Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)PR
Posts
3
Comments
1,683
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • You're describing the Republican politicians. The Republican voters are a different bag entirely.

    Out of the ones I have discussed politics with, their underlying motivations for supporting Trump are emotionally driven but explained through rhetoric aligning with their emotional motivations. It tends to be grouped into one of a few different feelings:

    • cost of living/financial security --- immigrants' fault, taxes, foreign nations taking advantage of US generosity
    • fear of change/bigotry --- immigrants, "DEI", "wokeness", border security
    • American exceptionalism/egotism --- immigrants, 1st ammendment
    • distrust of federal government --- "DEI", government corruption, regulatory overreach, socialism = communism
    • distrust of industry --- vaccines harmful, science bad

    Aside from the bigotry and exceptionalism, those emotions aren't necessarily wrong. Cost of living increases, politicians owned by lobbyists, and profit-driven privatization of essential services are actual problems. The issue with conservatives is that they have scapegoats to blame those problems on instead of acknowledging the underlying causes. All it takes is some loudmouth, ignorant jackass offering an overly-simplified, emotionally-compelling solution to a complex problem, and others will latch on to it, oversimplify and exaggerate it even more, and disseminate it until the rest of them start believing it.

    People can be hateful, narcissistic pieces of shit, and it goes without saying that this repugnant rhetoric is spread intentionally. But, it's also a direct consequence of a public education system failing among a landscape of patriotic propaganda and media controlled by a powerful few who put profit and self-gain above the health of society.

    When someone grows up being told America is a flawless nation, that self-reliance is the foundational trait of success, is never educated to think critically of the government and media, and is bombarded by a neverending stream of false information that validates their fears and lulls them into feeling smarter than everyone else, they end up being indoctrinated into the right-wing cult we have today.

    They won't blame foundational American principles (like the economic ideology) for American problems—they were made to believe America is perfect. It must be something external (like immigrants) making their life worse.

    They won't question those they believe have authority over them—the teacher is always right. If Trump says it's the Democrats fault, it's the Democrats fault.

    They won't make an effort to understand other views—self-reliance is antithetical to empathy, and they had it ingrained which one was more important. The only person they can trust is themselves and by extension those who agree.

    They also won't need to understand other views. With the breadth of echo chambers available at the tip of their fingers, it's easy to seek and reinforce conservative views, social connection, and validation. Chuck McFuck has a sole trans daughter who begrudgingly interacts with him, in contrast to his 10,000 friendly and cooperative buddies on r/conservative.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • The fun part about Trump's voter base is that when you point to this, they'll still say it was about fentanyl. That's the beauty of presenting contradictory facts: idiots will cherry-pick whichever one they think makes themselves correct and everyone else wrong.

  • Between getting less sleep, or getting less sleep with a side of PTSD, you're better off picking the former.

    If they're infesting the place and can't be dealt with in a single attempt, you're not just going to be dealing with the bloodsucking pests. It would be dealing with the constant anxiety and stress of whether and when they're going to come back, and all the disruptions and extra work caused in the course of trying to kill them. And that's in addition to whatever annoyance and discomfort they cause while feeding on you.

  • Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    Trump supporters: "that's fine, the president isn't congress"

  • If it's any consolation, they're inviting leopards inside their own homes while doing so.

    You would absolutely not be surprised how many Trump supporters rely on some form of welfare like disability or child benefits. As usual, those complaining about the others taking advantage of the system are either projecting, trying to reduce competition in the hopes that they get a bigger slice of the pie, or both.

  • If it unites the rest of the world as a side effect, I'm fine taking that loss.

    Both Russia and the US have an exceptional track record of ruining other countries through proxy wars with each other, only to later come in and take advantage of the destruction they amplified. If neither of them are capable of doing that anymore, everyone else is going to be better off until the day nukes start flying.

  • Not the other commenter, but they likely meant stability with respect to device drivers. The kernel is great at not degrading with a high uptime, but there's consumer stuff that's just perpetually unimplemented, buggy, or minimally-functional:

    • Sensor monitoring on Ryzen platforms
    • Realtek NIC chipsets
    • Nvidia cards and proprietary drivers for anything and everything other than compute workloads
    • Nvidia cards older than the RTX 2000 series and FOSS drivers
    • Peripherals targeted towards "gamers"

    None of this is the kernel maintainers fault, of course. The underlying issue is the usual one of shitty corporations refusing to publish documentation and/or strategically abusing the legal system to stifle reverse engineering for interoperability.

  • Trump posted a link to an Associated Press story outlining Zelenskyy’s comments and said: “This is the worst statement that could have been made by Zelenskyy, and America will not put up with it for much longer!

    Oh look, he insinuated the quiet part out loud.

    His one-sided deal and shitshow of meeting was meant to anger Zelenskyy so they could create some pretense for siding against Ukraine. Since that failed, he's just going to pivot to this as justification for joining the war on Daddy Vladdy's side.

  • The bad news is even those personally affected aren't all going to suddenly call a horse a horse. A good number of them will bitch and whine about him hurting the wrong people while being blissfully unaware that if someone got caught lying, it's not the first lie but just the first one that they found out about.

  • Don't worry, I'm sure fElon will make unemployment benefits even more efficient, too. Streamline the process by removing benefits from unemployment and those freeloaders will have to be efficient by taking the first underpaying offer given to them. /s