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So what have democrats gotten right?

BendintheriverBendintheriver Member Posts: 5,307
First Anniversary 5 Awesomes 5 Up Votes First Comment

When one sits back and looks at the big picture, they see that this might possibly be one of the worst administrations in history.

Immigration/open borders? What a damaging mess. Its costing lives.

Covid? Big no. They destroyed over 200,000 businesses and set children back years.

Education? We are in a downward spiral. They are hurting our children by dumbing them down with their woke bullshit instead of teaching basics.

Wokeism? Nope. People are now pushing back. Reverse racism and institutionalized sexism.

Foreign policy? Big nope. It seems like biden and his handlers have fucked up half the planet. Everything they touch turns to mud. I can't think of one success.

Race relations? They have divided this country even further. Surprised that was even possible.

Crime/Defunding the police? A miserable failure. Even some red cities are tired of the violence the rat leadership has brought.

Last but no least, the economy. biden and his bosses have had 3 years to get their shit together and have failed so miserably that they can't even attempt to lie their way out of that one.

And the left elites wonder why anyone would vote for Trump.

https://thefederalist.com/2024/03/15/2024-is-shaping-up-to-be-the-we-were-right-about-everything-election/

Last week, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul ordered the National Guard to start patrolling the subways of New York City to deal with the city’s crime problem, which has been metastasizing for years now.

There was a lot of guffawing from the online peanut gallery, and understandably so. In the summer of 2020, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., had written a New York Times op-ed suggesting the deployment of the military to quell the rioting that destroyed dozens of cities and did billions of dollars in damage. Though polls showed Cotton’s suggestion had popular support, the Times’ own staff revolted against their employer, with several employees publicly reciting some version of the mantra that publishing Cotton’s op-ed put “black people in danger.”

But now? Mara Gay, a member of the Times’ editorial board who had been quite vocal in her opposition to publishing the Cotton op-ed, has now authored a column headlined, “The National Guard Might Help Subway Riders Feel Safer.” (For what it’s worth, Mara Gay is not related to disgraced former Harvard president Claudine Gay, though Times columnist Roxane Gay, who also opposed the Cotton op-ed, is.) In four years, we went from Democrats essentially saying we had to tolerate the lawless devastation of dozens of American city centers to fully endorsing armed 20-year-olds rifling through your bag before you use public transportation to deal with the ordinary criminality they allowed to fester.

And no, they do not care that this is profoundly hypocritical or that Cotton’s reason for deploying the National Guard was far more reasonable than Hochul’s. In this regard, the blasé attitude toward Hochul’s deployment of the National Guard is alarming — deliberately allowing a criminal underclass to undermine existing order and then using the resulting lawlessness as a pretext to extend government control over law-abiding citizens is textbook tyranny.

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