• DanglingFury@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I understand all of that. The OP was just saying that both sides feel the same about each other. He was not saying that one side is better than the other, or that both sides are the same, they are clearly not the same.

    The media demonizes everything it can about the other side while downplaying or denying everything their side has done wrong. Everyone sticks to their ‘feed’ or ‘channel’ and so only understands their weaponized story of events. There are teams of professionals spinning each of these stories to the best of their ability. There are extremely complex algorithms pulling people further and further over their side of the boat to maintain enngagement and sell ads.

    If they only ever watch ‘Fox News’ then they’ll only hear about the good stuff their party doing and fear mongering over the other party. If they happen to see a counter argument on ‘CNN’ or something they’ll see it as fake/misleading/out of context/false. They’ll go into their similar minded social media communities and discuss and rant with a group that they see as everybody, validating their concerns.

    This is a media bubble, a worsening bipolar extermist movement driven my massive market forces. We have to acknowledge we are subject to the same media bubble effects as they are, the same market forces are being applied to us. Swap the positions of ‘Fox News’ and ‘CNN’ in the above paragraph and reread it.

    Until people acknowledge this and learn to engage with their opposition in a productive manner, the political climate in this country will continue to worsen. The politicians and media will never engaged the opposition productively as it is against their interests to do so. This bipolar extremism works too well for improving votes, user engagement, donations, and merch sales. Yet in the end, it is us who they are competing over. De-escalation is the best path forward from this. While that effort is against the flow of the system, we are the only ones who can do it.

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Democratic leadership and a literal few sane Republicans Representatives do indeed engage with their opposition at the detriment to how their base views either of them. They are a very fickle bridge currently holding our democracy together.

      That doesn’t mean that either base is incorrect on vehemently denying the others stances. Plenty of people see eye to eye on a multitude of issues. Only Republicans almost unanimously agrees with their opposition but still votes against their own wishes. That’s what single issue voting and scare tactics gets you.

      You’re falsely conflating a Democrats ability to vote with confidence in their parties stances and a Republicans ability to vote against a democrats. The Republican view harshly belies their ability to find an olive branch.

      • DanglingFury@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Take an upvote, well said and i can’t disagree with you.

        My reason in speaking out is to hopefully promote positive change. I see too many people here giving in to the us vs them, ‘deport them’ mindset that the other side has maintained for so long. Positive change requires one side to act better than the other and engage with them positively.

        https://www.npr.org/2017/08/20/544861933/how-one-man-convinced-200-ku-klux-klan-members-to-give-up-their-robes

        • BlanketsWithSmallpox@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I generally agree. There have always been far more bridges crossed with kindness and understanding than there have been in othering your neighbors.

          However like we’ve said, the issues everyone disagrees on are also very real, visceral, and part of of an every growing divide that happens naturally in democratic environments.

          Too many people forget that you can compromise on a lot, but once you’ve gone through everything, you end up with stances that cannot be budged on. They’re antithetical to how your entire worldview may work. And that’s fine to draw the line, but don’t mistake it for something you can’t whittle away at. Knowledge and understanding can get past a lot it, and sometimes, you never will. But it doesn’t make it NOT the best avenue for non-violent change.