Seriously, Democrats need to cool with the divisive rhetoric. We can't just
ignore people who disagree with us, dismissing them as Nazis and Bigots. So what if they repeat Hitler talking points verbatim and embrace Nazi symbolism, doesn't make them
actual Nazis. The fact is, the Democrats left the working class behind. So what if the Democrats solely saved the teamster's pensions. So what if the Biden administration was the most pro-union and pro-labor administration in 40 years. So what if some people were able to get their crippling student loan debt forgiven. So what if they bolstered the consumer financial protection bureau. Who cares about the CHIPS act? Also, can we stop sending money to help other countries overseas when we have people who are struggling here? Not that we
really want to allocate government funds to helping US citizens, because that would be socialism/communism/some sort of -ism that we don't really know what it means, but it's bad and it's tearing our country apart, but it gets of likes on Facebook when I post about it and that makes me feel good.
At the end of the day, what matters is how we posture about policy and not actually what we do. If Republicans really cared about the policies, they would've nominated Ron Desantis. The fact is, they want the show; the flash; the bravado; the vibes, and all the boring legislative stuff just isn't sexy-- memes about tax policy don't get upvotes.
Some of the points pundits are making in reflection to the election have merit, but if you zoom out a little bit you see the trend that in every western democracy the post-covid elections were a referendum on the party who was in charge during covid and the economic fallout that ensued -- I think that point has really been undersold as everyone is racking their brains to put it all together. This election confirms that we are officially in a post-truth, anti-intellectualism society, and no one cares about what the actual US economic data suggests if the vibes don't match. For low-propensity, low-information voters, right-wing media gaslit them into thinking we were in the throws of a complete economic depression, and it worked because they had an applicable real world context to apply it to in the forms of housing costs and other sectors of the economy that affected by inflation/supply change shortages, with no real effective counter-messaging from the Democrats.
Also, as it pertains to the Gen-Z political shift, particularly among disaffected young men, the social media algorithms has ran a masterclass at effectively targeting them with misogynistic/sexist/racist content that fuels their victim mentality regarding the current state of social affairs-- they've curated these safe space eco-chambers for them where it is feminism/multi-culturalism/modernisms fault as to why they have struggled to find their footing in the modern world, one where women are increasing more educated and less dependent upon men to achieve financial security. If you are in any other online spaces where you come into proximity with a lot of guys in that like 18-26 age bracket, but just listening to them and how they view the world, so many of these guys are just completely lost. To some extent, the Trump vote to them is rebelling against the liberal status quo that they feel has failed them anyway. I've said it a million times, but Trumpism is a reactionary counter-cultural movement against the socially liberal gains made in the 20th century, and some of these young guys voted for Trump with legitimate accelerationist aspirations.
Trump AG hopeful says he wants to drag Democrats’ ‘political dead bodies through the streets and burn them’
MAGA allies say they can finally admit Project 2025 ‘is the agenda’ for Trump’s second term
This is just the beginning, folks. For all the Gaza protest voters and the "I'm tired of voting for the lesser of two evils" protest voters, I hope not too many people have to die for you to realize that sometimes things actually can be worse than a status quo milquetoast liberal.