U.S. Politics, November 2024: GARBAGE DAY!!

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I think it is more a case of him being such a prolific liar/propogandist and genocide apologist that he wouldn't post any different, even if he was slightly more cogent.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:22 (one year ago)

hard to gainsay

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:29 (one year ago)

Americans in America do not understand football ultras; they probably think those guys had their tailgate ruined.

guillotine vogue (suzy), Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:30 (one year ago)

oh yeah, it's probably just mainly in Europe where he is making the US presidency and himself a complete bloody laughing stock!

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:33 (one year ago)

A Zionist friend from school posted the Biden thing on her IG.

guillotine vogue (suzy), Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:38 (one year ago)

Israeli football fans rampaged through Amsterdam last night following a Europa League match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax, tearing down Palestinian flags from private properties and chanting racist slogans.

some reportage for US context on what Biden is blithering on about

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:39 (one year ago)

The main reaction over here in BE/NL is mainly about how the Israeli fans were the victims of horrendous antisemitic attacks. Since any other reporting would constitute antisemitism. The whole world is stuck in a massive catch-22.

StanM, Saturday, 9 November 2024 12:41 (one year ago)

I read the BBC story on that, it was reported that people were being stopped anf asked for their passports, is that normal holliganism?

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgv4mdr9y8o

felicity, Saturday, 9 November 2024 14:47 (one year ago)

The Western media is also bending over backwards to hide the details about the anti-Arab/Palestinian charts. I only learned about that from here

Kurt Dandruff (Neanderthal), Saturday, 9 November 2024 14:59 (one year ago)

sadly yes, felicity. football culture is absolutely rife with racist violence - antisemitism, anti-black, anti-muslim. and the tel aviv ultras are among the wost offenders. i recognise this may be extremely wild to US posters

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 9 November 2024 15:04 (one year ago)

Man I cannot imagine defending this behaviour, now or any other day. Isn’t Biden or anyone even a little bit ashamed? Of course not, those are the deeds he’s facilitated that they’re singing about!

It bugged me that I couldn't find a video of the entire genocidal song, but then came Maccabi Tel Aviv fans: they arrived at Ben Gurion airport, fleeing from the fake pogrom, and started singing the entire song...

Ole ole
Ole ole ole
Let the IDF win and fuck the Arabs
Ole ole… https://t.co/n7nBpB691n pic.twitter.com/0ZVw1hIvs9

— B.M. (@ireallyhateyou) November 8, 2024



The fans were singing this before any assaults happened; normally when football fans disgrace themselves in this manner the authorities slap a travel ban on the offenders (visiting fans) and custodial sentences (home fans) and call it a day and travel bans have worked wonders in keeping these incidents to a fraction of occurrences compared to decades ago.

I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a vision of such unreality as reading about these fans threatening people’s homes (a woman posted in Dutch that she had visiting fans threaten her in her own home for having a Palestine flag in her window); attacking taxi drivers with chains; and ofc singing the lovely song about how many children in Gaza are dead. Hooligans go looking for trouble and they find it; fork found in kitchen.

gyac, Saturday, 9 November 2024 15:26 (one year ago)

I have heard that for a while. Things like Liverpoool fans being taunted about Hillsborough. It's pretty shocking to me. I don't like violence on or off the field.

I was specifically asking about people being stopped and forced to show their passports because people seemed confused about why it's being called antisemitic.

felicity, Saturday, 9 November 2024 15:28 (one year ago)

Re podcasts: The most recent episode of Pod Save America (an exception that proves the rule in terms of left-leaning podcasts that advocate for the Democratic Party) argued that it's not just about creating more Dem-supporting podcasts and influencers, but also figuring out how to make the Democratic Party more attractive to influencers who may not be explicitly political but have come to feel a cultural affinity with the right.

jaymc, Saturday, 9 November 2024 15:39 (one year ago)

Surely there should now be a thread for Israeli racism, which is now a prominent cause of conflict and racist incidents across the world.

glumdalclitch, Saturday, 9 November 2024 16:00 (one year ago)

The way it was described in the US media definitely contributes to a feeling of anxiety and persecution that many US Jews already feel. That it was described as a pogrom was sickening for multiple reasons… one being needlessly increasing that sense of persecution, and the other being the obvious dishonesty that this was about pro-Israel dudes basically saying “fight me” and then people fought them because of their aggressive behavior in a context where these things are known to happen…

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 16:02 (one year ago)

More on centrist Dems vs Bernie vs Harris campaign vs Trump vs confused voters

More centrist voices in the party have since Tuesday revived their criticisms of President Joe Biden’s 2021 stimulus plan, arguing it exacerbated inflation and hurt Vice President Kamala Harris even after Biden bowed out of the race. On the left, lawmakers and strategists faulted Biden for not more aggressively highlighting corporate price-gouging, and Harris for what they characterized as her move away from economic populism and embrace of billionaires such as Mark Cuban.

