Like many Americans, Carolina Giuliani was paralyzed over the prospect that Donald Trump — the man she blames for ruining her father and damaging her family — could be close to returning to the White House.

“It’s a hard phenomenon to understand. It definitely is,” Carolina Giuliani said. “I view Trump as a disease, and I think it’s really important to remember that with every disease, prevention is a much more effective strategy than treatment. … I thought we had cured ourselves of it the first time, but it doesn’t seem like we have.

“And I think if he becomes the president again, we may have a terminal illness in our country. And that really, really scares me.”


🗳️ Register to vote: https://vote.gov/

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    282 hours ago

    She’s close. Trump isn’t the disease, though, he’s a symptom. The disease is Christian nationalism, and it’s been festering far longer than Trump has been on the national scene.

    The disease lies in the Heritage Foundation, the Federalist Society, and a few other groups hell-bent on turning the US into a theocracy. They’ve been working on this for a very long time, and have been testing the fences for decades, like velociraptors, only making their move now they’ve found all the weaknesses they need to succeed.

    It worries me how focussed people are on the threat trump poses, because even if he dropped dead today, it would only be a temporary inconvenience to these dominionists who have infiltrated nearly every facet of the US government. They will not stop if trump disappears, or if Harris is elected.

    Please, watch The Family documentary. You’ll be amazed and likely sick at how deeply they’ve embedded themselves.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    62 hours ago

    Trump is the vector, not the disease itself.

    The disease is the curdling rage of the (mostly) working class that’s massively failed to achieve the American Dream™ that was promised to them, which has been perfectly heightened misdirected and cultivated by decades of right wing radio talk show hosts, psuedo ‘philosophers’, outright racist and religious extremists, conservative ‘think tanks’ lending credibility to failed economic doctrines, 30+ years of conservative influence on our public education systems essentially ruining it to the point that now only around 10% of Americans are capable of comparing and contrasting news coverage critically… etc etc.

    Trump was just the first presidential candidate to completely drop the pretense and show the country that its fine to go totally mask off with your inane bullshit falsehoods, that there is no real need for anything other than appeal via signifiers and cliches and dogwhistle.

    Actual policy means nothing, only spin.

    Actual hypocrisy means nothing, just sling more baseless shit at others.

    Reality means nothing, everyone else is wrong, you know in your heart what I am telling you, no matter how contradictory or incomprehensible it is, is true…

    … because it allows you to feel rightfully indignant.

    This has always been the strong undercurrent amongst conservatives.

    Trump was just the vector that metastisized it into basically mass psychosis.

  • @DarkCloud
    link
    8
    edit-2
    2 hours ago

    People feel wronged and betrayed by the system, and like they need that reflected in who they vote for as their representative.

    He is that person for those people (hence why they love the mugshot).

    The Republican side of politics knows this is the emotional driver, so they direct most of their media to that kind of grievance politics, and claiming they’ll “fix” these persecution issues in extraordinary ways.

    People like Musk and Thiel fund these campaigns.

    Trump thinks he can fix it all by breaking the system that he sees as persecuting him; the system of democracy and the rule of law.

    So he wants all its powers. He wants to be a dictator. Then you’ll see his politics and only his, and there’ll be no more persecution, no more broken system. Just him.

    That’s how the right wingers feel. They’re emotionally locked into this.

    That’s why they’re still on board, for the political solution to their emotional disenfranchisement, for their own sense something’s wrong with everyone but them to he proven out with power. Being onboard with Trump proves there’s a broken system they’ve been wronged by, and someone powerful is in that boat with them.

    It’s a cult, just as much as neoliberal compromise with the Capitalist forces of self-sacrifice is a cult.

  • @SGGeorwell
    link
    625 hours ago

    The Trumpist members of my family are proud to be recalcitrant about it all. It’s at least three parts: first there’s the gulf between us, and then the knowledge of the breadth of it, and lastly the pride of standing so far away from everyone. It’s not just that they’re way past the orbit of Pluto. It’s also the fact that they’re so proud to be so far out.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      395 hours ago

      My grandfather, who is generally a good-natured but immature man, really ate up everything Fox News spewed at him about Trump. He and my grandmother always play the pity card that I don’t visit them, but they’ve been supremely unpleasant to be around for the last 8 years because they can’t leave politics out of it.

      He wore a MAGA hat to my nephew’s 3rd birthday party and explicitly stated that he did it to make others uncomfortable. So no gramps, I don’t really want to visit you these days.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        194 hours ago

        If you’re doing stuff to make people uncomfortable at a fucking 3 year oldest birthday party, yeah it’s time for you to stop getting invited.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        4
        edit-2
        3 hours ago

        time to scatter banned books all around the house when he visits and put on your WOKE AF tshirt --“oh, does that make you…uncomfortable? grandma?”

