edit: seems like some people interpret “full of” as a mathematical majority which, while it may or might not be true instance to instance, isn’t my intent in posting

feel free to swap in “has a lot of” if that’s more familiar language to you :)

  • 反いじめ戦隊@ani.social
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    3 hours ago

    Since I can’t tell if OP is a fed or not, given by the moderation here, I’ll just repeat a famous quote by Reverend Charles Frederic Aked:

    It has been said that for evil men to accomplish their purpose it is only necessary that good men should do nothing

    Time to do something OP, evil neighbors need not to persist.

  • Daftydux@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 hours ago

    Food for thought. If youre a working adult youve invested in this country. You have every right to expect something in return. Like the expectation that your investment hasn’t been squandered for the purpose of evil.

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      4 hours ago

      i thought it was human nature for my paycheck to go to bomb apartment buildings several oceans away while my neighbors die of preventable diseases??? im confused

  • /home/pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/texas-news/national-weather-service-alert-timeline-texas-flooding/3879084/

    U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said Saturday it was difficult for forecasters to predict just how much rain would fall. She said the Trump administration would make it a priority to upgrade National Weather Service technology used to deliver warnings.

    Sure, Kristi. I’m sure you’ll say anything for headlines

    During a news conference early Friday morning, Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly said he didn’t know why the camps hadn’t been evacuated, but that the county did not have an early warning system or outdoor sirens to alert people to flooding conditions.

    “We’ve looked into it before … The public reeled at the cost,” Kelly said.

    Democracy, but stupid people are making your voting decisions

  • OhStopYellingAtMe@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    I’m with you. I live in a red state in the north, in a small island of blue, but if I drive for a few minutes in any direction it’s trump signs & bigotry.

    I feel like I’m surrounded by idiots. They’re bringing my state down with them. It’s horrifying.

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      9 hours ago

      Sending love ❤️ I truly hate to see would be-“progressives” laughing at the senseless deaths and violence just because some 30% of them voted a certain way.

      It’s one of the ways that capital keeps the culture war lit, I find. Breed hatred and dehumanization for a people group while gleefully stripping that people group from self-determination at every opportunity.

      • Bob Robertson IX @discuss.tchncs.de
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        7 hours ago

        I’m seeing a very ugly side around Lemmy the last couple of days. It’s nice to see posts like this!

        If something is despicable when your adversary does it, then it is despicable when you do it.

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          7 hours ago

          We are not immune to propaganda! ❤️ It’s on all of us to help each other out, finding our blind spots.

  • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Eh… I live in the cousin-fuckingly-deep South. In a city, and I work in a hospital, so I think it’s pretty safe to say this is one of the more left leaning bubbles within a hundred miles. …and there are still a fuckton of Nazis here.

    There are absolutely decent people trapped here, but we’re legit outnumbered. It isn’t just gerrymandering or some shitty system at fault: the majority of southerners are just fucking evil.

    There’s always some thinly veiled excuse - “We don’t hate women, we just want to protect the babies!” “We don’t hate immigrants, we just want to protect our jobs!” “We don’t hate trans people, we just want to protect our bathrooms!” but when you hear them talk amongst themselves about those people it’s pretty clear they really do just hate them.

    Most southerners are sincerely not good people.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      There are absolutely decent people trapped here, but we’re legit outnumbered. It isn’t just gerrymandering or some shitty system at fault: the majority of southerners are just fucking evil.

      This. I remember moving from a conservative area in a border state, to the South for a short time, and being absolutely floored by the things that were quite openly said and laughed about. And I was no wilting violet, I was already quite used to hearing vile shit.

      “Every population is secretly filled with our allies!” is delusional.

    • CorruptCheesecake@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      As someone who relocated to the south after being born and raised outside the south, I can confirm that the majority of people here are truly fucking evil. This place is horrific.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        8 hours ago

        I’m so sorry and thank you for sharing. I hope you can be a light to your community while also keeping safe and healthy. We’re with you homie ✊❤️

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      8 hours ago

      (edit: i came to an understanding with the person im responding to and i was not happy with how this comment was worded so deleting it because it wasn’t contributing)

      • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        I mean for sure it’s the entire country, with only depressingly slight variations in concentration one way or the other - but your image is about southerners specifically, so that’s what I addressed.

