2020 U.S. Presidential Election - Took place November 3, 2020. Former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden assumed office January 20, 2021.

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Ok, I'm an eternal pessimist, and I can't help but feel that the DNC will do everything in their power to lie, cheat, and steal their way to victory in November. So level with me, if Biden wins and steps down early on to crown Komala as the 47th president, how fucked are we? Will the Democrats try to calm the waters and give the carrot after 4 years of their screeching stick, or are the going to waste no time in bringing more chaos?
tl;dr Depends. Its gonna be Obama 2.0. Maybe with out without the kneeling to the woke left. But our freedoms will slowly be eroded. Maybe we'll go to war with Russia. idk. Trump could have a kangaroo court trial for being Orange Man. Life goes on. Trump's supporters will still be out there. They're not going to evaporate overnight. We probably won't see a total transformation into a green socialist paradise. Kamala is a neolib. She's in the pocket of Wall St. They will panic and threaten to pull lobbying money if they even think of enacting the Green New Deal. And if they even try, Wall St. will back someone who'll oppose it. Money talks and bullshit walks. Anything that interfering with the flow of money will be stopped.

This all really depends on the left gaining control of all 3 branches of Government. Which I'm not sure will happen. The presidency or the legislature sure. But both, not so likely. I think they'll do nothing, other than getting Biden out via 25A, if they had ultimate power. The corporatits are in power, not the woke. The woke are just useful idiots to the left atm. Once they've outlived their usefulness, they'll be thrown under the bus. Hell, Kamala being VP might be that moment.

Here's a longer version of my thoughts:
IMHO, I don't think that much will change if the left gains all 3 branches of government. The people at the controls are the corporatist. They get a lot of their money from Wall St. They aren't going to bite the hands that feeds them by enacting wide spread socialism. And if they try it anyways, Wall St will balk because it means less business and back someone else to do their bidding. The left will probably try and punish Trump with a kangaroo Trial and remove a few more rights. But a Biden admin will mostly be Obama 2.0. Yes that would be fucking awful but you'll be able to hide from the left.

I know the left is in full revenge mode, but its mostly propagated by the woke left. And the corporatists that do parrot those talking points only do so in fear of cancel culture. They're the ones who want full on camps and shit. But a lot of these politicians on both sides of the aisle are friends behind the scenes. And the corporatists have a lot more in common with the neocons than they do the woke left. There could be more public violence against right wing individuals but I think that'll be fleeting. Because the right has guns, and ccps, and once a few people are killed in self defense, they'll back down.

Going back to biting the hand that feeds you, removing 1A & 2A will not help business. Wall St wants money and a stable America is the best position to be in. The US Dollar is the defacto global currency. If America is in total chaos, that will reflect back onto the global economy and crash it. The Yuan is not powerful enough to sustain the global economy and China is already having major issues.

Social Media will ban pretty much all wrong think because Biden's admin will look the other way, but in the end they'll crash and burn. I currently think we're on the cusp of a SM crash since people are gunshy about using it and letting their political opinions known. And it'll get even worse if the left are in control of the government. Normies will abandon facebook and twitter in droves. And those that are left are going to start cancelling each other and the service. Adverts are going to say fuck this and leave.

The left will also try and prop china back up, but a combination of the international community telling china where to stick it after getting fucked by KungFlu and the mass flooding going will be insurmountable. India won't sit by idly while China gets propped back up. And places like Italy and Australia will probably stand with India. I can see Biden, or whoever, trying to send all our food over to China to feed them. Then turn around and tell the American public "We gotta tighten our belt buckles and ration food". And once the public realizes its all getting sent to China, it won't be pretty. A hungry and broke American public is a lot more dangerous than a hungry and broke Chinese public. At least the latter has had decades of totaltarian shit beat them into submission. Not so much with the former. And we have guns. If we don't vote you out first, then the public will kill the politicians involved. People with nothing to lose are very dangerous. Trump's audience isn't going to vaporize into thin air the moment he loses. They'll be even more galvanized to fix shit. Especially if what I said above actually happens.

