Time for another political essay. If you’re not an American citizen or able to vote in this upcoming election, my apologies.
I make no secret that I fucking despise Donald Trump. I actually like Hillary Clinton, which seems to be a weird rarity considering the amount of good work she’s done and the fact that all of the bad press about her is the result of the Republicans trying (and failing) to tear her and her husband down for thirty years.
Trump is now trailing far behind Clinton, which I consider a cause for celebration. But it is NOT a cause for complacency.
The biggest landslide election in US history was the election of Warren G. Harding in 1920, when Harding won with about 60% of the vote to his opponent’s 34.2%.
Some polls are reporting Trump with as little as 35% of the popular vote right now.
If turnout is large enough and loud enough, we can make Donald Trump the least supported major candidate in US history. Since the recording of him bragging about sexual assault came out, he has turned to dragging the whole election into the mud by striking back at Bill Clinton’s affairs; the usual goal of that kind of tactic is to drive down voter turnout. Trump’s band of Redcaps is pretty much guaranteed to vote, so they figure if they reduce turnout enough, they’ll win.
I want their plan to fail. I want their plan to fail so fucking spectacularly that NO ONE will dare to run for President on a platform of thinly-veiled fascism again.
The Republicans thought the House of Representatives was safe this year. In 2010, they gerrymandered the shit out of district lines to keep the House safe for them for at least ten years. But there’s a problem with gerrymandering: if the demographics shift unexpectedly between censuses, then suddenly a lot of districts wind up flipping against the party that the gerrymandering was meant to support. And Donald Trump is driving away the Republicans’ most secure core of voters, the evangelicals. And as I’ve said before: Congress is MORE important than the presidency.
If turnout is strong enough, and if people vote down ballot, the possibility exists for a massive upset. A Democratic presidency, a Democratic House, a Democratic Senate. They’re within our grasp. All you need to do, voters, is show up.
Motherfuckers don’t want you to vote. Young people, people of color, women, LGBTQ+ folks–they want you to be scared away, or to be convinced that voting doesn’t matter. They want your voice silenced. Don’t give the fuckers the satisfaction of letting it happen.
GO VOTE. VOTE DOWN-BALLOT. MAKE TRUMP THE BIGGEST LOSER IN US HISTORY.
IF YOU CAN’T BE BOTHERED TO VOTE OUT OF CONVICTION, THEN DO IT OUT OF SPITE.
EVERYBODY ABSOLUTELY NEEDS TO READ THIS. Becauselike 95% of the people on this website have absolutely no clue whatsoever about what drives rural poor areas. This is ABUNDANTLY clear every time anything having to do with rural issues gets mentioned, or any time a “redneck” perspective gets brought up. I’m a card-carrying Democrat with a strong social-justice focus. I’m a progressive. But there are so many times I read things and go “well, I agree with the theory behind this and that it’s best for the country and the world, but it also has no clue about or provision for anything outside the big cities.” And if the post or article talks about conservative areas? I live deep in a red area of a red state, and usually such posts and articles are only about as accurate as a funhouse mirror. If that. This article, on the other hand, is SPOT ON. Some choice bits:
They’re getting the shit kicked out of them. I know, I was there. Step
outside of the city, and the suicide rate among young people fucking doubles. The recession pounded rural communities, but all the recovery went to the cities. The rate of new businesses opening in rural areas has utterly collapsed.
I live in a town of 700 people. We’re a lot more prosperous than most small towns in our area; but that is on shaky ground and could change in an instant. (Remember, “a lot more prosperous” means that 2/3 of the commercial buildings in town stand vacant, boarded up. In some of them, you can see daylight through the gaps in the boards, because the roof is caved in. And in a town of 700 people, 40 separate households needed help from the food pantry last year–that’s about 20% of the population. We’re still doing better than a lot of the surrounding towns.) We have a small school–pre-K through high school–and it graduates between ten and twenty kids a year. In the last decade, there have been three teen suicides in town.
We as liberals tend to have a lot of sympathy for urban poor living in
those kinds of conditions. We’ll defend them at the drop of a hat–and
we’re right to do so. But that sympathy disappears when it comes to the
rural poor. It doesn’t even register that they face most of the same
problems you get in the ghetto, with even fewer services and programs to
help. We’ll talk about rural racism and homophobia and sexism all
day–and all of that exists–but we don’t talk about the very real
poverty and hopelessness and other problems that they face.
You know what that does to a community? You know the kind of grinding hopelessness that causes it in the first place? When everything’s going to shit and the larger world doesn’t care, only mentions you if you’re the butt of the joke or they can proclaim their moral superiority?
