Radical free speech is important and a cornerstone of the US. Yeah, you've got some real shitheads on voat but also a lot of decent people that just don't hold the previously approved PC opinions. The internet was way better before it began to coalesce into megacorps like google, fb, and reddit. Instead of defending free speech they caved to advertisers. The issue w/ that is someone is always pissed off by something and the smallest groups shout the loudest. Now we've got a situation that's gotten out of hand and even regular conservatives are targeted. Voat is basically a concentration camp for free speech online. They've rounded up all the "wrongthinkers" and sent them to one place.
Before reddit and that Mountain Dew (the hitler did nothing wrong naming contest) troll happened /pol/ was libertarian more or less believe it or not. The PC left is Frankenstein and Voat's their monster. Assholes were fewer and farther between online before they all got shipped to the same place.
When you start inventing shit like "micro aggressions" and telling everyone their racist nonstop... I could provide a thousand other examples. The left has even managed to bring back segregation on college campuses only this time they're called "safe spaces" and black only dorms.
The Radical Left and the Far Right are every bit as bad as each other and more alike than they are different. They both have a need to be authoritarian in order to stay in power. (Horseshoe Theory)
Reddit, Facebook, Youtube, Twitter, etc. have no shortage of racists. They've just got the "right kind" in our weird double-standard culture.
Wow, that jump in 1933 had me looking for a timetable of events and I wasn't disappointed. That's a lot of major events to happen in short succession, it reminds me of the October Revolution in Russia. Wikipedia: 1933 in Germany, October Revolution: Insurrection
Well, I'll agree that it played a big part in the rest of the country. I'm not sure about the area you live in--we've already hinted that we may be in totally different areas--but around here Trump got a lot of word-of-mouth. I'm in a major swing state that got Trump elected--Pennsylvania. It was a spectacle to behold, supporters came out of the woodwork. If the people didn't outright support him, they wanted to blow shit up (the camp I was in). The rest of them just didn't want to see another Clinton or Obama-like character. The Obama years were not positive overall for Pennsylvania.
I'm not going to disagree, and I'm worried about that.