Summary

Arab Americans who supported Trump in battleground states like Michigan express concerns over his key appointments, particularly pro-Israel figures like Mike Huckabee, Marco Rubio, and Elise Stefanik, who oppose a two-state solution and back Israel’s actions in Gaza.

While some voters hoped Trump would prioritize peace in the Middle East, his picks have fueled unease about his administration’s direction.

Outreach leaders like Massad Boulos, who engaged Arab American communities during Trump’s campaign, have yet to secure roles, leaving some supporters questioning their expectations of Trump’s policies.

  • The Quuuuuill
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    1371 month ago

    maaan… how the fuck are people this uninformed about who donald trump is and what he’s about? did all these people think supporting him would curry them favor, and make their people safer than if a less insane candidate took office? like, i geuinely don’t understand how you hear what this motherfucker says and not realize his whole entire deal i hating people who aren’t cishet white men. like i can get my friend who the first ever election she voted in in our country was 2016 when she grew up with different formats of propaganda, but he was president for four years, and this go around he’s been more mask off, and the people saying he’s dangerous have been more direct in their messaging.

    like… how are people this illiterate beyond just reading comprehension? like, why don’t you got anything comprehension, what is this?

    • sp3ctr4l
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      1 month ago

      54% of American adults have the reading comprehnsion skills of a 5th grader, or worse.

      How?

      Republicans have spent many decades defunding public education, with no effective pushback.

      • @rayyy
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        281 month ago

        Republicans have spent many decades defunding public education

        Republicans have also spent many decades developing psychological operations aimed at controlling the news and churches.

        • sp3ctr4l
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          91 month ago

          Yes, this as well.

          All while the Democrat strategy was to… not do any effective counter propoganda at the same scale or in the same manner whatsoever, keep relying on the traditional media outlets that they also simultaneously know are dying and becoming more biased against them.

          But then they also do a surprise pikachu face when the mediums they know are dying and irrelevant… don’t reach people.

          • @Eldritch
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            71 month ago

            They simply don’t have the funding to do the same operations at scale. Which is the whole point. Recently it was found out that Russians were funding Tim Fool and other right wing influencers to the tune of nearly $100,000 a week to put out a barely edited propaganda video once a week. Every two weeks he made as much money as recognizable notably left leaning media members like Sam Cedar earn in a year.

            People keep posting about how Democrats keep breaking fundraising records. They only break them once every 4 years generally. And those are only the records we’re aware of.

            Between all the dark money behind groups like Fox News, OANN, daily wire, The Blaze, and millions of other smaller propaganda Outlets. None of whom turn a profit on their own or make money. They are funded through wealthy Investments because they know the propaganda pays dividends.

            Democrats haven’t had funding like that since before Reagan broke the unions. Which is specifically why Reagan broke the unions. And a lot of our problems can be traced back to the loss of Union power and Union fundraising.

            You want to know why Democrats don’t pay a lot of attention to the unions anymore. This is why. The unions and people in general cannot even begin to compete with the amount of money sloshing around out there for conservatives. And that’s why Democrats have been out there so busy chasing it. Until we get rid of money in politics. Or actually find a way for regular people to begin to push back in similar ways there won’t be a change.

            • sp3ctr4l
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              31 month ago

              Well we can’t get money out of politics because all the money will vote against getting money out of politics.

              So any plan to do this will have to involve radical action outside of the norms of polite society which may or may not be against the rules of this community to describe in greater detail and specificity.

              • @Eldritch
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                41 month ago

                There’s plenty social action we’ve only begun to use. Exclusion, ostracization, and especially ridicule to it’s fullest extent. People in the last 8 years have started cutting out conservative family members. We need to go further. Are you on twitter? Then you should be ridiculed and harassed about it till you leave. Facebook? Same thing. Do you watch cable news, or any outlet that has these people. Especially if they don’t have the journalistic integrity to push back. Who the hell is dumb enough to watch that shit. Not anyone we would willingly associate with. Though that’s only part of the equation.

