Racism and bigotry jerk your chain this hard, it's not disinformation, the truth is in their faces every day of the week, they actively seek out lies that support their biases and shun the truth. Sure propaganda radicalizes them like middle eastern terrorists and works them up, but they chose to ignore reality and are thus not a victim, they are victimizers, of themselves first, then others. There are no two sides are the same and it's just politics, this is what social war looks like and the next step is civil war. If you support the US constitution, you really don't have a choice in the matter, war has been made upon you and your families, it is being waged on your primary instrument of freedom and peace, the constitution.
Anybody who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities, anybody wanna argue that point?
How many democrats accepted the election results at this point in 2016? There was plenty of just cause for them to question the election as Russia supported Trump and took measures to make sure he won, with his active cooperation and that of his campaign and his campaign manages have been convicted. The Trump supporters have NO evidence of election cheating whatsoever, none, zero basis for belief. There is no confusion here, no ambiguity, they are wrong and making death threats to public and election officials by the thousands.
Are these people enemies of the US constitution or not? If they are then take the same measures you would take with any other enemy who would destroy you and your country. There is a reason the oath is worded , ALL ENIMIES FORIGN &
DOMESTIC, whether they wear a, rag on their head, a grey kepi or a red MAGA hat, they are all the same, act accordingly.
Indeed, you may have to shoot your brother to save your country, it's been done before. In war you win or lose and sometimes you fight to a draw, but if the other side continues to attack, there is no peace, there never was, it was an illusion. America just feed black people to the monster to appease it for over a century, you never won the civil war, you just fought to a draw.
Fortunately this war won't be fought with guns, though they will be used, it will be fought with ideas, elections, laws and regulations. These are the weapons that will not just defeat them, but destroy them, that was the mistake you made the last time, you never finished the job. Ultimately it lead to this...
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Poll: Only Quarter Of Republicans Accept 2020 Election Results : NPR
Poll: Just A Quarter Of Republicans Accept Election Outcome
A solid majority of Americans trust that the results of the 2020 presidential election are accurate, but only about a quarter of Republicans do, according to a new
NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist survey.
Sixty-one percent say they trust the results, including two-thirds of independents, but just 24% of Republican respondents say they accept the results.
Nonetheless, President-elect Joe Biden is set to take office Jan. 20, and the coronavirus pandemic will be a central focus. On that front, Americans largely have confidence in Biden's ability to handle the crisis, and the number saying they'll take a vaccine when it comes available has risen over the past few months. But skepticism about a vaccine is driven by Republicans, particularly Republican women.
A rocky transition
More than a month after Biden won the election and was
declared president-elect, President Trump continues to baselessly allege widespread voter fraud and falsely claim the outcome is not yet known.
"We're going to have to see who the next administration is because we won in the swing states," Trump said Tuesday when asked why he wasn't including Biden transition officials during a coronavirus summit. "Hopefully, the next administration will be the Trump administration."
Unlike past presidents, Trump has refused to formally concede. That's something that two-thirds of Americans think he should do, according to the survey. Sixty-two percent of Republicans, however, don't think he should.
While he may not be acknowledging his loss publicly, behind the scenes, Trump has been discussing the possibility of running again in 2024,
sources tell NPR.
A strong majority of Americans — 60% — don't want him to run again, but two-thirds of Republicans do. That effectively freezes the potential 2024 Republican primary field.
As far as Biden goes, most Americans (56%) so far approve of how he's handling himself during the transition. That's more than the 49% that approved of the job Trump was doing during the 2016 transition.
What's more, by a 59%-to-35% margin Americans think Biden will do more to unite than divide the country. That's far higher than the 43%-to-53% margin for whether Trump in 2016 would do more to unite than divide.
"There's not going to be a honeymoon from olden politics days, but there does appear to be some room with people willing to give [Biden] a chance," said Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, which conducted the poll.
The impact of the coronavirus
One of the measures of Biden's presidency will be how he handles the coronavirus crisis. Americans appear to have confidence in the president-elect's ability to handle the pandemic — 62% said they were either confident or very confident.
But in his first year specifically, Biden is going to be judged on how vaccines are distributed and whether they are administered. Sixty-one percent of Americans now say they will take a vaccine when one comes available, up from just 49% in September.
The movement, though, comes mostly from increases with Democrats and independents.
The number of Republicans who said they will increased as well, but they remain largely split. That skepticism, however, is driven by Republican women. Just 34% of Republican women say they would take a vaccine when it comes available, compared with 61% of Republican men.
Also among the most reluctant to get the vaccine: Trump supporters (only 47% said they would), people who live in rural areas (51%), people without college degrees (53%), white evangelical Christians (54%) and non-whites (58%).
The coronavirus has affected a broad swath of Americans. About two-thirds said they or someone they know has gotten COVID-19. Forty percent said they or someone in their household has lost a job or income due to the coronavirus. Younger Americans and Americans of color are more likely to have been affected.
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