He’s had yet another horrible week. The old tricks aren’t working. Kamala Harris does not fear him. And it’s showing in the numbers.

  • archomrade [he/him]
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    13 months ago

    I am fine with hurting Democratic chances as a side effect as part of a campaign which will produce better behavior from the Democrats.

    So e.g. when the uncommitted voters punish the Democrats for their support of Israel, I’m in favor of that. When ozma makes something up about the Democrats that isn’t accurate, which only hurts their chances but doesn’t do anything productive for anyone except Trump, I’m against that.

    This is it, I think. If it were just about misinformation, we’d be having a different conversation. I don’t think anyone here would defend sharing outright false information. But that isn’t the only complaint you’ve had about Ozma; you’ve complained that they only post bad things about democrats, not just that some of them are incorrect (not even incorrect in entirety, sometimes simply incorrect it its framing, or maybe even factually accurate but simply uncharitable in its framing). I disagree with suggesting that behavior is ‘over the line’, outside of any alleged misinformation. Similarly, if there are pro-Palestinian protestors at the DNC today, I wouldn’t classify those people as ““useful idiots”” (I cannot put enough scare-quotes around this). The democrats have not moved hardly at all on their Israel policy, why wouldn’t they be legitimate protestors? I am indignant that I have to keep defending loosely-targeted attacks against protestors coming from you, when you are still being vague about what makes a protest or online protest behavior something that you consider to be “actually leading to Trump getting elected”. How the fuck do you measure that? What proof to you have that Ozma or Linkerbann or anyone else is “actually leading to Trump getting elected”, or that their building popular discontent around democrats on this issue isn’t “helping lead to better behavior from democrats”? Fuck you for accusing me of misrepresenting your argument, when your argument seems completely dependent on some imagined future that only you could possibly see. Honestly, ‘actually leading to x’ is effectively meaningless. Who the fuck knows if something “actually leads” to something? And it also still incorrectly places the responsibility of the protestor, who is protesting against a policy they would like to see changed, instead of the person in power, who is consistently refusing to take meaningful action toward better policy.

    Is that what I am saying?

    1. Yes
    2. No

    I reject your question.

    FFS, how about you apply your logic on your own example, then? If there are massive palestinian protests in the DNC this week that constantly interrupt the proceedings, is that an example of a good or bad protest? Is there additional information that you need to make that determination?

    Or maybe online: if there’s a user who exclusively posts (factually accurate) information about the Democrat’s culpability in the ongoing Palestinian genocide, is that a good or bad protest behavior? What makes it so? How do you know if that behavior “actually leads to x or y outcome” without traveling to the future to see what impact it had?

    No, I do not. I can take another stab at explaining it, but first let me ask something: Would you agree that Trump would be an even worse catastrophe for Palestinians (as well as many many other vulnerable people) than a second term of the existing Democratic status quo?

    I’ll answer your question with another question: would you agree that supporting any amount of genocide is beyond indefensible? Hint: the answer should be fairly obvious and the question should feel incredibly condescending.

    If I wanted to be petty I’d apply your own logic on your own behavior in defending democrats on their inaction. Does mozz’s behavior lead to better or worse policy from democrats? Does making excuses for their lack or response improve their policy on Gaza? No? Well fuck, looks like he’s just another useful idiot, then. 🤷‍♂️ Absent any concrete qualifiers i guess anyone or everyone could be a bad-actor

    • mozz
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      13 months ago

      Honestly, ‘actually leading to x’ is effectively meaningless. Who the fuck knows if something “actually leads” to something?

      This is totally weird to me. Why would you possibly advocate for any particular course of action, except in terms of what it’s likely to accomplish?

      What else would lead you to what you’re deciding to do? Vibes? Allegiance to the group? I’m just lost. I mean of course it’s impossible to know for sure what the outcome will be, but you can at least make an educated guess.

      Why else would you do a protest, unless you were aiming to impact the future? That is a serious question.

      I don’t think anyone here would defend sharing outright false information. But that isn’t the only complaint you’ve had about Ozma; you’ve complained that they only post bad things about democrats, not just that some of them are incorrect

      Hm. So, I just looked over a bunch of Ozma’s recent history and it honestly looks fine. Maybe it’s a little dishonest to characterize one of the main architects of the IRA and the Paris Agreement as “former alum of Blackrock” as if that’s the most relevant thing about him. But I mean basically it’s fine and that’s the only story I have much of any complaint about.

      I think most of my complaint about ozma is historical at this point. Back in the day he would do stuff like say Biden betrayed his voters on marijuana policy because he said he would do X Y and Z and then he didn’t. When I pointed out he had done X and Y and tried to do Z but failed, ozma would ignore it and post more memes about how Biden betrayed his voters on marijuana. That to me seems like it implies you don’t give a shit about X Y or Z, or pushing Biden to better marijuana policy, but you do want to try to get Trump elected. That’s weird and counterproductive. To me.

