US 2024 Presidential Election

Asita

Answer Hazy, Ask Again Later
Legacy
Jun 15, 2011
3,230
1,083
118
Country
USA
Gender
Male
You keep reading things that aren't there. When did I say it's only a Democratic campaign strategy? How is referring to Gorf's post a deflection when that post was your stated reason for reading mine the way you did?
I cited it as further supporting evidence for why your backtracking about scope was unconvincing, not the primary reason for the reading. With or without gorf's post, it is simply not reasonable to read your claim that "the mainstream media, social media, and all 3 branches of government all worked in concert to try to tell people to hate this man" as having the limited scope that you did not imply until several exchanges after being called out on overreach, which makes the claims about scope come off as backpedaling. But sure, let's say that we had a communication breakdown. As I said previously, it's not worth further derailment.

There is an expression I'd like to bring up though: "Communication is not about what you intend, it is about what you convey". Does that ring a bell? To clarify, I am not being catty, I am legitimately uncertain how widespread this nugget is. Premises that we think are implicit or given might not be recognized by the people who hear what we say. A statement that casts a wide net without qualifiers will inevitably be treated as...well, a hasty generalization that is painting with a broad brush.

For illustrative purposes, let's go back a few years and think about the "Not all men" stuff. Does that miss the point? Yes. Is it also, however, an understandable reaction to generalized statements that are easily read as overly broad and accusing a great many people who had no exposure to or interaction with the problem under discussion outside of hearing stereotypes. But then so too does "not all men" come off as being dismissive and downplaying the severity of the issue through deflection. In both cases, what was intended by the speaker did not match what was conveyed by what they said.

And while we've certainly gotten heated again, what I'm trying to say now is that if I can take a step back and say that I may have misunderstood your intent, can you take a step back and acknowledge that your initial statement perhaps did not adequately represent that intent?

It is you that does not understand the nature of argument. This is not a debate, this is not a trial, there is no defined winner or loser, it is not a zero-sum game. Arguing is exchanging ideas, attempting to convince people. If at any point you make an argument that convinces me, I can take your argument, and then I also have the convincing argument. You think performing for the audience is some measure of victory, but the truth is that you are not only failing to actually convince anyone who didn't agree with you in the first place, you are selling out your connection to the truth for the sake of that performance. You can't possibly believe that you somehow know better what I intended to say than I did, but you see that as the most expedient way to reach "right-wing guy wrong", and you ran with it. The only way to fail in an argument for argument's sake is to state a case that you don't find convincing. That's why you're not going to win by just pretending I said something I didn't. You might get the clapping seals here to clap for you, but that's not a victory.
I'm afraid you misunderstand my point.

My point was that you have a repeated tendency to declare yourself victorious and the person you're arguing against as "humiliated" or beaten because you left an argument without changing your opinion. And you've pointedly not applied that standard reciprocally. As you have also typically been unconvincing to the people you were arguing with, consistent application of your metric would instead rule that to be a draw or stalemate.

Hence the characterization of you as thinking yourself the Judge/Jury, you're making declarations about the performance of both yourself and the people you argue against and about the outcome of the argument as a whole, as if you were a neutral third party rather than one of the participants who - naturally - have a vested interest in telling themselves that they showed up their opponent.

Moreover, I think you misunderstand what I mean by audience. I'm not "sacrificing truth for the sake of performance". I am saying that an audience - which is to say, a third party uninvested in the outcome - will typically be a better judge of the merits of the participants' arguments than those participants themselves will be.

Put more directly, I think it's pretty safe to say that neither of us much likes the other. (Ironically, this is likely as much because of the personality traits we seem to have in common as it is because of the opinions that we differ on). And neither of us seems to believe that the other even argues in good faith, hence why so much of these spats end up being accusations and implications of spite and dishonesty. (And in case you feel inclined to dispute your participation in that, let me remind you that you just now accused me of "selling out your connection to the truth for the sake of performance", and not actually believing something but running with it as "the most expedient way to reach "right-wing guy wrong' "). And unfortunately that severely compromises our ability to evaluate our own performance in these exchanges. As a matter of principle, you want to believe that you outplayed me, just as I want to believe that I outplayed you. And because of that desire, we are predisposed to believe that we succeeded, especially if the other becomes frustrated into nonresponsiveness.

