I’m exasperated by any energy spent now on Biden’s cognitive health in the final years of his term. It was obvious he should not have sought a second term; should have to stuck to his promise to serve one term. Had he, the Democratic presidential nominee might or might not have won in 2024. Impossible to know. Also, irrelevant. 1/
Assuming - and it isn’t a safe assumption at all - the U.S. has a non-sham presidential election in 2028, nothing about Biden’s handling of a bid for a second term matters. Nothing about the unapproachability of Biden or his family matters. 2/
Maybe the Biden case demonstrates the problem of nominating somebody sufficiently old to be at risk of cognitive and physical decline. So we should try to avoid having nominees in their late 70s and older - for many reasons, including health issues. 3/
But, time debating how Biden could or should have been convinced not to stand for
reelection is time wasted when we have none to spare. There is a fascist in the WH, Congress is controlled by a fascist cult of personality. 4/
Pundits, commentators, electeds, Democratic Party poobahs, and every last citizen should
be doing everything possible to impede, oppose, and focus attention on Republican Fascism, at state and federal levels. All should be figuring out how we are going to make sure we have non-sham elections in 2026 and 2028. 5/
Biden is the past. The present and the future are fraught with problems that have nothing to do with him. 6/6

@heidilifeldman
Biden's initial 2nd term candidacy and Harris' subsequent mangled candidacy speak to serious problems in the Democratic Party. As does their attitude toward materially supporting Israel's genocide of Palestinians, despite massive disapproval from voters.

Being funded by corporations has caused the Democratic Party to see actual voters as merely something to be managed and manipulated, rather than respected and ultimately obeyed. And I've seen zero indications of change regarding those attitudes, but rather accusations of racism and misogyny against democrats who opted out of voting, and more pandering to the extreme right in the name of centrism.

The Democratic Party (and our American democracy) is in dire need of improvement and reform, but is currently led by people who would personally be financially and professionally harmed by reform. They need to be replaced via election primaries, and it's highly relevant to discuss the examples which demonstrate that need.

@me_valentijn @heidilifeldman It seems to me you’ve missed the point of this thread a bit.

Playing the blame game with Democrats is self-defeating. Money in politics is impossible to change in the short term. What CAN be done is voting against the GOP, in every single election.

And a corollary: If one wants the Democratic Party to align more with one’s values, one must vote. Because any politician is going to listen more to those who voted than those who didn’t vote at all.

It was malicious actors who convinced people that Harris was responsible for the situation in Israel, and told them the response was to not vote. Such behavior benefitted Trump and Netanyahu. We CANNOT allow such influence campaigns to work again.

@mls14 @heidilifeldman
I'm confused. How are democrats opposed to genocide supposed to vote for democrats over republicans in a manner which sends a signal of strong rejection of supporting genocide?

The choices were literally genocide materially supported by one party or genocide materially supported by the other party. Very vocal objections were systematically ignored by the Democratic Party and are still being downplayed and vilified to this day.

Thus simply voting democrat is not enough. We need to get the right democrats into power who explicitly reject the support of genocide and will engage in systemic democratic reforms. Otherwise we keep circling back to the same situation over and over again: neither party needs to represent voters' interests as long as they feel confident enough that we'll think they're not-as-bad-as the other party.

@me_valentijn @heidilifeldman Voting Democrat is not enough, but it is necessary, even if you don’t like the Democrat of the month.

And if you believe that Harris was pro-genocide, you were affected by the targeted disinformation meant to suppress your vote. Trump is going to literally remove every single Palestinian from Gaza. Do you REALLY believe Harris would do the same? We all know the answer to that.

@mls14 @heidilifeldman
The Biden administration supplied Israel with everything it needed to bomb Gaza into oblivion. Massive amounts of civilians were being killed even prior to the election, and documents repeatedly demonstrated that American bombs kept being sent even when the Biden administration was (publicly) scolding Bibi for his weekly episode of Definitely Going Too Far This Time. Harris refused to denounce any of that or give any indication that she would deviate from the Democratic Party in supporting Israel unconditionally.

And while Trump was always going to be far worse, there were also always going to be democrats who couldn't bring themselves to vote for the not-as-bad party while it was providing that support for genocide. It's human nature, not logic, and abusing people for it is perverse and not constructive.

@me_valentijn @mls14 @heidilifeldman

whiny assholes who used the genocide in gaza to not vote harris

1. condemned palestinians to worse with trump

2. don't give a shit about other important issues (trans rights, women's rights, etc)

3. if the usa ceased all military cooperation with israel (we should) israel will keep going

4. are entitled. bellyache about one issue (self-destructively on that issue!) and they think all the other trump bs won't touch them

manipulated morons, just like MAGA

@benroyce I'm yeah, how dare we expect politicians to not enable genocide…

@punissuer

If the other option is worse, and one is intelligent enough to see it is only one or the other, then one should aim for harm reduction

This is cold calculation, it's not exciting. The problem. Because people are emotional

But if one doesn't vote leading to worse for Palestinians, as is now occurring, then one's actions are self-destructive on one's own stated concern

The manipulation of the stupid with emotional thrall, hurting oneself: nonvoters are herded morons just like MAGA

@benroyce
@punissuer I have heard so many people say they didn't vote for Harris because they refused to support a candidate that supported the genocide.

But, they did anyway. They supported Trump. They may not have voted for Trump, but not voting for Harris did nearly as much harm.

