Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has endorsed President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign, a sign of the president’s strength in uniting his party to have the backing of one of its most liberal members

  • @onionbaggage@lemmy.world
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    1241 year ago

    Old man who vaguely agrees with my politics and is just mildly disappointing or a literal shit filled dumpster fire? Hmmm tough choice.

    • How is Biden disappointing? Before he became President he gave every indication of being yet another appeasement-oriented centrist, but he’s actually gotten a surprising amount done. Biden has ended up being far better than I expected him to be.

      • JD Squared
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        261 year ago

        Now imagine what he could accomplish if the people in this thread who complain so much actually went out and grassroots volunteered and got some progressives elected in their districts.

        • @stallmer
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          31 year ago

          Sorry. Too busy making petitions asking others to remove Alito from the Supreme Court to do any actual, useful volunteer work.

      • MasterOBee Master/King
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        221 year ago

        What has he gotten done that you support?

        I’m pretty disappointed in the Inflation Reduction Act that actually prints a trillion more dollars.

        We need inherent change in the government, we need congress to get off their asses and create good bills. We need to get away from the 4th branch of government.

        Not print a trillion more $ that goes to government subcontractors and the top 1%

          • MasterOBee Master/King
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            71 year ago

            I can post a lot of links to different people talking about different things.

            What has he gotten done that you support?

            Or do you support every single thing in that exhaustive list? If you do support every single thing, that might be more telling of you than Biden’s ‘accomplishments’

            • McBinary
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              251 year ago

              There is far fewer things there that I don’t support than those I do. Considering majority of that list were wildly popular, and in many cases supportive of basic human decency, I suspect it is less about my personal views than you’re trying to make it.

              • MasterOBee Master/King
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                51 year ago

                What has he done that you support?

                It’s a very simple question, I don’t know why you have such a difficult time answering it since you just spoke so highly of everything he’s done!

                • @SecretSauces@lemmy.world
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                  231 year ago

                  Not OP, but anything good for the planet I support. Anything that helps equality for all I support. All the steps he took to help us during Covid, including securing enough vaccines for everyone and helping people out of jobs due to covid with stimulus checks and small business protections (though I agree it probably could’ve been handled better, to curtail fraud), I support.

                  So, three large key points that in truth pertain to a LOT of small initiatives he’s done, I support. Much better than Trump would’ve done.

                  That being said, I wish we had better democratic alternatives for president. Biden (and honestly, a good chunk of our representatives on both sides) is just too old. We need to have term limits and age limits for all seats in government and SCOTUS.

        • @meco03211@lemmy.world
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          111 year ago

          You listed a lot of legislative issues there. What should the executive branch do for those issues? Veto the Inflation Reduction Act? Not enact bills passed by congress?

          • MasterOBee Master/King
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            41 year ago

            Executive branch should enforce laws passed by the legislative branch and do what they can to keep us out of more international military conflicts.

            The IRA was Biden’s baby, it’s not that he was silent on the bill then it just happened to cross his desk. The executive should NOT be pushing legislation, the executive branch should NOT be trying to unilaterally pass $1T in debt relief with an executive order and should NOT promote divisiveness.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              do what they can to keep us out of more international military conflicts

              Hard disagree. The Pax Americana is the best thing to happen to the geopolitical landscape in all of human history.

              • DreamerOfImprobableDreams
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                1 year ago

                Between the dogwhistle about wanting to end our support for Ukraine, and complaining about the IRA-- the largest climate change bill passed by any nation in human history-- because it “cost too much”, I’m starting to wonder if the guy you’re replying to is on the left at all.

                EDIT: Just checked their post history, and yep, they’re openly a conservative.

          • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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            21 year ago

            Do what it does whenever a Republican is in office: bully the holdouts of their own party standing in the way of their agendas. When Trump’s legislative agenda was imperilled, he used Twitter to the point where a whole generation of GOP legislators decided not to run for re-election.

            Every time Manchin and Sinema held up his agenda in 2021, he should have been hitting the airwaves and social media every day to single them out BY NAME for holding up what he was elected to do.

        • @Laticauda@lemmy.world
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          121 year ago

          I mean he’s the only president I’m aware of who just came out and straight called the fascists fascists, and didn’t backpedal when the fascists got mad.

        • prole
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          71 year ago

          But when the alternative is literally putting those fascists in office…

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            Yeah…

            That’s what everyone is complaining about.

            And why everyone is more upset at the people running the national party who refuse to let Americans have a primary.

            The ones who are willing to say “if you dont vote for this 80 year old who lied to you four years, have fun with trump!”.

            Do t worry tho, progressives will do what we always do and vote for the lesser evil.

            Doesn’t mean we have to pretend we like it

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              Progressive candidates lose elections, which is rather the problem here. There aren’t as many of you as your online circles would have you believe

              • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                31 year ago

                By that logic since world peace hasnt been achieved, we need to give up.

                That climate change is still happening, so fuck doing anything about.

                That a wealthy ruling class has always existed so it always will.

                That children dying of hunger is part of life and we just need to move on.

                Is that really the outlook of “moderates”?

                If something is bad, just accept it. Nothing will ever improve so stop trying

                It really explains a lot

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  11 year ago

                  This is a nonsensical interpretation of what I’ve said. If you lose elections, you don’t get a say in how the country runs. Progressives aren’t popular, and suggesting the system is rigged rather than piss-poor communication and outreach among progressives (combined with a total unwillingness to compromise and the fiery rhetoric that entails) is the reason why.

      • @ashok36@lemmy.world
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        131 year ago

        If you’d told me we could virtually eliminate Russia’s army and remove them as a competitor on the world stage for a couple billion bucks with no american troops in 2020 I would have taken that deal any day.

      • @Burnt
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        21 year ago

        Hasn’t legalized cannabis on a federal level and considering his career long stance on the war on drugs, I don’t really expect that he ever would support legalization.

      • @flossdaily@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Before I start, let me say that Biden absolutely has my vote, because the alternative is the end of our democracy.

        I’ll also say he’s away better than I thought he’d be.

        But here’s how he’s a disappointment:

        1. He failed to appoint an attorney general that would give us a special prosecutor to go after Trump for the most egregious case of Obstruction of Justice in the history of the country, as laid out in the Mueller report. This was a matter of national security, should have been the first set of indictments against Trump, and should have happened a couple years ago.

