• @go_go_gadget
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    57 months ago

    Then it makes even less sense to vote for a third party because you know it doesn’t do anything.

    I can stay home if that would make you feel better?

    If we can get rid of fptp voting system

    Never going to happen with the kind of candidates who make it through the primaries.

    By no stretch of the imagination did I even remotely suggest I get to choose who you vote for.

    Ok then accept I’m going to vote 3rd party and stop trying to convince me to do something else.

    • @[email protected]
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      -47 months ago

      I can stay home if that would make you feel better?

      This is the second bad faith argument you’ve made. Why?

      Never going to happen with the kind of candidates who make it through the primaries.

      Which is why I said you have to work from the ground up.

      Ok then accept I’m going to vote 3rd party and stop trying to convince me to do something else.

      I’m defending being rational and reasonable. Even if it won’t convince you, it might stop some other person who reads this from irrationally acting counter productive to their interests.

      • @go_go_gadget
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        57 months ago

        There is no course of action which is productive to our interests.

        As an aside, hypothetically, if you had a choice between:

        1. Shipping weapons to Israel
        2. Biden wins the 2024 election

        Which would you choose? You can only pick one and there is no third option in this purely hypothetical situation.

        • @[email protected]
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          -27 months ago

          There is no course of action which is productive to our interests.

          If you honestly believe this, then the only rational move is to use your vote strategically to increase the chances of the viable candidate - who most closely aligns with your belief - getting elected. Effectively throwing your vote away on an unviable candidate increases the chances of the candidate less like you will win.

          Play the game you’re playing, not the one you wish you were.

          And to answer your question, definitely 2. Although I believe i’m missing something.

          • @go_go_gadget
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            7 months ago

            Play the game you’re playing, not the one you wish you were.

            I am. I hope to demonstrate the Democrat party is non-viable when it refuses to make material compromises with leftists and progressives.

      • @[email protected]
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        47 months ago

        Not a bad faith argument, and characterizing it as that is disingenuous.

        They’re telling you: the ways in which they are willing to participate in the system is to vote for someone they actually care about, or to let the system run itself into the ground. It’s kindof akin to “live free or die”.

        If the mentality of “live free or die” does not sound reasonable to you, you are welcome to pursue your own brand of reason. Clearly, they will pursue theirs.

        The issue at hand is that the system stops working when people vote based on perceived power. Yes, we should also work to change the system. But the other person is not at all alone in having little faith in the system - and really, that’s what’s holding the system up, mostly - the faith it constantly breaks.

        • @[email protected]
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          -17 months ago

          It is absolutely 100% bad faith because they knew exactly what I meant and “staying home” is effectively the same. It was even couched in dismissiveness with the “if that makes you feel better” part.

          If the mentality of “live free or die” does not sound reasonable to you, you are welcome to pursue your own brand of reason.

          But to defend it like this, maybe you actually can’t see right through it. Or, maybe you just think bad faith arguments are good arguments.

          • @[email protected]
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            37 months ago

            The dismissiveness and “if that makes you feel better” is necessary because you’re getting hot and bothered about what they’re doing in their life. It’s not a bad-faith argument - they are simply telling you the other option they are willing to take. Which they know, I know, you know, and everybody who reads this thread knows is not your preferred outcome, but it clearly demonstrates that that is more of an option to them than toeing the party line in a broken system that they lack faith in.

            Regardless of what you consider it, I consider it a reasonable argument and tells you where they stand.

            • @[email protected]
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              -27 months ago

              Regardless of the reason for it, it was a bad faith argument, because it doesn’t change anything about the point I made. And you still have not addressed this.

              I consider it a reasonable argument and tells you where they stand.

              “they know, I know, you know, and everybody who reads this thread knows” where they stand. This isn’t hard to grasp. What I’m pointing out is that their response to it is irrational. We both agree that we would prefer it be different. The difference between us is I understand the game we are playing, and understand I should be using my vote with that in mind. The other poster is just going to throw it away due to vanity, as actually voting third party does absolutely nothing to solve anything.

              • @[email protected]
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                37 months ago

                Their response is not irrational. They feel unrepresented by the system, so they would rather let it fall to pieces and fight, if it comes to that.

