• Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I think you missed their point. They, and many others, don’t know why anyone would vote for Trump to begin with. Of course, I said the same thing when he first started being presented as a candidate for 2016. Like, of all people, him? But, here we are today, wondering if he actually had a chance for another term.

    A different voting method may have avoided him getting this far, but he really shouldn’t have even gotten out of the joke candidate category to begin with.

    • StinkySocialist@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      My bad Thanks for letting me know.

      I totally get that sentiment. I don’t really understand it either. I have family members that votes for Trump. It’s like their brain is rotted. They constantly use words that they don’t have a definition for like woke or CRT. They think everyone is lying except for Trump. It’s terrifying honestly.

      I think that’s about 30% to 40% of Americans sadly.

      • medgremlin@midwest.social
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        5 months ago

        In my experience, the people who vote Republican/conservative/Trump do so out of a certain amount of philosophical and emotional laziness and denial. Confronting the roots of our societal problems is difficult and uncomfortable, and takes a degree of empathy and emotional intelligence that many people simply do not have. To be clear; it is rarely their fault and frequently a result of the external influences and education during their formative years.

        The conservative viewpoint that has functionally become hereditary and contagious is that you are special and good, and the only people that are also special and good must have the same values, prejudices, advantages, and deficiencies that you do. This is why if you are nice and polite to conservatives they start spouting more and more bigoted bullshit. It’s because, in their mind, the only good people are the ones that agree with them, and they perceive you as “good” for extending basic decency to them.

        This cognitive shortcut is how I have succeeded in planting a lot of seeds of progressive values in the minds of my classmates at the conservative, religious school I accidentally ended up in. Each one of them is a single starfish, so to speak, but each individual moves the needle a little bit. Small progress is better than no progress.

        • StinkySocialist@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          I also attended a small private religious conservative school growing up. Happy to see someone like me out in the world with progressive politics. Good on you stranger. ☺️ I hope you’re living life to the fullest.

          That explanation makes sense to me. Good theory 👈😎

          • SOB_Van_Owen@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            I compare my time in a similar situation to being exposed to some nasty disease. It was misery at the time but has provided some inoculation against authoritarianism and demagoguery since. Also let me know sadists are a thing.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          5 months ago

          This is why if you are nice and polite to conservatives they start spouting more and more bigoted bullshit

          I always interpret this as projecting their opinions. If you give the person nothing to suggest a specific political leaning and have a positive enough interaction it’s too easy for them to assume you hold the same values as you.

          I’ve honestly caught myself in the same, so I just try to stay apolitical in interactions at work until others reveal their opinions to me