Former democratic party activists are organizing Muslims and Arab-Americans in Swing states to vote against Biden with the demand that he support a ceasefire in Gaza.

I’ll allow them a little bit of electoralism this time.

  • synae[he/him]
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    8 months ago

    I can agree Joe is a genocider and still vote for him instead of trump*.

    Trump is happy to apply his genocidal ideals to his own countrymen. Biden, less so - mostly directed outward/foreign. If my vote has influence on this matter, even slightly, who am I going to choose?

    Moreover, I’m not pretending my vote is some sacred gift I can only give to the most perfect candidate. Rather, I am happy if my trash vote can negate a even more-trash vote.

    * I predict being the_dunk_tank material and I accept my fate.

    Also I want to say, I am really trying to understand this. even if I say wierd/bad faith/something stuff it’s an accident and I want to understand the point of view of “anti electoralism” – if that’s the right term.

    • AbbysMuscles [she/her]
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      419 months ago

      I can agree Joe is a genocider and still vote for him instead of trump

      I can’t. It should be an easy red line to have

      • synae[he/him]
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        18 months ago

        Maybe this is what’s hard for me to understand about the anti-electoral stance. From what I’ve gathered in this thread, my vote is simultaneously completely worthless and inffective, yet also the most precious thing I should only give to the most worthy.

        I’m having a hard time figuring out how to word this comment to sound less snarky, but I am legitimately interested in your thoughts on this dichotomy. Or if you think this is not a good interpretation of your+other commenter’s comments, I’ll be happy to be corrected. Thanks.

        • culpritus [any]
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          8 months ago

          It’s pretty simple, if your vote is for a ‘lesser evil’ that is a negative choice proposition, hardly worthy of the word ‘choice’ or ‘democracy’. Two bad choices are still two bad choices, even if one is marketed as slightly less bad. The entire Dem strategy for like decades now has been this prisoners dilemma proposition. They never provide federal protection enshrined in law because that would take away the leverage of this strategy. The only way to break out of this pattern is to really threaten it directly by not acquiescing to it like good little liberals. That is why you have cognitive dissonance over this topic. The social pressure of ‘lesser evil’ is so deeply embedded in the liberal worldview that any questioning of it is adjacent to being a terrible right-winger.

          The cultural war divide benefits Dems, so they do everything to perpetuate it instead of reconciling it. You need to comprehend this to have a realistic understanding of US political economy.

          • synae[he/him]
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            18 months ago

            I can acknowledge all of that, and understand it intellectually, and still see that a vote can reduce the speed of encroaching facism.

            Trump lost Georgia by 11k votes, Bush won Florida by 537 votes – sometimes meaningful things do happen with relatively tiny margins and if they can be swayed in a preferred direction, I’ll take it.

            threaten it directly by not acquiescing to it

            How is this a threat? This is, I think, core to my failure to understand your position. To me that sounds like giving up and giving free rein to continue rolling back abortion rights, lgbtq protections, etc. This sounds completely irrational to me so if I’ve misunderstood you (or others, or this position in general) I am happy to be corrected on my assumptions. Thanks!

            • culpritus [any]
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              58 months ago

              giving up and giving free rein to continue rolling back abortion rights, lgbtq protections, etc

              show me where any of this has stopped or slowed under Biden please. that is the issue.

              give your vote away to a party that does not fight for these things but only uses them to receive your vote because you have no other option. that is the problem with continuing to vote for them without any real commitments or guarantees that they will do anything material to make things better or even stop the rightward momentum. if you can’t understand that, then you should really learn more about political history.

              • synae[he/him]
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                28 months ago

                show me where any of this has stopped or slowed under Biden please

                Of course I can’t :) unfortunately all I can say is that I believe it would have been (or will be) even worse under a second trump term, or many of the other republicans making a name themselves on the national stage. Lately, Joe sure is making your case a hell of a lot more clear.

                I believe I understand this point and why it is important. A few others have pointed it out as well. I think I am drawing different conclusions from it though.

                you should really learn more about political history

                Of course you’re right, always room to learn more. And by no means am I claiming advanced knowledge :)


                One thing I regret about the way this discussion* has gone, is that the conversation has trended towards presidential and/or national elections. But, I guess it is a common touch point many people have a frame of reference for, and it was easy for me to go along with for that same reason. I wish we talked more about local organizing, alternative parties, and different aspects of election processes such as voting methodologies, primaries, ballot access.

                * broadly throughout the entire thread; not specifically between you and I.

            • @freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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              28 months ago

              The USA is not a victim of encroaching fascism. The USA was fascist before it was even founded. Everything you can be that is “fascistic” was done by white European settler colonists before the Third Reich did it. Gas chambers, concentration camps, eugenics, wars of extermination, etc.

              The Democrats aren’t against this stuff. Ruth Bader Ginsberg relied on and reinforced the reliance on the Doctrine of Discovery for the legal basis of the USA. The Doctrine of Discovery is part and parcel of the religious decrees that demanded European settlers murder, rape, enslave, and break every non-European they came across.

              The USA is the reservoir of fascism. In Mein Kampf, Hitler explicitly details how the program of the USA was what he wanted to emulate and apply to the Slavs. His entire leadership team studied the USA to base their program on it, everything from apartheid to propaganda.

              The USA ruling class supported the ride of fascism in both Italy and Germany. When the USA finally entered the war it wasn’t to end fascism it was to stop the growth of communism. The USA collaborated with the Vatican to bring Nazis to safety all over the US sphere of influence. They created NATO and staffed it with Nazis. They worked with NATO through Operation Gladio to reinforce and support Nazi partisans all throughout Europe.

              Every time a vote comes up in the UN to condemn the glorification of Nazis, the USA votes against it.

              Fascism is a Euro-settler phenomenon. It predates the US. It was perfected in the US. It emerged in Europe from the reservoir of the US. It returned back to the US when it failed to defeat communism. The US maintained it the entire time.

              The idea that fascism is encroaching is a lie. It’s always been here. The only solution is revolution.

        • AbbysMuscles [she/her]
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          8 months ago

          From what I’ve gathered in this thread, my vote is simultaneously completely worthless and inffective, yet also the most precious thing I should only give to the most worthy.

          I think of it like this. In an ideal society (or at least vaguely functional political system), your vote would and should be precious. Yet in our shithole nation, this precious thing of yours is forced to be given to one of two genocidal evils. the-democrat is the face of a party who pretends like they’ll take your vote and do something useful. Stand up for minorities, do something about climate change, maybe reduce the mass social murder in this country, or just do fucking anything at all. Yet time and again, they only make things worse. If your vote is precious and should only be given to the most worthy, why give it to a racist, senile, sex offending, warhawk?

          And we all know that to vote for anyone other than the two candidates is a useless gesture, accomplishing nothing. So in practical terms, voting in this nation is voting for one of holden-bloodfeast this guy’s two masks. Why fucking bother?

          Edit to add-

          I can agree Joe is a genocider and still vote for him instead of trump

          Why? Why the shitting fuck would you decide “This genocider is deserving of my vote”. That is a physical manifestation of your thought that this man should lead our country. You’re not just passively thinking it, you’re taking an active step to make sure that happens. If a daycare was trying to choose between John Wayne Gacy or Albert Fisch to be its director, it would be fucking insane to give it serious thought and then vote on one of them. You should demand to know why this is the choice in the first place, and not shrug and vote for one of them like a browbeaten little b----

          • synae[he/him]
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            18 months ago

            Thanks for the emoji, I was starting to think I was doing something wrong if no hexbear folk would use emoji with me

            So in practical terms, voting in this nation is voting for one of holden-bloodfeast this guy’s two masks. Why fucking bother?

            The short answer is, one of the masks is attacking lgtbq and women’s rights domestically, and the other isn’t. I understand that their complicity- doing nothing to stop this or actually enact protections - is also part of your point.

            I’m not well-versed in the specific meanings of your emoji, but I take holden-bloodfeast there to be an old dying capitalist whose bank account can never be sated no matter the cost. I don’t think that type gives a shit about lgbtq issues one way or another. R’s do it for culture war bullshit, and holding on to their christian voters. But it is possible for them to simply stop pursuing those goals and keep their voters, and its not like the D’s will suddenly “step up” as the other mask of Mr Holden to start oppressing these groups. As long as the almighty economy keeps going and his bank account grows it doesn’t matter one way or another to his kind. So when it comes to voting for one mask or the other, if one is going to win anyway, why not nudge things towards the one that is more humane, even if its just a drop in the bucket?