Some progressive lawmakers such as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) argued that Democrats should have been more focused on economically populist messages, such as expanding Medicare benefits and raising the minimum wage, while publicly identifying the villains, such as Wall Street and the richest Americans. Harris’s campaign did propose some aggressive policy plans, but liberal critics have said these policies were insufficient or diluted in her public communications.

...As a presidential candidate, Harris did more than Biden to recognize voters’ frustrations and promise large-scale fixes. But her economic messaging contained other contradictions. While she embraced populist rhetoric on cracking down on corporate price-gouging and billionaires, Harris simultaneously tried casting herself as a pro-business moderate with a lighter regulatory touch than Biden.

From Election Day, it was clear that voters were confused about Harris’s economic policy priorities, said Celinda Lake, a longtime Democratic pollster.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/11/09/democrats-election-economy-inflation-harris-biden/

curmudgeon, Saturday, 9 November 2024 17:31 (one year ago)

Wow, wapo still uses "liberal" to signify economically left wing positions? Haven't seen that even in US political discourse for a while.

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 9 November 2024 17:39 (one year ago)

There’s definitely this balancing act that has to happen… where having policies for a social safety net are important but also rewarding work, which are sometimes at odds with one another

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:00 (one year ago)

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n21/adam-tooze/great-power-politics

The Tooze is loose

papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:02 (one year ago)

Increasing Earned Income Tax Credits and Child Care credits and the cap on non-taxable social security and funding that with increased taxes on capital gains and investment income would be policy that helps that … but it’s nerdy.

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:03 (one year ago)

But messaging like … people who actually work for a living pay more tax on their income than people who make money by owning shit, this needs to change… maybe that would “resonate”

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:04 (one year ago)

everything that flopson posted may be correct, i’m not qualified to talk about economic policy on that level. but you don’t have to be able to do that to make the obvious point i’m going to make, which is that the job of the politician and the political party is not just to pull the correct policy levers but also to communicate w/ the electorate in a way that effectively explains and sells your governance. to speak not to logic but to emotions. if you can’t do that then you might lose elections even if you did the right things. democrats being blindsided by the idea that inflation would matter more to people than unemployment is completely exemplifies their disconnection from the voter and their abdication of their duty to strategize the winning of the election

― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Friday, November 8, 2024 9:40 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

i've said this before itt so i won't belabor it, but it is really hard to find a good message when voters are pissed about inflation, as exemplified by every other incumbent party losing vote share and the vast majority getting voted out in the last 2 years. i'm always urging americans to look at the outside world and consider what's happening in your country in context

having said that, biden was particularly awful at messaging. i recall reading sometime in 2022-3 that he and his team were under the impression that their economic results would sell themselves if given enough time. obvious in hindsight this was just a rationalization for not putting biden on tv too much for fear of exposing his diminished state. i thought harris and walz did a decent job cleaning up his mess, but at that point the damage was done

okay flopson mcgaslighter, are those two full time jobs? or does that take into account two or more jobs of any kind? half of the people i know work a full time, have a weekend gig. i work two “part time” (aka would be considered full time if this country weren’t insane or i was tenured) jobs and at one point was doing that and working a weekend gig. all while going to school, and barely having any money much of the time. so shove your stats up your ass.

― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, November 8, 2024 6:57 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

sorry for being so aggro there, flopson— just frustrated that the very thing i have been talking about for months was being enacted on this thread, namely the Dems not recognizing or outright dismissing the economic pain a lot of people are feeling with graphs, charts, and “well, actually” statements. i know you didn’t mean to upset me, but you did— just feel like an alien in this space at times.

― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, November 8, 2024 7:58 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

no worries, and i'm sorry for upsetting you. i LOL'd at flopson mc gaslighter tbh :P

people itt tend to make a lot of claims about the economy, but sometimes get irritated when someone (me) points out subtleties or inconsistencies in the real world that don't fit our pre-conceptions. ppl who follow the economy as a job or hobby know from experience that the economy is always confounding our expectations, so we expect to be confused and wrong all the time, and frequently look up charts to double-check our intuitions. i was genuinely curious what the trends in multi-job holding were after reading your post, so i looked it up. that's where i'm coming from

i think it's completely legit to say "this is what me and the people i know are experiencing", and i have empathy for your situation. but imho it's also worthwhile when people make particular claims to look at stats to get a broader perspective and understand what's going on outside our bubbles

