• @[email protected]
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    17630 days ago

    Add disabled people to this list, homeless people, just so many of us who would suffer under a facist.

    • @njm1314
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      4530 days ago

      Pretty sure the homeless one should be on both ends of the track

      • @[email protected]
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        4830 days ago

        In a sense very true.

        However Trump’s proposals would make being homeless even worse, while Harris’s would make it somewhat better (although way less than is needed).

        So I still stand by my categorisation.

          • @[email protected]
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            2930 days ago

            Some people really think like that ahaha.

            “Both parties are the same”…

            Tell that to the people who’se families would get deported, to the women who lose reproductive rights, to the Ukrainians relying on our support to fight off an imperial aggressor, to the poor elderly and disabled people on social security…

            If both parties are the same to you, you’re likely in a position of privilege.

            • @[email protected]
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              -429 days ago

              Tell that to my friend in lebannon whose parents are getting bombed with white phosphorus. How privileged /s

              • @[email protected]
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                529 days ago

                Literally this but without the /s

                A Trump presidency will be disastrous for Gaza and Lebanon. If you actually have a friend there, and give a single shit about their future, you will vote for Harris.

              • @Drivebyhaiku
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                329 days ago

                What the hell are you talking about? Basically the American establishment has been Pro Israel since it’s inception. You have a two party system that treats this as the air America breathes effectively speaking you aren’t and never were going to be voting about the stance of Israel in this election. If you want that you need to organize and fight like hell and you should but there is nothing anyone can say or do to change the election promises on the table right now. If they could, they already would have.

                But that means that you are still voting for something. You are voting for everything else on the table. In your country’s case, your chance to actually have elections in another four years.

                You have noble concerns but you are letting them blind you to the reality here. This election is important. Republicans have spend decades rigging the game so they need less voters to win and their candidates have started spewing outright Nazi rhetoric. While your veiw is in the distance the wolf is in the grass in front of you. You need to deal with this first if you want your country not to not remove your personal power to influence it further… And I’m not inferring elections, I mean other forms of resistance.

          • @[email protected]
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            Also, watch as I disappear for four years, and then reappear only to whine about the state of the Democratic Party and how they didn’t pander to my progressive ass enough.

            Then disappear again for another four years…

      • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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        -930 days ago

        I’d actually say not really, democratic proposals for urbanism would significantly help ð unhoused even on ð more NIMBY end of ð spectrum.

    • peopleproblems
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      630 days ago

      My favorite one is missing! Political Dissidents AND party members deemed a nuisance!

    • @[email protected]
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      029 days ago

      There isn’t enough space in the frame for the flags that represent all of the people who get stomped on by fascism.

  • @PugJesus
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    7630 days ago

    It’s one national government, Micheal! What could it cost to derail, 10 lives?

    • @jaybone
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      1030 days ago

      There’s always rubles in the borscht stand.

    • @macattack
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      730 days ago

      “Elon Musk isn’t just some no good immigrant, he’s my no good immigrant”

  • Ech
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    6830 days ago

    This is more direct, but I always saw the original thought experiment as a way to explore that very concept - is inaction a “choice”? IMO, the only rational answer is Yes.

    Even without the third rail, “no choice” is very clearly a choice. People just selfishly want to believe they don’t share responsibility if they just let things happen “naturally”, as of their inaction means they aren’t involved. But they are. We all are. Pretending otherwise is foolish.

    • Cethin
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      730 days ago

      Yeah, that’s why there’s all the variations of pushing an extremely large person in front of the train to stop it, and things like that. The lever, obviously it’s a choice that you should make. The person, it’s still a choice, but at what point is it not an issue you should try to handle.

      Voting is a lever. There’s other actions that are more akin to pushing someone onto the tracks.

    • @Hoomod
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      629 days ago

      As Jeff Bridges said in the newer TRON movie

      It’s CLU’s game now, the only way to win is not to play

      But he was wrong, as his inaction would have caused him to lose

    • @Aceticon
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      There are over 200 million voters.

      A thought experiment about an individual choice is not even close to applicable to the choice facing a single voter since in that thought experiment not-choosing is the same as making the default choice whilst in a vote not-chosing is leaving the choice to all other voters.

      The use of this though experiment as a metaphor for the choice facing individual American voters is downright deceitful and propagandistic, self-servingly so since it’s being used to try and boost the chances of one side.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      People just selfishly want to believe they don’t share responsibility if they just let things happen “naturally”

      Elections are a weak tool for individuals to shape policy at the national level. Observing that your Congresscritters are blind and deaf to your solicitations, that gerrymandering and voter caging renders your vote almost meaningless, and that policy - particularly foreign policy - seems to be shaped by DC mega-donors and lobbyists and think tanks more than any recently elected officials doesn’t make you selfish. That’s absurd.

      And when you look at the miserable job guys like Eric Adams or Henry Cuellar or Richie Torres or Joe Manchin have done during their time in office, you begin to question the wisdom of this “Vote Blue No Matter Who” shit.

    • @SulaymanF
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      Those of us who don’t vote know this. We’re counting on it.

      The machine is going to keep on killing people overseas and persecuting minorities. But the system is based on consent. If Harris wins she will claim that the voters have endorsed her and all her policies, even if we held our nose and voted for in spite of those policies. Same with Trump, who tried to take away his supporters’ healthcare and was surprised that there was a backlash since his campaign was claiming the people had spoken and he had a mandate.

