• givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    They’re not “turning against him”…

    They’re just not offering unconditional support, and if they don’t do that Biden doesn’t want them.

    Which is his main problem with younger voters. He doesn’t want to work with voters, he wants voters to work for him.

    “I have noticed that there have been a lot more events with creators, but the creators that are getting invited are the creators who are very pro Biden and just parroting talking points or sharing photo ops of them smiling with the President. Not the creators who have been critical,” said Kahlil Greene, a history content creator and education advocate in Washington who said he hasn’t been invited to the White House since he criticized the administration over the TikTok ban and the war in Gaza.

    Annie Wu Henry, a political influencer and digital strategist who has worked on Democratic campaigns, agreed. While the White House once treated creators as independent media, she said, they now seem to be playing favorites.

    Biden’s team “is trying to say that they’re handling influencers like the press. But the thing is, the press briefing room has to have Fox News no matter what. They have to allow all of the media in,” Henry said. “When it comes to influencers, they only let in people who agree, and anyone who gives even a little bit of pushback is not welcome.”

    If Biden isn’t seeing the support this time, it’s not the fault of influencers, it’s his fault for ignoring anyone that’s not just kissing his ring.

    Same issue Hillary had.

    Quick edit:

    All he has to do is keep inviting the ones who are vocal about their concerns and open a dialog.

    Even if he doesn’t change stances, it’s a hell of a lot better than surrounding himself with “yes men”.

    It’s a very easy path forward, but it involves admitting people a quarter of his age have valid points. That’s hard for an 82 year old.

    • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      I do agree that it’s not the fault of influencers, but of the campaign itself.

    • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Biden is not a populist who panders to everyone just to disappoint more than half of them. He has positions which he holds and an administration working towards them. You can either agree with the direction or not. Someone may not be thrilled about having a choice between two candidates, but that’s reality and nobody’s gonna game it by not voting, so pick an issue and decide is Biden going to be better or worse than Trump? Unless their a nazi or indoctrinated Christian nationalist, 99% of the time gen z should come to the logical conclusion.

      Edit: IMO Biden has been the most progressive Democratic Presidents in a long time

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        Biden is not a populist

        Since when is representing the people who elected you a bad thing?

        And why do people who think that, think voters will turn out for someone that doesn’t represent what they want?

        Edit: IMO Biden has been the most progressive Democratic Presidents in a long time

        That’s not an opinion, it’s a factual incorrect statement

        • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          I’m open to your, obviously, well researched factual response to who is a more progressive President.

          • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            So you make a ridiculous claim, get called on it, and then demand the other person prove you’re wrong?

            The way this works is you prove your own claim before you demand others refute it.

            Why would they put the time in if you won’t?

            Like, you need to realize you’re asking someone to explain something for your benefit. If the other person just stops replying, you lose because you didn’t learn anything

            At least ask politely dawg…

            • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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              20 days ago

              There are many things, but I think that H.R. 8404, the Respect for Marriage Act and the fact that he didn’t just sign it into law, he had a major event as a signing ceremony on the White House lawn to highlight it, is a great example of the kind of President he has been.

              https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2022/12/13/remarks-by-president-biden-and-vice-president-harris-at-signing-of-h-r-8404-the-respect-for-marriage-act/

              • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                20 days ago

                H.R. 8404

                So…

                HR means it’s a bill that started in the House…

                And Biden has been very open the last four years about how a politicians view is their view and he can’t even change someone’s if they belong to his own party.

                So, and I’m just making sure here, you think Joe Biden is so progressive because he checks notes didn’t veto it?

                And instead he threw a big event and took credit for others peoples work?

                C’mon man, was that really the best you found?

                • dariusj18@lemmy.world
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                  20 days ago

                  He didn’t take credit, he actually detailed a lot of the credit due in his speech. But yes, it is the fact that he made a big deal about a progressive social issue that is an example of being more progressive than his predecessors. If you are looking for progressive things done without congressional action, you’re not going to find any, ever. That’s just not how our government works.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    20 days ago

    I dunno. I think his admin turned on them. Supporting a ban on a media platform that a lot of them want to use to be famous and make money. Supporting police brutality against peaceful protesters. Supporting immigration legislation that’s far from that on which he ran. Hrm. Who turned on who?

    • Optional@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      I think his admin turned on them.

      Bullshit. This administration has done more for GenZ and beyond than the last three republiQan administrations combined

      Is it everything and a giant bag of money? No. That’s not a thing. And any whining about having a privacy-mangling app being “taken away” is ridiculous. To be famous?? O Noes the BiDeN took away their famousnesses?? Teh harror.

      And Feds do not micromanage local cop overreactions to protests. And if you think this administration is anywhere close to the political alternative to that, you’re more than wrong.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        And any whining about having a privacy-mangling app being “taken away” is ridiculous

        the tiktok ban isn’t about privacy. You can tell that because every other social media app is just as atrocious as tiktok (and in fact, selling that same data to the CCP, too.)

        you know that, but it doesn’t suit your narrative so you ignore it. the tiktok ban was performative bullshit and we all know it.

