• bighatchester@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Hamas killed 1200 with about 500 to 600 civilian deaths so Israel kills over 21000 with of 19000 civilian deaths with 8000 being children . I really hope america finds someone else to elect president other than Biden who wants to send more weapons to Israel or Trump who is facing 90 criminal charges. There has to be a better option right ? I wouldn’t be able to bring myself to vote for either one of those people .

    • Draedron@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      Trump would also send more weapons. Dont forget he supported the settlements and moved the embassy

    • Immersive_Matthew@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      It is a real shame as the USA has had opportunity after opportunity to be a global leader, yet they seem to a) ignore their own people’s wishes and b) favor the industrial military complex to the point that it is undermining everything including their own regime. The shortsightedness is so foolish. I say this as a Canadian who loves America but am seeing a serious decline which Canada seems to also be following. The people are not being represented yet we are constantly told we should be grateful that we have such a great democracy. I feel delusional and deeply concerned.

      • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The political form of our economic system. Military industrial complex is what defines foreign policy based on the exploitation of other country’s resources on behalf of private companies. This is where the money that funds politics comes from. Politics no longer determine this economic arrangement because both parties consent to it.

      • mean_bean279@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The people are being represented in some ways and it’s more complex than “don’t send weapons.” Most likely polling for Biden team is showing that swing states have voters who support the Israeli military and so throwing their support behind it benefits them. Plus it helps a geopolitical ally of ours. Whether it’s the right thing or not isn’t my point, simply that there’s more to this and that technically by some polls it is widely supported. Other polls have it not as supported, but I’d bank on the Biden team knowing where to throw weight and where to give in.

        Poll

      • makyo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Because that’s not how it works.

        It’s too late for Dems to field an alternative that doesn’t just play spoiler and get Trump elected. And barring some massive turn of events, the spell Trump has on the GOP isn’t going to break. Americans need to game it out long term and think strategically about who will be more likely to lead to the kind of change you’d like to see. Even if you think Biden won’t do any of the things you want to see happen, at least there will be room to talk about it under him. A second Trump presidency will again smother outside opinions under a cloud of chaos and cruelty and incompetence. If you like the abiity to protest - remember how it was dealt with under Trump. Which means for anyone with a shred of humanity - plug your nose if you have to and vote Biden.

        • iegod@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          It’s only too late because Americans’ brains are broken.

          • DarthBueller@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Good take–hate on Americans while ignoring the Americans correctly explaining to you how the American electoral system is broken. Spend more time telling Americans that want viable third parties that they need to also support ranked-choice voting, and less time casting shade. If there’s any truth in your words, its simply that people need to know that having viable third parties REQUIRES ranked choice voting. I’m terrified that the US “No Labels” party will hand the election to Trump, because under the current system, ANY third party is an election spoiler.

        • silly goose meekah@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          There isn’t only 2 options. It’s insane that you keep voting for the same 2 corrupt useless parties when you have several others to choose from. And if everyone keeps saying “but they’ll never make it” they actually won’t. Only if you start voting for them the 2 party system can be abolished.

          • fluxion@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            As a staunch Bernie supporter, I’ve accepted that America is currently too broken to consider alternatives. We are on the brink of full collapse of our entire democratic system and have already been through an insurrection that a large percentage of the population is perfectly okay with. We’re heading toward full blow autocracy with another greedy Putin / Xi at the helm which will threaten the entire world so cut us some slack if we need to be pragmatic for the time being.

            • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              My only hope in the US right now as a socialist, is that the current neoliberal death spiral between the two consenting parties will eventually lead to people saying enough is enough in a meaningful political way, that combined with labor organizing. Every use of the word “realistic” to bolster the current arrangement of the parties is evidence they’re still comfortable with it in some manner and believe in it, that they still consent to this “reality.” The continued erosion of the social contract will change this over time, then they’ll either turn their dissatisfaction towards an internalized “other,” or they will choose the solidarity option and throw the bosses of their backs.

              Accepting things are bad and displaying how this affects you to others is the bare minimum to even begin to organize against this system. Any time a Democrat supporter tries to do the “realistic” or “clearly better but not good” thing they’re rationalizing and regulating what should be a display of revulsion.

          • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The problem is mathematical.

            To win the presidential election, you need to win a majority of the vote in enough states to win a majority of electoral college votes.

            If no-one gets 270 electoral votes, then the House of Representatives meets. Each state delegation gets 1 vote. Right now, that means that the Republican wins, due to e.g. Wyoming and Alaska getting just as much of a vote as NY and California, and Republican gerrymandering of swing states.

            There’s literally no way for third party candidates to be elected president. The best that a third party has ever done was in 1860, a 4 way race between a Democrat, Republican, Southern Democrat, and Constitutional Unionist.

            Lincoln, the Republican, got 39.8% of the vote but won 18 states and 180 electoral votes. The Democrat, Douglass, got 29.5% of the vote but only won a single state. Breckenridge got only 18.1% of the vote but carried most of the southern states. And Bell got 12.6% of the vote and carried 3 states - Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee.

            So Douglas ended up with more than twice as many actual votes as Bell, but got over 3x the electoral vote. And Breckenridge only got less than half as many electoral college votes that he’d need to win, and could realistically have only picked up Bell’s.

            The last time a third party candidate won a single electoral college vote was in 1968, when George Wallace won Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana. He was the former governor of Alabama, and had left the Democratic party after the 1964 civil rights law and 1965 voting rights law were passed by Johnson.

            The Democrats are also more of a big tent than most parties in counties using party list PR would be. In Italy, AOC and Manchin wouldn’t be in the same party, while in the US they basically have to be to win.

            The two party system exists for structural reasons. Plurality only works well in two candidate elections; third parties only do well in districts where they functionally replace a major party. Getting rid of the two party system is possible by changing the structure - switching to e.g. STAR voting in the senate and presidency and using e.g. MMP or STV in the House. But burying your head in the sand to pretend the structural issues don’t exist just doesn’t work.

      • TwoGems@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Well except the part where we’re on the brink of fascism and not voting will get Trump elected, which is completely idiotic to toy with

        • Count042@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          So, in that case, backing genocide was completely fucking idiotic to toy with.

          Harm reduction arguments stop working when the harm reduction side STILL fucking backs genocide.

          If that is the best we can do, and you expect me to be complicit with genocide by voting for someone who could stop it with one phone call but hasn’t, then maybe the system needs to break.

          If you want to preserve it this system through genocide and ethnic cleansing, then that says something about your moral code, or lack thereof.

        • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Trump governed like a milquetoast Republican and Democrats haven’t even tried to undo any of his legislative victories. They even committed more money to completing Trump’s stupid wall.

        • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s the consensus reality you’ve accepted yes, it’s also what got you to this situation and what will keep you on this downward spiral, until the social contract erodes to the point enough people lose faith in this consensus reality.

          • Asafum@feddit.nl
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            1 year ago

            So tell us, who’s the better option that actually exists and is running and will have the dnc allow them to run?

            You’re not convincing the entire country to suddenly vote 3rd party in under a year…

            • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Oh I wouldn’t bet a dollar on being able to convince Americans they have other options, despite them having a system where basically anyone can run for office. They’re completely enraptured with the consensus reality you express here and the political system is designed to keep them engaged in it. Only when you lose faith in this reality will anything change, the material conditions of your life will convince you.

              • Asafum@feddit.nl
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                1 year ago

                I think a rather large portion of the population has lost faith in the system, the fact that we all feel like the only thing we’re voting for is “not the handmaid’s tale” as opposed to voting for something speaks volumes. A vote for Democrats today is simply a vote for “Not the Republicans.” We have nothing to vote for and not an insignificant number of us realize that.

                We don’t have real options because even though there are other parties we have an entire society built to prevent that, everything from the political parties themselves to the media that keeps the population mislead/underinformed. Our entire society is built to protect the status quo for the wealthy.

                I wish all it took was being jaded, we’re well ahead on that one. I think it’s why Trump even exists as a political entity at all, the Republican voters have also given up on the system. I think the problem shows the difference in how we choose to “solve” the issue. “Conservatives,” completely going against their name, want to burn it all to the ground via Trump and start “new.” Democrats seem to believe in some aspects of the system and want to rebuild from within the current structure. The political structures of RNC & DNC obviously want nothing but the status quo.

                • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  This all makes a lot of sense. I view the Republicans and Democrats as different aesthetics of the consenting neoliberal economic arrangement, and agree with a notion of post-politics to describe this situation, where politics becomes increasingly engaged in cultural issues since your arrangement in the political economy is no longer up for debate. The neoliberal system is what’s in crisis and is basically running on fumes at this point, no longer sincerely believed in by determining actors within it. As the systemic stresses of degrading neoliberal capitalism turn inward it manifests in different ways politically. Trump doesn’t happen from nothing, there are real systemic anxieties underlying that, the problem for Democrats is any serious acceptance and solution of those anxieties is in conflict with the forces that keep them legitimate. The Republicans accept the brutality of the system as necessary and the Democrats try and put a good brand on it.

              • kmaismith@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                To suggest options exist without laying them out suggests your ignorance of reality might be greater than the Americans. How would a people trapped in an externally imposed set of political constraints be able to recognize their alternatives without some more perspective being shared.