      A big enough group of third party and non voters shows the flaw of these parties. If they want me to support them, then work with me, pander to me dammit. Expecting my vote when you promise absolutely nothing for my community is a common Democratic trait; look at how little some Democratic politicians did for the black community and their retort was “where else are you gonna go?” They’re doing it again for black Americans and Muslim Americans. Harris won’t even be seen with those voters but she found time to hug Liz Cheney and invite her into the big tent. Harris says Black Lives Matter, she says Trans lives matter, she says Israeli lives matter, she won’t say that Arab lives matter equal to Israeli ones. Why shouldn’t I vote for Stein, who DOES say this? Harris made a choice to back every one of Biden’s failed policies and made a calculated decision that she can win the election without me. Hillary thought the same, and hoped that by throwing Muslim-Americans under the bus she could maybe get a few republicans to change to her side. It failed, and it will fail again.

      Edit: ah yes, downvote me all you want but I’ve been speaking to voters in swing states and you’re only lying to yourself if you can’t address this issue for them. Harris can’t even bring herself to say the most basic talking points in support of Palestinian rights. Just say you plan to make a committee to look into how to build a future Palestinian state or that looking back it was wrong for Biden to deny the Palestinian death count, and that would address a lot of concerns, but it’s like she’s intentionally making it harder for Arabs and Muslims to vote for her.

      • Franklin
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        No politician is going to bend their policies for the population that doesn’t vote.

        For so long, boomers had the majority of sway with politicians because they had the highest percentage of voter participation.

        • @SulaymanF
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          -530 days ago

          But we DO vote. American Muslims actually have been a reliable Democratic voting bloc since 2004 and since we are a more educated and more wealthy community than the average American we also have been reliable democratic donors. Why the party under Biden has gone out of its way to avoid us is just horrifying.

          • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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            Probably because ð actual reason you broke rank is because you want to exclude queer folks.

            You þink we don’t see your guy endorsing Trump is ð same one who went around his city taking down rainbow flags and cancelling pride marches?

            Ð ummah always saw Palestine as a pawn to anchor ðeir antisemitism wið, and now ðey’re using us again to anchor ðeir queer-phobia.

    • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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      -2630 days ago

      Ð original was actually intended as a joke to mock ð schools of þought represented by boþ options presented.

      Basically saying ðat boþ lead to horrifying outcomes when unchecked by oðer ways of þinking.

  • @[email protected]
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    30 days ago

    TLDR If you care about the Palestinians then vote for Harris because her being president is useful for reaching a ceasefire.

    The other post about this topic got locked as I was typing a reply. I feel like my comment is relevant to this discussion so I would like to leave it here. I would think this reply, the original comment, and this post are tightly related and are all about the same thing.

    One thing I’ve learned this election cycle is how few people have any knowledge of utilitarianism. Genocide is better than genocide+1. Not acting is a moral choice, and frequently a cowardly one.

    There is utilitarianism the ethical philosophy and there is utility. Utilitarianism is still a form a moral reasoning as it subjectively elevates the maximization of happiness and well-being. And what constitutes happiness and well-being is not universal. Utility is a method of analysis used to determine how effectively a stated action advances a stated goal. Utility relies on empirical evidence, observation and math, and is goal agnostic.

    For many people on Lemmy, their goals are probably roughly summarized by wanting to end Israel’s genocide, Palestinian statehood, and general prosperity for the Palestinian people. Harris has stated multiple times that she wants a ceasefire. Trump has stated he thinks Israel needs to be allowed to finish what they started. Trump has also stated he’s going to be a dictator on day one and that his followers are never going to have to vote again.

    Moral reasoning that is consistent with our goals paralyzes us in this case. Voting for a candidate whose administration oversaw and contributed to a genocide of Palestinians is subjectively immoral. Voting for a candidate who is threatening to complete a genocide of Palestinians is subjectively immoral. Not voting or voting third party when the candidate threatening to complete a genocide of Palestinians is favored by the electoral college in a FPTP system is subjectively immoral. We can subjectively state one of these options to be the lesser evil, but we have no empirical way to measure evil. Thus in theory, there is no way to form a consensus with subjective moral reasoning alone.

    For people whose goal is to support the Palestinian people, it is useful to elect Harris, because someone in power who wants a ceasefire is a useful step to actually getting a ceasefire. Where as Trump will allow Israel to complete it’s genocide and end our democracy. This would allow Israel to continue it’s genocide indefinitely without US citizens ever being able to influence US foreign policy again.

    Everyone is prone to moral reasoning. It’s intuitive and philosophers have been doing it since ancient times. In this case, there is a consensus around wanting to help the Palestinian people. But any given moral reasoning derived from our goal doesn’t necessarily lead us to a course of action that can help them. With a clear goal in mind, utility provides a clear-cut and consistent answer in the form of voting for Harris. edit: typo

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      For people whose goal is to support the Palestinian people, it is useful to elect Harris, because someone in power who wants a ceasefire

      I have seen no material evidence to this effect.

      That’s not even an argument against Harris per say. But this insistence in a double-super secret pro-Palestinian insider movement insider her staff is delusional. Harris has been outspoken in her defense of “Israel’s right to defend itself” time and time and time again. She’s backed every effort to send more weapons of war to Netanyahu. She’s defended the UN ambassador’s decision to vote against sanctions for Israel or an end to hostilities or a future legitimized Palestinian state. She’s directly fundraising from AIPAC. At this point, claiming she’s a pro-Palestinian candidate is about as rational as claiming Trump is pro-Ukrainian.

      In this case, there is a consensus around wanting to help the Palestinian people.

      There is a relatively broad national consensus. But we are devoid of a political class reflective of those views. Hell, two of the most outspoken pro-Palestinian advocates in the US House - Jamal Bowman and Cori Bush - got kicked out of their seats in primaries fueled by AIPAC lobbyists. Ilham Omar and Rashida Tlaib nearly lost their jobs in the same manner.

