President Joe Biden had conspiracy theorists in a tizzy after posting what appeared to be his reaction to the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl win on Sunday night.
“Just like we drew it up,” Biden posted on X alongside a photo of “Dark Brandon,” the meme created by hardcore—and very online—supporters of Donald Trump that Biden and his team loved so much they adopted it as their own.
The post was apparently referencing far-right conspiracy theories which posit the NFL and high-level government operatives conspired to rig the Super Bowl in Kansas City’s favor to give maximum exposure to a yet-to-be-announced endorsement from Chiefs star Travis Kelce and his girlfriend Taylor Swift.
For starters, you need to look up the definition of genocide and stop using it incorrectly as an argument. Secondly, saying someone is irrelevant and pointless isn’t suppression. It’s an opinion.
I never once suggested that anyone shouldn’t vote for them. THAT would be suppression.
I wasn’t arguing about the definition of genocide. it’s a pretty outlandish hypothetical for you to be worried about that.
I wasn’t arguing it either…. But you called the two options “genocidal maniacs” which is an incorrect usage of the term.
in this hypothtical, those are the other two options. I would know: I wrote the hypothetical
Again, I’d ask you to look up the definition of genocide.
ok. you look up hypothetical, and we can meet back here to discuss!!
I’m not going to agree they’re genocidal for the sake of continuing a discussion. Either we both adhere to reality, or we’re done here.
I don’t do hypotheticals.
my whole comment was a hypothetical. so… bye.
If making up an altered reality is what it takes for you to participate in a discussion, you might want to look into how things are in reality and try and work with that. It’s a lot easier for everyone if the rules are the same.
I think we just have different ideas of what voter suppression looks like.
Well, I follow this definition.