lolgaxe wrote:
[/quote] You mean the people calling large protests with isolated cases of violence "riots" to make it sound worse than it actually is?
And by "people", you mean
the Portland police? Isn't that what a riot is? isn't it funny just how often a "peaceful protest" by members of the Left just happens to have a few bad apples who proceed to do such isolated things as toss rocks and bottle at police, light cars on fire, smash storefronts, etc? At what point do we place at least a small amount of blame on the "peaceful protesters" who continue to go out peacefully protesting, night after night, despite the fact that every time they do it, their large numbers more or less act as camouflage for those who want to destroy things?
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If you want to narrow it to a single bullet point and ignore the large picture and all the details, then I'll say the protests are louder this time than when Obama was elected simply because no one really felt endangered by an Obama presidency while lots of groups feel their lives and livelihoods are at stake with a Trump presidency, or that a Trump presidency is just corrupt in general.
Ah. So just a small number of actual isolated racists were afraid of an Obama presidency, while a really large number of... what? not at all racist folks are absolutely terrified of Trump? Because? Maybe the difference here is that no one defends or supports the actions of white racists, and thus their actions, when they occur, actually are small and isolated, while it seems like a very large number of people on the left support the actions of extremists on their side.
Which is maybe the problem? Perception vs reality and all of that.
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A more accurate comparison isn't between Obama and Trump but Bush and Trump, since the elections were similar in the EC and popular results.
I don't know if I agree though. The political climate was different back then. I've posted many times over the year how their seemed to be a sea change in how the Left acted after the 2000 election. Up to that point, the Democrats had controlled congress for 40 years straight (all 40 in the House, and 37 of those 40 years from 1955 to 1995 in the Senate). They had retained the White House up to 2000, so they were still empowered. But when they lost in 2000, it was like they went into panic mode or something. Suddenly, tons of money started flowing to what I can only describe as very radical and very emotional media outlets, designed to engaged in a constant emotion driven rhetoric campaign attacking everything and anything associated with the political Right.
I was as that time (IMO of course) that the Democrats more or less abandoned their decades long positive progressive message and turned to just outright name calling the GOP. Since then, our political divide has grown, and our politics have gotten uglier and uglier. I honestly don't think Trump has anything at all to do with it (although he certainly maybe doesn't help with some of his own rhetoric). If the most moderate and calm conservative in the world had been elected, I'm quite confident that we'd still be seeing angry protesting and riots by liberals, who, having been subjected to nearly 20 years of fear mongering about all the horrible hings the GOP would do if in power, have actually believed that and are scared witless about what will happen next.
Let's not forget that most of those rioting and protesting are relative young. They've lived most of their teen/adult lives with Obama as president, with most of their understanding of the Bush years filtered though the same liberal fear mongering messages. They literally don't know that a GOP in power isn't really the end of the world, but they think it is. They aren't aware that things were actually pretty good during Bush's term in office (and objectively much better in many areas). They've been subjected to a message that has massively over focused on issues of race, gender, orientation, and a smattering of fears about wars and foreign policy and nation building, but don't really have the life experience and context to see the bigger picture.
I remember the fears being raised about Bush when he won. It was all about how abortion would be outlawed, and sex education would disappear, and kids would be forced to pray in school, and learn creationism as science. Amazingly, none of those terrible fearful things actually happened, despite the angry left constantly drum beating the fear. And guess what? I suspect that what those kids rioting today are fearful off aren't going to happen either. They've just been wound up by fearful messaging and are reacting exactly as you'd expect.
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But since you want to talk violence in 2008 versus 2016 then let's start with Kaylon Johnson, who was jumped by three attackers who shouted "Fuck Obama!" and "Nigger president" as they broke his face. Then there were the students on the North Carolina State University campus in Raleigh, who spent Election Night spray-painting such fun-loving messages about Obama as “Let's shoot that Nigger in the head†and “Hang Obama by a noose.†Oh, in Utah a black family that was volunteering at a local polling station came home to find their American flag on fire. The morning after the election a black man taking his eight year old daughter to school found a six foot tall burning cross on his lawn next to his Obama lawn sign. The only black guy in Apolacon Pennyslvania also found a burning cross. And the four guys who spent election night driving around Staten Island, and assaulted a Liberian immigrant with a metal pipe, then drove around and assaulted a black dude and threatened a Latino dude and a group of black people, then ended their obviously peaceful night by mistaking a white guy for a black guy and ran him over with their car. In Michigan Randy Gray dressed in his full KKK outfit and spent the day waving an American flag around, but he insisted it had nothing to do with Obama so of course that wasn't anything hateful at all. Keith Luke started his courageous battle to save the white race that day as well, intent on killing as many Jews, blacks, and Hispanics as humanly possible before killing himself. He managed to kill two Latino women and was caught on his way to a synogogue. A bunch of kids in Idaho felt like chanting "Assassinate Obama" just to tease their minority schoolmates. In Kentucky, Washington, and Maine people were hanging and burning Obama effigies from trees. A church in Massachusetts was burned down. But other than those incidents (and the ones not reported since that's legitimate) 2008 was a totally peaceful election.
So pretty similar to what the violent extremists are doing in response to Trump's election. Well. Except without the rioting, and the "peaceful protesting" that is facilitating such things. I'm reasonably certain that no random bystanders to any of those crimes just stood there laughing about it though, right? I mean, shouldn't we maybe also judge a "side" by how the supposedly non-violent non-hateful members of that side act as well? Because there will always be haters and extremists on all sides of any issue. The real question is how the rest of us react to it.
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gbaji wrote:
That should tell you right there which "side" is more emotionally driven.
I'm going to have to go with the "side" sending letters to mosques that Trump is going to do to them what Hitler did to the Jews.
That's not the "side" though. That may be some disturbed individuals. The "side" is judged by how they act as a group. And frankly, the Left "side" is behaving horribly.
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As an aside since we're talking about Obama vs Trump, I'm most amused at how much people went out of their way to insist that Obama was going to take away the Second Amendment when there was literally nothing to even hint that was a possibility, and then those people voted for the guy who very publically threatened the First Amendment numerous times. Good job fuckwits.
Can't speak to Trump threatening the First Amendment (been drinking, remember?), but Obama absolutely did try to get a number of restrictions placed on gun ownership. He failed because he lost control of congress. Of course, how much of that was just pandering to the anti-gun folks, then waiting until he couldn't get anything passed to make attempts, then blaming the GOP for preventing it? No clue. Honestly though, while I'm sure that sort of thing is what got the most media coverage (cause angry gun toting white folks from the fly-over states always sells well on TV), most of the actual talk among conservatives with regard to Obama's agenda revolved around his spending agenda and foreign policy. And in those cases, most of the fears of the Right did come to pass. He did go on a spending spreed and put us further into debt. His "recovery" did result in terrible GDP growth for 8 years running. His fearful approach to foreign policy did embolden a ton of tin-pot factions of bad guys around the world resulting in violence, strife, and general global chaos.
Those were the things conservatives were really fearful of with regard to Obama. Not "OMG! A black President" or "OMG! He's coming for our guns!". That was the media narrative of the conservative reaction to Obama. I'm sure you can see why they might want that to be the perceived opposition position. Straw man indeed.
Edited, Nov 29th 2016 4:31pm by gbaji