        …and honestly, it scales up as high as you want to take it - for the most part, humans are just evil sacks of shit.

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          8 hours ago

          There ya go. I fully agree with you here. 👍 Sending love to you as “one of the good ones.” (Sorry that sounds mean but I don’t know how to put it XD)

          [Again apologies if my initial comment came off as abrasive. My entire post is a reaction to some crowds cheering on the recent tragedy in Texas and it’s clear now you are not anywhere near a part of that crowd and I misread the situation.]

          • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            No worries at all. Typing is a shitty medium for this kind of conversation: tone is mostly lost. I’m guilty all the time of making posts that sound 10x angrier than I intended. …or angry at all: usually I’m bouncing somewhere between numb, depressed, or caffeine-induced mania. I’m not really ever mad or aggressive; but then I’ll re-read a post I made the day prior and realize it comes off as absolutely pissed which is pretty much never the intention at the time of posting.

            I do tend to use profanity pretty casually… maybe it’s that?

            But yeah, when in doubt, read an internet-stranger’s post in the voice of Eeyore. Sometimes the words alone just don’t do the trick.

            • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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              4 hours ago

              (Personally for me it was the “cousin fucking” language that gave me the wrong impression. Not to tone police, that’s just kind of how I got to where I was because that’s very common in circles that tend to do dehumanizing .)

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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        9 hours ago

        With the victory of the current administration, you are applying a description of unequivocally the entire nation and relagating it only to those of the lowest income, those closest to historical slavery, and those with the fewest educational opportunities.

        As another person who works in a hospital of one of the poorest and most conservative states in the union…I don’t think you really know what you are talking about.

        First of all, there is no such thing as a basic definition of what makes up good people and bad people. You can be good to your family and your neighbors and be incredibly racist, bigoted, or just unempathetic towards anyone else outside your daily life.

        What I notice about the South the most is the inability to be compassionate to anyone who isn’t right in front of them.

        think if you engage more thoughtfully with historical realities you might begin to come to a different understanding.

        Historical realities can negatively shape culture… What about the Souths history leads you to believe that most of southerners are “good people” and how exactly do you quantify good?

        No offense, but do you live in the South? And if so…are you a person of color or another minority, because if not you may not be getting the full experience.

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          7 hours ago

          most of southerners are “good people”

          Strawman, reread the entire post bud. Looks like they just misunderstood.

          “The south is full of good people” (verbatim quote from my post, objectively true, yes from my own experience and yes minorities) DOES NOT mean “most of southerners are good people” (verbatim YOUR bad-faith interpretation of my post).

          Feel free to try again but as a principle I don’t defend positions I never said in my life.

          • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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            8 hours ago

            Strawman, reread the entire post bud.

            I think that’s a pedantic dispute considering you’ve made rebuttals against people claiming that good people were out numbered. Plus, what does “full of” even mean when it comes to judging the general morality of southern people? I think the generalization of the south being full of good people reads quite a bit differently than there are some good people in the South.

            objectively true, yes from my own experience and yes minorities)

            Generalities cannot be objectively true… Implying that something is full of good people implies a majority, as in a glass fullof milk, is not also full of water.

            • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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              7 hours ago

              ah. feel free to swap in “lots of” instead of “full of” then.

              sounds like a regional misunderstanding which you unintentionally misconstrued.

              people are not liquids in containers. something like “the government is full of corruption” doesn’t mean “more than fifty percent of government workers are corrupt” it just means “lots of corrupt people in government, can’t ignore that” and i would be more than willing to swap the verbage

              glad to clear this up as i genuinely didn’t expect that that would be misunderstood

              • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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                7 hours ago

                sounds like a regional misunderstanding which you unintentionally misconstrued.

                Maybe it’s a regional thing…but I don’t think I’m the only one who interpreted it that way.

