• Snot Flickerman
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    3 months ago

    The most sinister part of the chaos that Trump brews, honestly, is the deep apathy and antipathy towards politics that seems pervasive in society. Everyone was already tired by capitalism, but post-COVID the grind and the demand has spun ever higher while Trump keeps orchestrating chaos from, well, not even the fucking shadows but more like the toilet at Mar-a-Lago.

    It breaks a lot of people, and its fair, they’re just scraping by, worrying about their own. They have their own serious problems, medical issues, sorrow, loss, you name it, people are suffering. It’s validly hard for anyone to find the time for it and they become disconnected and disoriented.

    It’s fucking maddening that it works. It feels like humanity never actually left the dark ages.

    Anyway, quality Mother Jones article, good breakdown on why a lot of people’s memory of the past seems to forget the worst excesses. Explains a lot about the Bush administration, too, really.

    • IninewCrow
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      293 months ago

      I remember reading something like that years ago … that there are some historians who think that we haven’t left the dark ages yet. In everything else with technology and information we’ve progressed but we still think and act the same way we have for the past 2000 years.

      And the more I read about the subject over the years the more I realized that as human animals, our modern species have only been around for about 50,000 years. In all that time, we’ve only ever been fearful, short sighted, frightened creatures that wanted everything as quickly and as much as possible all the time. We couldn’t do it before but now we can.

      In that 50,000 year timeline we’re only on the very tip of history … it’s going to take us millennia to change.

      • Ech
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        153 months ago

        Just to clarify, 50,000 years is 50 millennia. If you meant millions if years, the term for that is mega-anna. And eons for billions.

        Other than that, I more or less agree. Humans have developed technologically much faster than we’ve been able to evolve/adapt to the changes we’re creating, and the stress from that is growing. Occasionally I wonder if it’ll prove too much for us in the end.

        • @Clinicallydepressedpoochie
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          3 months ago

          I dunno, couldn’t humans short circuit evolutionary trends by hacking their own genetics?

          • Ech
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            33 months ago

            Evolution being slow is a good thing. Trying to shortcut it would just be a more direct way to destroy the species. Also a great example of the kind of thing I’m referring to.

        • @[email protected]
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          43 months ago

          I did not know about mega-anna as a term before. Is it always hyphenated, or did you add that for emphasis?

          • Ech
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            53 months ago

            Had to look it up myself. I saw both, but went with the hyphen for clarity.

          • Ech
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            33 months ago

            Yeah, I’ve wondered if it’s something like that. Seems like a fairly easy trap to fall into, but hard to say for sure with only our singular reference point.

            • @samus12345
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              3 months ago

              My guess is that in order for life to survive long enough to get to the point where it becomes sapient, it has to be selfish and short-sighted, which becomes a tragically fatal hindrance.

              “We’re not gonna make it, are we? People, I mean.”

              “It’s in your nature to destroy yourselves.”

              “Yeah. Major drag, huh?”

      • @btaf45
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        33 months ago

        our modern species have only been around for about 50,000 years.

        Homo Sapiens have been around for 300,000 years.

        • IninewCrow
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          13 months ago

          Yes … but a human looking homo sapien from 300,000 years ago would not be able to understand our world today or be capable of imagining and thinking like we do. They might have looked like us but they didn’t think like us … that cognitive development didn’t happen until about 50,000-60,000 years ago. I’m no expert but in all the reading I’ve done, our modern selves and people that think, act and imagine like us didn’t exist until about 50,000 years ago.

  • OBJECTION!
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    3 months ago

    This is such a condescending form of analysis that totally misses the mark. It’s basically just, “Trump was bad, but some people still like him. Why? Must be because they’re just too dumb to remember things.” There’s no actual evidence that people have forgotten any of the stuff they mention, it’s purely just that.

    To attribute the issue to memory would imply that there was widespread agreement while he was in office that he was bad, which has faded over time. But Trump’s approval rating for most of his time in office hovered around 40%, similar to Biden’s. So what’s actually happening is not that people were on the same page about Trump being bad when the events of his presidency were fresh in their minds, but rather, that his supporters never agreed with/cared about the things the article is saying in the first place. Framing it around memory is nonsense.

    • @Warl0k3
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      303 months ago

      Seriously. “Why do you own all these gasmasks???” my mother asks, somehow forgetting the several consecutive years where trump’s thugs were regularly gassing me & all of my friends…

      • FuglyDuck
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        93 months ago

        were you at protests?

        • @Warl0k3
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          153 months ago

          Between the teargas and the smoke from trump’s cuts to the forestry service I used to just have a couple in my glovebox.

    • abff08f4813c
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      23 months ago

      Same. At the same time, good thing I don’t, so I can take it to the voting booth.

  • @captainlezbian
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    483 months ago

    One of the biggest things I remember about his presidency was the fucking embarrassment. Other countries were mocking us and for good reason.