      The internal institutions of the Democratic Party are openly in favor of the genocide of Palestinians in both Gaza and the West Bank, and of the people of Lebanon, and of Iran. If this shit keeps up, we could see the war spread to Jordan and Syria and Iraq as well. Certainly, there’s no love lost by Americans for two of those states.

      The political consensus is in favor of more killing, an escalation of the scope of the war, and free rein for the Israeli leadership in its mission to subjugate the surrounding territories. With continued US support, its very possible that the Israelis will get exactly what they desire, and we’ll be looking at a permanent occupation and continuous holocaust of native peoples on a scale not seen since the genocide of First Nations people in the US.

      • @[email protected]
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        4329 days ago

        I have seen no material evidence to this effect.

        Here’s a user’s comment that listed three sources:

        https://lemmy.world/comment/13069715

        She’s taken a stance, multiple times. The left doesn’t want to hear it.

        March - https://www.npr.org/2024/03/04/1234822836/kamala-harris-benny-gantz-gaza-cease-fire-israel-hamas

        July - https://www.politico.com/news/2024/07/25/harris-netanyahu-israel-cease-fire-00171315

        September - https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/harris-trump-presidential-debate-election-2024/card/harris-calls-for-ceasefire-in-gaza-while-trump-claims-she-hates-israel--isokhfqmy6EgRGrUOSuK

        If you’re sitting on the October Surprise please share it. All the evidence we have suggests that Harris wants a ceasefire. While Trump wants a christo-fascist dictatorship and is content to watch Israel complete its genocide. The candidates have distinct positions despite your argument’s attempt to conflate the two.

        • @davidagain
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          2329 days ago

          There you go bringing facts and rationality into a bOTh sIDes debate. Bold move.

        • @[email protected]
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          429 days ago

          Problem is that public statements are one thing, actions are another. And politicians are known to make great many statements they then contradict by their actions.

          • Flying Squid
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            329 days ago

            What actions would you have a vice president take? What exactly do you think she has the power to do right now?

            • @[email protected]
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              729 days ago
              • She could have publicly renounced the Israeli government instead of defending it.
              • She could have voted against and started voting initiatives to stop weapon sales and military aid.
              • She could have went to court to sue the government if Biden was reluctant. The arms sales are illegal by US law, as Israel is known to attack US and international humanotaroan aid
              • She could have made a point of opposing Netanyahu when he was in congress instead of just not being there.
              • She could have threatened to step down as VP and followed through with it, once she became candidate.
              • She could have let Palestinian Americans speak at the DNC convention instead of silencing them, while giving Families of Israeli hostages a place to speak. This was the bare minimum to do, unless clearly picking the side of Zionism.

              Then the party establishment had two options:

              • Either they would have fallen in line, winning the election and accepting that genocide is a no go for Harris.
              • Or they could have tried to oust her, knowing that it would cost them the election, or create so much push back that she remains as candidate and gets to toss them out.
              • Flying Squid
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                -229 days ago

                From just your second line I can see that you have no idea what powers the vice president has.

                Where and when was she supposed to vote against or for those things?

                • @[email protected]
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                  629 days ago

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamala_Harris

                  Senate presidency

                  When Harris took office the 117th Congress’s Senate was divided 50–50 between Republicans and Democrats;[193] this meant that she was often called upon to exercise her power to cast tie-breaking votes as president of the Senate. Harris cast her first two tie-breaking votes on February 5. In February and March, Harris’s tie-breaking votes were required to pass the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 stimulus package Biden proposed, since no Senate Republicans voted for it.[194][195] On July 20, Harris broke Mike Pence’s record for tie-breaking votes in the first year of a vice presidency[196] when she cast the seventh tie-breaking vote in her first six months.[197] She cast 13 tie-breaking votes during her first year in office, the most tie-breaking votes in a single year in U.S. history, surpassing John Adams, who cast 12 in 1790.[197][198] On December 5, 2023, Harris broke the record for the most tie-breaking votes cast by a vice president, casting her 32nd vote, exceeding John C. Calhoun, who cast 31 votes during his nearly eight years in office.[199][200] On November 19, 2021, Harris served as acting president from 10:10 to 11:35 am EST while Biden underwent a colonoscopy.[201] She was the first woman, and the third person overall, to assume the powers and duties of the presidency as acting president of the United States.[202][203][204]

                  As early as December 2021, Harris was identified as playing a pivotal role in the Biden administration owing to her tie-breaking vote in the evenly divided Senate as well as her being the presumed front-runner in 2024 if Biden did not seek reelection.[205]

                  So from my understanding she gets the final vote on split issues. She could have leveraged her political power to push these issues to get to vote.

        • @[email protected]
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          So she called for a ceasefire back in March? and then in July? And then in September?

          That doesn’t sounds very effective does it?

          • @[email protected]
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            Keep moving those goalposts. Btw, I hope this is literally your job because wow. 4 hour old account, and since jumping on this morning, you have been EVERYWHERE.

            At the moment: 40 comments in 4 hours. All about one thing. Nice.

            • @Cryophilia
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              -129 days ago

              He just does this until an account gets banned. All his usernames are some form of “fuckamericans”. Edgy 12 year old.

      • OBJECTION!
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        At this point, claiming she’s a pro-Palestinian candidate is about as rational as claiming Trump is pro-Ukrainian.

        I just wanna take this a step further and say it’s actually less rational.

        What Trump is talking about is stopping aid to Ukraine, something which he had previously supported and delivered on.

        What Harris isn’t talking about is stopping aid to the people killing Palestinians, a position that she has never supported.

        Of course I’m not actually saying Trump is actually pro-Ukraine. But if I had to choose one, I’d have an easier time defending that claim than the idea that Kamala is pro-Palestine because at least I’d have something material to work with.