        2. Student loans. Our economic engine requires a strong consumer class… Right now two generations of Americans are drowning in debt, and can’t buy goods and services from other Americans. It’s hurting EVERYBODY. Biden should be aiming to erase ALL student debt. Instead he’s taking half-measures that leave the United States still in crisis. And that’s BEFORE we talk about how weak his attempt to do this was, from a legal standpoint.

        3. Healthcare. We are still in crisis. The ACA was supposed to be a first step. Instead, it has been the only step, and Republicans continue to attempt to chip away at it. Why hasn’t Biden put out a universal healthcare plan? Or at least a public option? How can we ever make progress when he won’t even be the standard-bearer for these ideas?

        4. The Supreme Court was captured by fascist theocrats. Any future moderate (to say nothing of liberal) laws will be struck down by these assholes. Why is Biden not talking about packing the court until it once again reflects the values of the overwhelming majority of Americans?

        I could go on, but the jist here is that the United States is in absolute crisis, and like Hillary before him, Biden is the “nothing will essentially change” or “incremental change” candidate. Not acceptable during an emergency.

    • @guyman@lemmy.world
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      181 year ago

      Status quo keeps on truckin’ along.

      Rich keep getting richer. Poor people? Well, who cares about them anyway.

  • @figaro@lemdro.id
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    941 year ago

    Like I get that is what we probably are getting, and fine, he is better than whatever the republicans are putting forward, so I’ll vote for him.

    But

    Come on

    I wish, so much, we had a better candidate

    • Zagorath
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      341 year ago

      You need a better voting system.

      Any single-winner system is inherently flawed, which is why presidential systems are just straight-up worse than parliamentary ones. They’re by their nature going to be less representative. A system where the president is largely a figurehead is far better, along with a legislature which is elected proportionally using something like Mixed-Member Proportional, Single Transferable Vote, or party-list PR.

      But failing that, the bare minimum to call your system democratic is to use Instant Runoff Voting. First Past the Post is just straight-up not democracy. It’s a farce. The idea that two candidates with similar views both being very successful actually makes it less likely that either will win is an obvious complete failure of the system. (And, fwiw, you could have IRV presidential elections for a powerful POTUS while also improving congress by making it proportional, if you want to go a step further than just making Congress & President both using IRV, but not as far as the fundamental constitutional change required to make the president a figurehead.)

      • @Robbeee@lemmy.world
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        111 year ago

        And how do you expect us to do that, revolt? Because it turns out elected officials are reluctant to make significant changes to the system that elected them from which they profit handsomely.

        • @el_cordoba@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          Suspending reality, it would be interesting if enough progressives moved to states like Wyoming (pop 580k) and the Dakotas (780k and 890k) to move them blue. Then vote in progressive senators. For reference, NJ alone has a population of 9.2m.

          If that could happen It would be great to link senators to state population.

          • @dynamojoe@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            I agree with you but it’ll never happen. That would require a constitutional amendment and that bar is so high it can only be cleared under the threat of national revolt (like when the voting age was lowered, or prohibition was repealed). States would not be so eager to give up their power, and three fourths of them would have to agree.

        • Zagorath
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          11 year ago

          I don’t know how you achieve it, but if you haven’t got at least IRV, then electoral reform should be the top issue people push their elected representatives for. As I understand it, some states have already done it in some elections, so it’s not like it’s impossible. Without a functioning democratic system, you can’t ever get good outcomes on the things that actually matter. And with FPTP you don’t have a democratic system.

      • @Taalnazi@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        A parliamentary system with fully proportional representation would be best. The US is big though, so I think an electoral threshold of 4% may be needed. That, or require parties to fulfil the below condition before being able to participate in elections.

        • They need enough support through party membership from the area’s population, as a % of the latter. On counties, this would be about 4%. On a state level, that would be 1%. On a national level, 0.25% would be enough.

        You might think, why lower with each level? But the larger the population size is, the smaller the membership can be while remaining representative. This also stimulates smaller parties since now they have a chance to actually grow.

        Electoral districts also need to be thrown away – counties, states, and the entire country, are where the elections get held in. Because of proportional representation, it doesn’t matter however you were to divide up areas: 25% of votes on one party means 25% of seats.

        Lastly, force the Democratic and Republican Party to break up into separate parties with each no more than 20% of all seats. Or tell the parties that putting through with proportional representation as an agenda point will give them more votes. The Dems can argue, “One man, one vote”, the Reps can argue “America NEEDS to keep it Great! Vote the Dems away, get Proportional!”. Both should have this as agenda point.


        I also think it critical that the supreme court of the US isn’t 7 judges. It worked for a country with 2 million people, but you lot are a country of 300+ million now. You need something like 100 members, and make the supreme court appointed by the judges themselves, who are chosen by multiple random ballots themselves.

        The US Congress also could be expanded. Make the House go from 435 to 500 members, and the Senate to 250. They need to be updated for a big country.

        It also makes it harder to manipulate politicians, since there are far more needed to bribe.

        I have a whole writeup, if anyone is interested. I think that both Dems and Reps and anyone else can find themselves in it.

        • Zagorath
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          21 year ago

          I think an electoral threshold of 4% may be needed.

          I have absolutely no problem with such a threshold.

          I also think it critical that the supreme court of the US isn’t 7 judges.

          Okay so here’s a really controversial take. I think the problem with the SCOTUS actually stems from there being too many rights enumerated in the American constitution. I should note that I’m not a legal scholar, but I’ve read a lot of opinions from non-American lawyers who have explained this viewpoint, and it makes sense to me.

          Where I live in Australia, our constitution is largely uncontroversial. It doesn’t say what rights people do and do not have, but really just lays out the basic functioning of our democratic institutions, like how elections work, how Government works, how the Commonwealth interacts with the States, etc. Rights are left to Parliament to implement. This has the interesting difference from America in that it means that our High Court decisions are largely far less political than SCOTUS’s. Because the High Court of Australia doesn’t get to make the inherently political ruling of deciding how to interpret individuals’ rights as laid out in the constitution. By putting the right to bear arms in the constitution, SCOTUS is inherently given the power to decide what should be a legislative matter of how much people are allowed to own guns. It’s what lead to the morally-good but legally-nonsense decision that lead to Americans having the right to abortion*, which itself stopped the legislature from ever feeling like it needed to do its job in relation to abortion protections, which is in turn what made the disastrous outcome of Dobbs possible.

