• @Wolf_359@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Depends. He seems pretty out of it right now and I don’t know how much he would really accomplish. He’s also pretty old and unhealthy.

    But if he comes back angry and the people around him are effective, then yeah we would start looking for other places to live. I’m not trying to live in a Russian-style handmaid’s tale.

    I don’t think it’s dramatic to suggest Trump may actually put an end to our democracy though. Another Lemmy commenter summed it up best. They pointed out that we on the left may have disagreed with McCain or Bush, but we never once feared that they would seize power or leave NATO. We trusted them to at least keep the ship afloat and respect the basic tenants of our free and democratic nation.

    With Trump, we don’t have that. All bets are off because he’s an unhinged narcissist. He would leave NATO and risk the Pax Americana that has stabilized the world for almost 100 years now. And he would do it for money, for negative attention, or just because someone told him he couldn’t. America has some pretty major faults but China and Russia are not ready to take the reigns. Say what you will about the West but we at least endeavor to protect human rights. I think anyone who isn’t trying to build on the current Western peace is incredibly dangerous in a very scary way.

    • shikitohno
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      191 year ago

      He would leave NATO and risk the Pax Americana that has stabilized the world for almost 100 years now.

      Stabilizing the world is just flat out wrong. At best, the US has stabilized itself and a select few allies. Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan most recently, along with a whole bunch of countries in Central and South America over the last 100 years would probably feel quite strongly that the US has been a disruptive force for them.

      • @Wolf_359@lemmy.world
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        431 year ago

        As a devout lefty who thinks America and capitalism need a lot more checks and balances, I have to somewhat disagree with you.

        When we talk peace, we are talking relative terms. And I suppose I should also add prosperity into the mix.

        I think the West has enabled a period of relative peace and prosperity never before seen. And I think it’s getting, overall, better every day. Technology and capitalism, for all their evils, have lifted billions out of poverty and saved billions of lives.

        • shikitohno
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          21 year ago

          I’m rather curious how you relativise a lot of the US’ recent history. Sure, Iraq and Afghanistan weren’t pillars of stability, but I think the balance comes down pretty hard against the US with Vietnam and other Southeast Asian nations as well. Our continued support of Israel and Saudi Arabia isn’t looking so hot either.

          Then we’ve got military intervention in the Dominican Republic and support of Trujillo until he stopped being useful, installing the Pinochet regime after helping topple the government of Salvador Allende, support for the military dictatorship in Brazil, as well as backing dictatorships in Argentina.

          Our colonization of the Philippines was pretty awful, as is our continued treatment of Puerto Rico as essentially a vacation spot and Caribbean ghetto.

          You get the idea. Seriously, I’m hard pressed to think of an instance in the last century where the US has intervened on the international stage and actually has a credible claim to having done good with the exception of World War II.

          The government has created and fought for stability for a small subset of monied interests and has largely left the rest of us to jump for whatever table scraps they deign to let fall to us plebs. As @Nokinori mentions, even domestically, things are increasingly coming undone at the seams and looking ready to get worse.

    • @voidMainVoid@lemmy.world
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      -251 year ago

      They pointed out that we on the left may have disagreed with McCain or Bush, but we never once feared that they would seize power or leave NATO.

      They were saying all of the same things about W. Bush in 2004.

      We trusted them to at least keep the ship afloat and respect the basic tenants of our free and democratic nation.

      Not at all. The left viewed W. Bush as a wannabe dictator, not much different from how Trump is viewed now.

      • @sfcl33t@lemmy.world
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        141 year ago

        I did not view Bush at all like Trump. Really disliked his political takes on most things and thought he was embarrassingly dumb some times but it never ever even crossed my mind that he was a threat to the republic. And actually admired his composure and leadership after 9/11. They’re not even remotely comparable.

      • @Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        I viewed Bush as an incompetent moron with business cronies crawling in to every spot in his administration. I don’t recall people saying he was a wannabe dictator, he had at least some respect for the Constitution and the electoral process. Trump on the other hand, put extreme pressure on the DoJ to direct investigations away from him, minimize their impact or bury them as best as possible. His administration freaking extradited a convicted Russian agent back to her home country because she was funneling money and propaganda to the GOP through the NRA. Trump is a wannabe dictator, he didn’t get to be one because he didn’t have to spine to follow through with his coup because he knew he needed the thinnest amount of plausible deniability to give his GOP sycophants cover to justify letting him off the hook if it failed.