Hence not being an arbiter of your own performance. That's a tall order at the best of times even for skilled debaters, because there will always be that element of "I want to win" in the background. And it's much harder when the speaker is legitimately ideologically opposed to their opponent, never mind if tempers start to flare.

As a side musing, since we both seem to bring out the worst in each other, at this point I'm legitimately wondering if the mature and healthy thing for us to do would be to just block each other.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,792
3,536
118
Country
United States of America
I 1000% understand not voting for Harris cause they insisted that they didn't need us (or if I'm being real jerkish about it, they love Israel more than they love The United States) but voting for Trump instead because you imagined that he would not also be on his knees guzzling Israeli weiner is baffling...

EDIT: Like...seriously, can anyone point to even one sound bite or quote that would make them think Trump would be GOOD about Gaza? I guess if you grossly and incompetently interpret him saying "Finish the Job" as "He's going to bring Peace by brokering a deal!". That's the closest I've ever heard Trump say anything about Israel/Palestine...
There are a number of people who think Trump is "anti-war" for some reason. These people also usually seem to think that Trump is (don't laugh) an outsider who the deep state has no control over.
 

Agema

Do everything and feel nothing
Legacy
Mar 3, 2009
9,231
6,504
118
I can't help but chuckle at the hyprocisy of the left. We all know what the howls of outrage and protest would be should liberals employ the words of a Nazi to criticise the left.
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
12,129
6,398
118
Country
United Kingdom
I don't expect otherwise. We lack details that you are claiming to know, that's what I'm saying. The people who do have all the details declined to prosecute.
The only detail for which I brought up those witnesses was his presence at the sex and drugs party.

On that detail, the article is unambiguous. So you can claim the article is lying, if you like, but you cannot say that it lacks the information to rebut the idea that only Greenberg attested to his presence there.
 

tstorm823

Elite Member
Legacy
Aug 4, 2011
7,212
969
118
Country
USA
And while we've certainly gotten heated again, what I'm trying to say now is that if I can take a step back and say that I may have misunderstood your intent, can you take a step back and acknowledge that your initial statement perhaps did not adequately represent that intent?
Absolutely, it was a very short blurb, lacking in clarity or qualifiers, and I do not blame you at all for an initial read that failed to divine my intent with so little to work off of. And now I want to rant more:

People get all riled up about January 6th being a threat to democracy. The rioters on January 6th were never a threat to democracy, there is no world where that changes the results of that election, they barely accomplished delaying proceedings a few hours, Joe Biden became president at exactly the same time and in exactly the same manner as if they did nothing, and that's always how it was going to go down.

An actual threat to democracy is self-perpetuating powers. This is the sort of thing that leads to 3rd world dictators, where a person gets into power and starts to use that power against political opponents. They start arresting their opposing politicians, the state run media will start tilting heavily to defend the people at the top, courts will allow it all to happen, an absolute full-court press takes place, and at the end the party in charge gets to run all the elections forever which somehow voters never go against them ever again, just don't ask for any actual tallies.

If the US were like that, if it were a smaller nation without the same checks and balances, Donald Trump could never have gotten elected. He's been condemned by the legislature officially, he's been prosecuted by the executive, he's had judges rule against him. NPR is state funded media, they are really anti-Trump, and are still genuinely more neutral than most news sources. It's not that every single person is against him, or even most, it's that the people who are against him pulled every lever they could to remove him from power, and the American people still got to decide. Over the last 4 years, Democrats at some point have had majority control of everything but the Supreme Court. They had the House, they had the Senate, they had the presidency and all the departments within, particularly the justice department, they had the lower level courts, they had allies and supporters with concentrated power in mainstream media, the arts, and academia, and they hit Trump from every one of these institutions, and failed. Even if you support every action of these institutions, you may see my point here. You can agree with impeaching him, you can agree with prosecuting him, you can agree with NPR reporting on him as a threat to the country, you can genuinely stand by all of that and still see the upside that none of those things prevent the citizens from voting how they will.

That is a really strong showing for the strength of the American system, that it does not allow for people in power to effectively perpetuate their own power, at least not to the point where they can destroy their opposition and nullify the will of the people. For what it's worth, January 6th, 2021 was also a strong showing for the American system, in that a crowd of rioters genuinely presented no meaningful threat to the nation, and we continued forward just the same. We continue to have elections, the results of the elections matter, the rioters had no impact on that. Democracy prevailed, both then and now.

(And in case you feel inclined to dispute your participation in that, let me remind you that you just now accused me of "selling out your connection to the truth for the sake of performance", and not actually believing something but running with it as "the most expedient way to reach "right-wing guy wrong' ").
Not only do I not dispute this, I would say this is a reasonable encapsulation of every time I've declared myself a winner. I declare myself a winner only when people sell out the truth for the sake of their argument. When someone doubles down on assuredness of information they can't possibly know, when someone presents sources that all disagree with them and insist otherwise, when someone acknowledges a contradiction but still argues both sides of it, that's when people lose an argument. If I convince someone, I'm not going to declare victory over them, they have chosen to follow their reasoning to the best conclusion, that's not a loss. If someone argues consistently, no matter how poorly they argue, no matter how much I disagree with their conclusion, I'm not going to declare victory, they maintained their argument, that's not a loss. It's only when someone admits to or demonstrates that they are willing to violate their own reason that they've lost.

I don't think you actually believe you know my inner thoughts based on one or two sentences better than I do, and continuing down that thread would only leave a matter of time until it broke against you. You had to either eventually concede that the idea you were arguing with was not the only possible interpretation of my words, or continue arguing against something I neither said nor intended to say until you eventually demonstrate that you don't even really care what I meant to say, and that you'd rather argue against the fictional version of me that said what you read it as, and that would be a loss. Hence, "you're not going to win this way". To be clear, I don't think you did that, I just think you were headed towards that rabbit hole.
As a side musing, since we both seem to bring out the worst in each other, at this point I'm legitimately wondering if the mature and healthy thing for us to do would be to just block each other.
I don't think I've ever blocked anyone here. I'd rather not start now.
 

tstorm823

Elite Member
Legacy
Aug 4, 2011
7,212
969
118
Country
USA
The only detail for which I brought up those witnesses was his presence at the sex and drugs party.

On that detail, the article is unambiguous. So you can claim the article is lying, if you like, but you cannot say that it lacks the information to rebut the idea that only Greenberg attested to his presence there.
It is ambiguous, and without accusing any part of that article of being false, I can maintain that the only testimony we explicitly have attesting Gaetz presence at a drug-fueled orgy came from Greenberg. I will show you how.

The content of the affidavits themselves are only referenced briefly. We get this:
Rep. Matt Gaetz, the MAGA-fied Florida Republican, attended a drugged-up sex party with a 17-year-old girl he has long claimed not to know, according to three eyewitnesses cited in court papers filed late Thursday night.

They said the underage teen showed up in her mom’s car for the July 15, 2017, gathering, which was held at lobbyist Chris Dorworth’s Lake Mary home, NOTUS reported. A high school junior at the time, the girl was provided for the enjoyment of Gaetz and the other attendees who were there to “engage in sexual activities,” while indulging in “alcohol, cocaine, ecstasy … and marijuana,” the court filings said.

The allegations cited are included in sealed, sworn affidavits submitted amid an ongoing civil lawsuit Dorworth brought last year, in which he argued he had been improperly roped into previous sex trafficking accusations levied against Gaetz and his cronies. Gaetz was implicated three years ago as having had sexual relations with underage girls; his onetime friend, disgraced local pol Joel Greenberg, said Gaetz paid him to set up sexual encounters with young women, one of whom was allegedly a 17-year-old girl. A series of Venmo transactions appeared to corroborate Greenberg’s story, according to reports.
No specifics are provided as to who wrote the affidavits or which information came from which or how many of them. It is not certain that one of these affidavits is from Greenberg himself, but given that the source of the affidavits is a lawsuit against Greenberg for his claims about said party, it is not unreasonable to think that his claims are included. He can be one of these 3 affidavits.

Now, imagine the affidavits go like this:

Affidavit 1: "I attended a party where Matt Gaetz was present on July 15, 2017."
Affidavit 2: "I attended a party with Joel Greenberg and Matt Gaetz when I was 17."
Affidavit 3: "Matt Gaetz attended a drugged up sex party on July 15, 2017, with a 17-year-old who was provided to engage in sexual activities while indulging in alcohol, cocaine, ecstasy, and probably a ton of marijuana. Oh, by the way, my name is Joel Greenberg."

You can reasonably summarize those 3 collectively in the way the article does, all the Guardian's information would be valid if those are the exact affidavits. The first 2 do not contradict the third, and do corroborate some of the details. But still, there is only one actually accusing Gaetz of a crime, and it's Joel Greenberg. Because of the way they phrased it, because they combined the contents of the 3 into one claim, there's no way for us to know if more than one actually claimed the crimes happened there.

As an abstract example, if you ask a room of people to raise their hands if they like eating hamburgers or kicking puppies, most people will have to raise their hands cause they like eating hamburgers. But assuredly if you separate those out, all the hands go up for hamburgers and likely none for kicking puppies. For the Guardian to have been explicitly clear, the would have had to say that each affidavit individually attested to Gaetz presence at a sex party with a minor, which they did not do, leaving the possibility that 2 said something perfectly innocent and only one kicked the puppies. It's not a lie by the Guardian to be brief in their reporting, they have to consider the readability of their articles, and can't be trapped giving every possible detail in meticulous legalese for specifically the two of us using that article for a detailed argument. But it is ambiguous.
 

Hades

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2013
2,281
1,727
118
Country
The Netherlands
People get all riled up about January 6th being a threat to democracy. The rioters on January 6th were never a threat to democracy, there is no world where that changes the results of that election, they barely accomplished delaying proceedings a few hours, Joe Biden became president at exactly the same time and in exactly the same manner as if they did nothing, and that's always how it was going to go down.
Really? There likely exist some world where Pence was a rat and crowned Trump president despite him having lost the election, or one where Trump's cronies on the supreme court used the opportunity to go crown Trump under the fraudulent pretext that the election was ''disputed''

And in general, the very idea that the person who lost the popular and electoral vote should be able to get made president regardless, and that violence isn't objectionable to get this done in itself a threat to democracy. That it failed doesn't change this, and had Clinton send a mob on Biden for now crowning after he defeat the right would have made that very argument.
 

tstorm823

Elite Member
Legacy
Aug 4, 2011
7,212
969
118
Country
USA
Really? There likely exist some world where Pence was a rat and crowned Trump president despite him having lost the election, or one where Trump's cronies on the supreme court used the opportunity to go crown Trump under the fraudulent pretext that the election was ''disputed''

And in general, the very idea that the person who lost the popular and electoral vote should be able to get made president regardless, and that violence isn't objectionable to get this done in itself a threat to democracy. That it failed doesn't change this, and had Clinton send a mob on Biden for now crowning after he defeat the right would have made that very argument.
The right absolutely does make the same type of arguments you do. There were lots of people around 2014 claiming Obama was going to declare martial law and make himself king, and still some who claim Obama is secretly shadow president with Biden in office, and Elon Musk himself claiming that if Trump lost we would never have an election again.

But they're all either full of crap or delusional
 

Chimpzy

Simian Abomination
Legacy
Escapist +
Apr 3, 2020
12,875
9,314
118
Centrist Dems seize opening at the DNC: ‘I don’t want to be the freak show party’

Centrist Democrats are revolting.

As they begin to dissect their collapse in the presidential election, some Democratic National Committee members are concluding that the party is too “woke,” too focused on identity politics and too out of touch with broad stretches of America.

Those existential concerns, according to interviews with more than two dozen DNC members, are shaping the earliest stages of the race for DNC chair and, in the absence of a formal party autopsy, blame-casting among members about the causes of Vice President Kamala Harris’ defeat.

“The progressive wing of the party has to recognize — we all have to recognize — the country’s not progressive, and not to the far left or the far right. They’re in the middle,” said Joseph Paolino Jr., DNC committeeman for Rhode Island. “I’m going to look for a chair who’s going to be talking to the center and who’s going to be for the guy who drives a truck back home at the end of the day.”

Or as one DNC member from Florida put it: “I don’t want to be the freak show party, like they have branded us. You know, when you’re a mom with three kids, and you live in middle America and you’re just not really into politics, and you see these ads that scare the bejesus out of you, you’re like, ‘I know Trump’s weird or whatever, but I would rather his weirdness that doesn’t affect my kids.’”