            You’re not just passively thinking it, you’re taking an active step to make sure that happens.

            Isn’t part of your point that it will happen no matter what? If its going to happen, regardless of my vote, is it really an active step? This sounds like I’m being purposefully obtuse, but I’m not trying to be. I think maybe we’re just going in circles.

            Anyway, to address your addendum differently-- lately it seems on any given election cycle it’s the last gasp of hope that we can keep a semi-functioning democracy. Other activities happen before that, in which I am not taking active steps to elect a ghoul (or sometimes we can even take active steps towards a non-ghoul!).

            In that aspect, I think your serial killer daycare analogy is a bit weak, in that there are many more steps to electing someone to office than there are to hiring someone for a daycare; and the processes in place whittle the electoral field down to a very small group which would not be the case for hiring someone for daycare. When it comes to US electoral process, I understand it well enough to see how we got to that point, and recognize that even if the outcome is horrible I should use my tiny bit of influence to nudge us towards the less-successful serial killer. (err… tried to go back to the analogy, didn’t work so well. leaving it in lmao)

            • AbbysMuscles [she/her]
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              8 months ago

              if one is going to win anyway, why not nudge things towards the one that is more humane, even if its just a drop in the bucket?

              Like I said, materially supporting genocide is a red line. The GOP is working to strip rights and protections from women and LGBT populations. Yeah, the Dems aren’t actively participating. They are doing sweet fuck-all about it though. Their inaction on minority protections does not justify their culpability in genocide. Not to mention how many times the Dems have refused to codify such protections into law when they had the chance. They know for a fact that they’re allowing the GOP to get away with their shit once the GOP is elected, and they just don’t care. This lack of active attack means that people such as yourself can see them and say “well at least they’re not the ones actively hurting me” and still ensure that nothing is actually done. The “attack - standback” cycle is endless, and each party benefits from not actually helping these minorities. It’s like I was saying earlier, the Dems will absorb votes from people who think they’ll help. And they’ll never help. They don’t want to. If you care about women and gay people, why vote for a party that willingly participates in that disgusting cycle?

              is it really an active step?

              Yes. You are taking the time out of your day to expend energy and thought into marking your ballot and getting it filed. In some states, a substantial part of your day. That is actively deciding to use your limited impact on this system to vote for the genocide guy.

              I think your serial killer daycare analogy is a bit weak, in that there are many more steps to electing someone to office than there are to hiring someone for a daycare

              Don’t be a nerd about this. Of course there are more steps. It doesn’t change the choice’s similarities.

              Anyway, other people smarter than I am seem to have a lot more energy for the Q&A session so I’m tapping out. My point was and is that Dem’s “pretending to give a fuck” act about minority protections does not excuse them from participating in genocide. The fact that we’re at this point shows that democracy has blatantly failed. Good luck with your inquiries

              • synae[he/him]
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                18 months ago

                Anyway, other people smarter than I am seem to have a lot more energy for the Q&A session so I’m tapping out.

                I’m sure people like me can be draining sometimes. I hope I haven’t been too egregious in that regard. Thank you for your time and patience, & enjoy your day!

    • CyborgMarx [any, any]
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      358 months ago

      Trump is happy to apply his genocidal ideals to his own countrymen. Biden, less so - mostly directed outward/foreign. If my vote has influence on this matter, even slightly, who am I going to choose?

      Biden has Trump beat on deportations, police funding, military funding, and he’s completely unwilling to stand for abortion right, trans rights, and debt forgiveness

      And now he’s a genocider, so what actually are we supposed to be afraid of from Trump? At least with Trump most of the media and 50% of the establishment will oppose him, unlike with Biden where the 90% of the media backs him and 80% of the establishment cosigns his genocidal ideals

      I fear Biden and his ilk more than I fear Trump and his incompetent clown show, because at least with Trump I can be confident most of the country will oppose him

      I can’t even be confident that so-called “leftists” will oppose Biden, because here you are arguing we should vote for a man who’s committing genocide

      • synae[he/him]
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        28 months ago

