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bOtH SiDeS!!1!
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Yep it's the same old bullshit from out-of-touch sub-22-year-old revolutionaries who just so happen to intersect the Venn diagram with right-wing wedge-driving astroturfers, conveniently. They tend to stay quiet for 3-4 years, do nothing, then complain loudly about how imperfect the inevitable candidate is, then threaten to do something utterly meaningless and backfiring to their own end-goals like not voting or voting 3rd-party.
Tack on another on that list: Ukraine. Trump pledged zero aid to Ukraine; Republicans are blocking it all. Not only will more blood be spilled in Palestine under Republican leadership, but quantifiable more blood will also be spilled in Ukraine. Talk about a Pyrrhic victory.
It isn't that they're silent for 3-4 years, it's that libs suddenly need their support and start hounding them about their motivations.
Of course they'll hound you about your motivations; after all:
... Then you just aren't thinking logically or with any foresight whatsoever. In fact it's entirely self-defeating.
In the meantime go ahead and ask a Palestinian and Ukrainian who they'd prefer to have in the White House. I'll wait.
I'm not even sure what this means, except that it seems to suggest that leftists care about right-leaning policies? I've seen a lot of loose usage of the right-left definitions lately, and it's worth pointing out that the two geopolitical topics you specifically called out don't exactly fit a strict 'left-right' political scale (having to deal with hierarchies and egalitarianism, generally). Different branches within the left political thinking have different lenses to judge international conflicts (an ML will look at those conflicts differently than an anarchist). Although we all see those conflicts differently, we all tend to agree that the US has historically never been a benevolent actor in them and we regard the US's involvement skeptically, to say the least.
The US political system simply does not provide egalitarian opportunities for dissent through it's democratic process, so of course we threaten the system that is hostile to our involvement. Political dissent is the only tool available to us. It just so happens that this particular election provides quite a bit of leverage, because while the posture toward existing hierarchical structures is the same between the two parties, one party is desperately in need of support for self-preservation. Moderates have to work with us this time, and boy do they seem pissed about it.
Hardly, you just seem to think leftists are on 'your side'. Liberals have always been the largest roadblock to progress, and have always been our target for agitation. We threaten the Liberal coalition by withholding support, and that gives us leverage.
LOL, Biden has been actively supplying the weaponry being used against Palestinians, and Ukraine has nearly been left to defend itself for the last year as Putin's war machine has been slowly gaining momentum. I don't think either group thinks of Biden fondly and you're deluding yourself if you think they give a fuck about the US's presidential race. I actually think they'd be rooting for the political agitators trying to get Biden to deal while he's still in office, but I can't speak for them (and funny that you think you're able to yourself).
Whoa, slow down there slick. I was merely referring in context to the submission meme. Do you or do you not care about the things on the scale?
Why of course it does! For starters, they're called Primaries. The problem is your numbers are so tiny that your coalition of course cannot punch above its weight-class. You seem to believe you're the only group in America who matter and don't seem to understand the concept or caucusing or coalitions.
As a result you don't seem to grasp that if Biden pulls too hard to "work with you," he risks alienating more fragile, less-informed, less-educated more gullible parts of the electorate and then it's all for nothing because now we have to deal with the significantly-worse guy and party for 4 years, and everyone including Palestinians and Ukrainians will have nobody to blame but folks such as yourself because you tried to leverage beyond your weight-class.
Considering it was those darned liberals who won pretty much every notable piece of advancement and progress in our nation's history, I'm going to call bullshit on that. Thank a liberal for the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in Congress. It sure wasn't you or any tankies, now, was it?
Obvious deflection aside, I'm pretty sure Ukraine recognizes the obstruction in aid is entirely on Republicans. That you seem to muddy the waters suggests even more bad-faith arguing and now leans even more heavily to right-wing wedge-driving. It's getting a bit too obvious for me now. Just go ahead and follow through, will you buddy? Because I've yet to see a Palestinian or Ukrainian say they're rooting for Trump over Biden. Good luck, though.
Pretty sure they give a big fuck about the Presidential race because in Ukraine it determines the outcome of aid, and in Palestine it determines whether they get Biden who is stepping away from Israel, versus Trump who has openly embraced steam-rolling Gaza. Quite foolish really to believe otherwise.
LMAO, I stopped reading after you said I should thank a liberal for the Civil Rights Act
If leftists were such a small demographic then our voting patterns should be of no concern to your precious coalition, dipshit. But I'll take that as an admission that your ire at us is purely theatrical.