          This is, obviously, something so deeply ingrained that it would be basically impossible to change. Americans view their constitution almost like a religious text. Even though some of the founding fathers supposedly thought a constitution is something that should be basically rewritten from scratch every few decades, Americans view it as written in stone and as something that must not be changed except perhaps to enumerate more explicit rights. But fundamentally, a less politicised constitution would lead to a less politicised judicial system, which would allow each branch of government to do its part without encroaching on the others like they currently do.

          I’m with you on increasing the size of the legislature though. 2 senators per state is far too few (and makes it impossible to reasonably add in a proportional system on a per-state basis). I have much the same feeling about my country. I’d like to see our Parliament almost doubled in size, especially if we were to move to a more proportional system (we currently have a proportional Senate, but use IRV for our House of Representatives).

          * legally nonsense because if you look at how SCOTUS justified it in Roe, it just doesn’t make sense, legally. Somehow the right to an abortion is derived from…a right to privacy? That doesn’t make sense. And it makes even less sense when you consider that the right to privacy itself is somehow derived from the right to due process and equal rights under the law.

    • My only real misgiving with Biden is age, but I do still agree. With how crazy and dangerous Republicans have become however, we can’t afford to take any risks. We don’t just need to beat them, we need to beat them by the largest margins possible. We need to send a sharp condemnation. Biden’s incumbency advantage is indispensable for this.

      • @Narauko@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        You really don’t have any additional misgivings about a man who sold out the people of the United States to the credit card companies for a few measley hundreds of thousands of dollars, and who cosponsored a large percentage of why our student loan crisis is as bad as it is? There is a reason that all predatory credit entities are based in the state he represented for his entire political career. He doesn’t get a pass after decades of being a predatory corporate shill selling out the American people. How can the Dems not be capable of fielding literally anyone remotely electable if they weren’t competing opposite truly garbage candidates like Desantis and Trump? I have the same question for the Repubs, for fielding Desantis and Trump. And neither side actually solving abortion rights, gun rights, healthcare, etc when they hold all 3 branches because they are all afraid of losing their major wedge issues, without which they aren’t confident they can win elections.

    • @Falmarri@lemmy.world
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      241 year ago

      What exactly has Biden done wrong? He may not be as crazy left wing as you’d prefer, but really I don’t see why so many on the left are saying he’s so bad

      • Irlut
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        231 year ago

        Although I think Biden has overall done a good job I am disappointed that they’re running someone who is 80 years old. I would also like to see a general shift to the left, but at the same time I realize that the increased political division in the US makes this unlikely in the near term.

        • prole
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          101 year ago

          Giving up the incumbent advantage at a time like this is short sighted at best, and destructive and dangerous at worst.

          • @krashmo@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            People always have some reason ready to roll out when telling you to settle for some shitty candidate you don’t really like. I’m done with it. I compromised on Joe Biden to save America from Trump. I compromised in every election for my entire adult life. Now I’m voting for people I actually like. If the US is collectively dumb enough to go back to the GOP then we deserve the consequences of that choice.

            You can call that selfish if you want but I’ve been waiting 35 years for the compromise candidate to be the one from my camp and there’s always a bunch of armchair poly-sci experts coming out of the woodwork to explain why that would be irresponsible in the current political climate. Well too bad, I’m not voting for the geriatric anymore.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              101 year ago

              Must be nice to be a wealthy, single, white man who knows he won’t suffer under a Trump admin.

              Fuck the rest of the country, right? And our overseas allies.

              • @krashmo@lemmy.world
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                51 year ago

                Like I said, if America is collectively dumb enough to vote Republicans into power after everything that’s happened then another 4 years of a boring Democrat isn’t going to fix that problem. If we’re headed for some sort of collapse I’d rather deal with that now rather than later. Call that what you like but it’s not my way of doing things that got us in this mess in the first place so you’ll have to forgive me if I don’t put much stock in your “keep doing the same things and hope something magically changes” approach.

                I personally believe someone in the Bernie Sanders mold has a better chance of pulling in moderate voters than a Joe Biden does.

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  I’m sorry but the idea that Bernie Sanders brings in moderate voters is obliterated by the fact that he gets blown out in primaries because of moderate voters

            • @Varixable@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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              51 year ago

              I really don’t understand this attitude after how far the entire country backslide under Trump after 2016.

              Like, I get it, I felt the same way in 2016 and pissed away my vote, but you’ve got to realize how counter productive this is after how much more fucked everything got in four years right? Assuming you aren’t leaving the country, you do have to live with the consequences of another Trump presidency and further erosion of your rights.

              • @krashmo@lemmy.world
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                31 year ago

                Thanks for the pointless reply. Next time just downvote and spare people from having to read “I disagree with you” but in dumber form.

      • prole
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        141 year ago

        This comment will stay in the negatives, but anyone who is looking at this objectively knows you’re correct. They just don’t like it.

        • @Zaktor@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          It’s getting downvoted for the “crazy left wing” part, not the “what has Biden done wrong” part.

      • @Platomus@lemm.ee
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        121 year ago

        Because he’s ancient. He’s a half century older than the majority of the voting population.

          • @Platomus@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Because he isn’t the one that’s going to have to living in and running the world in another 20 years or fewer.

            Because there are plenty of other choices that better represent the current and future population.

            Because he was alive during a time that is so drastically different than the current world.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              I don’t want a representative of the population. I want someone competent who can accomplish policy objectives I share.

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  I don’t understand what you mean. The rest of the population can make the same choice in the same contest

                  That’s what voting is.

          • @people_are_cute@lemmy.sdf.org
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            1 year ago

            To say the quiet part out loud, he simply isn’t charismatic enough to hold the President position. Common people don’t feel their future to be secure under his leadership. Look at GOP’s candidates meanwhile (DeSantis, Ramaswamy, Trump) - they are all populist if not anything else.

            And like it or not, this perception matters. I can guarantee he’ll recieve less votes this time (compared to last year, he can still marginally win simply because of how unpopular the Right has become).

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              Populists should be fought because populism is a cancer. Biden is exceptionally charismatic, in my view. Significantly more so than most Presidential candidates not named Obama or Clinton.

