• PurpleSkull@lemm.ee
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      10 days ago

      We peacefully transitioned into a technocracy with a wanna-be dictator idiot at the helm.

      As an exercise for anyone reading this who doesn’t already know: How did Hitler got into a position of power? Look that up, don’t use AI, actually check up on that yourself.

      • chaogomu@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Technically the Nazis lost that election, but the Conservatives who won turned around and handed power to Hitler, all to prevent the Left from gaining power.

        • Asafum@feddit.nl
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          9 days ago

          Alien school: For todays class we will begin Earth history, please open your text book titled “Earth: All to Prevent the Left From Gaining Power.” This book covers the vast majority of Earth history.

        • PlexSheep@infosec.pub
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          8 days ago

          That’s not how elections work here. There is not really a “winner” in elections unless someone gets an absolute majority, which is almost never. Parties form a coalition to have a majority together.

          That’s how it is nowadays, but I think the old system had coalitions too.

      • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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        9 days ago

        Wait a minute, so democracy brings people like Trump, Hitler and Hamas to power? Does it mean that democracy is shit?

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          How about single party socialism? Has that ever turned back into stateless communism, comrade? Or did it turn into “socialism with Chinese characteristics”, Putin’s Russia, Pol Pot, and the DPRK that Trump wants to turn the US into?

          • alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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            9 days ago

            The Khmer Rouge was never socialist, they were some weird feudal ideology, hence why the CIA supported them and the US recognized them as the legitimate government of Cambodia for like 30 years after Vietnam liberated them and put an actual socialist government in power.

            Russia hasn’t been socialist since 1992; Putin’s Russia is what happens when you overthrow a democratic state run by the workers for the workers with a vibrant, multiparty capitalist “democracy”.

            “Socialism with Chinese characteristics” is more democratic than the US; the average Chinese person feels they have far greater influence on the government than the average American. They tend to be confused why Americans hate and fear the police and why we aren’t able to vote for politicians who will fix the problem.

            There’s also Cuba, who had a referendum on a new constitution a few years ago. After years of debate at the community level, they came up with a final draft that 92% of Cubans voted yes on. Could you imagine if we had that level of influence over our own government?

            See the thing you’re missing is that the communist parties of these countries themselves democratic; they’re typically structured such that every member above the rank-and-file is elected, with instant recall and “give us a better candidate” options.

            • tree_frog@lemm.ee
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              9 days ago

              Yeah it’s really amazing the number that Western propaganda has done on folks perception of China

              They assume democracy requires more than one party. When it should be people you vote for, rather than raw tribalism.

            • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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              9 days ago

              The Khmer Rouge was never socialist

              They weren’t socialist bc they took a step past socialism and into communism directly. They abolished money, replaced army with armed militia, achieved direct democracy, abolished institution of family, replaced farmers with agrarian proletariat, achieved 100% public housing. USSR is a capitalist shithole compared to Democratic Kampuchea.

                • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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                  8 days ago

                  They fit almost all of the criteria of communism. If Democratic Kampuchea haven’t achieved communism, it was very-very close to it. Much closer than any other country. If you disagree, please provide something substantial. What are the necessary criteria for communism that Democratic Kampuchea didn’t fit?

    • Eheran@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      I would assume most monarchies transitioned just as peaceful. What does that prove?

        • Eheran@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          Sure mate. Hereditary successions were usually smooth. In elective monarchies, there were more power struggles. Do you have anything to add other than insults?

          • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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            9 days ago

            Not to mention that monarchies last way longer than democracies on average throughout history.

            • Eheran@lemmy.world
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              9 days ago

              Is that so? I would assume democracies last a lot longer than 10 to 50 years? Considering that most of the world has democracies and they tend to be at least since WW2 that does not feel right.

              • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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                9 days ago

                Considering I don’t know any democracy that laster longer than 200-300 years and there are a lot of monarchies that lasted for many hundreds or even thousands of years.

                • tree_frog@lemm.ee
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                  9 days ago

                  And how are the material conditions for the average working-class person in those monarchies?

                  How much autonomy did they have over their lives compared to the 200 or 300 years they would have lived under a democracy?

                  How much suffering happened under monarchy compared to democracy?

                  Because if all of you are measuring is how long the ruling class can subjugate the working class, then sure I’m monarchy is better.

                  It doesn’t mean I want to live under one, but you go ahead.

                  • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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                    9 days ago

                    And how are the material conditions for the average working-class person in those monarchies?

                    Looking at today’s monarchies, the conditions are about the same as in today’s democracies.

                    How much autonomy did they have over their lives compared to the 200 or 300 years they would have lived under a democracy?

                    The same?

                    How much suffering happened under monarchy compared to democracy?

                    The same average amount of suffering.

                    Because if all of you are measuring is how long the ruling class can subjugate the working class, then sure I’m monarchy is better.

                    It’s obviously the most important parameter. If the govt system can’t even sustain itself for long enough, then it’s not even worth considering it.

                    It doesn’t mean I want to live under one

                    Thanks for sharing your opinion.

    • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Optical illusion. Plutocrats sharing power among themselves is not democracy, friend.

    • Snowclone@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      The only party willing to accept defeat and not cry foul until their cult riots lost. It will never happen the other way around are you’d have be to a deeply vastly empty head to not know that.

    • Gordon Calhoun@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Degree of democracy has more to do with the size of the ruling coalition relative to the size of the pool of the interchangeables. When power is shared within a large ruling coalition, there tends to be a louder and more influential voice by the interchangeables, leading to more democracy and better living conditions for everyone, including those in the losing coalition. Autocracies on the ruling spectrum tend to have tiny ruling coalitions.

      Source: my memory of reading The Dictator’s Handbook by Bueno de Mesquita and Smith. Highly recommended reading.

      If the ruling coalition of the US is much smaller than it appears to be, then yeah, it’s at risk of losing its foothold as a democracy.

      • tree_frog@lemm.ee
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        9 days ago

        Is there any way to tell who abstained and who just chose not to take time off work so they could pay their bills?

              • tree_frog@lemm.ee
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                9 days ago

                It depends on the state. It does tend to be a bit broader than that and most states allow early voting.

                However, red states tend to put more hurdles in to maintain their power, limiting polling access in working class districts, especially ones that aren’t predominantly white. Forcing folks to stand in long lines or get across town to cast a ballot. Or scrutinizing and tossing out more mail in ballots in those districts over something petty. Folks don’t have the spoons for that between bills, kids, work, and chores.

                Also factor in that a lot of folks abstained because they know their state is already blue or red, and at least, in the swing state I live in, the turnout was actually very high.

                Anyway, it’s not as simple as 1/3rd of folks abstained. While I imagine some did, just out of apathy toward the federal government and not understanding how dangerous Trump is to our planet, it’s just not the whole story is all I’m saying.

                The US has a long history of making voting a privilege based on class. And while on paper it’s not supposed to be the case, there are certainly mechanisms at play that disinfranchise folks who would likely otherwise vote.

                • can@sh.itjust.works
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                  9 days ago

                  Also factor in that a lot of folks abstained because they know their state is already blue or red, and at least, in the swing state I live in, the turnout was actually very high.

                  I see your points overall but this one seems meaningless to me. This is the kind of apathy that got you here. Even if they’re guaranteed to win any percentage of voters they lose is ideally one they’ll appeal to next time.

                  • tree_frog@lemm.ee
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                    8 days ago

                    Yeah, and if everybody did that then a blue state would get flipped to red. So I agree with you, I’m just sharing my understanding of the logic other people used.