        • @[email protected]
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          Why would you do this, yet completely ignore what Trump will do in Palestine and what Harris will do in Ukraine? Why is one only important for the one candidate, and the other for the other?

          Trump will stop aid to Ukraine, and, as he has already said, will give Netanyahu carte blanche to eliminate the Palestinian people in Gaza.

          Harris will continue to aid Ukraine, and has not taken a clear position on Israel/Palestine (because, if she did, she would 100% lose this election), but at the very least, has called for a cease-fire.

          Get out of here with this dishonest bullshit.

          • OBJECTION!
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            Nothing I said was remotely dishonest.

            Why would you do this, yet completely ignore what Trump will do in Palestine and what Harris will do in Ukraine?

            Because that’s not relevant to the specific point being discussed. The comparison was Harris on Palestine vs Trump on Israel. Y’all might expect people to constantly pay homage to your candidate to signal that we’re on your side or whatever, even when it’s not relevant, but I have no interest in doing so.

            Why is one only important for the one candidate, and the other for the other?

            I’m not voting for either or telling anyone to vote for either so this is nonsense. Trump is obviously not a good candidate and you shouldn’t vote for him.

            Harris will continue to aid Ukraine, and has not taken a clear position on Israel/Palestine

            Absolutely false. Harris has been completely clear that she agrees with Biden’s policy of unconditional military aid to Israel.

  • @NatakuNox
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    Edit: I don’t give a shit how many down votes I get. I’m correct! Vote blue! And show Palestinian, Arab, and all marginalized demographics you/we are not going to abandon them for self preservation. Show more empathy via doing everything within your capacity to help those around you. There are marginalized people around you. Do more. Be better. We all will be put in the tracks as the individual and we all hope others won’t boil down your life to a binary train track meme.

    I’m going to be 100% with yall that comment and post this shit.

    Before I go on, let me say I voted dem and know they would be better for the world over Trump.

    But is that’s the standard and argument you expect people to vote for, you are in for a rude awakening… To anyone reading this or agreeing with these outright insulting comments and posts about how you know better need to take a long look in the mirror. Because…

    If the only support you are giving to the Palestinian and Arab people is voting Dem and having arguments about lesser evils, then you are not helping the situation.

    Yes vote dem. But get off your ass and protest, donate, and support those communities currently harmed be democrats disastrous Gaza and Middle East policy. That’s how you sway hearts and minds. These fucking backhanded, self serving, ignorant posts and comments won’t stop anything but prove to those communities that the democrats base does not give a shit about anything that doesn’t directly effect themselves.

    Yall are missing the forest from the trees. Not voting for the light genicidal party nor the full genicidal party isn’t some gotcha win for Trump. It’s a failure on our part to demand our party doesn’t continue using our votes to do harm.

    call your senators daily and demand they publicly denounce Israel and the IDF. Donate money to organizations that are saving lives destroyed by our bombs. March with your fellow Palestinian and Arab brothers and sisters. Divest and boycott any business with ties to Isreal and the IDF.

    We should be on the tracks trying to destroy them not worrying about who we are sending the train towards. We’re better than this. This is just conservative tactics used on a population that we need to vote blue! We are better than this! show some empathy and get involved. I have Palestinian friends and they would spit in your face if you said this kind of shit to their face because it’s removing the humanity of the 40k people killed by Isreal via bombs provided by Biden/Harris. If you/we don’t care why should they?

    • @PugJesus
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      If the only support you are giving to the Palestinian and Arab people is voting Dem and having arguments about lesser evils, then you are not helping the situation.

      Jesus fucking Christ man, is it really so ridiculous to believe that a week before the election the current concern is voting Dem considering that is the upcoming issue with a hard and irreversible cutoff?

      Many of us are involved in politics outside of voting. I write my congresscritters regularly, usually on matters of foreign affairs, for all the good it does. I donate when I can.

      But right now a considerable number of people are banging the “DON’T VOTE BOTH SIDES THE SAME” drum when there is a very good chance of a literal fucking fascist being elected, the issue of “These votes are NOT fucking equivalent” is pretty fucking important to bring attention to, and bringing it to attention with asspats and “I understand if you don’t want to stop any further genocides happening, but…” is the kind of feckless, useless civility politics bullshite I’m constantly criticizing the Dems for, so you can be sure as shit I’m not cutting anyone else slack for that approach.

      • @NatakuNox
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        730 days ago

        Ya exactly. Where the fuck have yall been? I’m not trying to be pedantic or insulting but we that actually cares have been fighting for a long time to actually help! And yes they’re are things outside of our control but we should never fucking stop trying to stop the train. You (those that haven’t done anything to in your personal life to oppose fucking genicide outside of commenting and posting) are the reason why Palestinian and Arab Americans will stay home on election day. We need their vote! So get involved! Regardless of how the election ends we need to come together as a unified community and not individuals that act as if the Palestinians are already dead regardless of our collective actions! I’m guessing there are enough more marginalized demographics between you (not you specifically) and the next set of binary track decisions. If they (the rich and powerful) can do it to the Palestinian people they’ll do it to you. And when they do come for you I pray others don’t wait until a week before elections when they start posting train track memes as that’s a point that should be made.

        Get involved. Show communities that are currently on the chopping block you’ll never stop trying to save their lives regardless as how close the train is. Get involved! Voting is the absolute least you can do, but you can do more! This post and comment won’t sway a fucking election but us unifying and help those in need as much as possible will!

        I’m done. Yall be acting like I’m the one being crazy when I’m saying no one has to be on the tracks of more keyboard warriors actually did something for others. Get involved!

