Comment Re: Tax Increases Inbound (Score 1) 52
I don't give anyone a "pass" but my options last November were to throw* in with the side that rioted all summer in 2020 over one thing or the side that rioted in the fall of 2020 and a little into 2021 over another thing.
To be clear, I took absolutely no pleasure in voting for a candidate who egged on any of the rioting, but we live in a two party state where you have to vote for the extremists who scare you less.
And by "scare less" I don't mean abstractions or philosophical disagreement, I mean simply who in my assessment is more likely to prevent me from going about my day-to-day life. Who's going to do more to stop me from going to get groceries? Who's going to do make it harder to fill up the gas tank? Keep the power on? Let me walk down the street without fear of being targetted for looking to white or too property-owning to be down with the revolution?
Trump's escapades might jack up the costs of some imports. Harris was egging on the anarchists and wheb in office was pushing Cali-style energy policies that *would* make the grid unreliable, that *would* wreak havoc with transportation of things like food.
Massachusetts chickened out of the California Truck EV mandate before Congress killed it recently:
https://commonwealthbeacon.org...
But not before commercial truck sales ground to a halt earlier this year before the mandate was "paused."
https://www.masslive.com/weste...
A little of that is a nuisance. A sustained end to commercial truck sales means the food doesn't get delivered and the trash piles up.
Just like the good old days of the Soviet Union where central planning in service of ideology took precedence over boring things like keeping the lights on.
If the choice is between that and the capitol rioters....well that's not a choice, it's a hostage negotiation, and I didn't like the lockdowns and the mail ballot shenanigans all that much at the time.
*symbolically, since I live in an uncompetative one-party state and my vote is irrelevant