I know this is a weird question, but let me give you some context. I live with my parents. I live in a place where I can't get anywhere that I want to. No public transport and I don't have a car.
I used to live downtown and took the bus. Back then I had a read on people.
It's been a while since I've interacted with the general public. I see people at receptions for doctors appointments or whatnot, but that's about it.
One thing in the past though is that I could hate the beliefs of someone, yet like them well enough as a person.
I despise feminism, but I felt that individual feminists I could be cordial with and they'd be cordial with me. That most individuals will be friendly on some level and you can connect on some level.
I really truly don't know what people are like now.
I see what they're like on the internet and the news, but that is very unreliable to what the day to day experience is like.
I assume some of you live in cities and interact daily with many different types of people. What is it like "In the real world?" to be a little tongue in cheek.
I live close enough to the city and travel there enough for work that I know many die hard lefties in person. They're nuts. Like most people they modulate their opinions in a crowd if they think everyone else isn't on the same page, but once they know they're in a group of like minded cultists they go wild with radical conspiracy theories, retarded liberal philosophy, the latest MSDNC NPC narrative updates, TDS sermons, and claims that they are all enlightened moderates who just want the country to get back on track. It's hard to see them as people. They're more like drones connected to the machine collective.
What gets me is the projection. They constantly claim that republicans have all gone nuts. Meanwhile, the research shows that the left are the ones who have fallen off the table. It takes a legendary absence of self-awareness to see literal communists, trannies, and Muslims taking over your political party and then pretend like your side is the rational one.