• @[email protected]
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    1619 months ago

    I feel like this article is really missing out the part where oil interests are intentionally funding hatred of other modes of transportation. The PragerU video on “The War on Cars” is a good example. They are funded by oil companies, and this is public information that is easy to find. And they use that platform to prevent other modes of transportation from being safe or viable.

      • @[email protected]
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        219 months ago

        I think one of the main points in the article is that there is no group of cyclists able to come together to lobby and tbh, I don’t see how it’s really possible. It’s something I’ve been thinking for a while.

        I am a cyclist and a driver. I am not personally in a lobbying group for either. However, like another poster said, oil companies and car manufacturers have the money and reasoning to come together to lobby on behalf of drivers regardless of my actual wishes but they’ve got lots of my money from having bought and maintained a car. Cyclist manufacturers aren’t exactly large, have much money or are as combined into a few multinationals. There is no fuel industry either.

        I don’t really know any other cyclists like me who are more casual, and use it for local journeys. I want better segregated lanes, better and more secure parking (my bike got stolen recently), the police to actually care about bike thefts, and more considered routes/junctions. There are social groups of long distance weekend cyclists but tbh, they have completely different priorities and interests to me. Even when I used to commute my cycling habits were completely different so my requests would be different.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          Depends where you live, of course, but in the UK, where this article was published, there are quite a few organisations for cyclists, like the London Cycling Campaign, British Cycling and Sustrans (which advocates for Sustainable Transport generally, hence the name, but I think focuses mainly on cycling).

          I think all three are membership organisations, with slightly different focuses (like obviously the LCC focuses on London!). The LCC definitely is partly funded by the bicycle industry.

          EDIT: Somehow forgot about the greatest cycling club of all for UK-based cyclists: The National Clarion Cycling Club, which is a socialist cycling club!

          • @[email protected]
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            59 months ago

            Very interesting, thank you for sharing!

            Some of these are exactly what I was thinking so will join or see how they can help. However, I do get the sense they have no real say in local politics here given what I’ve seen in proposals and plans from the local and county councils. I noticed new caveats to some of the 20mph and LTN type plans (which are far behind other areas already) with “depending on the wishes of actual residents in that area”, or something along those lines added that sounds like full on NIMBYISM or anti-woke to me. I do reply to consultations with my concerns as a local cyclist but don’t see much changing. Perhaps doing so as part of a group will be better.

            Unfortunately I’m just outside London in Surrey where the infrastructure is awful. There is a noticeable drop in quality as soon as you cross the invisible border. It’s worse for cyclists and pedestrians.

            For example, the behaviour of car drivers outside my child’s primary school is terrible and they school constantly asks people to be more careful but the council doesn’t seem to care. They have yellow lines on the smallest stretch you can imagine and not even on both sides of a small road, which are ignored anyway. The road is still 30mph, there are no ped crossings, let alone crossing guards. I even requested parking enforcement to come. They said would add it to their list but have seen them once in 6 months.

            Sorry, turned into a bit of a rant towards the end!

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            Sure, there are lots of advocacy groups for good things with positive externalities that exist… but the funding for them tends to be vastly lower than the amounts thrown at lobbyists from industries with negative externalities.

        • @[email protected]
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          49 months ago

          There’s not exactly the same amount of money sloshing around in the cycling manufacturing industry. It’s a relatively cheap product, and there’s no consumables involved. In contrast, if you drive, you give the oil industry something like $100/month.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        I’ve been to the Pacific Cycle corporate headquarters, the current owner of well-known brands like Mongoose, Schwinn, GT, and Rioadmaster, supplier of most of the bicycle-shaped objects sold by mass-retailers like Walmart and Target.

        That’s right, into the very belly of Big Bike!

        And, uhh, they’re not very big. I’ll bet more people work at the Toyota dealership just down the highway. That is to say, bicycle industry lobbyists don’t stand a chance against automobile lobbyists.

    • SonnyVabitch
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      9 months ago

      Huh, interesting article, thanks!

      the study didn’t attempt to determine whether people more oriented toward the common good are simply more likely to ride bikes, or whether riding bikes actually increases people’s interest in the common good.

      I’d be curious which is the chicken and which is the egg.

