Objection

joined 10 months ago
[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago

Maybe you should respond to the specific comments you take issue with? The OP and most of the comments are more focused on the fact-checking.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago (19 children)

January 6th is not distinguishing on policy, it's another example of focusing on character in a way that doesn't have any direct, material impact on people's lives.

Project 2025, Trump disavowed, and I don't recall democrats really focusing on specific points from it that would materially impact people's lives. Telling people to read a 900 page document that Trump claims not to support is not enough, no.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 0 points 4 days ago (21 children)

That's not what I said. I said that the things you mentioned about him don't affect the average person's life in any tangible way, not that his actions in general don't affect them.

Perhaps, if the democrats spent more time focusing on those tangible things and distinguishing themselves on policy and less time focusing on his personal character, they might have had a chance.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (21 children)

No, you’re just asking dumb shit for the sake of asking it. The West just isn’t shitting out propaganda on its population the way Russia is, it’s not hard to understand.

A KGB agent visits America and meets a CIA agent, and says, "I'm so excited to learn from the American methods of propaganda!" The CIA agent responds, "What? But in America, we have no propaganda!" KGB agent slams on the table and says, "Yes! Exactly like that!"

I already cited numerous examples of US propaganda and dinsinformation which included ones that fit your arbitrary criteria of neither too recent nor too old. There's also shit like this recruitment ad that's pretty open and explicit about manipulating public opinion. Also like we explicitly have psyop divisions. It's also just a completely absurd idea, we don't do propaganda because, what, we're "the good guys?" Not how the world works lol, incredibly naive take.

They don’t because they’re not in charge of your fucking country.

Please stop telling me things I just told you. Literally in the part you quoted and were responding to, I said, "because they’re not in a position to do so."

But they do all that shit and worse to their own population.

But I'm not part of that population.

Again, you're misunderstanding me. I'm in no way claiming a moral difference between Russian and American billionaires, I'm merely pointing out that the more direct enemy of the American people are the set of billionaires with the means and motive to exploit us, namely, American billionaires.

Which might explain why you’re so blissfully ignorant of the Russian scourge.

More importantly, it would explain why Americans in general were always bound to lose interest in the conflict and give up on it, we just had to waste a bunch of blood and treasure on the conflict pretending otherwise first.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago (2 children)

I should add the caveat- by all means critique him, correct anything false he says

Great, that's what we're doing here, so no problem.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago (23 children)

Yes, because being an "oragutan rapist criminal coup attempter" doesn't actual affect the average person's life in any tangible way. Inflation does. Not hard to understand why he won, as they say, "It's the economy, stupid."

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (23 children)

Even under clowns like Trump, the US press is more free than Russia’s.

Which again raises the question of why Russian propaganda is so much more effective in the Western media environment where they can't censor things or control shit than Western propaganda is. See, you're distracted by a need to say, "Russia is the bad guy" that you're losing sight of the actual question.

I wouldn’t use the trash that Trump pulls as valid examples of how the West acts

Other than that, try not to fetch US examples from the cold war

No present or historical examples then, got it.

When did the US reform and change it's ways? Did a president stand up to the CIA and tell them to cut it out? Which one, when? Was anyone in the intelligence community held accountable for their actions and actually punished? Who, when?

Or did the US stop doing evil stuff right around the window of time where documents would not yet be declassified?

Putting aside all of that, even if I accepted your absurd constraints, I also raised points that fit your criteria, regarding the war in Iraq. Things that track with a consistent pattern of behavior before and after.

Russian kleptocracy aligns more with its population and doesn’t represent the interests of the rich?

I never said anything like that. What I said is that Russian kleptocracy is less directly opposed to the interests of the American people than the US kleptocracy is. The Russian oligarchs don't suppress our wages, bust our unions, and gouge our prices, not because there's any kind of moral difference but because they're not in a position to do so. The American oligarchs are the ones with both the means and motive to hurt the American people, they are, therefore, the primary enemy of the people, moreso than Russian oligarchs are to us. It's not about one group being morally superior to another.

Because they’re destroying democracies in your region.

In "my region?" My region is about as far away from Ukraine as it's possible to be on planet Earth.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (25 children)

I'd estimate, maybe half a percent? Might be too generous.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (25 children)

But the group of people we were talking about about being influenced was Americans, so it would be fairly natural to assume that I was talking about them influencing our own population, or that I was leaving it ambiguous. If you wanted to jump to the conclusion otherwise, you should've clarified.

I have no idea why were're limiting "propaganda" to "bot farms" which aren't a particularly effective form of it. Every US media outlet has a vested interest in falling in line behind what the president wants because otherwise they could be refused access to things like press briefings, something Trump is especially blatant about. The US media was fully supportive of the Iraq war and published countless lies promoting it, the NYT made up a story about "mass rapes" claimed to be conducted by Palestinians to justify the government's support for the war, going back further, into periods where we have access to declassified stuff, the US government literally had a mind control program called MK Ultra specifically about trying to brainwash people.

Of course, it has also conducted misinformation campaigns in other countries. Recently, the US government was spreading COVID/vaccine disinformation in the Philippines. During the Iranian coup that ousted democratic leader Mohammad Mossadegh in favor of a right-wing dictator, the CIA admitted that it had taken control of virtually every newspaper and media outlet in the country, used to manufacture discontent. If they can stuff like overseas, then they can do it at home too.

Furthermore, these intelligence agencies have interests that are more directly contrary to the American people than the Russian government does. They represent the interests of the rich, and the US rich are the most direct and primary enemy of the US poor. And yet, I never hear any libs express even the slightest ounce of concern that the most well funded intelligence network in the world, with an atrocious historical record showing that they have both the means and motive to suppress democracy, might be something to be concerned about. We should only worry about a less well-funded, less connected intelligence community with less directly opposed interests, because, what? They're foreigners?

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago (27 children)

Wait, are we talking about a handful of people being swayed by Russian propaganda, or broad segments of the population?

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago (27 children)

Why would that be the implication? There's nothing in that statement that suggests it would be the case, calling it "obvious" doesn't make it so.

[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (29 children)

Yes, because they weren't, because they didn't have to be. You're just randomly interjecting an unnecessary theory to explain why people were upset by things getting more expensive. People naturally get upset when things get expensive because, newsflash, people don't like paying more money for things.

But that's beside the point. Yes, your statement included another point, but it still contained the part telling me the part I had just told you. Don't do that shit, it's very annoying.

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