Right-wing lawmakers are proving increasingly willing to force potentially divisive votes.

  • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    A pox upon both houses. Both sides are hypocritical as hell. And both sides fucking suck.
    Unfortunately the American electorate is too afraid of change to do anything about it, and/or too lazy to vote in primaries in significant numbers, and/or the opposing party puts forward stupid candidates that have no change.
    Thus Congress has like a 18% approval rating, but a 80+% re-election rate.

    And in most cases, I’d argue that’s because candidates insist on pushing stupid wedge issues. The Democrat down south is going to go anti-gun which makes them unelectable. The Republican up north is going to go anti-abortion or anti-LGBT which makes them unelectable in a blue state. And rather than set those wedge issues aside and recognize that there’s FAR more important things at stake, we keep squabbling over bullshit rather than actually making progress.

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I agree that both sides do shitty things, but they’re no where near equivocal.

      • Democrats impeached Trump for withholding aid to Ukraine in an attempt to blackmail his political opponent, and then again for inciting an insurrection when he lost the election.
      • Republicans are trying to impeach Biden because he’s a Democratic, while they’re trying to normalize impeachment to downplay how serious it is so Trump’s previous impeachments don’t look so bad for the next election.

      Implying that both sides suck equally is dangerous. It’d be like a kid saying “My parents made me eat my vegetables, they suck. Also the guy that broke into my house and tried to stab my family sucks. All adults suck.”

    • DarkGamer@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      A pox upon both houses. Both sides are hypocritical as hell. And both sides fucking suck.

      I find it hard to look at the behavior of both American political parties and see them as equally objectionable. Our Overton window has shifted wildly in the last decade. By international standards, Democrats are conservative left and Republicans have become dangerously radical right. American Republicans have abandoned the rule of law. They oppose democracy and attempted a coup when they didn’t like the results. They openly lie and gaslight. They scapegoat vulnerable minorities. They force women to give birth against their will. They induce violence via stochastic terrorism. I can’t look at this situation and muster comparable ire for both sides.

      Congress has like a 18% approval rating, but a 80+% re-election rate.

      That’s congress as a whole, most Americans have a positive view of their own representatives.

      rather than set those wedge issues aside and recognize that there’s FAR more important things at stake, we keep squabbling over bullshit rather than actually making progress.

      In a 2-party system there’s little incentive to. I posit that voters are motivated to vote more by fear of the other party than enthusiasm about their own. This is a consequence of Duverger’s Law. If we want to fix the system and encourage cooperation, the best way is ranked choice voting, which encourages candidates to reach out to all voters even on the other side because they might be their 2nd or 3rd choice. When they implemented it in SF, some candidates running against each other started campaigning together, cooperating for mutual advantage.

    • slicedcheesegremlin@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Boy do I love whether I’m allowed to exist being seen as a “stupid wedge issue.” Totally agree, we should comprise and only shoot half the LGBT people! /s

      • BaroqueInMind@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Real-talk, the solution here is to encourage more gays/queers/trans folk to run for elected positions of power to better represent their minority.

        • slicedcheesegremlin@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Agreed. I also remember that Nebraska was making headlines recently because one of the representatives’ daughter was trans, so she was refusing to pass any bills that could hurt her child.

          • HubertManne@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            this just annoys me that much more. There have been so many cases of direct experience like with relatives moving their opinion (or at least their actions) so its like they can’t adequately evaluate things in the theoretical or just with general compassion and empathy.

      • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Didn’t mean to imply that LGBT is not an important issue. Not at all. Just that it’s something that one side feels more strongly about than the other.

        To an Evangelical (usually conservative), persecuting LGBT people is good policy and good for the country. To a Liberal (and to many like myself, FWIW), persecuting LGBT people is a civil rights violation that makes a person unelectable.

        To a Liberal, gun control is good policy that will save lives. To a gun owner (usually conservative) gun control is a civil rights violation, an unconstitutional violation of the Bill of Rights that makes a person unelectable just as much as if they suggested needing a license to exercise free speech.

        So what I’m suggesting-- if the GOP stopped trying to persecute LGBT folks, or the Democrats gave up gun control, either one of them would GREATLY increase their appeal especially to moderates and people on the other side of the aisle but who are fed up with their own party.

