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LeadersAtWork @ Xanis @lemmy.world
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763
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2 yr. ago

  • It should be noted that through all this people fought for those rights. So don't fall asleep, dear America, because organizing even within small communities will make a difference.

    If done correctly, massive change can happen. Dream big so that those who fear negotiate back down to the levels you'll accept.

  • Bad argument. Japan and Germany were allies. Popular public sentiment to join the war had been growing before Pearl Harbor. Afterwards it would have been political suicide to not join. Moreover, it supercharged factory production and created a patriotic wave that didn't die down for years.

    But yeah, let's just ignore all that.

    What the other commenter is saying is that Europe has relied on U.S. intervention. For better or worse (for worse) we are seeing the results of placing so many eggs into what is amounting to an oversized trash bin. While we should provide support across seas, I hope the larger public sentiment shifts hard towards fixing things here. Gaza and Ukraine are big deals. What about the major issues WITHIN our borders?

    Y'know, such as the slow rise of fascism over the years.

    The bad faith war on drugs.

    Rising costs of housing and medical, and living in general.

    The clear and obvious issue with money in politics.

    Homelessness.

    The slow decline in experts staying or immigrating here, and poorer education.

    And possibly the biggest argument for why we should step back military presence and focus inward: The absolute shit show that is support for veterans from a medical and insurance perspective.

    I could keep going. Many of these could be called endemic issues. For a Nation so large we sure as hell see the same problems nearly everywhere.

  • I was under the impression you paid less for a ticket on Spirit than you would travelling with other airlines. The extras would bump you up to the cost of a normal ticket elsewhere. Whereas other airlines push the cost of services into the normal price of the ticket.

  • The enemy of my enemy.

    We can agree with him and root for him. Just keep in mind who he is and what he's done. Don't allow a short memory to curb that perspective.

    In the meantime, while the monsters fight we should be collectively working to shore up things in our communities. I'm working on mine.

  • That's fascinating since I know I never selected it. Didn't even know it existed. I appreciate the heads up!

    Edit: Found the setting. Switched it to "On",, which I know based on other settings. Now not showing as bot. Weird bug, I'll take it though.

  • You know...years later and hundreds of miles, I swear I sometimes still hear a meow and catch the flicker of a tail out of the corner of my eye. Maybe in some small way, those of us who truly and deeply loved our pets, who made them family, never truly go forth alone.

    Edit: Also, apparently I was flagged as a bot at one point. Which sorta diminishes this comment, but there you go. beep boop

  • If we have authentic elections in 2 and 4 years the DNC needs to do something extremely simple:

    Step up and attack on issues their base wants. This is literally the only thing they'd need to do, as evidenced by the support Trump has received. They can go a step further by acting on, even unsuccessfully, promises they make during any election cycle. This is the same strategy Republicans have been using, just in a radically different fashion. Think of it as same tree, different branch.

    If I was given power to reform the DNC I would:

    1. Shift the older generation of political elites into advisory roles.
    2. Hold Nationwide polling and pull representatives from anywhere who show promise, with progressive ideologies AND vocal stances.
    3. Listen to and support popular grassroot movements
    4. Create rotating leadership roles within the organization with a focus on calculated risk taking and economics under an umbrella of simplifying the relationships between forward-looking policies and the struggle of the average American. Then follow-thru by supporting relevant policies at local and State level.

    This is simple leadership on a national scale and would work. The initial effort would be tremendous, though after a time it would begin to run itself as leaders in various districts take up mantles and push for the needs of any voter within their district(s).

    Alas, this is likely to forever remain hypothetical.

  • The problem is those of us who want a better life for all. For people to be able to live and not just exist, who strive for kindness. Our problem is always that we are too willing to turn our collective cheek. We are too willing to be kind for too long, be too tolerant, too understanding. Meanwhile, the angry and intolerable, and the malicious and evil, stand high atop shaky foundations yelling loudly serious threats.

    This election cycle is a representation of where our own anger has gone. I just fear it has come too late.

  • It's still a choice that we should strive to utilize. Not doing so may mean not having that choice, or the illusion of one. I do agree though, it's about time we shifted things back towards a better life for everyone.

  • That requires carrying this energy past the election cycle, regardless of the differences we may have on opinion, and coming together in agreement.

    Historically, the Left has been rather poor at banding together. We're more likely to argue than get things done most of the time. So it'll be an uphill battle for leaders of smaller groups across the Nation. First though, we need to make it past this hurdle.

  • I cast my vote based wholly on what will do the least harm. Because this world is not black and white, I must consider the impact of an individual who has openly promised to harm as many people as possible if they don't bow down. Live on high atop your knightly steed, oh great one, and look down through your poorly prescribed glasses and rejoice, for in your world there must be only one right choice.

    In reality, neither choice is favorable, just better, and that isn't fun for any of us.

  • Unless it's Dark Souls 2 wherein you mash a couple buttons after being knocked down or rolling and manage to queue up your binoculars perfectly. This, in turn, allows you to get a really splendid look at your enemy's grimacing face as he shoves a rather vicious and often seriously pointy metal object up your ass. All the while you're frantically trying to roll away and accidentally toss back a flask. This manages to save you from an untimely demise until you notice that you backed up a little too much and that dude waiting to ambush took one last drag from his cigarette, flicked it away, and proceeded to club your head like he was Babe Ruth after a particularly hearty breakfast.

    Then on the way back to your souls some asshole named "Forsworn" gets in your way. God only knows what his problem is.

  • I think what you mean is attention. He would still have had praise, and less verbal mockery, had he kept up the other route. Instead we got a third rate villain who would be easily demasked without Fred and Velma.