                But yeah, there are plenty of decent people in the South, I wouldn’t argue against that. I would argue it’s a smaller minority than in some of the other places I’ve lived though.

                • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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                  7 hours ago

                  but I don’t think I’m the only one who interpreted it that way.

                  i recognize that! good to know for the future and i also put an edit to the OP to clarify

                  🤝

  • fitgse@sh.itjust.works
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    17 hours ago

    Since 2013 we’ve seen disenfranchisement in Alabama in real time. Require strict new voter id, then close the DMVs in black and left leaning areas. Combine polling places in democratic leaning areas so they are further away and have long lines. Move polling places so they are no longer accessible by bus. Those are just the obvious ones, but the Republicans’ strategy has been to do anything they can to stop people from voting.

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      12 hours ago

      i would love so hard some legislation that requires voting ids on contingency that independent local sources find that access to ids are hugely increased

      which means it will never happen but hey a girl can dream

  • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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    16 hours ago

    Most folks in the south are good, honest, hard-working people - but the levels of propaganda aimed at keeping people ignorant and blaming minorities for systemic issues are hard to overstate. That coupled with a crumbling education system, poverty, and voter suppression is what keeps the south voting against the best interests of the majority of people.

    The average Southern voter is just trying to do the right thing with the information they have access to. Doesn’t make them any less wrong, but it does make the situation more morally complex.

    It always makes me sad when I see people in Left spaces saying things like “it serves them right” etc etc when disasters occur. Sure, the majority of voters may have voted for policies that caused these things, but they are ignorant and have been lied to their whole lives. Not to mention all the folks who have been disenfranchised by the system.

    • Zexks@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      No. Hard stop NO. Ignorance is no longer an acceptable excuse. They all have access to the same internet as the rest of us and all have the ability to verify the things they see and hear. Most choose not to.

      I’ll accept gerrymandering and some other hard physical barriers but ignorance and lack of education is no longer acceptable.

      • randint@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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        10 hours ago

        They do not have access to the same internet. Just see how Facebook’s algorithm decides what to show you based on your IP and usage history and a bajillion other factors. And how Google changes the search results based on IP too. They don’t choose not to verify the things they see; those things were presented as the truth to them in the first place.

      • cfi@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Critical thinking skills are essential for that, and they stopped teaching that a long time ago. It’s not enough to have access to information, you have to have the skills to judge and interpret it. This is why misinformation is such a problem, people literally don’t have the skills to distinguish between it and actual facts

        • Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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          14 hours ago

          Nobody ever taught me that either but I figured it out. I wish this didn’t need to be taught at all.

        • projectsquared@lemmy.world
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          14 hours ago

          It isn’t the schools’ responsibility to give you every damn skill necessary to be a functioning adult. We keep trying to put the blame somewhere where it doesn’t belong.

          • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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            9 hours ago

            Who’s responsibility is our? The parents? The ones who were themselves indoctrinated? The point of mentioning schools is to say that the reliable baseline of public education isn’t so reliable anymore, so all they have is propaganda filtered through their parents and community.

            It’s not about placing blame, it’s about diagnosing the causes and devising a fitting solution.

    • lostoncalantha@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      So what you’re saying is they can vote to fuck up the country and suppress other peoples freedoms. They can vote to instill pain fear and chaos in other peoples lives. But when the consequences of their vote bites them in the ass all of a sudden we need to have empathy and grace? Libs like you are why we are in this mess with fascism to begin with.

    • Gammelfisch@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      BS, unless they’re illiterate. They voted for the disaster and worse yet, Project 2025. “It serves them right,” and they can continue to eat shit.

    • F1gm3nt3d@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I lived in VA. From 2nd to 9th grade pre-internet. Now VA. Is South but it’s not west va., Mississippi, or Tennessee south. Even back then, you could spend an afternoon in a library and alleviate yourself of a lot of bad information unintentionally just by looking up that information. I know because I did. I’d hear grownups around me say sketchy shit and look into it. It’s even easier to do so now. Just the act of seeking clarity can bring some small pieces of enlightenment. A lot of people didn’t bother then and wouldn’t now.

