The GOP’s sweeping new anti-voting bill cleared the U.S. House Wednesday, setting up a high-stakes battle in the Senate.

The House voted 218-213 to pass the SAVE America Act, which experts have said could disenfranchise millions by requiring voters to show documentary proof of citizenship at registration and to provide photo ID when they cast ballots.

Republicans have argued for voter ID broadly, pointing out that there isn’t much to prevent a noncitizen from casting a ballot in a federal election — besides the fact that it’s a felony, easily caught, and would lead to deportation all for the chance to cast one out of hundreds of thousands of votes.

  • SnarkoPolo@lemmy.world
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    Married women can’t vote because the names don’t match.

    This will skate through the Senate. Elections in the USA won’t mean shit after this.

  • redwattlebird @lemmings.world
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    Here we go. This is how they’re going to further oppress the opposition and keep the regime in power. Anything to keep Trump from paying for his crimes.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    Well fuck there’s that other shoe… I was wondering where I put it

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    I’m a Canadian so I don’t have to put up with this… but I don’t think I could legally prove citizenship on the spot though.

    I do have a birth certificate, but it’s damaged, and would be considered invalid. It would cost me money to replace.

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      In Canada, you can go to your provinces service website to order a new one. They will mail it to you.

    • Soup@lemmy.world
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      In this case it literally doesn’t even begin to matter for us because all we need is our voter registration paper that government mails to us. We can bring other stuff but that’s it.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      twist: They look at the ID, proclaim it’s fake and add them to the ICE bus waiting outside.

      • NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world
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        Oh man i could just imagine going to replace my birth certificate because its damaged, and when they ask to prove my identity, say it’s not valid because of damage and then deport me on the spot.

        • rumba@lemmy.zip
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          back in the day…

          I was young and quite disorganized

          I misplaced my license, it was gone long enough I knew i had to deal with it.

          Looked up the required documents to get an ID

          couldn’t find my birth certificate. never had a passport I had a social security card, but I had laminated it (technically void) I had some mail from my address

          BC needed a license. SS card needed a license license wanted a passport or a BC and SS or a bunch of other things.

          I setup a DMV appt, (before 9/11) brought everything with my name on it that I could. begged for mercy. A manager came over, rubber stamped it and I walked out with my ID, Went to all the other places and replaced all the documents.

            • rumba@lemmy.zip
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              Yeah we moved to real ID now. They’re bonkers about you having exactly what you need. I don’t know what someone would have to do now. There HAVE to be protocols. it’s not a unique situation.

              Anyone, I’ve learned, and I can pass it on to my kids. what not to do.

              • ProfessorHoover@infosec.pub
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                Actually if you’re unlucky enough to be born off the grid in the US it’s really hard to get back on as an adult. I remember seeing articles about someone who grew up homeschooled and was now trying to prove their identity.

  • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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    To everyone saying people needed to wait until the mid-terms to take action: Fuck You.

    • D_C@sh.itjust.works
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      Yep. I’ve been asking for months and months where the protests are, and what about general strikes and so on. All I get is “it takes time to coordinate, just you wait” “it’s starting slow but will get up some steam soon” “wait til the mids” “it’s a big country, it’s very difficult to do anything but we will sort it blah fucking blah!”
      It’s all bullshit.

      A fucking failed reality TV star, convicted criminal, idiotic bankruptcy champion, confirmed rapist and deffo child rapist took over the whole of the uNazied States of america in less than a year and 99% of their population did fuck all about it. Fuck and all.

      After decades of them watching action movies whilst stroking their guns and threatening to shoot anyone who encroached their freedoms…yet a fucking orange geriatric paedo went full dictator on them without as much as a whimper. Pathetic.

      • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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        and what about general strikes and so on.

        A general strike is desperately needed, but it genuinely isn’t as easy as just calling for one and hoping everyone jumps onboard. Unions need to coordinate together to organize a proper one that won’t fizzle out, which I will admit has been an agonizingly slow process, but it does appear to be happening.