        • Jerkface (any/all)
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          9 months ago

          I mean it more in the sense of, “go vegan, get hated by everyone.” It’s not the right, it’s everyone right of you… In other words, a fundamental aspect of human psychology. :-/

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Yeah asking why conservatives think bicyclists are all radical leftists is a boring question full of answers we already know.

      The real question is why the hell anybody who enjoys riding a bicycle (and walkable infrastructure in general) can at the same time be a conservative or even a centrist?

      Like…. what are you doing? Have you not thought through the history of why the simple act of riding a bicycle or walking through your community puts your life at risk because our public spaces starting right outside our front door are utterly devoted to cars?

      If you ride a bicycle on public streets and you vote conservative or even centrist you are literally using your vote to make yourself more likely to be killed.

      There could not be a more direct example of how the idea of neoliberal individualism and libertarianism totally ignores material realities where an individual’s actions, such as driving a 6000 pound pickup truck for no reason, can directly lead to your death.

      There could not be a more direct example of how prioritizing individual freedoms (and let’s be frank, only certain individuals) to an extreme degree can result in tragic consequences for everyone.

      The freedom of the group has to be considered too… which is basically the whole point of leftism.

  • @[email protected]
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    599 months ago

    I think cyclists secretly love cars. Otherwise why do so many end up on a car hood or under its wheels? It’s probably one of those BDSM things really…

  • @[email protected]
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    429 months ago

    Look, I’m generalizing here, but there seems to be an almost intentional effort on the part of many journalists and journalistic outlets to misunderstand “The Right”.

    Its the charity part, which, like I get the journalistic training and the importance of giving someone you might disagree with the the charity required to have a conversation, but “The Right” has been using this act of good faith to further their agenda. We shouldn’t be giving them charity. Period. They’ve broken with the good faith required to support that charity. “The RIght” aren’t arguing or acting in good faith, and so charity shouldn’t be extended to them. They are captured by a kind of cynicism that is not compatible with civil society.

    • Ogmios
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      49 months ago

      I frequent both right and left wing areas of the web to try and keep tabs on what everyone is talking about, and literally the only place I’ve ever seen this sort of anti-cyclist circle jerk is on reddit.

  • @[email protected]
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    389 months ago

    I have a hypothesis about the right. Some of what happens is to protect the ego.

    Consider bike riding. Riding a bike is better for the environment and their health. This prompts questions like “why am I not being better for the environment? Why am I not being better for my health?”

    One option when faced with that sort of uncomfortable question is to reject thinking about it and get mad at other people. Do not consider anything negative about oneself. That’s uncomfortable and difficult. Being mad about other people is easy.

    This resolves the cognitive dissonance, though in its own expensive way with its own tradeoffs.

    • @[email protected]
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      269 months ago

      Yes, a friend clued me in years ago that the key to understanding the conservative mindset is their deep shame and self-hatred. A lot of people say it’s fear, but that’s only partly true. Everybody is motivated by fear; liberals just fear other things.

      But for conservatives, it’s fear that they’re worthless and inferior. That’s why so much of their ideology concerns groups that they denigrate and oppress in order to feel superior. This is why they have bicyclists in their crosshairs recently.

      And not just bicyclists. It’s not enough just to have a car. Oh no! They have to have a truck. And not just a truck, but a grotesquely enormous truck, with a grill that juts 6 feet straight into the air, perhaps with a lift kit, too. That way, they can roll coal on and intimidate drivers of smaller, weaker vehicles, like Prius drivers.

      It’s a performative doubling-down on the behavior that they subconsciously feel others are judging them for, in order to redirect the shame and self-hatred outward as anger at others.

      • @[email protected]
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        149 months ago

        I drive a Prius and can confirm. Large trucks act threatened by my existence on a regular basis.

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          It soundy similar to how some straight people act as though homosexual people are a threat to their particular sexuality. Of course we all know that they are 0% correct, unless, unless… you think you should be examining your own sexuality? Like maybe you suspect there is something that could be awakened there…?

          Then the lashing out makes sense.


          Also patriarchy and control, but it can be multiple things.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        Followed by the culture of you aren’t a real man if you don’t go into debt to drive a massive truck which the bed will be empty 99% of the time and you can barely afford to put gas in it (but its the carbon tax bankrupting them they’ll claim).

