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political psychology

  • A

    Lies, Lies, Lies. There has never been a President, or a cabinet, or an administration in the history of America who's whole political platform, value system and political action exists and thrives on toxic lying until  now.  

    jordanSA•...
    I personally think the shamelessness and sheer volume of lies is new, and alarming. I also think the vehemence people have on both sides of Trump, both idolization and demonization, is not good. Trump may be uniquely high in textbook narcissism....
    us politics
    political psychology
    media and journalism
    political history
    misinformation and fact checking
    Comments
    0
  • annabeth avatar

    Could it be ethically ok to not vote? note: I posted this two hours before Biden stepped down. It’s possible that a different Dem candidate could change my choices, but my overall perspective feels the same.

    A lot of people I’m close to have very strong opinions that to not vote in this presidential election is wrong. But I have no interest in voting. It genuinely seems to me that things will be perfectly not ideal no matter what happens in the election.

    My best guess of what’s happening culturally is that the mean green meme has gotten really far down its negative feedback loop, and red, orange, and amber are swarming on the attack. If that’s right, a breaking point of sorts will have to be hit for teal to get to its tipping point. In 12-step terms, green would have to hit rock bottom to be able to finally admit it has a problem and needs help.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if teal’s tipping point would have to be particularly intense because it’s also the tipping point into second tier, and we have no historical reference for what it takes for a culture to begin to get a foothold in a new tier (the big bang, the formulation of simple cells, and the leap from apes to humans might be comparable but difficult to translate…)

    This thought process just leaves me trusting what’s happening, and voting just doesn’t feel like one of the ways I want to participate in this happening.

    daveSA•...
    In Australia we have compulsory voting. You get fined if you don’t vote. I think that came from a belief that we’re pretty apathetic and might not engage with the system otherwise. This isn’t always a clear win....
    political science
    public policy
    civic engagement
    political psychology
    voting systems
    australian politics
    electoral behavior
    political campaigning
    Comments
    0
  • Philip avatar

    Trump is now…. ..officially a convicted criminal. And he’s still going to run. And he’s probably still going to win.

    I’m not quite sure what that says about the state of democracy, the Biden administration, the US and/or our world.

    But it strikes me as so utterly absurd, it’s actually kinda hilarious.

    I remember 8 years ago, I was so appalled when Trump got elected, it seemed like the end of the world.

    But the world didn’t end. And it might be my heartbroken disappointment with Biden’s warmongering-while-virtue-signaling administration or the fact that whoever’s actually in control of the Democratic party seems to just not give a fuck and is willing to run him again when he seems at least half-senile, but this time around I’m like, yeah, OK, Trump again. Fine. Bring it on.

    (Insert gif of person eating popcorn ).

    peteSA•...

    The sense I make of it is that a vote for Trump is a vote for autonomy. Like, Red, Fuck-you-I-do-what-I-want. The only way to lose his base is to submit to an authority.

    political science
    american politics
    political psychology
    voter behavior
    Comments
    0
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