• @[email protected]
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    1824 months ago

    No surprise there.

    After Knesset members actually got up and angrily defended the supposed right to rape Palestinians and the finance minister lamented the fact that the rest of the world would condemn arranging for the death by starvation of 2 million Palestinians, there’s pretty much no low left that’s too low for the Israeli government.

    • @NegativeInf
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      594 months ago

      Hit the bottom and kept on digging. Next stop, upper mantle.

    • @AidsKitty
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      -354 months ago

      Pot calling kettle black, sir.

      • @Rottcodd
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        114 months ago

        Mmm…no

        It’s “some random guy with a working moral framework, the ability to feel empathy, and some measure of respect for the rights of other humans and simple human decency calling a bunch of murderous xenophobic psychopaths murderous xenophobic psychopaths.” So it’s in fact nothing like that.

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    394 months ago

    It bothers me that voters aren’t going to find support for Israel to be a disqualifying issue.

    • @orrk
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      424 months ago

      well, show me who you can vote for, that actually has a reasonable chance of getting in, who isn’t supporting Israel.

      America currently has the choice of literal fascist takeover, or just milk-toast “liberal” policy.

      • @TexasDrunk
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        144 months ago

        Just so you’re aware, it’s milquetoast.

        I agree with everything you say.

        • barooboodoo (he/him)
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          44 months ago

          I’m not so sure about that, it often comes on the side with a big milksteak boiled over hard.

          • @TexasDrunk
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            54 months ago

            Well it depends on how you like your jellybeans with it.

        • @orrk
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          14 months ago

          no, i mean something so bland and white mayo would seem spicy, toast soaked in milk

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        4 months ago

        To your first point, there are none unless you’re willing to vote third party.

        To your second point, I disagree. Fascism isn’t some specter on the horizon. It’s already here, and the only choice is between the flavors that have been forced upon us.

        In the US, milque-toast liberal policy is fascist. Look at the costs of health care and education, the astronomical spending on war, the patronage of the big banks and exemptions they receive for their crimes, and the deliberate and escalated impoverishment of the poor and milddle class. (Not to mention the continued and escalated militarization of the police.)

        • @[email protected]
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          124 months ago

          that actually has a reasonable chance of getting in

          unless you’re willing to vote third party

          To be abundantly clear, with the system as designed in the US, third party (presidential) candidates do not have any chance of “getting in” this election, let alone a “reasonable” chance (in certain areas, some options may exist for lesser political appointments).

          Voting third party is at best a weak attempt to signal preference for future elections, but at worst a gift to whichever party or candidate you consider to be “most bad”.

          By all means, protest vote in the primaries, campaign for candidates you believe in, and most importantly, discuss the issues that are important to you to help bolster public awareness, but please, PLEASE, don’t fall for the con that is voting 3rd party in the election.

          I don’t know who your third party favorite is, but do yourself a favor and look at who is donating to their campaign, and what other campaigns those donors support - a lot of money is thrown at 3rd party candidates to draw votes away from credible political opponents.

          • FlashMobOfOne
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            144 months ago

            I don’t have any illusions about this or any presidential election.

            The person who wins will do the bidding of the billionaire class, and that’s how it’s been since the 60’s. (Though the wealth disparity has increased exponentially since Reagan’s presidency.)

            We haven’t had a president who did anything meaningful for the poor and middle class since LBJ.

            • @[email protected]
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              54 months ago

              No president has ever been or will ever be perfect, but we’ve had some good steps since LBJ:

              Clinton’s increased taxes on the rich, defense spending cuts, etc, got us our first and last government surplus years since '69, and made a little progress on welfare, but that was largely hampered by a Republican takeover of the House in '94

              Obama passed the ACA, which was pretty meaningful to the middle class. Again, further progress got hampered by Republicans in congress in the later years of his presidency

              Biden has passed the Inflation Reduction Act, which has lots of progressive incentives that benefit middle class families, including tax breaks for home efficiency improvements, renewable energy, and electric vehicles. He has also helped wipe away billions of dollars in student loan debts, benefiting middle class families (but again, you can thank Republicans for that not moving further or quicker)

              You’ll note the constant tend though - since the president doesn’t write the laws, without congressional support, progressive ambitions get killed.

              • FlashMobOfOne
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                4 months ago

                and made a little progress on welfare

                He famously cut welfare, and did a great service to furthering fascism via the '94 crime bill and ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’. He also used the the White House has his own personal pleasure house and gave out nights in the Lincoln bedroom in exchange for campaign donations, when he wasn’t taking trips on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane.