      What’s happening is post-truth BS. People just choosing to believe whatever the fuck they want, often without any verification.

      Are some people being led astray? Absolutely. But they’re also allowing themselves to be. People have been trying to convince southerners (and others) for decades, of not a century, that they’re being screwed over and the people they vote in are doing the screwing but many just flatly refuse to look into it at all and just keep going on blind faith. What happened to personal responsibility and self-agency? Not to mention that some people are just dumpster fires given human form and those people definitely deserve to reap what they sow.

      I don’t wish hardship on anyone but if a person continually brings hardship on themselves through their own, thoughts, votes, and actions, while ignoring all the warnings being handed out like candy at Halloween, I don’t find it surprising that others feel less inclined to be sympathetic let alone empathetic with their plight.

    • rc__buggy@sh.itjust.works
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      17 hours ago

      Yeah, someone told me yesterday that the people in Kabul deserve to have no assistance, “because they chose the Taliban”.

      I mean, that’s certainly a perspective.

    • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      It’s just hard to swallow that people choose to ignore reams of facts they have access to because they “disagree” with them.

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      15 hours ago

      the voting rights act was only in 1965. in a significant number of cases, no they did not

      the 19th amendment was in 1920. in a significant number of cases, no they could not

      it is demonstrably harder to vote if you are poor and harder to vote informedly if you are poor and uneducated all the way through 2025. no they did not vote for this.

      thank you for proving exactly why this post needs to exist. class consciousness, not culture war.

      • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        12 hours ago

        Those examples are from 105 and 60 years ago.
        There are ways to make the point you’re going for, but invoking legislation that old doesn’t do it.

        Am I sympathetic to people who are ignorant and so voted against their own interests? Sure, a bit. A lot of southerners would take issue with trying to defend them with cries of "don’t blame them, they’re too stupid to agree with me!” though.
        Am I sympathetic to people who have been systematically disenfranchised and economically abandoned? Of course, I’m not a monster.

        The fact remains that a lot of people in red states earnestly believe in what they vote for. You can talk about class consciousness all you want, but the people fighting the culture doing so because of manipulation by the rich or powerful in a class war does fuck all to help the people loosing said culture war. I’m sure the suicidal trans kid takes great comfort that the people voting to make them illegal are just misled.

        They’ve had every opportunity to inform themselves. Maybe eventually they’ll hurt themselves enough to stop fighting the culture war you don’t want others to fight.

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          11 hours ago

          60 years isn’t even close to life expectancy. so we are talking less than a lifetime ago. MLK’s daughter is alive, 62 years old (younger than most people in government) and posting on instagram about the same struggles her father fought.

          plus did you even read the part about ongoing class disenfranchisement in 2025 (poor people being kept from voting)?

          not even reading the rest of your comment since you couldn’t do the same for me. thanks for being such a genuine participant in this conversation.

          • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            6 hours ago

            I did actually read your comment, I just didn’t entirely agree with you you condescending ass.

            MLKs daughter never voted without the civil rights act. You forgot to add 18 to the age someone would need to be to have voted before the act passed.
            Most of the southern electorate is neither 78 or older, or even 60.
            The point was that it’s not a convincing argument, not that someone isn’t alive who was impacted.

            I’m not sure what class disenfranchisement has to do with the part you’re angry about. Maybe if you actually read what I said you’d have seen where I mentioned it for the rest of the comment.

            If you’re not even going to read what people say, you have no grounds to complain that people aren’t “being a genuine participant”.

            • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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              5 hours ago

              me: lists evidence of voter suppression in 1920, 1965, and today

              you: THAT WAS OVER 60 YEARS AGO

              me: i don’t think you saw the part where i said “today”

              you: name calling

              i love this website so much

            • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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              5 hours ago

              thanks for the personal attack i guess lol you are so cool online wow so cool

              still you act like 60 years is some kind of insurmountable gap in history and that’s so cringe. the echoes of slavery and native american genocide echo from before 1776 through today. MLK didn’t magically die and then fix every barrier Black people suffered in life. that’s pretty basic history lol.

