I’ve been seeing a worrying number of these people on Lemmy lately, sharing enlightened takes including but not limited to “voting for Biden is tantamount to fascism” and “the concept of an assigned gender, or even an assigned name, at birth is transphobic” and none of them seem to be interested in reading more than the first sentence of any of my comments before writing a reply.

More often than not they reply with a concern I addressed in the comment they’re replying to, without any explanation of why my argument was invalid. Some of them cannot even state their own position, instead simply repeatedly calling mine oppressive in some way.

It occurred to me just now that these interactions reminded me of nothing so much as an evangelical Christian I got into an argument with on Matrix a while ago, in which I met him 95% of the way, conceded that God might well be real and that being trans was sinful and tried to convince him not to tell that to every trans person he passed, and failed. I am 100% convinced he was trolling – in retrospect I’m pretty sure I could’ve built a municipal transport system by letting people ride on top of his goalposts (that’s what I get for picking a fight with a Christian at 2AM) – and the only reason I’m not convinced these leftists on Lemmy are trolls is the sheer fucking number of them.

I made this post and what felt like half the responses fell into this category. Am I going insane?

  • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    The keyword is “potential group of voters”. The raw truth is that centrists are more reliable voters than leftists. Sanders showed this very well in the 2020 primary. His plan was to get an overwhelming number of supporters and turn out like minded people, and that failed.

    Bernie championed progressive causes, but not enough progressives showed up to polls.

    • electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      The whole point is that you won’t get a set of people to reliably vote for you if you don’t reliably deliver the results they care about. I think the Sanders campaign was actually a success if you consider how much he was able to engage people that generally feel unrepresented by candidates. I know a lot of people, myself included that donated money towards a campaign for the first time ever (we are in our 40s). There’s a lot of energy out there that is ready to work for sincere leadership.