        END

        • @[email protected]
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          For sure. We should do better so we’re not in this predicament.

          But unfortunately, we are, and there are people on the tracks. Right now. And we have a decision to make (and “not playing” is one of those choices, and it doesn’t absolve you of blame).

      • @[email protected]
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        Many of us are involved in politics outside of voting. I write my congresscritters regularly, usually on matters of foreign affairs, for all the good it does. I donate when I can.

        I hate to be a bad news bear, but calling and writing congress does effectively nothing. When it comes to actual policy (and not empty lip service), politicians only serve donors and lobbyists.

        If we want real change then we will need to replace our broken and corrupt two party system with a modern multiparty democracy

        • @[email protected]
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          329 days ago

          I hate to be a bad news bear, but calling and writing congress does effectively nothing.

          Bullshit. They keep tallies of what their constituents have called in for and it does work when enough people pester long enough.

    • @[email protected]
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      2730 days ago

      I’m voting Democrat to preserve some semblance of democracy in this country, but I have to say I’m quite disappointed in my congress critters. My senator in particular. I’ve emailed her frequently, including links to articles detailing the crimes against humanity committed by the IDF, and all I get is a form letter response about how “Israel’s right to defend itself is so important” and “October 7th was terrible” and maybe a line about how horrible it is that Palestinians are suffering written in a way that either only blames Hamas or uses the most passive voice I have ever seen in writing.

      • @NatakuNox
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        830 days ago

        Exactly. And that does not mean our job is done. Please keep writing and advocating. If more people do this we can save lives. Not only if those that we can see. It’s about fighting for the best of humanity opposed to the race to the bottom. Vote blue, get involved, fuck the IDF, divest and boycott.

        • @[email protected]
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          630 days ago

          When I have more time during my winter break, I’m going to mail a handwritten letter with some articles printed out, and follow up with a phone call. I’ll read the damn article to her if I have to.

    • @[email protected]
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      2130 days ago

      Agreed but the chance those tracks will be destroyed before the election is slim.

      I applaud your call to activism but in reality much less people will ever commit to fighting for their ideals that way.

      Many more people will however are willing to give a token to a “right cause”

      Voting D is that token. It doesn’t fix shit, especially considering the genocide but it will be a slower decline of human rights then the alternative.

      More time to do activism.

      There are many others, also on lemmy that are not calling for activism but for a token of not voting. I think the meme is a representation of that particular logic.

      • @NatakuNox
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        30 days ago

        Everything you said is correct. I just don’t want to see all the surprised Pikachu when their inaction and self-righteousness results in a Trump victory. They’ll cry, “why didn’t the Palestinian and Arab Americans show up for the democrats?!”

        The train hasn’t hit yet there are still millions of lives we can save by doing more than just voting. If we’re not willing to do everything to save them, why should they do anything to save us? I don’t care how close the train is. I’ll be trying to destroy the tracks until it hits me and the persons tied to the tracks. That’s my point.

        These memes boil an unbelievably complex issue to a binary outcome. Marginalized communities are going to be there regardless of the outcome of the elections. Don’t wait until the train is about to hit you or something you care about before you decide to start dismantling the tracks. Then see how you feel when someone presumes your inevitable cleansing. I honestly feel like I’m living in Bizarro world or something. Like is what I’m saying beyond our capacity? We are doomed if we won’t all step on the tracks to stop the trains.

      • @[email protected]
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        -2730 days ago

        Voting D is that token. It doesn’t fix shit, especially considering the genocide but it will be a slower decline of human rights then the alternative.

        by any logic it accelerates the decline. it gives a clear signal that they can get away with anything as long as they can project a worse alternative.

        • @PugJesus
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          3530 days ago

          by any logic it accelerates the decline.

          “Enabling mediocrity of non-fascists is a faster decline into fascism than literally electing a fascist”

          Even by your own assertions on the matter of what electing Dems does, this is absurd.

          • @[email protected]
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            -129 days ago

            Still less absurd than you blaming the few people who don’t vote for your cult.

            The right is because of the right, firstly. Then secondly, it’s because the people in literal power right now did shit with it.

        • @[email protected]
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          30 days ago

          There is not enough time for a revolution before the election.

          Reality is people will have to make a choice D/R or neither. No matter how they chose there will be either a D or R in political power.

          If you have a proposition that will actually guarantee a different outcome i am willing to listen…

          My personal take is to wait till the second this power game is over and hard dictatorship is avoide. start then. At the very least you will have many more people willing to join. Currently your just hurting the credibility of your own cause.

          • Rhaedas
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            1230 days ago

            We have the same admin and reps until January, so even before the election people can start doing what they should have been doing all along and participate in more than just a vote. I’ll say it again, this genocide didn’t start a few weeks ago (when the “don’t vote for genocide” meme started), it didn’t start last October, it didn’t begin on any other major event that got the media attention for a while, it’s been decades, almost a century, of illegality and oppression and killing.

            Also a reminder, if you’re of one party or another and a different party gets into the seat, they are still your representative. You do not have to wait to get a matching letter to call them and praise or bitch about what they are doing.

          • @[email protected]
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            30 days ago

            what credibility anything will have when harris says that america has voted for her with the policy to continue arming israel to any extent ? a policy she has repeated multiple times during her campaign without leaving any ambiguity.

            what’s stopping her from saying this is the will of the american people and start locking up any protest in name of antisemitism ?

            and its not just israel, her policy on fracking and inflation is no better. life for working class has become hell in last four years, corporate greed is out of control and her campaign has been just “trump this trump that, vote me else you will have trump.”

            If you have a proposition that will actually guarantee a different outcome i am willing to listen…

            only outcome that will bring any iota of change is one in which popular vote clearly suggests we don’t want trump or harris.