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      You’re overthinking this. I mean, you’re right in general, but I have a hard time believing all this is going through their heads when they see a cyclist.

      I think it’s just different. Conservatives dn’ t like seeing change or difference. Clearly only cars should be on the road, and everything else is change, different, an affront to the “rules”

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        I don’t think it’s happening consciously. Most people don’t introspect that clearly or often

        But you may also be right that a generalized, acontextual, resistance to change may be a factor. Like if bike lanes were common and someone wanted to remove them, a lot of basic conservatives would resist that just because it’s a change.

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      Exactly, and it should be noted they also never consider the other reasons to bike. Health and environment are part of why I want my city bikable, but mostly it’s because I enjoy biking more than any other mode of getting around. It makes me happy to be on my bicycle and getting to use it to get groceries turns a chore into a delight. Even if I had a perfectly clean and safe automobile and perfect health I’d still choose to bike to the grocery store when I can because fun.

  • @[email protected]
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    369 months ago

    I am so tired of the “everything I don’t like is woke” crowd. How long did it take for the “everything I don’t like is communist/socialist” crowd to be publicly ridiculed for having such juvenile worldviews?

    • @[email protected]
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      169 months ago

      How long did it take for the “everything I don’t like is communist/socialist” crowd to be publicly ridiculed for having such juvenile worldviews?

      well, looking at McCarthyism… too long

    • @[email protected]
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      109 months ago

      How long did it take for the “everything I don’t like is communist/socialist” crowd to be publicly ridiculed

      They must be getting the last laugh because they are still around that’s why we [as in US] can’t have good health insurance.

    • @[email protected]
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      109 months ago

      The “everything I don’t like is communist/socialist” crowd has never been ridiculed, what the hell are you thinking?

      It is LITERALLY the American hegemonic ideal.

    • @[email protected]
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      99 months ago

      Okay I am going to play a devil’s advocate here. So of you are not wrong. Many of these people are lashing out at charge unnecessarily, though I do think it is important to look at why. First the politicians and talking head that are driving this are just trying to make hay out of non issues for their own personal agendas. Fuck them they are toxic, but why are there so many common people so willing to buy in. Simply because they are scared of losing their way of life and ability to support themselves. I don’t mean losing the “right” to drive giant trucks, but losing what their parents and grandparents had. These people have seen it with the loss of good quality blue collar work. The work their parents and grandparents had, which one person could support a family and buy a house with. They have seen how the loss of manufacturing, steel, lumber, etc. jobs have affected others and they are scared that they are next.

      They have the exact same existential dread of the future that the rest of have and or more or less the same reasons, they are just reacting in a different way. Just like how some people react to the loss of a family member with sadness and some with anger.

      Hard right politicians have found that they can swing some of these people to their extreme views by capitalizing on this fear and offering a solution. Obviously isolationism and hate are not good longer term solutions, but they sadly do work well in the short term. I firmly believe many people that are just kind of going along with the hard right are only there because see no other solution being offered to their problems. Remember many Germans were not Nazis but they let the Nazis take power not because they agreed with them, but because no one offered anything else. Yes it is a lie but it is very important to remember why the lie exists. Sadly ignoring or dismissing it will not make things better.

      I genuinely wish I had a solution, but I don’t maybe smarter people than me do.

    • DigitalTraveler42
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      First of all the “everything I don’t like is communist/socialist” were never ridiculed for their viewpoint, once Russia collapsed and China went mostly capitalist the communist rhetoric mostly dried up, but the anti socialist rhetoric remained and still remains, as does the much less talked about red-scare rhetoric, especially after a bunch of supposed “Antifa” dingbats allowed themselves to be interviewed on Fox News and admitted to being Communist/Anarchist, in the same way that the antiwork movement got derailed by that idiotic moderator going on Fox news.

      Secondly the “everything I don’t like is communist/socialist” crowd is the “everything I don’t like is woke” crowd, if we had a Venn diagram about this is would be like a 90% overlap, same type of people, same types of mindsets, both with white Christian fundamentalism at it’s root, and if you dig a little deeper you’ll find that under that those roots are built right on top of Confederate ideals and white supremacy.