        • Optional@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          and in fact, selling that same data to the CCP, too.

          Prove it or admit you’re just making shit up. What, you got a sizzling hot redstate.com article? A four-hour podcast with Bill and Jackie? A guy you know from the thing with the stuff? I’m looking for a properly sourced article, not a youtube playlist or “feels”.

            • Optional@lemmy.world
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              19 days ago

              Wouldn’t be necessary if they weren’t buying it

              That’s data brokers. You said social media apps ALL do the same thing. That is not the same thing. Do we need to break that down, or you wanna die on this hill?

              Here’s some more info,

              The only social media app mentioned in this article is TikTok, lol. Good, uh, try i guess? Unless you’re back to data brokers, which - again, is a different argument. Related, sure, relevant, yes, but your claim that ALL social media apps share data with the CCP just as bad as TikTok is not supported by that argument.

              And some more

              TikTok (again) and Facebook. Okay. Hey - they wanna ban facebook, I’m all about it. Let’s do this.

              wow, even more!

              Facebook again. I mean, fair point, facebook is just as bad as tiktok (exception noted below). But that’s still not “ALL social media is just as bad as TikTok”, that’s just facebook. Facebook is the hitler of social-media-is-bad discussion. I’ll totally concede that one.

              I can do this all day….

              Google, Apple, Microsoft . . . All as bad as TikTok? No. Rejecting this one. I bet you could find articles about selling data all day. Doesn’t support your point.

              It’s almost like you’re the one just making shit up and watching podcasts while insulting people.

              I thought people listened to podcasts. Do they watch them too? Weird, but whatever. So, look, i’m on board with shutting down data brokers and all like that, but you’re saying that TikTok us no different from, what? Gmail? Teams? Signal? No. You’re wrong.

              Here’s one reason. Because access to audio and video is essentially required, tiktok is inherently more dangerous than some other fascist spewholes like Xitter. The fact that the data is slurped directly into the CCP (let’s just make that a given, unless you disagree) means it’s already more valuable and useful than data-broker data for the reasons that the data broker would have to follow certain laws, it would cost a lot of money for a billion people’s data constantly, and they’d still have to put it together with what they already have which is fine if it’s name and address, but after that it gets super hairy super quick.

              So no - they’re not all as bad as TikTok.

  • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    What angers her is the president’s failure to engage with Gen Z influencers’ substantive concerns, she said — though she acknowledged that the White House climate office recently contacted her directly regarding a pause in the approval of new liquefied natural gas projects.

    “I prefer having a meaty climate strategy conversation

    I think that’s the most important takeaway here. We’re not used to having to get deeply into the weeds with public outreach, it’s frankly discouraged in the traditional media ecosystem where preference is to boil things down into simpler, easier to understand talking points.

    That’s not the way the modern information ecosystem operates though, there’s no longer the same degree of profit motive and ensuing oversimplification. This is the wikipedia rabbit hole generation, density is often welcome.

    This problem is highlighted earlier in the article where they mention not knowing if content creators are more like traditional journalists, or its more just about pay for views. The answer is its both, plus more on top. Some are academically inclined, some are organizationally inclined, some are propaganda, some are journalism, etc etc.

    So, the team moving forward is going to need more than one singular, unified method for its outreach, and is going to need more of a shotgun approach that can accommodate differently-motivated creators with different methods and mindsets.

    • flicker@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      I mean I’m glad that current generations want more. I hope they can drag discourse to where it should be!

      But I agree that there’s definitely a disconnect on what’s been expected from a campaign, up until now.

      Historically, campaigns are just one dude and his apparatus shouting their thoughts. A campaign isn’t a conversation. It should be. Honestly I wish we. could securely run a platform of “every single one of our choices will be a poll online for a month beforehand.”

      • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        I disagree a little bit. I think townhalls are an example of a dialogue between a candidate and their constituency, and used to have a bigger role before broadcast technology was invented, so, most of our history. It’s also a core concept in democracy for the leadership to pay heed to the voters wishes.

        The disconnect I see is in communication, where the campaign has struggled to explain the reasoning behind its decisions. I think the easiest remedy would be to tap more of the administration’s experts. Instead of trying to boil down the Gazan situation to soundbites, the administration could simply tap some of the policy wonks from the State Dept. Take one of the analysts that specializes in Middle East affairs and be like “okay, so, can you go talk to so-and-so for this afternoon and give them the rundown on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and our strategy? thanks Bob.” Not really Bob’s job of course, but it needs to be done. This would be instead of relying on any pre-existing communications experts. The influencer is a communications expert, they lack the policy expertise perspective, which is largely unavailable to most everyday citizens.