The worst part is that they know this. Anyone who claims otherwise is fucking lying. They are lying to us, and to themselves, and the latter makes it damned fucking hard to talk any sense into them.

@minego @benroyce @punissuer

I don't think this is the right approach. Like, I don't think you should blame people for not voting for a genocide enthusiast. You should blame the party for keeping genocide as a political promise, instead of making an explicit promise to *stop* it.

Like, I hope this is not mean, but this position sounds like "imperialism and genocide will happen either way, so you should choose the option that maintains our local infrastructure in place"... can you really blame people for not wanting to participate in that position?

@ruakueqche @minego @punissuer

i'm not a politician, i'm a hothead and a loudmouth rando

i don't give a fuck about the "right approach"

my approach is: "fuck your feelings, *think*"

we should choose the path of harm reduction. and then iterate to better

that is the only way

geniuses going "i want perfect now" and then not voting helps give us fascism and worse genocide and worse imperialism

if somebody can't realize that, they are a moron, and are sabotaging their own concerns

@benroyce @minego @punissuer I agree we should do the path of harm reduction. I also agree that harris was the better candidate. But I question where the blame should be placed.

I blame democrats for not having an anti genocide stance. If the issue of the genocide was important enough that they might loose the elections over it to a fascist, they should have campaigned against the genocide.

People who abstained from voting gave up on the system. Given the choices, that some people, even an important number of people, would give up was inevitable. I can't be angry at someone who despairs so hard they give up.

But I can be angry at those who, having the power to give up on the genocide, did not care at all, and after they lost to the fascist, they decided to collaborate with him.

Absteiners are not the same as MAGA, and the Democratic leadership deserves much more hate than the people who did not vote at all.

Political leaders are the ones with power, they gave the choices. They should face criticism for the choices they gave

@ruakueqche @minego @punissuer

yes the democrats need better, further left, candidates

everyone with 2 brain cells realizes that

the democrats suck, everyone knows that

so how do we get better candidates?

the point:

show up in the midterms

show up in the primaries

*that* is when we get better candidates

so if some nonvoter shithead can't be bothered to do that because they're playing video games:

fuck them

they are to blame

so yes:

fuck the democrats

*and* fuck lazy moron nonvoters

@benroyce
@ruakueqche @minego @punissuer

I would add: campaigns need candidates & managers & treasurers & canvassers &&&... if you want better representatives, you have to participate beyond voting. Voting is the entry point, the absolute barest minimum. All of us have excuses not to. For example, >1 in 4 of us have a disability. But doing even one single thing more matters & makes a difference, bc 1 > 0, and too many are helping so little but complaining & pointing fingers SO MUCH

@irenetherogue @ruakueqche @minego @punissuer

well said

and protest

and do direct action

and do local action

all the good things

but if you're someone sitting out there who thinks you do not have to also vote, you are a complete moron, and you are sabotaging all of your good work

voting is not a *replacement* for good work, it's not an either/ or

it's just something very simple you *also* do to move things in the right direction

@benroyce @irenetherogue @ruakueqche @minego @punissuer
There should be NO uncontested offices. Put your own name on the ballot. There is no bar to running for a local office. School board, sewer district, city council... So many positions, and all need to be filled with people willing to do the work of self governance. You do not need lots of "campaign workers". You are the campaigner, and small budget campaigns don't need a lot of paper work.
@mizblueprint
@benroyce @ruakueqche@kolektiva.social @minego @punissuer i'm a disabled parent of 4 and live in a wealthy, densely populated area. Small budget to beat red here is $150k. Tell me more about what I don't need.

@irenetherogue @mizblueprint @minego @punissuer

no one disputes the difficulty. mizblueprint is merely trying to encourage excitement and engagement

we can't be so optimistic as to think it is so simple. we also can't be pessimistic as to think it is too hard

i am accusing you, and mizblueprint, of nothing

i support and embrace both of you

we merely need more engagement as mizblueprint says, and a cold hard reckoning of the difficulty as you say

@benroyce
@mizblueprint @minego @punissuer

Gotcha, well said! And apologies mizblueprint for getting defensive, I totally misread the vibe of your comment & absolutely see what Ben's referring to. Agreed, getting active is probably way more accessible than it seems, esp bc there are lots of small ways to help, and none of us are alone!

@irenetherogue @mizblueprint @minego @punissuer

frustration is normal

i feel it, we all feel it

@benroyce
@mizblueprint @minego @punissuer

Truly, its an intensely stressful time. Thank you all the same tho 🕊️🫶

@irenetherogue @benroyce @minego @punissuer
I have run for office five times, & won three terms in city wide elections for city council. I retired from elected office, & have supported several younger people through appointed positions, into elected positions. I helped connect them with campaign consultants, volunteers, endorsements, & contributors. I felt that I would be "blocking" qualified younger people from office if I stayed into my 70's. Uncontested incumbents should not even be a thing.

@benroyce
@ruakueqche @minego @punissuer as i said, voting is the entry point. I strongly dispute that not voting cancels out or sabotages campaign labor, it simply leaves low hanging fruit on the tree.

As an aside, i invite u look up the difference between calling out & calling in, or if youre already aware of the difference, to start employing that knowledge. For starters, maybe dont put "if u dont, youre a [slur]" on your call to action, the reasons to do it dont outweigh the reasons not to