                We also need to promote and work hard to support actual non profit driven journalism. Building up viable alternatives. Nationwide and in our communities. There are people out there who need a bigger audience. If you’re familiar with YouTube coffeezilla for instance.

                Our complacency has been our downfall. This time a French Revolution style action will not work. They won’t all be located conveniently nearby to go after. They will be all over the world many of them hard to reach. In the end even France has still rotted from the inside regardless. And I shouldn’t even have to mention the Follies of Vladimir Lenin. Whose ideology has failed everywhere it’s been attempted.

                And the biggest hardest thing of them all. We need to be able to reach out to many of the disaffected people brainwashed by wealthy right Wingers. They would be recruits to turn against the people who currently own them. But that’s the hardest thing. Reaching so many of these people seems impossible.

            • @ChokingHazard
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              -11 month ago

              She raised a Billion dollars faster than any candidate in history. Do an audit and you will see the funds were squandered. She had the money.

              • @Eldritch
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                41 month ago

                Nowhere did I deny that she did. I simply stated that amount of money is a drop in the bucket when it comes to politics. Especially gathered once every 4 years. $1 billion every 4 years even if it’s spent perfectly would still be ineffective compared to the multiple billions of dollars spent per year collectively pushing conservative propaganda.

                And yes I know but but but Obama. Things have changed drastically since 2008. The propaganda has concealed and consolidated throughout our entire mass media to an extent unimaginable to someone in 2008.

                And while it is bad for Democrats to mismanage funds. Bad democrat. Bad democrat. It’s kind of missing the forest for the trees in this instance. And helping the opposition more. Keeping ourselves divided. But there are a lot of people on money more focused on destroying things than building things so that’s not unusual.

                • @nomous
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                  21 month ago

                  This seems like a good place to link Robert Evans BTB episode: “How Conservatism Won” in which “Robert sits down with David Bell to discuss how a consortium of rich failsons got together to fund a network of right wing think tanks and shift American culture in a fun new direction. (note: it was not actually fun at all).”

                  Our current situation really is the culmination of almost 70 years of rightwing efforts. They’ve mobilized their base and that base turn outs to city councils to set up Nativity scenes and school board meetings to ban books. There are dozens of “grassroots movements” with varying interests, (some funded by shady thinktanks but some funded by low level true believers). At the end of the day they all show up to vote for their guy(s) to push their party the direction they want, it’s worked and that party has mainstreamed extremism. Their judges and policy wonks are all Foundation Vetted and Approved ideologues.

                  The left lost, now is the time. Get a couple guns (a long one and a short one) and learn how to use them. Learn some basic first aid, you really just need to know how to stabilize someone. Start networking with like-minded people in your communities. The police will not protect us, they’ve proven they’ll happily club senior citizens to the ground and shoot any protesters in the face with rubber bullets while escorting a rightwing murderer to safety.

                  Iran was a secular, liberal state until almost 1980 when they (mostly legitimately) elected an Islamist theocracy; it could happen here.

                  tl;dl the rich hated FDRs New Deal and immediately set to work to undo everything he did and have been pretty successful, it’ll likely take decades of work to undo the damage that’s been done IF “the left” can wake up.

      • The Quuuuuill
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        211 month ago

        we’re going to fix this. i don’t know how yet. and it won’t be easy. and it won’t be short term. but we’re going to fix this, so read to a kid. make them remember reading time as the best part of their day. make them love the things AI can’t twist: physical artifacts

        • sp3ctr4l
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          1 month ago

          I appreciate your optimism, but my realism says no, no we probably won’t.

          We’ve got a maximum of 20 years, probably closer to 10, before millions, and then tens and then hundreds of millions of people around the world will be starving to death and attempting to mass migrate due to climate change, which we will not stop or mitigate.