            • @davidagain
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              229 days ago

              only outcome that will bring any iota of change is one in which popular vote clearly suggests we don’t want trump or harris.

              What planet are you on that you believe that this could happen or that it would make anything better in any way whatsoever?

              • @[email protected]
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                229 days ago

                if its not possible to happen then stop harassing others with these utterly vile memes. all it does is shows the world what a broken vile society we have become.

                if the number that doesn’t want to vote harris or trump is insignificant then why is every left community being brigaded with this kinda trash begging to give our support to a child murdering, pro fracking, prison slavery shill. you guys are no better than the racist bigots supporting trump.

                • @davidagain
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                  129 days ago

                  BoTh SidEs!

                  There’s a huge difference between a majority and a minority big enough to sway it for idiot weirdo geriatric genocidal trump, with his out loud promise to kill leftists for their political views, but you’re not so hot on spotting differences, are you?

          • @[email protected]
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            -930 days ago

            that doesn’t matter to them. it would have been bernie running against harris and they will be still still saying vote harris else sanders will destroy the economy. remember 2016 ?

            • @Rhoeri
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              2016? Hmm… wasn’t that the year Bernie asked everyone to support the nominee vs. Trump and one in ten of them did the exact opposite and voted Trump instead?

              Between that and 2020, it’s no surprise if no one takes third party or its voters seriously. Don’t blame anyone else for this. You did it to yourselves.

              • @[email protected]
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                29 days ago

                2016 was also the year when dnc rigged the primaries and fcked the country.

                yes we got what we deserved for supporting that. since then dnc and morons who keep posting these disgusting memes have made sure to see what dnc is. a corrupt party of leeches who only pretend to care about blm and lgbt while doing genocide.

    • @[email protected]
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      2130 days ago

      call your senators daily and demand they publicly denounce Israel and the IDF

      Honestly, do YOU do that? Daily?
      What has been your success rate in getting your senator on the line?
      You must be on a first name basis by now.

      • @NatakuNox
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        1130 days ago

        Uhhhhhh what? Are you being purposely dumb? Of course when I say call your senators, I’m not saying get them on the actual fucking line! Call his office/voice mail and make the comment… And don’t just comment one thing comment about all the communities currently being tied up on the tracks. And if you don’t want to do that have you donated to charities helping in marginalized communities local or abroad? How about volunteering? How about protesting? Whatever is in your capacity you should be doing it!

        • @[email protected]
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          -1030 days ago

          Of course when I say A I mean B

          Getting real tired of this Trump-supporter-like line of reasoning

          • @NatakuNox
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            1630 days ago

            If you’ve always thought people ment literally call your senators personal lines when they say, “call your senators” you probably are a moron. It’s that better? No one ever has ment it in the literal sense.

          • @Olgratin_Magmatoe
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            829 days ago

            Are you genuinely unaware that the process of calling your reps doesn’t go directly to them?

      • Rhaedas
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        1030 days ago

        Maybe they haven’t and are just pointing it out. Few do, and that’s the problem. It’s not democracy, it’s representative democracy, but it only works like a democracy would if people hold their reps accountable.

        So no, the ones suggesting to hold their reps to the fire, now and after the election, probably haven’t themselves. But they aren’t wrong, and it shouldn’t be thrown back in their face but instead embraced as a good idea to start now.

        Otherwise nothing changes, because other factors already contact our reps daily and influence them, that’s why they vote the way they do.

        • @[email protected]
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          30 days ago

          A problem is that even if you do, you’re just talking to some part-time intern they hired to not have to listen to you.

          • Rhaedas
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            1330 days ago

            For a single voter call, that’s true. That’s why it needs to be in mass numbers, and constant. Make them concerned that if they don’t show some change, people will start showing up physically. With pitchforks.

            And if they don’t still, then go get some pitchforks.

    • @SulaymanF
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      THANK YOU!

      Our community is suffering, and the only solution people are offering are to yell at us and shame us for not finding this situation unlivable. “Your community will keep dying in either administration but could you vote for the pro-trans politician while you’re suffering?”

      Mehdi Hasan was the only person who was able to reach out and connect to those voters with his recent video, and he did so with sympathy and understanding. He convinced me to vote and did so without bullying or calling me names.

    • @[email protected]
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      If the only support you are giving to the Palestinian and Arab people is voting Dem and having arguments about lesser evils, then you are not helping the situation.

      I would flip this back on those who suddenly, despite decades of oppression, really care about Palestinians… Show me one thing that any of those people have done the further that goal.

      • @[email protected]
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        228 days ago

        As someone that supported BDS years before oct 7, I don’t think it’s fair to fault someone for learning new politics. Especially considering how these events demonstrate the utter failure of our media to cover this topic with even an ounce of non-partisanship.

  • @CondensedPossum
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    1329 days ago

    it is a good thing there is no option for political violence on this helpful chart about the distribution of political violence

    you wouldn’t want anyone to get the wrong ideas about the direction political violence has to flow

  • ✺roguetrick✺
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    1129 days ago

    This shit is getting annoying because it’s such a fundamental misunderstanding of what the trolley problem tries to tell you. You cannot use the trolley problem to prove that utilitarianism is better. The entire point is to show the difference between deontology and utilitarianism. It’s just tiring to watch.

  • @TriflingToad
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    929 days ago

    I saw this exact one with someone on the bottom that said “I refuse to participate in a broken system” on r/PeterExplainsTheJoke and NOBODY understood it.

  • OBJECTION!
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    129 days ago

    Reposting my comment from the other thread because I was specifically asked to elaborate by @[email protected] but the thread got locked:

    Previous comment

    Honestly, I wonder how much of our disagreements do ultimately come down to moral philosophy. I see a lot of people making this comparison and I’d be happy to put aside the present political situation and step back to discuss a higher level of disagreement.

