How would we go about having a civil war? How would it start?
How Do Civil Wars Start?
12,449 views Sep 3, 2022 According to recent polling, 40% of Americans think the next civil war will likely happen within the decade. Jelani Cobb, Barbara F. Walter and Tiffany Cross discuss the current political landscape and what could push America over the edge.
The modern way is to sow chaos and dissatisfaction, stop social progress and cause social division, then "only I can fix it". The name of the game is seizing the power of the state and using it to suppress their enemies and retain power with minority rule. Trump was a vehicle for this and one of the few who they instinctively knew would follow through on a power grab. You won't see blue and grey with General Lee on his white horse, it will be more subtitle than that. In order for democracy to work you just need good will and there is none, they just wanna stick their thumb in Uncle Sam's eye until he gives in.How would we go about having a civil war? How would it start?
A group of guys get together going door to door asking who you voted for?
A group of armed militants form in some far off mountain and then come down to the cities and start shooting people up?
Do 50 million magats from all over the country suddenly decide to pick up a gun and kill their liberal neighbors?
Do all the magats start moving to the same state and start forming their own militias?
Curious minds want to know
i'm not sure i should give the magats any advice...How would we go about having a civil war? How would it start?
A group of guys get together going door to door asking who you voted for?
A group of armed militants form in some far off mountain and then come down to the cities and start shooting people up?
Do 50 million magats from all over the country suddenly decide to pick up a gun and kill their liberal neighbors?
Do all the magats start moving to the same state and start forming their own militias?
Curious minds want to know
Maggotsi'm not sure i should give the magats any advice...
The problem is there are those that are not very rational. It's gawds will.The US barely survived a virus that froze our supply chains of food and TP. A war would be hundreds of times worse. Frail elderly and children would be the first wave of deaths followed by tens of millions dying afterward of hunger, disease and battle casualties. Casual talk of civil war is unimaginable to me.
Fuck this civil war and any talk of it. Virtually every MAGA GOP "civil warrior" is 4F by military standards. An actual hot civil war would be a death sentence to them. None of their fantasies make any sense.
Oh, and those US militia. The US reservists who would be sent out to stop them? Those are damn fine soldiers. Many of them fought in real wars too.
Nobody should want this. Biden pleaded with the US public last night for peaceful political resolution at the ballet box. We should take note and listen.
no...MAGATS...followers of MAGA...i would not insult the noble maggot, who performs an important ecological function, by comparing them with the totally useless and non beneficial magat, who serve no useful constructive purpose, and only tears down everything it touchesMaggots
Lord take them soon, please.The problem is there are those that are not very rational. It's gawds will.
How would we go about having a civil war? How would it start?
A group of guys get together going door to door asking who you voted for?
A group of armed militants form in some far off mountain and then come down to the cities and start shooting people up?
Do 50 million magats from all over the country suddenly decide to pick up a gun and kill their liberal neighbors?
Do all the magats start moving to the same state and start forming their own militias?
Curious minds want to know
who gives a fuck if they're offended? if they're offended at people's opinions of them, maybe they should examine themselves and see why people have those opinions...just fuckin SAYIN...McCaul: A lot of Republicans were ‘very offended’ by Biden speech
Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) said many Republicans were “very offended” by President Biden’s primetime speech last week that called out former President Trump and MAGA Republicans as extremists and a threat to democracy.
McCaul told ABC’s “This Week” co-anchor Martha Raddatz that Biden’s Philadelphia address from Independence Hall on Thursday night had the “opposite effect” of unifying the nation because calling Republicans “a threat to democracy is really a slap in the face.”
Raddatz noted that shortly after Biden’s speech, McCaul tweeted that attacking Republicans would only further divide the country, asking: “When you look at those polls showing 60 to 70 percent of Republicans believe Joe Biden is not the legitimate president, what is Biden supposed to do when the country cannot even decide what democracy means?”
With a potential rematch of Biden and Trump seeking the presidency in 2024, McCaul said Biden is “teeing up who the enemy is in his view.”
“It [was] under the guise of a speech that’s to unite the nation, and I don’t think he succeeded in that,” the Texas lawmaker said of Biden’s address. “I heard it personally back here in Texas, that a lot of Republicans were very offended by that speech.”
Biden — who portrayed the Republican Party as divided between the hardline MAGA faction and mainstream conservatives — was also slammed by Trump, who called the president an “enemy of the state.”
Republicans criticized Biden in the wake of his address, with some declaring him the “divider in chief” noting that it went against his 2020 campaign promise to unify the country.
Biden has stepped up his criticism of Trump, notably mentioning him by name and calling out the MAGA-wing of the GOP and Trump’s influence on the party as a danger to democracy.
Before Thursday’s address, Biden had compared the MAGA philosophy to “semi-fascism,” drawing the ire of Republicans. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R) last week said the president “owes an apology” to Republicans for the fascism comment, a call echoed by others in the GOP.
The grip of Trump’s influence was on full display following an FBI search of his Mar-a-Lago property with Republicans fervently coming his defense in the immediate aftermath. And eight of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach him for the Jan. 6 rioting either resigned or lost against an opponent Trump backed.
McCaul: A lot of Republicans were ‘very offended’ by Biden speech
Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) said many Republicans were “very offended” by President Biden’s primetime speech last week that called out former President Trump and MAGA Republican…thehill.com
The truth sometimes hurts.