The race for chair — the party’s first real reckoning with its brutal Election Day outcome up and down the ballot — is wide open, with nearly a dozen names floated as possible successors to replace Jaime Harrison, who is not expected to run again. Potential contenders include some Democrats with formidable resumes, including Wisconsin Democratic Party leader Ben Wikler, Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Chair Ken Martin, ex-White House infrastructure czar Mitch Landrieu and U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel, among others.

Party officials are expected to wait until the next chair is seated, likely early next year, to decide on a formal review of Democrats’ failings in the election. But the recriminations over Harris’ loss to Donald Trump are already reverberating throughout the DNC — and influencing members’ outlook on the chair’s race, the first step the party will take to chart its post-defeat direction.

“This is basically a rebuild job from the bottom up,” said Donna Brazile, the former Democratic National Committee chair.

Amid that still-nascent overhaul, a wing of Democrats who believe the party shifted too far to the left is rising up inside the DNC.

“I do think there’s this whole sentiment that we just went too far out there on identity, and it allowed the Republicans to really attack us at every turn as a result, and that we just essentially did not focus on just the everyday issues of Americans,” said one DNC member from California, granted anonymity to speak freely.

“I’m not interested in anyone who is moving further away from the center,” said Cindy Bass, a Pennsylvania committee member from Philadelphia. “The center is where we have to be.”

President Joe Biden’s Democratic National Committee and his installed chair, Harrison, are by no means considered progressive insurgents. But the body has been subject to tactical shifts before. Following Hillary Clinton’s defeat in 2016, party officials stripped superdelegates of much of their power in the presidential nominating process, a victory for the left after a primary in which superdelegates overwhelmingly supported Clinton over Bernie Sanders. Today, among at least some members of the party, there is a sense that the party has drifted too far leftward in its messaging.

The concern is not just ideological but is spreading to issues of identity. Even some of the committee’s most progressive members say so.

A second member from California, granted anonymity to speak openly, described a general hesitation to back a woman or person of color for party chair after Harris’ defeat. This person added that view does not square with their own outlook. But they were not alone in noticing it.

“I’m disappointed that most of the names I’m hearing are men,” said Shasti Conrad, the Democratic Party chair for Washington state, one of the only states that trended toward Democrats in 2024. “I hope we get some strong female candidates, too. One of my worries is that one of the bad takes is the party thinks that we’ve tried more diverse leadership, and maybe that doesn’t work.”

One DNC member, granted anonymity to assess the field of potential chairs frankly, said, “It’s White Guy Winter.”

Virgie Rollins, the DNC Black Caucus chair, said she will “wait and see if someone from the Black Caucus wants to step up” to run to lead the committee. But she added, no matter what, “my caucus is going to be very much involved in who the chair is going to be.”

In addition to Wikler, Martin, Landrieu and Emanuel, potential contenders include California Sen. Laphonza Butler, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, defeated Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, former New York Rep. Max Rose and former New York state Rep. Michael Blake.

The new four-year term for the role begins in March and includes more elemental tasks than just choosing political vendors: The next chair will be responsible for setting the 2028 primary calendar as well as determining presidential debate parameters, not to mention framing the party’s midterm message and marshaling its fundraising efforts across the map.

In the wake of Democrats’ widespread loss, several DNC members said their next chair should be an organizing guru. Moderate, establishment-oriented and progressive Democrats identified it as a must-have.

“I’m looking for a new DNC chair who’s going to continue to help build the infrastructure of the party around organizing,” said Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. and DNC member Austin Davis, “to make sure we’re building an organization that can not only turn out voters, but persuade voters.”

He added, “Trump really kind of ran up numbers everywhere, you know what I mean? There was clearly a strategy not focusing on one place or another. And as a party we have to do that.”

That desire for better organizing extends both down the ballot and deep into the battleground states that Trump swept. Several DNC members said they wanted to see such efforts even in off years — not just in the ramp-up to the presidential election. And they want it to be led by people with deep knowledge of key states — not folks flown in from Washington.
MOST READ
4B-SEO-Sara-Wong-Politico.jpg

No Sex, No Dating, No Babies, No Marriage: How the 4B Movement Could Change America
Washington’s lobbyists are stunned Trump chose RFK Jr.
‘War on the verge of breaking out’: Trump allies fume over possible new Senate GOP hires
Trump taps oil executive Chris Wright as Energy secretary
The ‘team of vipers’ is back

“They need to pay more attention to having operatives that are from those states in those states and doing more training in the offseason,” said Tomika Vukovic, a recently elected DNC member from Wisconsin.

