Nach der Wahl ist vor der Wahl - US-Politik nach Trump

  • Us-Soldaten sind US-Soldaten, nicht die cleversten, sozialsten oder humanistischsten ihrer Generation : )


  • Ouch, painful.

    Kamala Harris erklärt auf die Frage, ob sie eine Impfung Ende des Jahres nehmen würde, wenn ein Impfstoff vorläge:
    "I don't Trust Trump".


    "Ja, ok, aber die Gesundheitsexperten haben ja das letzte Wort."

    "Nein, Trump will muzzle them."


    "Eh, also würden Sie einen impfstoff nehmen?"
    "Wenn die Gesundheitsexperten es sagen..."

    Die Frau unterminiert hunderte, wenn nicht gar tausende von Virologen und Experten, und das generelle Vertrauen der Bevölkerung in sie und einen möglichen Impfstoff.

    Because Trump.


    Krass, wie inkompetent und dumm sich einige Demokraten geben.


  • Und wie betitelt das die Washington Post? "Biden misleading supporter"? "Biden betraying progressives once again"? "Sanders - being fooled or fooling?"?

    Nee:
    "Biden’s flexibility on policy could mean fierce fights if he wins"


    Der Mann ist halt "flexibel" :D

    Na, kriegt Sanders (und auch die "but but but Sanders hat so viel Einfluss wie nie, jetzt wo er Biden vor der Wahl unterstützt!!!!") was er eben sät.
    Schade für die Mittelschicht.

    Egal, "but Truuump!!!1!"

    Go, vote Joe!

  • Matt Taibbi analysiert - mal wieder großartig! - warum Trump eigentlich genau der passende Präsident für eine Gesellschaft im neoliberalen Spätkapitalismus ist, in der sich alles nur noch darum dreht, wie man mit dem richtigen sales pitch auch noch aus dem letzten Dreck Geld machen kann:

    The Trump Era Sucks and Needs to Be Over

    The race is tightening. Is America sure it's ready to give up its addiction to crazy?


    [...]Donald Trump is so unlike most people, and so especially unlike anyone raised under a conventional moral framework, that he’s perpetually misdiagnosed. The words we see slapped on him most often, like “fascist” and “authoritarian,” nowhere near describe what he really is, and I don’t mean that as a compliment. It’s been proven across four years that Trump lacks the attention span or ambition required to implement a true dictatorial regime. He might not have a moral problem with the idea, but two minutes into the plan he’d leave the room, phone in hand, to throw on a robe and watch himself on Fox and Friends over a cheeseburger.

    The elite misread of Trump is egregious because he’s an easily familiar type to the rest of America. We’re a sales culture and Trump is a salesman. Moreover he’s not just any salesman; he might be the greatest salesman ever, considering the quality of the product, i.e. himself. He’s up to his eyes in balls, and the parts of the brain that hold most people back from selling schlock online degrees or tchotchkes door-to-door are absent. He has no shame, will say anything, and experiences morality the way the rest of us deal with indigestion.[...]

    The problem was this all played into Trump’s hands. Instead of crafting a coherent, accessible plan to address the despair and cynicism that moved voters to even consider someone like Trump in the first place, Democrats instead turned politics into a paranoiac’s dream, imbuing Trump’s every move with earth-shattering importance as America became a single, never-ending, televised referendum on His Orangeness.

    The last four years have been like living through an O.J. trial where O.J. testifies all day (and tweets at night). Not only has this been maddening to those of us who desire a more Trumpless existence, especially since it’s constantly implied that being anything less than enthralled by the Trump show is an inexcusable show of privilege, it’s massively increased the chances of the whole exhausting spectacle continuing, by giving Trump something to run on again.[...]

    With the election just a few months away, the country is coming apart at the seams. In addition to a pandemic, an economic disaster, and cities simmering on the edge of civil war, we’re nursing what feels like a broken culture. Life under Trump has been like an endless Twitter war: infuriating, depressing, filling us all with self-loathing, but also addictive. He is selling an experience that everyone is buying, even the people who think they oppose him the most.

Jetzt mitmachen!

Du hast noch kein Benutzerkonto auf unserer Seite? Registriere dich kostenlos und nimm an unserer Community teil!