FrostyTheDoo @ FrostyTheDoo @lemmy.world Posts 0Comments 116Joined 2 yr. ago
No one is saying that except you bud.
The media outlets most likely to do that (AP & Reuters) are no longer allowed in the room for these kinds of things.
Is this take supposed to be less pessimistic?
Is your point that Russia should be allowed to steam roll through Ukraine? Europe shouldn't help their allies and neighbors defend themselves? Standing up to bullies is worse than being a bully?
Genuinely curious if you even have a point to make at all. I hope I'm just interpreting you wrong.
Putin has Musk and Trump by the balls, for sure.
Give him some time. Once his cronies get everything working right he won't have to sue, he can just deny federal benefits to people who don't order a cybertuck and send their hearts out to him when they receive it.
Fair point. The next target is DEI, people already get defensive when things are called DEI as if its a new slur
It's so infuriating because those first 2 things technically are woke in the original sense of the phrase. It was never supposed to have a negative connotation, it just meant having your eyes open to the ways of the world and having a discussion about how to improve them for everyone. How did we let that get twisted into something we want to avoid at all costs?
Proceeds to bring up the US anyway
Interesting. I'm admittedly not well read on the Syrian situation or the new regime there. Do we think they will leverage this to let Russia evacuate their equipment for a price, or continue to block them to appeal to the west?
Did you even read the post?
Killing In The Name by RATM. Or Hot n Cold by Katy Perry.
Feelings? Nah
"women's role in society is to bear and raise children, upkeep the household, and please her husband. From nursing, teaching, cooking, cleaning, to wifely duties."
See how that sounds?
$50k is 1-2 years pay for the person who reported him. For them, that short term relief was worth more than the highly improbable outcome where this man's actions actually impact their life in a positive way in the next few months. Money wins almost every time
If I was an undocumented migrant and a family member of mine voted for Trump, or vocally supported him, I'd be pissed, and I'd say "if they deport me, I hope they deport you too."
Are you saying that would be wrong of them?
And I'm not allowed to feel the same way, just because (you're assuming) I'm white?
I dislike and wish real life consequences upon any Trump supporter. Not their family.
I'm talking about people that support Trump. You don't seem to understand that. My point is I have no sympathy for Trump supporters whether they're migrants, whether they voted or not. I feel bad for the migrants that don't support Trump. I really hope you can comprehend that.
Read my last paragraph? I know they can't vote. A lot of them still support Trump and his policies, and if they do, they can find out the hard way what those policies really mean.
To be clear, I absolutely do not support Trump's deportation policy. I simply don't feel bad for those that would wish deportation on others, if/when it ends up happening to them. If you support Trump and you get deported by his policies, you don't get my sympathies. I'm tired of playing nice with people that spew hate and only care about their own personal problems over the problems of their own community and country.
Harris lost a lot of ground with latinos in this election:
Trump beat Harris in nearly every major battleground state and improved among several key demographics, namely Latino voters. According to CNN's exit polls from 2020 and 2024, Trump gained 14 points among Latinos, with Harris winning the bloc by just 6 points this week. In 2020, President Joe Biden won the Latino vote by 33 points.
The hispanic community moved very far to the right. Yes, the ones that actually voted are not undocumented migrants, but people in their family are, and many of them do share in support of Trump
When he spoke to Flores in March, Velazquez said President Joe Biden had treated immigrants as if they were ignorant, and that the country was worse off because of his economic policies.
If Mr. Velazquez gets deported by Trump, I will have no sympathy for him. He even in that article says he won't have sympathy for himself, he'll leave the country if Trump comes for him. He literally knows he voted against his own interests and says it in the article. Why should I feel bad for that person? I'll save my sympathy for the ones who don't want to kick their own neighbors out.
"It's not human," he said of mass deportations, but added that he has a plan if the policy affects him. "I respect the decision. I leave the country."
Here's one more from Fox News talking about immigrant families on both sides of the issue.
"So you support Donald Trump because of the economy?" the CNN reporter asked the undocumented immigrant, to which he responded, "For the economy, yes. I don‘t support the anti-immigrant action," he said, as the reporter asked about Trump's plan for mass deportations.
If someone voted or prefers for bad stuff to affect the whole country, then I see nothing wrong with preferring them to be the one to personally experience it.
If 51/100 people voted to throw a random citizen into a volcano to make God happy, I would hope that the person that gets thrown in is one of those 51 people, and not one of the other 49.
If someone can't vote because but still holds harmful views, it doesn't make them any less deserving of finding out they are wrong. If you wish harm on others, I'm not going to coddle you when you're sad you personally got harmed.
It's not an aptitude test.