    I am a consequentialist, and I would agree, in principle, that the correct decision in the trolley problem is to pull the lever. But that should always come with an extreme amount of disclaimers. There are no shortage of people throughout history who have made justifications for their actions on the basis of “the ends justify the means,” but often, they turned out to be wrong. To use an example, torture under the Bush administration was claimed to be justified on the basis of getting useful intelligence in order to save lives. But no such intelligence was ever extracted. Really, it was more motivated by revenge, or a desire to be the sort of cool antihero who does the stuff nobody else will that needs to be done, but “the ends justify the means” served as a rationalization. Another example like that (though perhaps more controversial) is the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    The problem with applying the trolley problem to real life is that we are mere human beings of flesh and blood. We have a whole host of cognitive biases that mislead us even when we have the best of intentions. If we give our minds a way to justify things that we know are bad, it gives it an out that allows us to rationalize the irrational and justify the unjustifiable.

    There are two practices that are necessary to apply in order to counteract these biases. First, it is necessary to adopt a set of strong moral guidelines based on past experience and historical evidence. Second, it is necessary to regularly practice some form of introspection or meditation in order to better understand where your thoughts and feelings arise from, and how they flow through your mind. Said guidelines do not have to be rigorously adhered to 100% of the time, but they should be respected, and only deviated from after clear, careful consideration, understanding why the guideline exists and why deviation from them is almost always bad.

    “Base” consequentialism, where you recognize that pulling the lever in the trolley problem is the correct decision, but simply accept that as a guiding principle, is a terrible moral philosophy, worse than deontology and possibly worse than having completely unexamined moral views. Some of the worst atrocities in history are the result of that sort of “ends justify the means” approach, detached from a set of moral guidelines and detached from humility and self-reflection. I would even say, speaking as a communist, that many of the bad things communists have done in history are a result of that kind of mentality. Following moral rules blindly is preferable to breaking moral rules without first doing the necessary work to be trusted with breaking them.

    There’s plenty more I could say on the topic but people always complain about my long posts so I’d better cut myself off there.

    Elaboration:

    The trolley problem isn’t intended to demonstrate that consequentialism is simply correct, as some people seem to think. Rather, it’s meant to highlight disagreements between different moral philosophies and present contradictions in our moral intuitions. There are two follow ups to the classic trolley problem: one involves pushing someone off a bridge to stop the trolley, and the other involves a doctor killing a healthy patient in order to harvest their organs to save the lives of five people who need transplants. While a majority of people agree with pulling the lever in the original problem, most people disagree with pushing the man off a bridge, and virtually no one agrees with harvesting organs from a healthy patient. This reveals an apparent contradiction in our moral intuitions. To adopt the principal that it is right to kill one to save five very quickly leads to conclusions that are widely condemned as morally abhorrent, and so a deeper examination is needed. Like most things in philosophy, the trolley problem is meant to raise questions, not answer them.

    The deontological answer is to say that consequentialism is simply wrong, because it leads to those sorts of conclusions, but in my view this is throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

    The reason our moral intuitions scream at us not to push the man off the bridge or harvest organs is that these hypotheticals have unrealistic constraints and foreknowledge. In real life, it’s extremely unlikely that a trolley with enough force to run over 5 people would be stopped by one person, and it’s also not something we could possibly calculate with any degree of certainty ahead of time. Our physical intuitions get mixed up with our moral intuitions, and it’s difficult to actually accept the constraints of the hypothetical. The organ harvesting example is even worse. If the crime was ever revealed to the public, it would cause major damage to the reputation of the entire medical field, which would cause people to avoid potentially lifesaving treatments, and the doctor doing it would lose their license preventing them from saving who knows how many lives. Meanwhile, surgeries carry inherent risks and it is impossible to know with the certainty assumed by the problem that they will be successful, and there’s also the possibility that the other patients could miraculously recover. Moreover, the problem of not having enough organs could be addressed on a larger scale through policy without resorting to murder. The problem asks us to assume that every possible alternative is arbitrarily cut off and that we are 100% guaranteed to get away with it - which our brains rebel against, for very good reason. Many people commit crimes feeling certain that they’ll get away with it, but then get caught, and immediate, short term solutions often seem appealing, even when they might have very negative long term consequences or when a more cautious, long term approach might be wiser.

    It might seem that I’m simply rejecting the validity of those hypotheticals altogether, and to an extent I am, but this analysis reveals something important. People often fail to consider all these different factors that might make a situation not as simple as the original trolley problem, even when they appear to be. That is the danger of “base” consequentialism, of applying the principle of “the ends justify the means” blindly and without due consideration of alternative solutions or of consequences that are not immediately apparent. It is generally very foolish to reduce things to the trolley problem when they are more complicated, and people who reduce the election to a trolley problem are making the exact same kind of error as people who reduce the organ harvesting thought experiment to a trolley problem.

    I’ll use a hypothetical of my own to further illustrate my point. Suppose you and four other people have been taken hostage, and the hostage taker tells you to kill one of the other hostages, or else he’ll kill all of them including you. Is this a trolley problem? It might appear to be, but the reality is that introducing a human actor instead of a purely mechanical process changes everything. What happens if, after you kill a hostage, the gunman says, “Great! From now on, you work for me. You will kill anyone I say to kill. And if you refuse, I’ll kill twice as many people. My first order is for you to capture more hostages so I can repeat this and recruit another person just like you.” Isn’t that obviously indefensible? It would be completely justified for someone to kill you to stop you from doing that. But this is exactly where the ideology of lesser-evilism leads. We cannot allow ourselves to be manipulated like machines into strengthening the very people who put us into the situation in the first place.