          Governments around the world will continue becoming more authoritarian.

          Maybe we can make small, individual differences in our personal lives, but no, barring a worldwide overthrow of capitalism in some way that also does not result in a collapse of mass agriculture…

          No, we are looking at famine, destruction and chaos, and decent, critical thought oriented education will be an even more minor funding priority for all but the ruling class and their neo-nobility children.

          • The Quuuuuill
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            81 month ago

            we have two options to follow. we can do everything we can to make things better, or we can do nothing and everyone dies. personally i do not consider the latter viable. the former requires instilling hope that better things are possible. and here’s the thing: if we all band together against authoritarianism we will reach some people who are currently not awake to the possibilities. to reiterate, it will not be easy and it will not be short term, but if you ask me of the two possible outcomes, the one where everyone dies or the one where everyone gets to be free, i prefer the one where everyone gets to be free. so i’m gonna do everything in my power to bring that one to pass, even if it’s hard, unpleasant, or at times like right now seemingly impossible, but keep in mind every group faced with destruction passed down the messages they felt were most important, and always the message of the value of hope makes it through. hope is ultimately a weapon of resistance, one i refuse to give up

            • sp3ctr4l
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              1 month ago

              Oh I didn’t say we should do nothing.

              What I am saying is, is that we are past the threshold of a good future, for all but the hyper wealthy.

              Yes, we can do things to make it a less bad future for the masses, but there is no realistic plan where everyone, all 340ish million Americans, all 8 billionish humans, get to be free.

              Telling everyone authoritarianism is bad is not an effective strategy.

              Evidence: It’s what leftists and liberals have been doing for 8 years and it resulted in the greatest Republican sweep since Reagan.

              You have to actually do things, things which have a realistic chance of working.

              If your plan is to hope really hard, the lesson our hypothetical ancestors will learn is: Hopium cheerleading is an exhausting, virtue signalling waste of time that accomplishes nothing when it is not paired with actual, actionable plans.

              Have you got any of those?

              • @[email protected]
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                1 month ago

                Have you got any of those?

                For one thing, this is what fiction is for!

                If you’re like me, you probably know some people that fit in that neo-liberal democrat space: nice people, but definitely the kind MLK talked about as being an obstacle to progress. A lot of the time, they’re also the people that “aren’t into politics,” because they have straight white privilege, and these issues usually don’t affect them directly.

                One of the reasons the right has been so successful since Roe v Wade is because they get organized. They meet, they talk, they plan, they take small local action. And, of course, these are the kinds of things that leftists talk about. We need to organize, we need to work together, we need to stop in-fighting, etc. But we don’t have the natural advantage the right does.

                Third places. They’re built for the privileged and wealthy, and they fight to keep them that way. See campaigns against libraries. It’s way harder for a Jew, an Arab, and a gay man to walk into a bar and sit down for a discussion than it is for a bunch of old white ladies to talk about their Saturday plans at a church potluck. Spaces for left-leaning political discussion don’t really exist. Except in the realm of fiction.

                Star Trek is, of course, a very well known example of progressive fiction. I, personally, am a big Trekkie. Here on Lemmy, there have been memes about the Bell Riots (a two part episode from DS9, involving the crew time traveling to September 2024). We were making those jokes because those episodes, especially today, are very topical. AND THAT WORKS!

                I’ve had great conversations about those episodes with my centrist parents, as well as several acquaintances: conversations that deal with real topics, like homelessness, civic duty, and citizen action.

                The right builds their fortress on a foundation of anti-intellectualism because shutting down other conversations is their most powerful weapon, and they’ve employed it to devastating effect. The atmosphere in our country has been curated to be hostile to political speech and philosophy. Just think of how much ridicule one would receive for recommending something like a salon to a group of friends, rather than something like a boardgame night (this is also affected by lack of free time, so support your unions!). It’s for the same reason they sow division between minorities.