  • @[email protected]
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    329 months ago

    It’s pretty simple when you realize that conservatives are addicted to hate. In order to prioritize their hatred, they target people who make them feel like an asshole and people who are in their way. You can boil these down to people who make them uncomfortable.

    • @[email protected]
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      209 months ago

      Yeah, you gotta reframe it. “Don’t you miss when people used more traditional ways to get around? Give me a horse or a bicycle any day”.

      They will agree to fucking anything if you preface it as “traditional”

  • @[email protected]
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    289 months ago

    The truth? It stems from fear based mentality and personal insecurity. If you spend enough time evaluating the conservative mindset you come to realize it is grounded in fear and a disdain for oneself. They don’t want more cyclists because they think it’s an affront to them personally, as if they would need to start cycling to fit in.

    • @[email protected]
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      189 months ago

      And as we know all too well from history, enabling other freedoms (women’s suffrage, marriage equality, or now getting around by bike) disrupts those already established freedoms!

    • @[email protected]
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      159 months ago

      For many drivers, a car is debt in addition to a large recurring expense.

      Debt == freedom?

      • @[email protected]
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        129 months ago

        Yea thats pretty much the lie we are sold and forced to participate in for most of car centric North America.

  • @[email protected]
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    229 months ago

    A lot of people miss the fact that cyclists are just people getting about the place. As for example when you hear people say, ‘Oh, it’s only middle-class men who cycle, so why should we build bike lanes?’ as though it’s somehow the case that middle class men who choose to cycle just like… deserve to die? It’s a really common argument that people make and they’ve not even thought about the obvious implication of what they’re saying.

    Even if it were true that all or most cyclists were middle-class and male, which it isn’t, I’m never sure whether it’s the maleness, the middle-classness, or the cycling that has apparently warranted the death sentence.

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago

      Making it seem like it’s predominately something done by middle-class men, or even rich people, helps to undermine public support for it because of the image people have of a stereotypical male cyclist, ie a well-off person riding a $1400 bike with a bunch of lycra clothes and tech gear pretending they’re training for the Tour de France while they go through their midlife crisis. It’s much less relatable an image for many people, who might say “Well, why do they need to ride on all the roads? They can just go on the paths in the park, or if they have so much money, they can go to a purpose-built facility.”

      If you frame it as though it’s just going to benefit a bunch of people perceived to be living it up, you can drum up opposition from poor people, who don’t want their taxes going to fund some BS project that only benefits people who are already doing alright. Your aunt that’s busting her back trying to make ends meet and is trying to get back and forth to work and the shops on a bike one step up from a Wal-mart special can be much more relatable for many people who are struggling to keep up, can’t really afford their car payment and might even use a bike if there were dedicated bike lanes. So people looking to discourage building out bike infrastructure will naturally prefer that everyone thinks the only ones who would benefit from these developments would be some middle-manager who owns his home, rides a bike that costs more than your rent and that has gone on more vacations in the last year than you have in the last two decades.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        You’re absolutely right! As a middle-class man who cycles and just doesn’t want to die, I still find it very annoying.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      9 months ago

      The same argument is used to attack veganism, even though the diet aspect of it is cheaper (as long as most meat imitations are avoided, although those will get cheap too in the long run).

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        I’ve read that vegetarianism is cheaper than meat-eating, but veganism is more expensive, but I’m sure you’re right that it depends on what exactly you eat! In any case, it’s quite an odd argument for anti-vegans to make: ‘You can afford to do something good and that’s why you shouldn’t’?

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          When i was a vegan my main protien sources was beans and chickpeas which are way cheaper than cheese and eggs, which are common vegetarian protiens.

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      Also, the main reason women and children rarely cycle is because women are more risk averse and nobody wants their kid riding a bike on the road with people driving emotional support trucks. That mostly just leaves men who are willing to risk it or who can’t afford to drive.

    • PedestrianError :vbus: :nblvt:
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      19 months ago

      @frankPodmore @vividspecter Since middle aged, middle to upper class white men are also most likely to drive monster trucks for everyday transportation & recreation, we could also argue that for the safety and comfort of all we should do everything possible to get that group onto bikes instead of trucks.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        But instead, they turn around and blame traffic problems on women taking their kids to school!

