aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 am
Political issues aside, I'm not even sure that Americans are ready for having a non-white female president. And the fact that the Democrats were off to such a rocky start by initially nominating Biden for a second term doesn't help at all.
I don't think having a non-white female president would mean much in and of itself. A black man won the presidency twice, and a woman won the popular vote right after him, so I think Americans have mostly shifted to not really giving much of a shit about that. Policy is what really matters, and I anticipate she'd be pretty much the same as Biden.
Biden was initially nominated because he was the incumbent and incumbents tend to have a massive advantage, but there were doubts this time because of his age. But it isn't like this is some no-name politician, everyone is familiar with Harris. I'm not sure if nominating her instead at the beginning would've made much difference, but who knows.
aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 amThere's also the question of how long Trump will survive in office, in the literal sense. Given the recent assassination attempts, if this continues after he is elected then it is only a matter of time before one of them is successful.
Sort of a gambler's fallacy there. I think the more attempts on his life there are the stronger his SS protections are going to be (How much personal protection Putin does have?). Look at how many assassination attempts were made on Fidel Castro:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_assas ... y_attempts
(I think the real number is much lower than that, but there were tons of attempts on his life regardless).
aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 am So you may also want to ask yourself how comfortable you would be with JD Vance as president.
Having him in office would probably be better since he doesn't have Trump's political pull and cult of personality. Look at how quickly MAGA supporters were willing to turn on Pence.
aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 am I think it's unfortunate that pretty much every developed country has converged to a style of government that gives a disproportionate amount of power to a single individual that somehow "represents" the country as a whole, but perhaps it's just in our fundamental nature to seek out singular leaders to give ourselves some sense of guidance and direction.
It might make people more willing to get politically involved if there's some figurehead to rally behind/blame problems on.
I think having a singular figurehead can be pretty important though to make military decisions and quickly respond to disasters and serve as a foreign representative. It might be a bit antiquated (I'm interested in testing out other forms of democratic governance, the US's system is the result of a lot of compromises and is far from ideal) but I don't see it being phased out any time soon.
aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 am
I do somewhat relate to Teo's concerns as I have relatives in Slovenia (right next to Croatia). I understand that it detracts from the more pressing concerns regarding former East Bloc countries, but at the same time as Americans we can sometimes fail to appreciate how close European countries are to one another. Ukraine is pretty large and most of the fighting is happening in the east, so there's a good amount of buffer there. But if the fighting spreads to one of its western bordering countries, that could have much more immediate consequences for their neighbors.
I doubt a war will break out there any time soon since it'd be non-NATO countries getting involved against NATO. Putin winning Ukraine though would have some serious implications for Europe, which is why a Trump presidency is rather concerning.
aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 am
My latent, perhaps irrational fear is that China would end up siding with Russia and start military campaigns in East Asia, which would take the world more in the direction of a world war 3 scenario.
I don't think that'll happen. China is highly dependent on exports for its economy, and starting wars in Asia would result in sanctions. Also, given how the war in Ukraine is going pretty awfully for Russia, who were so cocksure they'd win within a week, that's probably made China less inclined to for instance take over Taiwan. Also, Taiwan is a non-NATO ally, meaning they'd be getting NATO and other non-NATO allies in the area involved (and Trump isn't cozy with Jingping as he is with Putin).
aroneous wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:51 am
Again, I think it's not at all likely, and I like to think that humans have collectively "grown out of" the desire for war and domination, this sort of thing already seems incredibly out of place in the year 2024.
It certainly is a big step back for peace and diplomacy, but it could have some benefits, again discouraging China from taking Taiwan, and it may lead to the end of Putin.