Any chance of limiting global warming to 1.5˚C rests on Joe Biden being elected to a second term. Voters need an accurate accounting of Biden’s climate record ahead of the November 2024 election.

If you’re in the US and want to get involved, you can volunteer or give to the Biden Victory Fund

  • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    Any chance

    Gotta disagree, we could for example elect someone who is an actual leftist and won’t drop build back better’s agenda because of some senate parliamentarian nonsense, or who won’t hand Joe Manchin a new gas pipeline during record heatwaves.

    But yeah sure, Biden is our only hope 🙄

    • silence7OPM
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      11 months ago

      The structure of the US electoral system means that we’re not going to get some third party to the left of the Democrats winning the Presidency any time soon.

      Biden’s about as good as we can get right now.

      • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        And so it goes in perpetuity.

        How many degrees warmer does it have to get before we say enough and demand real leadership and accountability to the people above the dollar?

        • silence7OPM
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          11 months ago

          The strategy that works is winning primaries within the Democratic party. You can see that happen in NY for example, where the DSA candidates won several primaries in the state legislature, creating a meaningful shift in what kinds of laws passed.

          • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            Agreed! Primaries are the more likely strategy for success. DNC holding presidential primaries this time around?..

            • silence7OPM
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              11 months ago

              They are…but there aren’t progressives running in them because they don’t think they’re in a position to win. Instead we get Robert Kennedy Jr. who is backed by Trump supporters to try and normalize fascist viewpoints and running in the Democratic primary against Biden in order to do that.

              I’d concentrate on congressional primaries if you want to elect progressives right now.

      • quarry_coerce248@discuss.tchncs.de
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        11 months ago

        If you still believe in voting you are driving us off the cliff. You are actively destroying our planet. Yes, you specifically are guilty too. Biden is not going to save anybody without civil resistance either. There is a lot better than Biden and if you don’t want to argue for that then you are dooming the world to catastrophe. We have to get better than Biden, otherwise we might as well just lie down and give up right now.

        The point is: Biden might be all we (or you, I’m German) get, but he is not enough. You MUST see that, right? If the US electoral system is incapable of avoiding climate catastrophe, are you really going to look back, satisfied you tried everything, or do you consider means outside of just voting every couple of years?

      • asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I worry that the only way to escape this nonsense two party system is for one party to lose enough that people start waking the fuck up that there are other, better options. Maybe if Trump / Desantis is electric then we’ll stop boiling frogs and get legitimately good candidates in.

        • silence7OPM
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          10 months ago

          The two-party system exists in the US because of how elections are run. In particular, most states decide who wins an election by who gets the most votes in the general election. So when you have a third party in the mix, it serves as a spoiler, tipping the election to the people that it disagrees with the most. A few examples:


          Example 1: D: 10 R: 9 I: 0

          The Democrat wins


          Example 2: D: 9 R: 9 I: 1

          Tied election, with outcome decided by a coin flip or other game of chance


          Example 3: D: 8 R: 9 I: 2

          The Republican wins


          The model which lets you change outcomes when elections are run like this is to take over a party from the inside. That means running candidates in the primaries in safe districts, and then backing them with money and volunteer hours.

    • Seraph@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      “But we have to pick someone more moderate so we can compromise with the Republicans!”

      Fuck no we don’t. If they field their most extreme and we field our most moderate only one thing happens. I yearn for a future where Bernie was elected instead and even he’s too damn old for this shit.

      • Backspacecentury@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        I yearn for a past where Al Gore won the election in 2000.

        Or perhaps, one where the republicans didn’t steal it (legitimately, not like Trump’s claims) is more accurate, I suppose.

      • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Maybe if we drag the Overton Window far enough to the right, it’ll come back around on the left?!

        • silence7OPM
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          11 months ago

          You just end up in a pure fascist state with no way out when you do that. Not a good move.

          • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            Haha sorry I was just being “/s” amigo. Although I’m sure some right wing pundits would love for us to believe this is possible!

      • smokinjoe@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        I yearn for a future where Bernie was elected instead and even he’s too damn old for this shit.

        You realize that unfortunately, that isn’t our future right?

    • silence7OPM
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      11 months ago

      How do you propose to elect somebody like that? Somebody well to the left of Biden would lose the center, and hence the election.

      Elect the progressives in Congress, where they stand a chance and can influence legislation. Put a moderate in the White House because we can.

      • Andy
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        11 months ago

        We need to foster a much larger, and longer scale ambition: democratic reforms.

        Ranked choice voting, an end to the electoral college, greater participation in local elections, and campaign finance reform are the primary avenues that come to mind.

        I don’t disagree that we should elect progressives to congress, but if the problem is structural, the solutions must be too. And they must be things that can overcome the current structural barriers. So obviously electing a third party candidate can’t be a solution to the barriers to that prevent third party candidates, for instance.

        But direct democracy ballot measures, for instance, can be used to institute ranked choice voting, and state legislatures can be used to compel more democratic measures on local elections, which can then foster the generation of politicians who built a populist base and are more likely to expand the franchise to the state level once they rise in their careers.

        Don’t forget: overturning Roe was believed impossible, but the people who wanted to do it spent 50 years building the tools to build the tools to build the tools to do the impossible.