                The alternatives have been explored from the American perspective. If there is a path we have missed, please enlighten us.

                • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  I told you the option, losing faith in this consensus reality, nobody is doing that for you because your faith in it is contingent on the conditions of your life.

                  Alternatives have been denied by this consensus reality. The Populists of the 19th century had another vision and were promptly dealt with through imposed segregation, a racial and economic order imposed to divide them. Eugene Debs’ vision was dealt with by capital and military interests and internal divisions. Taft-Hartley act denied the power of labor. The red scare eroded class consciousness so you don’t even organize or identify around your economic reality anymore. The neoliberal consensus of the last 50 years between the major parties, the military industrial complex driving your country’s geopolitics, have brought you to the current moment of the social contract eroding.

              • seang96@spgrn.com
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                1 year ago

                The main candidates will sue your for running for president. People register for it every year and get sued out of a campaign.

      • derpgon@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Its not the existence of a better option, no, the possibility of third option freaks them out.

        • Zink@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          The thing is, we do typically have 4-7 choices on the presidential ballot. Unfortunately our voting system strongly discourages voting for other parties if you want to actually affect the results.

        • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s more accurate way to say it, because they use “better” as a justification for not entertaining a third option that is actually good.

    • Edward Internethands@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That’s what first past the post voting systems systematically offer, “bad” or “very bad” options. Change the system and you’ll see a big difference

      • DarthBueller@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        How? Ranked choice voting and well-designed non-partisan redistricting are necessary reforms that too few people know about. We need a duo of liberal and conservative billionaires that make this their pet issue, a handful of country music stars, pop stars, and hip-hop/rap/RnB artists behind it and we’d get it in a heartbeat. Fuck, Elon Musk could distract people from the media nightmare that is his mouth and become a big advocate of it and we’d have Chads burning down the internet for these reforms the next day.

        • Edward Internethands@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’m solid on identifying the systematic issues at play historically and how they could have have been avoided, but how best to proceed from here is way more dynamic and probably beyond my expertise. Billionaires benefit from status quo, and if they or their populist goons were involved in the reforms I’m pretty leery of how good the outcome could be. I lost the ability to imagine a good path forward for America, which is part of why I left.

    • dx1@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Hamas killed 1200 with about 500 to 600 civilian deaths

      Minus a few hundred Israel killed with “friendly fire”.

      • DoomBot5@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Oh we’re doing that? If so, take a couple thousand off the other side that Hamas killed with their rockets. 25% of those never make it out of the Gaza strip, landing on their own civilians instead of making it to Israeli population centers.

          • DoomBot5@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Nah, even Hamas hasn’t managed to kill hundreds of thousands with their rockets. They only wish they could.

            • Count042@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              Wrong direction, and when the country you’re defending killed 8,000 children in two months, it’s not even funny.

              • DoomBot5@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Well going in the other direction is wrong. Hamas has killed lots of Palestinians with their rockets.

    • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Does that number of civilians exclude civilians killed by the IDF or in the crossfire? Because if not it’s even lower.

      • mwguy@infosec.pub
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        1 year ago

        When counting deaths in Gaza they don’t exclude those killed by the 20% of Hamas/PIJ/etc… rockets that land withing Gaza.

    • dzire187@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      moral high ground is not determined by the amount of casualties suffered by one side. there was a cease fire in place until October 6. It ended the next day. Israelis have lived in fear of terrorist attacks for too long. they have the right to defend their people and their land. and no, it’s not the land of third generation Gazans, who are majority descendants of Jordans who immigrated in the 40s.

      • Gyoza Power@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Israelis have lived in fear of terrorist attacks for too long

        And Gaza lived in fear of being bombed to the ground and murdered by the Israeli government for too long, while at the same time having all of their land stolen.

        And who’s land is it then? Third generation Israelis whose grandfathers just decided to take already occupied land? That’s a funny bit.

        I love how Israel is supposedly the victim all throughout their short history, yet, for some strange reason, they always gain something out of every conflict they, supposedly, get dragged into.

        Edit: plus, it’s stupid to think that the israeli government didn’t want this to happen. They knew that oppression would lead to a response, and that response would justify further attacks on Gaza until they gain full control. For countries like that, what’s a few of their citizens’ lives in exchange for power? The US taught them well in that regard.

    • fosforus@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      There has to be a better option right ?

      Yes, if anti-war is your main thing, then Libertarians. But you’d have to get not only yourself but 20 of your friends to vote for them for them to have a chance.

      https://www.lp.org/we-stand-alone-as-a-beacon-of-peace/

      Note though that this means they’re ideologically against supporting Ukraine as well.