Former president Donald Trump disseminated on social media on Friday an image of President Biden with his hands and feet tied and his mouth gagged, the latest example of the Republican candidate’s use of increasingly violent rhetoric and imagery this campaign season.

The image can be seen about halfway through a 20-second video that Trump posted on his Truth Social site. The post says it was recorded Thursday on Long Island, where Trump traveled this week to attend a wake for a recently killed police officer.

In the video, two trucks decorated with giant Trump flags and altered American flags are driving on a highway. On the tailgate door of one of the trucks is the image of Biden lying horizontally, bound and gagged.

Trump has a history of sharing and promoting violent images featuring his perceived enemies.

  • @[email protected]
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    -68 months ago

    You said trump doesnt deal with issues but he does more of it than biden does if you look at immigration.

    • @[email protected]
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      28 months ago

      I don’t believe Trump will actually follow through on most of what he says, because that’s what happened last time he was in office. And honestly, if he does win, I hope he doesn’t follow through because his immigration policies suck.

      That said, Biden’s immigration policies suck too. I don’t like the “diversity lottery” or the weird 8-year plan he proposes.

      • @[email protected]
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        -38 months ago

        I dont think any politician tends to do what they say, and trump is more braggadocios than most and will claim he will do more than he will by a long shot. But I can look at what he wanted to do, what he was stopped from doing, and what Biden is doing and see that I dont care about Trumps rude words when Biden is just so so shitty.

        • @[email protected]
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          -28 months ago

          They both suck, just in opposite ways. Trump seems to forget that our country was and is built by immigrants, and Biden seems to forget that following the law should be rewarded, not breaking the law.

          If I could vote for “empty seat,” I might just do it.

          • @[email protected]
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            -18 months ago

            I am going to vote for the libertarian candidate. Of all the groups they are the most right about everything, and since I am in Idaho, it doesnt really matter who I vote for president.

            • @[email protected]
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              -18 months ago

              Same, but I’m just south of you in Utah.

              But it also kind of depends on who the libertarian candidate is. I’m not a fan of the Mises caucus, but Charles Ballay seems okay. It really doesn’t matter anyway, because the Republican candidate will win regardless (was pretty funny when McMullin took enough votes in 2016 and Trump got <50%).

              • @[email protected]
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                08 months ago

                What is your issue with the mises caucaus, I dont think they are perfect, but I dont know a group with a better grasp of economics, and they have good logic behind when they dont go along with traditional libertarian stances (like open borders).

                • @[email protected]
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                  28 months ago

                  They seem like right wing libertarians, basing things too much on property rights and less on the NAP. They just seem like conservatives that are okay with some recreational drugs and same gender relationships.

                  That said, they haven’t been in control all that long and their platform seems pretty decent on their website, so I’ll give them a shot.

                  I’m generally a fan of the Chicago School of economics (Milton Friedman), mostly because I think the Austrian School goes too far in allowing things to fail. I’m against Keynesianism though, and I like the idea of competing currencies.

                  I don’t know enough about what they believe, but I have seen some alarming articles about how they might be courting the more extreme factions of the Republican Party. Whether those fears are FUD remains to be seen.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    18 months ago

                    I can see that critique being valid, but I dont necessarily think that being conservative is bad if it complies with the NAP, especially because being conservative is kind of vague. What I think is that they are essentially they are the party of The Pauls, Thomas Massey, and (maybe) Justin Amash, and when I look at their actions I rarely find things they have done wrong. If we look at Ron Paul, and the things he has been saying for decades, to the best of my knowledge he seems to be proven right every time.

                    If you podcast my favorites are “Part of the Problem” and “Liberty Lockdown”, those are both Mises caucus. I dont agree with everything, but they have a good rational behind their beliefs.