If you were drowning in that every day, and somebody said they’d save
you (and kick all the assholes who laugh about you in the teeth while he
did it), wouldn’t you want to support him even if he was an asshole you
despised?
Now, you know and I know that Trump isn’t going to actually save them–he’d have to be able to come up with a coherent policy, for one, which, hah, ain’t going to happen. And also you and I know and I know that even if he did save all the coal mine and power plant my town depends on it would be disastrous for the whole world in the long run. But Hillary doesn’t really have any plans that might help rural areas like mine, either, and some of her plans would hasten our destruction. Most of them are, in the long run, better for America and the world. (Sure, the rural areas will continue their slow, grinding, painful death, while being mocked for their poverty and backwardness, but America as a whole will be better.) Try telling that to people watching their communities die and their kids and friends kill themselves or drown in bottles.
It really does feel like the worst of both worlds: all the ravages of
poverty, but none of the sympathy. “Blacks burn police cars, and those
liberal elites say it’s not their fault because they’re poor. My son
gets jailed and fired over a baggie of meth, and those same elites make
jokes about his missing teeth!” You’re everyone’s punching bag, one of
society’s last remaining safe comedy targets.
“The rural folk with the Trump signs in their yards say their way of life is dying, and you smirk and say what they really
mean is that blacks and gays are finally getting equal rights and they
hate it. But I’m telling you, they say their way of life is dying because their way of life is dying.
It’s not their imagination. No movie about the future portrays it as
being full of traditional families, hunters, and coal mines. Well,
except for Hunger Games, and that was depicted as an apocalypse.”
And yes, there’s parts of that way of life–the racism, the sexism, the homophobia, to name just a few–that should die. But there’s good parts, too. There’s beauty, and love, and strength, and kindness, and generations of families working together to build community and a future. There’s traditions that have nourished and supported generations of people through meaningful lives–even if you might not recognize anything in those lives as important. And all of that is crumbling.
Neither Clinton nor Trump (nor any national politician of the last decade or anywhere on the horizon) can change that. You’d have to somehow dramatically alter the economy to bring jobs back to rural areas, and even if you could find a viable way to do it, more populated areas would probably scream bloody murder at the resources being diverted. But Trump, the vicious, narcissistic, bigoted, homophobic, ableist, misogynistic, jingoistic, fascist turd that he is, at least pretends that he can, that he can bring back the way things were when all those empty buildings downtown were filled and the kids weren’t killing themselves and rural areas at least sometimes saw themselves in popular culture as something other than the butt of a joke. It’s a lie, and a dangerous one, but I don’t blame my neighbors for wanting to believe it.
I know that many people here on Tumblr don’t want to sympathise with conservatives, and most particularly not people who support Trump; but everyone has reasons, and those reasons do amount to more than just “sexist, racist, and homophobic”.
The thing to remember is that even if Trump loses, you will still be living with your fellow Americans. You may not have to pay attention to them outside of the election cycles, but believe me, now that they’ve had someone tell them ‘I’m on your side, I can turn the world back to when your communities thrived’, they’re going to be a lot noisier in those election cycles.
In today’s news, the New York Times don’t give a fuck.
After publishing allegations from women who say Trump sexually assaulted them, Donald Trump threatened to sue the paper (see letter above).
The New York Times’ response? Try it. Take us to court.
The Times sent a letter back, saying:
The essence of the libel claim, of course, is the protection
of one’s reputation. Mr. Trump has bragged about his non-consensual sexual
touching of women. He has bragged about intruding on beauty pageant contestants
in their dressing rooms. He acquiesced to a radio host’s request to discuss Mr.
Trump’s own daughter as a “piece of ass.” Multiple women not mentioned in our article
have publicly come forward to report on Mr. Trump’s unwanted advances. Nothing
in our article has had the slightest effect on the reputation that Mr. Trump,
through his own words and actions, has already created for himself.
But there is a larger and much more important point here. The women quoted in our story spoke out on an issue of national importance –
indeed, an issue that Mr. Trump himself discussed with the whole nation
watching during Sunday night’s presidential debate. Our reporters diligently
worked to confirm the women’s accounts. They provided readers with Mr. Trump’s
response, including his forceful denial of the women’s reports.
It
would have been a disservice not just to our readers but to democracy itself to
silence their voices.
We did what the law allows: We published newsworthy information about a subject of deep public concern.If Mr. Trump disagrees, if he believes that American citizens had no right to hear what these women had to say and that the law of this country forces us and those who would criticize him to stand silent or be punished, we welcome the opportunity to have a court set him straight.”