The woke left will think they're the reason Biden won, and not because the left probably stuff ballot boxes and shit, and continue rioting. They'll get too big for their britches. The neolibs will the woke a few bones to try and satiate them, but it won't work. They'll start going after corporations that don't toe the line 100%. And then eventually the gated communities where the rich and political big wigs live. Then the left will send in the military to strike them down. It'll be worse than now, people will probably die and literally get theis skulls caved in. But you won't hear a peep about this because the mob will get banned from Social Media. The media won't report on it because they're in the pocket of the left. As soon as its convenient, the corporatist left will throw the woke left under the bus. They already know they're getting too rowdy. The left won't do anything to rock the boat currently because the DNC thinks it can use them to win the branches of governments. They're also scared of getting cancelled by the woke left. If Biden win, they'll have the army and the power of the government at their disposal so there will be no fear of reprisal from the woke.

Biden will not make it through his first term most likely. Either there will be plans to yeet him the day after inauguration. Or he dies of stress or health issues. The best case scenario for him would be kept alive medically for a while just so the left can use him as a scapegoat for why everything they try to do goes wrong.

I still think Trump will win. The left doesn't have that many chips in their corner they can use against the voting public. They blew their load too early with the lockdowns and Floyd riots. The public doesn't trust the media or journalists. Those same groups are going broke atm. China is on the verge of breaking thanks to flooding and the possible destruction of the 3 gorges dam. Biden has put himself into a corner by vowing to pick a POC Women as his VP. They're aren't any good choices. All fucking bad. The woke will eat Biden alive if he goes back on his word. Even if the internet is a wash with shills from ShareBlue on twitter and reddit. The left are super dumb and can't think 3 feet a head of them to save their lives. It would be a miracle if Biden picks a "sensible" VP, like Tulsi or Buttigieg.
 
Bruh, I don’t know how the DNC went from Crooked Hillary to Sleepy Joe. I don’t think they could find a more unlikeable candidate after Hillary. You could literally take a random 40 year-old from the street and have a bigger chance at winning the election.

I mean it can’t be that hard? Can it?

On Kamala Harris, when watching the democratic debates the only two democrats I absolutely hated were her and Booker. They had the most smug faces that just turned my stomach.

Maybe it is just me but Kamala could have been the most unlikeable on the debate stage out of all of them (although Booker came close). The Kavanaugh hearings did Kamala no favors either.

I mean Trump is very unlikeable but the Democrats outdo themselves trying to find someone worse.

edit: grammar
 
I'm still a little surprised he picked Harris as his VP. I wouldn't have guessed that earlier in the year. I also don't know why they'd pick a Democrat from California when trying to appeal to moderates, but whatever.

Moderates? There's no such thing as a MODERATE! You either agree with the most good and holy progressive party or you're OBVIOUSLY EVIL.

Did you perhaps mean FASCIST NAZIS IN DENIAL!?!!?!?!!!?!!?!!!?!!one!
 
Trump needs the economy to do great, make sure the gibs make him look good somewhat, repeal his own bumpstock ban and do his speech at Gettysburg as a middle finger to the woketards and neoliberals.

The wokie is a lunatic but the neoliberal is way more of a dangerous animal whose moral compass would would make Mao and Stalin look like Catholic saints.
 
The DNC will be putting all their hopes in Cambridge Analytica style voter targeting, relying on people staying in their swimlanes of information.
To swing voters who are horrified by BLM / Antifa ritoting, they will play up Kamala's cop / jail them angle.​
If you're Black, regardless of your actual views, you're going to get swamped by clips of Kamala speaking in support of BLM and how she's "Black".​
I don't know what messaging Bernie supporters will get but it will be tailored to whatever their consultants tell them will work.​
People who take the time, or have the luxury of time, to checkout multiple sources are the only ones who will see the variously crafted images superimposed. For the rest it's like a Spot the Difference game with only one of the pictures.

If you want to counter this, you want to expose the counter-narratives in their appropriate lanes. Where people are BLM types, show her jailing single mothers for their kids being truant, where they are scared of Antifa and BLM, show her supporting them.

You can also try to break down the lanes just by showing clips and statements from her that are representing different views.

But make no mistake, they don't see her hypocrisy as the problem you do, because their consultants and analysts and facebook spooks think they can keep everyone in their lane. One Kamala, Many Faces.
 
I know there’s a lot of Democrats who dislike Pelosi and Schumer and others cut from the same cloth, but it seems like the gap between what Republican voters want and how Republican officials vote is absolutely enormous. The Tea Party has seemingly fizzled out.
Didn't the Tea Party dissolve when Trump was elected because their job was done?
 
The weird thing about Bernie was the right-wing and moderate support though?

IDK. I guess more Trump votes, hopefully.
The thing about Bernie now is that his campaign is essentially over. The progressives lost. Now it feels as though there is a split, many are going to move towards Trump, and a mix of progressives and establishment virtue fighters are going to cause chaos. I feel like we will have a similar turnout to last election if @Harvey Danger and his charts can be used again. Maybe even more cross over if they realized that Dems will never satisfy/ Bernie flakes on them or see the craziness and have enough sense to jump.

Weird bunch, and one heck of a struggle to see where they align.
I guess people don't remember 2015 that well. 2015-2016 was the year when a lot of things changed politically. As much as a meme Bernie is today as well as his supporters, you have to remember that back before Trump there were a lot of disenfranchised voters who were usually moderate Democrats but with the advent of the culture war felt themselves abandoned. I should know since I was one of them.

Look back on a lot of 2015-2016 videos from people like Sargon, Louis le Vau, etc. I know, I know, but seriously, its showed us a trend from people that called themselves liberal or center-left back then that were looking for a reason to keep that description. The Karen wokes were all in for Hillary in 2016. Bernie in 2015 was a lot different than the Bernie today, he still hadn't swallowed the Woke Kool-Aid and a lot of voters who were into the culture war, as autistic as it was, liked him for it. After he cucked out, a lot of them outright abandoned the left and became unironic conservatives. We didn't leave the left, the left left us and spat in our face as they did so. Some voted Trump just as a fuck you to the left and many of us became right wingers.

That's the sad thing about the conservative resurgance in a lot of countries. They didn't become popular again because they've been great on the economy or immigration, or fuck, anything. It's just that the left shat the bed so hard that it became impossible to think of voting for anything but the right. Trump is not great, and Boris Johnson is a cuck, but voting for the alternative is unfathomable.
 
@Hellbound Hellhound

Hey I’m back and you’re wrong.

I mean, we’re meeting in the middle on a few things but you’re still mostly wrong.
Let's see, shall we?
If I recall, the EU concessions largely consisted of the UK being subject to EU oversight and regulation while not having any kind of representation. That doesn’t strike me as particularly generous.
Ironically, you've just described the situation post-Brexit.

The UK did have some representation in the EU (though practically, not much) by having a seat in the European Parliament: something which was rescinded through Brexit. The situation with regard to regulations and oversight remains the same. If companies based in the UK ever want to sell produce to the EU (the UK's biggest market), they will still have to follow all of the same rules and restrictions that they did before, only now, without their elected representatives having any say in them.

Brexit fundamentally happened because of a failure of negotiation, and a failure to understand what the main political point of contention was: which was fears about immigration. If the UK government and the European Union had managed to reach an agreement with the British people about that, then Brexit likely would never have happened.
Myself having conceded that there’s more to a diplomatic relationship than material terms, I’m curious as to why you’re the one suddenly taking a myopic view of the one between the United States and China.

For starters, I’m curious how you can accuse Trump of undermining global democracy while ignoring the fact that he’s been the first president in forever to take real economic measures against one of the most abusive and authoritarian regimes on the fucking planet.

Trump’s policy on China has two major motivations. First, as you’ve mentioned, is inequitable trade, something he was happy to publicize in the 2016 campaign. Second, which you’re choosing to ignore, is disentangling the United States from a brutal communist state, and weakening that state’s influence.

Trump’s fears of overreliance on China and the fallout from their negative global reach have been so thoroughly vindicated that you now have the Biden campaign weakly chiming in about how he’d be even tougher on China.

You can’t look at the immense political reach that China has in the US public square and argue that we have nothing to lose by becoming even more reliant on their exports and media/service markets. Especially not if you’re truly concerned with the health of democracy and Western ideals.
I don't think there is anything myopic about my view. I completely welcome any pressure that Trump can place upon the Chinese regime to address it's undemocratic makeup, corruption, and lack of respect for human rights, but progress of this kind isn't going to come about as a result of the United States trading less with China, and it's certainly not going to be engendered by a detrimental trade war.

The reality is that the political influence the US can exert on China strongly hinges on a good trade relationship between the two countries. There are three areas where a country can lead: militarily, economically, and culturally. The US comfortably beats China in the first two categories, but it absolutely dominates it in the third. There is simply no comparison: a China which is closely tied to the United States is going to be far more susceptible to US influence than the US could ever be to China.

My points concerning the specifics of trade still stand. The low-skilled manufacturing jobs which the US has lost to China aren't meaningfully coming back, and the tariffs Trump imposed have proven to be counterproductive.
It looks like we fundamentally disagree with the degree of leverage the US has over Europe in defense negotiations. We agree in broad strokes on likely outcomes of hypothetical defensive actions, but despite my best efforts you seem to be under the impression that NATO member states are free to walk away from the table. They are not. Not by any stretch of the imagination.

I will grant you the point that coordination and cohesion suffer if diplomatic relations are strained, but I’d still maintain that the US is the critical centerpiece to European defense, to the point where European leaders are as motivated now to coordinate with the US as they’ve ever been. Hell, if readiness and spending are taken into account, they’re more willing now than they were under Obama.

Speaking of Obama, the 2014 commitment to increased spending was likely a direct result of his own neglect towards Europe, and it’s obvious looking at the numbers that the real increase in spending from major NATO members did not occur until Trump started taking a more aggressive stance.

https://www.nato.int/nato_static_fl2014/assets/pdf/pdf_2019_06/20190625_PR2019-069-EN.pdf
This seems like quite selective reasoning. When Obama's leadership causes European member states to spend more on defense, it's weakness, but when Trump's leadership causes the same thing, it's strength? The only constant here is that European defense spending went up following a pledge by all member states to spend more, and I haven't seen any evidence that this is strongly tied to the singular leadership of any particular US President.

And the data doesn't clearly show that the trajectory of defense spending in Europe has meaningfully changed since Trump took office. Quite the contrary:
NATO defense spending graph 1.JPG

NATO defense spending graph 2.JPG

NATO defense spending graph 3.JPG

“I see no similarities between the two scenarios while also admitting that nuclear parity was the main reason there wasn’t escalation to begin with.”

You kind of played yourself here.

A nuclear exchange may be on the table, but fundamentally unlikely. Especially considering that fact that you’re assuming the alliance can maintain cohesion in the face of incremental aggression.
It wasn't nuclear parity which prevented Israel from nuking it's enemies, it was the fact that the risk of nuclear escalation wasn't in any way worth it.

When you're at risk of annihilation, the doctrine of mutually assured destruction is what you have to fall back on. Israel was never in that situation; they were always realistically going to win against their enemies.
I think we’re reaching a general understanding, but I need you to consider the vast difference between “flipping the odds”, and the loss of an overwhelming deterrent. The difference between a European victory with the US and one without it is incredibly vast, and this lies at the heart of my other arguments. Knowing that you are likely to win a conflict is a cold comfort when the conflict was allowed to start in the first place, has already taken a devastating toll on your nation, and will cause yet more destruction and misery before it can end. Just ask the Allies circa 1943.

It’s also crucial to consider the impact on European stability once Russia becomes a serious threat to EU member states and other continental allies. Europe does not want this, and they will fight to keep the US around to make sure it doesn’t happen.
I don't disagree with any of this.
Whatever happened to democracy, friend? Who elects those representatives?
The people elect the representatives, which is what makes the system democratic. If the people don't like the decisions their elected representatives make, they can vote for someone else at the next election.
I agree that material realities affect policy more potently than perception alone, that’s really what I’ve been saying since the start, but it’s naïve to assume that a nation immediately becomes an autocracy the second there’s a major crisis. In fact, that’s largely what you’ve stated (and I agree) we want to avoid in the first place.

I’d encourage you to look at the history of the World Wars and other 20th century conflicts to see how crucial the will of the people and their perceptions are to the balance of power and rules of engagement, even in times of existential threat.

I would still add that “the people” in most cases are more sensitive to rational material realities than they are to popular perception alone, although these days the balance is way closer than I’d like.
I'm not saying that countries automatically become autocratic in times of crisis, simply that leaders may have to make unpopular decisions. I don't believe this represents a failure of democracy either: the whole point of representative democracy is that we elect people to govern on our behalf, and when your full-time job is to deliberate over the merits and feasibility of a particular policy or course of action, it's perfectly understandable that you will sometimes come to a different conclusion than some random person off the street who's thought about the issue for perhaps no more than 10 seconds.

Appealing to the people on matters of principle is important; representing their interests is important, but when it comes to the complex matters of statecraft and diplomacy, the devil is in the details. I have no problem with elected representatives having a different view to that of the electorate, just as long as they are still accountable to the ballot box come election time.
I’m just gonna have to disagree with you on most of this one considering there’s no conflict at stake currently, yet somehow that hasn’t stopped a wave of populism and Euroskepticism from shaking up internal cohesion in a major way. Are you European? I’m genuinely interested if you have a different take on this if you are, but from where I’m sitting, it looks to me like the Europe and the EU have a whole lot lose if the US is no longer subsidizing their defense.
I haven't seen much evidence that the rise of populism in Europe has done much to affect European cohesion beyond perhaps strengthening the divides that already existed between East and West. Most of the anger seems to be directed towards the government, and the main point of contention isn't defense, but concerns about the economy and immigration.

And yes, I am European, although I have many family ties across the US.
Most universal health care systems cost less taxes than American programs (and health care in general) for two main reasons:

1) Countries outside the US are sucking the teat of American medical innovation.

2) Medicaid and Medicare deal with poor people and old people respectively, two of the most high-risk groups medically that have the highest associated health care costs.

It’s not a fair comparison.
That's not why healthcare in the US is so expensive. There are plenty of other countries that are able to provide healthcare systems which are free at the point of service to everybody (including the high-risk groups you mention), and still do it for less per capita than the cost of Medicare and Medicaid alone. American medical innovation can't be the reason either, because when population is taken into account, the US doesn't produce the most medical innovation; it's not even in the top 5.

The real reason healthcare in the US is so expensive is administrative inefficiency coupled with a lack of measures to prevent rent seeking. Both problems would be solved by having a centralized system in place.
You cannot, in a million fucking years, convince me a public option is going to result in anything but bloated bureaucracy at best and catastrophic decline in quality of service at best.

Trump has taken steps to try and get more transparency for health care billing and costs, which shows some positive focus on the subject.

The ACA was so ineffective that they relied on a bait and switch for premiums as well as outright coercion in the form of a fine. In my opinion it existed solely as a means to keep people reliant on the government once they had broken out of the Medicare bracket.

On top of that, I remain skeptical of any form of government price fixing due to the overwhelming body of historical evidence pointing to how it typically ends in disaster.
The ACA was ineffective because it was gutted by compromise. A lot of powerful financial interests rest on there not being a public option for healthcare providers to have to compete with, and as such, a lot of lobbying takes place to ensure that there isn't. The fact remains that universal healthcare isn't some theoretical pie in the sky idea; it's the norm across the developed world, and in terms of cost effectiveness and ease of access, the evidence is clear that it's preferable to a customer-driven system.

Even Trump has signaled in the past that he agrees with me on this: back in the 90s he advocated a single-payer healthcare system.
Yeah but who are you voting for? Assuming you’re American that is. I’m curious, I really am.

I think there’s a decent chance you’re a Shareblue shill or similar, given how you go from ignorant about topics to suddenly knowledgeable about surface level talking points while opening other lines of attack. All with a “how do you do, fellow conservatives” kind of vibe. But I’m curious how you plan on voting nonetheless.

(Although if you are a paid shill, you are absolutely in the wrong fucking neighborhood).
I'm not eligible to vote in the United States, so I won't be voting for anyone, although if I could vote, I'd be inclined to vote for Biden simply because I think he'd govern more responsibly, create less scandal, be more willing to listen to advice, and delegate responsibility more effectively than Trump, who's nepotistic, revolving door of a cabinet have been turning on him and generating scandal left and right. I could be completely wrong, of course, but given how bad things have been, I'd be willing to take the chance. If Biden turns out to be a disaster, then I'd be fine with him being a one-term President.

And no, not everyone who disagrees with Trump is part of some conspiracy. I'm not a conservative and I've never claimed to be, but I'm not especially left-wing either. What I am, fundamentally, is baffled at how much a once great country appears to have completely taken leave of it's senses over the last few years, and I think a repudiation of this development would be a positive step in the right direction, even if the alternative is less than ideal.

If it ever seems like I'm shifting my focus or changing the subject, it's probably because I've already made my point on the matter. I also don't really want to get bogged down with minor details when I feel like my central points have already been made.

People can neg-rate this post all they like. I don't care. I feel like I've said all that I reasonably can at this point anyway.
 
I'm still a little surprised he picked Harris as his VP. I wouldn't have guessed that earlier in the year. I also don't know why they'd pick a Democrat from California when trying to appeal to moderates, but whatever.
It basically had to be a "woman of color" (and that just means black at this point, sorry Tulsi) and the same thing that tanked her presidential campaign (her record of enthusiastically throwing people in prison for minor crimes) might actually appeal to moderates who want someone to put a stop to the rioting but are too afraid to admit it out loud. I think that stuff overrides what state she's from.
 
I have given up on all of these polling and betting odds:





Also lets make a list of pozzed and based websites to use.
 
And yes, I am European,
This explains so, so much.
Ironically, you've just described the situation post-Brexit.

The UK did have some representation in the EU (though practically, not much) by having a seat in the European Parliament: something which was rescinded through Brexit. The situation with regard to regulations and oversight remains the same. If companies based in the UK ever want to sell produce to the EU (the UK's biggest market), they will still have to follow all of the same rules and restrictions that they did before, only now, without their elected representatives having any say in them.

Brexit fundamentally happened because of a failure of negotiation, and a failure to understand what the main political point of contention was: which was fears about immigration. If the UK government and the European Union had managed to reach an agreement with the British people about that, then Brexit likely would never have happened.

Retaining national sovereignty was the main issue at play, with immigration a distant second.

They are now at the same footing as a trade partner while retaining a greater degree of domestic autonomy. In terms of trade they're subject to regulation, sure, but there's no longer any risk of Berlin sticking its fingers into UK monetary policy, like it did with Greece.

(I'm not qualified to say whether or not that was justified, but it still represents a broad power of intervention when it comes down to it).

You may know more about this than me, but overall I don't buy the line that immigration was the main driving force and it looks like the polls bear that out.

I don't think there is anything myopic about my view. I completely welcome any pressure that Trump can place upon the Chinese regime to address it's undemocratic makeup, corruption, and lack of respect for human rights, but progress of this kind isn't going to come about as a result of the United States trading less with China, and it's certainly not going to be engendered by a detrimental trade war.

The reality is that the political influence the US can exert on China strongly hinges on a good trade relationship between the two countries. There are three areas where a country can lead: militarily, economically, and culturally. The US comfortably beats China in the first two categories, but it absolutely dominates it in the third. There is simply no comparison: a China which is closely tied to the United States is going to be far more susceptible to US influence than the US could ever be to China.

My points concerning the specifics of trade still stand. The low-skilled manufacturing jobs which the US has lost to China aren't meaningfully coming back, and the tariffs Trump imposed have proven to be counterproductive.

I appreciate your charitable view of American cultural hegemony, but I think you're off here. I'll respect your perspective as a European insider if you respect mine as a US citizen. Yes, China absolutely wields a great deal of power in the American public square. US based media companies will bend over backwards to cater to the Chinese market, and will drop the fucking hammer on any of their employees who jeopardize their business relationships over something so small as a public statement. That's not including the ever growing list of tech firms now majority owned by CCP proxies.

There definitely danger in being closely entangled with a China that has been pushing its limits for decades, and while sunshine and rainbows style diplomacy would be nice, I don't see any issue with reminding them that we're more free to walk away than they are.

This seems like quite selective reasoning. When Obama's leadership causes European member states to spend more on defense, it's weakness, but when Trump's leadership causes the same thing, it's strength? The only constant here is that European defense spending went up following a pledge by all member states to spend more, and I haven't seen any evidence that this is strongly tied to the singular leadership of any particular US President.

And the data doesn't clearly show that the trajectory of defense spending in Europe has meaningfully changed since Trump took office. Quite the contrary:
NATO defense spending graph 1.JPG

NATO defense spending graph 2.JPG

NATO defense spending graph 3.JPG

Learn. To. Read. Graphs. This is actually embarrassing.

First off, there's a difference between Obama's "you're on your own, lol" and Trump's "we want to stick around, but you have to pull your weight".

Secondly, despite your impressive command of MS paint, you seem to have fucked up in your cherrypicking:
NATO defense spending graph 1.JPG

This is annual change in defense expenditure as a percentage of GDP. It doubles in Trumps's first year in office and remains twice the post-pledge average each year after.
So Trump's policy contributed to a doubling of the rate of increase in defense spending. Not fucking bad.

NATO defense spending graph 2.JPG

This graph shows a similar story. Spending increases ramped up after Trump was in office while further highlights how the US' commitment to defense spending is greater than Europe as a whole.

NATO defense spending graph 3.JPG

Nice try. This is billions of dollars, not percent of GDP, which is the main metric for measuring compliance to the NATO pledge to begin with.

That paper I linked shows a few more interesting trends; namely, it shows how a lot of the increase in NATO spending is driven by smaller nations rapidly meeting their goals while the larger economies dragged their feet.

Kinda like Trump has been saying all along.

It wasn't nuclear parity which prevented Israel from nuking it's enemies, it was the fact that the risk of nuclear escalation wasn't in any way worth it.

When you're at risk of annihilation, the doctrine of mutually assured destruction is what you have to fall back on. Israel was never in that situation; they were always realistically going to win against their enemies.
I thought you were making the argument that the soviet backed regional powers had access to nuclear escalation by proxy. Which they kind of did.

Israel's survival was very much on the line, but yes, they didn't have much to gain by risking escalation.

I still don't think Europe would either except in the most dire cases of a war between major powers.
I don't disagree with any of this.
Neat.
The people elect the representatives, which is what makes the system democratic. If the people don't like the decisions their elected representatives make, they can vote for someone else at the next election.
Yup.
I'm not saying that countries automatically become autocratic in times of crisis, simply that leaders may have to make unpopular decisions. I don't believe this represents a failure of democracy either: the whole point of representative democracy is that we elect people to govern on our behalf, and when your full-time job is to deliberate over the merits and feasibility of a particular policy or course of action, it's perfectly understandable that you will sometimes come to a different conclusion than some random person off the street who's thought about the issue for perhaps no more than 10 seconds.

