Former president Donald Trump disseminated on social media on Friday an image of President Biden with his hands and feet tied and his mouth gagged, the latest example of the Republican candidate’s use of increasingly violent rhetoric and imagery this campaign season.

The image can be seen about halfway through a 20-second video that Trump posted on his Truth Social site. The post says it was recorded Thursday on Long Island, where Trump traveled this week to attend a wake for a recently killed police officer.

In the video, two trucks decorated with giant Trump flags and altered American flags are driving on a highway. On the tailgate door of one of the trucks is the image of Biden lying horizontally, bound and gagged.

Trump has a history of sharing and promoting violent images featuring his perceived enemies.

  • CableMonster
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    I think you analysis seems to be accurate, it seems to well encapsulate the problem. I remember Milton talking about the negative income tax and I think it probably its probably the most pragmatic way to get out of our current welfare dependence issue.

    My theory is that the libertarian party should be the party of “Hey, government takes your freedoms and your money, lets have less government.” I might want to federal government to be 1/10th the size, but thats not really a winning argument when most people have Government Stockholm syndrome and believe the government helps them, and it kind of does for some people.

    I see what you are saying about how the libertarians are courting the right, but how do you believe that winnng over people on the left is actually viable? I feel like many of them are so far into the marxist and authoritarian camp that there really is no bridging that divide, and maybe the only way is influence them in our direction.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      8 months ago

      There’s no way any third party is going to get any interesting number of seats until there’s significant election reform, so that’s what I’d do. That resonates with any minority party, and hopefully enough voters in the majority to get it through.

      So focus less on winning seats (though candidates should still run) and focus more on the message. Join up with other third parties and the minority party and do a big, focused push for voting reform. My ideal scenario is proportional representation in the House, but honestly, anything that eliminates FPTP gives third parties a shot.

      • CableMonster
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        8 months ago

        So then focus on the things we would agree on like being anti-wars? It just seems like most of the other third parties are too far off. Like RFK, he seemed anti-authoritians and just different, but then his VP is a SF tech person whom I would guess is pretty much a leftist.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          8 months ago

          Yeah, focus on things that helps third parties in general, such as:

          • anti-war - other two parties are fairly hawkish
          • voting reform and ending gerrymandering
          • digital privacy and consent - both parties extended or replaced the Patriot Act
          • right to repair - greens would love the eco-friendliness, libertarians would like the stronger property rights; wouldn’t be required for leased products

          And so on. Basically don’t push anything too controversial, and focus on things that the major parties so poorly and that most third parties and independents would agree on. That would show voters that having more choices is valuable.

          I see three possibilities with this strategy:

          • major parties take up these proposals - win win
          • voters demand voting reform
          • nothing changes - so status quo

          The Libertarian Party should transition to an advocacy organization instead of trying to get people elected. Basically, “policies before politics,” which should improve the perception of the average person of the LP.

          • CableMonster
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            2
            arrow-down
            1
            ·
            8 months ago

            I think it is essentially a advocacy organization, I do wonder if they could get a lot more influence if it were possible to get someone onto the debate stage so that everyone could see their opinions.