                The difference is that you wish to win, following the rules of the game. They want to change the game. Perhaps your method will work, perhaps it won’t. But letting it escalate will definitely bring change. Perhaps it will be change they end up hating. Perhaps it’ll be what they want. Either way, things change. Implicit abuses of authority are hard to fight unless you have a solid bead on the issues. Explicit abuses of authority at least give you a target - and if things have gotten to the point of war, you can actually shoot at that target.

                In any case, rationality is often the enemy of action. A thousand people waiting until they have the definitively right direction end up doing little. A thousand people with a rough idea of what they want, and willing to take action, win, lose, or draw, will get things done.

                This relates to the whole “reality-based community” issue.

                • ObliviousEnlightenment
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                  07 months ago

                  Some of us are the people the other side wants dead. Taking the gamble on that change is literally risking our lives. I’d much rather a broken government that won’t oppress me to a functional one that will, and anyone who’d argue against that is arguing for betting my life on a positive change

                  • @[email protected]
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                    17 months ago

                    They are likely risking their own lives, too, whether or not they know it. But even of they are not, it is their prerogative to vote or not to vote, or to vote for whom they wish, regardless of your opinion, and even if that takes humanity in a direction that means we will have to fight for our freedom again. The cost of freedom has always been paid in blood. Force must be applied to those who attempt to force us, and only to the point that we are freed from their influence, lest we act as they do, and be bound by the consequences of making the same poor decisions.

                    It’s weird watching the Democrats give the government additional powers, and watching the Republicans use those powers for power’s sake. And the Democrats seem shocked every time, and then when they have power, and the option to relinquish that power for both sides, they do not.

                    We have not ceased and will not cease being in a world of tooth and claw, and of animal necessity. If you think you’re better than that, you’ll overreach, and get bitten. …and that’s the democrats and republicans - the overreach, and the bite, back and forth in different ways, ongoing, cycling like yin and yang until we have enough cultural experience to naturally do better - if we make it that far. …and that involves reaching across the aisle, and understanding your ‘enemy’ well enough that you ‘get’ it, on a visceral level.

                    But, most people don’t do that, because, y’know. Filthy centrists that may as well be the other party, and all. Fortunately, being genuinely rooted in centrist concepts has benefits far beyond the political game.

                • @[email protected]
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                  07 months ago

                  Their response is not irrational. They feel unrepresented by the system, so they would rather let it fall to pieces and fight, if it comes to that.

                  Except I was feeling them out for what is their ultimate goal, and at no point did they say anything about the whole system falling apart. You are trying to rationalize their actions, but it is, frankly, just irrational. But even if it were “let the whole system fall apart” that’s also irrational because, chances are, it’s not them that is going to come out on top. It will continue to be people who currently have the power.

                  The difference is that you wish to win, following the rules of the game. They want to change the game

                  Not mutually exclusive. I understand the game I am playing, and play with those rules, and act rationally within those rules. I understand that you don’t change this by voting third party for president. I know that might feel good, like you are doing something, making your voice heard. But it’s just pissing in the wind. If one wants to change this, it comes from the floor up, and it’s something I do push locally as well.

                  In any case, rationality is often the enemy of action. A thousand people waiting until they have the definitively right direction end up doing little.

                  We do know the way forward, it’s working from the ground up. It’s getting our election system changed. No single president can change this, which is exactly why protesting the presidential election in this way is pointless.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    27 months ago

                    I’ve already said what i have to say. …I doubt you’ve convinced them, but it’s good you have a passion and are pressing that direction. I understand that you think their take is irrational. I don’t think their take is irrational, though it’s not how I view things. Same as with yours.

                    In any case, it’s good you have a passion for a way forward, and it sounds like you’re willing to pursue it. You’ll still have to accept the existence of those who don’t think like you, and who don’t agree with you, and wish to live their lives their own way. You either make room for them, or you fight them - and it seems like you have other, more important battles, which have a higher likelihood of success than trying to stop someone from thinking the way they do.

                    Goodnight, and goodbye - say your final piece, and make it good for those who come after, since that’s your real audience. Above all, though, I hope life is interesting and enjoyable for you.