        I’m not going to defend Biden or dems in general, but part of your point that I want to address directly is this:

        completely unwilling to stand for abortion right, trans rights, and debt forgiveness

        While he and other dems are “unwilling to stand”, they are also not actively working against those or certain other causes. If everyone who believes in these causes chooses to not vote because they’re not being addressed, republicans will win and do their damndest to stomp all over marginalized groups even more. This is why I vote (against them).

        at least with Trump I can be confident most of the country will oppose him

        Oppose him verbally, sure. But that has no effect, and actually sometimes emboldens him and other R’s as they do stuff to “own the libs”. Why is opposing him like this good, but opposing him with my vote bad?

        I think my stumbling block in trying to understand this POV is that I do believe there is inherently a difference between voting for someone and voting against someone else. I’d rather not freely cede anything to those I consider to be worse. I understand you may see the outcome as “the same” and for some people, it is. But I do believe that there are people where a difference between the parties exists and is important in their lives.

        To address your last point, I’m not trying to convince anyone of anything, certainly not against their conscience. I’m trying to understand why walking away from elections is (or at least seems to be) the general consensus amongst this community.

        Thanks for your thoughts.

        • CyborgMarx [any, any]
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          78 months ago

          While he and other dems are “unwilling to stand”, they are also not actively working against those or certain other causes. If everyone who believes in these causes chooses to not vote because they’re not being addressed, republicans will win and do their damndest to stomp all over marginalized groups even more. This is why I vote (against them).

          Why did you zoom in on the “completely unwilling to stand for abortion right, trans rights, and debt forgiveness” part, but completely ignore the “Biden has Trump beat on deportations, police funding, military funding” part? BIDEN IS DOING his damndest to stomp all over marginalized groups, even more then Trump when it comes to those specific areas of contention

          Also not being willing to stand up to republicans in terms of abortion rights IS the same thing as “actively working against those or certain other causes”, in fact false alliance is worse than outright hostility, because it confuses and disarms marginalized people who look for allies

          Oppose him verbally, sure. But that has no effect

          Really? An entire country with every liberal and leftist org united against Trump and the only opposition would be verbal? And I thought I was a doomer

          Why is opposing him like this good, but opposing him with my vote bad?

          Because your vote strengthens the Ratchet Effect, as we’ve seen with Biden’s rightward shift

          I think my stumbling block in trying to understand this POV is that I do believe there is inherently a difference between voting for someone and voting against someone else

          If the person you’re voting FOR is doing the same or worse things than the person you’re voting AGAINST, then your politics are frankly incoherent and insincere, and you’ll end up valuing the lives of certain people over the lives of others, and at that point you might as well just become a republican

          • synae[he/him]
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            18 months ago

            Why did you zoom in on the “completely unwilling to stand for abortion right, trans rights, and debt forgiveness” part, but completely ignore the “Biden has Trump beat on deportations, police funding, military funding” part?

            I didn’t ignore it to be purposefully obtuse or willfully ignorant. Sorry if it came off that way. Perhaps I should have addressed that specifically; poor communication on my part. Also I know I’ve said it somewhere/elsewhere in the thread, but I’m not here to defend Biden or the Dems.

            The reason I didn’t address that part directly is because I agree with your assessment and conclusion on those matters. I focused on the other parts because I see those as part of the few differentiators between the parties.

            false alliance is worse than outright hostility

            This is an interesting point and one I’ll carry with me. Thanks.

            Really? An entire country with every liberal and leftist org united against Trump and the only opposition would be verbal? And I thought I was a doomer

            I mean, what happened last time? We spent four years screaming about all the bullshit he and his allies (and/or those that saw his shitstorm as useful cover for their own agenda) and what was the effect? I really believe it was harmful even; emboldening him, his allies, and the next wave of republicans emulating his style on the national stage.

            We can have a doomer-measuring contest if that’s what you’re into :)

            Because your vote strengthens the Ratchet Effect

            I’ve never heard that phrase, usually heard it called “shifting the overton window” but I do like the graphic. I guess it places more focus on the action and actors than the nebulous “general political climate”.

            So, with our ratchet, isn’t it helpful to stop turning the crank? Isn’t it worthwhile to cast a ballot or two if it keeps from moving a notch?