Oof, that one kind of hit hard then, didn't it?
Keep preaching of pyrrhic victories from the comfort of your home as -- checks notes -- not a single Tankie was in Congress who voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964, now, did they? So yes, thank a Liberal for actually getting shit done. Don't have much to list for winning rights for the American people now, do you...?
LMAO tell me you don't understand zero-sum without saying it. Yes, congratulations: If tankies back out they might throw the election for the true fascist and accelerate the deaths of Palestinians, Ukrainians, and cripple rights on the home front from women to trans -- great job! But now, you've just jeopordized an even LARGER chunk of the electorate in voting against you and now you still lose because you sacrificed the larger voting-bloc for the smaller voting-bloc. Totally wise move there, buddy! Way to think that one through!
Yet who am I kidding -- you seem to blame Biden for the lack of aid going to Ukraine, so there's really no use in discussing any further.
lol checkmate, tankie
I will gladly accept these congratulations on behalf of all tankies
Haha great memes, kid!
I just have to jump in here to point out how utterly, completely, cataclysmically wrong you are about this. First, let's start with the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Yes, it's true that no, "Tankie," was in Congress to vote for it, but attributing it's passage to Liberals shows a fundamental misunderstanding of how the parties functioned at the time.
Economically, the party positions were mostly the same, with Republicans promoting fiscal conservatism while Democrats supported labor rights and the social safety net. However, in terms of the Civil Rights movement, the divide was centered around geography, not party; Republicans and Democrats from northern states were far more likely to support the Civil Rights movement than southern states. In fact, more Republicans voted for Civil Rights Act than Democrats (a point disingenuous Republicans will bring up without acknowledging the Southern Strategy, but that's a separate issue), so fiscally, the Civil Rights Act was passed with more conservative than liberal support.
Second, the Civil Rights movement in general was a far-left movement that clashed with Liberal Centrists. Martin Luther King was far more aligned with Socialists and Democrat Socialists than Liberals, and was downright anti-capitalist, saying, "Capitalism has often left a gap of superfluous wealth and abject poverty...[creating] conditions permitting necessities to be taken from the many to give luxuries to the few," and that, "capitalism has outlived its usefulness.”
King also had no patience for moderate Liberals. In a speech in 1960, he said, “There is a pressing need for a liberalism in the North which is truly liberal...[that] rises up with righteous indignation when a Negro is lynched in Mississippi but will be equally incensed when a Negro is denied the right to live in his neighborhood.” Even in his famous 1963 Letter from a Birmingham Jail he said:
So, in summary, attributing the Civil Rights Act to Liberals is patently wrong. Economically, more members of Congress who voted for the Civil Rights Act would identify as conservative than liberal. Socially, the Civil Rights movement was often at odds with Liberal pragmatists who pushed for slower, more moderate action. Finally, given your comments, I'm pretty sure that if Martin Luther King were alive today, you'd think he was a Tankie.
So let me get this straight: You say I'm, "cataclysmically wrong" about this but in the very next breath confirm precisely what I said that not a single leftist / tankie / social democrat / democratic socialist / socialist / commie in Congress actually moved this to a law...? So I guess I'm cataclysmically correct. I had to read your comment twice over to make sure
What you're discussing is the great ideological-party realignment of the 20th century; a transitioning point beginning in the FDR days and going all the way forward with Goldwater and Nixon's Southern Strategy. I'm painting broad strokes certainly, but it is abundantly-clear that the liberals of today were largely the Republican of yesterday. Does it seem likely that Southern Democrats would be the advocates of Civil Rights when it was the Northern Abolitionists who fought to end Slavery and the Southern Democrats advocating for slavery and issuing the "Southern Manifesto"? Consider a map of WHERE those votes for the 1964 Civil Rights came from, specifically, where the majority of NAY votes came from. In summary: The exact same people who more greatly supported labor rights and social safety nets were also the ones who voted YAY for the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Those were neither socialists nor southern conservatives; those were predominantly northern liberals.
Moreover:
At the end of the day I feel my point remains the same: It was those very liberals who turned his words into law. We can be grateful to the grassroots organization, but at the end of the day there is a coalition that needs to be had to get things actually done at the highest level of law creation.
Buddy, you need to reread my comment, and this time go past the second paragraph.
