• Rentlar
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    51 minutes ago

    Right now my mind is at, “it very well could be, but time will tell”.

    Had Trump had the right people in places to make certain decisions, it could have very well ended in 2020 just as much. Well the world did change in a big way near the end of his term, with COVID, how he botched it and how he gave corporate handout after corporate handout which caused the inflation that Biden is being blamed for.

    I’ve been still grasping for ways that the US still can be saved, which there are many, but they hinge on

    1A. Trump going back on many of his worst promises and not doing them, because reneging is his thing, or

    1B. Trump and his team being too incompetent to enact his agenda, or

    1C. The backlash to Trump’s unpopular moves creates disobedience within government, military and writ large, preventing him from enacting his agenda, and

    1. Democracy not being rigged during his tenure, avoiding where elections become just as meaningful as Russia’s or China’s during the 4 years.

    A plurality of Americans gave Trump and Republican facsism basically all the dragon balls of power, so it’s up to him pretty much whether he can use them and the most Americans can do is organize and resist.

  • @themaninblack
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    111 minutes ago

    It’s my point of no return. Leaving in two weeks forever. Good luck.

  • @[email protected]
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    72 hours ago

    I think it’s possibly the end of Western democracy. If Russia and China stroll through Europe with Trump’s help, that’s pretty much it, no?

    • @Coreidan
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      61 hour ago

      Naw this is ridiculous.

      Everyone knows it started in the 70s and we’ve been headed down hill ever since. Reality is this country died 60 years ago. It’s just taking awhile for the wheels to fall off the bus.

  • @[email protected]
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    143 hours ago

    We don’t know.

    The US came back from a US president hiring private goons to spy on his political opponents.

    The US came back from a US president illegally selling weapons to Iran to fund right wing militias in South America.

    The US came back from a US cabinet member taking literal bribes from oil companies to give them oil drilling rights on federal land.

    The US came back from a US president illegally firing a cabinet member and installing his own lackey.

    But it didn’t HAVE to.

    I don’t think there’s really such a thing as a ‘point of no return’ for a Democracy. But it is possible to get to a point after which you don’t return.

    • @postmateDumbass
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      157 minutes ago

      The next line of defense is 3/4 of state legislatures.

  • @Clinicallydepressedpoochie
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    For democracy? Yes.

    The longer the rubes hold on to this pipe dream that the dems can make a come back the further we will slip and longer it will take to recover. Unfortunately, I don’t think democrat party members will ever give up on the democratic party and they will spend all their political goodwill investing in this farce of a party long after the elections are still free and fair.

    Say, free and fair elections survive by some act of god. That doesn’t change the fact the GOP can beat them handley in a free and fair election. The only thing trump needed to cement his win was the Supreme Court to sign off on everything. Given immunity all the road blocks trump had before have been lifted.

    We have till January and you will see what the executive is actually capable of, with limp dick biden kicked to the curb.

    The terror that will be trumps deportation methods will have your jaw drop and I’m not kidding. We tolerated kids in cages, Abu Ghraib is coming to America and our own sex trafficker and chief will begin some truly despicable shit. You better believe media capture is part of it because there is no way other country’s will be let in on this side of the veil.

    I’m not a doomer. It’s not hyperbole. Im not an oracle and would pay my with my own life just to be wrong.

    I still am hopeful though that my countrymen can snap out of it and quit dismissing reality in real-time, allowing us an actual chance at resisting this upheaval. If we wait till the midterms though, this shit is cooked, packed, and on the shelf.

    If you want to say, look at American history, I’d quickly defer you to the 90s. Whatever we might have once been we are no longer that. We are consumers educated by infomercials who only know reality TV and “influencers”. Coke was the first plague, Springer the second. Followed by real world and road rules. All of this media “culture” stripped us of what it ever ment to be American. No one sits around and wanes intellectual about the founding fathers unless you’re a fashie supreme court justice or Lin-Manuel Miranda. Today, in 2024, the Apprentice is more American than George Washington.

    There was a time when a single black women sitting at the front of a bus could change a nation. Today Rosa would hit the front page of reddit on a Wednesday and fall off by the time Europeans woke up to see.

  • @DarkFuture
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    365 hours ago

    Yes.

    In my opinion we’ve already passed the point of no return and recent events have just confirmed as much.

    This isn’t about having differing political opinions. A profoundly unfit, amoral criminal with a very public history of being an awful person came along and started spewing extremely dangerous rhetoric, some of which is almost verbatim to Hitler’s, and our society ate it up and made him president in 2016. This man, who leads a party who courts racists/sexists for their votes, utterly failed his tenure as president, bombing his response to the greatest American crisis since WW2 and presiding over the highest White House administration turnover rate in U.S. history. Since then he has become a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist, and illegally attempted to overturn our democratic institutions by various means.