            I’d also add that I’m not saying casting a vote is the only action to take – and I’m not saying that you’re saying this about my position, either. But I’m picking up the impression throughout this thread that maybe folks think I’m only in favor voting and no additional action, which is not the case. Anyway, just something I thought I’d clarify.

            voting FOR is doing the same or worse things than the person you’re voting AGAINST

            Maybe this is where the disconnect is. In the sum total, I see one pile of shit to be slightly smaller than the other. That’s part of why I focused on the differentiating aspects between the parties that you mentioned.

    • Doubledee [comrade/them]
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      359 months ago

      I want to understand the point of view of “anti electoralism” – if that’s the right term.

      That’s relatively straightforward. Elections are a distraction, they redirect energy into a form the political order can digest without changing. The more you invest in them the less you are putting into alternatives that are more useful. Vote, if you want, it might do marginal good in an infinitesimal scale, but agonizing over voting is playing into a system that exists to funnel all your energy into itself.

      • synae[he/him]
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        29 months ago

        Vote, if you want, it might do marginal good in an infinitesimal scale, but agonizing over voting is playing into a system that exists to funnel all your energy into itself.

        I guess this is where I’m lost. They mail me ballots, I fill them out and mail them back. It’s almost the least I can do. If every person opposed to fascism did the same, I believe fascism’s encroachment would be slowed.

        • Doubledee [comrade/them]
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          449 months ago

          I don’t know what you mean. Democrats keep winning by the numbers. Fascism is still encroaching. It’s been encroaching my entire life, and Republicans have won the popular vote once in that time. People do vote. And this still happens.

          I’m not telling you not to, I keep saying it’s fine to do if you feel like it. So is watching a movie or getting a snack at 3 in the morning. You do you. But don’t act like it’s fixing anything. It clearly isn’t. That’s why you get to keep doing it.

          • synae[he/him]
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            29 months ago

            I’m not sure I understand your point. The way the popular vote influences the result is a travesty. But that doesn’t mean that voting (or not) in a way that encourages anti-suffrage is better. There’s no way things will improve by walking away - that just hands control to fascism faster.

            That’s why you get to keep doing it.

            By that same token, if it doesn’t do anything then why are some states working to expand voting and ease-of-voting versus some that are trying to restrict it in various ways? There’s a clear party divide on this topic in the US and one side is more fascist than the other.

            • Doubledee [comrade/them]
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              309 months ago

              Oh I see, yes I should clarify. Democrats keep literally winning elections, in addition to sometimes not winning them. Regardless of the result fascism gets no further away.

              Let’s not forget Obama, drone striking American citizens and their children without trial or warrant. Or all the money and weapons he gave the Saudis and Israelis to continue the project of violent extermination they were both embarked on. Or the way he aggressively pursued whistleblowers like Manning and Assange who tried to warn the public about the things the government was doing. Nobody forced him to do those things, he did them voluntarily.

              Let’s not forget that he rode into power in control of the entire government, both houses of congress, the Court and the executive, and did nothing to enshrine any protection against the reactionaries that he ostensibly dislikes. Why didn’t they codify abortion protections into law? Or take steps to secure voting rights, if those are so important? Why did they piss away their control of, again, ALL of the government? For what, Obamacare?

              Why is Joe building the wall for Trump, overturning regulations that protect sacred indigenous sites and wildlife to do so? Why the fuck are the cages still there? Why are we flying Venezuelans back to a country that our country’s policies have turned into a humanitarian disaster?

              I cannot reiterate enough how much it’s totally fine if you feel like voting for these people. Do it, if you want, you’ll contribute in an imperceptible way to the total vote count at the end, and that might be satisfying for you or, as I’ve acknowledged a few times, it might even mean some marginal benefit happens sometimes. I mean, not literally, your vote still doesn’t matter, whether you did or not would not have made the difference. But sometimes an okay thing might happen.

              I think it’s fine to do that. I think if you want things to change you should look at historically what sorts of things actually had to happen to defeat reactionaries. It’s basically never voting.