    • yesdogishere
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      -981 year ago

      how about the opposite view: trump supporters feel Trump will be good. He will allow the USA to become much more independent and cut off paying for other nations’ wars. why should we pay for them? there is no need for america to be the guardian of democracy or anything. We just want to live god-fearing lives and raise good families. We don’t need the rest of the world. Our military can stomp out any invaders.

      • Hyperreality
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        1 year ago

        He will allow the USA to become much more independent and cut off paying for other nations’ wars. He will allow the USA to become much more independent and cut off paying for other nations’ wars.

        Kowtowing to countries like China and Russia, allowing them to win strategic victories, will make them more powerful and give them more influence on US politics. Ie. the US would become less independent.

        You don’t become more independent by telling countries like China that you give up.

        In the case of Ukraine, they’re one of the world’s top exporters of grain, which is in part why food prices have been rising globally.

        We don’t need the rest of the world.

        You do. The world has globalised. At least 40 million American jobs are directly reliant on exports. The rest of the world also produces stuff like oil. Fuel prices would skyrocket.

        A lot of unprofitable stuff has also been moved overseas. It would cost money to make it in the US. Many resources are also rare in the US. Stuff like rare-earth elements. Good luck importing from countries which have signed deals with China, because they’re the new super power. Combined with de-dollarisation this would also cause massive issues, rampant inflation for example. You think it’s bad now? You ain’t seen nothing yet.

        Our military can stomp out any invaders.

        No one needs to invade the US. It’s cheaper to simply buy a candidate or blackmail him. This allows countries like China to push through legislation which favours their business and strategic interests. Eg. dropping support for Ukraine or dropping support of Taiwan so that China can take control of advance chip industries.

        In the long term, the US would find it hard to sustain a huge military budget when facing economic turmoil and a debt crisis. Especially in relative terms. China has a population of 1.4 billion. If the US withdraws from the Asia-Pacific and Europe, they’re likely to become part of the Chinese sphere of influence. A country of 300 million, will inevitably be pushed around by a power bloc of 3 billion.

        Of course, none of this will convince a Trump supporter, because most base their support on emotions not reason. And once they find they can’t afford to fill up on gas, or groceries, they’ll blame anyone but themselves.

        • @mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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          -41 year ago

          Many resources are also rare in the US. Stuff like rare-earth elements.

          This is actually incorrect. Rare-earth elements aren’t that rare, they’re just difficult to extract and the processes are worse on the environment than most types of mining

      • @Wodge@lemmy.world
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        551 year ago

        Well how about doing anything remotely Godly? I mean seriously, the stuff ol Jesus H Christ tried teaching y’all seems to have been completely missed. You lot would call him “Woke”.

        I’m glad you stick to the “I’m a Christian” lark, as if there is a hell, you’ll be more than likely heading there.

      • BraveSirZaphod
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        451 year ago

        We just want to live god-fearing lives and raise good families.

        And the main difference between us is that I don’t really care if you do that, while your friends will label my future family with two dads as a gross perversion that calls for state intervention in order to prevent the terrible abuse of a child having two loving parents that happen to both be men, as if it’s not abusive to raise a child under the terror of thinking that they’re always being watched and will be tortured for all eternity if they wind up being attracted to the same gender. But ultimately, that’s your life and I’ll leave you to it. I’d just ask for the same courtesy.

      • Skybreaker
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        411 year ago

        It’s ironic that people who want to live “God-fearing lives” are basically choosing to worship the antichrist. Because that’s what Trump is. You know people by their actions, not whatever bull crap they spout to get reelected.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        261 year ago

        We just want to live god-fearing lives

        That’s a funny euphemism for “impose your delusions on the rest of society, violating their freedom from religion.”

      • Deceptichum
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        221 year ago

        You should be fearful of your god because if he’s real you’re fucked.

      • @Cold_Brew_Enema@lemmy.world
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        181 year ago

        Oh yeah living a God fearing life sounds amazing. Nothing I like more than constantly fearing an invisible sky person will send me to a fiery hell if I don’t constantly worship him.

      • And that’s the issue. That “we” represents fewer than half of Americans. The past three times Republicans have won has been only because a person in S. Dakota’s vote counts for more than a person in California.

      • Jaysyn
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        131 year ago

        Admit it, you just have a fetish for being lied to.

      • @Wolf_359@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        As another commenter rightfully pointed out - you don’t get to be independent and isolationist at the same time.

        Indigenous island tribes may have had this luxury for a time, but once your nation is known by another nation, it’s compete or die.

