I don't think there's enough support for cutting Ukraine aid in the Republican party to let Trump get away with it even if he wants to. They'd be cutting off a revenue stream for American weapon dealers, if nothing else.Madrigal wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2024 2:07 pmBiden was actually the best candidate for the Democratic Party because he's senile and can't learn anything new, just like them.Roger Mexico wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2024 6:07 amBiden probably should have dropped out a lot sooner. He left the party in just about the worst possible situation--no time to actually choose another candidate, and only the last 3 months of a 2-year campaign cycle to promote the one they defaulted to.
Of course they might have just been screwed anyway.
I never thought she had a snowball's chance in hell. I thought Nader made some good points on (I think it was) Democracy Now; she went after the Republican base instead of tapping into the disenfranchised Democratic one. It is interesting to see moderates like David Brooks in the NYT saying that maybe to challenge Trump the party needed someone disruptive like Bernie Sanders all along, someone he personally wouldn't feel comfortable with. The consensus seems to be that the Democrats won't learn (again). I've never seen so many Democrats saying that.
They never deliver but there's always a worse option, so they ask for the vote for nothing in exchange. That won't work every time. I feel the same way about Trump as I do about Milei in Argentina; in their profound political ignorance, there is a huge amount of common sense in people not voting a failed candidate, painful as the result will be.
I worry about Israel now going even further with Trump's support. Hopefully this means Zelensky negotiates, but I'm not even very sure about that.
I am worried about escalation between Israel and Iran. Israel's not big enough to win an actual war with Iran by themselves, even with the US bankrolling and supplying them, so I kind of assume their strategy if it comes to that is to drag American forces into directly. Biden did nothing to actually pressure them to do anything differently in Gaza or Lebanon, but I don't think he would have fallen for this. Trump might, but hopefully it doesn't come to that.
A lot of people are predicting an economic crisis if the tariffs Trump has been talking about go through. His mass deportation idea would also hit the farm industry particularly hard, which isn't going to help the food price inflation his supporters blamed Biden for. The logistics of it are likely to require basically building concentration camps, too.
And yes, of course the Democrats won't learn anything from this. I agree that it's likely disruptive populism is simply what voters wanted. Even in 2008 Obama was sort of a disruptive populist candidate, but after him they went right back to just nominating whoever has seniority in the party and then yelling at people about betraying them after they lose. This might change in like a decade after the dinosaurs who've been in politics since the 70's all die off, but even then I wouldn't hold my breath.