Hypothetically, I think there would be no difference than what is occurring now. The rhetoric from his administration would be more belligerent though. If you take the genocide out of the equation, Biden is clearly the better choice. Unfortunately, it is part of the equation.
I’m voting for Biden. But if he loses, I won’t blame voters like you for berating fellow citizens for wrongthink, and depressing voter turnout. I’ll blame the duopoly system for giving us shitty candidates.
Trump and the other Republicans will say a lot, but they aren’t going to act any different than what Biden and Blinken are already doing with Palestine. The only difference is the symbolic language the Democrats use to assuage their voters. What are they going to do, send more arms and money faster?
Definition of complicit denotes otherwise. If making the right choice is unpopular, that doesn’t make you complicit with another choice. You’re conflating the two choices. Why is it Group C’s fault the other groups can’t get their shit together. Stop bullying people to vote the way you want. It makes you look weak.
People who are choosing not to vote for Biden are doing so because of a genocide that is happening NOW. You want to question them on contingent hypothetical real world results of a Trump presidency that may, or may not, happen in the FUTURE.
You’re trying to scare voters by telling them a dragon 🐉 is outside, when a venomous hydra is already in the room with them.
You’re concern trolling and “just asking questions,” it reeks of desperation.
Unlike voters in many other industrialized countries, Americans tend to vote from this “retrospective” perspective. Studies show that Americans view elections – especially presidential ones – as a referendum on the past performance of an officeholder, a political party or the current administration.
Felix Salmon (born 1972) is a British/American financial journalist, formerly of Portfolio Magazine and Euromoney and a former finance blogger for Reuters, where he analyzed economic and occasionally social issues in addition to financial commentary. In April 2014, Salmon left Reuters for a digital role at Fusion.[1][2] In 2018, he joined Axios as chief financial correspondent.[3]
“It’s very devastating that the leadership of the administration is not only not listening to their colleagues, but to the majority of the American people, who want a cease-fire, who are horrified by what’s happening in Gaza.”
What If Trump Is Right About America? (www.thebulwark.com)
It’s time to ask some hard questions about ourselves.
The New Theory of Ukrainian Victory Is the Same as the Old (www.theamericanconservative.com)
Unconditional defeat of Russia, no matter how it is framed, is a fantasy.
Reminder... (lemmy.world)
"Inflation" doesn't mean what it used to (www.axios.com)
Change in Consumer Price Index, as measured by normal people and economists
Heavy seas disrupt Gaza pier aid operations (www.upi.com)
UPI.com
A Sick, Dystopian System Worth Overthrowing (www.counterpunch.org)
Counterpunch.org
GOP Officials Are Outsourcing Their Lawsuits to a Far-Right Christian Group (www.rollingstone.com)
Conservative public officials are hiring the Alliance Defending Freedom to lead their culture war lawsuits — and handle their public statements
School choice programs have been wildly successful under DeSantis. Now public schools might close. (www.politico.com)
The Republican governor’s school choice programs may serve as a model for other GOP-leaning states across the country.
The First Jewish Biden Appointee to Resign Over Gaza Speaks Out (www.commondreams.org)
“It’s very devastating that the leadership of the administration is not only not listening to their colleagues, but to the majority of the American people, who want a cease-fire, who are horrified by what’s happening in Gaza.”
Accusing Mercedes of 'Wanton Lawlessness,' UAW Seeks New Alabama Vote (www.commondreams.org)
“All these workers ever wanted was a fair shot at having a voice on the job and a say in their working conditions,” the union said.
Are we sleepwalking into Orwell’s nightmare? (www.indexoncensorship.org)
Forty years on from Nineteen Eighty-Four, a panel of freedom of expression experts has explored the relevance of the dystopian novel to now
Florida men are taking over the GOP (www.politico.com)
The nation’s third-largest state has shed its swing-state profile and is now the home base of Donald Trump’s Republican Party