Man I aced reading-comprehension to the point of scholarships; with that I've now read it three times and I'm still no closer to having enough ink to connect those dots.
Isn't it a bit ironic that you quote MLK in 1963 when those very "white moderates" came to be the ones to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964? I'm really trying to understand you here, so help me.
OK, I'll try to make this simple enough for you; the kind of Liberal pragmatists that you're congratulating for Civil Rights Act simply weren't responsible for passing it. Civil Rights leaders were, by and large, much farther left than Liberals, and they often complained that Liberals were obstructing the movement as much as segregationists. Leaders from Martin Luther King to Malcom X identified Liberals who preached incrementalism as a hindrance to Civil Rights.
However, if you were to trying to attribute passage of Civil Rights Act purely based on the vote totals of Congress, you'd still be wrong. Segregationist southerners from both parties opposed the bill while northerners from both parties supported it, and it passed with a bipartisan coalition that was majority Republican. While these Republicans were anti-segregation, they were still free-market, anti-labor, fiscal conservatives, and you don't get to retroactively turn them into Liberals because of the Southern Strategy.
So, the Civil Rights Movement was led by leftists, Liberals were an obstacle to the Civil Rights Movement, and when a bipartisan coalition passed the Civil Rights Act, fewer Liberals voted for it than (what we would today call) moderate conservatives. From the decades leading up to the Civil Rights Act to the passage of the Act itself, Liberals were not the driving force.
Anyway man, I didn't get a, "reading comprehension," scholarship, but one of my scholarships was a work-study where worked as a writing tutor, and I'm pretty sure I've stated this point as clearly as possible. If you still don't get it, I can't really help you.
That guy's entire vibe is r/iamverysmart incarnate, I don't think it matters if you beamed it straight into their head they'd still find a way to get it wrong
I don't know about that. I mean, they got offered scholarships because of their reading comprehension.
Look I can be very direct and note that I explicitly said that white moderate liberals -- not tankies -- were the ones who passed the legislation that effectively turned long-time civil rights grievances into redressed law, and that is precisely what happened. But sure I'll fully acknowledge that without activists across the range from Malcolm X to MLK Jr., (whom Malcolm X basically said he wasn't leftist and aggressive enough) influenced aforementioned white moderate liberals to action. As I said (and as was deflected and ignored by you), MLK made that statement a year prior to the Civil Rights. Put another way, if anyone thinks MLK would be advocating to let Donald Trump in today by voting 3rd party or not voting, then they are out of their goddamned minds.
Nevertheless good luck getting white southern conservatives to be influenced to such action; and therein lies the difference between the two primary ideologies in America. The point being made is: Progress can still occur via liberals; the same cannot be said should you let Republicans get in office.
You prove the point that geography made the difference and as the realignment completed these northern Republicans and Democrats consolidated into a unitary Democratic banner. Also I do not understand what you're referring to when you write the coalition was majority Republican; it was majority Democrat. - 46 Democrats, and 27 Republicans in the Senate and 152 Dems to 138 Republicans in the House For. This makes the total For 198 Dems 165 Republicans. Nevertheless it almost doesn't matter, for as we noted these Republicans, the party of Lincoln still in transition of the party realignment as the Dixiecrats abandoned their coalition, effectively became the liberals of the modern Democrats. It really doesn't matter how one slices it; the overarching premise is that the North of Then voted in favor, and just so happens to split along the Mason-Dixon line just as it does today after the realignment. I sure as shit am not thanking a Southern confederate-adoring conservative, that's for sure; thus it must be predominantly the Northern Liberal amidst both parties during this transitional period who was more predisposed to abolition, more pro-union/labor, and anti-segregation.
Perhaps you're writing from a false premise; have you tried entertaining some humility? I'm open to being wrong, but let's work through this together, shall we?
I'm just in disbelief you're still parading around like an idiot making heros out of libs for eventually taking a minimum of action after a decade of protests and sit-ins by activists.
I'm just in disbelief that when the wise man points at the moon, you're still looking at the finger and missing the entire point, which is to say that as much as you complain about those big bad liberals, they're still the ones who actually end up passing the major laws that set the foundation for progress; and alllllllllllllllllllllllllllll the decades of cute sit-ins and protests by activists against fascist Republicans (of the modern day) would NEVER, EVER achieve a modicum of change.
Lmao without those libs obstructing progress those 'cute' protests and sit-ins wouldn't have been necessary
Correction:
FTFY.