              • synae[he/him]
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                28 months ago

                (Well I wrote out a whole thing but then the lemmy web UI disappeared it somehow 🤦 … I’ll try to rewrite some variation of it)

                I understand and agree with your assessment of the dems, but to me this is exactly why the “lesser evil” argument sways me. Republicans would be doing all the same things, and worse - e.g., “don’t say gay” bills and other anti-lgbtq policies, rolling back abortion access, etc. Are dems wrong for not protecting those things when they had the chance? Yes – But Reps are the ones actually doing it.

                From my casual bystander reading of hexbear/lemmygrad content over the past few months, “totally fine if you feel like voting” was not a part of my understanding of the anti-electoralism sentiment I’ve read. My impression was more “that’s dumb, you’re dumb, anyone who votes is dumb” and no one with a conscience should vote. Which, to me, seems like simply handing over the keys to drive us off a cliff.

                Anyway, thanks for taking the time to write everything you have, and trying to help me understand. Cheers

        • BurgerPunk [he/him, comrade/them]
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          349 months ago

          If every person opposed to fascism did the same, I believe fascism’s encroachment would be slowed.

          That should be true. Its totally sound reasoning. Except the system in the US is designed to frustrate popular will and facilitate minority rule. Individuals simply voting their conscious will never solve anything within this system.

          Liberal democracy and the spectacle of the election, is a perfect vehicle for the rise of fascism, but it actively hinders what is needed to stop it

          • synae[he/him]
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            29 months ago

            Even if it’s designed to “frustrate popular will”, isn’t not voting frustrating that will even further? That just seems to be playing into their hands.

            To me, the question is accentuated further when considering those people who willingly give up their suffrage which many others fought and died for. And further with the sentiment of “If voting didn’t do anything, they wouldn’t try to stop certain people from doing it”.

            I can’t shake any of that when the barrier is so low and the stakes can (occasionally) be so high.

            • BurgerPunk [he/him, comrade/them]
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              269 months ago

              Even if it’s designed to “frustrate popular will”, isn’t not voting frustrating that will even further?

              No. And that’s not even what I’m saying. I’m saying individuals voting individually is pointless. Voting can only really matter as a collective action as part of an organized group or movement. In short, exactly what the people in the article are doing. Organizing to withhold votes in key districts unless demands are met is far more powerful and a better expression of democracy then what you’re talking about.

              To me, the question is accentuated further when considering those people who willingly give up their suffrage which many others fought and died for. And further with the sentiment of “If voting didn’t do anything, they wouldn’t try to stop certain people from doing it”.

              This is just lib shit. You’re not really engaging with what any of us are bringing up, especially if you think these silly clichés are worth mentioning. I’m sorry for being harsh, but i feel the need to be direct here

              I can’t shake any of that when the barrier is so low and the stakes can (occasionally) be so high

              No one is saying its hard to vote or cares if you or anyone does it. The larger point people here are making is that the spectacle of electoral politics and the illusion that individuals can engage in this low effort behavior and actually effect any meaningful change is a distraction that steals energy form organization and movement building which is the only way to effect change, and the only way that any political action, even electoralism, can accomplish anything.

              • synae[he/him]
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                28 months ago

                You’re not really engaging with what any of us are bringing up

                Certainly last night with my first few rounds of comments, it was hard(er) to do so since I was a little drunk which is what got me posting in the first place. I don’t mean that as an excuse, just by way of explanation.

                I want to engage and I am trying to understand your (and others’) perspective on this topic. I acknowledge that I am not as educated on the general topic and certainly not on the specific aspects that you and others have raised. I apologize for making my lack of education other people’s problem – though I am thankful everyone has been patient and generous with their time.

                I’m sorry for being harsh, but i feel the need to be direct here

                Despite my intoxication, I knew what I was getting into. And I appreciate your honesty and taking the time to try to help me understand.


                The larger point people here are making is that the spectacle of electoral politics and the illusion that individuals can engage in this low effort behavior and actually effect any meaningful change is a distraction that steals energy form organization and movement building which is the only way to effect change, and the only way that any political action, even electoralism, can accomplish anything.

                Thanks for emphasizing this point, which I did not grasp at all yesterday. After continuing the discussion today and reading what you and other have written, I feel have a better handle on it and understand this point of view better.

                • BurgerPunk [he/him, comrade/them]
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                  38 months ago

                  I was a little drunk which is what got me posting in the first place.