The party is searching for answers in that state — and everywhere else. And some DNC members just hope the committee will pick a chair willing to dig into that work.

Said one New York DNC member, granted anonymity to assess the party’s ailments: “I would like to see a chair that can be critical of the party. And take a real in-depth look of where we’ve done things right and we’re we’ve failed and take action, even if it’s not popular. Not everything is puppies and rainbows.”
:sneaky:
 
Last edited:

tippy2k2

Beloved Tyrant
Legacy
Mar 15, 2008
14,715
2,148
118
Kamala Harris gave (from what I saw at least) exactly ONE statement on Transgender Care and it was her "STATE RIGHTS!" bullshit line about "following the law" for Transgender Care.

But sure Democrats, the problem was that you didn't go Left Enough. Maybe if you go right even more, you'll finally find that mythical Republican who wants to vote Republican but thinks the Republicans are just TOO Republican to vote for...
 

Hades

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2013
2,281
1,727
118
Country
The Netherlands
Another case of double standards for Democrats and Republicans is how to react to defeats.

Harris not conceding before the votes were fully counted and having her concession be done fairly quickly afterwards received the gloating commentary about what a poor loser she was. Clinton similarly was criticized for not conceding fast enough. Meanwhile Trump was and still is downright glorified for not conceding his loss at all, and plenty of people run damage control for his coup attempt to try and cancel out said loss.

To signal that whatever they do the dems cannot win the optic war we have Biden not throwing a hissyfit and plotting to subvert the democratic outcome being somehow considered proof that he always had the worst intentions.

There's plenty to criticize the democrats for so why exactly do their critics insists on spending so time on the petty stuff.
 

crimson5pheonix

It took 6 months to read my title.
Legacy
Jun 6, 2008
36,496
3,698
118
Centrist Democrats are revolting.
And they're complaining too. The refrain of "the party isn't focused on regular Americans" is true, but it's because of you dumbasses that they aren't. Start saying "medicare for all".

Another case of double standards for Democrats and Republicans is how to react to defeats.

Harris not conceding before the votes were fully counted and having her concession be done fairly quickly afterwards received the gloating commentary about what a poor loser she was. Clinton similarly was criticized for not conceding fast enough. Meanwhile Trump was and still is downright glorified for not conceding his loss at all, and plenty of people run damage control for his coup attempt to try and cancel out said loss.

To signal that whatever they do the dems cannot win the optic war we have Biden not throwing a hissyfit and plotting to subvert the democratic outcome being somehow considered proof that he always had the worst intentions.

There's plenty to criticize the democrats for so why exactly do their critics insists on spending so time on the petty stuff.
This style of complaint comes up a lot, and the foundation of the complaint is essentially "why aren't the center and left a mindless cult?". The problem with encouraging critical thinking is that people might think critically about you.
 

Gergar12

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 24, 2020
3,955
869
118
Country
United States
It's funny. I remember the first women's march had 1 million people, and the talk among DNC insiders was that the leadership was anti-Semitic due to the personal views of some of the lead organizers.

For fuck sake, liberals will stab their own over the smallest shit. Social media is a cancer of social activism. No wonder the left and the pro-Palestinian left hate the Democrats. If we were serious about countering Trump, we would have to do things that cost PE, M&A-dependent tech, and healthcare middlemen money, and the Democrats would rather do anything but that, including having so-called Hitler win.

I do think Trump will get some Venezuelan and Central American families deported who have legitimate asylum claims, and some will be put in internment camps. And there's a 50/50 chance there will be a war against Iran. But the Democrats, instead of running on the public option, paid family leave, or even federal weed legalization, would rather risk climate change, another Middle Eastern war possibly, and traumatized families who could be more efficient and contribute to America, which does help America over even a medium (5-10 year term than risk their billionaire backers.
 

Hades

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2013
2,281
1,727
118
Country
The Netherlands
I don't really like Secular talk much, but I think this is a good takedown on the idea that Kamala's campaign was somehow too woke despite having failed precisely because it was so aggressively center right. I suspect the argument is mostly an ill faithed ploy to move the overturn window further to the right, further away from minorities and to give those same minorities a kick while they're down to boot.

