• @papertowels
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    6 months ago

    I’ve asked folks who aren’t voting for Biden what they think the odds of their vote reducing genocide in the real world is, and all I’ve gotten is crickets.

    Given that there doesn’t seem to be much confidence there, the real world results are likely trump or biden.

    Trump has folks in his party alluding to nukes when saying Palestine has to be ended quickly, even trump himself has stated that Israel has to end the war quickly. Therefore I suggest that Trump will result in far more lives lost than Biden.

    Folks on Lemmy are typically left-leaning.

    This means that a Lemmy user voting third party could’ve been a vote for Biden, which in a binary choice results in less lives lost. Yes, I know, Biden centrist, etc etc, but he’s to the left of the absolute insanity that is the republican party.

    However instead some folks value a clean conscience over real world results, and vote third party/abstain. If these votes would’ve otherwise gone to Biden, then they have made a trump presidency more likely, which has the real world effect of resulting in more lives lost.

    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.

    • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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      26 months ago

      So, you’re okay with not having a clean conscience? Or, other voters should be okay with not having a clear conscience? If Biden winning is more important to you than having a clean conscience. Vote for him. But don’t pressure people that choose to have a clear conscience.

      Unless thought police is on your bucket list.

      • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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        6 months ago

        From my perspective, they are implying that your belief that voting third party or abstaining gives you a clear conscience makes you a self-centered, arrogant fool. Because the result of your action (or inaction) will increase the likelihood of the more bad thing happening.

        To me, that’s not a clear conscience. That’s ignorance. That’s explicitly choosing to ignore the consequences of your (in)action. That’s short-sightedness to the degree that someone would expect of a preschooler. One with behavioral problems.

        • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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          16 months ago

          That’s a lot of words to say you are okay with genocide. I’m not gonna castigate voters for voting against a candidate that enables it. Maybe I’ll change my mind once I get to middle school. It depends on how long recess is.

          • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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            6 months ago

            I did not say I’m okay with genocide.

            Our choices this election are genocide with a side of an untoppped baked potato, or genocide with a side of radioactive flaming diarrhea.

            There is no third option. The third option is that the waiter brings you one of the two and you have to accept it.

            At least one way, we get a bland potato. It sucks, but that’s the way this restaurant is run. We can’t just get up and go to another restaurant. But, maybe if we can just find it to ignore the genocide (which, by the way, the chef is really limited in what they can do without the support of the rôtisseur, especially when he gets a couple line cooks to side with him), we might be able to have no genocide next time we come back. Otherwise, we’re all gonna get sick being close to all the radioactive diarrhea and the whole place is gonna get shut down.

      • @papertowels
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        16 months ago

        You’re implying that asking people what they think the real world results of their choices are is being the thought police? That seems a little… diluted.

          • @papertowels
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            16 months ago

            I’m not getting how you got to that conclusion, can you flesh it out a little more?

            • @TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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              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.

              • @papertowels
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                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@lemmy.world
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                  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.

                  • @papertowels
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                    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.

      • @papertowels
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        6 months ago

        What’d he have to do to earn it? It’s hard to think about Lemmy users as a whole, what about you in particular?

          • @papertowels
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            16 months ago

            Ah, it sounds like you’d typically vote third party to begin with.

            If that’s the case, then your vote was never going to go to Biden to begin with, so all of the above doesn’t really apply.

            • Victoria Antoinette
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              16 months ago

              i haven’t voted for a democrat for president since 2008, but it’s not as though they don’t know how to earn it. they don’t want it.

              • @papertowels
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                6 months ago

                And that is fair.

                I should’ve been more explicit - what I posted is focused on folks who are single issue voting here.

                EDIT: If Palestine is the only thing someone cares about, voting third party is likely actually hurting their cause. However you are choosing who to vote for based on many additional issues, which is why this doesn’t really apply to you.

    • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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      16 months ago

      Voting third party right now also just perpetuates both parties. There are enough people in this country to elect anyone from the major parties, so a third party can’t win unless one of those parties collapses. The only way a party collapses is when it consistently loses elections.

      The republicans won’t consistently lose elections as long as progressives don’t vote for democrats, so both parties will continue on. The majority of the people in this country are left of center, so the only way republicans win is by suppressing votes, and one of the ways they do that is by propping up progressive third party candidates.

      If we truly want a progressive party, making sure republicans never win elections is the way to do it. Then either the Democratic Party will shift left and republicans will regroup under a new less extreme conservative party, or the Democratic Party will shift right as it absorbs all the republicans and a new progressive left party will rise. Both ways result in a more progressive set of major parties.