And do tell me — which ideology and which party did all those Civil Rights activists from James Clyburn to John Lewis end up joining in Congress...? And which party does MLK Jr.'s descendants , and the vast majority of the black community continue to caucus with today...?
Oh yeah, "those libs."
Lol yea I'll give you that, because the worst thing that can happen to a lib is being accused of perpetuating an oppression that they consider themselves to be fighting against. It's the quality that both makes them stand in the way of progress and also receptive to agitation
So it's said, we shouldn't let perfection be the enemy of progress. These purity tests and Gatekeeping only work insofar as they have someone open to change from the inside where the laws are made.
Thank a White Liberal for the passage of the Civil rights act and for being a pathway to change; for, therein again lies the difference that you so whimsically continue to dodge. Liberals have always been the gateway for change. Hence why the aforementioned activists joined their banner.
Never once conservatives.
And for what it's worth, I'm significantly left of the average Democrat and modern liberal.
Well when you whack a liberal, candy falls out.
Of course I'm gonna keep whacking liberals
*edit for whackier language
It really isn't.
Thank God those poor Civil Rights leaders had such benevolent white saviors to help them.
No one thinks that, no one said that, you're just making up people to be mad at.
Yeah, this was always my point. It's in the second paragraph of my original comment. Nice reading comprehension.
OK, now we're starting to get into where you actually don't understand history. You seem to believe that the Republicans said, "actually, we want to do racism now, let's start the Southern Strategy!" and all the good Republicans that voted for the Civil Rights Act became Liberal Democrats. In reality, the Republican/Democrat party switch took decades and involved very few members actually switching parties (aside from the Dixiecrats). Most Republicans who supported the Civil Rights Act didn't become Democrats or Liberals, they just saw their party gather more racist members over the years until they retired. They didn't, "consolidate under a unitary Democratic banner," they were still Republican and fiscally conservative.
OK, I get it. You're looking at raw numbers without factoring in who controlled the House and Senate and how they voted. Only 153 out of 244 Democrats (63%) supported the Civil Rights Act vs. 136 out of 171 (80%) of Republicans. 46 out of 67 Senate Democrats (69%) vs 27 out of 33 (82%) Republicans. These white Liberals you keep praising weren't the reason it passed, they were the opposition. The same white Southern Democrats that backed the New Deal also fought tooth and nail against the Civil Rights Act, more than their conservative peers.
You're taking a modern understanding of Liberals and applying it to the Civil Rights Era. You're congratulating good white Liberals for passing the Civil Rights Act, when many of the major supporters would be considered conservatives and most of the opponents would be considered Liberals by most metrics. Beyond that, you're pretending that the Republican conservatives could retroactively be counted as Liberals because you fundamentally don't understand the party swap.
Besides that, your ranting about how tankies (which, by the way, you're incorrectly using to mean, "Socialists, Marxists, or other Leftists," but that's a whole other issue) didn't cast any votes in the Civil Rights Act, while ignoring that some of the most prominent voices in the movement where Democratic Socialists, Socialists, or other forms of, "tankie." Sure, they spent years getting beaten by police, attacked by segregationists, and told to slow down by incrementalisy Liberals, but they weren't in Congress, so according to you their not as important as white Liberals!
And then, after building this white-savior Liberal fantasy for yourself, you have the audacity to tell me entertain some humility? Sorry buddy, you're going to have to work through this one on your own.
https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/civil_rights/cloture_finalpassage.htm
https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2004/summer/civil-rights-act
Curse those liberals for demanding a stronger civil rights bill, right!?
Ergo: Liberals supported; conservatives resisted. No tankies in Congress. Thank a liberal. Yes, I'm aware that what is progressive for the time is comparatively conservative by today's standards; that doesn't change the point.
Congrats on completely ignoring everything I said about the nuances of Civil Rights Era politics and instead finding sources that only uses, "liberal," and, "conservative," as they refer to socal policies of the time. Don't think too hard about the fact that Dirksen was a staunch fiscal conservative who supported the Vietnam War, or that Strom Thurmond was a New Deal Democrat who supported public spending on the working class. I wouldn't want you to disrupt the ahistorical dichotomy you've created for yourself! Maybe Google, "tankie," before you use that word again, because you have no idea what it means! Good luck with the scholarships!