      If there are massive palestinian protests in the DNC this week that constantly interrupt the proceedings, is that an example of a good or bad protest?

      No idea. I’m not even plugged in enough to that culture to know. Probably it’ll be a good thing; anything that’s directly putting pressure on the Democrats and bringing public awareness to the issue will probably be a good thing, because those are two excellent things.

      Like I said, I don’t know if there are any people who are doing protests at the DNC who think the answer is to unconditionally blow up support for the Democrats, imply that they caused inflation and they love what Netanyahu’s doing and are cheering him on, and so vote instead for Cornel West. I know they exist on Lemmy, and if they’re in Chicago too, then I would classify those people as useful idiots.

      Does that help answer the question?

      I’ll answer your question with another question:

      Dude, I am not asking that as any kind of “gotcha” question or anything. I want to know where you are coming from.

      would you agree that supporting any amount of genocide is beyond indefensible? Hint: the answer should be fairly obvious and the question should feel incredibly condescending.

      If it’s a choice between blowing up the earth and destroying India or something, and those are the only two possible options, then I would choose destroying India. That’s sort of the type of choice you have to make in modern American politics. If there was a way to lean on the lever to make the blow-up-India explosion smaller, I would definitely support doing that.

      If someone was saying, blowing up India is SO BAD that it is indefensible, and so I want to aim a whole bunch of criticism at the blowing up India option (and in a way that seems only in the vaguest of senses to connect with leaning on the lever to make the explosion smaller and in practice seems more likely just to make more likely the blowing-up-earth option), that would alarm the fuck out of me and I would disagree with that person.

      I mean doesn’t that make sense? If the alternative is no genocide, then supporting genocide is indefensible. If the alternative is a bigger genocide, then supporting genocide can be an “acceptable” (if you want to call it that) lesser evil. Putting pressure on to reduce the magnitude of the lesser genocide, while also advocating for it to be the lesser and not the greater genocide, sounds perfectly defensible. It sounds right to me.

      Does mozz’s behavior lead to better or worse policy from democrats? Does making excuses for their lack or response improve their policy on Gaza? No? Well fuck, looks like he’s just another useful idiot, then.

      I doubt anyone from the DNC is on Lemmy. I think the impact of anything I am saying, if any, will be on the voters.

      That’s what makes it not make sense to me why shitting on Democrats on Lemmy is supposed to help any Palestinians. It seems more likely to get Trump elected, which will hurt them.

      • archomrade [he/him]
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        13 months ago

        Why else would you do a protest, unless you were aiming to impact the future? That is a serious question.

        Lmao no it’s not, you’ve been articulating the other reason repeatedly, haven’t you? According to you, a great many people protest simply to get Trump elected, right?

        Like I said, I don’t know if there are any people who are doing protests at the DNC who think the answer is to unconditionally blow up support for the Democrats, imply that they caused inflation and they love what Netanyahu’s doing and are cheering him on, and so vote instead for Cornel West

        There’s good news here: there actually is a condition to running interference to democratic support, and it’s very well communicated.

        The funny thing is that people want to treat the opposition as a monolith, but it’s a coalition of various interests just like any other group. If there’s a group within the group that is hard-lining a Palestinian liberation movement, the good news is that group likely isn’t big enough that you’d need their support. But there’s likely some compromise policy that gets the support you need from that larger group without conceding the least practical conditions.

        But when you treat them as a monolith, it’s easy to complain that nothing you do can appease that group of crazies so they must not be acting in good-faith!

        doubt anyone from the DNC is on Lemmy. I think the impact of anything I am saying, if any, will be on the voters.

        Lol this would be more funny if it weren’t so depressing. You don’t even see the self-contradiction. It reminds me a little of that conservative minority trope: “our opposition is both laughably weak and existentially dangerous”

        • mozz
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          3 months ago

          According to you, a great many people protest simply to get Trump elected, right?

          But when you treat them as a monolith, it’s easy to complain that nothing you do can appease that group of crazies so they must not be acting in good-faith!

          Let me try a different tactic: I’ll just ask it as a question. Am I supportive of people protesting at the DNC, trying to get the Democrats to improve their policy on Israel by vocally demanding change, and withholding support unless they do?

          I’ve given you the answer as to what my feeling on this is, several times.

          • archomrade [he/him]
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            13 months ago

            Based on your varied responses: sometimes.

            It seems to depend a great deal on what you think the likely outcome of that protest is, and if your imagined calculus puts the protest on the wrong side of some imaginary line, suddenly those protestors are ‘useful idiots’ at best or ‘bad-actors’ at worst.

