn’t have nearly enough votes to get legislation they wanted and could have been shut out by simple majorities. Blue states and blue state politicians really need to get some fucking cojones or the US is heading down a path it’s never going to come back from.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Only when you have a razor thin majority, which is the exclusive type of majority we’ve given Democrats in Congress for the past few decades.

        Except for a few months during Obama’s term.

        Which got us the greatest expansion of Medicare in our history and has saved thousands of lives and millions of dollars.

        The ONE example we have of voting in a true Democratic supermajority was a massive success.

      • maporita@unilem.org
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        10 months ago

        They only had a majority in both houses for 2 years and still managed to get the ACA passed which was pretty significant. Even Trump couldn’t undo it. Also in fairness to Obama he was focused on staving off financial collapse for a good part of his first term.

        • farngis_mcgiles@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          im not impressed with them passing a conservative healthcare plan from the 90s that is basically just free money for healthcare companies and still leaves millions of americans without healthcare. the dems didnt even stave off financial collapse they bailed out huge banks and other corporations while doing absolutely nothing for the american people

        • thoro@lemmy.ml
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          9 months ago

          The ACA was a Heritage Foundation health care plan that acts as a de facto subsidy for private health insurance. The best we ever get is still conservative.

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      10 months ago

      California has a bullet proof super majority and they can’t provide a livable wage, affordable housing, universal healthcare which includes dental and mental healthcare, or address homelessness other than hiding them from view. If a state like that can’t provide, why should be trust it to happen at the federal level? Dems could hold everything but 1% of Congress and they would blame that 1% for everything they didn’t do

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I live in CA. Our homeless people have Medi-Cal, which includes dental, vision, and mental care. We have a zoning issue that the NIMBYs aren’t budging on, though I think I have found a workaround involving right of first refusal. Once we fix the zoning issue, our housing costs will come down dramatically.

        Also, remember we only “own” about 1/3 of the land out here. Most of the state is Federal land operated by the BLM

        • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          K I’ll go tell the tent cities that everything is actually going really well for them lol.

          Private healthcare loves the ACA + Medi-Cal cause it keeps their costs high and guarantees tax dollars can pay it. These companies often sell off their debt for fractions of it’s value cause they know they’re not going to get it all back, and they only need a small percentage to turn a ridiculous profit. This is the system these tax scheme substitutes for public healthcare help maintain.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Dude, compare California to a non Democratic majority state, not to the perfect utopia you want.

        Of course California has problems. If they solved those problems, there would be other problems.

        But California has massively fewer problems due to the untouchable Democratic supermajority in the state.

        Parts of California even have ranked choice voting.

      • theuberwalrus@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The major difference between the federal government and state governments is the fact that the federal government is the source of all money. They can spend it into existence. California cannot.

        • GodlessCommie@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          None of the things that would improve the quality of peoples lives better would cost the state a dime. Requiring businesses to pay a livable wage will increase state revenues and a stronger economy. Requiring universal healthcare would increase productivity and provide preventative care which lowers costs to the state, employers, and employees.

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            9 months ago

            It seemed that your original comment boiled down to, if a state can’t do something, how can the federal government possibly do it, and I gave a major reason why. Also, healthcare isn’t free unfortunately, and since it cannot be tied to employment, it would have to come from the government.

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              9 months ago

              it would have to come from the government

              The government can regulate coverage and medicine. The core infrastructure is already in place through Medicare and Medicaid in every state.

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    10 months ago

    Look, I get the Dems are our only vehicle for Progressive policies becoming reality because I know we’re never going to move away from FPTP voting any time soon. I just don’t like having to go along with the same corporate greed. It feels very two steps forward, one step back.

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      10 months ago

      It feels very two steps forward, one step back.

      And it is. But that still equates to a step forward. Voting red is a legit step (or three) backwards.

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        10 months ago

        Voting red is getting your legs broken so you can never step again. The fact that they tried a fucking coup thst every one of those motherfuckers would have gone with if successful should not be forgotten.

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    10 months ago

    Cause he’s a fuckin mummy John. We are tired of electing boomers that don’t understand fuckin computers.

    Selling us a tube TV in the year of flat screens.

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      10 months ago

      This president made an empty promise about continuing to work for paid sick leave after preventing a strike by railworkers at the end of 2022. Except, that it actually worked. Almost every union did get paid sick leave for its members within six months aided by continued pressure from the White House.

      He’s a pretty lousy union buster.

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    10 months ago

    Primaries are for ideas and ideals. General elections are for harm reduction.