John Hayward Profile picture
3 Nov, 17 tweets, 3 min read
I worked late into the night on Election Day 2016. I remember the shocking news of Trump's victory reaching Clinton campaign headquarters, her supporters howling in anguish and sobbing. Many of those images have been sarcastically memed over the years since that night.
I remember my first thought was feeling bad for them. I know those people would have lashed out in blind rage at every Republican in sight, they were brimming with hatred for people who share my beliefs, but I still didn't feel any pleasure at seeing them in pain.
I thought it was terrible that we've come to the point where people were so invested in politics that losing an election could rend their very souls. I was furious at Hillary Clinton for hanging her supporters out to dry, hiding in her room instead of addressing them.
But you have to admit, people are not wrong to think these national elections have incredibly high stakes. I wish it were not so, it's not the way America is supposed to work, but here we are. And now we routinely hear about friendships and family bonds shredded over politics.
It seems like a growing number of people are motivated to vote largely because they DO want to see the other side lose, enjoy their rage, and gain the power to punish them for disagreeing. That's pretty explicitly the case in this weird "referendum on Trump" election.
Many of the people I felt a pang of sympathy for on Election Night 2016 went on to nurse their hatred, becoming even more bitter partisans, absurdly styling themselves as "resistance fighters" against a tyrannical overlord. And you know what? I don't regret feeling bad for them.
What they feel, and how they act on their feelings - whether they indulge in tides of emotion, or control emotion in favor of reason - is on them. I'm responsible for me. I strongly believe they must be defeated in this election, but I feel not the slightest urge to punish them.
If Trump scores a seemingly even more shocking victory today (or next week, you know, whenever) I still won't enjoy watching Biden supporters suffer - not the ordinary people who got involved in an election and voted in accordance with their beliefs.
Yes, I know that feeling is not widely reciprocated, and it won't be much in evidence on the Left if Trump loses, but it's still where I am. Politicians and professional operatives are one thing, but voters are another. I worry that we've grown too bitter, lost too much empathy.
Which is always something I worried about, something I anticipated, as the size and power of government grew. The stakes are too high. Too many people expect the central State to manage everything, settle great debates with terrible finality, and destroy everything they dislike.
There was less bitterness and rage inherent when the local and state elections were more important, when people didn't expect titans to stride forth from Washington and crush their enemies, when you could opt out of crusades or move to towns that shared your deep beliefs.
I think I'm concerned with empathy because throwing it away marks that first step toward totalitarianism. A nation where everyone gets juiced about voting against people they hate is a nation open to total political domination of private life. I think it's getting worse.
Look at all the totalitarian ideas that are becoming commonplace now: Hate speech isn't free speech, you can't be my friend if you disagree with my politics, everything you say or do is a political statement, you should be judged by the color of your skin, silence is violence...
All of that gets a LOT worse if Democrats win, and they're growing comfortable with the ultimate instrument of totalitarianism, political violence. They must be defeated. The path away from totalitarianism is clear in this election, and it's voting Republican.
The other side whined about Orange Hitler for years, but Trump clearly isn't the one telling you how you MUST live, how you MUST speak, what you MUST do with your money, and how you MUST be judged and punished for an endless list of social "crimes."
But I'm pushing to defeat toxic Democrat ideas and hideous policies, not individual people. I loathe the notion of punitive politics. I didn't vote because I want to see the other side cry, and I sure as hell didn't vote to empower officials to punish them for dissenting.
Totalitarianism is sweeping the world. Too many people see it as the only way to "solve" society's problems and impose "justice." I refuse to see my fellow citizens as pegs to be hammered into holes. I have no urge to punish innocent people, not even for one night. /end