            • mozz
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              3 months ago

              It seems to depend a great deal on what you think the likely outcome of that protest is, and if your imagined calculus puts the protest on the wrong side of some imaginary line, suddenly those protestors are ‘useful idiots’ at best or ‘bad-actors’ at worst.

              Yes. You have grasped it.

              If someone’s protesting with the most likely result being better outcomes for the Palestinian people (because of useful pressure on the Democratic party, or even better some longer-term reform to our broken system that leaves these as the only two options), then I’m in favor of it.

              If someone’s protesting in such a way that the most likely result is Trump winning the election and making things 10 times worse for the Palestinians, then I’m against it.

              I have no idea why that would be weird or surprising, but yes. There’s a little bit of overlap between those two goals, and it’s impossible to know the future or the impact of any particular action definitively, but a lot of real-world situations are messy. Them’s the breaks.

              I describe as “useful idiots” people who are falling for deliberate propaganda which is being deployed to turn them unconditionally against the Democrats, alongside a lot of objectively false criticism, producing only a vague level of improvement to the Democrats’ behavior but a strong result of making it more likely that Trump will win, yes. If you’re not doing that them I’m fine with you. And I have no idea, as I said, how many (if any) of the DNC protestors will fall into that category in practice. I just know how I categorize people based on the outcomes they’re promoting, and I know I see people in that “useful idiot” category on Lemmy. I don’t think you’re one of them, for the record; that’s why I laid out some of the specific accounts I’d describe as more specifically promoting propaganda as opposed to good activism and tried to be specific about it.

              Hope this all is helpful; glad we could clear it up.

              • archomrade [he/him]
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                13 months ago

                I describe people who are falling for deliberate propaganda which is being deployed to turn them unconditionally against the Democrats, producing only a vague level of improvement to the Democrats’ behavior but a stronger result of making it more likely that Trump will win, as “useful idiots,” yes.

                Jesus christ. Do you consider US culpability in the Palestinian Genocide a part of this ‘deliberate propaganda’? At what point does someone protesting against democratic involvement and complacency in Israeli war crimes become someone who is protesting against democrats generally? Is there any grey area that you’re willing to acknowledge between these two categorical binaries you’ve proposed? Can there be a legitimate protest against the democrats, that hurts their odds at winning, but doesn’t directly result in a change of policy? If the democrats and the protestors both refuse to bend to the other, is it categorically the protestors’ fault if and when trump wins? Even if it isn’t apparent that they’ve lost explicitly because of those protestors? Is it also the fault of the protestors if the democrats adopt a pro-palestinian policy in response to the protestors, AND THEN lose? What i’m gathering from you is that it is ALWAYS the protestors fault for the loss, no matter what the democrats do in response.

                Fuck off with your electoral reductionism. The democrats are not helpless here, and they could absolutely be fighting to save palestinian lives and it is 100% their own fault if voters decide they can’t support them over it. They are welcome to weigh the electoral calculus to predict how voters might react to their policies but it is completely their own fault if they’ve chosen the wrong ones.

                “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a “more convenient season.”

                • mozz
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                  3 months ago

                  Do you consider US culpability in the Palestinian Genocide a part of this ‘deliberate propaganda’?

                  No

                  At what point does someone protesting against democratic involvement and complacency in Israeli war crimes become someone who is protesting against democrats generally?

                  When they stop either conditioning their lack of support on Democratic behavior, or advocating for voting reform or some other strategy which can lead to effective replacement of the Democrats with something better. Either one of those sounds fine and sensible to me, but when they reach the point of saying, functionally, “well if the Democrats aren’t doing what I want then I will let the Republicans win even if they are 10 times worse at the things I hold as priorities in the world,” that to me stops making sense.

                  I think if you’re a Palestinian who is still alive right now, and a protestor “on your behalf” enables Trump to come to power, and then Trump supports someone who kills you, the idea that the protestor was mad that the Democrats weren’t doing enough for you before Trump and Netanyahu cooperated to kill you would be cold comfort. I think this whole “harm reduction isn’t worth doing” idea is a childish and entitled reaction from someone who is safely far away from that harm that is very real to very real people in the real world, who have the luxury of poo pooing the entire idea of predicting outcomes in the real world and strategizing how to get them.

                  Is there any grey area that you’re willing to acknowledge between these two categorical binaries you’ve proposed?

                  Yes, quite a substantial one.

                  Can there be a legitimate protest against the democrats, that hurts their odds at winning, but doesn’t directly result in a change of policy?

                  Yes. If it’s only hurting their odds of winning, and not even trying to change their policy, then it’s suspect to me, but as you said there’s quite a substantial grey area and it’s not easy to tell ahead of time what protest might result in what outcome. You have to just kind of do what you can and hope that you’ve worked it out what is going to help the Palestinians and what is going to hurt them, and do the first and not the second as best as you can figure it out.

