• korazail@lemmy.myserv.one
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    3 hours ago

    What does that mean?

    This is the frantic typing of someone who is distraught; who has seen their country die and now has to live with the still-kicking remains.

    That might be a bit hyperbolic, but to those of us with empathy for our fellow man, it’s not a major stretch.

    They mean to say that so many people are about to die in so many places, both domestic and foreign.

    When I woke up after election night, I wept for the uncountable number of people who would die because of that one night. Some will be killed soon by having critical care fully enshrined as illegal because they are women. Some will die later, because their healthcare benefits are cut and they can’t afford care. Some might die because they happen to have said the wrong things publicly. Many will die in a year, as we empower other fascists in other countries to do terrible things. Many more will die in a decade because of policies enacted by the incoming administration, which places vastly more importance on the increase in wealth of a few over the well-being of the many. And I can see a future where BILLIONS die because the people in charge prioritize power and money over the health of our planet.

    The nation that I grew up believing in: the melting pot, the country that welcomed those in need has turned hostile and ugly. The first trump election was a fluke, a flaw in the system that allowed a “charismatic” “outsider” to gain power and abuse it. Biden’s election was a refutation, though only barely, and seemed to show we were better than that.

    Trump’s re-election, however, is proof that we aren’t better. Enough people couldn’t be bothered to vote that we elected a criminal.

    We, collectively, chose this and we will never be free of that legacy.