I saw a post where women were advised to stock up on birth control before the new administration starts and it reminds me of the thing I hated the most about 2017 - 2020.
-
I saw a post where women were advised to stock up on birth control before the new administration starts and it reminds me of the thing I hated the most about 2017 - 2020.
Instead of a government that helped people, we had a government which randomly would choose some set of people to inflict harm and inconvenience. Travel bans, bans from serving in the military, actions against Planned Parenthood and Title X, changes in asylum policies, etc.
It hurts to realize voters chose a return to this.
-
It is truly disappointing that the majority of voters chose a return to a government that deliberately and wantonly harmed millions of people over rhe belief that a person with “concepts of a plan” will make their grocery bills lower and gas prices cheaper.
-
@carnage4life They just believe it will work others, not them.
Or, possibly, they don't think it will happen. That was a weakness in the Democrats campaign. They presented Trump as a would be dictator that will turn back the tables about everything. It may be true -or not, will soon find out-, but people found the idea over the top and did not believe it.
-
@carnage4life don’t you think that the deregulation (social and environnemental) combined with the drill baby drill are quite good for short term economic performance? (Unfortunately)
-
Simon Willisonreplied to Eddydy last edited by [email protected]
@Eddydy @carnage4life his two signature economic policies are tariffs and mass deportation, and I don't think anyone credible has made an argument that either of those will have anything over than a massive negative impact on the economy
-
@dl2jml @carnage4life a key plot point in Ronald Dahl's Matilda was that the nightmare headmistress got away with everything because the things she did were so outrageous that nobody would believe any child who described them