        China and various other countries would immediately start filling the power vacuum. Your standard of living would drop immensely and your grandchildren would be consuming Chinese culture within a decade or two at most. The American dollar, America’s total dominance in science/culture/medicine, the spread of the English language - these could all be wiped out fairly quickly if America just threw up its hands and said we were done.

        What you’re suggesting would be like Apple saying they’re going to take it easy and just stick with the iPhone 15 for good. The result would be an immediate power grab and some other company would pull ahead, leaving Apple so far behind they’d never catch up again.

  • @aceshigh@lemmy.world
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    641 year ago

    i’ll worry about it if and when it happens. i have wasted too much time, energy and resources worrying and catastrophizing about things i cannot control.

    • @DuckOverload@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Not a bad idea to consider a plan though. If you’d want to move away, that’s a major decision that is best made through research and deliberation, not in a fearful rush to escape.

      • @dingus@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Be killed??? Look, I know Trump is nutso, but why in the world would him being president again equate to someone’s family being killed??

        • Dunno know. Maybe they are immigrants and will end up in some camp, maybe they are trans and someone will murder them, maybe they are Jewish or muslim and someone will shot up their temple, maybe they are Asian and someone will push them right into the subway tracks, maybe they will work in the service industry and be forbidden from wearing a mask, maybe they are diabetic and lose their Obamacare coverage for insulin…

  • Dantpool
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    571 year ago

    If we make plans, and post them on the internet, people start throwing around words like “premeditated” and it just makes things harder.

    • Neato
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      -211 year ago

      I love this. “We have a plan but we can’t tell you.”. Peak uselessness.

  • Name-Not-Applicable
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    541 year ago

    I’ll sigh, shake my head, and think, “That figures”. And then I’ll go to work, like every other day.

    • Neato
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      211 year ago

      This but perhaps crippling depression as well.

      • @nugmeister64@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        what else can we do in a country like this with the candidates and party system we have? it would be nice to have real elections and options.

    • @LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Voting is important, I also like to think about other tangible ways to build power - like what is power? It’s being able to eat, having a place to live, having healthcare, saying what I want, associating with who I want, deciding how I spend my time.

      I think about how the Mondragon complex, probably the largest worker cooperative in the world, started in Franco’s Spain, and turned one of the poorest regions into one of the wealthiest.

      I’d like to think I would stay and work to gain more power for myself and my peers - I want to stay and join/start a worker cooperative. I want to see a massive ecosystem of worker owned enterprises, which will translate to tangible power. Getting organized means being better able to fight off the kind of oppression Trump promises.

  • Lemminary
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    381 year ago

    Take a shot for every comment saying “Move to Canada” :)

      • @RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        I would simply shoot anyone who attempted to do any of that to me or anyone else in my care. We should all be prepared to defend ourselves, rather than give in to oppression.

        • @Ultraviolet@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Not all at once. Fascists target a series of out groups, starting with the most marginalized, making the in group smaller and smaller. The more of the rich white cisgender heterosexual Christian male boxes you check, the further down the list you probably are, but you will be targeted eventually.

          • @TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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            -11 year ago

            Assumes he gets a third term, though, and that will not happen without a civil war or massive protests unrest. It also ignores the amount of legal challenges he’ll get, and the Supreme Court can’t rule on all of them.

          • @TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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            21 year ago

            Chill out, dude. I’m not voting for a Republican in a state or national election any time soon. I’m of the opinion that Trump is a puppet controlled by other Republicans given the fact that Angela Merkel had to explain to Trump 11 times that he has to make trade deals with the EU and not Germany.

            The fact that you resort to insults first and communication last (just like hardcore Republicans, by the way) is what’s gonna make the left lose elections and make America worse off.

            • froglegs
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              11 year ago

              I am not so sure he is such a puppet. Care to explain? A lot of high flying republicans seem to fear him.

              • @TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                From my limited knowledge of other Republicans, they probably fear his influence and reach. The thing about Trump, though, is that every time I read a recollection of some high-level conversation between him and another qualified official, he always seems clueless. For example, in a 2021 interview, Fauci said that Trump would believe personal anecdotes from “friends” despite Fauci explaining multiple times that anecdotes are less trustworthy than scientific studies:

                It was always, “A guy called me up, a friend of mine from blah, blah, blah.” That’s when my anxiety started to escalate.

                https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/24/health/fauci-trump-covid.html

                He’s a puppet because he lacks media literacy and lacks an understanding of logical reasoning, and as a result, he’s easily manipulated by other people with stuff like conspiracy theories. Republicans might fear him because he will win. I fear him because he will make bad decisions not purely out of malice but out of a lack of due diligence and understanding of the effects of his actions.