              • @Reptorian@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                Populism alone isn’t bad. Sometimes, it’s the only way to get a perspective or idea out there, and make it not seem like a taboo anymore. And some ideas out there are worth supporting.

      • @Crimesawastin@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        He ran on getting kids out of cages and there is still a giant open-air prison for refugees on the border. He busted the railroad union. Those are two pretty big issues for the left. He’s further right than Obama, and probably futher right than Nixon, if you compare their platforms. Fighting fascism by moving further right is a really bad way to fight fascism.

      • Grant_M
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        101 year ago

        Biden has been great. The most transformative policies in 80 years. Great for the world.

          • Grant_M
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            21 year ago

            Being able to see through the RW/Kremlin propaganda fog does not make me a “shill bot.” I suppose by your metrics, AOC is also a “shill bot” for supporting Joe Biden? He’s the first in a LONG WHILE to promote any kind of true global unity on important issues. Not perfect, but DAMNED good.

            • @killa44@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              Yes. AOC is controlled opposition at best. Biden’s only redeeming quality is that he’s not Trump.

    • hh93
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      101 year ago

      The problem is really that the whole system is fucked up.

      Elections being about “the lesser evil” instead of voting FOR what you actually want is just horrible - no wonder so many people are losing faith in democracy over there…

      • @SCB@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Biden was a clear “best choice” instead of a “lesser evil” for me. I think he’s a great guy doing a great job.

        • @Leer10@sh.itjust.works
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          41 year ago

          I want someone who wouldn’t have greenlit the Willow Project in the Arctic. We are way past making compromises in the climate emergency.

          • @SCB@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            I am literally a climate lobbyist. I have a meeting with a republican rep in 2 weeks. His stance is that climate change is probably real, but is undecided on if humans cause it.

            That’s what we have on the other side. That’s a MODERATE position for the other side right now. Compromise is the only way we’re gonna make any progress if we can’t get them out of office, and majorities are tough to come by

            • @Zaktor@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              Approval of drilling projects is an executive decision. The president doesn’t need to compromise with anyone in making those decisions.

    • @Cool_Name@lemmy.world
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      91 year ago

      How is RFK Jr. the primary opposition? I know he wasn’t, but it feels like he was put there by the dem establishment as a threat. When I’m feeling like I would support any other democratic candidate to run in place of Biden, this barely younger absolute crank leans in and goes ‘anyone?’ Ah fuck, let’s go dark Brandon… if i have to… I guess.

      • @ashok36@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        it feels like he was put there by the dem establishment as a threat.

        Hahahahahaha, no. He’s been entirely enabled by those on the right and their hangers-ons in the podcast dork-o-verse. He’s an entirely artificial candidate that only appeals to the fringe 5% or so that would have otherwise voted for Nader, or Jill Stein, or Kanye West.

        • @A7thStone@lemmy.world
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          51 year ago

          Don’t lump Nader in with those kooks. He would have been a decent president. There’s no way he could have won, but he would have done the job fairly well.

      • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think he was actually bankrolled by Bannon and the like. I’m not sure why they thought a far right loon like RFK would weaken Biden. Like you said, his candidacy feels like a purposeful Biden advertisement.

        • DreamerOfImprobableDreams
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          Because they fundamentally don’t understand how left-leaning people think, which means they don’t understand what we want in a candidate. These are the same geniuses who convinced Kanye to run for president in 2020 because they thought he’d peel away the Black vote from the Democrats just because he was Black. (Did I mention they’re all racist AF, too?)

    • @flossdaily@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      Yeah, the Democrats really fucked up by uniting against Bernie in 2020, and Warren fucked up by not getting behind him.

      So we’re stuck with Biden, who aims too low on all our critical issues.

      But it’s vital to understand that we ARE stuck with him. There’s no path to victory for anyone else in the party.

      So it’s Biden or … A fascist takeover of the country.

      Easy choice.

      Painful. But easy.

  • @Scooter411@lemmy.ml
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    891 year ago

    Well that’s unfortunate. Wish we could find someone other than an old fucking white guy to represent us.

    • @bookworm@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      The fact that someone like Biden and Bernie exist in the same party tells you how awful the 2-party system is.

      • HobbitFoot
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        191 year ago

        Bernie has said some really nice things about the Biden Administration.

        • @Scooter411@lemmy.ml
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          311 year ago

          Too be fair - the Biden administration isn’t all bad and I think when they do something good we should acknowledge that so that maybe they keep doing good things. That doesn’t mean I don’t think there are better options, though.

          • HobbitFoot
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            161 year ago

            You can hope for better options, but it says something that the Progressive leadership doesn’t see a reason to challenge Biden in the primaries. And as some didn’t like hearing, the Progressive leadership has found Biden to be an ally in passing significant legislation. The problem of moving forward isn’t the Presidency, but Congress.

            • JD Squared
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              151 year ago

              I wish more people understood that. Biden might be centrist, but every single progressive policy that has come his way he has endorsed. He would go even farther to the left if we had the right Congress.

            • @hark@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              Yeah, it says something. It says they’ll be blackballed by the party if they dared to challenge the incumbent.

            • @Scooter411@lemmy.ml
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              21 year ago

              I agree with all that - but the presidential candidates do a lot of heavy lifting in congressional elections. They can help drive voters to the polls and get more progressive candidates the attention they deserve. Biden isn’t getting anyone excited to go vote.

        • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I mean, it’s not that hard to. Even simply coherent sentences are like ambrosia after the previous administration, and Joe’s got actual things to say on top of that.

    • @Beardliest@lemmy.world
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      411 year ago

      For real. Even as a white guy, I’m tired of this shit as well. Wish we could get someone younger and more progressive on the ballot. It’s time to get those old ducks out of office. They have no grasp on how shit really works these days.

    • @GiddyGap@lemmy.world
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      161 year ago

      I’m hoping for Newsom 2028. In the meantime, Biden will probably be infinitely better than the alternative in the general election.

    • candyman337
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      1 year ago

      I agree, but generally a party will back a sitting president of that party, additionally division of the Democratic party is what caused trump’s election in the first place.

      I wonder if she’s being groomed to be the next candidate. I would like that a lot, but what the Democratic needs right now is unity, because the Republican party is very divided.

      • HobbitFoot
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        111 year ago

        She’s probably being groomed for House leadership. She has a relatively safe seat and seems willing to put the work in being a good representative. However, to do that, she needs to build the caucuses that she is in.

