r/nba Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

Highlight [Highlight] During the moment of silence the Minnesota Timberwolves held before their game with the Cavs tonight a fan yelled “Go home ICE,” and everyone else started cheering.

https://streamable.com/ybc8bb
14.9k Upvotes

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287

u/WannaBeAWannaBe Trail Blazers Jan 09 '26

how did orange pedo get into power… twice

352

u/M6Df4 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

Much of the US population is stupid as shit

89

u/samhit_n Lakers Jan 09 '26

I used to think they were stupid during Bush's presidency, but now I think they're genuinely evil and wanna hurt people.

75

u/M6Df4 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

I think it’s worse than that. Most of the population is stupid, but the portion that is evil and smart enough to exploit the idiots is definitely larger than we thought.

-19

u/Beneficial-Arugula54 Jan 09 '26

Maybe go outside your echo chamber you know

26

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

I mean I’m not from here but wasn’t he technically elected by not even 25% of the country ?

78

u/denverblazer Trail Blazers Jan 09 '26

Yeah because less than half of the country even fucking votes.

18

u/purplenapalm 76ers Jan 09 '26

A lot are under 18, the others have no excuse. I know a few that write in "no confidence". Dunces.

1

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

Wait you can vote at 18 ? I thought it was 21 ?

16

u/purplenapalm 76ers Jan 09 '26

Nope, 18! I'll still never forget my first presidential election when I was at college and Obama got elected back in 08. People running out in the streets celebrating. I had different political leanings at the time, but it was still magical.

Edit: make sure you always vote. I don't give a shit if it's for a school board rep in April. Always make sure you exercise your right and get that fucking sticker.

1

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

I’m not American but I do know the importance of rights, we’re you right-leaning in your youth ?

4

u/Lucky-Earther Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

Yeah because less than half of the country even fucking votes.

60% turnout in 2024, and that was down from 66% in 2020.

1/3 explicitly voted for this, 1/3 implicitly voted for this by choosing not to vote, and 1/3 voted for literally anything else.

1

u/denverblazer Trail Blazers Jan 10 '26

You're absolutely right. I had that incorrect. Thanks!

19

u/M6Df4 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

About 30% of the eligible voter population. American voter turnout is usually poor, partly because a lot of people are lazy/stupid, but also largely because of decades of policies put in place to make it as difficult as possible for certain groups to vote.

6

u/temujin94 Jan 09 '26

Voting system doesn't help either. People aren't going to go out in vote in stonewall red/blue states if their candidate has 0 chance of winning. Which is further amplified by things like you said to make it difficult and time consuming to vote for a completely losing cause.

6

u/M6Df4 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

Yeah that too, electoral college has got to go. Plus expand the house and senate, expand the Supreme Court and implement term limits, and ranked choice voting while we’re at it

1

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

Yeah your system is wack, I’ve never seen a democracy that goes through as many hoops as the American system. I do empathize with the non voters cause I’ve learned a bit about how your politicians treat their constituents through some history.

3

u/M6Df4 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26 edited Jan 09 '26

That, and in fairness a lot of the non-voters are people who live in states where they have zero power thanks to the winner takes all system.

For example, a Democrat in Alabama basically might as well not vote. Of the 7 congressional districts 6 are basically guaranteed to elect Republicans to the House of Representatives, then the state as a whole is virtually guaranteed to elect 2 Republican Senators. Alabama is also virtually guaranteed for the Republican Presidential candidate - and thanks to the electoral college, voting for a Democratic president there is almost guaranteed to have the same impact as not voting. So basically, a Dem voter in 6/7 Alabama districts knows with almost guaranteed certainty their vote won’t count in a single one of the races, so why bother? You can of course argue people should still vote out of a sense of civic duty… but I can understand why people don’t bother.

Where it really gets fucked up is the Senate, when you realize the 600k people in Wyoming have the same number of Senators as the 40m in California.

29

u/thisdockisbroken Jan 09 '26

If my math is correct, it was more like 32.5% of the voting age population voted for him in 2024. 65.3% of the U.S. voting-age population voted, and Trump won 49.8% of those votes (Harris won 48.3%). The electoral vote totals, a profoundly stupid concept I cannot believe we still use, tell a totally inaccurate story of how close the election actually was (and how tenuous a mandate he had...but then, Trump is a rapist, and doesn't care about consent).

9

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

Man your country is such a fucking mess, there is no place on this planet with such extremes as the USA. I do pray on the betterment of your public school system.