                Obama passed the ACA, which was pretty meaningful to the middle class

                The ACA only matters if you have the money to withstand being price-gouged. Most people don’t, sadly. What’s even worse is Obama had the power in Congress to make real change, but opted against single-payer in return for lobbyist contributions. Obama made big promises and then pretended to be powerless, but the rich were rewarded beyond measure while the rest of us lived through the foreclosure crisis.

                without congressional support

                The Trump Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and the Affordable Care Act were passed with simple majorities. It stands to reason that when the president has Congress, they can do what they want if they’re actually willing to make change.

                That is why I don’t have any hope for the future of this country. The two previous Democratic presidents both had Congress for half of their terms, and the poor and middle classes got poorer.

                No president has ever been or will ever be perfect

                True but the definition of ‘imperfect’ has changed vastly over the last 50 years, which is why fascism is a reality rather than the specter most Americans seem to think it is.

                Two weeks ago 99% of the country was arguing with each other in support of two candidates in clear cognitive decline, and it took a very public cognitive meltdown to change that.

                • @[email protected]
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                  54 months ago

                  Trump would personally push the button to exterminate the Gazans. That’s what we’re up against. I suggest you put your energy into defeating him, then we put Kamala’s feet to the fire so she listens, as she has already signalled her intention to do so.

              • FlashMobOfOne
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                124 months ago

                Also, sorry I had to edit my other reply a zillion times. My Internet’s being spotty this evening.

          • ???OP
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            24 months ago

            The democratic system in America is broken… what is democracy if you just constantly converge onto a two party system?

        • @[email protected]
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          74 months ago

          This is the kind of comment that prisoners of the two party system, Lemmy.world smug libs downvote.

          Keep speaking the truth regardless of the brigading.

        • @Sabin10
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          34 months ago

          That’s unregulated capitalism. You’re describing capitalism, not fascism.

          • FlashMobOfOne
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            164 months ago

            I mean, you could argue that we’re missing a dictator, but the billionaire class that actually owns this government feels sufficiently dictatorial to me.

            The only upside in all this is that economic disparity has gotten so bad that it’s forced labor unions to get stronger by necessity.

        • @Tarball
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          04 months ago

          Reliably, the “both-sides-are-the-same” poster.

          • FlashMobOfOne
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            4 months ago

            What did I say that’s factually incorrect?

            The positions of the Democrats and Republicans are literally the same on the issue of Israel. (And others, if we’re going off their record.)

            For instance, Joe Biden has been a vocal supporter of militarized police. He even mocked the Defund movement in his first SOTU speech.

            • @[email protected]
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              24 months ago

              The democratic party is not particularly good on Israel, but you’re deeply deeply ignorant if you can’t see how much worse the Republicans are.

              • FlashMobOfOne
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                34 months ago

                On the issue of Israel they’re exactly the same. They make sure Israel gets our money and weapons no matter the extent of the horrors they unleash.

                • @orrk
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                  14 months ago

                  ok, so here’s the difference, democrats are sort of locked into the whole “our only ally in the m.east” bit, republicans want us to step up weapons deliveries and just send our own troops to help cleans gaza, a bit of a difference.

            • ???OP
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              14 months ago

              But have Democrats not been quitting Biden’s admin?

              • FlashMobOfOne
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                24 months ago

                If they have, then that’s to their credit. Sadly, it hasn’t been enough.

                • ???OP
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                  24 months ago

                  I think a decent amount of people have quit. It hasn’t been enough because the pushback from Biden’s administration in ignoring them is pretty stubborn and strong. I think both parties have divided on this but I feel like a larger portion of Democrats, when compared to Republicans, are pro-Palestinian or at least were opposed enough to the bloodshed to quit their posts. The views of these two groups should not be expected to be generalizable at such a critical and decisive time.

    • Chozo
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      174 months ago

      In my opinion, you shouldn’t qualify or disqualify a candidate over a single issue. While it sucks that nobody on the ticket supports this particular view, there aren’t a lot of other constructive options available.

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        44 months ago

        In my opinion, you shouldn’t qualify or disqualify a candidate over a single issue.

        I think that’s fair for most issues.

        On Israel though… I mean… at what point is the horror and our government’s support of it enough to support a change?

    • A'random Guy
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      54 months ago

      No, don’t care don’t want trump2. Whine into the void for all I care

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        -104 months ago

        It’s like I said: two flavors of fascism.

        You have the more civilized kind helmed by the Democrats, where people are oppressed and killed by poverty wages, lack of housing and education, militarized police, and cuts to the social safety net in favor of war.

