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How do I even human? I don't get it. Ugh, people are scary. ohnoes

Why is this in the dredge? Because I'm dunking myself.

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smuglord

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No one calling themselves a "history nerd", or says they "enjoy history" actually knows history. All the non-americans calling out americans' wrong education on who beat the Nazis are being downvoted.

Link to post in comments

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WHY IS THE CAT NOT LOOKING AT THE TV?

This was posted by a pro-Trump poster on Twitter, btw.

Kamala is supposed to be on SNL tonight, because she has her finger on the pulse of American culture. /s

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submitted 14 hours ago by soiejo@hexbear.net to c/dredge_tank@hexbear.net

Context: Richard Spencer supporting Kamala Harris

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submitted 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) by thelastaxolotl@hexbear.net to c/dredge_tank@hexbear.net

Tweet

Only good brit is shaun sad

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submitted 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago) by Angel@hexbear.net to c/dredge_tank@hexbear.net

In this context, the political divide isn't just about disagreements over policy or ideology—it's about fundamental differences in how we value and protect the rights and dignity of all individuals, regardless of their identity or background. The challenge is not just to bridge the divide through understanding and communication but to confront and dismantle harmful beliefs and practices that have real-world consequences for marginalized groups. This isn't just a matter of disagreement; it's a matter of justice and human rights.

As our society progresses in understanding various issues such as climate change, mental health, social science, and LGBTQ+ rights, we must adapt and evolve our perspectives based on new information and evidence. This growth is not an attack on tradition but rather a recognition that what may have once been accepted as normal can actually be harmful to certain individuals or groups.

It is crucial for everyone, regardless of political affiliation, to acknowledge the importance of recognizing and addressing harm caused by outdated beliefs or practices. Instead of viewing these changes as a threat to tradition, we should embrace the opportunity to create a more inclusive and just society. This requires a proactive approach in advocating for the rights of all individuals and continuously reevaluating our own beliefs and actions in light of new evidence and understanding.

The political divide extends beyond policy and ideology, reflecting differing values in upholding the rights and dignity of all individuals. The task at hand involves not only fostering understanding but also actively addressing harmful beliefs and practices harming marginalized groups. This issue transcends disagreement; it's a matter of justice and human rights.

Progressives recognize that evolving understanding is crucial, as new facts emerge that challenge past beliefs. Vegans exemplify this, acknowledging the sentience of animals and their capacity for emotions. Despite industries and individuals choosing to exploit them, knowledge and awareness must drive change for a more compassionate society.

What can I say that hasn't already been said? edgeworth-shrug

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Donald Trump arrived in Washington as a political outsider in 2016, upending US politics, reshaping the Republican Party and engaging previously disengaged voters.

He became the first president to be convicted of a crime and still falsely claims the 2020 election was stolen from him.

But he continues to draw strong popular support on the issues that top voter concerns, such as the economy and immigration.

Six of his supporters explain his enduring appeal as he makes his third White House run.

Luiz Oliveira, a small business owner in Nevada, moved to the US from Brazil in the 1980s but he’s not happy with the number of immigrants arriving through the southern border.

“How is this happening in America?” asks the 65-year-old. “All these people crossing, it’s an invasion.”

Mr Oliveira says the Biden administration “opened the border” and allowed it to happen, referring to the rise in border crossings after Biden came to power.

Encounters between migrants and US Customs and Border Patrol at the US-Mexico border hit a record high in December of 2023 but have fallen sharply since, to a four-year low.

He describes how hard he had to work to get his citizenship, finally “earning” it in 2012. “For me to be a US citizen is a privilege, an honour. I love this country.”

Mr Oliveira is confident Trump will put an end to what he calls a border crisis. “You want to come to America? Earn it, like I did.”

Trump has vowed to secure the border and deport anyone living in the US illegally. Harris says she would revive a cross-party bill, opposed by Trump, that would expand the authority to deport people and build more border wall.

A new president will not be the biggest change in Ben Maurer’s life come November.

The 38-year-old truck driver from Pennsylvania is expecting his second child just weeks after the election.

Mr Maurer, a lifelong Republican, is hopeful that next month will mark the starting point of a more prosperous time for his family as Trump potentially returns to the White House.

Last year, his wife quit her job because the cost of childcare was higher than her income. Since then, Mr Maurer has been the sole provider for the family and his wife has stayed home with their eldest child as they await the new arrival.

This would not be the case, Mr Maurer believes, if Trump were president.

“I feel like [Trump] has a handle on making it about the American economy first and the American worker first,” he says.

Trump’s plan to preserve American jobs and to tackle inflation will mean a more affordable reality, he thinks, because business costs will mean cheaper childcare.

Inflation soared post-Covid, as it did in many western countries. Harris has said she would ban price-gouging on groceries and increase housing supply. Trump says he would increase drilling to lower energy costs.

