The narrative that Trump's win is only due to white folks needs to deaded on here.....

Unbothered

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Well, the majority of White people voted for Trump, and that's factual, but the small segment of Black people, along with the Latinos, Muslims, etc who also voted for Trump is just as much of a problem, a smaller fraction of it but nevertheless problematic, and that shouldn't be ignored or downplayed because that just gives the impression that their actions are acceptable.

I don't care if it was just approximately 500 total Black men and women who voted for Trump; they need to be called out and ridiculed for their decisions. People who can't understand what I'm saying, it all goes back to what I said in another thread on this same topic; it comes down to them subconsciously feeling a level of guilt in the role, even if small, they might've played in Trump's victory.

The human conscience is a powerful thing; no matter how much a person tries to compartmentalize and make sense of the reasonings behind their actions, they still feel bad.
 

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Uachet

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Well, the majority of White people voted for Trump, and that's factual, but the small segment of Black people, along with the Latinos, Muslims, etc who also voted for Trump is just as much of a problem, a smaller fraction of it but nevertheless problematic, and that shouldn't be ignored or downplayed because that just gives the impression that their actions are acceptable.

I don't care if it was just approximately 500 total Black men and women who voted for Trump; they need to be called out and ridiculed for their decisions. People who can't understand what I'm saying, it all goes back to what I said in another thread on this same topic; it comes down to them subconsciously feeling a level of guilt in the role, even if small, they might've played in Trump's victory.

The human conscience is a powerful thing; no matter how much a person tries to compartmentalize and make sense of the reasonings behind their actions, they still feel bad.
Because this path is an effective use of time, or is it because your anger about it is so overwhelming that you can't control yourself?

This is also what I mean by hatred of Black people. Even some of our own want to go through unneccessary effort that will not change any outcome or make life any easier under Trump, to continue to point the finger at Black people (no matter how few there were, as per your own words).
 
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SNG

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90 million muthafukkas didnt vote and the ones that did majority still voted for Kamala. Yes a few c00ns voted for Trump and he had more of them than any republican president but way more cacs that pushed him into the position.

90 million is a lot of people that didn’t vote that’s more than enough for another political party .
 

AnonymityX1000

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Well, the majority of White people voted for Trump, and that's factual, but the small segment of Black people, along with the Latinos, Muslims, etc who also voted for Trump is just as much of a problem, a smaller fraction of it but nevertheless problematic, and that shouldn't be ignored or downplayed because that just gives the impression that their actions are acceptable.

I don't care if it was just approximately 500 total Black men and women who voted for Trump; they need to be called out and ridiculed for their decisions. People who can't understand what I'm saying, it all goes back to what I said in another thread on this same topic; it comes down to them subconsciously feeling a level of guilt in the role, even if small, they might've played in Trump's victory.

The human conscience is a powerful thing; no matter how much a person tries to compartmentalize and make sense of the reasonings behind their actions, they still feel bad.
Do you even know who you are calling out? Do you think they hear you? Sounds like you are just yelling into the wind to feel better. It's not changing anyone's mind or making anyone ask for forgiveness.
 

AnonymityX1000

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:russ: @ the folks who was laughing and cheering Kamala losing, now saying "don't blame us" Same nikkas who made it a point to announce they were voting for the couch to punish the Dems, are not saying" don't blame us" :russ:
We didn't care who won. No one was cheering her loss We just laughed at those who predicted a Kamala victory. Quite a few were acting like it was a done deal. Whoopsies.
 

num123

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Black people and other minorities did have a big part in her loss: Our turnout in major cities in Battleground states was down by a lot and white Trump voters' turnout increased:


The end result was the urban tide never materialized for Harris, not in Philadelphia and not in other major cities across half a dozen battleground states.

Blue cities represent the core of the Democratic base — they contain a mix of liberal educated professionals and working-class voters that have long sustained Democratic candidates — and the party has to run up the margins in urban areas to stand any chance of winning elections.

But this year, the major cities accounted for smaller shares of the votes cast in the battleground states than four years ago — effectively ceding political power to suburban and rural voters who are, in aggregate, more conservative. Even as fewer voters turned out in Philadelphia, for example, Pennsylvania statewide had more votes cast than in 2020.

While there are differences across the cities, a POLITICO analysis found the greatest decline in voter participation in all six appears to be in predominantly low-income Black and Hispanic neighborhoods. There were some shifts toward Trump, but it was ultimately the turnout drop in staunchly Democratic precincts that had the greatest impact on urban margins.

The analysis of nearly 3,000 precincts — the most granular election results available for the biggest cities in six of the presidential battleground states — across Philadelphia, Atlanta, Charlotte, Milwaukee, Phoenix and Las Vegas paints a vivid picture for why Harris lost ground. (Complete precinct results for Detroit, the biggest city in Michigan, were not available as of Friday.)
How individual voters cast their ballots is not known, but stark residential segregation along lines of race and class suggests clear patterns in which voters swung toward Trump the most, and who stayed home this time.
For instance, Trump received nearly 3,400 more votes than he had in 2020 across the 476 “predominantly Black” precincts in the six cities, defined for POLITICO’s analysis as places where at least 85 percent of residents are Black. But Harris received about 17,500 fewer than Biden had, a far greater impact on the overall margins.



That decline in city voter participation does not alone explain Harris’ defeat — Trump improved on his 2020 margins all across the battlegrounds, including in purple suburbs and rural red counties. But the turnout slump prevented Harris from building an urban firewall in areas that have long been bastions of Democratic power, and it portends challenges Democrats will have to address in future elections.

People who only look at how many people voted rather than where they vote and the turnout of voters are wrong.
 

num123

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If the Dems know the country is sexist and racist why did they place Kamala as the nominee?
So if "The Democrats" picked a white man, would that not even be worse than Kamala just based off of the fact they would of been appointed and not elected? At least with Kamala she was voted for with Biden at the top of the ticket, so claims she was "appointed" were stupid. But a random candidate plucked out of nowhere would of been somehow better? Come on.
 
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