        The best thing we can do in the meantime is to unionize our workplaces if it isn’t already, help a friend unionize theirs, speak up at union meetings about the importance of preparing and organizing a general strike (set up strike funds, contact other unions and mutual aid orgs to plan a date and resources, etc), and joining a local mutual aid group that will help us weather the strike.

        I’ve been spreading this guide showing how to prepare for resistance as far and wide as I can. If you’d like to chip in and spread that as well, you have my full permission to copy and paste it wherever you think it’d get the most eyeballs (that goes for anyone else reading this too, your help would be much appreciated. Just try to make sure you post it where it won’t be totally off topic and unwelcome).

        You can access the markdown version of that comment by clicking the little page icon with the folded edge beneath it (on lemmy through the browser), so you don’t have to manually copy the links or the formatting.

      • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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        Kinda hilarious that you critique others for not organizing while you yourself also are not organizing.

        Your criticism is you asked if there were protests, nobody organized them, and now you complain no one has organized one.

        You can organize too you know.

        If you are saying this as someone outside the country that’s a bit different. Obviously if you are not there you are not responsible to organize.

        Anyway there are protests that have been happening, look at minneapolis. There have been quite a few protests, they need to go further, but they have been growing and increasing in frequency for a while now

        • billbasher@lemmy.world
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          There have been protests all over the country. We are almost at the point of civil war if this ICE sh continues. I have been protesting

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      Who do you think is saying that?

      I mean, these guys pay good money for propaganda, I’m sure they have people posting shit like that everywhere to ensure people wait

    • KelvarCherry [They/Them]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      That mentality pisses me off. Partially because they’re definitely going to rig them; but more because thousands of people are dying every week. Thousands are being disappeared. How many folks were sent to CECOT? How many people were grabbed off the street? The ICE abductions were the tipping point and tragically we failed. (It didn’t help to have all the libs yelling “DON’T FIGHT BACK!!”)

      You’re going to sit back and hold a zen zone through 2 years of holocaust? Really? The entitlement of those folks is insane.

    • OneWomanCreamTeam@sh.itjust.works
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      I don’t think I’ve seen a single person saying that. Plenty saying that you should vote when mid-terms roll around, but none saying that you shouldn’t be doing anything before or after.

  • Gates9@sh.itjust.works
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    Last election several individuals committed voter AND election fraud. They were all Republicans.

    Let’s see ‘em in the comments if you’re inclined to display them.

  • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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    This mandates government registration to access an essential right of a citizen in a democracy. Ask for the same thing for gun ownership though and the right would lose their minds.

    • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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      What’s interesting, is that many of us already do register with the state governments.

      Its goal isn’t to regulate voting. It’s to suppress it.

      • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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        Yep. Very easy to disenfranchise many people this way.

        Particularly, anyone whose name or SAAB on their passport or birth certificate doesn’t match their photo id. Anyone who works during DMV hours and can’t take time off to renew an ID. Especially those who don’t drive (and thus don’t need a license).

        So let’s see, that’s mainly women, genderqueer, and the working poor. Alright alright.

        Who else?

        I’m sure that a lot of the unhoused don’t have easy access to their birth certificate or passport.

        Anybody who cut ties with their parents and can’t access this paperwork. So no strong family values.

        Oh yeah. The millions of Americans who can’t even dream of leaving the country who never even got a passport in the first place.

        How is this not a poll tax?

        And I’m gonna guess that this is going to make mail in voting more difficult? Or perhaps we will have to verify our ID with an app, this getting all of our info while also removing anonymity from voting, at a time when one party is not just hostile, but downright violent towards members of the other.

        How about this…the republicans get to have a poll tax if the Democrats get to have a literacy test. If we are gonna make voting harder, lets make it harder for both sides. Deal?

        Obviously that’s quite tongue in cheek.

      • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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        Agreed. The goal is to design a system where you must prove your right to vote rather than be allowed to cast a vote with passive validation after the fact. Folks who can’t prove their right to vote are primarily low-income voters who are presumed to vote Dem.

        As this is not the least restrictive means to accomplish the legitimacy of the election, it does not pass constitutional muster (good luck with the current Supreme Court though). I also wonder how this might infringe on the rights of First Nations (literally completely ignorant here) and states right to administer their own elections.

          • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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            What they are going to create is a world where women refuse to take their husband’s name. I’m certain the right will be up in arms over that as well. Par for the course for the poster children of unintended consequences.

            If their goals were ever what they say they are, there is almost always a better policy that could drive that out come, but every time the right’s solution is “just make them.” And then big fucking Pikachu surprise when that doesn’t work out like they plan.

    • silence7@slrpnk.net
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      The goal here is to keep women from voting: the SAVE act very specifically requires that you

      • Prove citizenship
      • That you prove that the name on your citizenship document (eg: birth certificate) match your current name

      Because women often change name when they get married, they’ll have a mismatch, and need to spend time and money to be able to vote. If the legislation passes, it will block about 20 million Americans from voting. Because of gender disparities in voting, Republicans see this as to their advantage.

      Give your Senators a call at 202-224-3121 and ask them to block this change.

    • IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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      I’m not in the USA, but in here government ID has been a requirement to vote as long as we’ve been independent. Same goes with driving license, registration of a car, guns obviously, bank accounts and a ton of other everyday stuff and it’s not really a problem. Sure, you need to take care that specially the new ID card they hand out is valid (5 years at the time if I remember correctly) since it’s often (one might argue too often) required to validate your identity.

      And when done correctly it’s mostly a good thing. Last time I voted it took maybe 10 minutes and I had several days to pick one which suits me. I gave my ID card to the clerk who then checked a box that I already voted (so that they won’t give me second ballot) and then I filled the ballot and cast my vote. That’s it. And of course there’s mechanism so that you can vote even if you’re hospitalized or out of the country or something else preventing you from voting “the normal” way.

      Current government at the USA seems to do everything they can to make voting more difficult, but requiring a valid ID to do so isn’t really the biggest issue you have out there.

      • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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        That the thing, and ID requirement sounds reasonable but it really isn’t in the US.

        First, there is no national ID. The closest we have is out Social Security Card, but that’s just a number. There is no photo or other identifying information. Every state issues drivers licenses, but those can vary widely.

        For example, Arizona drivers licenses don’t expire until the person is 65 which makes them terrible for identification purposes. Imagine looking at a driver’s license photo taken at age 16 and trying to figure out if that is the same 60 year old person standing in front of you.

        There are birth certificates, but those alone aren’t positive identification either. There is no federal requirement to have one, though most people do. Still, there are about 60,000 babies born outside hospitals who may or may not ever get a birth certificate. These parents are often antigovernment and think they are doing their kids a favor by hiding them from the feds.

        Then there is the issue of ID requiring a permanent address. Native American reservations do not get federal mail service, so they don’t have addresses. They use post office boxes to get mail, bit those aren’t valid for ID purposes. There are also people who live out of cars, RVs, or a simply homeless who nonetheless are citizens with a right to vote.

        My partner had all their IDs lost in a fire., so I’ve gone through the process of getting a new ones and it is a nightmare. First, you need a copy of your birth certificate. But they won’t give that without some sort of proof of identity. That means we had to go to my partners gynecologist (the only doctor they had been to in this state) and get a letter swearing their identity and to their bank for proof of address. Then we could order a copy (plus fees) from their home state which we had to wait for a physical copy to be mailed.

        Once that arrived, we were able to fill out the forms to get a temporary social security card (have to wait for the real one to come in the mail). After that we went to the Department of Motor Vehicles (which always has a huge wait) to present all the previous forms to get a state ID (a driver’s license would have required a written test, an eye test, and a driving test as well).

        This all took us a couple hours a day for more than a week of going to various offices, being told we needed other forms, getting those forms, coming back, and so forth. Imagine trying to do that with a car, or in a rural location where offices could be an hour drive apart, or trying to do that while holding down two jobs.

        The general point I am making here is that if you are poor, a minority, rurally located, or simply someone who falls outside the average, getting an ID can be a significant hurdle to the basic democratic right to vote.

        • IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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          That’s just wild from my perspective. In here pretty much everything works with your SSN and some way you can prove it’s yours. Healthcare, pensions, schools/education in general, taxes, benefits and nearly all publicly funded things require that you can prove you are who you claim to be. Hell, I can’t even get certain type of packages out of the post office without a valid ID.