Pardon me, but I thought it best to cut through the noise (e.g., patent finger-in-ears denial akin to, "Nuh-uh!") and go straight to citing primary sources of which you curiously deflected; you see, you learn to do that with those fancy scholarships :)
To the contrary I'm pretty sure I pinned you into a corner after trying to claim it was conservatives not liberals who were the standard-bearers of the change. Here you're not trying to play games of equivocation and move the goalpost by essentially allegings, "buT LiBeRals AREn'T ReEallY LibERals!" I mean — what?
I really don't need to go any further, and it's a remarkable reality of your position that you cannot rummage up a single academic source to counter what I had already provided. However, it's a new day and I've got my coffee so let's address some bullshit:
Straw-man. No, that is not what I'm saying at all. If you would've read more closely what I wrote a couple responses back, you would've recalled that I noted the transition took time and didn't complete really until the '70s or even arguably Reagan. Considering
You're just not making any sense, here. (1) All the union strength and support was in the North. (2) YOU said it was a regional differentiation, with northerners voting in greater numbers. (3) Ergo, the vast majority of support came from districts and states predominantly pro-Union. So... ??? Or what, do you think the southern state's rights anti-union confederates suddenly decided to turn out in great numbers to support the bill...? Let me again remind you what actual historians have to say:
... But hey, why don't you go tell those scholars they're using the ideological labels incorrectly ;)
There really isn't much more to say. My original claim was: "not a single Tankie was in Congress who voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964, now, did they? So yes, thank a Liberal for actually getting shit done." From that:
I PROVED:
I REMINDED YOU:
I therefore entirely reject the notion I'm, "cataclysmically wrong." Seems I'm actually right on the money.
Finally isn't it funny you quote MLK's "White Moderates" remark in 1963 who is ostensibly speaking of what we'd consider centrist liberal Dems today and those very white moderates did end up passing the bill in 1964? You still continue to deflect this amusingly.
Buddy, I can't help you. If don't want to acknowledge how much of the Democrats economically Liberal coalition were segregationists, I can't help you. If you want to believe that the Conservatives who supported Civil Rights legislation were actually Liberals, I can't help you. If you want to pretend that the leftist Civil Rights leaders who were beaten, jailed, and lynched did less for Civil Rights than the Congressmen they pressured into adopting their movement, I can't help you. If you want to say, "mLk ShAmEd CeNtRisTs BuT a YeAr LaTeR tHeY vOtEd FoR CiViL rIgHtS! HoW oDd!!!" WITHOUT EVER QUESTIONING IF THOSE TWO EVENTS WERE RELATED, I can't help you.
Anyway, I can't help you with the substance, but maybe I can help you with the style. The overly formal language you're using? ("Ergo," "I therefore entirely reject," "you continue to deflect this amusingly.") It may make you sound smart to dumb people, but it makes you sound dumb to smart people. It's unnatural and reeks of somebody who's trying to hard. It's why that other guy keeps posting that little meme of a smug guy under your comments. He's making fun of how cringey you sound.
Anyway, that's the best I can do for you. Go be wrong at someone else.
Buddy:
If I can't get through with direct quotes from those who were a part of that era, specifically noting liberals FOR and conservatives OPPOSED
If I can't cite primary historical sources from Senate.gov and Archives.gov detailing the same.
If you can't muster a single source to support your position that contrasts what I already cited, as you simultaneously ignore these direct quotes...
... Then I believe we are done here.
Buddy, if you can't actually remark on exactly where I'm using language wrong, then it's FAR more probable that my word-choice might just strike above what you're used to and this a desperate attempt to sling shade.
Besides, if I "dumbed down" my language to my Appalachian roots, then you'd try condescension with me and espouse how much more educated and academic you are to me. Apparently I beat you to the punch, and that upsets you. Who knows -- maybe there's a bit of personal insecurity and projection going on here. All I know is that it's a pretty fucking pathetic low-blow. Should be noted that I tend to reflect the tone and let them stoop to a lower level. So maybe look in the mirror. If you can't take it, then don't dish it out, buddy.
As for the other user, I don't really care — that kid's frankly not that bright or informed on the issues. At least you presented a cogent argument by contrast. If you think I'm being smug, go join the fucking Trumpers who cry about elitism and feeling insecure around people who are educated — I really don't care, buddy. Now until you actually respond to my sources, my logic, instead of hopping around more than the Easter bunny, then kindly stay down.
Frankly because now your argument has descended into personal attacks on me it sounds like you're — as you said — "cataclysmically" desperate.