      • @Zaktor@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        If the Democratic party needs unity when the Republicans are divided, when exactly would dissent ever be acceptable? Seems like this is just a pitch to always be unified, which in turn means never challenging the party establishment.

        • candyman337
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          21 year ago

          The system has been formed that way intentionally. That’s one of the huge issues with our election system actually

  • @basequal@lemmy.world
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    801 year ago

    The fact that the majority here is okay to settle with a mildly dissapointing 80 year old, just so the other “evil” side doesn’t win is a bit disheartening for the state of US politics and democracy.

    And this is comming from a politically shithole country I am born and living in.

    • @Thetimefarm@lemm.ee
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      521 year ago

      Trump has all of Bidens issues AND he’s a fascist idiot. Trying to say he’s in any way better than Biden just shows either how uninformed you are in American politics, or you think people like Trump are attractive candidates. If it’s the latter you may want to take a look at the type of people who, in your own words, are making your country a “political shithole”.

      • @whofearsthenight@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Thank you! The “evil” in quotes is what did it for me. We don’t need the quotes. Trump and their side right now has no redeeming qualities and shouldn’t be in charge of an airport Starbucks. This isn’t a choice between slight differences in policy, this is “do you want to vote for nazis, or no?” Oh, I know about Godwin’s law, how boutcha google that and see how he feels about it.

      • @SlowTurn@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        It took me a second to figure out why you called Biden a fascist but I came to the realization it’s because that Biden wanted to relieve student debt which is considered a socialist policy and that for is considered an extension of fascism. But that’s not the problem that most people have with fascism coupled with the fact one can be a socialist without being actually fascist. The aspect everybody is more concerned about is the totalitarian side that tends to be with a true fascist. The water is easily muddied by terms.

      • @basequal@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I am not even remotely saying that, and I wasn’t even refering to a specific Republican candidate (least of all Trump given the latest events). Personally, I preffered Biden’s policies last election, however this is not at all relevant to the point I was making.

        Failing to see Biden shortcomings over Trump (or any other candidate) and vice versa is just a reflection of how black and white your view of politics is. Keep in mind that half of your country voted for the oposite candidate of your liking, and labeling them all as fascists is hurting you the most.

        I am looking at my country as well, it’s not like it’s an exclusive thing you can have an opinion on. Keep in mind that the current people on position in my country are actually appointed by the American democracy police, so what happens on your side of the pond has some impact on my end as well.

    • @wwaxwork@lemmy.world
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      201 year ago

      She wouldn’t win, at least not yet, we’ve got to drift more to the left as a country to have an election she’d become President in. And if not Biden who? Who should run for President that has a chance of actually winning the election? It’s easy to piss on them selecting Biden, but no one else is a viable option. You want more younger options to vote for, run for office yourself, get your friends to run for office, can’t vote for young left leaning politicians if they don’t freaking run and win elections.

    • Ab_intra
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      1 year ago

      You know that the “evil” have no idea what he’s doing half the time right? He has zero clue as to what he is actually doing. He is saying a lot of shit but in reality he has no idea what the fuck is going on.

      Trump is one of the few presidents that actually has no idea of how to govern at all. If that don’t scare you then I have no freaking idea what will.

      At least Biden understands the political prosses and how things work. And also he don’t take cases of files with him so he can brag about how the US had plans to attack Iran…

    • stevedidWHAT
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      81 year ago

      “Good choices” don’t exist bro it’s just shit or less shit. My life is gripped with pessimism and I’ve never been happier

      /s

    • @Myro@lemm.ee
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      61 year ago

      Well said. Really embarrassing, but still leagues better than the other option.

  • Grant_M
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    691 year ago

    She understands that we are under attack by a global RW fascist insurgency. Keeping the GOP out of the WH will save democracy in the US and around the world. Any GOP winner would stand back and allow the russian terrorists to take Ukraine and beyond.

    • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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      131 year ago

      Yes, this is why we must unequivocally support the guy who couldn’t get any laws passed to protect against said RW fascist insurgency. The guy who can’t get his own party to pass voting rights expansion. The guy with no plan to counter the hijacked Supreme Court, and who has steadfastly refused to develop one. Yup, this is the guy that’ll stop American Fascism.

      • Grant_M
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        301 year ago

        Always blaming everyone except for the actual fascists is exactly where the fascists want you.

        • @agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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          111 year ago

          No one’s blaming biden for the facists existence but are you expecting the facists to stop themselves? If not someones gotta do it, like maybe the commander in chief of the country under attack.

          • Grant_M
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            81 year ago

            Don’t dwell on the past. Plan ahead. Vote. Give him the tools. This is a global emergency.

            • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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              61 year ago

              What makes you think he’ll use those tools when he won’t use the ones he already has? This is like when the police say they need more resources in order to tackle police brutality.

              • Grant_M
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                61 year ago

                A country with no elected R politicians at any level or as close to that as possible. VOTE

            • @sarin_sunshine@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              It’s so easy to keep the status quo going when you’re able to convince both sides that it’ll be the literal end of the world if the other side wins. Keep voting for one of the two parties which are chosen for you, it’ll turn out alright.

              • @el_cordoba@lemmy.world
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                61 year ago

                Manchin, Sinema, and fillabusters prevented any real change during those two years. IIRC Biden and congressional democrats were able to use budget reconcillation rules to get past the 60 vote rule to get stuff done, after they placated Manchin and Sinema though.

                • @alphalyrae@midwest.social
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                  31 year ago

                  This is correct. They had to shove a ton of initiatives into the reconcilation to get anything done with Sinema and Manchin blocking everything.

            • @sarin_sunshine@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              It’s so easy to keep the status quo going when you’re able to convince both sides that it’ll be the literal end of the world if the other side wins. Keep voting for one of the two parties which are chosen for you, it’ll turn out alright.

            • @sarin_sunshine@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              It’s so easy to keep the status quo going when you’re able to convince both sides that it’ll be the literal end of the world if the other side wins. Keep voting for one of the two parties which are chosen for you, it’ll turn out alright.

            • @sarin_sunshine@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              It’s so easy to keep the status quo going when you’re able to convince both sides that it’ll be the literal end of the world if the other side wins. Keep voting for one of the two parties which are chosen for you, it’ll turn out alright.

          • @alphalyrae@midwest.social
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            71 year ago

            And exactly how would Biden get anything through a Senate currently spilt between the two parties? You would need 60 votes to overcome the constant filibusters the Rs would throw up since this would not be a budgetary vote.

            Last time I checked, there are only 48 Dems plus three independents who caucus with the Dems, for a total of 51. We’d need at least 62 to account for Sinema and Manchin, so expecting Biden to solve this is delusional.

      • @acunasdaddy@lemmy.world
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        191 year ago

        The filibuster exists. Biden isn’t all powerful. None of the things you mentioned would get past the current congress.

        Biden isn’t perfect. But trump is the end of America. Vote Biden 24

        • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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          11 year ago

          If it were reversed, Trump would be bullying the GOP senators in his way (and he might even pull a couple of Democrat votes because they lack party unity)

          • @acunasdaddy@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Trump isn’t bullying his way past 60 senators and the house for anything major. They passed one major piece of legislation (tax cuts) when he was in office. That’s it. No Obamacare repeal, no abortion legislation, nothing of significance. And now they don’t have any platform anyway so….

      • The choice is between guy we don’t like and aren’t that excited about, and literal fascists. If you have a viable, shot in hell alternative, glad to hear. If not, you’re doing the work of the fascists.

    • TwoGems
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      111 year ago

      Yep. We have to realize what position we’re in as a country and it’s not great. We have to get the current Dems winning then gradually change things.

  • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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    671 year ago

    Biden wasn’t my first choice in 2020 and I really wish he was younger, but he has done extremely well as President so far. If he wins again and stays healthy, I have almost no concerns he will continue to get things done.

    • @chakan2@lemmy.world
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      91 year ago

      Yes… Destroying Unions and allowing the Supreme Court to undo 50-100 years of progress was doing extremely well as a president.

      • @anadem@lemmy.world
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        151 year ago

        Unfortunately you’re displaying your ignorance. Biden has zero influence on the currently-ghastly Supreme Court. In fact given how little actual power a President has here, Biden has accomplished a lot, despite the razor thin Democrat majority (and Manchin! and Sinema!) in the Senate.

        • @Zaktor@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          I mean, he doesn’t really have direct power to control the court, but the court is vulnerable and responsive to public opinion and he could do more on that front. We have justices themselves saying the court is acting unconstitutionally and Biden’s putting out statements worried about how expansion would “politicize” the court. The more worried they are with their legitimacy the less bold they are in their rulings.

      • @mrpants@midwest.social
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        131 year ago

        On the second thing are you aware of how our system of government works? You should read up on it. Blaming Biden for it is just plainly misinformed.

        • @Bolt@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          The criticism is that he didn’t pack the courts, which while strongly going against tradition, he is not prohibited from doing.

      • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I disagree with what he did in the railroad union, but to say he’s destroyed unions is a bit of a misnomer. Other replies have already explained how stupid the second part of your comment is, I don’t need to add to that.

  • Ertebolle
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    591 year ago

    Age notwithstanding, any incumbent president in the last 50 years would be absolutely overjoyed to run for re-election with Biden’s record; tons of new blue-collar jobs, strong economy, relative lack of major fuck-ups or controversies or other drama except manufactured RW ragebait. Basically everything swing voters want and nothing they don’t want.

    Nor is there any real reason to fret about base turnout, given that liberals will view the Republican candidate winning as apocalyptic and show up simply to vote against that person, however disappointed they may be in Biden and whatever performative statements they make about their votes not being guaranteed.

      • Chariotwheel
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        91 year ago

        The campaign needs to see to make Kamala Harris digestible. More than with most campaigns, the way she is viewed is immensely important due to Biden seemingly able to keel over at any moment.

        • Ertebolle
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          1 year ago

          They could also replace her.

          In fact there’s a pretty good argument that they ought to pick their strongest 2028 candidate - which is almost certainly not Harris - and Biden should secretly promise that person that he’ll resign after the midterms in order to get them to agree to join the ticket; the odds are pretty strong he doesn’t make it through 4 years anyway, and this way there’d be a solid plan in place when he finally runs into whatever medical setback forces him out.

          • @Zaktor@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            They’ll avoid the problem in favor of short term benefit. Any belief I had that the Democratic insiders had a long-term masterplan went out the window with how little they’ve done to pump up Harris. I don’t even want her to be an eventual nominee, but I thought they’d be purposefully building her as the trusted heir apparent. Instead they just dumped no-win issues on her while making her mostly invisible in the administration’s wins.

            • JD Squared
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              21 year ago

              That sounds like what happened to every vice president we’ve had in my lifetime. And that’s close to 6 decades now.

              • @Zaktor@lemmy.world
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                31 year ago

                Yeah, but there’s a real difference when that VP is a Joe Biden or Dick Cheney who didn’t really have an expectation to be the heir apparent, and when the president is old enough that not finishing a term is a real possibility. There’s an uncomfortably high (though still low) chance Biden actually has to be replaced on the campaign trail, and while that’s never a good thing, it’s a lot worse when you’ve saddled your VP with tasks like solving immigration and getting voting rights passed when she never really had the power to do either of those things. “Eats shit on tough issues so the president doesn’t have to” is a valuable service from a VP, but not if you want people to be ready to accept her at any moment as a drop in replacement.

                • JD Squared
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                  21 year ago

                  So you’re trying to talk about two different things and joining them together. On one hand being the heir apparent, and on the other having the president keel over.

                  Biden was absolutely the heir apparent. If his son hadn’t died he would have ran, and our country may have been on a much different course than it’s been for the past 6 years. For many of us, the idea of Cheney becoming president because of health reasons was pretty damn scary. For both bush terms!

                  Speaking of heir apparent, George Sr was definitely not considered qualified to follow in Reagan’s footsteps. He actually called Reagan’s policies voodoo economics.

                  In any case, if the president did have to step down hypothetically in 2 years, Kamala Harris is not going to appear any dumber than any of the other VP s we’ve had in my lifetime. She would be a placeholder until the next election, just like any of the others would have been.

        • Kamala Harris has done exactly what a Vice President is supposed to do, but she isn’t going to be President after Biden, at least not yet.

      • @c0c0c0@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        Not only is he old, but he’s pretending that doesn’t matter. I think that’s pretty disingenuous.

