Retire, Breyer: another September 2021 US Politics thread

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that's the thing about tacit, silent Christians - i know that when push comes to shove, they'll side with god and the GOP

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:08 (two years ago) link

i cannot defend anything i am saying, but i am guided by a voice from within. must be satan

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:09 (two years ago) link

“the Democrats’ Senate campaign arm has signaled it will use abortion rights as a cudgel against Republicans running in states like Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada and North Carolina.” https://t.co/PwzbVBy46v

— David Bergstein (@DavidABergstein) September 3, 2021

Well that’s the important part, really.

papal hotwife (milo z), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:10 (two years ago) link

i don't know if i like this trend or not

I guess Jason Miller didn’t like being reported to the Texas authorities, and having a $10,000 bounty placed on him. Imagine that. pic.twitter.com/V4WiyT7Aha

— Hamish Mitchell (@H_MitchellPhoto) September 3, 2021

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:12 (two years ago) link

There are plenty of liberal Christians and ones that do things too—my partner arranged anti-Death Penalty vigils with he Catholic social justice groups outside Virginia’s Death Row. Other Catholic Churches have given sanctuary to undocumented immigrants on the run from ICE. Many churches sponsor refugee resettlement. My Lutheran Church in Minneapolis growing up sponsored and housed Hmong refugees and then Somali refugees. Liberal/Leftist Christians are everywhere but they are quiet, not loud. Christ endorsed this in his a parable of the widow’s mite. The louder you are about how religious and generous you are, the less likely you are either.

Derek and Clive Get the Horn Street (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:28 (two years ago) link

The beast who shot up the Tree of Life synagogue was mad about their refugee resettlement activities.

Derek and Clive Get the Horn Street (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:30 (two years ago) link

but christ also endorsed loud, direct political action, like overturning the tables in the temple while calling them a "den of thieves"

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:32 (two years ago) link

Faith Christ the revolutionary still inspires many of us, we just do t trumpet that fact I guess.

And hey plenty of priests and nuns led draft card burning ceremonies during the Vietnam era if you want something more dramatic.

Derek and Clive Get the Horn Street (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:34 (two years ago) link

i do actually want something more dramatic, right now, in this life and this moment

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:35 (two years ago) link

is Faith Christ a christian country singer

Duke Detain (Neanderthal), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:35 (two years ago) link

i would have to be the biggest 100% fool in the universe if i thought there were zero christian activists

it's such a strawman

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:35 (two years ago) link

Faith in Christ..

Derek and Clive Get the Horn Street (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:35 (two years ago) link

oh shoot, bill mckibben exists? well then, i guess the fundamentalists are no longer by far the dominant voice of christianity in america

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:37 (two years ago) link

bill is an example, to me, of someone who is humble, quiet, and yet very LOUDLY political

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 20:37 (two years ago) link

i would have to be the biggest 100% fool in the universe if i thought there were zero christian activists

it's such a strawman


Ok but You were wondering why they are not so loud? Or more loudly trumpeting they are motivated by their faith?

I guess I dunno what you were getting at sorry. I agree people of faith should wreck more shit though.

Derek and Clive Get the Horn Street (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:41 (two years ago) link

I mean I guess it’s because leftists, including those who are religious, don’t latch themselves to the Democrats like the evangelicals do to the GOP?

Derek and Clive Get the Horn Street (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 3 September 2021 20:42 (two years ago) link

then i'll take them to a catholic church, and a synagogue. then a unitarian church. then a methodist, then a baptist. a black evangelical church

FWIW, I did exactly this as a child (plus Baha'i, Hare Krishna, Greek Orthodox, and Quaker). It was standard Unitarian religious ed curriculum for 6th grade.

Richard Marxist (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 3 September 2021 21:00 (two years ago) link

i mean, i don't know what i'm talking about either. so no worries.

i guess in order for anything i'm saying to make sense, you have to start with this premise:

1. evangelical conservative christians are the dominant voice of Christians today.

for better or worse, they speak for the Christians because yes, they are incredibly fucking loud, but also they are the plurality of Christians, and by FAR the most politically effective Christians.

maybe i should stop there and see if at least that parts seems true to someone that didn't have their life ruined by evangelicals. WHITE evangelicals.

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 21:03 (two years ago) link

FWIW, I did exactly this as a child (plus Baha'i, Hare Krishna, Greek Orthodox, and Quaker). It was standard Unitarian religious ed curriculum for 6th grade.

it's what any faith that had faith in itself would do, i think. doing otherwise is like being an abusive boyfriend that won't "let" the girlfriend go the bar with friends

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 21:03 (two years ago) link

also, as i understand it,

jesus : pharisees :: what i want modern NON-fundamentalists to be like : white evangelicals

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 21:10 (two years ago) link

or am i missing that one part in the gospels when jesus silently makes a donation to the "pharisees are misrepresenting judaism" fund, and never says a word about it out loud or draws attention to his dissatisfaction with the pharisees

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 21:11 (two years ago) link

jesus is cool
pharisees uncool
cool christians are disappointing on some levels
white evangelicals are extremely evil and in the least metal way possible

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 21:12 (two years ago) link

even though i haven't been a christian in the last 20 years, i STILL have a sense of responsibility for the things that are said in the name of christianity. it's deeply disappointing (continuing the trend) that people who still are christians don't feel the same, at least not in significant numbers. there are counterexamples, counterexamples of individuals, churches, movements in the past. but in general, at least as i see it, the cool christians don't seem to be THAT bothered by how evangelicals take ownership over christianity. that's why i get that creepy feeling that if/when real theocracy comes to the united states, "cool christians" probably won't really mind all that much

Karl Malone, Friday, 3 September 2021 21:31 (two years ago) link

Shit, I know more Bible passages than most Christians.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2021 21:41 (two years ago) link

Post-ABC poll finds 77% of Americans support the decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Afghanistan, including 88% of Democrats, 74% of Republicans and 76% of independents. But widespread support falls apart when it comes to how the departure unfolded https://t.co/8RvRDhZXDw pic.twitter.com/Ob65Xwi8RP

— Post Polls (@PostPolls) September 3, 2021

Seems like the media might have been… manufacturing dissent.

papal hotwife (milo z), Friday, 3 September 2021 22:45 (two years ago) link

milo endorses a Biden position at last!

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2021 23:17 (two years ago) link

I have a hard time believing anyone is going to care about Afghanistan in six months.

akm, Friday, 3 September 2021 23:31 (two years ago) link

Continued support for the actual withdrawal points that way, but when Republicans retake the House it’s going to be Benghazi times a hundred.

papal hotwife (milo z), Friday, 3 September 2021 23:32 (two years ago) link

I have a hard time believing anyone is going to care about Afghanistan in six months weeks.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2021 23:35 (two years ago) link

doesn't seem like they've been able to come up with a Benghazi-type narrative at this point, though

Dan S, Friday, 3 September 2021 23:49 (two years ago) link

It's gonna get to a point (in a lot of ways this has already happened) where Republicans are going to be speaking exclusively in in-group code that's totally incomprehensible to anyone who's not marinating in right-wing radio, YouTube channels and Facebook memes 24/7.

but also fuck you (unperson), Friday, 3 September 2021 23:52 (two years ago) link

Americans wanting us out of Afghanistan but disapproving of any specific withdrawal action is as unsurprising as my three-year-old niece melting down because she wants to go outside and play in the snow but refuses to put on her shoes.

Jaime Pressly and America (f. hazel), Saturday, 4 September 2021 00:36 (two years ago) link

"I have a hard time believing anyone is going to care about Afghanistan in six months."

Texas, hurricanes and Covid have already moved that into last weeks problems.

earlnash, Saturday, 4 September 2021 01:37 (two years ago) link

remember when a seated president led a riot to overturn his obviously lost election, and 147 of the 213 republicans in congress voted in support of it, and for about 2 days some of them seemed to feel bad, but then soon afterward nearly every republican recalibrated and realized that they actually are very into fascism and support it and long as they're still in power?

me neither

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 01:42 (two years ago) link

wait, i remember

no i forgot again

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 14:51 (two years ago) link

the story of how the filibuster, somehow, remained in place is already being written

Is filibuster reform dead?

Eight months into President Joe Biden’s term, the minoritarian Senate rule remains untouched. It’s not how activists thought things would unfold.

Back in January, they saw a dynamic flowing in their favor: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) would block nearly everything Democrats tried to do, gradually frustrating Sens. Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) into embracing filibuster reform.

Meanwhile, they’d be launching a pressure campaign, educating people about the rule’s racist history and showing them what it means in practice: no minimum wage hike, no LGBTQ protections, no sweeping labor protection act, no gun restrictions, no expanding the Supreme Court. And most importantly, for the psychologically battered and bruised Democratic politicians and constituents alike who just witnessed a president come close to stealing an election while letting loose a violent mob on the Capitol — no voting rights, gerrymandering reform, or election protections.

Even if it meant letting Biden’s beloved infrastructure bills, the centerpiece of his agenda, go first in line, activists were generally hopeful — or at least they saw a path. Clear the infrastructure bills off the deck, then tackle pro-democracy reforms and bust the filibuster if you had to to make it happen.

“I’m not as optimistic as I was,” Adam Jentleson, a former Harry Reid staffer and author of a history of the filibuster, told TPM this week.

The war of attrition-style failed votes at the hands of Republican senators haven’t worked. Various reforms and tactical ideas haven’t significantly swayed Manchin or Sinema. Witnessing up close the new two-tiered Senate operating system, where certain bills can pass through reconciliation while the rest are consigned to the filibuster graveyard, hasn’t piqued their frustration.

And activists’ best argument, their battle-informed warnings that without voting protections, Republicans would try the 2020 gambit again but better, fell on deaf ears. The gerrymandering clock has started, and maps will start dropping this month. As more time elapses, it’ll become too late to put voting reforms in place before the 2022 midterms.

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 14:52 (two years ago) link

And most importantly, for the psychologically battered and bruised Democratic politicians and constituents alike who just witnessed a president come close to stealing an election while letting loose a violent mob on the Capitol — no voting rights, gerrymandering reform, or election protections.

huh? we forgot that

And most importantly, for the psychologically battered and bruised Democratic politicians and constituents alike who just witnessed a president come close to stealing an election while letting loose a violent mob on the Capitol — no voting rights, gerrymandering reform, or election protections.

what? we forgot that

And most importantly, for the psychologically battered and bruised Democratic politicians and constituents alike who just witnessed a president come close to stealing an election while letting loose a violent mob on the Capitol — no voting rights, gerrymandering reform, or election protections.

huh?

And most importantly, for the psychologically battered and bruised Democratic politicians and constituents alike who just witnessed a president come close to stealing an election while letting loose a violent mob on the Capitol — no voting rights, gerrymandering reform, or election protections.

oh right, right

And most importantly, for the psychologically battered and bruised Democratic politicians and constituents alike who just witnessed a president come close to stealing an election while letting loose a violent mob on the Capitol — no voting rights, gerrymandering reform, or election protections.

wait what?

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 14:53 (two years ago) link

COVFEFE!!!!!!

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 14:54 (two years ago) link

what is that like coffee or something? did he spill some COVFEFE on his keyboard?!

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 14:54 (two years ago) link

Video: Alex Jones goes off on the left, takes ivermectin live on air to dispel media’s “it’s horse dewormer” talking point.
pic.twitter.com/JQeZzIyzzN

— Melissa Tate (@TheRightMelissa) September 4, 2021

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 15:04 (two years ago) link

hope he turns inside out

Profiles in Liquid Courage (WmC), Saturday, 4 September 2021 15:48 (two years ago) link

realizing that millions of people watch him on a daily basis and take him seriously explains a lot. i mean, look at that. holy shit dude. and people are looking up to him and listening to him! i'd "looooooooooool" but these guys really are like the people who spray their teeth in mad max

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 15:54 (two years ago) link

definitely just going to stereotype here and say that alex jones and his viewers are just really dumb. they got to biology and got stuck in the pH section and just decided they would never understand anything through that method. "the old knowledge". so they just started huffing paint thinner

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 15:55 (two years ago) link

their last memory was talking to the guy at the gas station who had a hookup for whippet crackers

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 15:55 (two years ago) link

He's still refusing to get on Gavin McInnes's level and put a butt plug in on air.

papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 4 September 2021 16:26 (two years ago) link

If you plug up, it helps with the horse dewormer diarrhea.

papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 4 September 2021 16:27 (two years ago) link

Rebuilding our crumbling physical infrastructure – roads, bridges, water systems – is important. Rebuilding our crumbling human infrastructure – health care, education, climate change – is more important. No infrastructure bill without the $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill.

— Bernie Sanders (@SenSanders) September 2, 2021

Karl Malone, Saturday, 4 September 2021 16:36 (two years ago) link

Some days, the only thing that gets me through is knowing that people like Alex Jones will someday die. Maybe not soon, maybe not before he does incalculable damage to the minds of his followers, but someday. Someday it'll absolutely happen. I mean, yes, some other slavering beast as bad as him or worse will probably burst out of his corpse when he goes, just sloughing him off like the remains of a cocoon of evil, because that's the world we live in now, the one where you think things can't get worse and then they somehow exceed the limits of human imagination, but then I guess at that point I can just take solace in my own impending mortality. There's always a bright side!

Marty J. Bilge (Old Lunch), Saturday, 4 September 2021 16:46 (two years ago) link

The realization that "people" on the whole are actually bad, untrustworthy, susceptible to misinformation to the point that it seems like they actually crave it, and so fucking selfish all the time. it may be obvious and known for a long time -- i've seen the intro to fellowship of the ring, i understand how "humans" work -- but i didn't understand the degree of it until trump, and then especially with covid. i get so angry because at one point i was very much an Idealist, and i guess i'm dumb enough to think that it's still a good thing. but when believing in "people" goes away, so does everything else. the thought of public service becomes a joke. public health becomes a joke. climate change, the possibility of every doing anything about it - lol, are you kidding, after a year and a half of covid? we have ZERO chance. everything just goes away when faith in humanity goes away. ironically, i think this is part of what probably drives people to religion

This hit me right in the feels. I'm still grappling with the philosophical position that people are bad but I would respectfully suggest that if this is anything more than a hot take, it might help to take a step back, I'm sensing a certain amount of confirmation bias at work here.

Consider that little more than a generation ago we were able to create the EPA, protect endangered species, mostly stop acid rain and the growth of the hole in the ozone layter, enact affirmative action etc etc.

I think the main trends which make our present moment seem particularly hopeless are the predominance of social media and the GOP in effect becoming the party of the Christian petrostate. Social media is a mixed bag but it's pretty clear it's mostly in the wrong hands right now. Aside from all the egregious conniving and platforming of disinformation, I think that from the positive side, social media has actually made it clear that even in America most of us are actually pretty progressive. This in turn has elicited a hysterical reaction from the right and especially the evangelicals.

I have high hopes that in terms of media we're close to the bottom now, there is significant room for improvement. Sadly though our dysfunctional political system now seems stretched to breaking, and our physical environment also is sorely ailing. (...Sorry I was trying to be hopeful again but I seem to be working on digging a little hole for myself at this point.)

recovering internet addict/shitposter (viborg), Saturday, 4 September 2021 18:43 (two years ago) link

If you plug up, it helps with the horse dewormer diarrhea.

― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, September 4, 2021 5:27 PM (three hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

Point of order: a butt-plugged Alex Jones would very swiftly explode like a shit-filled firework on the 4th of July.

"the fancy things" being his nads, etc (stevie), Saturday, 4 September 2021 20:22 (two years ago) link


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