                But fiction doesn’t have this weakness! Have your friends over to watch some Star Trek, or lend out your copy of Men at Arms, and get Sir Terry Pratchett’s Sam Vimes “Boots” Theory of Socioeconomic Unfairness into the hands of an impressionable youth. AND THEN DISCUSS WHAT IT MEANS! Do some literary analysis. Talk about the realities that informed the art. Empathize with Jadzia as the cultural norms of her society demand she end her relationship with her former lover, simply because she’s also a woman now. Then, suddenly you have your own group for leftist political discourse.

                That’s where it gets truly tough, but as was stated above, this is going to have to be a long term effort. This is a first step. It’s up to us all to take one, and then the next, and then the next, just like those monsters that set out to repeal Roe v Wade 40 years ago, and only succeeded now.

                • sp3ctr4l
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                  1 month ago

                  So your plan is to write subversive fiction, and have third places where people will talk about theories.

                  Uh ok neat, we are doing that here, virtually, and people have been doing this on the internet for two or three decades.

                  (Insert Einstein’s definition of insanity here)

                  So again, what’s the actionable, definable, realistic plan?

                  I’m currently getting my ass downvoted into oblivion in another thread for saying that software developers unwilling to sacrifice their livelihoods or lower their quality of life, and who instead continue to write software that directly promotes corporate profit seeking and spreads fascist propoganda are part of the problem, that they bare some degree of moral responsibility for societal degredation.

                  “Someone else will just do the job.”

                  To me it looks like a great many people have a vast, in depth understanding of all of the things that are broken with society, but we are already past the threshold where all of these people who understand the problems…

                  … well, they’re unwilling or materially unable to…

                  … you know, do anything about it.

                  tl:dr;

                  we are already neofeudal serfs.

                  discussing theory is great, but if it doesn’t lead to any actual, implementable plans for change, nothing will change.

            • rustydomino
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              41 month ago

              My dude thanks for the message of positivity. Personally I think we’re fucked regardless but I do appreciate the thread of hope. I try to do what I’m can individually as well and sometimes it feels futile but it’s good to know that there are some of us (dozens even!) still trying to do the right thing.

          • The Quuuuuill
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            61 month ago

            and also libraries and book mobiles. and help fund reading therapists however you can. give the children the things that helped you come up. that’s all society has ever been. a 10k year long effort to give the kids a better future than the one we were given. it’s just every 80 years we fuck it all up and give them a worse future. but if our ancestors voices can reach us, our voices can still be around as long as the truth needs to be told

        • @Brainsploosh
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          -21 month ago

          Bold words from a country built on the failure of other empires.

          • The Quuuuuill
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            91 month ago

            when i say “we” i don’t mean america. i mean the poor, the lower classes, i mean people who know the truth. people who understand hierarchies aren’t necessary to society, that poverty is enforced, and that all people can be, and deserve to be free. sorry for any disclarity. this is not just about the united states. this is about a global system of terror that’s about to get a lot scarier after a summer of intensifying authoritarianism

            • @Brainsploosh
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              -121 month ago

              I’m saying that sometimes it’s not fixable. We’ve been at this for about 200 000 years, almost nothing has been long term solved yet.

              Besides, your perspective is iffy. From what you’re saying in the reply, you’ve ignored the suffering of the rest of the world until it affected you personally, and now you claim to speak for everyone affected? Seems like quite a douchebag thing to do.

              The world will be different, this will probably not be what ends us all. We will more probably survive as a species only to put ourselves in a bind with even higher stakes. Our base social instincts are wired this way as long as there’s resource scarcity or inequality.