    • BananaTrifleViolin
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      81 year ago

      From abroad at least Biden seems like a very poor candidate. As he’s chosen to stand again the dems have little choice but get behind him or risk a devisive primary season splitting the party.

      But the republicans look set to select a very poor candidate too. It says a lot about how broken US politics is that were probably going to see a rerun of the last election with two elderly candidates battling it out in a deeply divisive and particularly polarised election.

      The election will basically come down to how many people don’t like Donald Trump. That’s not great.

        • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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          11 year ago
          • He promised he wouldn’t run.
          • He’s old and likely has experienced cognitive decline.
          • He’s the most anti-union president since Reagan, and supposedly a Democrat.
          • The border is as bad or worse than under Trump.
          • He’s not actually able to campaign effectively for himself or others.
    • goryramsy
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      81 year ago

      The only major fuckup was the failure of student loan debt cancellation, and the pullout from Afghanistan. But arguably the latter wasn’t his fault, as it had been put in place before he was in office.

      • @YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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        211 year ago

        Military-wise, the pullout of Afghanistan was a huge success. The Russians lost 535, the British lost 16,000. On top of it the United States evacuated 250,000+ civilians in 3 weeks who were never part of the pull-out. Many think of it as a failure but it was the largest humanitarian airlift effort in human history. If there was a fuckup it occurred in 2020 when Trump told the Taliban they can have Afghanistan. That is where everything fell to pieces.

        • coffeetest
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          21 year ago

          Well, not to mention, Afghanistan had a few other knock-on effects on the, um, former Soviet Union.

          • @YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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            131 year ago

            During my government-paid vacation to Afghanistan, those we fought against were mostly Iranian or Pakastani, not actual Afghani people. If we did run into an Afghani it was usually a teenager. Given I was there in 2008 and 2012 and not in 2020, the feeling that any pull-out would be messy was already present. The locals didn’t believe we would ever leave, we told them in 2012 we didn’t think we were the right culture to help them out of the darkness and that we wouldn’t stay forever. The United States never invested in Afghanistan, Congress blocked all grain shipments despite military intelligence showing it would result in farmers growing opium. I know for many Americans the only view of the nation was war images, but those of us on the ground saw more than that. The Afghani culture is really cool, they are the best horsemen I have ever seen, deeply caring and understanding. They also are a broken people who don’t view themselves as a nation but as tribes of people. In the end those I met and spoke to were very interested in western culture and we fostered a great relationship. The largest problem they faced was foreigners from the West and South bringing war to their villages and forcing their strict religious rules on them.

            I do believe that Afghanistan will never recover, India or China are going to exploit the nation for it’s resources and leave nothing for the people there. Maybe either of those nations will run the Taliban out, but it won’t be anytime soon.

            • bane_killgrind
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              11 year ago

              If there’s one thing the US will do, it’s get you hooked on drugs. You can be an army vet or a small country and it’s just the same.

    • MasterOBee Master/King
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      21 year ago

      If we weren’t stuck in the two party system, we’d absolutely have a much better candidate.

      We can stop pretending he’s accomplished. Our nation is still extremely divided, and it’s getting worse. Our economy is okay for the top 60%, but we still have insane opioid crisis, homeless crisis, housing crisis and the bottom 40% are not better off. They are fighting against inflation, while being told that they just need to suck up $5/gallon gas prices. Inflation seems to be getting under control more, and the Ukraine response was decent. He did okay.

      But I’d hope we can do better than okay.

  • BarqsHasBite
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    551 year ago

    Did anyone expect anything different? I don’t recall incumbent presidents ever having a real primary.

    • DreamerOfImprobableDreams
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      1 year ago

      Jimmy Carter did-- Ted Kennedy challenged him for the 1980 presidential nomination. The result was them doing so much damage to each other that the ultimate winner of the primary (Carter) came out battered and bruised, giving Reagan the edge he needed to win the general. And we all know how well that worked out for the planet. (Spoiler alert: horrifically.)

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        211 year ago

        That was the opposite tho…

        That was “moderate” party leaders trying to sabotage a progressive at any cost.

        That fucked America up reeeeeeeally badly. But the people who decided to do it got what they wanted: an excuse to tell voters that progressives can’t win.

        • DreamerOfImprobableDreams
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          101 year ago

          That was “moderate” party leaders trying to sabotage a progressive at any cost.

          Wait, what? I thought Jimmy Carter was considered really progressive for his time. And Ted Kennedy wasn’t some perfect progressive hero, he had some pretty major blemishes on his record like Chappaquiddik. So I always saw it as more pointless infighting than any kind of centrist-vs-progressive showdown like 2016.

          Then again, my parents were in high school when all this was going down, so my knowledge is obviously pretty limited, lol.

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            131 year ago

            Carter is our most progressive president since FDR…

            The “moderates” were the ones running the party that allowed a primary…

            I thought my comment was pretty clear, but hopefully that’s clearer

            • BarqsHasBite
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              Not everyone’s American and not everyone knows history from 42 years ago of foreign countries.

                • I mean, things like primary challenger and stuff like that aren’t really terms non-Americans are familiar with. I also wasn’t quite sure which of the two people I didn’t know was the progressive one.

              • DreamerOfImprobableDreams
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                41 year ago

                Also, OP’s ignoring that Kennedy was also a progressive hero, too. The primary was progressive vs. progressive-- which is part of the reason it’s remembered today as the poster child of pointless infighting that did nothing but benefit the opposition. I’ve literally never heard anyone here in the States have OP’s take on the primary until this thread.

                • BarqsHasBite
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                  21 year ago

                  Reading it again the confusion is in Canada the party leader is basically the PM candidate.

                  I guess in the US the president is not the party leader. Without that knowledge, you don’t know what’s going on.

              • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                I explicitly said the problem was the party leaders allowing a primary.

                That was “moderate” party leaders trying to sabotage a progressive at any cost.

                That fucked America up reeeeeeeally badly. But the people who decided to do it got what they wanted: an excuse to tell voters that progressives can’t win.

                Sink two progressives in one blow, and hope you get a moderate in 4 years.

                If Carter did 8, Kennedy would have likely been president next, maybe for another 8 years. Moderates were losing the party. Having a republican beat a weakened Carter let them tell voters that the party had to move right and that progressives couldn’t win.

                • BarqsHasBite
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                  1 year ago

                  In Canada the leader of the party is basically the PM (Prime Minister) candidate. One and the same.

