• @TokenBoomer
    link
    English
    16 months ago

    If you’re okay with people voting their conscience, then you can’t be upset when they do that. If you are upset when they don’t vote your way, that’s the policing of thought.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      16 months ago

      I’m fine with people voting with their conscience, but I just want folks to acknowledge whether or not their vote makes a trump presidency (therefore more genocide) more likely. Most people just seem to think “I’m not voting for genocide so my hands are clean and I’m good!” and stick their head in the sand.

      I’m not upset if they do, nor do I expect them to vote my way. I just want to encourage them to discuss the real world effects of their choice. I just want to make sure they’re internally consistent in their reasoning. For example, another commentor said they’ve voted for third party since 2008, and my response was for them to simply carry on doing so.

      You can label discourse as “thought policing”, but then that casts an extremely wide net that cheapens the term as used by Orwell.

      • @TokenBoomer
        link
        English
        0
        edit-2
        6 months ago

        People who are choosing not to vote for Biden are doing so because of a genocide that is happening NOW. You want to question them on contingent hypothetical real world results of a Trump presidency that may, or may not, happen in the FUTURE.

        You’re trying to scare voters by telling them a dragon 🐉 is outside, when a venomous hydra is already in the room with them.

        You’re concern trolling and “just asking questions,” it reeks of desperation.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          1
          edit-2
          6 months ago

          People who are choosing not to vote for Biden are doing so because of a genocide that is happening NOW. You want to question them on contingent hypothetical real world results of a Trump presidency that may, or may not, happen in the FUTURE.

          Oh so they can reason about a hypothetical future if they vote third party, but they can’t do so if it’s about a trump presidency? That’s hilarious. Or are you saying they unable reason about a hypothetical future at all?

          Holy shit my man I’m asking folks to tell me what THEY think is going to happen as a consequence of their actions. If their reasoning is so shit that that question shakes them to their core, get good.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              16 months ago

              I appreciate you defining that, but I don’t see anything that suggests most voters fall under that category - any chance you’d be able to dig that up?

              • @TokenBoomer
                link
                English
                16 months ago

                Sure.

                Unlike voters in many other industrialized countries, Americans tend to vote from this “retrospective” perspective. Studies show that Americans view elections – especially presidential ones – as a referendum on the past performance of an officeholder, a political party or the current administration.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  16 months ago

                  Thanks!

                  Do you think retrospective voters use the past to try and inform reasoning about the future?

                  IMO there has to be some level of this happening, otherwise retrospective voters would only have an opinion on those that already have served, and would be essentially picking from those who have not served at random.

                  • @TokenBoomer
                    link
                    English
                    16 months ago

                    It’s been a while since I read the study, but I think that was part of it. They used the past to inform opinions about the future.