also, when thinking about these things in a political context, we need to look not just at absolute levels, but also to look at comparisons of consistently measured outcomes across time. voters think the economy that trump presided over in 2019 was a good economy, so if certain measures of economic well-being look the same or better now than then, there is a bit of a puzzle there. the answer to the puzzle can't be that everyone's perceptions are legitimate. for example, we know that the way that voters perceive the economy is influenced by partisanship. between november 2020 and january 2021, republican's perception of the economy cratered

https://tinypic.host/images/2024/11/09/Screenshot-2024-11-09-at-12.41.21PM.png

(https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-ECONOMY/SENTIMENT-POLITICS/gkvlgqjzxpb/)

this change was not reflective of real changes in the economy that occurred that winter. i bet my hat there is going to be a symmetric shift in the opposite direction between now and january. i will not conclude that the economy is suddenly good when this happens, and that won't be gaslighting

This piece talked about targeted price controls:

https://www.theguardian.com/business/commentisfree/2021/dec/29/inflation-price-controls-time-we-use-it

"Today, there is once more a choice between tolerating the ongoing explosion of profits that drives up prices or tailored controls on carefully selected prices. Price controls would buy time to deal with bottlenecks that will continue as long as the pandemic prevails. Strategic price controls could also contribute to the monetary stability needed to mobilize public investments towards economic resilience, climate change mitigation and carbon-neutrality. The cost of waiting for inflation to go away is high."

― xyzzzz__, Friday, November 8, 2024 7:20 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

doubtful price controls would've done much. the inflation was mostly caused by shortages in supply chains, and price controls on inputs would exacerbate shortages, as happened in the later phases of the nixon price controls. some very targeted controls (which is what isabella weber proposes) might have been helpful at the margin, but because they are targeted they wouldn't have much impact on headline inflation

flopson, Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:14 (one year ago)

Did Biden do anything on prescription cost?

Heez, Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:26 (one year ago)

Slept on it

Kurt Dandruff (Neanderthal), Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:36 (one year ago)

Xp flopson — I wonder how much of it has to do with comparative benefits … like, how great the stock market is doing which is something that has been in the news quite a bit vs people’s lived reality.

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 18:42 (one year ago)

Given how much inputs are already subsidized, would it have been that big of a leap to backstop most staples with further subsidies, or at least draw from already banked subsidies like (I can't believe this is real) the strategic cheese reserve?

Philip Nunez, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:02 (one year ago)

Or issue more emergency payments to people with lower incomes so they can afford things … like the ones that had been issued during the early years of Covid. That is simpler than price controls.

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:11 (one year ago)

Did Biden do anything on prescription cost?

iirc, the legislation that made it through the center-right gatekeepers in Congress put a cap on insulin prices immediately, but postponed most of the relief for common prescription drugs to be phased in over a period of several years. it's hard to get these details correctly lodged in one's memory because it's so obvious that nothing is going to happen that affects you until years down the road.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:16 (one year ago)

jfc, even in my shithole country after decades of centre-right governments, insulin and epilepsy meds are still free. It seems completely insane to me that there is any kind of debate on this in the wealthiest country in the world.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:29 (one year ago)

Well imagine how future generations of American women feel that they can't have abortion.

felicity, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:39 (one year ago)

Can't do anything about this world, even when you are in power - but please elect us anyway! xp

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:41 (one year ago)

No news here but otm

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/columnist/2024/11/06/trump-wins-2024-presidential-election/75942805007/

Voters chose Trump. He won. Cruelty won. Bullying won.

And that’s who America is right now. We are Trump, and we will own every bit of the shameful and painful and embarrassing things he does. We are not "better than this." We lost the right to make that claim the moment the presidential race was called.

Of course there was already a lot of reason to challenge that claim before. But nothing like putting it to the test.

Blitz Primary (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:44 (one year ago)

https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/exit-right/

"By the middle of his term, Biden had become a de facto austerity president, overseeing the lapse of welfare state expansions, including not just the loss of the child tax credit and temporary cash relief but the retrenchment of SNAP and the booting of millions off Medicaid, all during a period of unified Democratic control. Gradually, Biden largely dropped the demand for progressive social policy and focused his fiscal discussions instead on the deficit—a repetition of the same posture that had condemned the Obama administration and created the opportunity for the rise of Trump in the first place. Emblematizing this capitulation, Biden decided to cave to corporate wishes for the pandemic to be over as a matter of public policy—particularly public policy that enhanced workers’ labor market power—even as it continued to rip through Americans’ lives. In place of earlier progressive ambitions, Biden offered an economic nationalism more or less borrowed from Trump and a new Cold War liberalism."

