• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1457 months ago

    That headline is golden. But boy is it depressing that this is where we’re at as a nation. And it’s all because the GOP has been taken over by fascists and their army of useful idiots in tacky red hats.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      707 months ago

      What’s depressing is if literally any of our institutions acted how they were supposed to, this wouldn’t be an issue.

      The 4th estate is failing the country because they’ve been bought by oligarchs.

      The judicial apparatus is failing because it’s been bought by oligarchs.

      The political apparatus is failing because it’s been bought by oligarchs.

      Man I wish we could put our finger on the reason why everything is coming down around us…

      • @barsquid
        link
        357 months ago

        It’s awesome how we can trace so much evil back to Southern Strategy and Reaganomics.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          217 months ago

          It’s very frustrating, yeah. All the progress this country was making was thwarted by a bunch of butt-hurt southerners and racists.

        • @Archelon
          link
          67 months ago

          Hell, you can take it further back to the failure of Reconstruction and the resulting propaganda wave creating a massive reactionary base.

    • @ZagamTheVile
      link
      637 months ago

      Remember when Dean had to drop out because he showed excitement about doing well?

      • FaceDeer
        link
        fedilink
        207 months ago

        To be fair, his campaign was already on the rocks at that point. It wasn’t the scream alone that did him in.

          • @commandar
            link
            127 months ago

            He came to suck years later.

            At the time he was considerably farther to the left than the rest of the field short of Dennis Kucinich. Opposition to the Iraq war was central to his campaign when half the party was still trying to justify it. He wanted to push universal healthcare before that was a common position within the party. He was on the cutting edge of promoting gay rights and was extremely popular in the gay community when that community didn’t have the voice it does now. His stint as DNC chair built real party infrastructure and helped set the stage for Obama’s 2008 run.

            The country – and the Democratic Party – were considerably more conservative 20 years ago and he definitely helped push things toward where we are now.

            That said, he’s absolutely said and done some things in recent year that make it pretty clear he’s not the progressive vanguard he was back then. He’s stood still, and arguably regressed, while the country kept moving. It’s unfortunate. But I think it’s also a mistake to dismiss him outright; he was a pretty important figure in getting the party to where it is now.

      • @troglodytis
        link
        27 months ago

        So… Trump met with a probation officer that is assigned to his case currently. Right? So… His probation officer.

        Super curious. What about this hair makes you think you needed to split it(and edit your error without acknowledging its correction)?

          • @troglodytis
            link
            1
            edit-2
            7 months ago

            Well just under the headline the article states “pre-sentencing”

            So you didn’t take the time to understand the article, didn’t take the opportunity to realize your lack of understanding of the various roles and duties of a New York probation officer, and still haven’t, even though multiple inaccuracies in your statements have been pointed out to you.

            Obtuse throughout.

            Edit: engaging has been my mistake. I thought your original comment was in regards to the headline. This makes clear you are speaking to the article. Had I understood that, I would have not replied, as there would be little point.