                  Totally fair, that makes a lot of sense. Yeah i wanted to be direct but i don’t really want to be harsh, since i think you’re asking genuine questions.

                  I’d also say like others have, that it’s fine if you vote. Some of us vote, and under certain circumstances some who generally don’t would, especially locally.

                  But we’re mostly communists here, so we reject capitalism and liberal democracy, and through historical example know that you can’t use liberal democracy to stop the oppression of the ruling class that controls liberal democracy. They won’t let their power be voted away, so that’s why we have the general attitude we do toward voting especially in national elections in the US.

                  Anyway, thanks for asking genuine questions. We can be a rough bunch, but we don’t have a problem explaining ourselves to people who genuinely want to understand. No one is born a communist and we were all ignorant of the things we know now at one time.

            • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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              118 months ago

              To me, the question is accentuated further when considering those people who willingly give up their suffrage which many others fought and died for. And further with the sentiment of “If voting didn’t do anything, they wouldn’t try to stop certain people from doing it”.

              You should be embarassed to have written this. Withholding votes is only a strategy when you are able to vote. A person with no access to food cannot go on a hunger strike.

              Also, the saying that you are butchering was originally “If voting could change anything, they’d make it illegal”.

              • synae[he/him]
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                18 months ago

                Withholding votes is only a strategy when you are able to vote.

                Yes, I understand that - for the most part I am trying to understand the general consensus around here that “voting is silly lib behavior”, so we as I understand it we are inherently talking about people who are able to vote, and the general recommendation that they should withhold their vote. If you want to include people who are not allowed to vote in a certain jurisdiction, I feel like that is a different conversation that I might not be equipped for (not to say I am feeling very equpped for this whole convo in the first place ;p ). But I’m happy to hear your thoughts regardless.

                Also, the saying that you are butchering was originally “If voting could change anything, they’d make it illegal”.

                Yes, I’m aware of that as well, others have riffed on it (or butchered, sure) to suit themselves and I was aiming for one of those variants I’ve heard in the past. Since it’s a pithy aphorism, I don’t find one particularly more true than another, nor that any should necessarily be taken literally. (I did say the “sentiment of” and I don’t mind sticking with it)

                Cheers

                • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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                  108 months ago

                  for the most part I am trying to understand the general consensus around here that “voting is silly lib behavior”,

                  While you will get different responses, generally the consensus is “Voting for dems as well as worry about voting on a personal level is silly lib behavior” Voting for a third party and being involved in some organized effort to extract concessions are both fine.

                  • synae[he/him]
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                    18 months ago

                    I see, thanks. That was not a distinction I was aware of; it really did seem to me like third parties are also generally eschewed by this community.

      • synae[he/him]
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        9 months ago

        Thanks for pointing out the discourse from elsewhere in the thread (and from history) , I’ll give it a skim-read soon and an honest sober read tomorrow

      • synae[he/him]
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        28 months ago

        So the part of this that stood out to me the most is this:

        Is the refusal to vote in this phony election a counsel of despair? No, it is dogged hope. It is hope that if twenty-five million voters refrain from voting in 1956 because of their own accord and not because of a sly wink from Khrushchev, this might make the American people ask how much longer this dumb farce can proceed without even a whimper of protest.

        Now we have ~80 million people abstaining in the 2020 elections (per NPR: https://www.npr.org/2020/12/15/945031391/poll-despite-record-turnout-80-million-americans-didnt-vote-heres-why), and yet the dumb farce goes on. If people continue removing themselves from the voter pool, it’ll still continue on. I’m failing to see the hope here. Maybe that’s why I’m having a hard time understanding this point of view.

        Thanks again for pointing me to that link.

    • redladadriver [none/use name]
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      28 months ago

      The problem here is that enabling violence in any form outside, leaks right back in. You don’t think the Anti-China rhetoric ramped up Anti-Asian violence in the United States? The Dems’ unconditional backing of the Israeli “human animals” treatment got a Palestinian boy and his mother stabbed to death in Chicago. Your vote is the ONLY bargaining chip you have in this “democracy” in North America. If you fail to apply conditions, you’re just rubber stamping any horrific policy that the administration enacts.