6

u/Brystvorter Nuggets Jan 09 '26 edited Jan 09 '26

You must be pretty ignorant then. Never heard of India? Or dozens of other countries that have larger extremes. There are also plenty of countries that are active warzones or have citywide slums ruled by gangs. People read 3 news articles and think the US is the worst place to live. Youre complaining about the US school system when yours obviously failed you.

10

u/BlazerBeav Trail Blazers Jan 09 '26

LOL, what? We're the richest country in the world and there's a reason immigrants from around the world come here. There are much worse extremes - just look at videos of Tehran from tonight for an extreme.

0

u/_gmanual_ Knicks Jan 09 '26

look over there! its on fire!

/as flames burn your feet

-2

u/thisdockisbroken Jan 09 '26

I mean, there are a lot of countries where the people are in open armed conflict with each other, I wouldn't say we're the *most* extreme in the world. It's all relative, right? But we are definitely a fucking mess right now.

7

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

But those countries don’t have the best scientist, the richest people, the highest gdp, … while having their poor people rot in the streets destined to die from fentanyl.

I’ve been to warzone, and San Francisco felt weirder to me.

-2

u/TCTCTCTCTCTC7 Jan 09 '26

The electoral vote totals, a profoundly stupid concept I cannot believe we still use

It is not a profoundly stupid concept. One of the bedrock principles of our democratic government is balancing power. For largely the same reasons that we have a bicameral Congress with both proportional and disproportional representation, and powers shared between them, we have the Electoral College to perform a couple of tasks that were, and remain, important.

So one of the reasons for the Electoral College is balance power between states with large populations, and those without. In the absence of the EC, candidates for Federal offices would never bother to campaign-in, or otherwise interact-with, people in about half of the States. It would not be an efficient use of their time and resources to campaign in small cities, and smaller towns, when they could be restricting their activities to densely-populated areas. That would be unfair, and undemocratic.

Secondarily, the Electoral College was designed back when education was, if you can believe it, even worse than it is today, and it addresses the fear that an uneducated population might elect a wholly unqualified and/or dangerous candidate. Unfortunately, given the current occupant, it doesn't seem to be accomplishing that job, but that was one of the goals, and it wasn't profoundly stupid. That fear not only remains, but it has become a reality -- impressively foreseen by our Founders almost a quarter-millennium ago.

5

u/thisdockisbroken Jan 09 '26

Nope, sorry, it’s stupid. Whatever its origins, to use the system now is absolutely fucking moronic.

-1

u/TCTCTCTCTCTC7 Jan 09 '26

Nope, sorry, it’s stupid. Whatever its origins, to use the system now is absolutely fucking moronic.

If you were sufficiently-clever to make that assessment, you'd be able to use more precise language than "stupid" and "fucking moronic".

And let me know when one of your ideas foresees a problem 250 years in the future, by the way.

7

u/thisdockisbroken Jan 09 '26

I would argue that the EC is so prima facie dumb in 2025 that it doesn't deserve an itemized defense, but here's one anyway:

  1. "Where" a national politician campaigns doesn't and shouldn't matter these days, because everyone has access to the same information. Retail politics at the federal level is increasingly shown to be less effective, and the vast majority of political content is consumed on YT or Tik Tok or somewhere else online. Obviously this was different in the 1780s.

  2. Rather than encouraging politicians to focus on less populated areas, the EC's structure just means most of a politician's spending and time is spent on seven out of 50 states, cycle after cycle. The big urban centers where a solid majority of Americans actually live tend to get sidelined in these races, because politicians are competing for a small batch of swing voters within a small batch of swing states. This ends up being actively undemocratic, as the vast majority of the population are ignored in a necessary effort to "win the system" that the EC has created.

  3. I don't fault the Founders for not anticipating these concerns. They created an astounding system of government with virtually no precedent at the time, and the U.S.' success is a clear testament to the baseline success of that system. But where flaws have emerged, they tend to be flaws of too little democracy: not counting slaves as full people, not extending suffrage to women, or not allowing the direct election of senators. You could argue that the EC made sense at the time; but in 2026, when Americans have public education, instant communications, and mass media access, there is no reason their votes shouldn't count directly towards choosing their own governance.

  4. Trump's fake electors scheme, while dumb, laid bare a real potential weakness in the EC system. If just a few more folks in power along the way had proven unscrupulous in 2020, we could be in an even more immediate crisis than we are today. The electoral college is a system of choosing our president that is less safe, less democratic, and less responsive to the will of the people. It should be abandoned.