              • The Quuuuuill
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                41 month ago

                you’re projecting mate. I’ve been saying we live in a global system of torture for 13 years and protesting genocide since 2008. across the globe there are stories of societies who figured this shit out before white supremecy arrived on their shores and wrecked everything. i’m sorry, but no. this resource scarcity and inequality are constructed by the holders of power. it’s planned and on purpose to keep us from ever seeing that the rich keep us poor so we’ll stay angry at each other and let them stay in power. i fundamentally disagree with you about what all of human history tells us, and what the natural order is. i honestly ask you this, if the natural order is struggle between groups of people, why does it require so much energy and effort on the part of the part of the people in power to keep it going?

                • @Brainsploosh
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                  -61 month ago

                  Yeah, we seem to misunderstand each other at every turn, it may be that we have too little common ground for this to be a productive exchange.

                  Let’s chalk it up to cultural differences and see if we can meet in a forum more conducive to nuance and building understanding.

      • Flying Squid
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        21 month ago

        So true. And getting rid of good teachers through low pay and other disincentives.

        My daughter had a completely unqualified “substitute” teacher for her entire sixth grade here in Indiana. Her qualifications? She ran a children’s theater troupe in Orange County, CA. Really. Never taught a class in her life, which is why she did at least two blatantly illegal things (only one of which I knew about in time):

        1. Punished my daughter for refusing to say the pledge of allegiance. That was decided as her right by SCOTUS in the 1940s.
        2. Told the kids that the 2020 election was a lie and Trump was the real president.

        I wish I had known about the second one during the school year because I read her the riot act on the first one.

        And now she’s in online school in the 8th grade. It’s a public school, but done online. The teachers are accredited, and they are (overall) decent. It is run by Pearson, the evil company that makes the textbooks most public school kids use, so she’s learning from the same source as most kids in the U.S… Since I’m a “learning coach,” meaning I make sure she stays on track, I’m reading what they’re teaching her and it’s ridiculous.

        Right now she’s doing English grammar. Shit that does not matter outside of academic fields like linguistics, things that are not necessary to know for good writing and reading. You don’t have to be able to define a participle to know how to read or to write well. And frankly, it’s really fucking confusing to the point that I can’t follow it sometimes. Even her teacher keeps screwing it up based on what I overhear while she’s doing her lessons. What they do teach about composition is insane and stupid. She’s supposed to start a formal essay essay with a “hook,” which usually ends in a question mark. So an essay on, say, compound interest is supposed to begin with something like, “do you know people can earn interest on the interest they already earn?” rather than a fucking topic sentence. That’s supposed to be the second sentence. She actually got marked down for not having a hook and just starting the essay in an adult manner.

        Social studies isn’t any better. In fact, it’s far worse. They’re covering the 19th century right now. First, Washington’s entire presidency was one single lesson. Then there was another lesson with 11 very long pages about Marbury vs. Madison (again, mostly an academic topic that Americans only need basic knowledge of). More recently they had four very short pages on the accomplishments of women in the 19th century. Harriet Tubman got two paragraphs.

        On top of it, absolutely nothing in either class has any sort of context she can apply to her own life. Does she want to know how the checks and balances system of the U.S. federal government can affect things she cares about? Too bad, they’re just going to tell you what they are and move on with maybe a brief explanation of the background rather than the ultimate results. Does she want to know how to keep paragraphs concise and not use ten words when one will do? Too bad, it’s time to learn about gerunds. You know how important it is to know what a gerund is, right? College-level English term papers require you to write detailed explanations of such things what with how essential they are.

        And I won’t even get into the bullshit they teach her about drugs in her health class.

        • @frostysauce
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          01 month ago

          Dude, that’s the stuff you learn in school. What you’re describing is pretty much what I remember learning around 8th grade in the '90s.

          I don’t get why you’re so upset, it all sounds perfectly normal to me.

          • Flying Squid
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            11 month ago

            If your teachers were doing blatantly illegal things in the 1990s, that doesn’t make it okay now.

            Also, I was in high school in the 90s and that’s a load of shit. No one ever taught me anything about a “hook” for an essay question.