    This go around the American people were presented with a choice between that person, who only managed to make himself appear even more unfit during this campaign season, openly stated he is anti-worker rights, and is directly responsible for removing women’s federally protected right to bodily autonomy, or a successful prosecutor with a doctorate in law, backed by a party that, despite misinformation, has a voting history proving they vote in favor of the average American FAR more than the opposing party…and Americans STILL managed to drop the ball and go with the CLEARLY worse choice. And when I say clearly, I’m talking about by every conceivable metric that exists in reality.

    At this point it isn’t about Democrat vs Republican or Trump vs Kamala or Biden. It’s about the American people. We are not a society of intelligent voters. We have failed our responsibility as citizens in a democracy by being too lazy to learn and by allowing misinformation to mislead us and emotions to cloud our better judgement. We are not engaged in responsible involvement in our own politics. We gleefully elect people that only offer hate and fear and lies, despite how hard they try to prove how awful they are to us. And THAT is why we have passed the point of no return. If you remove the parties and the politicians out of the equation, you still have a society that fails at responsibly preserving a democracy. That gives in to hateful rhetoric and fear. That wants to get the better of the “others”.

    There is no happy ending for a society like that. A society like that can only decline. This was not an election about one political ideology against another. It was an election about morality. And we categorically failed that moral test.

    There are excuses. We’ve been through a lot. Lots of people are desperate. Desperate people make bad decisions. But the bottom line is we don’t live in a society with a majority of responsible adults making responsible, fact-based decisions about the most important things.

    In the arc of history we may end up reaching a better place, but personally I believe we’re embarking on a decline that will most likely last the rest of our lives. It simply isn’t a problem that can be fixed short term. And we’re about to experience a sort of deconstruction. A deconstruction of norms. A deconstruction of institutions. A deconstruction of education and safety nets. And those things take a lot of blood, sweat, and tears to build back, because it’s easier to destroy than it is to create or maintain.

    Buckle up. Try to find happiness where you can. It’s probably not getting better anytime soon.

    • TheLowestStone
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      3 hours ago

      I’ve never been more happy to be childless by choice.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 hours ago

        I don’t understand this line of thought. As in you are childless by choice BECAUSE of what is going on in the US?

        • TheLowestStone
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          73 hours ago

          I’m childless by choice because I don’t like children. I’m happy I don’t have kids because they’d be experiencing this shit storm during their formative years and I can’t even imagine how badly that would fuck them up.

  • @[email protected]
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    378 hours ago

    No. People always want some apocalyptic ending, but there’s always a chance to make adjustments in various ways. It’s just that some solutions, the ones that are less painful and involved less people’s lives getting destroyed and less death, some of those solutions become increasingly distant.

    And look, if you go back and check out the history of unions and labor rights in the US, it was a bloody history. I think we might be looking at that repeating itself. And that’s only if we’re lucky.

  • @AnyProgressIsGood
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    157 hours ago

    It would seem that way. The people elected a guy that tried to overthrow democracy

    How do you recover from that

    • @DarkFuture
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      115 hours ago

      You probably don’t.

      Even with a contentious subject like abortion. That’s a disagreement about a specific topic. You can reach a middle ground. It’s one of many topics to debate over and forge legislation regarding.

      But the majority gleefully electing a guy that effectively looked us all straight in the face and said “I don’t give a fuck about democracy and will attempt to subvert or overthrow it if it doesn’t suit me”? Yeah, there’s really no recovering from that. At least not without a long period of serious decline and suffering, followed by lots of struggle and death to earn back what we lose.

      We disrespected the shit out of our democracy and everyone that fought/died for it. There’s no way that ends well.

  • @4grams
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    197 hours ago

    This is based on nothing but vibes and my observations but I think so. We were cooked the moment we elected the clown the first time, just been a slower slide than I anticipated. In truth though we already had the disease at that point but it was then it became terminal.

    I desperately want to be wrong and will do what I can to prove myself a moron. Fingers crossed.

  • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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    12511 hours ago

    Not really. Not to be dismissive of the harms of a 2nd term trump.

    But you have to understand what American history has been.

    People were literally enslaved in the early days, then the country was literally at war with itself over slavery. Then Jim Crow and Segregation. Black people were lynched. White mobs would kill black people.

    Chinese people were targeted by the Chinese Exclusion Act and banned from entry, some were US Citizens too and they weren’t except either.

    The US had a major economic crash in 1929. Got into 2 world wars. American Citizens of Japanese ancestry were literally arrested and held in camps because of their ancestry. Went through cols war, the red scare, mccathyism. People randomly getting accused of being “communists” and arrested. Unions get cracked down. Protests were brutally suppressed, more violently than in modern day. Black people protesting for their rights and took a bus down south got burned. Civil Rights activist Martin Luther King Jr. literally got assassinated.

    That is the American history.

