if you're referencing that specific graph, the graph where oil production starts fairly high, and then drops significantly due to covid, and then rose back up a little bit higher than where it was previously. Compared to the 2016-2020 period where there is a very clear and distinct rise in production? Even including the 2016 lull.
I wish this graph was a little cleaner, and didnt include 100 years worth of oil production, and also had a rate of change average over the top of it, that would really demonstrate the point i'm making.
Yes, I want them to adopt popular bipartisan policies, like m4a, green energy subsidies, food subsidies, new government housing, etc
i would like for them to adopt these as well, but i fear almost none of these are going to be "bipartisan" the political climate is just too much of a disaster for this stuff to matter right now. Also, doesn't the IRA bill literally subsidize green energy? As well as appliance and utility upgrades for home owners.
technically yes, but the only reason this particular method of voting is any good is because it's a collective reasoning thing. For some reason a large group of people when independently making a decision on something, collectively come to a more accurate consensus than would otherwise be achieved. Which is likely the idea behind most simple online based voting systems.
The hard part is making sure that no funny business happens unfortunately.
the key breakdown here is: people concerned for the health of the country either voted for trump or kamala. Everybody else didn't vote because they either don't care, or would rather bitch about other things for no particular reason.
and until lefties learn that bitching about whether it was actually the DNC that made them lose or the fact that it was actually just minorities not voting hard enough or whatever cope people are using these days. This will keep working, that's the problem.
Everybody loves to shit on the left and the DNC when it's convenient, and then leech off of them when possible, while ignoring all the positives that have been gained through even an admittedly flawed institution.
Unfortunately none of this matters if the republicans psyop everybody in america, at the end of the day we have to win not winning, IS losing, and losing is simply not sustainable.
I would argue it’s worse than reddit in terms of the average political leanings of users. I have seen overwhelmingly far far left users around here. The few reasonable moderates I’ve seen are getting downvoted for incredibly normal comments.
i think it's gotten considerably worse since the election, which is to be expected, from both sides.
You’ve met different online right wingers than me lol. Maybe you are just on left platforms. I think both sides have the full range. We just see nicer right wingers on a left platforms like lemmy. That’s the only way they’d survive lol.
this is 100% true, it's just that the right tends to be more politically engaged and active, than the far left, because the far left is a little bit too busy swimming through its own shit half the time.
I don’t think you’re right but you make valid points on xyz
this is 100% just cope btw.
to be clear, lemmy is the equivalent of being on like, far right community forums. So it shouldnt be surprising that people are very commie coded here.
i'm not conservative, by any stretch of the definition, though i do appreciate some of the more classically conservative values (none of which actual conservatives stand for ironically)
Nor am i progressive, or any flavor of communistic. Although that might change given enough problems with the US voting populace. Though not to the amusement of any lemmy users im sure,
Frankly, to be honest, i'm anti humanist right now, in my political satire arc. Take from that what you will, but if you take it the wrong thing, i will outlive you politically.
TL;DR im disappointed in everyone, you should've done better, you should have higher standards for yourself and your conduct, and you don't and that makes me sad.
if you're referencing that specific graph, the graph where oil production starts fairly high, and then drops significantly due to covid, and then rose back up a little bit higher than where it was previously. Compared to the 2016-2020 period where there is a very clear and distinct rise in production? Even including the 2016 lull.
I wish this graph was a little cleaner, and didnt include 100 years worth of oil production, and also had a rate of change average over the top of it, that would really demonstrate the point i'm making.
i would like for them to adopt these as well, but i fear almost none of these are going to be "bipartisan" the political climate is just too much of a disaster for this stuff to matter right now. Also, doesn't the IRA bill literally subsidize green energy? As well as appliance and utility upgrades for home owners.