                  If the democrats and the protestors both refuse to bend to the other, is it categorically the protestors’ fault if and when trump wins?

                  Not categorically, no. The Democrats have a lot of responsibility, the Republicans and Netanyahu obviously have quite a bit more. The protestors might have some responsibility, but depending on how they were protesting, potentially not much at all.

                  Honestly, I’m less concerned with assigning “blame” after the fact than I am with strategizing what I could do, or what someone else could do, to get better outcomes. Like I say, I consider this whole thing of it being real important “whose fault it is” when something horrifying happens to be an entitled mentality from someone who’s not directly in danger. Mostly when people’s families’ lives are threatened they’re more focused on “how can I keep them safe” than they are on “whose fault will it be if someone comes to power who kills them, and how can I make sure it won’t be this person’s fault but instead this other person’s fault.”

                  Even if it isn’t apparent that they’ve lost explicitly because of those protestors? Is it also the fault of the protestors if the democrats adopt a pro-palestinian policy in response to the protestors, AND THEN lose?

                  So this brings up a really good point. To me, it makes a lot more sense to help the Palestinians by educating the American people about what’s going on in Palestine, so the Democrats won’t have to decide (to any degree) between enabling war crimes and losing the election.

                  A lot of protests right now are serving a double purpose – one, they’re bringing awareness to the issue with the American people (and it’s working), and two, they’re threatening the Democrats electorally and forcing them to change their calculus of what types of Israel policy they should do if they don’t want to lose the election from the other direction (and that’s working, too). Both of those are good things. I keep saying that, and you keep insisting for some reason that I must have a problem with them. I guess because it makes the point that you’re trying to say easier if I am just against all protestors. As I keep saying, I am not.

                  What i’m gathering from you is that it is ALWAYS the protestors fault for the loss, no matter what the democrats do in response.

                  I don’t care whose “fault” it is. I am talking about what actions are good (in terms of creating better outcomes in the future), and what actions are bad (in terms of getting people killed). Like I said, this emphasis on “fault” having any significant importance is the mindset of someone who isn’t watching their family getting killed.

                  • archomrade [he/him]
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                    13 months ago

                    A lot of protests right now are serving a double purpose – one, they’re bringing awareness to the issue with the American people (and it’s working), and two, they’re threatening the Democrats electorally and forcing them to change their calculus of what types of Israel policy they should do if they don’t want to lose the election from the other side (and that’s working, too). Both of those are good things. I keep saying that, and you keep, consistently, insisting for some reason that I must have a problem with them. I guess because it makes the point that you’re trying to say easier if I am just against all protestors. As I keep saying, I am not.

                    Yea, that’s the point. But you continuously allude to some “other” type of pro-palestinian protestor, who is putting the pressure squarely on those most directly responsive to their protest, as “useful idiot”, or “bad actor”, or alluding to them having abuser logic for placing agency on the people currently providing Israel military aid and not, weirdly, on themselves. You even use a double-standard when discussing online behavior: in one instance, the correct way to Do Activismtm is to convince the american public to sway public opinion, and then in the next you hand-wave away activity that is directed at swaying public opinion because ‘you doubt the DNC reads your comments on Lemmy’.

                    That, OR, you’re trying to distinguish between types of pro-palestinian protestors using some weird, “that’s not gonna help” classification system that’s opaque and/or ambiguously defined, so that at any given moment someone saying “democrats haven’t done enough” can be cast aside as “other” or “bad actor”. It is almost as if you are defending a naieve enthusiasm from water being thrown on it, simply because you value that enthusiasm even while there is a veritable gulf between what is needed from democrats on Israel and what they are doing. No, you may not return to your brunch, look at the shit that still needs cleaning up. Protestors are there to remind libs (who, as you pointed out, are safe from harm themselves no matter what the democratic policy is on Israel) that the work is not yet done. This includes people on Lemmy who are serving you reminders that things continue to be shit, despite what little democrats have actually done.

                    And it’s not even like the Democrats can’t, also, campaign for that change being worked toward. You’re pretending as if the desired policy must grow from grass-roots before democrats can take action, but the democrats already know what the right thing to do is, it is just politically inconvenient to have to do it right now. A huge part of the problem is that the Democrats actively use the bully pulpit to deflect blame and run cover for Israel - when they should be using it to make the case to the american public why things need to change.

                    Literally anything to disembody the problem away from your personal electoral goals, while also claiming to support the issue being raised. It is the quintessential ‘white moderate’ take that MLK discusses in Letter from Birmingham, but you’re so blinded by self-confidence that you couldn’t possibly see it.