    • Snot Flickerman
      link
      fedilink
      English
      33
      edit-2
      5 hours ago

      Louder for the people in the back, thanks.

      I believe its unfounded self-righteousness.

      They are totally self assured and prideful, no matter how fuckstupid they are. They even pride their own ignorance.

    • @Eldritch
      link
      English
      5
      edit-2
      3 hours ago

      People want to believe that they’re informed. Want to believe that they know things others don’t. That they are wise. And will push back when challenged. Because they don’t know the one thing every wise person knows. Just how much they don’t know. Fools are confidently wrong. The wise are cautiously correct.

      • @Whats_your_reasoning
        link
        11 hour ago

        You’re absolutely right. I’d just like to add on:

        Wise people learn from the mistakes of others. They observe and take note of chains of events, and use that knowledge in order to guide their own decisions in the future.

        Wise people question what they believe. If they feel cognitive dissonance, they don’t ignore it; they examine their ideas and consider the prospect that they may be wrong. They can change their minds based on new evidence.

        Wise people are skeptical. When they learn about a situation, they don’t take immediate sides based on knee-jerk emotions. Rather, they examine all available information and come around to their own ideas in their own time.

        Using all of the above points are what guide wise people towards “cautiously correct” decisions. They are more likely “correct” because they base their ideas on a greater pool of information, and are capable of discarding ideas even if the ideas “feel good” to believe in. They remain “cautious,” because no matter how sure they believe they are, they are well aware that there’s a chance they could still be mistaken.

      • @IchNichtenLichten
        link
        English
        63 hours ago

        45 years ago:

        “Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’”

        ― Isaac Asimov

    • EleventhHour
      link
      3
      edit-2
      4 hours ago

      I believe a large part of Trump supporters are that way due to some overgrown form of Oppositional-Defiant Disorder.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        43 hours ago

        I’d disagree on that considering these people trend toward obedience in everything like police/laws, Christianity, “traditional values,” party politics, etc, etc.

        I think it’s more a superiority complex where instead of being boring nobodies, they’re actually insiders with special knowledge that the rest of the masses don’t have. Additionally, right wing propaganda gives them scapegoats to blame for all their life problems (financial, social, personal). Add these two together and you have the modern republican base.

    • @acosmichippo
      link
      English
      2
      edit-2
      3 hours ago

      The trumpets in my family, aunt and uncle, are different. they pretend to be affable and loving, act like they want to see us, but every time we get together they CAN NOT HELP themselves from talking shit about liberals or whatever the latest fox propaganda is. And they know my parents, my wife and I are left to varying degrees. So I finally said fuck it, clearly you do not respect me, so I don’t need your bullshit in my life anymore.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    234 hours ago

    She’s absolutely correct. I lost my father to Trump about a year ago. It got so bad that I had to block all contact with him. No email, no text, no calls.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      143 hours ago

      I don’t speak to my mother anymore for the very same reason, but she was in the tank for Trump since day one. She’s always been a hyper conservative cunt, and honestly I jumped at the opportunity to remove her from my life.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        93 hours ago

        I’m sorry to hear you had to do that. It sucks to lose a parent like this. I’m not happy about my situation. But I don’t need that in my life either.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    124 hours ago

    My father revealed that he had been bullshitting about every moral lesson he had ever tried to tell me when he went maga.

  • @A_Random_Idiot
    link
    English
    8
    edit-2
    4 hours ago

    its not a fuckin disease.

    You can catch a disease through no fault of your own.

    These MAGA fucktards willfully disregard common sense, and truth, and decency, and their own christian moral values, because service to the party and the orange lord is paramount.

    everything about MAGA is willful and intentional.

    These are not poor innocent victims, These are rampant, fascist pieces of shit, that finally felt comfortable enough to let their swastikas fly when they thought they had their chance at seizing glory and crushing the opposition that would are make them face repercussions for their abhorrence.

    People trying to desperately shift blame away from them, and turn them into victims, is bullshit, and nothing but evidence of how well all these right wing pieces of shit managed to stay under the radar and mask themselves until they thought the time was right.

    • @acosmichippo
      link
      English
      5
      edit-2
      2 hours ago

      She means disease in the macro sense, like America is diseased. People are no different than they were any time before, just now they are being driven by their emotions and biases with profit-driven 24 hour news and social media.

  • @cybervseas
    link
    English
    -175 hours ago

    That’s rich coming from a Giuliani. Her father and brother were ruined before Trump.

    • @toasteecup
      link
      English
      415 hours ago

      Considering she is saying he divided the family and that Giuliani was pretty quiet before Trump, I think we should take it as a “we didn’t always agree but we were family and that came first”. Which if true is a terrifying possibility that mutant oompla loompa man is capable of splitting a family that badly. Reminds me of some civil war quotes.