        Put differently— if a bunch of politicians came to you and said ‘we’ll stop trying to take away LGBT rights, but in exchange you stop trying to take away gun rights’, would you agree to that?

        • CileTheSane@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          If I understand you correctly, your suggesting the politicians should say “We’ll stop trying to deny people the right to live and exist, in exchange for not trying to stop unstable people from easily murdering random civilians”?

          • HubertManne@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            also I have never seen an outright ban on guns proposed in the legislature. Limitations on ownership (drug use, mental health issues, requirement to take a course) and type/options (clips size, rate of fire, concealability, etc.)

            • admiralteal@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Even if an outright ban were the goal for some incremental policy changes wouldn’t ever get there.

              We already nearly all agree on and have weapons controls. There are weapons a private citizen simply cannot legally own.

              We’re debating where to draw the line on who and what and when. And at this stage, all we’re asking for is to move the line a couple of inches to try and prevent the worst of the frequent, common, and unacceptable tragedies.

              The gun nuts act like there’s an absolute position you can hold with no exceptions. The only way that can be true is if you believe every citizen has the right to walk into the local pharmacy and buy a yellowcake bomb and jar of weaponized smallpox any time they feel like it, and if you believe that, you are insane.

              There’s no absolute position. It’s a negotiation. The conservatives refuse to engage in any negotiation whatsoever because they do not have any sincere principle they are defending on the issue.

              • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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                1 year ago

                With respect I think you haven’t spent much time listening to pro-gun people.

                Different people have different opinions. Sure, there are some absolutists. But that’s not everybody.

                The ‘line in the sand’ that almost ALL pro-gun people will get behind, is semi-automatic small arms- pistols and rifles and shotguns and the like, as we know them today. Not machineguns or rocket launchers or cannons. Do you see people rallying on the steps of capitol buildings demanding machineguns and rocket launchers be re-legalized? I don’t.

                If you want to understand why there’s no negotiation, this comic explains the pro-gun position pretty well.
                To put that in perspective, you must understand that in the early 1900s, you could order a machinegun, a fully-automatic weapon (hold down the trigger and it will rapidly and repeatedly fire), through the mail, delivered to your doorstep with no background checks or other interference. And you’d order this from a hardware catalog. There were shooting competitions in school- kids brought guns to school all the way up to the 1970s or so because shooting was a competitive school sport.

                So follow the history, and it’s the same thing repeated over and over. Anti-gun people want to compromise, we’ll regulate this but not that. Wait a few years and it happens again. Go through a few iterations of that and guns are now one of the most highly regulated items you can (sometimes) buy. And yet there were no school shootings in 1920, even though you could buy a VERY effective firearm for such purpose in the mail.

                So I suggest instead of writing off anyone who takes a pro-gun position as a ‘gun nut’, you should try listening to those who disagree with you and try to figure out WHY they disagree.

                • admiralteal@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  Oh god fucking forbid we engage in the hard process of incremental policy based on changing circumstances. Cry me a goddamn river.

                  This isn’t a slippery slope. The argument to ban some classes of guns has to meet strict constitutional scrutiny, not just a rational basis. You have to successfully argue the harm justifies a limit on the right. Something our system is – or at least was – equipped to do. But nowadays, maybe it genuinely isn’t, with the way conservatives have spread like cancer through the court system and legislatures to fill it with stubborn no-compromise 2A rights nonsense that refuses to engage in any reform.

                  It is a factual reality that guns have become better machines over time. They’ve become cheaper, more available, and more dangerous. You bring up a 1900s machine gun as if this is an example of some incredibly dangerous weapon? It goddamn isn’t.
                  A 1900s machine gun is hardly any threat at all to modern civil society. It is large, stationary, and obvious. It is not reliable. It is not easy to use, contrary to your characterization. You cannot sneak it into a shopping mall. You cannot conceal or open carry it while out on errands. It’d be a pretty major effort to even reliably mount it in good working order to a vehicle. A modern “sport” semi-automatic rifle or even handgun offers a bigger threat than one of those things.