                  So reading those words would mean that the PM, who is the party leader, would have had to allow a challenger. (which isn’t how it works here, but anyway.)

        • DreamerOfImprobableDreams
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          hat was “moderate” party leaders trying to sabotage a progressive at any cost.

          Wait, what? I thought Jimmy Carter was considered really progressive for his time. And Ted Kennedy wasn’t some perfect progressive hero, he had some pretty major blemishes on his record like Chappaquiddik. So I always saw it as more pointless infighting than any kind of centrist-vs-progressive showdown like 2016.

          Then again, my parents were in high school when all this was going down, so my knowledge is obviously pretty limited, lol.

  • People don’t understand the importance of this endorsement. AOC is considered as the next generation. Most 16-24 yr olds agree heavily with her and would identify closer to the left.

    If Democrats play it smart, they could hold a majority for 10-20yrs. We are seeing swing states lean more blue than red ( Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, Arizona, and Virginia). This is a huge problem for Republicans bc they always relied on these states to combat large democratic states.

  • /home/pineapplelover
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    371 year ago

    wtf is happening. This is a - rep for AOC in my eyes. She realizes the fucker is real old right? Elect someone younger please.

  • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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    271 year ago

    “we’re under a fascist insurgency and we must ensure that the GOP doesn’t gain the White House, this is why we must vote for a politician who refuses to do anything to prevent this insurgency from gaining strength like expanding the court or making abortion available on federal land and who refused to use their constitutional authority to prevent giving the House GOP any concessions on the budget/debt ceiling”

  • Doug Holland
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    1 year ago

    Biden is pretty unambiguously awful, and only looks good against any Republican. AOC is doing the right thing here, but long-term we have got to get rid of these cobwebheaded oldsters and move on to the next generation, or the generation after.

    When we do, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez would be a good choice.

      • Doug Holland
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        11 year ago

        Biden is awful, from a left perspective, and I’m of the left. I imagine for middle-of-the-roadsters, though, Biden’s the yellow line.

  • @catshit_dogfart@lemmy.ml
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    181 year ago

    Anything else would do nothing but make chaos, it’s a really bad look if your own party doesn’t back you anymore. Same with the VP, a president dropping their VP would also be a really bad look.

    Cry all you want about “old white guy” but for this election he’s the shoo-in. Yeah he’s too old, I think so too, yeah I want a real progressive. But damn it all, he’s done pretty great stuff and damn the democrats for not shouting about it more.

    For a party to primary their own president, that would signal nothing but weakness.

  • @justdoit@lemm.ee
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    161 year ago

    Well no shit, who else is she gonna support, the anti-vaxxer with a grudge against Fauci?

    • MasterOBee Master/King
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      51 year ago

      I’ve gone the opposite way and actually watched RFK’s interviews and stances. At this point I’m much more likely to vote for him than any of the other clowns in the race.

      He’s not an anti-vaxxer btw, that’s just some bullshit his opponents spread. He’s for vaccines, he just looks at how other European countries are testing them and our comparatively extremely high mandates for vaccines.

      • @justdoit@lemm.ee
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        261 year ago

        … you have some reading to do my guy.

        RFK can say he’s pro-vaccine all he wants, but he’s the chairman of probably the most well known and active anti-vaccine organization operating today. He has personally spoken, funded, and advocated for antivaxx events and movies, and is one of the biggest mouthpieces for the lie that vaccines cause autism, writing several articles and even books about it.

        The EU thing is bullshit too, by the way. The US and EU have similar governing bodies for vaccine testing and approval.. And mandates? EU has similarly common childhood vaccine mandates in most major countries.

        RFK is one of if not the major megaphone for the idea that trace amounts of thiomersal is driving autism rates, despite it 1. not being used in childhood vaccines since the 90s and 2. never having any link to autism whatsoever..

        Saying “I’m pro-vaccine, I just believe the vaccines are causing an “autism holocaust” and we should let parents skip vaccine schedules because vaccines are actually just poison” is just being anti-vaxx but with a veneer of libertarianism.

        And to be clear, I’ll entertain the libertarian arguments against mandates (they’re not convincing imo, but that’s a conversation for another day), but RFK is absolutely not arguing that position in good faith. He has inadvertently caused preventable deaths worldwide by advocating for fringe pseudoscience.

        • MasterOBee Master/King
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          21 year ago

          He’s been extremely clear - he’s not anti-vaxx, he’s anti-mercury in vaccines, he himself is vaccinated, and he got his children vaccinated.

          Him being skeptical of the clinical trials does not make him anti-vaxx, sorry to say.

          Him asking people to prove vaccine safety does not make him anti-vaxx.

          And he’s been more explicit about not running on an anti-vaxx platform.

          Do you agree with whoever you vote for on 100% of issues?

          • @justdoit@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Vaccine safety HAS been demonstrated. Him choosing to ignore that is the issue. Has it ever occurred to you that maybe he’s not interested in proving vaccine safety, he’s interested in fabricating its harm?

            He’s not being “skeptical of clinical trials”, he’s willfully broadcasting misinformation. Did you even click on a single link I sent?

            Anti-mercury? Did you even fucking click one link I sent you? Thiomersal isn’t in any childhood vaccines, it was removed in 1999, and even then it was never shown to be harmful at the doses present in vaccines. Yet he still runs anti-vaxx events on that obvious lie.

            Did it ever occur to you that people lie about their priorities when they’re running for office? This dumbass has caused irreparable harm to health worldwide and continues to fund general anti-vaccine propaganda. He’s STILL the chairman of the CHD, the most prolific anti-vaxx advertiser on the internet. Read my fucking links dude. Him being not only scientifically ignorant but also a raging hypocrite is a selling point to you?

            I’m really not trying to be a jerk here, but you have me floored. For fuck’s sake, let his track record speak for itself. He can say “I’m pro-vaccine” all he wants, but he’s poured millions of dollars and countless hours into anti-vaccine propaganda. He’s one of the main reasons people think vaccines cause autism, even though that’s not the slightest bit true. He’s one of the main opponents of the COVID vaccines, despite their safety being demonstrated over and over. He just barely wrote another book on the subject!

            If running one of the worst anti-science hoaxes of the century doesn’t disqualify you from being the president of the US, which if you weren’t aware, comes with extreme influence over the research direction and funding of the US… what fucking would disqualify someone?