• Ghostalmedia
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    331 year ago

    Because probation sounds a lot better than prison and bankruptcy. 🤷‍♂️

  • PugJesus
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    291 year ago

    Because they’re cowards and finally facing the prospect of consequences. Fascists are only ‘tough’ when there’s no pushback.

    • @SlikPikker@lemmy.ca
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      161 year ago

      Old fascists did die fighting and were incredibly dangerous.

      We’re lucky the current bunch are so fucking stupid

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        One of the defining features of fascists is being entirely self-serving. The only reason one would go down fighting is if it were his best option (i.e. if generalissimo would purge him anyway if he didn’t).

        In other words, his lieutenants are flipping because Trump is still acting more like a two-bit con-artist than a ruthless dictator. I would say that’s a good thing, but I think it’s more just a reminder of how much worse we can still expect it to get soon.

        • @SlikPikker@lemmy.ca
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          31 year ago

          Of leadership, sure that’s generally true.

          I’m just telling you the S.A weren’t proud boys. They were a hell if a lot more dangerous

      • Tigbitties
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        61 year ago

        These people like the idea of fascism but it’s only because of their sense of entitlement. They have no ideology. It’s greed, opportunism, and ego.

      • @beebarfbadger@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        The vast majority of those who died fighting on that side were either forcibly conscripted or had no other options. The people in power were still mostly all mouth and nothing to back it up.

  • @root_beer@midwest.social
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    51 year ago

    They have something to lose. The hoi polloi, the rank and file chuds, they won’t give up, even after they’re bled dry from the grift

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    51 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    It happened the way Ernest Hemingway, in The Sun Also Rises, described going bankrupt: “Gradually, then suddenly.” Last month in Georgia, Scott Graham Hall, an obscure bail bondsman and Trump supporter, took a plea.

    Chesebro’s plea bargain indicates an abrupt change of heart: he had demanded a speedy trial just weeks before, a motion that had accelerated the court’s work, and by the time the news of his decision to flip was announced, jury selection for his hearing was already under way.

    Ellis had gone about recruiting potential fake electors for Chesebro’s scheme, soliciting Republican officials in Georgia, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Michigan to back the plan.

    But no matter what, Meadow’s involvement – even if only partial and temporary, even if it does not lead to a bigger deal – suggests a more significant crack in the hull, and only added to the growing feeling that, as the Trump criminal cases proceed, many of the rats are starting to flee the ship.

    Powell, for her part, always the conspiracist and true believer, has spent the days since turning state’s witness trying to publicly signal her continued loyalty to Trump and his lies, sworn testimony be damned.

    But in his real life, among the people who actually interact with him, Trump has long been paranoid and embittered, prone to blowout fights with close aides and dead-to-me turns on those he sees as insufficiently loyal.


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