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ModernMech04/03/20252 repliesview on HN

> It was clearly bad, but few people saw impacts in their own lives.

It did though, they just didn't know how to measure it, and it wasn't felt immediately. It was like the flash of light that dazzles before the pressure wave of the nuclear bomb blasts everything (which in the analogy is this moment, now).

What happened on Jan 6, and in the leadup and response to it, was the erosion of democratic norms. Before Nov 2020 they were stronger, and after Jan 6 they were significantly weakened. Our institutions are essentially built on trust, and Trump in his campaign to overturn the 2020 election spent every waking moment for months attacking those foundations. He purposefully eroded people's trust in Democracy for no reason, because there ultimately the fraud he alleged in that election was not found.

That impacts everyone. They just don't feel it in the supermarket; they just have no "democracy meter" that they can use to gauge how healthy their representation is in government. But the reason he's able to do what he's doing now is he because he laid the foundation in 2020.


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recoup-papyrus04/03/2025

Yeah, Jan. 6 mattered A LOT because the response to it just totally invalidated the legitimacy of the American elite.

"Your concerns don't matter, and we hate you. Shut up and take it."

That and covid.

After these events, it's just a matter of time before they are deposed. A hostile elite can't go mask-off like that and expect to stay in power for long.

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