• @Zombiepirate
    link
    English
    1441 year ago

    She put my recent thoughts into words: they simply can NOT admit that they were wrong about Trump, especially since they’ve curated their new identity around him.

    After all, many sacrificed their family life on the altar of Trump. If you make a stand for bigotry that’s so rancid it drives your kids to sever contact, you have to believe it’s in service of something higher or else come to grips with your own moral failings. I know which one I believe is more likely.

    It’s the rotten core of the anti-intellectual ideology that the right has been pushing for decades.

    • flipht
      link
      fedilink
      391 year ago

      This. I can’t solve this, and neither can any other individual person.

      It will take a wide spread implosion, but they’ve got a resilient ecosystem that will just switch messianic figures out once Trump is no longer able to hold public sway.

    • @CADmonkey
      link
      281 year ago

      Sunk Cost Fallacy for president

    • @DarthBueller
      link
      101 year ago

      Anti-intellectual theology as well. “God and Country” evangelical churches from the smallest to the largest find it absolutely crucial to brainwash their congregations against higher ed and critical thinking.

      • Lemminary
        link
        13
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Anti-intellectualism is an American trait

        But tbf, it’s not uniquely American *rubs temples while staring at own country*

      • @Cryophilia
        link
        51 year ago

        True. I think we’re fortunate in that anti intellectualism (and just plain old stupidity) is less common on the left, and tends to be more harmless when it is there.

        • @DarthBueller
          link
          71 year ago

          I’m left but the tankies are idiots and their ideology requires sticking your fingers in your ears and pretending history didn’t happen. Though lemmy is the first time I encountered large numbers of such folk.

  • SpaceBar
    link
    English
    711 year ago

    “…the first rule of MAGA is to never, ever, under any circumstances, admit that liberals might be right about something.”

    People in cults stay in them for the same reasons. So many times, they were told they were wrong, that they couldn’t take the embarrassment of making such a mistake.

    Maybe MAGA people need to be coddled a bit. Tell them that Trump changed towards the end. They were right, but he betrayed them in the end. Something else should be tried. Many of these people are dangerous in the mental state their in.

    • flipht
      link
      fedilink
      341 year ago

      Maybe. But this just kicks the can down the road. They’ll do the same shit with a new messiah figure as soon as they find one that can string two words together and make them feel like they’re virtuous for their hatred.

      • Bipta
        link
        fedilink
        -11 year ago

        It’s inevitable. There is no solution to the problem.

        • flipht
          link
          fedilink
          141 year ago

          Ultimately, it’s because we let them get away with a literal civil war. Here in 2023, almost every protection put in place after the civil war has eroded to nothingness, and they/their ancestors weren’t held accountable, and have been allowed to lie a false narrative into being for almost two centuries.

          They’ve told us they still view this as a civil war. I wonder when enough normal people will believe them.

      • @Cryophilia
        link
        131 year ago

        They need to be forced to accept responsibility

        I won’t hold my breath.

        The only solution is the California model: vote them into powerlessness. They’ll never change. Just leave them to their impotent rage while the rest of us move on.

        • @DarthBueller
          link
          71 year ago

          You forget that California actually allows for a fair amount of direct democracy - the South will cling to Republican government and will fight any movement toward direct democracy and ballot initiatives because every effort to appeal to their base would be defeated.

          • @Cryophilia
            link
            31 year ago

            True but if we get enough dems in office, we naturally progress towards stronger ballot measures. We can’t do anything while Republicans are in office.

            • @DarthBueller
              link
              21 year ago

              And it will take some bizarre set of circumstances to ever get the GOP out of state office because they have gerrymandered everything to fuck, and the rural base is seemingly forever captured by the GOP, and the states’ supreme courts are GOP, and …

              I frequently fantasize about Canada, where the assholes are fewer in number. Though I was recently in upstate New York and I realized how much I fucking miss the Northeast.

              • @Cryophilia
                link
                31 year ago

                There’s a lot of Black people in the South. That’s where we need to focus our efforts. Stacey Abrams style.

                • @DarthBueller
                  link
                  21 year ago

                  I hear you, but the black community has been saying the system is rigged (regardless of who wins) for far longer than nearly anyone else. I don’t know how you go from massive disengagement to engagement given the levels of distrust that exist. Or how you get black politicians elected to office outside of statewide office or city government. The youth vote decided to suddenly show up, but it’s not enough by itself.

      • @Cabrio
        link
        41 year ago

        Exactly, some people deserve to get exactly what they want, fuck em.

      • @Archer
        link
        21 year ago

        more rational concerns (e.g. economic precarity)

        It was never, ever, about “economic anxiety”. It was about hurting the right people, and they didn’t care if they had to suffer too as long as the right people suffered

    • @Astroturfed
      link
      111 year ago

      He pretended to want to help them during his campaign. They fell for it and just ignored all facts and evidence since. Doubt they’re going to see the light.

      • SpaceBar
        link
        English
        11 year ago

        Yeah, this is along the lines of what I was thinking.

