various assassinations, the brink of nuclear apocalypse, an unpopular political war away from home that caused a social movement, and political espionage.

It’s like we’re cursed.

  • protist@mander.xyz
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    4 months ago

    You’re not wrong about all the things that have happened, but there are lots of countries around the world over that same timeline who have had a much worse go of things. The US has been the most powerful country in the world, so what happens here has an outsized impact, however this seems like just another facet of “American exceptionalism,” that the bad things that the US has done or had happen are somehow more special than all the bad things that have happened everywhere else.

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Yeah, but not every empire survives these things. Or survives and remains recognizable.

    The U.S. has also never experienced a felon rapist traitor in the Oval Office with an entire party abdicating their responsibilities and conceding their power to that felon rapist traitor and protecting him from repercussions at every opportunity.

    Reality check. We have a literal traitor in the Oval Office backed by a treasonous party.

    Shit’s not looking good.

  • Sabata@ani.social
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    4 months ago

    various assassinations, the brink of nuclear apocalypse, an unpopular political war away from home that caused a social movement, and political espionage.

    It’s been a crazy week.

  • myrmidex@belgae.social
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    4 months ago

    I don’t think this is only true for your nation. I mean, I’m from Belgium, not only did this nation massacre a lot of people in the Congo, it also provided the uranium for the Manhattan Project and the ensuing Little Boy dropped on Hiroshima.

    It’s not (per se) nations that get the worst out of us, it’s the power structures controlling such nations.

  • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    You can only drop something so many times before it actually breaks, and we never really fixed the cracks caused by the civil war.
    Reconstruction ended early after Johnson took office and as a result we didn’t end segregation in the south until a century after the war ended.
    There are people alive now who still remember segregation and some of them liked it that way. And now they’re empowered, both metaphorically and literally, thanks to the gerontocracy we’ve created.
    We’re going to tear ourselves apart trying to undo 60 years of progress over the next 4 years.
    I feel like if we pull through this as an intact nation it’s not going to be recognizable as the nation we grew up in until long after we’re all gone. It’s going to take generations to clean up this mess.

    • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      4 months ago

      Agree 100%.

      Although I don’t just blame the old people, a lot of them were hippies.

      We’re still the same divided country we were in the civil war, racists and oligarchs vs people of better character.

      Trump has, even at this early point, permanently changed the political realities of this country. He will be remembered for elevating the presidency to the point where the rule of law no longer applies.