• mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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    10 months ago

    Gore was one of the senators who saw early on the potential of the internet and fought for funding for it. Vint Cerf said that Gore’s actual statement (which, of course, was not that he “invented the internet”) was completely accurate in terms of taking credit for what he’d accomplished and the value of it. It’s the same quality he had that put him ahead of the curve on climate change (he would actually still be ahead of the curve today, in terms of the woeful bullshit people in Washington consider “the curve”).

    If your goal is to live your political life in such a way that no one can twist your words around and make you look bad, you’re not going to succeed. I think a better approach would be uprooting and demolishing as much as possible of the powerful media systems that are engineered and funded to take good politicians’ words and twist them around to produce malevolent results and make those politicians artificially look bad. How to get that done, I wish I knew.

    • OpenStars@startrek.website
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      10 months ago

      I think Obama’s approach was to bypass the media, and reach out directly to the people themselves, even if through them. That way, the media dared not make fun of him. Ofc they did anyway, but quite often, it did not stick as a result.

      Here I have to ignore Faux News b/c they just ruthlessly tried to tear him apart - e.g. a black kid dies by violence, and Obama sheds a tear in sympathy, and they accuse him of it being faked. Which even if so, so what? We should have, and demonstrate, sympathy to people - imagine if that were a competition, and he was winning it, rather than the exact opposite of that which is the reality that we had:-(.

      So the more mainstream media made fun of Obama’s pauses, and how white his hair had turned while in office. Obama himself played along, especially in the White House Correspondents speeches. Those were great relations:-D.

      Somehow Gore never managed to do that. I imagine him more like an engineer (which I am myself), who might be technically quite proficient, but struggle at the more “people” aspects of the job. Nixon too in a fashion. The people want a JFK/Bill Clinton/Obama/Trump, they don’t want someone who will actually get the job done, more’s the pity:-(.

      And now we have Biden, who similarly is quietly getting things done, though the media is eating him alive whenever/however they can. After that, whether in this upcoming election or the one after that, it’ll be a GQP member - you just know that, b/c of Dems never winning successive elections in history. Rinse & Repeat.

      UNLESS libs learn this lesson, finally, and put forward someone who is electable? It very much IS a popularity contest, no matter how much we may wish, demand, expect, or hope otherwise:-|.

      The attitude of the Greek Stoics impresses me: we cannot impose our views upon the entire world, we can only change what WE can manage to change ourselves. Maybe that means skirting the government at the federal level - like individual states right now could pass protections against future anti-abortion laws, so why don’t they? Or coalitions among cities could accomplish a lot - e.g. we can’t force people to take vaccines, but we can work to make them cheap, effective, and available to anyone that will.

      Navel-gazing back into the past does serve a purpose, but only to the extent that we learn from our mistakes as we move forward.

    • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      If your goal is to live your political life in such a way that no one can twist your words around and make you look bad, you’re not going to succeed.

      You’re not going to succeed, nor will you ever care about anything that matters