Samantha Bee reminds us that a Trump-like politician has been elected twice before thanks to vote splitting
For those of you wondering how Canada kept electing Harper, here you go. I really hate rebologging this political stuff but you guys are really starting to scare me. This isn’t rhetoric anymore, this is how shit works. I know you guys aren’t used to it, and it really sucks that countries like mine are used to it, but sometimes you can’t just vote for a person. Sometimes you have to vote against against one.
Ryan dis-invited Trump from the rally tomorrow in Wisconsin
Mark Kirk and Jon Huntsman have called for Trump to drop out
Gary Herbert (Gov of Utah) has said he isn’t voting Trump
Happening level: Happening.
RNC is SERIOUSLY floating getting Trump to drop out and bumping Pence up to the top of the ticket. That is historically unprecedented. Heck, people have ALREADY VOTED in some states.
And now the Receipts are coming in.
One of the Presidential candidates everyone forgot about de-endorses Trump.
At this point it’d be easier to say which elected GOP officials from Utah HAVEN’T called for Trump to step down.
2016 has been a shitty year in many ways with not a lot of good news to enjoy
But this week
This week we’ve had news confirming Legend of Korra, Batwoman and America Chavez ongoing comics
Carmilla is getting a movie
Alex Danvers and Maggie Sawyer are going to be lesbian-ing together in Supergirl
And now Donald Trump has completely self destructed
It’s like 2016 was holding all the good news in reserve for this week
It’s like 2016 went, “Hey y’all I’m sorry about all that, and I apologise in advance for some other stuff set up that I can’t unset, but… I know you all love October, so I’m gonna try and make it a little better”
We forgive you 2016…
Yeahhhhhh… Sorry kids but I’mma have to come in and use my cranky old grandma voice, because the ELECTION HASN’T HAPPENED YET.
The RNC replacing Trump with Pence or someone else could be disastrous. The left is already divided thanks to Bernie bros, the Green Party, that Gary Johnson wanker, and the general fuckery that is liberals. The Republicans are traditionally a) loyal to a candidate to a goddamn fault, b) show the fuck up to vote, and c) will usually suck it up and present a united front.
Dissent in the RNC ranks is great, but complacency on our part could be terrible. If people don’t show up to vote because they’re sure Trump shot himself in the foot, it will be Brexit level disaster. The RNC bigwigs might be backpedaling but Trump has thousands of fucking rabid followers – a veritable army of bigoted assholes who don’t give a fuck how terrible he is because they’re just as fucking bad.
Trump himself is highly divisive, but if you replace him with Pence or some other less outrageous candidate, shit will get real, and real fast. EVERYONE looks reasonable compared to Trump, even Mike “let’s use electroshock conversation therapy on queer kids” Pence, or Ted “Zodiac Killer” Cruz. Suddenly people who would never vote for Trump are thinking about showing up at the polls, and since they’re Republicans and they’ve been registered forever and don’t have to worry about gerrymandering and ID fraud and shit, the election gets real scary real fast.
This election is pivotal – not to keep Trump from building a wall, but to keep him from NOMINATING A SUPREME COURT JUDGE WITH A REPUBLICAN MAJORITY CONGRESS. That judge can break the current gridlock for good or ill, and what do you think a Republican nominated judge would be like? We’d be living in the dark ages for the next fifty years cause y’all decided to forgive 2016 in advance.
So look, don’t get complacent, 2016 is still the devil – it’s that ex you know is gonna pull some shit the minute you take them back, so DON’T FUCKING DO IT.
I want y’all out there and paranoid like Mad Eye Moody after a year locked in a fucking chest.
CONSTANT VIGILENCE.
I want y’all out there and paranoid like Mad Eye Moody after a year locked in a fucking chest.
Last week, [Cards Against Humanity] went one step further, announcing the creation of
its own super PAC, the type of political organizing committee enabled
by a 2010 Supreme Court decision to spend unlimited amounts of money on political speech. The company dubbed it “The Nuisance Committee,”
named after Cards Against Humanity co-creator Max Temkin’s grandfather
Ira Weinstein’s experience during WWII. While interned in a POW camp in
Germany, Weinstein formed with other prisoners the “Nuisance Committee,”
designed to irritate their captors. A press release announcing the
super PAC’s formation writes, “The comparison here between Trump and
Hitler is intentional.”
“If your opponent is going to be spending tons of money and using all of
these legal tools to outflank you, to say that we’re going to stand on
principle and we’re not going to spend any money, and we’re not going to
fight back, and we’re not going to advocate for our values using all
the tools that the system provides, then how much can you really care
about the cause? I feel so strongly about Trump that I will use whatever
tools are legally available to try to stop him. Unfortunately, where we
are in American democracy right now, that includes all these things
that nobody likes.”