Earlier in her career as an artist, June Carey had to supplement her income with welfare because of how difficult it was to be self-employed.

The 70-year-old from Chico, California, was able to get off welfare after less than five years and she thinks Trump’s policies will provide that pathway for others.

“Being on welfare, I saw how it does not work,” she says. “It creates generations of people who never move on.”

She says it’s essential that Americans are self-sufficient and not dependent on government programmes.

Today, she lives on $1,900 (£1,456) per month from social security. But with the price of food and gas rising under Biden she says she cannot cover minimum expenses and might need help again.

She wants to see politicians create an economy that means Americans like herself can afford the necessities, instead of spending money on “liberal policies”.

And that is where Ms Carey believes Trump will help.

“The former president runs this country like a business and the more he talks the more I am impressed,” she says.

Brooke Riske was not always a Trump voter.

In 2016, unimpressed by Trump or Biden, she voted for a third-party candidate. But the Covid-19 pandemic changed her mind.

“Our government has become too active in our lives,” says the 38-year-old educator from Virginia.

During the uncertainty of Covid, says Ms Riske, Trump was a steady presence. And he cares about the country and wants to improve it, she says.

It’s not just his policies she admires, it’s also the person. Watching him in Instagram videos and podcast interviews, she says she likes what she sees and hears.

“The times where he’s interacting with his grandkids I see the softer side,” she says.

“He kept our country very peaceful for several years, I don’t think a person is capable of that unless they have diplomacy, humanness and kindness in them.”

Ms Riske says she knows that view is at odds with how some others see him but she doesn’t trust how the media portrays him.

“I've just accepted him for who he is.”

Jeremy Stevens has long been disheartened by the two-party American political system but when Trump came onto the political scene, he says he felt hopeful again.

He was shocked when instead of working against what he describes as an atypical, novice political candidate, the Republicans “allowed” Trump to take over the party.

The small business owner, 45, was convinced Trump’s proposal for an America-first industrial policy would provide Americans with economic security. “The country is a giant business to be run.”

Mr Stevens, who says he separates Trump's personality from policy, runs his own car sales and service centre in Maine where he has lived all his life.

High inflation has hit his own family and put a squeeze on his customers - some of them have been forced to put off necessary car repairs.

“They’re struggling because they have to choose between putting food on the table or putting new wheels on the ground,” Mr Stevens says.

The Trump economy put America and Americans first, he says. “That’s what we want to go back to.”

Despite the US economy posting growth and employment figures that are the envy of other nations, many Americans like Mr Stevens feel the country is on the wrong track after years of high inflation.

But the sentiment is divided - 61% of Democrats and 13% of Republicans rate the economy as "good", a recent Ap-NORC poll found.

Amanda Sue Mathis spent nearly 10 years serving in the US Navy before she was forced to medically retire in 2018 because of her chronic illnesses.

Until 2016, the 34-year-old Michigan resident had never voted. Trump’s entry into politics changed that for her; his candidacy inspired her to cast her first-ever ballot in his favour.

When she thinks about presidential candidates, she thinks about who she would want to report to and who she would respect as commander in chief, she says.

“He or she is not going to be just my president but will decide where we were going, who we were fighting [as a country],” Ms Mathis says. To her, Trump is the obvious choice.

“[Trump] is strong, he is very steadfast and believe he invokes fear because nobody ever knows what he’s going to do,” Ms Mathis says.

“He invokes fear in the rest of the world, don’t mess with America, don’t mess with our allies. “

Trump wants the US to disentangle itself from conflicts elsewhere in the world.

He has said he would end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours through a negotiated settlement with Russia, a move that Democrats say would embolden Vladimir Putin.

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submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by Erika3sis@hexbear.net to c/dredge_tank@hexbear.net

This is too much of a cognitohazard for me to bother translating in full, hence the summary rather than full translation

Original text in NorwegianDagens samfunn lar oss knapt kunne si noe uten å tråkke noen på tærne. Det som en gang var vanlige, maskuline verdier – åpenhet, handlekraft og pågangsmot – blir ofte kritisert som «giftig maskulinitet».

Mange unge menn føler at de verken kan være seg selv eller uttrykke seg fritt, fordi alt blir nøye kontrollert av en krenkekomité som slår ned på alt som kan såre noen.

I en verden der politikere veier hvert ord på gullvekt for å appellere til størst mulig grad av velgerkretsen, står Trump som en av få som sier ting rett ut. Selv med hans typiske overdrivelser, stoler jeg mer på hans ord enn på vanlige politikere.

Mange unge har mistet troen på at politikere bryr seg om folks virkelige problemer. Mens politikerne prioriterer idealistiske temaer som klima og solidaritet, er unge mer opptatt av å få endene til å møtes.

Når de samme gamle sakene gjentas uten konkrete resultater, fremstår Trump som et friskt pust.