This + some of the experiences that I have been reading on here -- struggles with housing, tax, employment insecirity etc. -- can't be waived away by flopson's graphs and incumbency argunents.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 9 November 2024 20:26 (one year ago)

This thing about talking over the precariat and saying "this is a good economy, considering the circumstances" and then pointing at some more breadcrumbs that've been thrown at them and some bullshit stats ... that's that shit I don't like ... or nor most voters it seems.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:15 (one year ago)

It definitely didn’t help that the US was basically giving free military aid to Israel to kill a lot of poor people at the same time as not being responsive enough to the desperation of its own people. I think the isolationism in terms of foreign aid that people associate with Trump is also appealing to people. And then on the flipside, people who are more supportive of foreign aid are like … uh, our foreign aid is committing genocide? Fuck that.

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:37 (one year ago)

TFG will, of course, continue giving Israel everything.

guillotine vogue (suzy), Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:49 (one year ago)

and he will probably stop giving Ukraine anything

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:49 (one year ago)

And for my history nerd post — I had hoped this wouldn’t be a replay of 1968 because Harris wasn’t an old white dude like Hubert Humphrey and we had already experienced 1 Trump administration… but the campaign that courted the equivalent of 68’s Wallace voters was an example of repeating historical mistakes

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:51 (one year ago)

Suzy and akm otm

sarahell, Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:52 (one year ago)

I’ve been saying ‘oh great, Harris is c21 Humphrey for the exact same reasons’ alllllll week.

guillotine vogue (suzy), Saturday, 9 November 2024 21:55 (one year ago)

TFG stands for The Future Guy, right?

Grape Fired At Czar From Crack Battery (President Keyes), Saturday, 9 November 2024 23:03 (one year ago)

That/This Fucking Guy.

guillotine vogue (suzy), Saturday, 9 November 2024 23:14 (one year ago)

The Fraudulent Guy
This Failure Guy
That Felonious Guy
That Fetid Guy

abreast of what's afoot (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 9 November 2024 23:43 (one year ago)

That Fecal Gibbon

abreast of what's afoot (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 9 November 2024 23:50 (one year ago)

The Fucking GOAT!!!!!!

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 9 November 2024 23:50 (one year ago)

and he will probably stop giving Ukraine anything

The MIC is not giving up that particular revenue source.

papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 10 November 2024 00:09 (one year ago)

Biden had become a de facto austerity president, overseeing the lapse of welfare state expansions, including not just the loss of the child tax credit and temporary cash relief but the retrenchment of SNAP and the booting of millions off Medicaid, all during a period of unified Democratic control

I know we rip on the voters for falling for misinfo, but this is some serious misinfo that Dissent's writers need to seriously examine. It's like they forgot that Biden pushed for all the expansionist policies, and signed many of them, and every Dem in the Senate was on board with them - the ones that failed were solely due to Manchin and Sinema. (The 2020 pandemic aid originated in Pelosi's house and Sanders in the Senate, and only passed congress because even the Republicans realized that their residents were hurting). As much as I love Dissent, that's fucking crazy that 96% of a party's elected body trying to do the right thing = austerity/bad

Front-loaded albums are musical gerrymandering (Prefecture), Sunday, 10 November 2024 01:01 (one year ago)

it's a description of what happened - it doesn't mean biden is personally to blame for it all but he is going to get the blame from a lot of the public regardless, and he did very much pivot to focusing on the deficit over anything progressive as the next sentence describes.

ufo, Sunday, 10 November 2024 01:06 (one year ago)

High level that is correct, as ufo says, but the details (now that I am looking at the specific things they mention) are worded weirdly or are wrong.

The child tax credit was not removed ever. There had been relief payments to people with children during covid. There had also been an increase in the amount of untaxed dependent care benefits during covid that got brought back down to pre-covid levels. Thus, there were government benefits for lower income parents with kids that got taken away after the initial pandemic ended, but the child tax credit was not negatively affected. Why not describe the actual facts which still support the argument they are making?

A lot of the increase in Medicaid recipients was a result of the expansion of unemployment benefits during covid. A lot of people got automatically enrolled in Medicaid (or the state program that was Medicaid funded) when they qualified for unemployment. When the unemployment benefits ended, some people got kicked off Medicaid. But, why not say the truth… the government ended unemployment benefits too soon including Medicaid coverage?

sarahell, Sunday, 10 November 2024 01:37 (one year ago)

"Instead of raising one trillion dollars to run ads trying to persuade the 17 Republican women who dislike Trump to secretly defy their husbands and vote for a Democrat, just go on podcasts that men and anti-feminist women listen to and tell them that your republican opponents want to defund zoos, force American workers to adopt and raise orangutans instead of human babies, and are giving the orangutans free healthcare and voting rights."

https://daisybrain.medium.com/what-the-democrats-got-wrong-68219f682bff

sleeve, Sunday, 10 November 2024 02:23 (one year ago)


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