  • @Facelesscog@lemmy.world
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    341 year ago

    Well, I’ve got some rope, a candlestick, a revolver, a lead pipe and a nice knife; I wanted to keep my options open.

  • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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    331 year ago

    Watch Democrats blame people they were actively hostile towards for not enthusiastically waiting for hours in the cold to vote for them.

    Then watch the world’s longest-running uninterrupted democracy with the world’s largest military and the world’s largest nuclear arsenal become a fascist dictatorship. Maybe I’ll die quickly and have a chance to be envied.

    Fix your messaging, Dems. Pretend he’s a progressive and oppose him.

    • Honestly, just point to his examples of government overreach! Heck if Dems really wanted to hurt him, do some overreach that they want to do anyway and make sure that they thank the man, heck say without him this would be impossible and that if we don’t take advantage of it someone else will!

      Just go hard on red flag laws, just use those bad boys up on all of their opponents, and say “Trump was awful for a lot of things, but thank god he got some of the strongest anti gun laws on the books in decades, without him, we couldn’t have gone after this dangerous far right militia, he really made this inevitable.”

  • @Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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    331 year ago

    I imagine a number of famous people will talk about how they’re moving to Canada, and don’t.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          131 year ago

          Surprisingly well, given that his incompetent failed coup landed him fuck-all for punishment.

          • @agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            He’s literally on trial for a coup that failed and thats surprisingly well? What went well in your opinion the coup that didn’t work, or the trial(s) that are ongoing?

            • @grue@lemmy.world
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              71 year ago

              He’s literally on trial for a coup that failed and thats surprisingly well?

              A properly-functioning society would’ve executed Trump for treason by now. Hell, even the fucked-up Weimar Republic had managed to try, convict, and imprison Hitler by the time three years had gone by since the Beer Hall Putsch.

              Meanwhile, Trump hasn’t even so much as seen the inside of a jail cell yet, so things are going extraordinarily well for him.

              • @agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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                -11 year ago

                Im not going to defend the court draging their ass but its a hell of a lot easier to try a dead man over one who won’t shut up. Hes also in the same situation as his little insurgent fans, those cases took and are taking quite a long time too, I still wouldn’t call that better than expected. If he doesn’t see the inside of a cell thats better than expected but by all meausre of lawyers commenting on his cases, ‘better than expected’ is not a take I’m hearing.

        • @Stiffneckedppl@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          When we look at other countries that have had successful coups overturn their governments, the most common indicator among them is a previous unsuccessful coup plot.

  • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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    291 year ago

    Nothing I can do. Just do my best to finish out at college (assuming financial aid is still a thing) and move out of the country ASAP.

  • @GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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    281 year ago

    Fortunate enough to also have EU citizenship, so I’ve already made arrangements to leave the country in that case. Will keep voting from overseas, though.

      • Drusas
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        161 year ago

        Republicans are trying their damnedest to make voting illegal and/or overly burdensome even within the United States, so good luck there.

      • @GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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        91 year ago

        I’m just not interested in living in the US under a second Trump presidency. Such a presidency would run against everything I stand for and against everything I want for myself, my family, and my kids.

        • @PutangInaMo@lemmy.world
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          -21 year ago

          I hear you but that’s a bit dramatic. Imagine if everybody who disagreed with the presidential vote just ran away…

            • @PutangInaMo@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              And if everybody who disagree fled the country, they’d be handing it over on a silver platter…

              And do you think that would not embolden other countries to follow suite?

              It’s fucking stupid and a cowards way to get pissy and run away. And to disrupt your lives because of some made up shit you think is going to happen? You’re just as delusional as magats…

          • @GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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            01 year ago

            Trump is an insane narcissist and he’s been talking like a fascist for a long time. And he has a lot of supporters who are willing to go to extremes to defend him. To me, he’s a symptom of an extremely unhealthy society, and I think a lot of people would leave under a second Trump presidency if they could.

            I can, so I will if that happens.

              • @GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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                11 year ago

                I have the option and I’ll choose to move out if Trump comes back. Absolutely.

                But please do enlighten us about your suggestions.

                • @PutangInaMo@lemmy.world
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                  11 year ago

                  Idk don’t uplift your life and run away? Stay and keep fighting? If you bail when things get bad and want to come back after they get better, then just stay wherever you go.

      • @Diasl@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        From the outside the whole thing seemed to be an absolute circus act. People getting increasingly polarised, constant (pretty much daily) news about something fucking stupid he’s either said, done or something disgusting one of his cronies had been involved in.