blogdiva , to random
@blogdiva@mastodon.social avatar

REMINDER: corporatism IS fascism. USA's political elites are controlled by unelected corporatist oligarchs for whom politics isn't about party or nation but business. checkout how the DNC wants to price out the little people from their fundraisers. this is literal corporate capture but with political parties because oligarchs only care about the state violence they can capture & profit from.

> How Biden aides are trying to shield the president from protests
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/joe-biden/biden-aides-shield-president-pro-palestinian-protests-rcna141251

blogdiva OP ,
@blogdiva@mastodon.social avatar

VOTING IS HARM REDUCTION
it's not a mandate when the opposition is fascist and the billionaire donors of your party's elite are part of that fascist opposition.

VOTING FOR POTUS ONLY MATTERS IN SWING PRECINCTS
not having direct democracy is why it's easy for oligarchs to buy themselves a party. even the Greens, btw.

so don't worry about some shmuck in NYC not voting. worry about people not voting in fucking Maricopa county.

you're white in the South? STFU & hit the pavement

blogdiva OP ,
@blogdiva@mastodon.social avatar

IF YOU ARE WHITE AND IN A SWING DISTRICT, GO TO WORK

it's not Darnell from the Bronx's job to get your neighbors to the polling places.

especially if they're young or Black or both. that's your job.

don't berate BIPOC or LGBTQI people online for telling you the truth about the fascism in this country: it's always been here, it's just been called Manifest Destiny, white supremacy, racism, homophobia, sexism.

so go to work. we all have different work to do

pluralistic , to random
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The corporate wing of the Democrats has objectively terrible political instincts, because the corporate wing of the Dems wants things that are very unpopular with the electorate (this is a trait they share with the Republican establishment).

--

If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/29/sub-bushel-comms-strategy/#nothing-would-fundamentally-change

1/

6G ,
@6G@mastodon.social avatar

@pluralistic

Right, US voters and folks better get youself in the
because the RACE is an horror show

only won by 43k votes in 2020 (from 3 States)

only won by 77k votes in 2016 (from 3 States)

flexghost , to random
@flexghost@mastodon.social avatar

Let’s chat

Do you feel you have less interest posting about politics / current events lately?

Why?

Do you notice the same responses over and over again?

Do you feel headlines and events seem to go nowhere or seem to repeat?

Do you think people are more polarized or less polarized?

Are people beholden to their sides’ ideology— the kind of people where if you looked at their profile you would know exactly what they think on most issues without nuance?

I just wanna hear where you’re at…

ALT
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  • 6G ,
    @6G@mastodon.social avatar

    @flexghost

    Awww, no change of interest posting

    I see the (nice) extream "radical liberals" saying Dems in and policies will get a win

    I see (nice) cool liberals pointing out above, except they label them as liberals and not "radical liberals"
    (some of the best Mastodon posters)

    I see (nice) pro posters who give DAMN GOOD reasons to VOTE in the election, seriously need to register esp in the key States its a event

    wdlindsy , to random
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    "Rural white voters have long enjoyed outsize power in American politics. They have inflated voting power in the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House and the Electoral College. …

    The unfortunate fact is that polls suggest many rural white people’s commitment to the American political system is eroding."

    ~ Thomas Schaller


    /1

    https://theconversation.com/why-rural-white-americans-resentment-is-a-threat-to-democracy-224346

    wdlindsy , to random
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    “Name a force or impulse that threatens the stability of the American political system – distrust in the fairness of elections, conspiracy theorizing, the embrace of authoritarianism – and it is always more prevalent among rural Whites than among those living elsewhere."

    ~ Tom Schaller and Paul Waldman, White Rural Rage: The Threat to American Democracy (New York: Random House, 2024), p. 5


    /1

    https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/734507/white-rural-rage-by-tom-schaller-and-paul-waldman/

    wdlindsy OP ,
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    “Because it violates the ‘one person, one vote’ standard, malapportionment in the Electoral College and especially the U.S. Senate is the primary means by which White voters—and rural Whites most of all—retain electoral advantages at the national level. ...

    No group was ever dealt a better electoral hand than rural White Americans."

    ~ Ibid., pp. 62-3


    /18

    wdlindsy OP ,
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    "The inflated power of rural White voters confers upon them an unusual ability to force state and national governments to cater to their preferences and grievances. Herein lies the danger: precisely because they wield inflated power, rural Whites’ increasingly tenuous commitments to democratic norms and traditions are magnified across the U.S. political system in many of the same ways their preferences have been for two centuries.”

    ~ Ibid., p. 63


    /19

    wdlindsy OP ,
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    “The Republican Party and its rural White voter base also enjoy a pivotal advantage in presidential elections, which are decided by the Electoral College rather than by a national popular vote as is used in every other democracy in the world. Thanks to the inflated power that smaller states enjoy in the Electoral College, the past two Republican presidents entered the White House despite having lost the popular vote."

    ~ Ibid., pp. 66-7

    /22

    wdlindsy OP ,
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    It's not just possible but likely that yet another Republican in the near future will win the White House despite receiving fewer votes than their opponent. ...

    Although Democrats support a national popular vote at higher rates than Republicans, the share of Republicans who prefer a national popular vote rule grew steadily from 40 percent in 2000 to a 54 percent majority by 2016."

    ~ Ibid., pp. 66-7, 70-1


    /23

    wdlindsy OP ,
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    "Then Donald Trump was elected. What happened next? On cue, Republican support for electing presidents based on the national popular vote dropped by half, from 54 percent to 27 percent.”

    Ibid., pp. 70-1


    /24

    https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/734507/white-rural-rage-by-tom-schaller-and-paul-waldman/

    18+ SylvanWoods ,
    @SylvanWoods@mastodon.nz avatar
    wdlindsy , to random
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    "The original Constitution was written when democracy meant something radically different than it does today. Over time, Americans have amended the Constitution to make it more democratic, but shortcomings remain."

    ~ Larry Schwarzol and Justin Florence


    /1

    https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/01/we-need-talk-about-amending-constitution/677065/

    wdlindsy OP ,
    @wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

    "The most significant, in our view, are the hardwired constitutional structures that are inimical to any modern understanding of democracy: the Electoral College, which could put Trump in office without majority support for a second time, and the equal allocation of two seats in the Senate to each state (an arrangement that gives a Wyoming voter 70 times more senatorial clout than a Californian)."


    /2

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