Why does /pol/ seriously believe they influenced the election? Every single person who would be influenced by memes during the election is at best a civic nationalist (reddit's ideology as opposed to ethno-nationalism) and also under 20 years old, too young to vote in america. The only people /pol/ has reached are people like my NEET cousin who got kicked out after his parents found out his manifesto on Hitler, Non-white inferiority and the Jewish Illuminati.
>>73234611
What happened to him?
because /pol/s extremist attitudes was picked by the social media at large so they believe their other leanings had greater internet impacts too
>>73234611
>Why does /pol/ seriously believe they influenced the election?
Because they're mostly stupid fucking teenagers with delusions of grandeur.
/pol/ did play quite a serious role in the election tho. also this thread probably belongs there.
>>73234611
>Jewish Illuminati
That is actually true tho
>>73234611
18-20 year olds can vote in America.
I'm not an ethnic nationalist (at least not for the US), but after 1914 the borders of Europe were drawn around the basis of different ethnicities getting their own nations and the concept of "self determination of peoples". It's not an edgy idea. Civic nationalism is obviously necessary and superior for a country without an ethnically homogeneous population. Look at how all the ethnic troubles African and midle eastern nations have, largely because they were drawn arbitrarily without consideration of the distribution of tribes/ethnicities/peoples living in those areas.
>>73234971
>borders where drawn around different ethnicities
Dumb shit
>/pol/ is full of delusional spergs
you don't say?
>>73234611
>Why does /pol/ seriously believe they influenced the election?
because it's /pol/