Have you noticed the rush of House Republicans calling it quits in the last few weeks?

Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.) announced his exit Nov. 1. He explained that to be a member of the Republican House majority means putting up with  the “many Republican leaders [who] are lying to America, claiming that the 2020 election was stolen.”

Buck is predicting that even more House Republicans will leave “in the near future.”

The day before Buck said good-bye, House Appropriations Chair Kay Granger (R-Texas) also quit. Granger had been a leader among House Republicans who prevented the far-right, election-denying Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) from becoming Speaker of the House.

Also in October, Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.) said she was quitting. “Right now, Washington, D.C. is broken,” she said. “It is hard to get anything done.”

  • SoylentBlake@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    You’ve seen less election cycles than I have if you think voting will bring change.

    Social unrest, protesting, rioting brings change

    Voting (in the past 50 years) simply reaffirms or denies the social unrest. The media talks of nothing else. It’s ratify the status quo or the end of democracy, neverminding that the status quo is essentially institutionalized fleecing. We are tax-chattle. Every dollar you save, somehow, in the system entirely built to make that impossible, will be extracted from your body in exchange for medicine. We will all die penniless and propertyless. By design.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Social unrest, protesting, rioting brings change

      So fucking do it. Get out there and riot or whatever you want. All you’re doing is shitting on the last form of peaceful change we have left. We all get you’re jaded and cynical.

      • SoylentBlake@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I never said I was against voting, quite the opposite actually.

        I’m just trying to temper expectations back to reality. Voting for change when you have two options 1. Status quo, even tho everyone acknowledges it’s not working - for us anyways 2. Fascism.

        Ya see how only one side offers change, and that change is terrifying?

        The Dems are essentially incapable of leading change that benefits everyone, and when they do pass big policy, it’s Republican policy (Welfare to work, 3 strikes, ACA).

        Unfortunately for anyone concerned with the future or wanting better, be that the youth or progressives, Liberals (moderate “Democrats”, commonly called centrists nowadays)vision of society is what we have. Trickle down. Subscription model everything. Yada yada. When all you care about is money (which is implied by being pro-corporate, socially conciliatory) all you care about is not rocking the boat. It’s the mayor of DC naming the street Black Lives Matter to placate unrest, NOT to do ANYTHING actual meaningful, but to do something trite and superficial that liberals can close their ears off to anything else while they point and say “I did something”.

        Voting my guy, is the START of defense. It is not offense. The difference is CRUCIAL if effecting change is your actual goal. We need precise language, expectations, and goals to ward off the liberal duplicity and double speak. I’m on your side man, I’m just trying to flesh out some of the nuance your way.

        And yo, don’t at me, we gotta be better than that in an exchange of ideas. You don’t know where I’m coming from. I just lost my house and every fucking thing Ive ever owned, and my hedgehogs, on the 5th of July (neighbors fireworks, FML fr). I’m a little busy trying to stay warm and clothed this winter instead of leading a protest, sorry if that doesn’t fit your timetable, it doesn’t fit mine either.