          Sure, there’s some burecrautic annoyance to actually get valid ID card or passport, but compared on what you’re saying it’s walk in the park. Last time I renewed mine it was enough to submit application for it digitally and then visit a police station to actually confirm my identity for that application, but in total with traveling it took 2-3 hours.

          And also I can verify my identity online pretty easily either via my bank credentials or with a phone service. For me and a lot of other people it’s really convenient, but obviously in here we also have people who can’t (or won’t learn to) use all the new tech so for them some things have gotten more difficult.

          A fun side-note is that today my driving license actually doesn’t qualify as valid identification. On some cases it’s still enough and it used to be as good as actual ID card but with a ton of EU drivers licenses from other countries around it’s not ‘strong’ enough identification anymore.

          • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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            The United States works a lot more like the EU than any individual country. Each state has its own politics and leadership. Some states try to make things easier, some try to make things harder, and it can all flip from one election to another. It makes it very hard to make any kind of progress. A passport would work as ID just about anywhere, but less than half of Americans have one. I don’t (and I’ve been out of the country a couple times).

    • Triumph@fedia.io
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      In order to legally purchase a firearm (except in a transaction between private parties) you have to fill out a federal transfer form.

      • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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        If you are the type of person who cares about the government knowing you have a gun, you will certainly acquire it through a transaction between private parties.

  • Bustedknuckles@lemmy.world
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    It’s a disgusting attempt to disenfranchise millions of women and anyone else who changes their name, or doesn’t have time/money for the hassle, but it’s also only one prong of the attack. The name match requirement would be at the time of voter registration, so wouldn’t affect current voters unless… Massive swaths were purged from the voter rolls - this is a reason why the feds keep suing for voter roll information from states, and why red states have complied

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    provide photo ID when they cast ballots.

    Does this mean mail in voting is dead?

    Also, the party of state’s rights everyone.

    • silence7@slrpnk.net
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      The key requirement in it requires you to have ID with the same name as proof of citizenship. Because women frequently change their name when they get married, it means that they won’t have matching documents, and won’t be able to vote.

      Call your Senators at 202-224-3121 and tell them to vote against it.

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        Install the app “5 calls.” It is free and has no ads. It provides you with the direct phone number for all your representatives and senators as well as curated topics and scripts. You can also set up a weekly reminder to call them and be a pain

    • Patrikvo@lemmy.world
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      Photo ID makes sense, if the country has this allready in place. In Belgium everyone over the age of 12 has one and it’s all you need to prove identity. And since it has a electronic chip, you can use it to handle quite a lot of official administration through the internet.

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        This is the United States, so they’re imposing a requirement that somebody not just have a state-issued photo ID, but have a birth certificate or passport which matches their current name. It’s very common for women to change their name when they get married, so the net effect if this passes is to prevent tens of millions of married women from voting.

        Republicans want that because women are more likely to vote for Democrats than men.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          This also intentionally targets trans people since getting your birth certificate changed is a pain in the ass and they’ve intentionally targeted our ability to get passports in the current regime.

        • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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          We got married in the Caribbean, over 30 years ago. We can’t find our marriage certificate. I have no idea where it went, but it has never turned up in several moves.

          We have requested a copy several times over the last decade or so, have sent letters with the fee (only about $10), but it is always ignored, or we get a letter back saying that the payment was wrong, or in the wrong currency, etc. We have followed their shifting rules to the letter, we’ve spent over $100 so far, and we still don’t have a copy. As a result, my wife’s driver’s license has expired, and she can’t get a Real ID.

          This legislation targets her specifically.

          • CosmicTurtle0 [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Could you get married again in the states?

            In effect, from a documentation standpoint you’re not married. Might be the easiest solution to go to the courthouse and fill out bullshit paperwork to get documentation that you’re married.

            • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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              We’ve thought of that, but we haven’t pulled that trigger yet. Frankly, this could be the cheapest divorce ever, if we, or one of us, wants to go that route.

              Seriously, if we did get officially married in America, what would that mean for the last 30+ years of our marriage? Did we commit numerous cases of fraud by claiming to be married on financial documents, for instance? Mortgages, car loans, income taxes, etc ?