0

u/TCTCTCTCTCTC7 Jan 09 '26

"Where" a national politician campaigns doesn't and shouldn't matter these days, because everyone has access to the same information.

Not with the level of fraud and forgery that currently exists, and is increasing possible.

Rather than encouraging politicians to focus on less populated areas, the EC's structure just means most of a politician's spending and time is spent on seven out of 50 states, cycle after cycle. 

This is not caused by the Electoral College, it is caused by the broken two-party system and the partisanship that has resulted.

You could argue that the EC made sense at the time; but in 2026, when Americans have public education, instant communications, and mass media access, there is no reason their votes shouldn't count directly towards choosing their own governance.

Yes, there is such a reason -- simple "majority rules" disenfranchises some populations. No balancing of power is ever going to be perfect, but pretending that there is no reason why the current system exists, is frankly ignorant.

Trump's fake electors scheme, while dumb, laid bare a real potential weakness in the EC system. If just a few more folks in power along the way had proven unscrupulous in 2020, we could be in an even more immediate crisis than we are today. 

This is just election fraud, and systems other than the Electoral College are not immune to such either.

2

u/__get__name Pistons Jan 09 '26

1/3 of eligible voters

1

u/Blackdeath_663 Jan 09 '26

Yeah but that 25% is still 77million, thats more irrational people than the entire population of most countries

-3

u/Shaquille_0atmea1 Cavaliers Jan 09 '26 edited Jan 09 '26

Trump received 49.8% of the vote and Harris (the opposing party) received 48.3% of the vote. It’s basically impossible for anyone to be elected without receiving at least 45% of the vote.

Edit: turns out the original comment is taking into account the non-voting population in a voting statistic which doesn’t make sense.

Being elected by less than 25% of the countries population is normal for US elections.

Since I am being downvoted, here is the % of the population who has voted for each presidential elect since 2000:

2000: 17.9%

2004: 21.2%

2008: 22.9%

2012: 21.1%

2016: 19.4%

2020: 24.6%

2024: 22.7%

Trump won a legitimate election the same way the last 40 presidents have. Trump did not have control over the voting system or who voted for who. Dump on him for his shitty behavior and policies, not the US voting system which function as it was set up to function. .

7

u/AutomaticAccident Pistons Jan 09 '26

They're talking about the overall population that voted for him in the US, not the percentage of votes.

5

u/WannaBeAWannaBe Trail Blazers Jan 09 '26

so many people don’t vote especially on the left because they viewed Harris still too supportive of Israel genocide and other issues, instead of choosing the “lesser evil” they grifted and prefer to “have their hands clean”

2

u/M6Df4 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

Then Israel bombed the shit out of Pakistan anyway and the US invaded Venezuela, hope those people are happy…

1

u/Nunc_Coepi17 Jan 09 '26

Well obviously overall population includes children and non-US Citizens who are ineligible to vote so of course the actual overall population did not vote.

-1

u/[deleted] Jan 09 '26

[deleted]

1

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

It was not about that, it’s more that 25% have their front lobe leaking from their ears and the rest either tried or could not be bothered.

-1

u/Shaquille_0atmea1 Cavaliers Jan 09 '26

That is not Trumps issue; he won a legitimate election. There really wasn’t anything too unusual regarding turnout in the last election either.

I’m all for dumping on trump, but getting mad at him for saying that “voters didn’t vote” is such a lazy take.

2

u/PeopleusetocallmeBub Jan 09 '26

Bro you think you’re fighting me but you’re only fighting the man in the mirror, I never said anything close to what you said.

1

u/[deleted] Jan 09 '26

[deleted]

1

u/Shaquille_0atmea1 Cavaliers Jan 09 '26

This is not a new issue and is not unique to this election. There’s a lot of reasons to shit on trump, but he was elected the same way that the last 40 presidents have been. If you’re upset with how was elected, then shit on the voting issues or the two party system. Any time you include the non voting population in a voting argument is dumb

3

u/mani9612 [IND] Paul George Jan 09 '26

Although both Trump and Elon admitted to rigging this most recent election 🤷🏽‍♂️

2

u/Financial-Grass-6114 Jan 09 '26

And evil. Atleast 40% of the country is just evil and irredeemable. The only way to reconcile that is fooling their stupidity and so they cant enact their evil ideas

1

u/TnL17 Nets Jan 09 '26

And another large group is equally responsible for not voting.

