• bizarroland@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    They don’t think we’re open minded and understanding.

    They think we’re ignorant of how the world works, condescending, and irrationally judgemental.

    I’m not saying this is how we ARE, this is just how they view us, and because they view us like that from the very start, there is no opportunity for meaningful dialogue.

    It is bi-directional prejudice, and only by acts of understanding and patience and wisdom can that be overcome.

    • apfelwoiSchoppen@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Agreed, for the most part. I’m never going to be impartial and seek understanding with a racist Nazi. They will have to understand my fist.

      • RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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        1 month ago

        That’s fun to say, but where they balk is they think you draw too big of a circle around groups to label them “nazis.”

        So to them, you may as well think anyone who likes guns is a nazi.

        • ObliviousEnlightenment@lemmy.world
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          30 days ago

          Well they should stop actingike nazis if theyre gonna be so fragile about it. No amount of you explaining their mindset will make that mindset okay

          • RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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            30 days ago

            My suggestion to you would be to leave the virtue signaling to politicians and the figuring out how they work in order to beat them to the adults in the room.

      • krash@lemmy.ml
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        29 days ago

        What if the angle would be that you understand the underlying needs and feelings that are being expressed as support for Nazism?

        • what_was_not_said@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          “Historians have a word for Germans who joined the Nazi party, not because they hated Jews, but out of a hope for restored patriotism, or a sense of economic anxiety, or a hope to preserve their religious values, or dislike of their opponents, or raw political opportunism, or convenience, or ignorance, or greed.

          That word is “Nazi.” Nobody cares about their motives anymore.

          They joined what they joined. They lent their support and their moral approval. And, in so doing, they bound themselves to everything that came after. Who cares any more what particular knot they used in the binding?”

          ― A.R. Moxon

        • Ellen_musk_ox@lemm.ee
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          28 days ago

          What if you showed us evidence for that actually working in any meaningful sense, in order to stop people enabling fascists?

    • TheFogan@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      Pretty true, obviously most racist biggots don’t see themselves as racist biggots. They don’t see us as “open minded” they see us as close minded to their views.

      • skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        Depends on the person. I’ve been told to my face without a hint of irony that “you’re so open minded all your brains fell out”.

        • bizarroland@fedia.io
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          1 month ago

          I spent most of my childhood being repeatedly informed by my incredibly Republican family that I lack common sense.

          Yet, I have the common sense to know that if you let people do whatever the fuck they want to do with their own bodies and lives then they’ll stay the fuck out of your body and your life.

          Perhaps that is an uncommon sense. However, it should be a common sense but the people who claim to have common sense fail to understand that consistently.

          Maybe common sense is not all it’s cracked up to be.

          • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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            30 days ago

            Common sense is a thought terminator. It’s just “everyone who’s smart agrees with this”. It’s common sense you shouldn’t inject any aspect of a disease causing pathogen into people. It’s common sense that you can’t burn so much stuff you make the whole sky smoky or permanently warm the planet. It’s common sense that you don’t share an ancestor with an oak tree. Now none of that is true. You should get vaccines, uncontrolled combustion creates smog and contributes to global warming, and all eukaryotic organisms share a common ancestor. But if you phrase things right and say it’s obvious people will agree with your false statements and think people are over educated idiots for being right.

          • r3g3n3x@lemmy.world
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            30 days ago

            The bigger obstacle the left and right have to finding common ground is the hypocrisy of body autonomy. Vaccines, women’s rights, trans rights, drugs, health choices and more derived of things like this all boil down to an individual decision to do what they want with their own body and no one has any consistent logic. This is just one source of disagreement.

            We’re way past the point of needing ranked choice voting to allow people to truly support the ideas the most identify with without being lumped in with other groups simply to avoid loss of voting power in a first past the post environment.

            • chuymatt@startrek.website
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              29 days ago

              No. It is consistent. Bodily autonomy for everyone. You don’t get to go into the populations as a plague rat and kill others with your idiocy, though. That impinges on their freedoms.

        • Zink@programming.dev
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          1 month ago

          Being convinced to give a shit about other people just shows that you’re gullible, to them.

