I’m not sure what the phrase “fake outrage” would actually mean, but the outrage I feel seems pretty real to me.

  • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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    55 minutes ago

    Fake outrage would mean no one really cares that he’s a huge racist. Which ya know what, this racist administration might be so racist, that they actually believe that shit.

  • wuffah@lemmy.world
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    Chaos is a ladder. My estimation is that this riles the base and enrages the opposition, creating fertile ground for violence during the election. Beyond that, I think it serves as a pressure release valve for the vicious idiocy, narcissistic rage, and extreme pathological insecurity that is constantly roiling inside Trump’s mind. He simply can’t contain it anymore.

    Although, I never would have guessed that the enshitifcation of the federal government would result in such a disgusting and debased tactic. The people in this “administration” are not mentally well, and they must have waited their entire lives desperately working to project their insanity on the world. They wield the most sophisticated political apparatus ever built, and an advanced computational capability ostensibly conceived to birth new intelligent life, borne of the most perfect objects created by humanity, and this… this is the result? This childishly misanthropic display of racist schoolyard bullying? It’s beyond pathetic.

    The children of America’s elite who grew up seeking the approval their parent’s vile and extreme beliefs, subsumed in a radioactive miasma of absurd wealth and power, vomit their sickness on to a vulnerable society. It is my belief that we are in the depths of a mass campaign of psychological and physical narcissistic abuse and projection.

    These people would be pitiable if they weren’t so dangerous. America is being controlled by children on meth with machine guns.

  • canuck666777@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    I will never understand this country. They’ve got to be like the dumbest MF-ers on the planet!

    A deadbeat racist loser who happens to be a convicted felon with a track record for lying, corruption, and is a rapist and a known pedophile runs for the country’s top office and the poor and the middle classes vote for him believing a billionaire who’s never shopped for groceries his entire life is going to make their lives better? Either 1/3rd of their population is inbred (the preposterously low IQs can only be a consequence of multigenerational inbreeding), lack critical thinking ability or are just brain dead!

    Man I’d shoot myself in the nuts before voting for this guy!

    Btw, he’s not going away peacefully. No way is he relinquishing power! America needs to come up with a plan or they’re cooked!

    • mtoboggan@feddit.org
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      The average American is shockingly poorly educated. There‘s no process of coming to terms with the past, e.g. when it comes to the genocide of Native Americans. Our students during our exchange with a Wisconsin High School noticed that they had done maths stuff in year six, the Americans were doing in year 9. Critical thinking and complex topics our students learn at school in year 11-13 are outsourced to university undergraduate education and thus limited to actual university students. It‘s shocking to see that there‘s a caste of priviledged entrepeneurs leading the way followed by millions of hard-working Americans still believing in the propaganda of the American Dream where they beat themselves up because they hold themselves at fault for a lack of social climbing while having three jobs.

      • Asafum@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        the propaganda of the American Dream

        It’s the American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it. :/

    • andallthat@lemmy.world
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      Don’t know what country you’re from but local versions of “how the f## are people voting for this person” are popping up and getting increasingly popular in most democracies.

      The US being thr US clearly have the bigliest, crassest piece of garbage of us all, but looks like we are all heading there. And I’m looking at whatever the US are going to do to reverse this trend because I need to see a glimpse of hope that this trend IS reversible and that I won’t die in a nazi dictatorship after my grampa fought to rid us of the previous one.

    • dhork@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      You just don’t understand, what choice did they have? The only other choice was a lady!

    • SeeMarkFly@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      One third of America would like to kill another third of America while the third third watches.

      Fascism is simply a permission structure for people to be their most vile selves.

      • villainy@lemmy.world
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        One third of America would like to kill another third of America while the third third watches bets on the outcome on Polymarket.

    • 4am@lemmy.zip
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      Don’t forget the majority of people alive today on the United States who are of voting age lived through leaded gasoline.

      Literally a country of amygdala damage, combined with fear coping via pastors/evangelists.

      It’s the perfect storm of morons.

    • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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      Americans are subjected to extreme levels of propaganda from childhood onward, and the propaganda is just subtle enough that many don’t see it for what it is. I think it’s hard for outsiders to appreciate this, but if you dig into American news sources it’s quite shocking how twisted it all is.

      • canuck666777@lemmy.ca
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        20 minutes ago

        They CHOOSE to accept whatever propaganda they are exposed to instead of relying on their intelligence and fact checking.

      • lemmylump@lemmy.world
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        This.

        Unlike the people I went to highschool with, I have been able to travel the world, back in highschool they all seem smart and cool to me, now they all sound like hateful stupid people. Stuck in their close minded deeply red and religious surroundings the propaganda did its work on them. It’s like a horror film, they’re completely different people it seems.

        It breaks my heart, as there’s no saving them.

        • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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          What’s funny is those people likely view you as the one that is twisted, or tainted, etc, especially if you also went away to go to a university.

          I grew up in a similar area though I was spoiled by having parents (and friends of my parents) that had a much broader view than most of my neighbors and other school children.

          I would mostly keep my thoughts to myself unless I knew the other peer rather well, since all that high-falutin’ thinking and open mindedness was viewed as dangerously subversive by the local hicks.

          But I remember going back to visit a few times during university and in the years shortly after completing university, and…it was always a trip to engage with some of these types again. They don’t seem to have any awareness of how benighted they really are. I still see a few of them on Facebook when I peek in on it. It’s so incredible how these people manage to remain so provincial even after the online world became a thing. I just don’t get it. I was one of the cyberoptimist types in the early 90s that thought the information superhighway would illuminate these types, even if only a little bit. I think the exact opposite happened.

          • ragepaw@lemmy.ca
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            I worked with a guy, who grew up in the US Deep South. He told me he joined the marines after Sept 11, 2001 to (and this is the quote he used) to get revenge on, and kill the “ragheads” that attacked his country.

            He told me the cure for his racist idiocy was going to Afghanistan and meeting the people there and discovering they’re just normal people like the ones he knew back home and it wrecked (and fixed) his world view.

            • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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              Honestly, I wish there was some kind of travel program that was required for all children/adolescents somehow. Or at least a well-funded option.

              Something where virtually everyone travels outside the country. We could start slow, and maybe just have people travel even within the country at first. If you live in the burbs or in a rural area, you are sent into some metro areas (ideally multiple states), put up in hotels and taken to various things to be seen. If you live in the cities, same thing - you visit some deep rural areas and learn something about that area.

              I grew up with people that were proud of the fact that they never lived outside the county, and had not even left the state. Their whole lives. And didn’t really go into the cities within the state. They were just as provincial as you might imagine. They had all kinds of ideas about people in foreign lands, and within American cities, and within states (like California), but had never been there and didn’t even have any kind of interest in learning more via books or documentaries, etc., even if travel was too cost prohibitive.

          • lemmylump@lemmy.world
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            Oh they see me as all that Fox News has told them I am, and they behave like pack animals any view that doesn’t fit in. It’s kind of scary.

            I too, enjoyed the brief period of the enlightenment and renaissance of the early days of the internet before it became weaponized. I even thought in 2007 the first iPhone was a true moment of change, I was right, but very very wrong at the same time.

            Smartphones killed the internet we once thought possible.

            And here we are like refugees in a tiny corner of the internet, trying to stay away from all the awful, yet still be connected.

            I’m grateful I knew that fleeting world.

      • Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        3 hours ago

        I really didn’t appreciate it until I had to come to the US for a week for work in NC (in Nov during election week!). Its utterly relentless. Watching TV from my hotel room was utterly exhausting. So much blatant propaganda and lies shown with alarming frequency.

      • ragepaw@lemmy.ca
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        I don’t think it’s hard for outsiders to understand. I think it’s harder for Americans to understand. Those of us on the outside can see it easily and obviously. And it’s not subtle.

        In the movie U-571, it depicts the Americans capturing the first enigma machine, thus helping to lead to an end to WW2. The reality is, the Royal Navy had them before the US even entered the war.

