Assuming America exists in 20 years blah blah blah

      • SSJ2Marx [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        Same. The camp who thinks that Afghanistan and Iraq were totally justified, but the Dems would have done them better, thinks that Dubya just wasn’t smart enough.

        • ziggurter [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          5 months ago

          TBF some also think that Iraq and Afghanistan were just “regrettable mistakes” or that they might have been crimes, but gee-shucks-oh-well-shrug, that’s just how politics go.

          And to be “fair” the orders of magnitude might have been different, but if they look too closely at the process of how the war machine ran, they might have to admit that Democratic presidents have also been war criminals. Like, if they get too uptight about “Bush’s wars”, then right around the corner is the fact that Obama took us from bombing two countries to continuously bombing like seven countries, in the span of a couple years. And similarly for executive authority, domestic spying, deportations, etc.

          They can’t afford to be too honestly critical. They just have to pretend that what’s going on right now is different and exceptional, and no: of course it isn’t exactly the same “lesser-evil” choice they’ve demanded you make (or at least accept) over and over and over again for generations!

          So IMO some kind of at least vaguely rehabilitative amnesia is actually pretty necessary. It might take a slightly different form with Trump than with Dubya, but it’s still going to have to be there.

    • underisk@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      I once got heavily downvoted when suggesting that Andrew Jackson, Nixon, Reagan or either Bush were all easily worse. I think you’re giving them too much credit.

        • ziggurter [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          5 months ago

          Not quite “ownership”, but reminder that Bill Clinton (and almost-president Hillary Clinton) used prison slave labor in the Arkansas governor’s mansion, and enjoyed it quite thoroughly according to Hillary’s own writing…

            • ziggurter [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              5 months ago

              Nathan Robinson wrote about it. He quotes directly from her book It Takes a Village:

              Clinton was, however, generous enough to allow inmates from Arkansas prisons to work as unpaid servants in the Governor’s Mansion. In It Takes a Village, Hillary Clinton writes that the residence was staffed with “African-American men in their thirties,” since “using prison labor at the governor’s mansion was a longstanding tradition, which kept down costs.” It is unclear just how longstanding the tradition of having chained black laborers brought to work as maids and gardeners had been. But one has no doubt that as the white residents of a mansion staffed with unpaid blacks, the Clintons were continuing a certain historic Southern practice. (Hillary Clinton did note, however, that she and Bill were sure not to show undue lenience to the sla…servants, writing that “[w]e enforced rules strictly and sent back to prison any inmate who broke a rule.”

              See Current Affairs: The Clintons Had Slaves.

              I read about it more extensively somewhere else, and I’ll see if I can find it. There was a place where she was also quoted as talking about loving the murderers especially, because they were allegedly even more docile than people who had committed less-violent offenses.

                • ziggurter [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                  5 months ago

                  As far as I can tell. The writing seems to indicate that.

                  Another quote from her same book furnished by fucking Glenn Beck, if you can stomach that source, with the bit about people convicted of murder:

                  When we moved in, I was told that using prison labor at the governor’s mansion was a longstanding tradition, which kept down costs, and I was assured that the inmates were carefully screened. I was also told the onetime murders were far the preferred security risks. The crimes of the convicted murderers who worked at the governor’s mansion usually involved a disagreement with someone they knew, often another young man in the neighborhood…

                  I saw and learned a lot as I got to know them better. We enforced rules strictly and sent back to prison any inmate who broke a rule. I discovered as I had been told I would, that we had far fewer disciplinary problems with inmates who were in for murder than with those who had committed property crimes. In fact, over the years we lived there, we became friendly with a few of them, African-American men in their thirties who had already served twelve to eighteen years of their sentences.

          • Vncredleader [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            5 months ago

            I mean the handsome general era was not good but those guys did at least serve the union, more than can be said for Woody who was a full lost causer