Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

> The point is this: when Trump says the economy is doing badly, he's objectively lying

Not to the person struggling.

I'm not saying that Trump will actually improve their circumstances.

I'm saying that, according to Bernie and others, Harris' campaign didn't do a good job speaking to them.

Instead they told them that the economy is "doing very well" which clearly didn't resonate.



I agree that Harris dropped the ball on some of her messaging, but it's weird to dwell on that when Trump's messaging is a bunch of psychotic hallucinations. Also I'm talking about the point I was originally making. I guess people don't want to talk about that tho and prefer to rationalize Harris' loss.


> I guess people don't want to talk about that tho and prefer to rationalize Harris' loss.

You're doing it again...repeating the same mistake of implying that everyone that supports Trump is an idiot, rather than trying to understand what motivates them.

The same mistake the Democratic party keeps repeating.


I agree that this is a mistake the Democrats are making. But focusing on that distracts from a more fundamental problem. Thomas Jefferson famously said that a well-informed electorate is a prerequisite for successful democracy. We've been neglecting that for a long time, and now we're paying the price. With a well-informed electorate, we wouldn't have to engage in these messaging games and identity politics.


I don't disagree with you (or Jefferson), but I'm not sure it's so different today than it ever was. I doubt that the population as a whole was ever super informed or fully resistent to lies, propaganda, and misinformation.

So maybe our democracy has never been or will be successful by that definition. But somehow (largely thanks to checks on power and infighting) it manages to kick along.

In my opinion, information is the only thing that can fight ignorance. Something that I find troubling with the modern Democratic platform is the desire to limit free information by labeling it "misinformation". Another move that I believe exacerbates the problem rather than addressing it.


We've never had a President that so many top generals, high-ranking Republican party officials, family members, and countless other close associates and former partners have all said is fundamentally unfit for office. This isn't just Democrats wringing their hands and crying foul. We're talking lifelong Republicans who honestly tried to work with him and could not believe the stupidity and malice. Remember all those Republican congressman who, in January 2021, said that Trump's little treason operation ought to disqualify him from office, then later fell in line when they realized having integrity is difficult? Doesn't that seem a little unprecedented to you?


> Doesn't that seem a little unprecedented to you?

Yeah it does, I don't disagree. But he won another election. By a lot.

I remember the same despair when he was elected the first time, with predictions of the end of the world as we know it, and yet here we are. I think the warnings this time like "democracy is in the ballot" will be shown to be wrong as well.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: