At the national level yes. In retrospect it had a low probability of success, prior to Trump no one was talking about flipping the entire nation to a nationalist populist platform as a viable option, but it was still worth hitching our wagon to him to give it a go. And I don't regret doing so. And I appreciate him finally, at long last, throwing in the towel so now we know he isn't going to be the guy.
Now we go back to pre-Trump era politics: we are on our own, and there is no one to save us. All politics is local now: your next-door neighbors matter, your local sheriff matters. Except that now we know there are a lot more of us than we originally thought, and we now know that effectively no-one in politics at the state-level and above is on our side.
Yep. Unfortunately I live in a state that is far left blue. They always vote blue and there is no GOP to speak of. What little there is of the GOP already cucked and "denounced" what was going on over there.
You know, six years ago, at the start of GG I was just some center-left moderate, and it took years upon years of the left being retarded like this to push me over to the populist/nationalist right.
It wasn't just a "red pill in 20 seconds" moment for me, it was just a gradual grind as I got shoved farther and farther away from the left, and making the slow realization that so many people are so willingly "unawake", so to speak.
I used to dislike the right wing segment of KiA, and it took another year or two of this bullshit for me to finally realize I'm fighting against people who actually see the bigger picture and the long term implications of all this stupidity.
My state is also blue: thanks Seattle. My neighborhood is great, and the slice of normalcy I've managed to carve out from the overall cuckedness of my region makes it more difficult to consider leaving than if I just lived in CHAZ and had to pay tribute to Warlord Raz.
Six years ago feels like lifetimes ago. That was about the time I started waking up that something in liberalism wasn't adding up. I had a friend who was a Dawkins fan-boy who all of a sudden turned on him because of Elevatorgate, and it didn't make sense to me at the time because Dawkins always had the same sort of acerbic attitude; but I guess before then it didn't matter because it was aimed at Christians.
I always appreciated the right wing segment of Half, even back when I didn't agree with it. Spectemur always made his arguments well, even when I disagreed with him. I don't anymore. I think a lot of right-wing positions can't be argued into in modern Western society because they go against the ether of what you're taught ought to be, so you can only buy into them if you experience them first-hand. In that regard 2020 has been a godsend, because it's provided ample opportunity to show the lie of how "free" liberal Western democratic society is. No sane person can claim we live in a "free" or "open" society when people are forced into their homes and arrested for leaving them.
At the national level yes. In retrospect it had a low probability of success, prior to Trump no one was talking about flipping the entire nation to a nationalist populist platform as a viable option, but it was still worth hitching our wagon to him to give it a go. And I don't regret doing so. And I appreciate him finally, at long last, throwing in the towel so now we know he isn't going to be the guy.
Now we go back to pre-Trump era politics: we are on our own, and there is no one to save us. All politics is local now: your next-door neighbors matter, your local sheriff matters. Except that now we know there are a lot more of us than we originally thought, and we now know that effectively no-one in politics at the state-level and above is on our side.
Yep. Unfortunately I live in a state that is far left blue. They always vote blue and there is no GOP to speak of. What little there is of the GOP already cucked and "denounced" what was going on over there.
You know, six years ago, at the start of GG I was just some center-left moderate, and it took years upon years of the left being retarded like this to push me over to the populist/nationalist right.
It wasn't just a "red pill in 20 seconds" moment for me, it was just a gradual grind as I got shoved farther and farther away from the left, and making the slow realization that so many people are so willingly "unawake", so to speak.
I used to dislike the right wing segment of KiA, and it took another year or two of this bullshit for me to finally realize I'm fighting against people who actually see the bigger picture and the long term implications of all this stupidity.
My state is also blue: thanks Seattle. My neighborhood is great, and the slice of normalcy I've managed to carve out from the overall cuckedness of my region makes it more difficult to consider leaving than if I just lived in CHAZ and had to pay tribute to Warlord Raz.
Six years ago feels like lifetimes ago. That was about the time I started waking up that something in liberalism wasn't adding up. I had a friend who was a Dawkins fan-boy who all of a sudden turned on him because of Elevatorgate, and it didn't make sense to me at the time because Dawkins always had the same sort of acerbic attitude; but I guess before then it didn't matter because it was aimed at Christians.
I always appreciated the right wing segment of Half, even back when I didn't agree with it. Spectemur always made his arguments well, even when I disagreed with him. I don't anymore. I think a lot of right-wing positions can't be argued into in modern Western society because they go against the ether of what you're taught ought to be, so you can only buy into them if you experience them first-hand. In that regard 2020 has been a godsend, because it's provided ample opportunity to show the lie of how "free" liberal Western democratic society is. No sane person can claim we live in a "free" or "open" society when people are forced into their homes and arrested for leaving them.