    • @HWK_290
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      303 months ago

      I recently rewatched the video of the UN assembly laughing to his face. Insanity that he’s still respected as any kind of statesman

      • @captainlezbian
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        73 months ago

        He isn’t. He’s just got people who vote for him anyways

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      53 months ago

      That’s not unusual for Americans, though. Bush, Clinton, Reagan, Nixon… Americans have been putting up turds to the Oval Office since President Kennedy’s term abruptly ended.

      • @btaf45
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        43 months ago

        That’s not unusual for Americans, though. Bush, Clinton, Reagan, Nixon

        All of those guys were way more respected than Trump. And of the rest, all of the others not Bush jr were way more respected than Bush jr.

        The current period IS very unusual for how badly our reputation has fallen. Although you could also say America’s reputation around the world was unusually high from 1945-2000.

      • quicklime
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        13 months ago

        Turns out Kennedy too was more of a turd than most people suspected at the time. Not in the same league with your list, but still a real mess once you know enough about him.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil
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          -13 months ago

          Turd on turd violence. But it did seem like Kennedy was ready to fix Truman’s mistake in kicking off the Cold War.

          And then…

          • @rottingleaf
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            3 months ago

            Once you read enough about post-WWII Soviet military doctrine, you’ll realize that the Cold War is the reason the Hot War didn’t happen. Not like Vietnam and so on, but real hot.

            Why? Because that doctrine was quite simple. Soviet ground forces after its adoption sucked donkey balls because they were intended to mop up what remains after nuking Europe. BMP-1 sucked donkey balls because it wasn’t an armored transport, it was a protected transport. To rapidly cross rivers and swamps on irradiated terrain, while kinda protecting people inside from radiation, not from bullets even. The whole reason USSR’s ground forces after WWII had a reduced peacetime component, but huge mobilization plans and mass warfare approaches, is that they were expected to die from radiation a lot, so why bank on quality.

            EDIT: And contrary to the common perception, even in WWII human waves were not the tactic of choice of USSR’s military. So this was a conscious change, an enormous reform. I can say I can’t avoid the feeling of huge respect for people who would really tackle the numbers and warfare theory to produce such a plan to nuke half the world and possibly emerge as a victor. However, the reforms after that plan made already corrupt Soviet bureaucracy even more corrupt, and discarded experienced and principled people, recent world war veterans, from the military in droves, which long-term made USSR’s failure certain. Before the post-war rebuilding and Khruschev some of its institutions and systems were still respected. Stalin’s regime was horrible, but it was also less corrupt. After Stalin’s death and the following events, nobody managed to say “we failed and we should sit and think”. Well, Kosygin’s reforms which were not completed, growth of MIC, use of soldiers and students as workforce, slow decay, KGB thieves\assassins and degenerate fascists becoming the ruling class since late 70s, the rest is known.

      • @errer
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        43 months ago

        Please pull over I don’t want to go down this lane anymore

    • FuglyDuck
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      13 months ago

      bro, I’m trying to figure out what cocktail- other than the right-aide- causes this amnesia.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      A great video but he forgot leaving the Kurds high and dry and dealing with then releasing thousands of Taliban in Afghanistan.

  • 😈MedicPig🐷BabySaver😈
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    273 months ago

    A) I remember.

    B) I wish I didn’t.

    C) I wish the insanity never happened.

    D) Anyone have a Neuralyzer from MIB that I could borrow?

    • NickwithaC
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      93 months ago

      Forget the neuralyzer, use the time machine from Men in Black 3, go right back to 2000 and rip every single one of those hanging chads off of the ballot papers!

  • @[email protected]
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    263 months ago

    Many people are kind of stupid. Not ignorant. But like, incapable or unwilling to evaluate what’s a good source and what’s nonsense. Also incapable of drawing plausible conclusions even when given good sources. It’s all emotional. It’s how you can have stuff like “the outgroup have all the money and power, but they’re also poor and taking all our welfare” at the same time. Feels truthy. Anti-vaxxers get the high of bonding with their anti-vax friends and feeling like they’re part of the in-group.

    There’s not really an answer. Invest in public education for 100 years, maybe. But we’re going always going to have authoritarians shitting life up for everyone.

  • billwashere
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    183 months ago

    Waking up everyday wondering what batshit crazy thing he had either just said or was going to say that day. It was exhausting. And then the pandemic hit and he was suggesting the most batshit crazy things about that. And then he somehow was able to politicize the most common sense things we could do. It was absolutely the most stressed I’ve ever been for that extended period of time.

    I rarely completely disagree with people and I’m pretty good at empathizing and putting myself in their shoes. I may not agree with them but I can see where they’re coming from and can see some good in them. That is to say I usually don’t hate people. I hate this man. I will be glad when he’s not around to spread the chaos and just outright stupidity he spouts and surrounds himself with. This planet will be better off without him in it.

    • @Fades
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      3 months ago

      Waking up everyday wondering what batshit crazy thing he had either just said or was going to say that day. It was exhausting.

      For you? Yeah it was exhausting, you poor piece of shit. For the media? It was the best goddamn four years of their lives. Every morning the people would rush to see what insane shit he did that day and the news media farmed the FUCK outta them clicks.

      Not that the CBS executive chairman and CEO might vote for the Republican presidential frontrunner, but he likes the ad money Trump and his competitors are bringing to the network.

      “It may not be good for America, but it’s damn good for CBS,” he said of the presidential race.

      Moonves called the campaign for president a “circus” full of “bomb throwing,” and he hopes it continues.

      “Most of the ads are not about issues. They’re sort of like the debates,” he said.

      “Man, who would have expected the ride we’re all having right now? … The money’s rolling in and this is fun,” he said.

      • Leslie Moonves CBS CEO at the time

      They desperately want to drag us back

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    I recently got back from visiting my in-laws in rural Appalachia. All the bad things that happened during the Trump presidency happened under Biden to them.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      I remember seeing that with Clinton, post Bush sr. All the bad stuff done by Reagan & Bush was blamed on Clinton as he worked to clean up their messes.

      Again, with Obama after Bush.

      Traditional American politics.

  • /home/pineapplelover
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    103 months ago

    Someone needs to compile a list of all the heinous shit this idiot has done. Make it a website or something.

  • @FinishingDutch
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    3 months ago

    Heck, between the media, The Donald on Reddit and the whole pandemic, people were rightfully getting burned out on everything. I don’t really have any active memories between march 2020 and early 2023. That whole time period feels like a big blur. And that’s just me as a European. I can imagine it’s way worse for people in the US…

  • @[email protected]
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    93 months ago

    I just assumed that they forget the horrid shit because of some twisted confirmation bias.

    Everyone keeps pointing it out, and they keep telling themselves about the “good” things he’s done. Reinforcing their own confirmation bias.

    I first heard about this phenomenon in “how to win friends and influence people”… It’s a book, crazy, right? It’s about human nature, and how arguing with someone often results in them arguing for their point, further entrenching them in their opinion. While they don’t convince you with their arguments, they convince themselves and that makes arguing with someone a difficult thing to do, and “win” at (by convincing the opposing person of your viewpoint).

    The fact is, the more we argue with them about Trump, the more they have to argue for him being someone that’s going to “make America great again”, and the further they get entrenched into that viewpoint.

    The sooner more people realize that this is a viscous cycle of mental violence and simply decide not to continue, the better. Obviously that’s hard to do when you are faced with the very real possibility of him being reelected, and essentially bringing back the Nazi party with him…

    Idk what’s the right thing to do, but clearly, nobody is going to change the minds of the deranged “MAGA” crowd anytime soon.

    • Stern
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      123 months ago

      I just assumed that they forget the horrid shit because of some twisted confirmation bias.

      Personally I figured it was that so much bad shit happened so constantly that it got remembered as just one bad thing rather then one hundred bad things. Damn near every day Trump was doing something new and stupid.

    • @RememberTheApollo_
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      73 months ago

      and they keep telling themselves about the “good” things he’s done.

      Thing is that they view a lot of the shitty things he did as good.

      So when I see someone pose that we’ve forgotten the bad stuff, I don’t think that’s the case for a lot of people. They view some portion of the bad as good.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      Yeah, everything I’ve been hearing in the last couple of years has talked about how traditional fact checking methods do not sway beliefs. The few things I’ve heard work are innoculation and ridicule.

      Inoculation (telling someone about conspiracies before they’re encountered) seems like it could be used in favor of whatever ideology, not just the truth.

      And ridicule (couch sex memes and “weird”), seems to work because it specifically targets the “follow the strong man” approach that many fools take to belief building. Like that can’t be applicable generally, can it?

      I am yet to learn of a solid framework + practical methods which work to guide people toward belief based in reality.

      Perhaps it’s multi-faceted. First make them feel like part of a community, which grounds them in experience and removes the most insane conspiracies/fear, then they’ll be grounded enough to accept some media & scientific literacy education?

  • @TankovayaDiviziya
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    53 months ago

    Is it just me, or I thought it’s a general consensus long ago that voters have the memory of a goldfish? Why would forgetting the worst of the Trump presidency be any different? Even people have somehow rehabilitated George W. Bush in spite of deliberate lying by his administration, and dragging the United States into a needless conflict for 23 years that cost $1 trillion.

    • @btaf45
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      13 months ago

      Even people have somehow rehabilitated George W. Bush in spite of deliberate lying by his administration, and dragging the United States into a needless conflict for 23 years that cost $1 trillion.

      Each new GOP president is so much worse than the last guy was that we start thinking maybe the last guy wasn’t as bad as we had remembered.