Vi er lei av venstresidens konstante belærende moralske overlegenhet. Trump er en politisk outsider som utfordrer og har erfaring utenfor politikken. I en verden der mange føler at institusjonene har sviktet, representerer han en som faktisk tar opp kampen mot systemet.

Mange unge menn ser verdien av å forme sin egen vei uten en stat som stadig legger hindringer. I Norge ser vi en stadig voksende stat som blander seg inn i alt fra økonomi til helsevalg, noe mange unge velgere viser økende misnøye med – noe som også bekreftes av unge menns politiske preferanser i Norge.

For mange unge står Trump som en representant for noe annet. Han støtter lavere skatter og mindre statlig kontroll, noe som appellerer til dem som ønsker mer økonomisk frihet.

Hans prioritering av nasjonale interesser og fokus på energiuavhengighet har også betydning. Han har jobbet for å styrke selvforsyning, særlig innen energi, noe som ikke bare skaper arbeidsplasser, men også reduserer avhengigheten av utenlandsk import.

Dette treffer en nerve hos mange unge nordmenn, som ser på Norges økte fokus på fornybar energi og internasjonale forpliktelser som en utfordring for landets egen oljeindustri.

Trump representerer en politikk som verdsetter uavhengighet og nasjonale ressurser, noe mange unge ser på som avgjørende i et usikkert globalt marked. Under hans ledelse vokste den amerikanske økonomien, arbeidsledigheten sank, og mange opplevde faktisk økonomisk trygghet.

Han setter amerikanske interesser først, viser vilje til å prioritere selvstendighet, og verdsetter de frihetene som mange unge ønsker mer av i hverdagen. For unge nordmenn som ser på stadig økt statlig inngripen og svekkelse av oljeindustrien med skepsis, er det et forfriskende perspektiv.

For meg handler det ikke minst om å støtte en motvekt til en kulturell og politisk utvikling jeg føler meg stadig mer fremmedgjort av.

Når man blir ignorert av en politisk klasse som virker ute av kontakt med virkeligheten og konstant preker moralsk overlegenhet, er det ikke rart at man støtter en kandidat som tør å være annerledes.

Så ja, hadde jeg bodd i USA, ville jeg ha stemt på Trump.

Summary in EnglishRadan opens the piece by complaining about "snowflakes" calling traditional masculine virtues "toxic masculinity" — or more precisely rather than "snowflake" he uses the term "krenkekomité" meaning "offense committee" — and he then claims that Trump by contrast "tells it like it is". Radan then asserts that caring about things like solidarity and the environment is "idealistic" when people "just want to make ends meet" — Trump, Radan says, is a political outsider who's taking up the fight against "the system", a breath of fresh air who's going to get things done, unlike the "left-wing moralizers"; and in so doing, Trump represents all the young men who want to go their own way without the obstacles of the state. Radan then quickly remarks on how young voters are dissatisfied with the current size of the Norwegian state.

Radan says that Trump represents for many young people "something else" — someone who will lower taxes and reduce state interference and give them economic freedom. He asserts that Trump's prioritization of the USA's national interests and his focus on energy and resource independence will create jobs and reduce the USA's reliance on foreign imports, and that it's precisely this about the former president that catches the eye of many young Norwegians, who see Norway's commitment to renewable energy and international agreements, and excessive state intervention, as a force challenging and weakening the oil industry. Many young people, according to Radan, see resource independence as decisive in an "uncertain global market". Further Radan claims that under Trump that the USA's economy grew and unemployment decreased and many were lifted into economic safety.

Radan concludes by calling Trump a "counterweight" to "cultural and political developments" that he finds himself alienated by, and that it is unsurprising that a politician who "dares to be himself" has won the support of those who feel ignored by a "political class of out-of-touch moralizers".


What concerns me above all else is, firstly, that NRK would actually publish this opinion piece; and secondly, that "half of young men" according to this piece believe in this sort of nonsense, that even the most charitable among us would hesitate to call "sophistry at best". The "student of economics" who wrote this piece plainly to me reads as a ghoul of the oil industry and a "belly-showing dog" for Septic imperialism, and generally a reactionary who is staking his life on the continuation of capitalist system.

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For someone that left my-hero she seems to have brought a lot of his bazinga along with her. k-pain

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But he doesn't realize it hasn't been a show for a while.

Sorry, this shit was too stupid to not post.

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speech-r Drej for "I warned you about humans, bro! I told you, dog!"

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Fuck these bazingas and their exhausting copium/hopium cocktail dependencies.

I'm heading out for a while, too tired for this shit. Fortunately, Drej stingers are so easy to fly, even Matt Damon can figure it out in a matter of minutes.

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lmao (hexbear.net)
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The Dredge Tank

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This community was created with the purpose that Rule 8 fans will just block it.

The rules are literally The Dunk Tank's rules, just without rule 8.

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