        • silence7OPM
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          11 months ago

          Yeah, it will take structural change, and the way to pull that off is to elect people to state legislatures and to congress who will actually work to make it happen. It doesn’t happen otherwise.

          • neanderthal@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I don’t get why this is downvoted? A grassroots new political party can’t go from 0 to Congress/Whitehouse in any reasonable time. A coup is a worse idea that if failed would crush the entire movement. A revolution means the most powerful military by far to ever exist, and the worlds reserve currency has uncertain control and would destabilize the world.

            I think I’ll take pushing the DNC to get us where we need to be, thank you very much.

      • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        You do it by framing the debate around meaningful policy changes, and immediately delivering on those changes at every opportunity to do so. Progressive policies will meaningfully improve people’s lives in almost every way. Force those centrist voters to think. Clearly paint a picture of the vast wealth inequality that exists between the elite and normal Americans. Force them to ask themselves why other candidates don’t want them to have better pay, more time with their families, free access to the best medical care, and free access to higher learning to improve themselves and learn new skills. These things are the “bootstraps” repugs love to harp on about, and progressives must lead the charge in enabling our people to take hold of them.

    • smokinjoe@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      I’d love to elect someone like that, but they’d have zero chance.

      Not unless you have some incredible plan a la the ground-game Barack had that gave him such a surprising win in 2008.

    • Andy
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      11 months ago

      Shout out to Cornell West.

      And before anyone picks a fight: I would vote for Biden if my vote made the difference between him and Trump, but we won’t get anything from Biden unless we apply demands and pressure. We would not have any of Biden’s climate legislation if he wasn’t afraid of losing Bernie’s voters. We absolutely need West running, or electing Biden will accomplish very little.

    • FluffyPotato@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      The US is in a position were they have to choose between eating a turd or shooting themselves I the head every presidential election, this isn’t new.

      Also I heard the democrat party aren’t even doing elections within the party. Like that sounded illegal to me until I found out your parties are also corporations which sounded very American. But even with that you don’t have a good choice cuz the alternative is death, so gobble the turd.

  • LiesSlander@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    Wow, wrong from the first sentence of the subtitle. I’ll concede that a democrat will do less damage than a republican in the white house, but beyond that I take issue with this opinion piece.

    The Willow project. The Biden administration approved this expansion of oil production, against the outcry of millions of people, most notably the Native Village of Nuiqsut and City of Nuiqsut. This opinion piece focusses on the fact that this project will directly release hundreds of millions of tons of CO2 through the burning of fossil fuels. What is not mentioned is the habitat destruction, poisoning of fish, harm to caribou, air and water pollution, and blatant disrespect to the Native people who are directly affected (I’m not even going to get into how resource extraction causes much of the crisis of MMIWG2S).

    As the author concedes in the article’s conclusion, the specifics do matter. So how, specifically, does his opinion piece counter the fact the Biden administration took deliberate action to increase fossil fuel production? With a proposal they made to increase water heater efficiency, backed by a statistic that looks at the cumulative effect nearly 40 years from now. Unstated are the assumptions that this will pass, not get repealed in the future, and that industrial civilization will exist in 2060. There is a similar statistic involving automobiles and fuel efficiency, again involving a future date (2050 this time) and many assumptions, like that people will be using cars for their daily transportation 30 years from now.

    These things are not comparable to the immediate harm of the Willow project, taken together they paint a grim picture, one in which fossil fuel production continues to expand while politicians push the problem down the road with reforms that assume society does not need to fundamentally change. We need action now, and the Biden administration is actively making things worse in the present while selling us an unrealistic future.

    Electing Joe Biden to be President of the United States of America for a second term in 2024 will not limit global warming to 1.5⁰C. If we actually want any chance of limiting the warming of Earth to 1.5⁰C, we need nothing short of global revolution. Fossil fuel production has to stop, agriculture has to drastically change to regenerate the land, ecosystems must be healed. None of this is workable under global Capitalism, and States will never be an effective method for organizing the kind of human labor necessary to save ourselves and our home. This is a scary idea, it requires us taking personal and collective responsibility for the fate of humanity, going out of our comfort zones, and genuinely caring for one another.

    Go ahead and vote for Joe, but don’t kid yourself, he isn’t a solution.

  • Andy
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    11 months ago

    *“Clueless voters”… *

    When you think this way you’ve already lost.

    Voters vote based on the needs they see in front of them and the solutions being offered. If one doesn’t like how voters vote, do not blame them, blame their circumstances and options. They have so little power relative to political, business, and media elites. Instead of criticizing them for using that modicum of power in a way you don’t like, demand that the people with the power give voters a reason to vote otherwise. Doing otherwise is not only disrespectful, but pointless. It’s like wishing away rain instead of weatherproofing your roof.

    In other words, chastise the media for failing to explain this, and politicians for failing to convince voters that they’re serious. This least-worst-option thing only works for people who have anything to lose. Me? Yeah, I’m the petite bourgeoisie, so it’s compelling. But I don’t blame people in, say, East Palestine for saying, ‘no, electing Biden will not save ‘the environment’. You want me to vote to save YOUR environment, but you won’t vote to save MY environment.’