  • @[email protected]
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    189 months ago

    I’m wokerati! But no shit, we’re doing what the left wants, so of course the right is mad. It doesn’t matter if it’s for our health, cheap transit, or the environment or any other reason we aren’t guzzling oil to get somewhere and so they’re mad

  • @[email protected]
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    189 months ago

    It’s pretty much just rural vs urban divide.

    Bikes don’t work well in rural or suburban communities and so if you are for it, then you are one of the “urban liberals” and so I must oppose you at all costs.

    Of course there are also urban conservatives that are against cycling but we have a name for those, idiots people with a financial interest in the current car centric infrastructure

    • @[email protected]OP
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      9 months ago

      Bikes don’t work well in rural or suburban communities

      It can work to an extent in some of those places too, it’s just the infrastructure and sprawl has gotten so bad. Small towns in Europe often have quite good cycling infrastructure and public transport, for example.

      But I agree with your overall point that the culture and politics of surburban/exurban/rural areas are a big part of it (along with the history that drove people from the cities to these areas in the first place).

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        The major problem against cycling for rural/suburban, people have a commute that makes cycling impossible. I happen to work in the same small town that I live in but I still can only bike to work during the summers when the kids are out of school and my wife is home.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        rural communities also used to have better rail infrastructure as well. With our current car prioritizing infrastructure, you are going to have a hard time convincing rural people give up the agency that a automobile gives them with regards to being able to have a career, grocery shop, get their kids to school, etc.

        Hopefully remote work can fix that first problem as that will help the other issues as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        The safety bike was invented in 1885 and the model T was invented in 1908. So the precar bike heyday was pretty short.

    • Jerkface (any/all)
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      29 months ago

      The Mennonite rural communities near me are all absolutely dependent on bikes to maintain their lifestyle.

    • nifty
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      9 months ago

      Nah, people love bikes in the suburbs where I live. Maybe it varies by state!

  • BeautifulMind ♾️
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    There’s a couple of things at play here:

    Where the infra (say it’s the road) isn’t adequately engineered to accommodate cycling and driving at the same time, it’s going to give drivers the experience that the road is a scarce resource and when resources are scarce, some folks are going to think in eliminationist terms (e.g. if those people just didn’t exist, everything would be fine) or the part of their brains that descends from people that wiped out competing clans and took their resources rules the moment and they set about violently defending ‘their’ resources.

    The folks most-triggered at being made to share the road with cyclists really do some mental gymnastics to frame it in a way that they’re really the victims here and it’s cyclists, not the road engineering, that are the problem. Oh, poor me those cyclists don’t pay taxes and I subsidize their use of my roads bla bla bla and eventually that comes out in the form of vehicular assault to teach cyclists a lesson to stay off their roads. It’s bullshit all the way down of course, but that way they get to feel like the good guys while still bullying and murdering cyclists.

    Also, it’s not by accident that the ‘everything is woke’ people are the first to engage in whatever moral panic that’s directing political violence at today’s boogeyman- whether it’s trans people in bathrooms, or gay people generally, or pregnant women that have ideas about bodily autonomy, their targets are always a tiny vulnerable demographic and uniting to put them in their place is an exercise in maintaining or restoring what they think order ought to look like. If they’re not putting people into the bottom rung of whatever hierarchy they think they’re defending, probably they think it’s the end of order or civilization or the like and they’ve failed in their duties to uphold order. Keeping them agitated about (and acting out about) moral panics is an effective way for lobby groups to pit people against scapegoats to keep their ire focused away from themselves or their patrons.

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      Your second and third paragraph neatly provide one of the best explanations I’ve seen for what people mean when we call the modern right wing fascists. They see people violating the order as they’ve decided it is and are encouraged to respond with vehicular homicide

    • HelloThere
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      179 months ago

      This is an article in a British paper, written by a British journalist, about her experience in Britain, and names multiple British people.

      There is no mention at all of America, nor Americans.

      So what does your republican party have to do with it?

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        Yeah my bad I didn’t read it, just kind of browsed through and left my two cents on the headline.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        I also didn’t read the article, although I was clued in By an earlier comment, but …. A lot of these comments could have been about the US. Conservatism seems to have the same hatred problem everywhere you go. All the big truck comments probably were from the US: that can’t be as prevalent in the UK