1731886429777.png
 
  • Like
Reactions: Seanchaidh

Phoenixmgs

The Muse of Fate
Legacy
Apr 3, 2020
9,656
831
118
w/ M'Kraan Crystal
Gender
Male
Top of my head? Fox, Sky News Australia, Breitbart, Washington Examiner, New York Post, OAN, the Washington Times, the Boston Herald, the New York Observer...

Though let's cut out the middle man, skip past the "oh you namedropped a few things but that doesn't matter" waffle, cut to the heart of your contention (which was that Trump didn't have meaningful support and therefore had the deck stacked against him), and start breaking out the lists of who was stumping for him, shall we? You know, the politicians, the businessmen, musicians, writers, actors, influencers, organizations, etc.

List of Donald Trump 2016 Presidential Campaign endorsements
List of Donald Trump 2020 Presidential Campaign political endorsements
List of Donald Trump 2020 Presidential Campaign non-political endorsements
List of Donald Trump 2024 Presidential Campaign political endorsements
List of Donald Trump 2024 Presidential Campaign non-political endorsements

And mind you, that's just the official endorsements.

Again: By no stretch of the imagination was Trump a dark horse candidate in this race.
You're listing Sky News Australia as mainstream media for the United States? Really?

Of the biggest papers in the US, the New York Post is the only one that leans right.

You're really going to compare like Rosanne Barr and Mel Gibson to Taylor Swift and Oprah as equally popular celebrities that endorse presidential candidates. If a celebrity comes out as conservative, they are shamed hence why like all the celebrity Trump endorsements are from celebrities that were already kicked out of Hollywood basically.

I never claimed Trump was a dark horse candidate, I knew Trump was going to win, it was pretty obvious. It's that people don't give a fuck about the mainstream media and they don't have the power/influence that they think they do. That doesn't change the fact that the mainstream media was clearly in Biden/Harris' corner.

Dangerous is whitewashing. He is way worse than dangerous.

I don't know how not showing one thing is proof. They kept on recording Trump words to make him sound more reasonable and intelligent. Then you listen to him live and you can see where the MSM edited his performance to make him look better
I can't roll my eyes any harder at that. He was already fucking president, nothing fucking happened. A news network not airing a major party candidate's victory speech is completely fucking unacceptable. You're no longer a news network if you do that.

What are you talking about? They edited Harris' "Live" interview. They literally make up stuff that Trump says that he never said. You don't have to make up anything, just report what he said and that's everything you need. Where is this proof that they edited a Trump speech to make him sound better? You're literally gaslighting me at this point.

Tribalism, Trump is part of the tribe they belong too, and of course their tribe is good, so Trump is good. Everything bad said about him is a lie, because it would imply their tribe have bad people in it, which could mean that they themselves could be bad.
Is this a serious post? This can't be a serious post, right?
 

Asita

Answer Hazy, Ask Again Later
Legacy
Jun 15, 2011
3,230
1,083
118
Country
USA
Gender
Male
You're listing Sky News Australia as mainstream media for the United States? Really?

Of the biggest papers in the US, the New York Post is the only one that leans right.

You're really going to compare like Rosanne Barr and Mel Gibson to Taylor Swift and Oprah as equally popular celebrities that endorse presidential candidates. If a celebrity comes out as conservative, they are shamed hence why like all the celebrity Trump endorsements are from celebrities that were already kicked out of Hollywood basically.

I never claimed Trump was a dark horse candidate, I knew Trump was going to win, it was pretty obvious. It's that people don't give a fuck about the mainstream media and they don't have the power/influence that they think they do. That doesn't change the fact that the mainstream media was clearly in Biden/Harris' corner.


You asked me "Aside from Fox, what mainstream media was in Trump's favor". I gave you a handful of examples off the top of my head, based on the outlets that I remember circulating and being championed by Trump's base over the last few cycles. You declared that Harris "got all the celebrity endorsements". I provided you with a few lists of celebrities and prominent organizations/figures that endorsed Trump. That your pride demands that you find some pretext to claim they don't count is on you. As I've said before, I'm done wasting my time on your bullshit, so I have no intention of chasing you down the field as you move the goalposts.
 
Last edited: