• foggy@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    My message to the dnc

    Fuck you we elected Bernie and you ran Hillary and then we elected Bernie and you gave us Biden. Fuck you.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      They knew Bernie might actually improve the lives of Americans and our rich overlords shudder at the thought of that.

    • timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works
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      21 days ago

      Who elected Bernie in 2020? Biden wiped the floor with him. Maybe more people should’ve voted for Bernie in the primary then.

      • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        I mean, the commenter is overstating what happened in 2016 and 2020, but Biden did not, “wipe the floor,” with him. Obama and the DNC convinced every centrist to drop out, consolidating the moderate vote around Biden, while Warren stayed in, splitting the progressive vote, and Bloomberg used his personal wealth to run anti-Bernie ads. Then Biden had to ask Bernie to help him craft a platform just so he could be electable. It’s less that, “Biden wiped the floor with him,” and more that, “the entire Democratic party lined up to block Bernie so Biden could limp over the finish line.”

        • timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works
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          21 days ago

          Which is normal politics. Why didn’t Warren and Bernie make a deal then?

          Face it- if he can’t win a primary then that’s on him. And this is coming from someone who voted for him in 2020.

          Point being- people need to stop acting like there is some mythical force stopping progressives. If they truly were that numerous then Bernie would’ve been elected as the candidate in 2020 (2016 I’ll give you the DNC fuckery.)

          Moreover, they could elect AOCs all over the country too. But guess what- either they aren’t that numerous or they’re lazy as shit. Either way, you get “centrist” candidates like Biden. People seriously need to wake up and either start voting en masse in the primaries or realize that America is just not that progressive.

          • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            Buddy, half your comment history is whining about non-voters costing Harris the election, and you’re gonna turn around and say, “less people voted for Bernie, deal with it?” Bernie had the entire party lined up to block him; name another candidate the party has done that to. Meanwhile, Harris had a level playing field with Trump and he wiped the floor with her.

            Face it- if she can’t win an election then that’s on her. And this is coming from someone who voted for her in 2024. People seriously need to wake up and either start voting en masse in the general elections or realize that America is just not that moderate.

            • timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works
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              21 days ago

              It is non-voters. Whether they’re left leaning or center or whatever really doesn’t matter. They’re going to get it one way or the other. They had a chance to drive the car more left but decided it wasn’t worth showing up so now it’s going full speed right wing back to the 50s and worse.

              Congrats?

              I mean, you’re basically making my point. People who don’t vote decide the election with their inaction. Whether it was not coming out for Bernie or not coming out for Kamala, it’s the same thing.

              So yes, thank you for proving my point better than I could. I appreciate the assist.

              Bonus- Bernie finished behind Kamala in Vermont. So let’s not act like progressivism is some silver bullet here.

  • themaninblack@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    One of the biggest unforced failures of the Biden administration is the reported complaint of Joe Biden that people weren’t acknowledging the economic turnaround.

    Biden did a lot of good for the economy! Massive stimulus via the infrastructure bill, a sensible approach to recovery from Covid, acknowledging that recovery from an inflationary period would be necessarily painful, etc. He was a steady hand at a time when America needed one.

    But what sends me into apoplexy, what really grinds my gears, is that this motherfucker was so out of touch to believe that this was a messaging problem. He felt that Americans had not yet heard of his accomplishments in turning around the tide of economic misfortune, how badly the republicans would have bungled it, and how the next four years would have been a period of huge growth based on the previous four.

    All of these points were absolutely true.

    But there is no housing supply. The economic pressures are so hard on young people that their biological impulses are changing.

    Young empiricists have taken a look at the climate and have correctly deduced that their future is full of pain in the absence of truly radical action.

    And Kamala’s strategy for relieving pressure on the housing market was a $25,000 credit for first time home buyers? In an environment where housing prices have doubled and tripled in fifteen years?

    I am one of the very few members of the public that attended Feinstein’s funeral at San Francisco City Hall. And the only one there that day wearing sneakers. I attended her lying in state, paid my respects to a committed civil servant, and in the book, cautioned Pelosi against a similar, “ignominious” end. Then I hear that Pelosi has filed to run again in 2026. As an 86 year old.

    At some point the Democratic leadership looks less out of touch and more actively malicious considering the serious and existential crises of the young and near-young in the United States.

    The country is in decline because of its extreme individualism, its lack of compassion, and its ruthless “politics is the art of the possible” approach by leaders who could not possibly inspire with bold leadership.

    The party is chasing local maxima.

    • Wrench@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Very well said. I hated Harris’ “economic plan.” It wasn’t going to make a dent. It might get some people in rural passover states afford a home, which is great for them, but would do nothing but maybe raise costs of entry level tiny condos in any city.

      But I do think they accomplished a lot in Biden’s term. If you compare the US’ inflation to other 1st world countries, we recovered far better. We were moving in the right direction. It would have been far worse with Republicans.

      And they accomplished all that with a festering rot of DINO obstructionists in the senate, and a republican controlled House. They did an amazing job with the limitations they had.

      But they didn’t adequately lay the blame in the right hands. They didn’t address greedy corporate Housing speculation. They tried and failed to reign in “shrinkflation”. And they failed to bring some sanity to the immigrant blaming, and instead somewhat joined in on it.

    • AutistoMephisto@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      And Kamala’s strategy for relieving pressure on the housing market was a $25,000 credit for first time home buyers?

      This was also going to be coupled with a large tax credit to construction companies for building single-family homes and another tax credit for selling them to first-time homeowners.

      Taken together, that all sounds pretty good. But I think what really needs to change is zoning laws. The problem is that the federal government has no control over the zoning ordinances of local communities. Hell, state governments barely have control over that. Usually whenever a rezoning of a neighborhood is brought up, it causes a firestorm at city council meetings.

    • GoofSchmoofer@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Harris’ solution to the housing problem really annoyed me. There are so many other more effective ways to go about making housing more affordable but she just ignored them. This, in my uneducated opinion, would have also motivated more voters.

      In a more general sense, the mainstream Democrats have always had a difficult time with messaging which is nothing new but really showed itself in this past election.

      Democrats think that if you just spend time educating the voting population on all the good their policies will do then the voter will make a rational decision in the voting booth. And in the exit polling that is exactly who voted for Harris, highly educated people that like that kind of lecture type of politicking. But most people don’t vote like that - they don’t want a professor in the oval office they want a cheerleader.

      • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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        20 days ago

        Disagree on only one point: the time for a cheerleader has passed.

        The people now want a Teddy Roosevelt progressive. A person who physically kicks asses and legally enforces regulations on the Corporates who are undermining the country’s well-being to pad their pockets. A leader who is tough, speaks plainly, and has grit and vision for the conservation of natural resources.

        None of these qualities describe any current members of the Democratic party.

        • ✺roguetrick✺@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          There’s a lesson in Teddy though. The industry republicans did their damnedest to sideline him and would’ve succeeded if McKinley hadn’t been shot. They put him in the vice presidency in the first place to get him out of the New York governors house.

          • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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            20 days ago

            Yep. Lots of lessons in our historical precedents that Dems pretend don’t exist.

            Nevertheless, I would 100% vote for Teddy Roosevelt’s corpse

        • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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          20 days ago

          Lies. But rubes love lies because they’re palatable and don’t create the challenge of critical thinking.

          • BadmanDan@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            And that’s why HE wins. You can’t be someone like that if you’re on the back foot (incumbent). Hell just lie, the media and podcasters will let him get away with it because he’s the challenger. And you’re doomed. It’s that simple. You’re not beating that.

            • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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              20 days ago

              I would argue that neither the Harris campaign, nor her DNC masters actually wanted to win.

              The Dems cherish their “underdog” persona and by losing, they know they’ll be getting even more donations from frantic, fearful Americans. And by losing, the Dems don’t actually have to produce any governance results. They can just sit back and wag their fingers at voters with a smug, “I told you this would happen,” face.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    21 days ago

    “Nothing will fundamentally change” + “there is not a thing that comes to mind.”

    Two killer statements.

    • NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io
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      21 days ago

      To be fair Biden’s “nothing will fundamentally change” is a lot better with context. “There’s not a thing that comes to mind” is fucking inexcusable though.

      • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        To be fair Biden’s “nothing will fundamentally change” is a lot better with context.

        To be fair, it became clear over the course of 4 years that it was correct at face value.

  • NeilBrü@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    The message to Democrats neo-libs and neo-cons, is clear: you must dump neoliberal economics corporatism.

  • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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    18 days ago

    Oh. The message I got was that many people today are so immature that they would rather join a collective psychosis than accept their own part in humanity

  • Floon@lemmy.ml
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    19 days ago

    Biden spent four years massively pro-union, the Inflation Reduction Act was massive and not marginal with the job creation all over, and his administration remembered that the Sherman and Clayton Acts exist and used them. They have been everything a good leftist could want.

    We live in a post-truth world, and the massive media oligarchy is in full effect, driven by the editorial desires of the hyper-rich. Dems could run Jesus and lose, at this point.

  • Angel Mountain@feddit.nl
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    19 days ago

    America should get rid of that two party nonsense and start forming a proper government.

    Those founding fathers would be ashamed.

    • Floon@lemmy.ml
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      19 days ago

      Those founding fathers discovered they had a two party system immediately and did nothing to prevent it from being cemented in place.

  • steeznson@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    As an outsider it seemed more like they had an image problem than an issue with their concrete policies. Obviously it could be both but I got a sense people believed the dems were out of touch.

    • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      That is because the democrats have abandoned.the working class and use guilt and loyalty to effectively fool the middle class into policies favoring the wealthy.

      Neither party is responsive to the working class because hourly wages are too low vs prices to allow for significant political donations.

      So until actrue 3rd party catches the working class and moves american politics leftward, its just fewer and fewer with more and more.

      Hence, keep people stupid so they dont figure it out.

    • skibidi@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      There were plenty of problems with the concrete policies on offer.

      ‘most lethal military’, tough on crime, secure the border… it was ridiculous to see how far right the supposed left went in search of votes. Harris’s platform looked more like Trump’s from 2016 than it did Hilary’s.

  • zenitsu@sh.itjust.works
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    19 days ago

    We’re gonna just continue to blame the Dems while ignoring that a massive online propaganda campaign brainwashed enough morons into voting again for a convicted felon who tried to steal the last election, and already had a dogshit first term? Even if you “fix” the dems, the propaganda will still paint whoever is representing them as worse than the fascist puppets on the other side, and the masses of dimwits will swallow it while thinking they’re enlightened centrists.

      • zenitsu@sh.itjust.works
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        18 days ago

        BS, there were polls showing the massive disparity between how people responded to “how would you rate the current economy?” and “how would you rate your own financial situation?”, about 70% had said their own situation was good or very good yet a similar amount said that the countries situation was either bad or very bad. Absolutely brainwashed

  • Denidil@lemm.ee
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    19 days ago

    People going around claiming the Democrats are neoliberal immediately after they leaned super hard into unions is some serious gaslighting horseapples.

    • ToastedPlanet@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      19 days ago

      they leaned super hard into unions

      Biden supported unions before and after the railway workers strike, but Biden still felt the need to kill the strike. Supporting unions enough so that they get incrementally better deals is pro-union, but it does not a progressive make. We need radical systemic change to our institutions and Biden is ideologically incapable of delivering on that for the economy, the Ukraine War, Israel’s genocide, climate change, or immigration to name a few.

      • Denidil@lemm.ee
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        13 days ago

        You never paid attention to the follow up on this one did you?

        the reason the strike was killed was because it was “thousands of working people vs millions of working people”. The Democrats voted to insert the contested item (sick leave) and the republicans blocked that vote (Which had to be separate because stupid legislative rules).

        However the Biden administration kept fighting in the background for the unions to get their sick leave, and eventually won. The unions even posted articles celebrating Biden getting them their sick leave.

        that situation was a complex one and a reminder to not view the world in black and white.

        • ToastedPlanet@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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          12 days ago

          that situation was a complex one and a reminder to not view the world in black and white.

          https://time.com/5888024/50-trillion-income-inequality-america/

          There is little evidence that the current administration has any interest in dealing with this crisis. Our hope is that a Biden administration would be historically bold. But make no mistake that both our political and economic systems will collapse absent solutions that scale to the enormous size of the problem. The central goal of our nation’s economic policy must be nothing less than the doubling of median income. We must dramatically narrow inequality between distributions while eliminating racial and gender inequalities within them. This is the standard to which we should hold leaders from both parties. To advocate for anything less would be cowardly or dishonest or both.

          The 1% have extracted 50 trillion dollars from the bottom 90%. It’s time we side with labor in no uncertain terms.

          the reason the strike was killed was because it was “thousands of working people vs millions of working people”.

          https://www.vice.com/en/article/more-than-500-labor-historians-condemn-bidens-intervention-in-freight-rail-dispute/

          The second reason Phillips-Fein finds the labor fight compelling is because of the way Biden framed it, as a choice between the interests of railway workers and the economy as a whole. But he didn’t have to do that. “The president could also embrace a sensibility that more explicitly identifies the interests of the country as a whole with those of the workers and their unions, rather than seeing them in opposition,” she said.

          Biden is a pro-union neoliberal. We need pro-union progressives and socialists with a populist narrative to campaign on.

            • ToastedPlanet@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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              10 days ago

              Neoliberals are anti-union.

              Neoliberals are institutionalists. Unions are institutions. So no one should be surprised when a neoliberal like Joe Biden incrementally improves things for unions and their members.

              i see you and raise you the actual unions involved

              My argument is not that Biden did nothing, but that he could and should have done more. The president should leverage the full power of the executive branch to benefit workers. There is no need to capitulate to the owner class and break strikes. Incremental changes will not correct the fifty trillion dollar transfer of wealth from the bottom 90% to the top 1%.

              screw your kiddie-pool-depth faux-leftism.

              The incremental changes your argument is unsuccessfully attempting to justify are neoliberal policies. The fact neoliberal policies benefit unions does not change the fact that they are incremental changes. Your argument is not a leftist argument, but a neoliberal argument pretending to be a leftist argument. Your argument relies on name-calling and ad hominem attacks in an attempt to distract from this deception.

  • Draedron@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 days ago

    Thanks to idiot non voters there will not be a chance to dump these policies since there wont be another election

    • Shardikprime@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Man, you really need to touch grass. 4 years will pass, another election will be held, and you will be just wasting time dwelling into that thought.

      Better prepare for the future