      • bizarroland@fedia.io
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        1 month ago

        And, their views typically do not include the things that most of the people I know hate the most about the platform that they ascribe to.

        They just think being Republican will make them wealthier or fix problems in the country or make the world a better place.

        The single issue voters have an opinion on a single issue and everything else doesn’t matter compared to that one thing.

        They don’t care about all of the bad as long as the single bit of good can be accomplished, and they don’t care if you think that single bit of good is a bad thing.

        They don’t care to talk to or be dissuaded by their family members who are not approaching them with a spirit of love and care for them.

        Beside that, it’s not mentally or emotionally healthy to live spring-loaded with ontological traps that can be fired off with a single phrase to bring down judgment and the fires of hell on the people you meet.

        They’re not going to want to hear you if that’s what you’re bringing to the table.

        • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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          1 month ago

          Of course, after Trump in the white house, it’s kinda irrelevant.

          Historians have a word for Germans who joined the Nazi party, not because they hated Jews, but out of a hope for restored patriotism, or a sense of economic anxiety, or a hope to preserve their religious values, or dislike of their opponents, or raw political opportunism, or convenience, or ignorance, or greed.
          That word is “Nazi.” Nobody cares about their motives anymore.
          They joined what they joined. They lent their support and their moral approval. And, in so doing, they bound themselves to everything that came after. Who cares any more what particular knot they used in the binding?

          • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 month ago

            Sure, let’s just casually label half the fucking country as Nazis. That definitely worked last time.

            Prime fucking example of exactly what their first comment was talking about.

            • voracitude@lemmy.world
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              30 days ago

              “We” aren’t labeling “them” anything. They literally sided with Neo-Nazis. People carrying swastika flags in support of Trump, and you think “not Nazis” were ok with that? Sorry friend, but no. If someone is okay to march with Nazis, they’re a fucking Nazi.

              • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                29 days ago

                I must have missed something if every single Trump voter was out there marching with the ones carrying the nazi flag. Maybe I should get my eyes checked, as I sure didn’t see tens of millions of people in those photos.


                Stop misusing literally.


                I understand what you’re getting at, but I vehemently disagree that guilt by association can be reasonably applied to the entirety of a group this fucking large. Has the same feel to me as being distrustful of every person with dark skin because of skewed crime statistics.

                • voracitude@lemmy.world
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                  29 days ago

                  I’m not misusing the word. They saw Nazi flags flying and at best they thought

                  Well, I might not agree with what they’re saying, but they have a right to say it

                  Except that what a Nazi flag says is incompatible with what this country should be, with what these people who think themselves “patriots” profess to believe. You don’t think guilty by association is fair? Explain to me why not, please. In what way is “Yep, being on the same side as Nazis is fine” not just being a fucking Nazi? I will be positively floored if you can come up with a single reasonable scenario to convince me there’s any difference.

                  And don’t think this is in bad faith, either. If you can convince me you might just give me a fighting chance to forgive my family who went off the deep end. It is actually quite important to me, I’ve just given up there’s any hope of getting through to them after so long. Especially now he won.

            • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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              30 days ago

              It’s not a nice way to say it, but it is important to distinguish conservatism from the current situation where you have conservatives supporting nazis, planning concentration camps, and planning to pull a Hong Kong-style silencing of the opposition.

              It is important to tell conservatives that the guy they voted for has gone off the deep end. For diplomatic reasons, I would probably avoid emotional words and say something along the lines of “we’re concerned that Trump plans to illegally block the democratic party from elections and trans people and immigrants may have to flee the country in the face of workplace discrimination or outright persecution and violence. His politicization of the military could lead to another coup attempt.”

              But that’s just part of how you defuse fascism, those are the words you use with both Putin supporters and Trump supporters.

              There is no place on earth and no time in history where “guh, inflation” is a reasonable excuse to vote for a nazi.

    • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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      30 days ago

      They think we’re ignorant of how the world works, condescending, and irrationally judgemental.

      Lol. Yep Though in fairness, I am genuinely judging them so fucking hard.

    • hddsx@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      Hi,

      Person struggling to still call self conservative. I don’t like lefties either - they hear the world “conservative” and thing MAGA Nazi shitheads immediately. And they are constantly condescending and judgmental, yes.

      But that doesn’t change the fact that if you voted for Trump, you are either a piece of shit or you’re stupid.

      It also doesnt mean that we who can understand Trump has now determined he can and will abuse his power shouldn’t try to dialogue with Trump voters without being shitty to them. You’re not going to turn a vote (if there still is one next time) by being an asshat. Just make sure they’re not hardcore Trump diehards because time is precious.

      • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Hi!

        A while back I myself made the sometimes painful journey from a conservative to the progressive I consider myself now. I know you didn’t ask, but here’s some stuff to keep in mind.

        The internet has no place for subtlety. People desperately want the dopamine rush that comes from righteous fury, defending one’s viewpoint and crushing those who disagree. It’s true of a lot of people, and I’ll be honest, I’m guilty of it on occasion. It just feels so damn good to be right.

        But in my experience, most people in life don’t really act that way. I mean, in high school I occasionally got shit on by people who were “lefties,” but I was usually asking for it. More generally, people were much more likely to ask me questions and discuss our differences. They may have been judging me, but I never got that vibe. It’s just easier to see the person you’re talking to as a fellow human in person. And those people were integral in helping me realize that a lot of the stuff I was seeing online about feminazis and whatnot was simply more rage product, designed to get that part of the brain pumping and let me feel good and superior to someone else.

        Removed from the left vs right rage online, I found that it became increasingly difficult to call myself “conservative.” Not because I was worried about how people would think of me, but rather because the more people I met and the more I learned about the world, the harder it was to reconcile what I knew with the views I had held. And when I would try to provide context or data to my fellow conservatives, they refused to listen. Anything that didn’t reinforce the views they held, they didn’t want to hear.

        So much of what I thought I knew about “lefties” was from online takes and screenshots that others shared, but none of that matched my experience with real people in real life. And I’ve been so grateful I had the chance to spend time with people with significantly different lived experiences from my own who didn’t shun me for my views but were friendly and helped me become a more empathetic person.

        Of course, this goes both ways. The average conservative doesn’t want to kill gay people or black people. They aren’t represented by the extremes either. Generally speaking, people just want to live their lives. I truly think one of the biggest differences between progressive and conservative mindsets is about how many people whose lives are different from your own you’ve gotten to know. It helps us be less afraid of one another. It’s part of why densely populated areas tend to be more progressive, I think.

        Anyway, I wish you luck in your journey. Hope you didn’t mind my musing here!

      • PunnyName@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Here’s my problem with the “not all conservatives” mind frame: Nazis and maga have security attached themselves onto conservatives, and conservatives who “aren’t those guys” aren’t doing anything to eradicate those parasites.

        If you have 10 conservatives and 1 Nazi at the dinner table, you have 11 Nazis.

        • hddsx@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          I agree with the Nazi statement.

          I did try to eradicate them. I voted Harris. The fact that so many people voted Trump after seeing what he did is what makes me question calling myself a conservative.

          But I’m just some person in a some county in some state. I’m not a registered Democrat or Republican. Other than voting, I’m not sure what I /can/ do

          • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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            30 days ago

            The fact that you’re trying to figure it out is the important part. It’s important to self-reflect and define your ideologies, not by what others have told you to believe, but by what you personally believe.

            Also, it’s okay to not take a label. It makes sense to want to identify yourself as an individual before attempting to identify yourself as part of a group.

            • hddsx@lemmy.ca
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              29 days ago

              The thing is, I don’t think my fundamentals have changed at all:

              1. The purpose of a government is to better the lives of its citizens
              2. The constitution is a living document and was intended to be modified as time passes
              3. Nobody is infallible. We can all misunderstand things
              4. We shouldn’t change things unless there is evidence that things need to be changed (this is the conservative part)
              5. You should strive for a moral viewpoint that everyone can apply equally. There is no us vs you.
              6. Political parties are a detriment to the people
              7. You should be able to vote for whoever you want. (George Washington’s viewpoint)
              8. Compromise is generally good.
              9. We should have the freedom to choose ideas
              10. Work within the system to find what needs to be changed. Then, change the system to accommodate
              11. Conservatives and liberals should agree on the end goal, even if they disagree on the me tbh is to get there.