              I’m not sure what class disenfranchisement has to do with the part you’re angry about.

              all of it you silly goose. disenfranchisement means “depriving someone of the right to vote.” when the poor are depreived of the right to vote (not directly by law, but indirectly by systemic barriers), it means shocker they don’t vote. this entire thread is in response to someone saying “i guess but they voted for that too.” that’s the context you butted into, i operate on the pretty fair premise that you knew that and read the thread. :)

      • knighthawk0811@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        people are changing the gerrymandering lines at some regularity and those people and their changes are quite specifically put in place on purpose and the voters continue to go down that road because they want the result of having more voting power. so yeah, they voted for it

  • *dust.sys@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    I can’t do shit about that in Pennsylvania. You’d think there would have been more an effort to disprove the allegations or fix the problems sometime between 1865 and now.

    • Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      18 hours ago

      Guess what! People in the south frequently can’t do shit about it either. If you would like to blame this on the people who live there for not voting correctly, please explain to me what you think ‘gerrymandering’ and ‘disenfranchisement’ mean, and what the average person living in the south is supposed to do about this shit being greenlit by SCOTUS.

        • Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone
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          17 hours ago

          The victims of the vote manipulation aren’t a random accident, it’s mostly leaving Republican voters standing by design. If legislation swept through other states that put the same voting requirements and gerrymandered districts as a lot of southern states have in place, they would probably also start to become real Republican shitholes without anyone’s values or voting patterns changing.

          • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            I’m not sure what you mean but I still stand behind people having choice while also they’re being pushed to choose poorly.

      • fitgse@sh.itjust.works
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        17 hours ago

        And every time a city tries to do something good, the state steps in and stops it. This happens daily in Birmingham, Alabama where the state is constantly overturning things the city has passed or the state takes the ability away from the city.

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          8 hours ago

          You are maybe being sardonic but you’re touching on a real poignant issue that’s worth investigating.

          Notice how the NRA conveniently backs the oligarchic state? The average NRA member owns something like 17 guns. That is, they can afford 17 guns. NRA members are wealthy.

          This is not an accident. Poverty has been weaponized to keep the majority-white, upper to middle class the ones that are armed, while the working class, the people of color, queer people, women, migrants, tend to be less armed and less able to organize.

          Of course these are all trends, or tendencies, not hard and fast rules (plenty of Black or Queer Texans own guns), but on the whole, and especially in combination with a militarized, capital serving, police force it had a real dampening effect on ability to resist oppression.

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      18 hours ago

      There are rights organizations that work across state borders for these causes. Not trying to shame, just putting out there that there are outlets for your talents, time, money, or even just verbal support.

    • oppy1984@lemdro.id
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      17 hours ago

      I don’t care about the color of your skin, your gender identity, your sexual identity, your political identity, what country your from, or your legal status here, I hate all humans equally, I just want to be left alone.

      <freeze frame>

      Narrator: And that children was the prophet who taught us to hate equally and mind your damn business.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        10 hours ago

        im a progressive because i want nazis to have healthcare

        and im a liberal because i want them to need it

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      12 hours ago

      that’s totally okay! this is the politics community not the “who do we like” community lol

  • teslasaur@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Do explain how gerrymandering affects the presidential election. All votes are counted for the entire state.

    I get that it affects local elections. That is obvious.

    • *dust.sys@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      That’s actually easy.

      The shape of the district gets decided based on the concentration of votes for one party. The goal is to make enough districts with enough concentration of your voters that you always win those districts, and make the rest of the state have few enough districts with enough of a mix of of voters for both parties that A) the for-sure districts can’t be lost and B) the not-for-sure districts can never oppose the for-sure districts as long as they remain under your party’s control.

      So all the rigging party needs to do is campaign enough in the for-sure districts that they can’t lose, and campaign enough in the not-for-sure districts that their opponent can’t win. And then because of the Electoral College, all of the states votes go to the rigged party.

