• ronalicious
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    851 year ago

    i am feeling so impatient. just throw this asshat in federal prison already.

    • @Treczoks
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      81 year ago

      Indeed. The only place he should go after MarALago and the court rooms.

      • @AngryCommieKender
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        01 year ago

        They’ve already tried their shit in a small town. Got hit by a chair, and someone swam in from two counties over to beat their asses. Didn’t need guns or weapons, just a wholesome ass beating.

    • @aidanM
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      51 year ago

      I think majority of Vice readers were never with the GOP. Then again Gavin McInnes was a founder

  • @Biff
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    381 year ago

    “If conservatives become convinced that they cannot win democratically, they will not abandon conservatism, they will abandon democracy.” - David Frum

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      while I get and in many ways agree with the sentiment, it is truthful to assert that there was a time when if the Republican Party lost elections, they would actually change their platform and try to win back voters. As American popular culture has shifted more and more to the left, however, now that it’s pretty much unthinkable for the electoral map of 1984 to happen again, and they see it as an existential threat.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        You make a good point. I just wasn’t alive to see that level of self reflection from the Rebublican party.

        • @[email protected]
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          121 year ago

          Absolutely. Anyone under 30-40 pretty much only knows the GOP as the party of “Obama is a MMUSL1M!1!!!”, but like, it was the Nixon Administration that created the EPA. It’s also difficult because much of the economic issues we’ve experienced from 2008 onwards are because of the Clinton Administration, so the “both parties are the same” argument can be pretty compelling. You could definitely make the argument that in the 90s, they were, but Beau of the Fifth Column on YouTube put it well:

          You walk into a bar to find an ATM while on a road trip with your very visibly-queer friend. The bar is full of MAGA hats. Do you feel comfortable leaving your friend out front while you look for the ATM, and maybe take a leak? Now imagine the bar is full of “Vote Blue no Matter Who” shirts.

  • @dude187
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    1 year ago

    Removed by mod

    • @Fisk400
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      371 year ago

      Popular vote is what the most number of people want. The idea that popular vote is bad is anti-democratic.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Don’t fall for it. Conservatives have been beating the It’s a republic, not a democracy for many years now. They are too dumb to realize representative democracy is a form of democracy. We should have a direct democracy in electing the President. And I have no problem with Representatives voting on all the other stuff. Then again, a lot of times that means shit doesn’t even come up for a vote because the controlling party will say some bullshit like “We don’t have the votes to vote on it”. I’m not sure how to fix that, aside from electing better reps, but humans sure like the incumbent, no matter how ineffectual they have been.

    • @[email protected]
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      321 year ago

      Let’s say you had s choice between two schools.

      School A makes an attempt to teach things that are true. Some teachers make less of an attempt than others and will make mistakes. Some will outright promote propaganda but are generally frowned upon by the others.

      School B has teachers that lie almost exclusively. Teachers who don’t are being drummed out of the school as traitors to the school.

      Given how extremely similar these schools must appear to you, which do you pick?

      • @EmpathicVagrant
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        -21 year ago

        You just described actual schools, public schools are being controlled and stifled from teaching certain things via book bans now though, or new teaching restrictions. Meanwhile your school B example sounds like the now publicly funded private schools that just teach via indoctrination.

        A little close to home tbh…

        • @deadtom
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          41 year ago

          Like the “slaves had it good” bullshit from pragerU that Florida just approved for classrooms? Oh wait I’m sorry it’s from PragerKids… cause they have a whole wing to target children in exactly the ways Republicans claim without evidence that Democrats do.

          From Republicans, every accusation is a confession. Just look at child marriage laws and the expansion they are trying to do to see how badly they want be able to own and fuck children.

          • @EmpathicVagrant
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            31 year ago

            Indoctrination to have more control down the road, exactly.

    • Raltoid
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      1 year ago

      It’s literally impossible to change your mind, because you are living in a delusion or your own making.

      • @Chreutz
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        101 year ago

        Not that what you say is incorrect, but you should be very wary of believing that a party’s name is a good indicator for its actual policies. I know the US only has two parties with very generic names, but in other countries with more parties, names can be deceiving.

          • @Chreutz
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            31 year ago

            Yeah, my comment was as much for anyone reading your comment that might draw the wrong conclusions.

            Cheers! 👍

          • @Chreutz
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            21 year ago

            Noooo, I thought that was one of the good ones! 🤣

    • z3rOR0ne
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      231 year ago

      Hey, asshole. Why don’t YOU change MY mind?! Cuz the last time I checked there was only one party that is willing to get in bed with antisemites, LGBTQ hate groups, fascists, white supremacists, and…uh…oh yeah, rich billionaires.

      Seems to me one party is a little more desperate to control the general population, and it certainly looks like that party doesn’t care who they have to get into bed with to accomplish their nightmarish goals.

      So why don’t you do the hard work for once and YOU change MY mind?

    • genoxidedev1
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      1 year ago

      Oooh! Oooooh! ☝🏻🤓 Le both sides bad!! LMAO I’M SO EDUCATED 🤣🤣🤣

    • Flying Squid
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      141 year ago

      Okay, Crowder. Don’t you have a podcast to blather on?

    • pitninja
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      1 year ago

      I certainly am in favor of a popular vote for president. The only reason anyone would want the president elected by a convoluted system whereby our votes don’t directly count toward who we want to represent us all is because the system is currently benefiting their side disproportionately. The only reasons the electoral college exists at this point are to give some states an outsized weight on the end result and to override the will of the people in the form of faithless electors. But electors could’ve prevented the disastrous Trump presidency and chose not to, so if they’re going to rubber stamp an unpopular and unqualified candidate, they are not fulfilling their original purpose.

      The only way I’m in favor of keeping the electoral college is if we uncap the size of the House of Representatives (which I think we should do anyway). The House no longer represents the makeup of the entire American public because it’s now unnaturally skewed conservative and each representative represents over 700,000 constituents. If we’d kept expanding the House about the same rate we used to (and should), we’d have almost 700 representatives. This system is increasingly unfair and undemocratic.

      • @AngryCommieKender
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        1 year ago

        I would go further and cap the representatives at 250,000 citizens rather than 500,000, thereby expanding the house to over 1300 representatives. This would allow third party blocks to form, and potentially gain enough traction to have more than one third party senator.

    • @mindbleach
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      81 year ago

      Athenian democracy didn’t even exist in Athens. Representation has always been part of democracy. They’re not mutually exclusive or even distinct. Democratic governance requires government. Stop fucking this particular chicken.

      • @[email protected]
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        -21 year ago

        Democratic governance for whom?

        A privileged few, elected by a similarly privileged citizenry, wielded political authority through a monopoly on the force of violence. Ancient Athens for the poor, for women, and for non-Greeks was a dictatorship.

    • @MooseBoys
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      41 year ago

      I think you’re confusing “democrats” with “democrat politicians”. You’re right that politicians on both sides are beholden to big money first and foremost.

    • @Dankry
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      1 year ago

      deleted by creator