[green, pointing to a clock with Hitler above it, that reads 11:30] Oh no, look… It’s half to Hitler
[yellow, annoyed] Chill out buddy, don’t be such an alarmist
[green, pointing to a clock with Hitler above it, that reads 11:45] Oh no, look… It’s quarter to Hitler
[yellow, rude] Yeah I get it, I tweeted about it, leave me be
[green, pointing to a clock with Hitler above it, that reads 11:55] Oh no, look… It’s five to Hitler
[yellow, scared] Oh shit oh fuck, we really need to do something NOW
[green, pointing to a clock with Hitler above it, that reads 11:59] Oh shit, look… It’s one to Hitler
[yellow, terrified] It’s too late now, wish we could have seen it coming earlier
I’d mean all the people dumb enough to get Trump elected by thinking you could beat him by espousing almost exactly his policies. Who wants Trump-lite when you could have the real thing?
Nice way to let off all the people who didn’t vote against Trump.
“We thought Harris would be exactly the same!!”
Could you conceive of a world where they voted against Trump but also against genocide?
It’s been almost a year can you really not just accept that you were wrong and that sacking up and voting for Kamala would have been the correct move?
Sorry, it’s kind of a “human” thing to not vote for genocide.
Well congrats on your pyrrhic victory of not voting.
Cry because I didn’t vote for genocide
I can conceive of anything.
But what I conceive wouldn’t be the reality of the last election.
Here are two examples of people doing politics. Take notes.
Frederick Douglas was an escaped slave. In 1860 he had a choice; speak out for the strongly pro-abolition candidate, or back Lincoln, who was not going to call for immediate abolition. Douglas figured that it was better to back Lincoln and have the President’s ear, than to back a candidate who had no chance of winning.
Martin Luther King’s top assistant was a gay Black man named Bayard Ruskin. Ruskin never put himself forward, even though he was a vital part of the Movement. He knew that America wasn’t ready to accept LGBTQ issues at that time, so he stayed silent.
So, can you conceive of looking at things dispassionately and playing the long game?
Playing “the long game” on genocide is effectively actively murdering people, especially when previous administrations have actually employed the “yank the chain” policy on israel. There is no long game here, there’s genocide or no genocide.
As we speak, the genocide is ongoing. So nothing you advocate actually helped.
You can stamp your feet and scream all you want, but ignoring the facts does nothing.
But I won’t support a genocide either, rhetorically or with a vote as you have. It’s called having principles. Try it.
So we both agree that your high principles did nothing to actually stop the genocide.
And your lack thereof did?
Yes, but not voting lead to the beginning of a hispanic genocide in the states, so im not really sure they cared all that much when they just made genocide bigger and more expansive
Reprehensible as it is, we’ve seen no evidence of a Hispanic genocide (yet). The scale isn’t there, and there’s active internal pushback. It doesn’t benefit the corporate class so it likely has a shelf-life. Whether the pushback comes to anything or halts creeping fascism remains to be seen, but such a concept is currently completely hypothetical.
The Gaza genocide however, is real, and may still be happening. Also, big difference between “not voting” and “not voting for your corporate party prescribed candidates”.