    I make a point every time I refer to lesser-evilism to call it an ideology, because that’s what it is, even though it’s adherents do not recognize it as such and simply call it obvious, objective, and rational. It is none of those things. It is important to recognize that this is a specific belief system, and one that frequently leads to absurd and abhorrent conclusions, and that many people reject, including many academics and philosophers.

      • @JonsJavaM
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        429 days ago

        I locked the post due to a ton of reports on comments. That’s not happened here.

        • OBJECTION!
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          Was my comment one that attracted reports? If so, why didn’t you give an actual reason for removing it? If not, then what’s the problem with continuing a part of the conversation that wasn’t part of the reason the other thread got locked? This is ridiculous.

          How is it fair to keep up OP when it’s clearly a continuation of the previous post, but then remove my comment for the same reason?

          • @JonsJavaM
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            329 days ago

            I’m on Mobile right now. I restored the comment, as it broke no rules.

            • OBJECTION!
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              -129 days ago

              Sorry to bother again, but it still shows removed on my end from .ml, but shows up if I go to .world, do you know if there’s a way to fix that?

              • @JonsJavaM
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                429 days ago

                Sadly, just time. Federation isn’t always instant

  • Omega
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    030 days ago

    It should be giving the choice to a Nazi.

  • @Vailliant
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    -130 days ago

    I feel at this point the majority of content on this sub is not funny or a meme anymore. While I don’t agree with Trump at this point Lemmy is becoming “astroturfed” like reddit

    • @lennybird
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      30 days ago

      This is, objectively, a political meme. Humor is not requisite.

      This happens every election cycle the closer election day comes. Is it really any surprise political advocacy is higher during political season?

      And what makes this “astroturfed”?

      • WhatTrees
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        730 days ago

        “Things I disagree with are being upvoted so it must be a coordinated campaign”

        • @Vailliant
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          229 days ago

          That is so disengenious and you know it…

          • WhatTrees
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            229 days ago

            Is it? Your complaint is that things you disagree with are appearing more frequently, which they do when people upvote them. Sorry most of us have similar feelings about not voting / voting third party, but the only reason you’d call it astroturfing is if you think it’s disingenuous.

            • @Vailliant
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              029 days ago

              You dont like voting third party/not voting, yet you would frame me as your opponent…Nice framing. I haven’t said I disagree or agree with it. Not everything is so black and white as you may see it.

              All I said was is that I don’t like seeing the same posts appear X times on political Memes every day.

              And what I think is disengenious is the way you frame it. To frame my statement as such that I support not voting/ voting third party.

              • WhatTrees
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                029 days ago

                Astroturfing is when there is a disingenuous coordinated campaign with a goal in mind. This post is specifically against not voting or voting third party, and you came here to complain about seeing too many things like this post. If your complaint was about seeing too many voting / politics memes in general, I imagine you would recognize what sub this is and what month it is.

                I don’t believe you would be calling an abundance of voting related memes in a political memes sub this close to an election with no goal in mind “astroturfing” unless you didn’t know what the word meant. The obvious implication is that you believe there is a disingenuous coordinated campaign against voting third party or not voting. My point is that there doesn’t have to be. It’s more likely that many people, myself included, agree with the message of the political meme in the politics sub, and probably more than normal since we are so close to the election.

      • @Vailliant
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        429 days ago

        Every single time I open Lemmy I see at least 5 posts about " voting third party bad" it is not much different from reddit during the 2016/2020 campaign. How it is run now I wouldnt know because I havent browsed reddit since 2023.

        Even political Memes are generally lighthearted and people dont fight as much in the comments compared to reddit.

        • @lennybird
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          129 days ago

          These are just facts though. Until idiots stop voting 3rd party and spoiling elections for fascists, this pattern will continue.

          You would be better off convincing the ignorant to stop engaging in the Spoiler Effect.

          Then the memes shall stop. Everyone wins.

          • @naught101
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            629 days ago

            A better solution would be for the US to implement some kind to voting system where third party voting does matter. Like lots of the world has.

            • @lennybird
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              329 days ago

              100% agree. The only way to that is electing Dems and sending the GOP the way of the Whigs.

              • @naught101
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                329 days ago

                Yep. The thing I worry about is, even if the dems pull of a win that gives them the power to do this, would they actually do it? I doubt it, somehow.

    • @TwoBeeSan
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      830 days ago

      American elections bring out the worst in everyone everywhere.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 days ago

        No shit, my friends in lebannon getting bombed and some idiots first worldist privileged yank are drawing memes with palestinians tied to a track.

    • @[email protected]
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      229 days ago

      Oh, I agree that it has been astroturfed. Anyone who’s been on this site longer than a few months can tell you that.

      Except it’s not memes like this that are being pushed. In fact, this meme is a direct response to the massive influx of propaganda that this site has seen in the past couple of months.

    • @Rhoeri
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      29 days ago

      Sub? Really? You know this isn’t Reddit, right? And it’s called: Political Memes. Not SuperHappyFunnyHaHaMemes. Want funny? maybe go to a “sub” that hosts funny memes. I dunno. Just a thought.

  • Crass Spektakel
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    -228 days ago

    This picture misses that the choice also kills the switcher.

  • vlad
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    -330 days ago

    I just want a candidate that supports both universal healthcare and the 2nd amendment.

    • @BanjoShepard
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      3230 days ago

      Quick, somebody get this guy on the ballot!

      • @[email protected]
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        130 days ago

        Considering everyone is talking about fascists coming to power and life getting more threatening, it would make some sense for the groups in the photo to look into being armed.