• AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    You are right of course. It doesn’t make it any easier to stomach.

    Congratulations on your citizenship, for whatever that’s worth these days. Honestly, I’m emotionally affected by this election, and I’m going to say a lot of things that aren’t necessarily indicative of my overall feelings about this country. For all of our faults, it’s still a country of amazing opportunity and privilege compared to a lot of other countries on this planet. I still love it here, despite being at odds with over half of my fellow citizens on a regular basis. So really, and genuinely, congratulations on becoming a citizen, and welcome to the fold.

    • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      privilege

      Do you think that privilege comes from the enlightenment of our politicians? From the population as a whole just working harder than in other places? Is it perhaps conjured from magic? Or would you consider that it was privilege derived from the well-documented and brutal exploitation of the global south?

    • sigmaklimgrindset@sopuli.xyz
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      16 hours ago

      Thank you! I’m very lucky in that I was claiming what was already a birth right through my parents, so my citizenship was really not as tough as people actually immigrating and going through the whole intrusive process.

      I still don’t consider the US my “home” per se, not like my birth country, but I’ve met some wonderful people, and my state is pretty blue, so I have no doubt my governor will be fighting the orange clown tooth and nail for four years. That being said, man the political atmosphere here can be…well, let’s just say I’m getting used to the “American exceptionalism” aspects of the culture.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Idk how long you’ve been here, but this is not normal. This is very wrong, and it’s disturbing how many people don’t see how far we’ve fallen. Politics has been an ever-present and disturbing part of our lives since 2016. It wasn’t like this before. But when an attention seeking narcissist entered the race, the media outlets decided to pounce upon his every worthless word, rather than ignoring him like the incompetent joke that he is. They gave him an outsized voice when he should have none, and he’s caused nothing but harm ever since.

        I don’t know what the future looks like from this day forward. It could end up being nothing more than a 4 year grift (or however many years clown show lives if less than 4), or it could end up being a serious challenge to our democracy. I’m not looking forward to it, but it is decided, so here we go.

        That said, I know a lot of refugees who came to this country 45-50 years ago and their lives & kid’s lives are immeasurably better than they would be in their home country. For reasons like that, I’ll always fight for what America represents. I’m hoping some day soon Americans remember our real ideals and start living them more truly.

        • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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          7 hours ago

          Politics has been an ever-present and disturbing part of our lives since 2016.

          Politics was ever-present before that, it’s ever present in human society, it’s just that some privileged middle class people choose to ignore it and largely succeed when their NPR ASMR isn’t blasting them with “ORANG MAN BAD” every hour of the day to brow beat them into caring.

          • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            It was not, but I’m not going to sit here and argue with a kid about things I lived through. And no, I wasn’t middle-class, I was deeply poor.

            • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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              6 hours ago

              Perhaps you’re conflating “the electoral dog and pony show” for “politics” then, because if you were “deeply poor,” it’s hard to imagine not dealing with politics. Easy example, the cops are a pretty political institution, acting as the agents of establishment powers. Hell, the enclosure of the commons and the resultant practically monopolistic effect that landlording has is also pretty political, liberals just don’t talk about it (other than Adam Smith).

              • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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                6 hours ago

                It wasn’t shoved in our faces 24 hours per day. Of course we were affected by the laws which govern us, but outside of much shorter election cycles, the government wasn’t something that normal people discussed every day, all day. The politicians did their things in the background and we lived our lives. You cannot understand how exhausting this new reality is unless you’ve experienced what it was like before what you referred to as “the dog and pony show”.

                • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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                  5 hours ago

                  What you’re describing is a low consciousness of politics, whether due to desperation, poor education, or whatever else, since those moment-to-moment experiences generally could productively be described as political.

                  My argument, and you might actually sympathize with it, is that the only fundamental difference here is the media screaming at people about this nonstop. Seriously, lineral people who like to fancy themselves as “staying up to date” with political goings-on are basically in an abusive relationship with the media that complete contorts their ideas of the past and future to promote the “this is the most important election of our livetimes” bullshit that they’ve done three elections in a row now. It’s not what the politicians are doing, it’s this screaming from the media that is frankly wrecking the mental health of the people who listen to it regularly.

                  I actually do remember what it was like before then and a few months into it starting, whatever you might say of my decision making, I just disconnected for two years because I already hate Trump and don’t need a thousand headlines a day that ORANGMANBADORANGMANBADORANGMANBAD. It ended up being a good opportunity to learn about politics from a historical perspective and get some distance from this shit (and ultimately, that was a major factor in my becoming a communist, but we aren’t here for that).

                  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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                    5 hours ago

                    Right on, yes we can call it that. So the average person existed in more of a low consciousness state back then. And why wouldn’t they? The government systems operated as they do, and there wasn’t much an average person could do to change those things in-between election cycles.

                    You’re right that most of this is the media’s doing, and then the rest is having attention whores as leaders. Notice that Biden wasn’t clamoring for headlines every day of his four years in office.

                    Now with social media people equate complaining online with activism and believe they’re somehow helping by yelling into the void non-stop. Or they’re just overwhelmed with the constant bombardment from the 24 hour news cycle, and constant interaction with people across the globe, and need to yell into the void for sanity, or companionship, or whatever. I’d put myself into that latter category these days, or at least these last few days.

                    I tuned out a few years ago myself. I was sick and tired of seeing Trump’s face and hearing his name all the time. I got off all of social media, bought some magazine subscriptions, and spent more time outdoors. It was wonderful. But I don’t know many other people doing that these days. It’s not like the old days where you can just be offline and have a vibrant social circle, and do your thing. A significant portion of the average person’s life -or at least the average person around me- is spent online. So eventually I came back online. I do actively avoid politics outside of elections though, and I have a pretty healthy block list going.

                    Thanks for engaging. I think we understand each other and aren’t quite as different as I thought from your original response.