        As a Canadian, I know that we were heavily involved with freeing the Iranian hostages, but if you watch the movie Argo, you would think the United States did everything. Jimmy Carter, President at the time of the event, decried the movie saying that Canada did 90% of the op.

        The Great Escape portrays the escape from Stalag Luft III as an American affair, when it was a Commonwealth operation, and not a single American escaped.

        Black Hawk Down. If you watched the movie, you would think the rescue was done by US forces, completely disregarding the fact it was largely Pakistani and Malaysian forces that rescued the American service people.

        That’s not even getting into the non-war movies where the US is represented as the ultimate moral authority in all things.

        How about the “World Series”, where with the exception of one team, every one is in the United States.

        Co-opting the term “American”. The Americas includes more than just the USA. Mexicans, Argentinians, Canadians, Hondurans, Columbians, etc. are all “American”.

        Even the implication that no one outside the United States would understand how bad the propaganda there is, is American exceptionalism.

        • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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          I have spent almost my whole life outside the USA myself, and though I saw these things in American movies etc., I wasn’t really aware of how little Americans know about what’s going on in the world, and how tilted all the information they consume is, in school and in the general culture, until I spent some time living in the USA. You make a good point though, and I wasn’t the most perceptive.

      • VoteNixon2016@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Schoolhouse Rock was a foundational part of my childhood. It’s because of those songs that I have the preamble to the Constitution memorized, and know what a preposition is

        But the history songs… Wow. Presented as fun and educational, but the one about Manifest Destiny might as well be called “Lebensraum”

  • ccunning@lemmy.world
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    I’m not sure what the phrase “fake outrage” would actually mean

    See line 2 of the narcissist’s prayer:

    That didn’t happen.
    And if it did, it wasn’t that bad. <— You are here
    And if it was, that’s not a big deal.
    And if it is, that’s not my fault.
    And if it was, I didn’t mean it.
    And if I did, you deserved it.

  • hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 hours ago

    Sen. Tim Scott, a Black South Carolina Republican who is the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said the image was “the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.”

    I’m sure he meant it’s the most racist thing he’s seen out of the white house this week

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    “Trump posting this video — especially during Black History Month — is a stark reminder of how Trump and his followers truly view people,” the NAACP wrote on X. “And we’ll remember that in November.”

    Cute. They think they’re gonna get to vote and voting will fix everything.

    • villainy@lemmy.world
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      in November.

      Checks calendar

      Only 91 lifetimes to go until we remember something. I’m on pins and needles over here.

    • agingelderly@lemmy.world
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      You’re welcome to choose the other option just don’t aim for the ear, that thing has wolverine healing abilities.

      Edit: grammar

        • GreenBeard@lemmy.ca
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          I mean, at this point we could only hope they would start eating each other without their glorious leader. Not sure making a martyr out of him would have the desired effect though. Maybe if a Qannon or a Groyper got him.

          • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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            Maybe if a Qannon or a Groyper got him.

            You can be sure that if such a thing were to happen, they would have a miraculous transmutation from radical right winger into “antifa” or BLM or whatever the most politically advantageous boogeyman is.

  • evenglow@lemmy.world
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    Just another warning for what Republicans are going to say about the midterms. What was it last time? Fake votes because there were bamboo fibers in the paper?

  • Hegar@fedia.io
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    The fascist regime wants people talking about some racist meme and not their involvement in raping children or their illegal death squads kidnapping and murdering with impunity.

  • pulsewidth@lemmy.world
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    This would be absolutely cringe if a high school kid was doing it as a petty insult to their rivals… But it’s the president of the USA.

    I know its a melting pot of factors that has caused it, but it still blows my mind that “normal” for the USA has fallen so fucking far, so fast since Trump came on the scene. 10 years ago a fucking tan suit was ‘weird’ for a president…

    • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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      10 years ago a fucking tan suit was ‘weird’ for a president…

      Well, for a whole lot of idiots, low-info voters, and of course the reactionary centrists.