• TigrisMorte
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    17 months ago

    You are participating regardless. You are simply letting others decide for you.

    • Remmock
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      57 months ago

      Abstention has historically been a way to declare your distaste for all options and, outside of America, is regarded as honorable. For some reason Americans don’t get that a massive absence at the polls isn’t just about “having better things to do”.

      • TigrisMorte
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        17 months ago

        It historically has been and shall always remain an ineffectual and pointless way to assure you and your interests are not a part of the calculation in any way. The fewer that Vote the easier it is to “manage” the remainder. No one, literally no one including the nonvoters themselves cares a single whit for the opinions of nonvoters. Refusal to participate makes your position meaningless. It is the “holding your breath” of the lazy and immature adult. Nothing more and nothing less.

        • Remmock
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          17 months ago

          Wow. You have a severe issue with people who are presented some options and say: “No, thanks.”

          I have a civic duty that if I am not represented by a candidate, that I do not muster support behind that candidate. If a political party needs my support, it is their responsibility and not mine to attract the voters they claim to need.

          You can watch the constant sliding of Democrats toward the right and the vacillating popularity of fringe-left parties to know that the Democratic Party doesn’t give a damn about winning left-fringe voters. After Nader secured over 3 million votes in 2000, do you think the Democratic party learned a single lesson? Or did they just shit the bed all over again in 2004? Did Obama run on any of the 2000 Green Party’s positions?

          I’ll save you the effort: The Democratic Party opted to adopt 0 of the Green Party positions from the 2000 election.

          So tell me all about how voting Third-Party somehow sends a message.