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More from @Doc_0

4 Nov
However this squeaker finale to the race turns out, it's pretty clear that both Shy Trump and Weary Biden voters were potent forces in the election. It looks like they were almost perfectly matched against each other, thanks to mail-in ballots for the Weary Biden contingent.
You can't say that Biden's basement strategy was a flop, even if he ends up losing by a hair. It worked exactly the way it was supposed to. The election was an up-or-down referendum on Trump for a lot of voters, just as the Biden camp wanted.
You can't say that Trump's rhetorical excesses didn't hurt him. They obviously did. These last few weeks of momentum shifting and Biden corruption revelations didn't matter to people who punched out on Trump long ago. Many of them mailed their votes in long ago.
Read 13 tweets
4 Nov
A narrow Biden win plus a GOP Senate will work out just fine for Beijing. Their man sits in the White House and uses executive power to kneecap the U.S. economy while turning foreign policy in Beijing's direction. U.S. domestic policy stalemates are okay by China.
Biden will march the U.S. back into globalist institutions subverted and dominated by China. He'll strengthen Iran and move the Middle East back in a direction agreeable to Chinese policy. He'll end the crackdown on Chinese spying and political subversion in the U.S.
Biden will make a lot of noise about repairing relations with China and rebuilding trade. A lot of very sweet deals will flow Beijing's way. Their political narrative of the coronavirus will become entrenched with the collapse of U.S. resistance.
Read 5 tweets
4 Nov
While we wait for this nail-biter to be resolved, let us pause to give thanks for an election that will give us plenty of things to argue about for years to come, which is what we really wanted. Everyone was right and everyone was wrong. Let the Hot Take cornucopia overflow!
Donald Trump took on the combined forces of the Dem Party, the media, Big Tech, China's coronavirus, and the Deep State. He supposedly only had a 2% chance to win. And yet he fought it down to a handful of votes in a few key states. An astounding achievement!
Joe Biden was the worst candidate in living memory, a doddering old man who spent the campaign hiding in his basement, with a running mate who got blown out of the Dem primary early - but he still fought it down to a handful of votes in a few key states. Trump really blew it!
Read 14 tweets
3 Nov
See how Dem cities are boarding up for riots today, but the media is trying to gaslight you into thinking it's Trump voters they're worried about? That's your life every week for the next four years if Biden wins: left-wing political violence normalized and excused.
The big new trick the Dems learned over the past year was pulling the police out, leaving the areas they control helpless against riots. Not even the almighty coronavirus could make those Dem officials lift a finger to protect their constituents from organized political violence.
If Biden wins, that trick becomes a page in their permanent playbook, just like the preceding page that inspired it: they got away with blaming the incompetence of local Dem officials on George Bush after Katrina, with help from the media, so now they've weaponized incompetence.
Read 10 tweets
2 Nov
How good are you feeling if you're Xi Jinping right now? Your virus has the Western world teetering on the edge of more economy-killing lockdowns. Your man Joe Biden is favored to win the U.S. presidency, largely because of the virus.
If Biden wins, the Green New Deal ends the threat of the U.S. economy forever. China's industrial domination of the 21st Century is assured. All you have to do is say you care about global warming, mumble something about zero carbon in 50 years, and the Greens leave you alone.
Under Democrats, the U.S. collapses into an accelerated version of the welfare-state death spiral Barack Obama envisioned. Never again will Americans escape from that comfy hospice room the Left has prepared for them.
Read 13 tweets
2 Nov
One day until Election Day, and you can still find plenty of evidence for whatever you think is going to happen. For those who think Biden won before the first debate was even held, the polls have tightened but he still looks to be in the lead almost everywhere that matters.
If this election is a pure referendum on Trump vs. the most generic opponent ever, and a critical mass of voters decided thumbs-down on Trump before the campaign really began, then you'd see the kind of polls you're seeing in the homestretch.
Some groups around the margins are bouncing around, but a lot of people decided they're livid at Trump over the coronavirus, they don't remember or care about anything before the pandemic, and they've decided to give someone else a shot. They made up their minds long ago.
Read 15 tweets

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