To circle back and give a proper answer to your previous post, I've got an example from earlier this week. Trump ordered out the remaining US Attorneys left from Biden's administration. Articles about it looked like this:
President’s move to ‘clean house’ comes as attorney general works to implement administration’s political agenda
www.theguardian.com
and then internet comments about it looked like this:
So we've got media headlines about Trump firing US Attorneys and a left-wing response about how corrupt and/or authoritarian that is, and if you read the articles they basically all admit this is perfectly normal. So a fictional argument might go basically like this:
Lefty: Trump is firing all the US attorneys and installing his own loyalists!
Me: Yes, and?
Lefty: They're overthrowing the government, they're fascists.
Me: This happens every administration. Democrats do it too.
Lefty: The Democrats are fascists too!
So that strawman I'm arguing against has criticized Democrats, sure. But what they haven't done is questioned the premise. In this moment, the idea that replacing the US Attorneys is malicious or illegal works toward the benefit of Democrats because Republicans are in power. Accepting the premise that this is a bad action still leads to a call to action against Republicans, and consequently for Democrats. It's not a long established worldview, no, it is subject to change, but people can still buy into that premise in the now.
The internet is full of left-wing people who think Democrats aren't good on healthcare, or minority rights, or Gaza, or any number of things, but even condemning Democrats as being insufficient in those areas is more often than not politically helpful for Democrats as it is emphatically in line with the premises that Democrats claim they care about. And for things like those, big consequential things, there's a likelihood that people actually care about those things independent of what party says what, but where it becomes obvious that someone is just parroting a party is when it's things that nobody has honestly put any thought into. Suddenly people have very strong opinions on tariffs, or USAID, and you can point out all sorts of things about the history of tariffs or USAID, but some people are going to be firm in their commitment that tariffs are terrible and USAID is good, even if that involves condemning some Democrats, because those are the premises that work against Republicans now. Those Redditors talking about replacing attorneys as a second coup or as weaponization of the Justice Department have absolutely never in their life even wondered whether US Attorneys change with each administration, and certainly don't have informed opinions about whether it's a good or a bad thing that they do, but the premise that it's a bad thing pushes in the direction they want to push, so they run with it.