this post was submitted on 28 Apr 2024
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What happens in November is up to Biden – it will not be the fault of the protest voter if Trump is elected. The questions remain: does the Democratic party fear Trump as much as we do? And does it value its voters enough to shift away from an approach to the onslaught in Gaza that a majority of Democratic voters are against?

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[–] Xanis@lemmy.world 12 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

It has everything to do with your question. Biden has already proven he is willing to roll over on many issues. Biden has gotten a lot done these last four years, far more than most of us expected. Meanwhile, and I am NOT downplaying the severity of the genocide, people like you are using that in exactly the same way you accuse people like me of using Trump. Thing is your reluctance to help Biden get into office, and acknowledgement of the likely atrocities Trump would attempt, does you no favors. You can't see past your own anger to the bigger picture, and it's a damn shame. Because where Biden buys us time to continue coming together and push for change, Trump will attempt to lock us, and the very many minorities, LGPTQ+ communities, and any person not white and certainly anyone who stands against him, possibly and quite literally behind bars. He is so damned bad that the ENTIRE WORLD was pushing back against his Presidency and are terrified of him winning again. Except Russia.

Either we step the fuck up and stop being bitches and work together for a change over the next few years, or all this shit, every single part of it, will occur again in 2028. Including, as happens nearly every god damn fucking time, a serious situation that splits our attention and our support while the Right looks on and smirks. Every. Time. And we keep falling for it because we care.

[–] Krono@lemmy.today 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I'm not angry, I was asking an honest question that no one has answered yet: how?

You say you take the genocide seriously, and you say electing Biden is buying us time to push for change, so answer my question then:

How will we effectively push the Biden administration to change Gaza policy after he is re-elected?

[–] Xanis@lemmy.world 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (2 children)

Not just Gaza. You're stuck. Broader change. Biden is already showing he is willing to make changes and roll over on many issues. So we do what has always worked: We stand as a united voice. We come together to vote in more progressive local and State representatives while also collectively looking Biden in the eye and saying what we want.

None of this "If you won't then I won't." bullshit. Literally one issue at a time.

The reason I'm angry is because this is actually incredibly simple. We live in an age where we can organize so god. damned. easily. Yet we keep finding ourselves at each other's throats. Gaza IS a situation that is causing us to split. Yet not reelecting Biden is the wrong way to go right now because we don't have a reasonable alternative. Not this time. This time it is truly binary.

So take that energy and carry it past the election and into further elections and further actions. Elevate our voice. We can still make that difference, though I feel we are slowly running out of time courtesy of the Republican party's actions, and our own party's inability to come to consensus. Both inside and outside the Chamber. Say what you will about Republicans: When it comes time to act, they often do so single-mindedly, even if it hurts them too.

[–] Krono@lemmy.today 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

The Gaza liberation movement is collectively looking Biden in the eye and saying what we want. We are standing with a united voice. You should join us instead of creating all this needless division and conflict.

[–] Xanis@lemmy.world 2 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

Then I implore you: Push the movement to change course once the situation in Gaza is taken care of. Don't let it dissolve. Restructure to focus on other issues here at home. That's literally all I have sought for years. To build a movement in the U.S. that seeks to push for positive change through a collective, unified, voice. One where everybody on the same side comes on board. Where we do not turn others away out of spite or malice and instead teach patience to change minds.

After Gaza. After we get Biden in. Just continue that energy and don't break apart in apathy and individual discourse once again.

[–] EndlessApollo@lemmy.world 0 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Gaza getting "taken care of" means them getting wiped out to Biden and most democrats. He had made it abundantly clear he will not budge on this issue, there is nothing that can stop the flow of weapons into Israel, and that he is straight up ignoring the protestors because "disorder isn't the answer" (besides the disorder Israel is generating in Gaza ofc). What is your solution to this? Just ignore it and fall in line? Biden will never unaffix his lips from bibi's asshole, so what are we supposed to do other than accept the genocide and accept Biden helping the IDF wipe Gaza off the map? How about you pressure biden to stop committing genocide instead of telling people with empathy to shut up and take it?

[–] Dkarma@lemmy.world -1 points 7 months ago

Right now you're acting contrary to what your last sentence implies you should be doing.

You're detracting from Biden when you should be falling in line.

Get a clue people. If you care about Palestine then Biden is literally your only option.