OK, so tell me which one of those folks you mention denies that Biden is president (so, OK, I did not watch the video suggested above). More to the point, and while I try not to point personal fingers unless it's warranted, it is you who states that you consider both parties equally complicit while you align yourself along party lines. I have voted split-party tickets all my life and never cared much about party identifiers. Massachusetts has had several Republican governors with Democratic legislators and I'm fine with that because I like non-partisanship. Likewise, I often tune in to Fox and the rest, and thereby offer them a chance to say something fair and reasonable, but all I hear are nonfactual lies, hate, and ranting madness. Do I sometimes scream when a Democrat or pundit says something similarly destructive and stupid on MSNBC? I certainly do. Do large parts of my brain and heart hope that Liz Cheney becomes our next president? Yes, because what I honor most is bravery and honesty.
It was never my wish that the vast majority of Republicans would align themselves with everything I see as wanton and grotesque. My uncles and father fought vigorously about politics because in their world both parties had merits. Trust me, none of my forebears (who all fought for democracy in WW2) would align themselves with Republicans today, while I believe they might still identify several virtues among Democrats. When most Republican party members became abject liars, religious zealots, and white supremacists fighting to undo long-accepted, hard-won human rights, they forfeited their rights to be considered as viable candidates. Period.
It's not enough to say both parties are bad and there's nothing to be done. While we remain a democracy (and thank goodness we still might be so thanks to thinking voters), one must vote for the lesser of two evils. By voting the miscreants out of office, we help to inspire better future behavior. Is Mark Finchem going to be Arizona's next secretary of state, where he can fulfill his expressed goals of corrupting future elections? No, because Americans decided they wanted better and voted him down.
Warning: If this discussion does not grow beyond a tiring recital of the same rants I've heard for the last six years, you won't need to worry about my future responses. Meanwhile, I try to avoid specific stories that I read in the paper this week (arguing in a tit-for-tat manner that makes us further hate each other), and stick to broader arguments about fundamental morals and behavior. I suggest we do that.