  • @DoctorTYVM
    link
    481 year ago

    Clinton was right about everything. In 20 years its going to be really hard to explain why she wasn’t the obvious choice who should have won by a landslide

    • @krashmo
      link
      381 year ago

      No it isn’t. She wasn’t relatable or likeable at all. People wanted an outsider and HRC is about as much of an insider as you could be.

      • Yewb
        link
        fedilink
        341 year ago

        Where are the Bernie bros that dude would have won.

          • @lolrightythen
            link
            11 year ago

            Me neither. Our caucus center was powerfully pro Hillary and made the Bernie folk line up in the hallway as opposed to the gym where everyone else was so O’Malley would catch any votes that didn’t go to Hillary. My state at the time (Iowa) went to Hillary by a razor thin margin

          • @archiotterpup
            link
            -51 year ago

            Then do you actually believe in your politics?

      • @AbidanYre
        link
        English
        281 year ago

        She wasn’t relatable or likeable at all

        Neither is Trump. Hillary was obviously the better choice.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          301 year ago

          Hillary was obviously the better choice given the 2, but DNC shafted Bernie on record, which caused a lot of people to go 3rd party, against both RNC and DNC.

          • @Eldritch
            link
            -61 year ago

            And this just shows how easy it is to manipulate Democrats as well as Republicans. Realistically the DNC did not give him the shaft. But that is forever the only narrative you will ever retain.

              • @Eldritch
                link
                01 year ago

                It’s not. Your article actually points to the exact same things I’ve been saying. Debbie Wasserman Schultz despite being the chair of the DNC is not the whole dnc. Even culty gabbard who was a member of the DNC at that time called her out and is probably the one that helped leak the emails. Wasserman Schultz is a horrible piece of s*** for her actions but she’s not the entire DNC. Because even they were calling her out.

            • @Astroturfed
              link
              -21 year ago

              Oh look the Hilary apologist here to tell us it’s everyonea fault but the terrible candidate who lost.

              • @Eldritch
                link
                11 year ago

                LOL I voted for Bernie in the last two primaries. Thank you for proving my point. Programmed and wound so tight you can’t even help yourself.

                • @Astroturfed
                  link
                  01 year ago

                  Voting for Bernie doesn’t make you not able to be a Hilary apologist. She ran a shit campaign and she lost. I voted for her, doesn’t make me blind to the reality.

        • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
          link
          fedilink
          111 year ago

          Trump was relatable and likable to his supporters. Clinton couldn’t say the same except for a small number of them. It’s become tradition in the Democratic Party to hold your nose when you vote for president.

          As an example of her lack of relatability and likeability, here she is chilling in Cedar Rapids and telling kids to Pokemon Go to the polls.

            • @krische
              link
              71 year ago

              But that is relatable to his supporters, he’s living their dreams. If they were rich, they’d want you have sex with porn stars and live in a gold penthouse.

            • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
              link
              fedilink
              41 year ago

              Considering his supporters think they’re all temporarily embarrassed millionaires, that is relatable to them.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        221 year ago

        Trump is about as likeable as a rabid dingo. Clinton was better in absolutely every way to people with two neurons to rub together.

        • @krashmo
          link
          61 year ago

          It doesn’t take much to be better than Trump. Still, Clinton campaigned as if winning was a foregone conclusion and then she found out that it wasn’t.

          • @DarthBueller
            link
            71 year ago

            Some of us remember the 90’s, and the ubiquitous bumper stickers implying that while Bill was President, Hillary was in charge. Playing on sexist tropes, calling her a bitch of the canine variety, “I didn’t vote for Hillary,” “She’s not my president,” etc… Hillary was well hated before she ever ran for President.

            • @24_at_the_withers
              link
              21 year ago

              I remember all this, and I fell for it. Due to years of propaganda against her, I just had this mild feeling of revulsion to Hillary. I primaried for Bernie in a district that’s very close in demographics to the national average, and was stunned that Hillary had about a 4x as many supporters. But once she became the official Dem candidate, I started watching her campaign events, debates and researched her political history. Hillary was a fantastic candidate and after watching her in action I fully understood WHY there had been decades of propaganda from the right against her - she was incredibly dangerous to them - not only because of her likelihood to win, but even moreso due to how effective she would be as president.

              • @DarthBueller
                link
                2
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                My impression of her in 2016 was that she’d be a neoliberal centrist that would make similar missteps to Bill Clinton, and I wanted nothing of it. Bill was lauded for bargaining with the GOP controlled Congress, but people like me had to help fight against the effects of his deals with the devil. There were a LOT of POC grandmas in public housing getting booted out because the housing project’s super alleged that their grandkids were dealing drugs - the changes to HUD regulations allowed grandma to be at fault for failing to control their grandkids. And there was a not-insubstantial number of project supers that would just make shit up because they ruled over the projects like it was their private fiefdom. I worked in Legal Aid at the time.

                Also, Hillary’s charisma was lacking. Not that charisma is all-important, but she just seemed fake as fuck. I wanted Warren because of her focus on consumer protection and debtor friendly bankruptcy reform.

      • @SCB
        link
        51 year ago

        People who want outsiders are, it turns out, dumb and wrong

    • flipht
      link
      fedilink
      321 year ago

      It’s actually an easy explanation.