              Is getting officially remarried even legal? I know people renew their vows, but that’s ceremonial (and dumb), not legal.

              • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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                But her maiden name is still valid and presumably matches the one on her birth certificate? There’s no legal requirement to change your name for either marriage or divorce, as far as I know, and latitude is wide in terms of hyphenation, etc. You may have more options than you know.

                Also, the question of “fraud” only really matters when bills don’t get paid, and now for voting. If you have other evidence of your marriage (pics, invites, announcements, etc) from that time, you can easily prove that your intent was not fraudulent. I wouldn’t sweat that part of it too much yet.

                But if I were in your shoes (and I’m not, so take it with a grain) my next step would be to get a free consult with a family attorney in your state, as they’re the lawyers that deal with name changes the most, and get the real picture of what’s actually legal and possible for you in the state where you live. You could also run the fraud question by him/her, if it’s still an issue.

              • silence7@slrpnk.net
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                In much of the US, living together and presenting yourself as married over a period of years means you’re actually married.

                • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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                  Those laws have been going away in the 21st century, they’re relics of a time when the government didn’t have great records of things like marriage

              • CosmicTurtle0 [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                I didn’t consider the fraud route. You might need to consult an attorney or consider consulting an attorney in the Caribbean to have them get a copy of your marriage certificate.

  • Formfiller@lemmy.world
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    We the people need to rise up. Our entire government is compromised and occupied by criminals and Zionists who have “legalized” their criminal behavior at our expense

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    satan. had a piece of trump downstate rep on a politics show pushing this trump. The reporter brought up even the heritage foundation found few cases of any impropriety and he blew it off just hammering the talking points. 100% next step is mail in can’t be done because no id. Fuck them and all this bull trump of theirs.

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      Speak for yourself. I’ve voted in every election I’m eligible for since I turned 18 in '98. That was a midterm election. Still voted.

      I consider voting to be the most patriotic thing anyone can do, followed closely by paying taxes.

      • HubertManne@piefed.social
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        Yeah that and jury duty are the specific things citizens are expected to do. Not to mention you have to be nuts to not participate when you have the privelege of living in a democracy. Citizens accept the constitution, patriots support and defend the constitution, traitors ignore the constitution.

      • Optional@lemmy.world
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        Ah one o’ them genoside supporters eh?

        (/s of course, I’m in complete agreement.)

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    The US was always doomed to fail. You can’t make a nation out of an empire. You can’t build a democracy on top of slavery, colonialism and genocide.

    I think there are some well meaning people trying very hard to make it work, and god bless them, but they’re certain to fail.

    The only thing to do now is try and find a viable exit strategy. The US Federal government will soon be completely and permanently taken over by the terrorist organization that is the Republican party. It’s time for states to start forming their own, independent militias while the 2nd amendment at least still exists. We can hope that peaceful secession will be possible, but we certainly cannot plan on it.

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      13 小时前

      Substitute half of present day European countries into that first paragraph and see how true that rings

      • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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        10 小时前

        The colonial empires of Europe didn’t just convert to democratic nations, they were destroyed, through revolutions and wars, including two devastating world wars. And from the rubble of the old European empires, nations were formed, many of which are democracies, though of varying quality. The US is a legacy of those European colonial empires. So, for the US to follow the same path, the US empire must be destroyed (although hopefully in a more peaceful, less harmful manner), so that new democratic nations can be formed in its place.

        • ѕєχυαℓ ρσℓутσρє@lemmy.sdf.org
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          9 小时前

          This is why I find it so funny when the US celebrates its independence day. Bitch, independence from who? Yourself? (I know from who, but I think it’s kinda bullshit. It’s like if the British committed genocide in India, and then declared independence. Kinda dilutes the meaning of the word.)

    • I_Jedi@lemmy.today
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      12 小时前

      What the US can do is set up various client states, like Napoleon. The US has enough military power to arbitrarily redraw any borders it wants. Hell, they could reinstate the French monarchy if they wanted to.

      Like Burgundy, the US would then be able to institute a unique yet artificial nation.