After a day and several replies from people. I’ve come to the conclusion that people here are ok with their party and leaders supporting genocide and they attack the questioners (instead of their party leaders) who criticize those who support genocide. Critical thinking is scarce here.

I’m shameful of humanity.

  • @JuBe@lemmy.world
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    21 month ago

    It’s not a religion, it’s reality and acknowledging that we can’t always get what we want when we want, and sometimes, the best option is harm reduction. You’re going on and on, like voting is always about ideological purity, but it’s not. The current system we have means you can push as far in whatever direction you want during the primary elections, but when it comes down to the general election, there are two viable candidates. The reality is, most third party slates, don’t even have a path to 270 electoral votes. Of the two that do, only the Libertarian Party has ever received an electoral vote, and that was in 1972 because of a “faithless elector,” rather than support at the ballot box. The Green Party? They only show up every four years to make perfect the enemy of better. They’re not serious. That leaves you with Trump and Harris. If we characterize them as cynically as you seem to view them, the choice is between someone that impulsive, vindictive, transactional, and devoid of even being able to pretend to a modicum of empathy, versus someone that isn’t stopping genocide fast enough. Of those two, which one do you think is more likely to exacerbate genocide the most?

    Saying you’re not going to vote for a candidate that “allows genocide,” doesn’t mean genocide isn’t going to happen, it just means you get to feel better about yourself rather than inching things toward less genocide that might actually save some lives. So take how you will feel about yourself voting for someone that “allows genocide,” and set that aside, and ask yourself, out of the two, who is going to make it worse and who will make it less worse — because that vote has real life-and-death consequences.

    • @Ephoron
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      1 month ago

      it’s reality

      Just declaring it to be ‘reality’ doesn’t stand in for an argument. I obviously disagree so if you want to have a discussion you have to forward some rational argument for your view.

      Why will withholding a vote when neither candidate is acceptable not stop genocide?

      You’ve simply declared that it will, but not given any reasons.

      If both candidates are going to continue arms sales, then there’s no difference. The idea that Trump’s going to sell more is silly, there’s no current limit, Israel buys what they need. So the only affect I can have is in the long term.

      Here, there’s two options:

      Make it clear that genocide does not win votes.

      Make it clear that even genocide is not going to dissuade me from voting Democrat and so give them basically a free ticket to ignore voters complety.

      The former is the most likely to stop genocide.

      Same goes for any other issue.

      All the while you vote as if it were a duopoly, it will remain a duopoly. It’s not about getting ‘the least worst person’ into power next month, it’s about the long term value of making it clear to politicians that they cannot simply threaten us into voting for them, that they need to present policies we want in order to secure votes. Anything less and you might as well chuck democracy now. All they have to do is build up the bogeyman again and you’ll vote for them no matter what. In what way is that remotely “for the people, by the people”?

      • @JuBe@lemmy.world
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        31 month ago

        The “long term” doesn’t matter if the candidate that wants to “be a dictator on day one” gets his way, but you know what, maybe your self-righteousness will save us all. You say what you want but you have no way of achieving it. So, bye Felicia.

        • @Ephoron
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          -31 month ago

          bye

          ?

          You’ve expended less than 500 words arguing your case and you’re giving up because I haven’t capitulated in the first two replies?

          Either you have a very low confidence in your persuasiveness, or a very low confidence in the strength of your argument.

          What did you expect from this exchange, I unquestioningly accept the wisdom of your Delphic monologue?

      • @WrenFeathers@lemmy.worldM
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        21 month ago

        It’s FAR too late in the game to explain to you how a non-vote or a throwaway vote helps Trump. It’s explained nearly every time this comes up. So you either know- or you refuse to accept reason when it’s provided to you.

        Either way- you’re entirely wrong. But you’re free to be wrong, so long as America remains a democracy.

        Lets hope that there are enough of us trying to save America from a “dictator for a day” to make up for the willful ignorance of protest voters.

        • @Ephoron
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          -31 month ago

          It’s explained nearly every time this comes up.

          It’s so disheartening to see society descend into this monolithic, unthinking, blob.

          An argument doesn’t become an ‘explanation’ just because you agree with it.

          People have made their case. I’ve disagreed with it and given reasons. That’s how rational debate works (or at least it used to in better times).

          What’s happening here is people are disagreeing about a matter and exchanging reason why they reached their differing conclusion.

          It’s not one party ‘explaining’ some fact to another. It’s not maths, people disagree. Experts disagree. It’s an open question still.

          • @WrenFeathers@lemmy.worldM
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            1 month ago

            Some things are empirical. Like… throwing away your vote on third parties- and how protest votes are batshit stupid.

            • @Ephoron
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              -31 month ago

              Look up ‘empirical’. It doesn’t mean ‘point of view I agree with’.

                • @Ephoron
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                  -21 month ago

                  Well, no, it doesn’t mean that either, but I get the point anyway. You’re not here to defend your position, that’s fine. It’s not obligatory.

                  • @WrenFeathers@lemmy.worldM
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                    1 month ago
                    1. :originating in or based on observation or experience**. empirical data.
                    2. :relying on experience or observation alone often without due regard for system and theory.

                    Observation and experience.

                    By observation, protest votes are stupid.

                    By experience, third party votes are stupid.

                    And I love the IMAX quality projection you’re displaying here. it’s obvious you have no position to defend. You just put people on the defensive to cover up for it. None a so or one of you have provided any policy offered by third party candidates. Not one of you have explained any logic that can argue against the concept that you’re knowingly tossing away votes while simultaneously allowing a much worse candidate to win.