Then I would give you the same advice - might find a safe room while this blows over. You're going to be exposed to ideas you don't like in the real world.
Possum is transgendered and is facing far more than a simple bombardment with harsh ideas, which she is more than capable of dealing with as you can see from her handling of the discussion here. So it would be nice if you didn't fall back on the trite "safe space" condescending insult so many others have resorted to. She is facing a country that already had a nasty trend of physically and verbally attacking, painting them as sexual predators prowling school bathrooms without any evidential basis, and attempting to legislate against people like her, and that was before those elements of the public and government were further emboldened by the election of Trump. So, if you could maybe have it in your heart to not be so dismissive of her concerns and treat her like some delicate college student who simply can't handle opposing viewpoints, that would be great, mmkay? Have some damn empathy.
Unless it's being overblown in the media, and most Democrats will accept Donald Trump as their president. I'm at least asking for that.
Of course he's my president. I don't question that he was legally elected President of the US. That's the part that terrifies me.
You guys look so ignorant every time you use the KKK reference. Their membership nationwide is between 5000-8000. The population in the U.S is 300 million. They are basically irrelevant.
You guys lost all credibility with the race card after the nation elected a black man to the presidency twice by big margins. You cant then say that it turned around and became racist because of Trump. Even Michael Moore of all people disagrees with you.
http://dailycaller.com/2016/11/11/m...-elected-obama-twice-theyre-not-racist-video/
Just face it, your side had an incredibly flawed candidate whose biggest slogan was, "The other guy is mean." That "other guy" was talking about issues that working class voters care about eg: jobs, china, immigration. That along with lower turnout from the liberal base is why Hillary lost.
Yes, there is a block of millions of mostly middle class white people primarily from the Rust Belt but also other areas who were previously Obama voters but turned on Hillary and the Democrats because they felt their concerns about the loss of manufacturing and coal mining jobs that frankly aren't going to come back in any meaningful numbers (it's harsh but it's true, and they need help) were being ignored. Their motivations may not be racist in nature but it's rather naive to think that just because someone voted for the black guy doesn't mean they can't also harbor racist views. This election of all things should convince you of the power of the protest vote against established political dynasties like the Clintons and the Bushes, and some people might have held their nose and voted for the black guy out of sheer desire to upset the status quo. Not saying there are a lot, just saying that the whole "we elected Obama, so we can't be racist" argument is nonsense.
But there is also a YUUGE block of white people who feel that their country has been taken away from them. It's inherent in the dogwhistle slogan "Make America Great Again", and overtly reinforced by Trump and his surrogates' racially, sexually, ethnically, and religiously divisive rhetoric.
You can have both coexist at the same time. It's not mutually exclusive. The existence of some non-racist and less overt Trump supporters does not negate the large block of virulently bigoted supporters who want to take the country back to a "better" time, like the 1950s, when the women and the blacks knew their place, the gays were locked up or kept their "condition" quiet, transgendered people weren't even on the radar yet, and Mexicans got deported in quaint little programs called "Operations Wetback" once we'd finished exploiting them for cheap labor.
That's the Great America many of them want to go back to again, because by most other actual verifiable metrics, America is doing better than that mythical nostalgic land they're pining for. Not all. There are definitely people suffering and the middle class has been gutted (primarily because of pro-big business, anti-union policies like the type Trump and his cronies have and will implement again, despite union members voting against their own self-interest), but in most cases things are better now than they were in the past, and they could be even better if not for regressive policies and an obstructionist Congress.