Appealing to the people on matters of principle is important; representing their interests is important, but when it comes to the complex matters of statecraft and diplomacy, the devil is in the details. I have no problem with elected representatives having a different view to that of the electorate, just as long as they are still accountable to the ballot box come election time.
If we circle back around to the issue that sparked this debate in the first place, namely the reluctance of the European populace in general to fulfill their Article 5 NATO obligations if called upon, I don't doubt the leadership would be more inclined to intervene than their constituents.

But the leadership aren't the ones jumping into the trenches. Nor would they expect to be in power much longer if the population thinks that they've been put in danger by intervening.
I haven't seen much evidence that the rise of populism in Europe has done much to affect European cohesion beyond perhaps strengthening the divides that already existed between East and West. Most of the anger seems to be directed towards the government, and the main point of contention isn't defense, but concerns about the economy and immigration.
This was in 2016, it looks like things have rebounded since then, but I guess we'll see in the end how it all shakes out.
The ACA was ineffective because it was gutted by compromise. A lot of powerful financial interests rest on there not being a public option for healthcare providers to have to compete with, and as such, a lot of lobbying takes place to ensure that there isn't. The fact remains that universal healthcare isn't some theoretical pie in the sky idea; it's the norm across the developed world, and in terms of cost effectiveness and ease of access, the evidence is clear that it's preferable to a customer-driven system.

Even Trump has signaled in the past that he agrees with me on this: back in the 90s he advocated a single-payer healthcare system.
Why what a very European thing to say! I guess I'll just suffer here in silence with my excellent insurance, robust safety net in cases of poverty, and vastly lower effective tax rate.

I'm not eligible to vote in the United States, so I won't be voting for anyone, although if I could vote, I'd be inclined to vote for Biden simply because I think he'd govern more responsibly, create less scandal, be more willing to listen to advice, and delegate responsibility more effectively than Trump, who's nepotistic, revolving door of a cabinet have been turning on him and generating scandal left and right. I could be completely wrong, of course, but given how bad things have been, I'd be willing to take the chance. If Biden turns out to be a disaster, then I'd be fine with him being a one-term President.

And no, not everyone who disagrees with Trump is part of some conspiracy. I'm not a conservative and I've never claimed to be, but I'm not especially left-wing either. What I am, fundamentally, is baffled at how much a once great country appears to have completely taken leave of it's senses over the last few years, and I think a repudiation of this development would be a positive step in the right direction, even if the alternative is less than ideal.

If it ever seems like I'm shifting my focus or changing the subject, it's probably because I've already made my point on the matter. I also don't really want to get bogged down with minor details when I feel like my central points have already been made.

People can neg-rate this post all they like. I don't care. I feel like I've said all that I reasonably can at this point anyway.
I think a lot of your view of Trump has been colored by the media. It's cliche as fuck, but I really think you're underestimating how invested establishment players are in making sure literally everything Trump does is painted in a negative light. In terms of policy he's been a moderate reformer, center right at most. Despite his unorthodox style, he has quite a few major domestic and foreign policy victories under his belt. Yet if the popular media is to be believed, he's a baby-crunching turbofascist.

When Trump fires a cabinet member because he doesn't think it's a good fit, it's a scandal. When Obama had the vast majority of his second term cabinet made up of literal fucking banking executives, why, there was nary a peep. I'll leave it to you to judge which of the two is better for the US.

I didn't suspect you as a paid shill because you disagree with Trump, I did it because we're both several thousand words into this shitflinging and you won't fucking give up. I didn't stop because I'm an asshole. I know this much. I was just curious as to your motivation. At no point did I mention a conspiracy. There are a lot of people on this site who disagree with Trump but they don't write fucking novels about it while trying to be persuasive, mostly they just bitch and cry or else bait and laugh. It's the combination of cordial persistence and recycled talking points that I found suspicious.
 
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