  • @[email protected]
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    781 month ago

    As an Arab-American myself, I say fuck them. They deserve all the shit that’s to come their way. The dude said it loud and clear “let Bibi finish the job”. I know the Democrats didn’t do shit either, but at least they never said they wanted to deport everyone, which means you’ll still have a fucking voice. You can protest them when they’re in office. He was very clear with his stance on minorities. Some of them argued with me about “nuclear family and religion” and fucking bullshit. Dumbasses, you don’t need Trump to have a nuclear family and have your religion. It just never makes sense to me.

  • candyman337
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    721 month ago

    I don’t understand how any Arab American could think Trump would advocate for peace in the middle east.

    • The Quuuuuill
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      531 month ago

      he talks about peace, but it’s obvious from the context he means the kind of peace hitler meant: the kind where everyone is dead at the end of the grand all consuming war

      • @[email protected]
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        431 month ago

        I can’t believe those people took Trump seriously. The same guy who literally instated a muslim ban and uses the words arab/muslim/terrorist interchangeably.

        • The Quuuuuill
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          181 month ago

          the lesson here is “gotdamn is propaganda effective, even to get people to do the absolute dumbest shit”

          so start putting out messaging about how… not to be a shitty person where people who aren’t guaranteed to agree with you will see and hear it

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          The Muslim ban happened during his presidency, which was apparently too long ago for most of the electorate to remember. Honestly, it’s an interesting insight into the workings of our political system. Maybe more presidents that lost their re-election bid should have tried again

    • Skiluros
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      171 month ago

      This is not unique to Arab Americans.

      There is a decent amount of Ukrainian Americans who support independent Ukraine, but also think Trump would stop the war and be a better choice for Ukraine. Although it seems that this is somewhat less common than in the Arab American community (I could be wrong).

      This is of course complete bullshit. Trump is a corrupt American oligarch with degenerate tendencies. Oligarchs protect their gangs, expand their territory and give kickbacks to partner gangs (e.g. allowing unsafe “full self driving” rules for Elmo’s organization). This is not even a Trump or American thing, this is universal.

      With respect to Gaza, the Israeli oligarch gangs have far more money and influence on Trump’s crew. Then there is also kinship ties.

      But this was a shrewd move by Trump’s crew. I think some proportion of the Arab American community will become life-long supporters irrespective of what happens in Gaza (I think their concern for Gaza is a bit more nuanced than what one may think at first glance).

    • @Treczoks
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      41 month ago

      Like, by nuking the whole place until the shooting stops?

  • @[email protected]
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    661 month ago

    Did they forget the Muslim travel ban he tried to do in his first term? It was one of the first things he did in office. He has already told you who he is multiple, multiple times.

    • @[email protected]
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      321 month ago

      Trump just got reelected. America forgot about Trump’s first term…

      It’s absolute insanity…

      • @[email protected]
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        171 month ago

        America lives its life one quarter mile at a time… Nothing else matters: not the mortgage, not the store, not my team and all their bullshit. For those ten seconds or less three month, I’m free.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 month ago

        When you consider the drugs and toxins we consume, it isn’t that surprising. I feel like I blocked out a lot of memories from his first term, but I still had enough left to know it was a nightmare I didn’t want to repeat.

  • Flying Squid
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    561 month ago

    People kept saying, right up to the election, “don’t vote for Harris because she supports genocide.”

    Those people got what they wanted and yet they’re suddenly very unhappy about it. Interesting, isn’t it?

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      They were living in their own alternate reality where they changed the system by doing nothing lol

      • Flying Squid
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        101 month ago

        My favorite ones were the ones who said to vote third party and when you asked them which candidate, they would say it didn’t matter.

        Because that’s how elections are won.

        • @andrewta
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          51 month ago

          Notice those people are silent right now.

          • Flying Squid
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            41 month ago

            Not all of them, sadly. They’ve pivoted to “none of this has anything to do with me, all I did was tell people to absolutely not vote for Harris. She’s the one who ran a terrible campaign. Also, Trump won’t be all that bad.”

          • @frostysauce
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            31 month ago

            They were bots. That’s why they are silent now.

  • @[email protected]
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    511 month ago

    You were warned.

    You refused to listen.

    You refused to look at the evidence staring you in the face.

  • Avid Amoeba
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    341 month ago

    “I just want you to think about what the alternative was,” said Abbas, referring to the current administration’s handling of Israel’s war in Gaza and its invasion of Lebanon. He added, “What did you expect from myself or many members of the community to do?”

    I see Abbas is still in the denial stage.

    • @Goodmorningsunshine
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      201 month ago

      They’re always so eager to never once think critically and to always let themselves off the hook. I’m sorry, but on the brink of societal and ecological collapse, I equate those who refuse to think with those who actively destroy.

    • @PugJesus
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      111 month ago

      “I just want you to think about what the alternative was,” said Abbas, referring to the current administration’s handling of Israel’s war in Gaza and its invasion of Lebanon. He added, “What did you expect from myself or many members of the community to do?”

      “Think of what the alternative is” is exactly what we were saying.

      People are stupid. And because of that, we’ll suffer an incredible amount of harm that very easily could have been avoided.

  • @[email protected]
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    341 month ago

    It’s fascinating how he didn’t permanently lose the vote of the entire US Muslim community when he, you know, tried to institute a Muslim ban.

    (I’m aware that “Arab Americans” doesn’t equal “Muslim Americans” but there’s a lot of overlap.)

  • Lord Wiggle
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    321 month ago

    German jews who voted for Hitler got concerned soon after the elections too. Many ethnic Germans too, but all they had to do was say “ich hab es nicht gewust” afterwards. The second World War has been so well documented. Yet many still haven’t learned anything from history.

  • circuitfarmer
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    261 month ago

    some Arab Americans who voted for Trump

    I mean, I lack respect for anyone voting against their own interests. The rock you must be living under to vote for this dude with such mountains of bullshit behind him is immense. Maybe some leopard-face-eating will change things.

    • @emmy67
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      -151 month ago

      To be fair, it wasn’t possible to pick a candidate that was aligned with theor interests this election.

      One was definitely worse, but neither were positive

      • circuitfarmer
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        161 month ago

        These aren’t people who didn’t vote. These are people who chose Trump over Harris. Only one of those candidates has a platform which is highly likely to negatively impact Americans who aren’t white.

        (And before Gaza gets brought up, it is moot: neither candidate was going to end that war).

        • @BowtiesAreCool
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          11 month ago

          Well, trump might actually end it sooner by helping to eradicate Palestine completely.

  • @[email protected]
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    261 month ago

    GOOD. fuck everyone who voted for fascism. i look forward to reading about their dismay at the realization of just how fucked we all are

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      If the left can organize to transform this disappointment into actual resistance, that will be worth something. Right now I think mass civil disobedience is the only thing that can really slow down the implementation of fascism, but it needs to be organized and we don’t yet see anyone stepping up to organize real resistance.

  • @kaitco
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    231 month ago

    “I never thought the Leopards would eat MY face! Even though they specifically said they would and campaigned on eating all faces, I didn’t really think that they would be so focused on eating faces, especially not mine!”

  • @Nuke_the_whales
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    181 month ago

    Remember how after 9/11 Republicans wanted every Arab and Muslim dead? Did these Arabs forget that?

    • @frostysauce
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      51 month ago

      Remember the fucking Muslim ban during Trump’s first term? These people must have.

    • @TankovayaDiviziya
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      1 month ago

      Voters in general have a memory of a goldfish. People vote on immediate concerns and issue. To be honest, if Democrats had a stronger backbone to stand up to Israel, this would not have happened.

  • MushuChupacabra
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    171 month ago

    Yeah?

    Trump is not concerned with your opinion.