I think it depends on the other party. Sometimes people are persuade-able, or at least it will give them pause, a reason to ask questions.
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and persuasion is usually a process anyway. Maybe one data point won't do it, but hearing similar arguments over and over again might.
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I should mention that I think there's a non-0 possibility Jared was lying to *me* here bc he thought this was a more palatable explanation.
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Or that Jared was wrong but believed he was right?
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I blame them for sticking their heads in the sand when confronted with irrefutable information about who their candidate is.
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What irrefutable information! All I've seen is allegations and blatant lies! If they had any proof the man would be in jail. SMH AT THE LEFT
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Being informed is part of civic responsibility, regardless of which party you belong to.
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I'm an active Democrat. Many have complained to us it's our fault for 45. Said they didn't know about election because we didn't tell them.
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The electoral college. More people voted for Hillary, remember?
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Not in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan. More people voted Trump in those states. You ignored the question that was asked.
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