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      I feel less sympathetic for many conservative states than this image would encourage, but even though gerrymandering doesn’t impact presidential elections directly it does impact state legislatures who then control the rules around presidential elections.
      Every vote is counted, which is why there’s focus on voter suppression. If your legislature decides to make it harder to vote in liberal or more densely populated areas, voter turnout will naturally skew conservative. Same for shifting requirements to focus on criteria less often met by demographics that don’t support you, or changing the criteria for purging the voter registry and making it harder to register.

      • teslasaur@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Read a bit of the Kemp wiki and found this unrelated gem:

        “Georgia was one of 14 states that used electronic voting machines that produced no paper record, which election integrity experts say left elections vulnerable to tampering and technical problems”

        Well. I see no problems that could arise from that 😑

        I mean, technically still not any gerrymandering in the presidential elections. Just making sure we understand what the word means. Otherwise we can extend the meaning to say something like: poverty leads to zoning of the empoverished which leads to gerrymandering. That doesn’t mean that poverty = gerrymandering

    • cAUzapNEAGLb@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      Reminder that most states, while the majority may have gone for one candidate or the other, were still mostly under a 60/40 split

      The States with the most landslide victory for trump where all northern states, Wyoming, West Virginia, and North Dakota, and even those were just 70/30 splits.

      Thats many people who did not want this president. The South is not some unanimous bloc

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        4 hours ago

        Sometimes seeing the numbers is the most meaningful! Even in a 70/30 state that’s still 3 in 10 people who didn’t ask for this—maybe more if, as is sometimes found, Democrats gain more votes when polls become more accessible.

        Thanks for sharing!

    • Frog@lemmy.ca
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      18 hours ago

      The fact that Hillary Clinton can get nearly 3 million more votes and lose in 2016, and how Al Gore won the popular vote against George W. Bush in 2000 and somehow Florida, where the governor at the time was Jeb Bush, held significant power in deciding who the next president was going to be, is kinda fucked.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        18 hours ago

        technically the electoral college and gerrymandering are not the same thing, but yeah i would honestly totally agree that the EC belongs in the list of oppressive forces in the meme (i stole the post otherwise i would edit it lol)

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      18 hours ago

      no one claimed gerrymandering affects presidential elections, not directly certainly. but local regressive policies and disenfranchisement also hurt oppressed people daily; that’s why all three are up there.

      (one could make some pretty valid connections between local elections and lobbying money going towards national campaigns, so we can discuss that if you want but just to keep it accessible and evidence based for now)

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      8 hours ago

      There’s like a ton of comments in this thread already from people who say “I am a good person on your side being oppressed in this area” but go on tell them they’re wrong about existing lol

      • underscores@lemmy.zip
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        5 hours ago

        Trump got elected by your “good people” and also the Lemmy community is a niche, also anecdotes are not evidence.

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          4 hours ago

          Hey dude I just came here to spread a message of kindness to a minority of good people in tough geopolitical situations that we see them and are there for them, and that even though they might be surounded by evil actors and a history of violence and abuse, that we will fight for them.

          Your words and choices here are making that shitty. Check yourself. You’re being mean. Cheers.

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      15 hours ago

      thank you for proving exactly why this posts needs to exist. class consciousness, not culture war.

      • betterdeadthanreddit@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Given the luxury of that choice, I’d be right there with you but sometimes we just have to fight the war that is waged upon us even if that means stepping down off our high horses to do so. “At least I was polite” won’t do me much good when Jim-Bob and Jethro (between moonshine-fueled arguments over whose turn it is to get their sister pregnant again) blow my head off for being a filthy Yankee.

        • CorruptCheesecake@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          These backwoods redneck pieces of shit you describe are the fucking scum of the earth. It’s frustrating how they live in their own little white trash world, forever insulated from the consequences of their actions and beliefs. They have the state, the church, and their community enabling them in their ignorance. I wish I could pluck one of them out of their sleepy little mudhole town and drop them in the bay area and watch them have a fucking aneurism after being treated the way they treat outsiders. The difference however is that they would deserve it for being Nazi trash.