• @[email protected]
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      162 months ago

      They are, indeed, people. My point was only that they are not “bystanders”. They are actively involved, and much more so than the average voter.

    • experbia
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      62 months ago

      i wouldn’t know, according to them and their folks, my friends and family and I are not people, so I guess my definition of that must differ. moreover, I don’t dispense sympathy for people who would cheer and support the news that me and mine have been hunted down and shot in the street. I don’t sympathize with the aggressors. I’ve just been trying to mind my own business and live my life as best I can, but these people (in sudden newfound need of sympathy and feelings of safety, lmao) have been talking for years of purges of non-Whites and gays, and civil wars, and rounding up the undesirables (that’s me, apparently, by virtue of birth) to clean up the country. might as well be asking me to sympathize with a school shooter over his hearing damage from not wearing earplugs while he mowed down a classroom.

    • @gravitas_deficiency
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      2 months ago

      We’re getting into paradox of tolerance territory, tbh. I’m not upset that supporters of fascism were killed.

      I am upset that the guy with the rifle didn’t have better aim (if indeed that was actually how everything went down, and it wasn’t staged in one way or another, because there are several fishy things about this).

      • @[email protected]
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        42 months ago

        I’m glad I’m not the only one getting that vibe. It’s like they lifted the idea verbatim from a 90s TV show.