    And here we are, through such a shitty history, democracy survived, and voting rights expanded to so many people. First to Black people, then to Women.

    Back then a majority of the population supported segregation, institutionalized racism. But today, a majority of people are okay with interracial marriage.

    I have high hopes we can survive another trump term.

    It won’t be pleasent, but we’ll survive.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 hour ago

      On the other hand, do keep in mind that mighty empires have fallen. We cannot say for sure that things will be fine just because in the past the USA has survived

    • @DarkFuture
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      125 hours ago

      The part about our history you’re forgetting is that we never, through any of that, gleefully elected a guy that has made it abundantly clear he doesn’t give a fuck about democracy and will work to subvert or destroy it if it doesn’t suit him.

      This is new territory.

      And we’re about to experience the deconstruction of things that will be very difficult to build back.

      Your point is that we’ve been around for a few hundred years, so we can bounce back. But history would like to point out that nations that were around much longer than us have ceased to exist many times over.

      I wish I had your optimism.

    • LeadersAtWork
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      10 hours ago

      It should be noted that through all this people fought for those rights. So don’t fall asleep, dear America, because organizing even within small communities will make a difference.

      If done correctly, massive change can happen. Dream big so that those who fear negotiate back down to the levels you’ll accept.

    • @GelatinGeorge
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      9 hours ago

      I think the problem here is the concurrent effects of climate change. The US couldn’t have picked a worse time to move from flirting with facism to full-on marrying it.

      You can deal with one crisis if you’re coordinated enough but the chaos that’s already occurring with the climate - and is set to become exponentially worse - doesn’t give me much hope for a harmonious conclusion to this. Obviously, I hope I’m wrong and you’re right.

    • @NineMileTower
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      2910 hours ago

      I feel like a lot of people online need to read this comment, go outside, and live their life. This is not defeatist, and it’s not unreal optimism. Thank you for this.

    • @[email protected]
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      89 hours ago

      Dont forget the trail of tears.

      The US has been through a lot and will likely recover, but it would be nice to avoid making the same mistakes again. How many more people have to get hurt before humanity learns?

  • @[email protected]
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    46 hours ago

    Doubt it.

    The rest of the world isn’t lucky enough to never have to hear about the perpetual US election cycle again, and frankly there’s just too much money in it for them to give it up.

    It’ll be a fucking clown show for the next four years though.

  • @Apepollo11
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    10311 hours ago

    From an outsider’s perspective, I think a lot of people think you guys sailed past the point of no return back in the 80s.

    • @Magister
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      9211 hours ago

      Reagan, he is the starting point of everything: the tax cut from 73% to 28%. USA never got back on track after this.

      • @NABDad
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        6211 hours ago

        Nope. Johnson.

        No, not that one.

        Andrew Johnson.

        So many ways it could have been better.

        He could have punished the Southern Aristocracy for starting the civil war. He could have ensured that the evil that led us there was exterminated forever.

        Failing that, they could have actually removed him via impeachment instead of falling just short. That would have at least established forever that the presidency is not some sacred “unimpeachable” office.

      • @I_Miss_Daniel
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        59 hours ago

        But Raygun did a great break dancing set in the Olympics.

    • @[email protected]
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      Remember when the entire world was convinced there was absolutely no way Bush, an idiot, fascist, religious bigot, etc could get re-elected?

      • @kitnaht
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        11 hours ago

        Nobody thought that at all. Most presidents sitting during outbreaks of war retain their positions. You’d have to have been in a complete echo chamber to believe this stance. The moment 9/11 happened, it solidified Bush’s Second term in stone.

        I assume you mean Jr. Because Sr wasn’t the moron that Jr was.

        • @[email protected]
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          Yeah no, I’m gonna disagree. Being outside of the US at the time, most people did think that. And yes, obviously I’m talking about Jr since Sr didn’t get re-elected. 9/11 was a full three years before the election of his second term. And most importantly before he started the war in Iraq. A war that was widely viewed as illegitimate outside the US.

          • @kitnaht
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            1110 hours ago

            It was viewed as illegitimate inside the US too. And yeah, I remember, even as a 17yr old at the time, seeing the event happen live and lamenting to my mother that we were going to have another Bush term over it. Historically for America that’s always been the case.

            • @[email protected]
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              It was viewed as illegitimate inside the US too.

              You’re recollection of events is clearly skewed. Something like 80% of the population approved of it at first. Meanwhile there were protests in the millions of people around the world against it.

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

              A Gallup poll made on behalf of CNN and USA Today concluded that 79% of Americans thought the Iraq War was justified, with or without conclusive evidence of illegal weapons.

              • @[email protected]
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                It’s so fucking disgusting to be honest… I’m just a worthless dumb shit uneducated factory worker and at 17 I could see right through that garbage… We’re a hateful group of people whether we care to admit it or not, there was a lot of anti-islamic/Muslim/Arab sentiment in the US at thst time. People were bloodthirsty.

                I was going to join the military after highschool to get training since I’m poor and had no real direction to gamble on college, and then take it from there whether to stay in or not. Once talk started of invading Iraq I immediately said fuccccck that. I still blame Bush partially for my current situation. :/

              • @kitnaht
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                10 hours ago

                You should read your own link, because it also mentions that by the end of his term, most disapproved. By 2006 it was viewed as illegitimate by most. My recollection of events is fine, thanks.

                America will generally approve of measures when they are led to believe it affects their security and safety. It’s the years afterwards that determine if it continues to hold support.

                • @[email protected]
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                  You should read your own link, because it also mentions that by the end of his term, most disapproved

                  I clearly stated “at first”. Mind you by the end of his term a majority still thought it was the right thing to do.

      • @Today
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        410 hours ago

        Nucular. 🤦

    • @givesomefucks
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      1110 hours ago

      What?!

      The 80s were fucked, but if you’re saying it was worse than the response to the Civil Rights movement…

      McCarthyism…

      Jim Crow…

      Or the KKK destroying reconstruction…

      Like, I could see saying that last one was the point, only if you start the clock immediately after resolving the civil war. Cause obviously a Civil War is what really happens after a point of no return. We lasted a couple years in between the two points.

      For as fucked as the last 40 years has been, as far as America goes we’re beating the average on basic human decency.

      What’s happening now isn’t new, it’s a slip backwards, which is unfortunately common when you try to fight fascism with moderate politics. It works for a little bit because they’re coasting off the last people who really fought. But all moderate politcs really are, is giving fascist time to regroup in the shadows like fucking Sauron.

      It’s a cycle, and we live in a time when you can learn pretty much anything about history in a few minutes on Wikipedia

      America can not afford for voters to stay ignorant. We need people who know what happened last time, what worked then, and what might work again. Stop acting like we live in unprecedented times, and start reading up on how fascism has been defeated historically.

      Cuz we’re up, like it or not shits getting real again. And the more people know what we’re doing then better.

  • The Picard Maneuver
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    5211 hours ago

    Progress isn’t a straight line, and sometimes there are setbacks on the way. I’m disappointed, of course, but I’m optimistic that we’ll manage.

    • Tanis Nikana
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      1411 hours ago

      We may yet manage as a country, but the millions that die from this election won’t get to see it.

        • @[email protected]
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          1210 hours ago

          Soldiers knocking down doors to arrest millions of illegal aliens and everyone who looks like an illegal alien and shoving them into camps, what could go wrong?

          • @Today
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            210 hours ago

            I don’t think we will see that, but i do think we will see ice raids on businesses that tend to hire immigrants and fake crackdowns on paperwork that dramatically increases the time and hassle for everything, and weird pushes for all paperwork to be in English.

        • Tanis Nikana
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          69 hours ago

          Women. Queer people. Non-white people. Hell, even white straight cis evangelical Christian rich men who die from being sick.

          There will be so much death.

          It will be unending.

            • Tanis Nikana
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              17 minutes ago

              I’m not about to provide you with masturbation material.

        • @NineMileTower
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          410 hours ago

          I love how you have downvotes for asking for clarification. As if asking for it is an argument deserving of downvotes.

          • Kairos
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            14 hours ago

            A fellow Lemmit who enjoys split score totals!

        • @[email protected]
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          38 hours ago

          I think that the us perspective on politics is surprising self-centered. If millions will die remains to be seen, but an unpredictable us leadership will certainly shift power dynamics on an international scale. The trump administration might randomly decide to side with land grabbing dictators, might embolden Israel, or switch to Doge Coin as the main currency. Those things might not directly cause death, but will disrupt the world stage to a degree which might overpower currently stable institutions. Which in turn might lead to death and suffering as a consequence. I’m not trying to say that everything should remain as is. Things are awful in a lot of places, but one of the biggest and most powerful nations with a “leader” that might throw a world ending tantrum over a Twitter thread is nothing anybody, but the most nihilistic acclerationists want. Also Trump’s plans to withdraw from climate change mitigation will certainly add to the pile of dead bodies which we will inherit in the next 50 year as a consequence of our actions today.

    • @ChicoSuave
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      29 hours ago

      And progress without testing it’s resiliency against malicious actors will not last. As much as we hate Trump being elected and staffing clowns in each position, it will test what has been made so far. Row v. Wade, as we now know, should have been stronger. The Voting Rights Act too. The states that required the law to be fair have pulled back the law and reveal little has changed.

      No one likes getting burned but fire is useful for showing us what burns easily and what withstands the heat. We will rebuild stronger and know what works.

  • @Modva
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    139 hours ago

    That’s up to Trump, because your vaunted checks and balances are gone.

    Think he’s going to show restraint? Insight? Empathy?