              I’m a bit of a centrist. I think we should always take the middle ground, after passing the options through a moral filter. In other words, the moral middle ground between genocide and don’t kill people isn’t to kill some people. It’s to not kill people at all.

              I don’t like things like feminism, black history month, and pride month. However, I understand their importance. To me, female, black, and LGBTQA+ are just all people. They should all have human rights.

              Don’t like feminists? Join them. The point of feminism is to create a world where feminism doesn’t exist. We’ll just all be humans. Black history is American history and it should be included year round. LGBTQA+ is fine so long as everything about it is consensual - and it is.

              Don’t like the gays? Don’t be gay. You don’t have the right to infringe on other people’s human rights. We don’t need to make a big deal about it, or have a month of celebration. They should be able to just exist. My only objection to LGBTQA+ is porn. I should be able to choose between penis and not penis, but that is easily rectified behind the scenes.

              I have viewpoints liberals hate: it’s okay to address the adverse side effects of marijuana (ie. Disproportionate imprisonment of a distinguishable subgroup — not subclass — of people). It should be okay to research marijuana. It is not okay to legalize it before the experts have sufficient data and have evaluated such data. The best way to battle climate change in transportation isn’t electric vehicles. Lithium ion batteries are unstable. The best way is to let me drive whatever car I want, and provide places to do so (ie. Race track that’s a toll road), and install public transportation. Then, you slowly take away lanes until there is only one lane and the shoulder to get by in case of an accident.

              I have views Republicans hate. While I enjoy firearms, I think the second amendment interpretation ignores the precondition of the militia. The president should not be immune to criminal prosecution of any kind. Fascism because your “team” is on top is still not OK. Don’t like abortions? Don’t get one. Religion should not guide government policy.

              Like, isn’t it better if things are data driven (and filtered for bias)?

              Universal healthcare makes sense by the numbers. The more people you represent, the more leverage you have during negotiation. Sure, your taxes go up - but that’s how government works…

              Fighting climate change makes sense. If climate is change is real and we ignore it, the world becomes nigh unlivable. If climate change is real and we do something about, life is better for all the organisms that live on earth. If climate change is false and we do nothing, cool. If climate change is false and we fight climate change, we can all breathe better. What’s the downside here?

              Fines should not be a fixed amount. It should be based on percentage of income. $300 fine for some making $8/hr for 8 hours a day is, assuming average of 30.437 days a month, is approximately 15.5% of gross monthly income. Whereas if you make, say, $60,000/year assuming an average of is just 6%. And the actual spending power goes down drastically more, the less you take home.

              Etc etc etc

              • svtdragon@lemmy.world
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                28 days ago

                I’m a pretty progressive guy and I don’t think there’s much in here to disagree with. The only nit I would pick is that inertia isn’t a great argument to keep things the way they are. That is, “we’ve always done it this way” isn’t a great reason to do anything.

                Your framing of conservatism is in line with the Eisenhower era when we weren’t linked into this existential crisis about the concept of governance. But for the last twenty years (at least) the American right has been against the very idea that the government should govern.

                The left is trying to argue about who it should serve, taking its existence as a precondition, and the right is trying to dismantle it without regard for who it serves. As a result, we’re pretty much irrecoverably talking past each other.

                • hddsx@lemmy.ca
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                  28 days ago

                  It’s not so much that it’s keep things the way they are because we’ve always done it this way.

                  It’s more, maintain order while we figure out if the system works. If it doesn’t, change it. I don’t think it’s as much inertia as it is there are a lot of things on the agenda. Let’s change what changes would be more effective first

    • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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      30 days ago

      It is bi-directional prejudice, and only by acts of understanding and patience and wisdom can that be overcome.

      Those acts need to be bidirectional too. And guess what?

      • josefo@leminal.space
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        1 month ago

        that’s why the word was invented, to replace the obvious intolerance for openness

      • dan@upvote.au
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        1 month ago

        I still haven’t looked into what “woke” actually means, but from what I can tell, it seems to mean anything far-right people don’t like.

        • Soggy@lemmy.world
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          30 days ago

          In left-leaning spaces it means “cognizant of the injustice pervading society”. On the right it means “uppity”.

          • nixcamic@lemmy.world
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            30 days ago

            cognizant of the injustice pervading society

            I mean that’s what it means to people on the right also they just think that’s a bad thing.

        • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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          29 days ago

          Yeah, seems like “woke” is anything we’re not supposed to approve of this month.

          I do find the word “woke” incredibly useful.

          The moment the word exits someone’s mouth (as a complaint), I save a ton of energy on how to handle any further information they share (highly suspect).

          Edit: I’ve actually discovered some great art and culture by being warned away from it’s “wokeness”, too.

    • bradd@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Also there is no way the second dude isn’t going. He’s going and hes going to bs and eat and drink beer and belch, no matter who else is going to be there.

      • nomous@lemmy.world
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        29 days ago

        If it’s anything like my brothers family they’ll be the first ones in line for food and the first ones to leave too.

    • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      Yup they think they are the open minded ones or whomever doesn’t immediately fall down to them and refer to their words as gospel as not open minded or interested in ‘a discussion’.

  • HootinNHollerin@lemmy.world
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    30 days ago

    Be me

    Liberal uncle in conservative/ trump family

    Fly to red state for family member’s funeral

    Get made fun of by all family members in public at the funeral reception

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      My grandma never met you. She lived to be 103, and died last October (2023).

      My grandma loved you. She wanted you to do well, and be happy. Just as she did with everyone on earth. It’s physically impossible for her to host a dinner big enough to feed everyone on earth. But the logistical impossibility is the only reason she didn’t do it.

      My cousin is a lesbian. She had been married to a decent man, had two kids. Good family man. Married for nearly 10 years before she discovered she was lesbian. The breakup was civil. He did nothing wrong. They both still loved each other, and loved the kids. He was still welcome at the table, as was my cousins new partner. My cousins mom was NOT accepting. When my aunt tried making a scene, my grandma said “Melinda…I won’t have hate at this table. You love your daughter. I don’t ask you to agree with your daughters lifestyle. But I do ask you do not bring hate into my home.”

      My grandma was a teacher in her 20s. She lived in a small but growing suburb, and essentially raised the whole town. She got promoted several times as the years went on. Eventually being the district superintendant. She LITERALLY was responsible for raising thousands of kids, who were everywhere from the boomer generation to the millenials.

      She had a simple philosophy. Which was that she loved you. She would put aside the world to hear what you had to say. My grandpa used to joke that when WWII broke out, she was having tea with the neighbors and helping raise their kids. Just discussing the day. Choas and war breaking out across the globe, but she was determined to hear about you. And for the kids, she would teach them that everybody was different, and we need to love everybody for who they are. Not who you want them to be.

      And she loved everyone. Even you. Even though she never met you. She always said “Everyone is welcome in this home, as long as they take off their hat at the dinner table, leave hate out of their hearts, and tell me about their day.”

      The only time I ever remember her saying anything negative, was somebody had said during trumps first term something he was doing in office.

      Her reply was “I just do not like that man.”

      AIRHORNS!!!

      I know that sounds so non-aggressive, but for her to say she didn’t like someone would be like a world leader declairing WWIII. The room literally went quiet.

      So I try to live my life to keep making Gram proud. Accept everyone, even if you disagree with them. You can’t just accept those you get along with, and not create an echo chamber.

      So if you’re ever in Cleveland, you can have a meal with me. And maybe when you fly out of state to be with family, you can teach them about letting the hate go.

        • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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          30 days ago

          She’s my hero in life.

          My dad is a loud stubborn alcoholic. Someone who just forces his way into being “right”. Two of my three aunts would just bicker and fight. The third aunt would usually be reading a book, or watching a documentary. She had 3 masters degrees.

          From those 4 children my grandma had came 4 different families. With that, meant that back in the 90s, when everybody was still alive, but before the great grandkids came, meant that there could be roughly 40 people in this small condo, which was essentially just one medium sized open plan living room, and a seperate kitchen.

          So you’d have my dad barking orders at someone, my aunts fighting amongst themselves. Uncles loudly argueing sports. Grandkids all running around, doing cartwheels, jumping off the couch. Basically a lot of noise and chaos in a very small space.

          And then my grandma would very quietly say “Excuse me”.

          Whole room stops. Dead silent. Room full of respect. And with a hushed voiced, barely louder than a whipsper she would ask “would someone check on the potatoes? I wouldn’t like them to burn.”

          14 people, her kids, grandkids, the uncles, all rush the kitchen, and checking potatoes. Like it only takes one person to do that. I get that. But the uncles are the only people she didn’t have a major part of raising, and even they respect her. Most of them met her when they were older teenagers. So she very much had the whole neighborhood mom thing going on in the 50s/60s.

          But just imagine how that works. Room full of chaos comes to a dead silent stop because a woman in her 80s wants to make sure everyone gets a baked potato, and mashed potatoes, and sweet potatoes.

          Doesn’t matter what she wanted. If gram wanted something, the world stops for her. And I was 40 years old last year when she died. I never once heard her yell. Yet the idea of her needing to is completely foreign to me. Because EVERYONE wanted to make sure her every need was met. Not through fear, but from a place of love and respect. She had taught us life lessions since most of us were born.

          That’s why I don’t use past tense. It’s not that she “was” my hero. She IS my hero. Now and forever.

      • zmrl@lemmy.zip
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        30 days ago

        Your grandma sounds like a terrific human being. Sorry to hear that she has passed. Thanks for sharing.

  • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    30 days ago

    Non-conservarives: I don’t want to associate with people who voted for a bigot.

    Conservatives: Wow, so much for the tolerant left! I guess we all were not fam in the klerb!

    This was basically a Facebook post o saw someone post. Like, how can you, with a straight face, say shit like “I guess we aren’t all fam in the klerb” when you voted for the one kicking people out of the damn klerb?

  • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    It’s weird, in my family the black sheep are the ultra conservatives whereas everyone else leans from Liberal (at the most Right Leaning) to “Let’s burn down a mansion and eat the first non-servant who runs out alive!”

    I was kinda glad that the uncle who was “Always trying to be my friend, always hip and cool and with it despite actually being none of those things and instead coming off as an annoying asshole.” basically stopped talking to me or even acknowledging my existence beyond telling his son/my cousin that I was possessed by Demons that made me cut off my dick and that’s why they gotta get the Mexicans outta America before they teach Evolution to white children (Barely an exaggeration), and his son/my cousin was smart enough to basically say “My Dad says you’re evil, but I’m actually going to be somewhat nice although still an annoying little bible thumping shit, because if you’re evil you have all the Satanic Video Games in VR!”

    and I said “Well at least you have some level of thinking for yourself, here’s my Occulus (I’m not calling it a Meta), go nuts.”

    Lately only my Aunt has been coming to Thanksgiving Dinners while the uncle and cousin have been staying at home, apparently she’s starting to get sick of their Right Wing Christofascist Bullshit.

    For the record, she’s Anti-LGBT, Pro-Trump, and believes they eat dogs in Ohio, she’s just sane by comparison to her husband and son.

    Like it’s the difference between “Trump’s racist, but at least he’s not a Democrat” Vs. “Trump is literally the Messiah, We’re gonna send the infidels to Christ for Judgement!”, Far Right Vs. QAnon Shit

    We’re very civil about it in the hopes that she and hopefully the son too, can break away from her husband’s nonsense.

    For the record: My aunt is the one related by blood, not the uncle.

    I will say this, I hate Reddit Atheists; the kind that jump on your case for shouting “Oh God!” when you’re scared and worship the Sacred Texts of St. Hitchens. But if every religious person I ever met was like my uncle and his son, I’d totally get why Reddit Atheists are the way they are…

    Last time the kid came to Thanksgiving, he was talking to my sister about Jurassic Park… Then during dinner when I was just making conversation, (Everyone eats at the same table, we don’t have a separate “Kid’s Table” sides they were in their late teens anyway) I made the mistake of treating dinosaurs as if they were real and not an elaborate creation of Hollywood.

    He kept chanting “The Big Bang is a Faerie Tale, not a theory!” until I “apologized to Jesus for my blasphemy.”

    They actually had to take him out of public school and put him in a private Fundie school because he kept failing his classes due to trying to claim most of History and Science didn’t actually exist on his assignments.

    I’m deeply worried; one day that guy (He’s an adult now) is going to leave the bubble created for him by his Church and his father, and he will not be even slightly equipped to begin to comprehended the world outside.

      • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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        30 days ago

        Mom and Dad have to die some time…

        It may happen when he’s old and grey, rolling outside on his futurstic hover wheelchair wondering why people say it’s the hover-servos that make his chair fly and not Jesus.

    • Sine_Fine_Belli@lemmy.world
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      30 days ago

      Tell me about it, I don’t like my mom’s transphobia. I also don’t like the fact that she likes trump. At least she’s not a Christian Nationalist yet.

      My dad is pretty chill at least and I try to be on good terms with him.

  • Bilb!@lem.monster
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    1 month ago

    In my family, the more conservative guys are the clean shaven ones. Weird.

    • GHiLA@sh.itjust.works
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      29 days ago

      puts his personal Bible on the table at family gatherings

      looks back at it every now and again to see if anyone notices it

      …I know the type. We have one or two.

  • rational_lib@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    “but if you were so open minded why won’t you listen to Joe Rogan?” Actual point made by Trump supporting relative

  • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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    28 days ago

    When I drive, i think about how often people are traveling to places they don’t want to go. If only we could all stay in our basements. If only we could be free.

  • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    My family all gets along great - no obnoxious relatives, no buried conflicts surfacing, etc. I always wonder how many people’s Thanksgivings are like the extremely overworked sitcom trope and how many are just happy get-togethers.

  • MacN'Cheezus@lemmy.today
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    30 days ago

    If they don’t kill you for being too open-minded and compassionate, you might live long enough go see yourself become the racist uncle

    • Ech@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Nah. The “old age makes you conservative” adage is bs. I may not always be precisely on top of current trends, but I’ll never be a racist, hateful shithead just because I lived a bit longer.

      • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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        30 days ago

        Me in my twenties - mocked for my idealism and the related accessories on my car and person that proclaimed such ideals.

        Me in my thirties - starting to feel a little beat down by life, really hard to get myself to care about more than keeping a roof over the family’s head.

        Me in my forties - starting that stereotypical rightward slide, spent a few years listening to some folks I shouldn’t have, which didn’t help.

        Also me in my forties - started to realize on topics I knew something about, those people I was listening to were full of shit. Stopped listening. That idealism of my twenties was quietly going “Hey I’m still here, I just need a little attention!” I couldn’t hear it for a long time, but it never stopped tugging.

        Me in my fifties - I’m not sure what fucking happened, but I started to feel more like my twenties than I had in a long time. Still struggling, still paycheck to paycheck. But more believing in the good people around me. More believing in those ideals from my twenties. More mentally flexible than I’d felt in a long while. Peace and love for everyone.

        Me still in my fifties - eat the rich, fuck Republicans, and fuck Democrats for pretending to care all these years. I need to find politicians who represent me, because it sure as hell isn’t these donor-controlled far-right and center-right assholes.

      • MacN'Cheezus@lemmy.today
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        28 days ago

        I’m old enough to understand that every time you think “this will never happen to me” it’s DEFINITELY going to happen to you.

        • Ech@lemm.ee
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          28 days ago

          Good thing I don’t value the opinion of misogynists.

  • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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    29 days ago

    Attitude like this would make the problem worse, this is not how they see it and if they were to see this comic, it would push them away more.