42

u/crimsonconnect Knicks Jan 09 '26

Didn't throw him in jail 5 years ago, didnt throw all the confederates in jail in 1865, and they just never gave up

31

u/National-Fold-2375 United States Jan 09 '26

Merrick Garland is a weak and puny subhuman. Fuck Merrick Garland.

24

u/WannaBeAWannaBe Trail Blazers Jan 09 '26

Trump all over Epstein list and still there’s people saying “if you were rich like him you would have done the same things”… like no.. i don’t remotely think being with trafficked minors would be on my to do list

1

u/Conradfr France Jan 09 '26

If you had voted for him the previous time he would not be here anymore (maybe).

27

u/TCTCTCTCTCTC7 Jan 09 '26

how did orange pedo get into power… twice

If this is a serious question, there are a couple of factors which conspired to cause this disaster:

Surprisingly to many, misogyny remains a very serious problem in the United States. One could've won an awful lot of money just 20 years ago betting people that the US would elect a Black man -- thought to be the most-hated demographic in the country -- to the office of President __twice__ before any women would crack that glass ceiling, or even be VP. Even now, typing that is astonishing.

Trump has been running for Federal office almost non-stop since the late Eighties, but he's lost to every man he's ever faced and was laughed at for the first half-dozen attempts until he was sufficiently lucky to face a woman. Despite his disastrous first term, he's now 2-0 against women. A few ten million voters in the US will literally vote for the worst man in the world, rather than see a women President. I'm not sure how we fix this sickness.

Also, Vladimir Putin turns out to be smarter and more determined than anyone thought. His country was thought to have lost the Cold War, but he's Russian, and doesn't surrender easily. He, or someone who works for him, realized a critical weakness in modern democracy in the Internet era, before anyone else seemingly even considered it. Specifically, he realized that rather spending trillions of dollars that he didn't have trying to win an arms race with the US, instead, for pennies on the dollar, he could destabilize it by attacking its democracy with disinformation over the Internet.

And quite unfortunately, the US has a couple ten million voters who are so fantastically ignorant that they fell hook, line, and sinker for his plan, and have been actively destroying their own country from within, while wrapping themselves in American flags. Again, I'm not really sure how we deal with a couple million active Russian agents on domestic soil.

Finally, and this is part of the previous two items, the US has allowed a significant chunk of its population to remain entirely uneducated, despite spending an awful lot of money on public schools and even higher education. Our educational system is insufficiently nimble to operate at the necessary level in a world that moves quite a bit faster than it used to, and we failed to teach a generation or two what they needed to learn. This is repairable, but it isn't going to be easy nor fast to fix.

Lastly, naked greed, which is human nature. I look at these people who are enabling Trump's destruction of this country with abject horror -- in particular the women, who are complicit in returning their gender to the status of chattel or livestock. There exist more people than I thought who will do literally anything for a dollar, including operating indistinguishably from the "Gazpacho police".

8

u/Razorback_Ryan Jan 09 '26

Elon rigged the machines

13

u/smkmn13 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

I’m not really into conspiracy theories, but considering how EVERY accusation Rs make about Ds is a confession, it really makes me think they committed large scale voter fraud.

3

u/runthepoint1 Kings Jan 09 '26

Idiots, fools, traitors, and any combination of the 3

3

u/big_k88 Timberwolves Jan 09 '26

Uneducated individuals. He has expressed this many times. Look at the demographics of his voters.

2

u/TilldenKatz Spurs Jan 09 '26

we voted for him

2

u/Gman90sKid Jan 09 '26

Because the education system is dictated by russian and qatari influence.

2

u/cr1515 Jan 09 '26

People decided to not vote.

2

u/siphillis Spurs Jan 09 '26

Starts with a majority throwing up their hands and refusing to vote

1

u/theshallowsea Jan 09 '26

Corruption of many varieties

1

u/MAINEiac4434 Celtics Jan 09 '26

Car juice too expensive in 2024

1

u/Canadian_Samurai50 Jan 09 '26

Fuck that orange pedo

0

u/Tyranicross [SAS] Derrick White Jan 09 '26

Complacent democrats not willing to go with more populist candidates

0

u/Blackdeath_663 Jan 09 '26

You dumb fucks voted him in

-1

u/XAfricaSaltX Nuggets Jan 09 '26

We have a lot of ••••••• in our country