Comment by fsckboy
10 days ago
>Especially in the current political climate I hope I do not have to explain how undesirable and dangerous that is.
this is not the way to make a point that the other party will find persuasive.
10 days ago
>Especially in the current political climate I hope I do not have to explain how undesirable and dangerous that is.
this is not the way to make a point that the other party will find persuasive.
What do you mean by 'the other party'? Many places have more than two parties.
I assumed that meant "the other side of the conversation", e.g. "all parties involved".
Yeah I'm glad I don't live in a two party state. The zero sum game politics that results in rips the country apart. You see this in the US and also in the UK (Brexit etc)
It's not better in countries with multiple parties where nearly everyone (every relevant party) wants authoritarianism in the name of "fighting hate speech".
3 replies →
I assumed they meant Republicans/Trump, but it's a bit confusing because those parties aren't very popular in the EU:
https://www.pewresearch.org/global/2025/06/11/confidence-in-...
whatever your political alignment, saying the situation in the US is problematic might sell pretty well in the EU.
Don't be obtuse to make a point, the OP specifically stated they were in the United States.
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(I wish non-Americans wouldn't spend all their time tripping over themselves to try to insult Americans. If you didn't feel so insecure about yourselves and resentful of the success of others, you wouldn't feel such a need to justify your existence.)
In this case, however, it's your poor English to blame. In English when you talk to another person, that other person can be called the other party. It's not an attitude, it's a very neutral term.
“We have both kinds of music: country _and_ western”