• Ook the Librarian
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    1121 year ago

    If you like the ideas of the Green Party, vote for them at the local level. The fact that they don’t seem to want to govern at the local level is enough for me to ignore them as an option.

    • osarusan
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      1 year ago

      This needs to be said more than anything else.

      Politics NEVER changes from the top down. You don’t elect some absolute newcomer who circumvents all the normal paths and then completely revolutionizes the country. (At least not in a stable, functioning society.) Politics in the US happens from the ground up. Not top down.

      If any third party was serious about changing society, they would start at the local level. Then, after proving that they can enact meaningful change and bridge the divide between the huge political span that Americans hold, they would sweep their state elections and federal elections.

      All of these pie-in-the-sky parties who think that they will win the presidency and then somehow enact society-changing legislation (_the president doesn’t make laws!!!_) are either fools or charlatans.

    • Flying Squid
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      151 year ago

      vote for them at the local level.

      They only run in a handful of local races. I’ve lived in both a red state and a blue state- Indiana and California- in multiple districts and I have never once seen a green party candidate on the local level.

      • Ook the Librarian
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        301 year ago

        That is literally my point. Ignore them until they seem to want governance as opposed to only seeing them in national headlines tilting at windmills. It’s worthless.

        If you like Stein’s platform, voting for Stein will decrease the likelihood of you ever seeing such a policy implemented. If, say, a state rep. runs on a Green platform, they would likely get my vote.

        • Flying Squid
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          51 year ago

          I know it was your point. I was supporting it.

          • Ook the Librarian
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            91 year ago

            Cool. I really hate the English use of “you” when “one” is really the word one wants. But when one uses “one” as opposed to “you”, one sounds crazy.

            I honestly think a lot of online defensiveness arises from this construction.

            I’m saying, it sounds like I’m saying “you need to do blah cuz you’re wrong about blah”, when I would prefer it to be read as reiterating my earlier point of “if one wants to see Green policies enacted, one would do well to ignore Jill Stein.”

            • Flying Squid
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              31 year ago

              I think you’re probably right about that.

            • @Bernie_Sandals
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              11 year ago

              Someone should start a community for the use of one instead of you.

    • Shazbot
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      141 year ago

      Gayle McLaughlin used to be the Green Party’s best example of what they could do at the local level, until she left in 2016 to vote for Bernie Sanders. I’m fairly certain she is the outlier.

      • Ook the Librarian
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        51 year ago

        Right. I do believe that many members of the Green Party are good political options. It’s just they as a party don’t rally around them. They only seem to push for the presidency. I don’t see how they can hope to accomplish anything when they seem to shoot for the moon every four years, and only manage to spoil things.

        Until I start seeing good options on the ballots from the Greens, I will just continue to hope the progressives win the dem. primaries for my local seats.

        • osarusan
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          21 year ago

          They only seem to push for the presidency

          This is the key indicator and red flag that they are a clown party that isn’t serious about politics. They’re in it for the attention and the money.

    • @goldenlocks
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      -71 year ago

      They can’t run local level candidates without funding. All you do is complain instead of help.

      • Ook the Librarian
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        61 year ago

        I’m a voter, my friend. I can complain about a party all damn day. If you think that a political party is going get a dime from me before they can even convince me to vote for them, you have strange spending habits.

          • Ook the Librarian
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            31 year ago

            It’s not that I don’t care about local politics. You sending a link that’s relevant to other people’s local politics is completely irrelevant to me. Until the GP option is common on local ballots, not just 5 featured ones, I do not want hear about a presidential run.

            By the way, I do commemorate you on your outreach and activism. You’re getting shit on in this thread, and you’re still politely getting your links out. Good work.

      • @kerrigan778
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        21 year ago

        And they can run presidential candidates without funding??? What the heck are you talking about?

        • @goldenlocks
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          -21 year ago

          It’s easier to raise awareness of the campaign, and yes they historically get much more attention and funding.