        And then you have the Trumpist flavor, where all of those things happen too and he says mean things.

        The lofty speeches don’t make much of a difference to me when viewing what the two parties actually do.

    • @auzy
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      4 months ago

      You again eh.

      The guy who wants people to vote for Trump…

      Again, I don’t think anyone wants the Israel war

      But, Trump is so much worse. It’s not even a comparison at this time.

      Trump is literally raping women. And at this time, that’s the least of what he’s done

      But I suspect you’re taking this approach because you know directly telling people to vote for Trump will get you down votes, but if people check your history, it’s clear that’s what you want…

    • @[email protected]
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      14 months ago

      A lot of discussion in some replies to this, but what I want to know is what you want people to actually do?

      Do you think people should vote this upcoming election? If so, who do you think they should vote for?

      What do think would happen if people reading this thread (and no one else, let’s not pretend we have any sort of real influence here) followed your advice? Would it actually make the world a better place?

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        4 months ago

        I know full well I’m shouting into the void. My side has less than 1% of the vote every election. Nothing I say matters beyond the enjoyment of discussion.

        The conservatives won and fascism is what we’re getting for it.

        I just want people who call themselves liberal to take a moment and actually think about what Democrats do once they’re voted into power.

        • KillingTimeItself
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          24 months ago

          I know full well I’m shouting into the void. My side has less than 1% of the vote every election. Nothing I say matters beyond the enjoyment of discussion.

          who the fuck are you voting for? Nosferatu?

          • FlashMobOfOne
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            34 months ago

            I am a Green Party voter, so Jill Stein.

            • KillingTimeItself
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              24 months ago

              ah, yeah classic green party shenanigans unfortunately. I have beef with the green party for this exact reason, but at least you’re voting.

              • FlashMobOfOne
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                44 months ago

                I have beef with the green party

                We have beef with Democrats too. They fight harder to keep us off the ballot than they do to get themselves elected.

                • KillingTimeItself
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                  04 months ago

                  based, we should unite, greens and dems together would change literally nothing, but not having the greens party exist would arguably be more productive :)

                  The only thing the greens have ever done is fuck over germany’s power grid. (this might be a slight bit of hyperbole, but still)

    • ???OP
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      04 months ago

      On some level I like to believe many people think of it as a disqualifying issue but recognize that this is a bad time and a bad system to disqualify anyone.

      That is entirely the fault of the faulty democratic system. Voters like to think they have the power but they don’t have much in America. They can’t even all swing to a third candidate and vote for them.

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        4 months ago

        After this last primary, I can’t agree with you.

        The Democrats had Marianne Williamson, who is by far a more moral and progressive candidate, and wasn’t suffering clear and public cognitive decline.

        Zero votes.

        The Republicans had Nikki Haley and a host of others, who will also some degree of asshole, weren’t nearly the same degree of asshole as Trump. (And also weren’t suffering very public cognitive decline.)

        Zero votes.

        Is the system bad? Yes. But folks who vote party every single time always seem to pick the worst candidates too, and it’s eminently clear that genocide and war crimes aren’t considered disqualifying factors in voters’ choices.

        Partisans, in essence, vote for whoever NBC and Fox tell them to.

  • @Sarmyth
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    334 months ago

    Not a probe to find the perpetrators, just who tattled. Classic.

  • @UnderpantsWeevil
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    234 months ago

    Can’t wait to meet the Israeli Julian Assange and Edward Snowden.

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        34 months ago

        What’s really scary to me is that I’m pretty confident the next Al Qaeda is having its origin story right now.

  • @Doorbook
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    214 months ago

    This nice to have to keep people who say only “democracy in the middle East” and “not apartheid state” quite…

  • @hexdream
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    134 months ago

    So they are taking tips on how to handle leaks from the US government?

  • @[email protected]
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    114 months ago

    They will sic prince bonesaw’s squad of professional butchers to cleanse the earth of all traces of this crime.

  • @Sam_Bass
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    44 months ago

    A perfect demonstration of how deeply ingrained in the middle eastern mentality is the utter disrespect for human life so that these things are fully legitimized over there. And if our repuglicans had their way it would be here too

    • AreaSIX
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      4 months ago

      “ingrained in the middle eastern mentality”? I’d have a look at my own mentality if I was this comfortable generalizing several hundreds of millions of people like that. It seems like you have disdain for both victim and perpetrator irrespective of which in your mind is which, because they’re middle eastern. Weird.