                  What an utterly ridiculous argument you make, saying there were no school shootings in the 1900s when there were likely no guns CAPABLE of that kind of thing at the time, and certainly none in regular circulation.

                  I did not write off anyone who takes a pro-gun position as a ‘gun nut’. You cannot “respectfully” mischaracterize what I wrote in such a disingenuous way. I wrote off anyone who takes a no-compromise position as one. Want to have lots of guns in society? Do what the Swiss do. Extensive and continuing training and licensing. Universal registration. Strict rules about safe handling. And couple it all with major poverty interventions, public education, and healthcare to get rid of violence and desperation at the source. Most progressives are down for that. But instead, the gun nuts try to do the literal opposite by passing things like Constitutional Carry.

                  • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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                    1 year ago

                    Please read my post again. I didn’t make a pro-gun argument. I explained why pro-gun people don’t want to ‘compromise’. There’s a big difference between the two.
                    Short version- they feel they’ve ‘compromised’ many times already and each time they give something up and get nothing back, so why should they keep playing that game?

                    Imagine if it was the first amendment rather than the second. Would you ‘compromise’?
                    ‘Last year the compromise was we can still post anything we want online, but we need a free speech license. This year the compromise is we can still post anything we want, but we can only criticize the government in special contained free speech websites that don’t show up in Google.’ You’d be like the character in the comic, flipping the table and saying ‘I don’t want another compromise that takes away more rights, I want REAL free speech back!’.

                    If you step back from the confident belief that you are 100% correct and reasonable about this (or any issue really), and try to understand the other person’s point of view, you’ll be able to make much better arguments for your own POV. But that requires NOT writing off anyone who doesn’t partially share your POV as a ‘nut’ (which is EXACTLY what you did when you say anyone not willing to ‘compromise’ by instituting your list of gun regulations is a ‘nut’).


                    What an utterly ridiculous argument you make, saying there were no school shootings in the 1900s when there were likely no guns CAPABLE of that kind of thing at the time, and certainly none in regular circulation.

                    This is simply incorrect.
                    Semi-auto firearms were available starting in 1902.
                    One of the most popular semi-auto pistols of all time is the M1911. It fires a .45 caliber bullet, and the design of the bullet and the gun have not majorly changed since they were invented in 1911. 1911s are very popular today still and are sold by many manufacturers.

                    And if you go even earlier, Thomas Jefferson owned a Girardoni Air Rifle- that was a weapon that fired a half-inch metal ball and was quite lethal at 150 yards. It wasn’t semi-auto but it could fire 20 shots in fairly rapid succession (about the same as a modern bolt action rifle).

                    Point is-- it’s not accurate to say mass shootings didn’t happen in the early 1900s because suitable weapons weren’t available. Such weapons WERE available, and if anything, easier to buy than they are today.

                    Until the [Hughes Amendment of 1986](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firearm_Owners_Protection_Act#:~:text=Hughes (D-N.,specifically to amend 18 U.S.C.) you could buy your own machinegun (full-auto rapid fire). In 1986 such firearms were banned. So why not more mass shootings before the ban?


                    But instead, the gun nuts try to do the literal opposite by passing things like Constitutional Carry.

                    And have the >50% of states that done this turned into bloodbaths with shootouts from every fender bender?

            • mirror_slap@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              And the Dems are idiots about gun safety anyway. Let them have all the AR-15s they want, just don’t allow magazines- force hand reloading when the thing is empty. Don’t ban handguns, ban handguns with magazines. Slap insurance and license requirements on owners. Don’t take them away, just make them far less deadly and far more expensive. That side-steps the “take away your guns” crowd entirely and passes the court challenges too.

      • Entropywins@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I’d bet the person would care about you and your struggle if they met you but at a distance unfortunately they see your struggle as an obstacle to their agenda… I get careless a lot myself and say things without empathy or thought to what it might imply to others… sorry you ha e to deal with that

        • slicedcheesegremlin@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          It’s ok, I get what you mean though. Considering how my parents ended up being tainted by all of this discourse though, without even being trump supporters or antivaxxers, I doubt meeting people like me in person would be able to change their minds.