      People were more concerned with a Democrat being likeable, after decades of character assassination, while they didn’t care that the republican was a criminal, and also foreign interference and an FBI that was paralyzed by biased agents and management fear of appearing biased, actual outcomes be damned.

      It was a perfect storm of regressive misinformation and every individual with the ability to stop the train wreck trying to cover their own asses and pass the buck instead.

      • @kameecoding
        link
        111 year ago

        wasn’t this also the election that was heavily influenced by Cambridge Analytica? while Facebook being the biggest social media site in thebworld/us?

        • ThrowawayOnLemmy
          link
          41 year ago

          I just want to also call out the Internet Research Agency, Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear: All Russian information groups, a disrupted our elections in one way or another through different types of social engineering, hacking, trolling and misinformation creation. They went after individualls, businesses, and government organizations, not limited to the DNC.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      211 year ago

      She didn’t even campaign in Michigan thinking it was a sure thing. She ran a terrible campaign.

      • @DoctorTYVM
        link
        151 year ago

        I’m sure that will be something people in 20years understand. She didn’t campaign well enough so we elected a narcissistic sociopath who bragged about grabbing women by the genitals and then fucked our country into fascism.

        But her emails…

    • @Astroturfed
      link
      181 year ago

      Everything is a bit of a stretch. She was certainly wrong about how she ran her campaign. Poisoning the well in the primary worked out so fucking well for her. It was her turn, she earned it. No reason to convince the voters to show up by campaigning, or creating a platform people were excited about. Just say how bad Bernie is, then how bad trump is a few times and hide.

      • @SCB
        link
        101 year ago

        “Poisoning the well” aka “winning by 3 million votes”

        • @Astroturfed
          link
          11 year ago

          I don’t like how the system works either, but that doesn’t change it or invalidate her loss.

          • @SCB
            link
            0
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            My point is that she didn’t poison the well so much as she crushed Bernie in the Primary.

            She also won the general by 3 million votes but I was specifically talking about how bad she beat Sanders.

            I find it very strange you can dislike how she can win the general by 3 million votes and lose due to the EC, but also you think it’s fucked up she got the nom while also winning the primary by 3 million votes.

            • @Astroturfed
              link
              1
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              Let me just rehash every statement she made disparaging Bernie and Trump supporters. Oh wait, there’s no point in arguing with any of you DNC knob gobblers. So, I won’t.

              • @SCB
                link
                0
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                Trump supporters are human garbage and her being right about it is what the article youre commenting under is literally about.

                If you don’t think Sanders supporters treated Hillary, her supporters, and the Democrat party like shit… All I can say is give this thread a skim. They’re still doing it.

                You’re doing it right now.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        61 year ago

        Yeah, the DNC clearing the field for her looks really bad in hindsight. A lot would be different if Biden had run in 2016 when the whole Bidenbro phenomenon was really popular.

        • @Astroturfed
          link
          31 year ago

          Agreed. Biden running would of in itself made me feel 100x better about the primary process. She was clearly anointed by the DNC before the primary even started. They couldn’t even at least pretend we had a choice…

          • @archiotterpup
            link
            21 year ago

            Right, but in the end she was going to get the votes anyway. Bernie couldn’t perform as well in the South which is a major voting block. Bernie did a great job of attracting young and white male voters. He didn’t pull the number of black voters and white women to overcome Clinton’s lead.

            I say this as a Warren voter.

            • @krashmo
              link
              11 year ago

              Bernie couldn’t perform as well in the South which is a major voting block.

              Major voting bloc in what, the primaries? Why is that even relevant? Democrats don’t win in the South. That sucks if you’re a Dem voter in the South but basing who the candidate is going to be in a national election on winning some primaries in states that won’t go blue in that election is pointless. The South is a lost cause. There’s no reason to care what they think about the Democratic nominee.

  • @eran_morad
    link
    121 year ago

    This conclusion has been obvious for fucking decades.

  • @ganksy
    link
    41 year ago

    Yes but this gets us nowhere

    • @Cryophilia
      link
      31 year ago

      No, I’m happy to take every opportunity to shame the people who refused to vote for Clinton out of sheer fucking stupidity in 2016.

      Your vote fucking matters. Never forget it. This is a lesson. Never forget it.

    • @ganksy
      link
      11 year ago

      I don’t know, have we just tried flinging mud at each other?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    -411 year ago

    The mainstream media has treated Republicans with contempt and derision for years. Why wouldn’t they be bitter?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      191 year ago

      It’s embarrassing how much the mainstream media coddles Republicans. Working the refs the only play you guys know these days.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      11
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Those pieces of human shit deserve more contempt and derision for their appalling crimes against humanity.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      81 year ago

      Persecution complex says what?

      And how many years are we talking here? It’s been 7 years since the party chose the known sexual predator to be the face of the party, and most of them still love him now that he used that choice to commit a bunch of crimes and betray our country.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      71 year ago

      Republicans who stay with the party after the last 7 years either don’t give a shit about the future or are complete idiots or both.