I think for fun I'll just re-quote the primary sources:
Go be wrong at someone else.
Look at that false confidence.
No, I'm good right here.
Speaking frankly: you're just not worth responding seriously to. You treat every interaction as if it's the worst type of performative debate, and every point is argued antagonistically and purposefully misrepresentative of the comment being responded to.
I learned a long time ago that being earnest with anyone so eager for 'debate' online is pretty pointless.
Maybe next time you'll at least be more subtle.
I'm not worth it, but boy do you go around replying to all my comments obsessively! What's wrong with taking serious discussions, well, seriously? Sorry, I'm just not a meme person, and I frankly don't believe I remotely approached the pettiness as you and the other user in striking low to substitute a lack of substantive rebuttal.
Have you entertained the humbling possibility you're just being out-classed and that's making you uncomfortable? I mean when you make legitimate points I'm willing to yield, such as when you gave me that link to a more recent poll on US perception of Israeli actions.
I know Trump speaks and writes at a 4th grade level and with more memes though — maybe that's more your speed?
You've been active in exactly the same post comments as I have been, I've seen you everywhere this week and I find it difficult not to mock you because you make it so goddamn fun.
This is exactly the 'performative debatelord' behavior I'm talking about. It would be one thing if we were having a disagreement we were working through, but you treat it like it's boxing match. I'm under no obligation to speak with you, let alone enter into some strange sparring match where positions are just weapons to wield against an opponent that you pick up and put down when it's convenient. Even your use of the word 'yield' is reflective of this weird adversarial behavior that is hard not to regard as incredibly adolescent and worthy of scorn.
Ok, Formal Frank is going back to bed now, here comes Silly Willy. I'm turning my meme-mode setting back on, just as a fair warning that any further attempts at defeating me in the marketplace of ideas will be met with unrelenting mockery.
I feel I've done nothing of the sort. I'm entirely supportive of engaging in the mutual pursuit of truth, but when my opposition first engages in bad faith arguments, deflections, fallacies, then snarky adolescent memes followed by personal attacks then you open the door to me responding however I wish. It's not my fault you lack the capacity to discuss formally and maturely.
If you go back to the beginning you'll find you engaged in these downward-spiraling antics first.
In other words you're holding me to a higher standard then you hold yourself. Embrace some humility and learn from your mistakes.
Thoughts and prayers for my humility, which has sadly died in a tragic mass-shooting accident.
Sounds like Biden better quit alienating his base, then.
If only this wasn't a zero-sum game where 100% supporting his "base" didn't alienate key swing-voters in key swing-states...
But arethey really his base if they're so far gone they're okay with playing chicken with Trump....? One has to wonder...
They are if he needs them to be re-elected
And you could also say it's Biden playing chicken with Trump lol
Just let me know when you have a solution for the:
In addition to:
Biden is quite clearly trying to cater to all these very large impactful groups while throwing a bone to the fringe tankies. Among these groups, tankies are most certainly NOT the most impactful to the outcome of the election, but sure -- he'll take every vote he can get. But your efforts would be better made trying to convince swing-voters and Jewish Americans to stop supporting Israel.
I think you're mis-remembering that poll, it's actually 55% DISSAPROVE and 9% NO OPINION
Nah, I was referring to this but I'll yield that this newer poll shows promising shifts... Which is ultimately why we're seeing a shift in Biden's position against Israel accordingly.
So as I said: your efforts would be better made trying to convince swing-voters and Jewish Americans to stop supporting Israel and you'll see Biden continue to take a harder line. Yelling insults to liberals isn't really doing much good, buddy.
"Two thirds of Americans would probably support withdrawal of support to israel, but you should finish convincing the rest of America before expecting Biden to do anything about it"
Lol nah I'll keep calling obstinate libs silly names, you resplendent nincompoop
How closely are you paying attention, because Biden has certainly shifted from what the polls were then, to now. As I've repeatedly demonstrated:
So yes, keep it up. Crying about Biden and those big bad liberals literally does nothing. Go after the people who are actually supporting Israel and — voila — as the polls continue to oppose Israel more, so too will Biden. It's almost like that's Democracy during an election year in action or something...
Seems to me like my name calling is having some effect, you vivacious village idiot
Post hoc fallacy. You have zero proof of that. Now you resort to ad hominems to supplement your lack of argument?
I knew I had you on the ropes.