• mochisuki@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    This is the same tone set by the people who whined that we were refusing to vote for Biden and oh look now Biden isn’t in the race anymore because we refused to accept him.

    Keep accepting the one candidate that they spoon in front of us without asking if we actually want that one

    • NeptuneOrbit@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      It’s a little different because people complained, Pelosi (aka the party listened) acted.

      I our current political system, the game theory just doesn’t work for much besides a two party system.

    • Xtallll@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 months ago

      This is the same tone set by the people who whined that we were refusing to vote for Gore and oh look Nader didn’t win Bush did.

    • Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Biden being forced out is a great example.

      Democrats will only appeal to people not voting for them already. People showing them they won’t vote for Genocide you already changes policy.

      When the pressure gets too high Democrats will cave. If they want your vote make them work for it never let them fearmonger you into giving it for free. Jill Stein 2024 baby.

    • curiousaur@reddthat.com
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      7 months ago

      Exactly.

      Its applying leverage to the party saying meet these criteria or get spoiled. It’s basically a union for protest votes, and it’s effective. Which makes it extremely important in the current two party system because it’s the only way certain issues will get addressed.

    • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      Biden didn’t drop out because some online leftists refused to vote for him, he dropped out because big donors that back the Democrats wanted him to.

  • index@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    The parties are already there or you couldn’t vote them, this example is stupid. Supporting parties with blood in their hands is endorsing evil.

    • YeetPics@mander.xyz
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      7 months ago

      Look, you’re either saying america is a functional democracy or no citizens are on the hook for the crimes of the government.

      Which is it again?

    • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      Voting for a third party, like trying to walk through a third door, is an indication of intent. Going through the door would be getting them elected to office.

      And yes, supporting a party would be endorsing whatever evil policies the party supports—but voting isn’t an act of endorsement. Nobody knows how you vote; it has no meaning as a personal statement. Its only meaning is in the differential effects of the policies of the two candidates your vote decides between, in the most likely scenario in which it is the deciding vote.

      You absolutely should support and endorse a party you believe in, but don’t mistake voting in a presidential election for either of those things.

      • index@sh.itjust.works
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        7 months ago

        Voting is a direct act of endorsement

        Its only meaning is in the differential effects of the policies of the two candidates your vote decides between

        There aren’t only two candidates.

        You absolutely should support and endorse a party you believe in, but don’t mistake voting in a presidential election for either of those things.

        There’s no confusion, a party perpetrating war and genocide is evil and if you support them you are evil too.

        • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.worldOP
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          7 months ago

          Voting is a direct act of endorsement

          endorse | verb [with object]
          to declare one’s public approval or support of.

          Your vote is expressly not public—you’re prohibited from keeping or sharing any proof of your vote.

          There aren’t only two candidates.

          In the event that your vote actually decides the election, it does so by giving the winner one more vote than the runner-up; at that point those are the only two candidates at issue. And that’s the only event in which your vote matters.

          • index@sh.itjust.works
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            7 months ago

            Spin it as much as you want. Anyone supporting, endorsing, or voting for a party with blood in his hand fueling a genocide is directly complicit in the crime

            • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Go ahead and feel morally superior as your protest vote enables someone way worse to hurt way more people. All the women dying of ectopic pregnancies or sepsis from stillbirths they cannot abort are on you. The GOP will let Russia have Ukraine where they will rape and murder anyone who resists, and they will unconditionally increase funding for Israel’s genocidal land grab.

              And you will think, “that’s not my fault, I voted for the not evil one.”

              But that’s not true, because you could have voted for the person who is willing to negotiate on those things, but you chose to feel better about yourself instead of actually help anyone.

              • index@sh.itjust.works
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                7 months ago

                Supporting and voting a party complicit in a genocide is not just a “feeling”. Dozens of kids are being murdered daily in gaza, this is already the worst scenario.

                All the women dying of ectopic pregnancies or sepsis from stillbirths they cannot abort are on you.

                Wrong, these are on people voting for the red and blue party which for a century have been cycling in power promoting the same authoritarian politics.

                The GOP will let Russia have Ukraine where they will rape and murder anyone who resists

                I encourage you to read about the cold war and check how many military bases the us has spread all over the world. I also encourage you to read about ukraine government corruption and their authoritarian measures and lastly i encourage you to check who usa and russia are in partnership with.

                • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  And if Trump wins because of your “morally superior” choice you’ll have only succeeded in helping Israel exterminate them faster. There will not be any discussions about whether to pause or halt shipments of arms.

            • vatlark@lemmy.worldM
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              7 months ago

              This post was reported for disinformation. To me this post reads like an opinion and hyperbole.

              If we do assume that the post is making a factual claim; I’m not a lawyer and I don’t know if voting has ever been used to claim that someone is complicit in a crime. Im open to being pointed to evidence.

            • YeetPics@mander.xyz
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              7 months ago

              I blame the Armenian genocide on you and you alone.

              Deny it all you want, you were complicit AF.

    • Caveman@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      You’ll get a boatload of spoiler effect elections until people start voting tactically again. Third parties need to start locally and not participate in the presidential elections for a long time.

      There is a path to voter reform by creating hung parliament and require voter reform in a coalition agreement. Once dominant running for governor or a senator becomes possible.

    • TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      No you won’t.
      But if you put door in while building the house (local and primary elections) you’ll have installed it at the right time.

    • OpenStars@discuss.online
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      7 months ago

      Especially if you ram that not-door long, hard, deep, and strong enough, really get up in there and penetrate that wall. If you run out of steam you could even switch to an electric appliance, but in that case be gentle (though not too gentle…).

      Um… I’m not sure where this is going, and at this point I’m afraid to continue? 😔

      • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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        7 months ago

        Depends on how cheap the drywall is.

        You may avoid brain damage, but your get cancer form the dust on the way through.

      • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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        7 months ago

        so not only would you have an extra door you’d still be smarter than people voting 3rd party in a first past the post system. Win/Win

    • index@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      Math doesn’t decide what people vote, they are free to vote anything they want. Parties don’t automatically side with each others because another is most likely to win. This video is rooted in the mindset that politics and elections are a horse race between left and right.

      What’s preventing third parties from winning it’s not math but the propaganda and the power of the red and blue party. The ruling parties didn’t become this powerful mathematically. Over decades and centuries the ruling class paved their way and ensured their power with violence and repression.

      • Big_Boss_77@lemmynsfw.com
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        7 months ago

        If third parties aren’t mathematically impossible, where are all members of third party during midterms? Local elections? The work it takes to make real lasting change is done down ballot, where are they at those times? Why do they only creep up during presidential races? The above analogy may not be perfect, but it’s pretty damned close… but we could also compare third party to all the lazy animals in the story of the little red hen…

        In case your not familiar with the children’s story…

        • index@sh.itjust.works
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          7 months ago

          The government spend billions of dollars to make sure third parties are nowhere to be seen. This post being evidence. You got a fascist party and one involved in a genocide yet you see warnings about not voting for anyone else.

          • Big_Boss_77@lemmynsfw.com
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            7 months ago

            It doesn’t take a whole lot of money to run for city council, local officials, sherif, alderman. It takes a bit, but not millions to run for state government positions. Are you saying the federal government is quashing local and state third parties? That is where you make your sweeping electoral reforms for federal elections. Why don’t we ever hear about them making moves in those races? Where are they when I go to vote for my city council? My county commissioners? Are you telling me the federal government is coming down and removing them from ballots?

            That’s a pretty serious accusation, and I’d love to see some sources on that, because I’m with you all the way if that’s the case.

            But when you’ve got someone who was wined and dined by an impotent dictator, and a half dozen of his cronies and yes men coming in and trying to split the vote for the best chance of preventing a take over by the impotent dictator’s choice clown… and then suddenly you’ve got people toting her banner when she’s been largely silent the past 3.5 years… it kind of makes you wonder, or it should… assuming you’ve got more than 3 braincells reenacting the DVD screen saver.

            • index@sh.itjust.works
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              7 months ago

              Why don’t we ever hear about them making moves in those races?

              Because mass media are own by government and rich people. If you try to compete with them they take you down

              • Big_Boss_77@lemmynsfw.com
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                7 months ago

                I see a few bits of information about it happening at the presidential election level, but I’m not finding anything at the state and local level. Can you provide some sources on that?

    • bradinutah@thelemmy.club
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      7 months ago

      This is the way. It is possible and unlikely to have a third party win under the right conditions, like with how the Republican Party became a national party after Lincoln was elected as a third party candidate. But ultimately there will always only be two parties with the outdated FPTP voting method. If only George Washington knew about and pushed for a better voting system than FPTP.

      • barsquid@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        IMO, it’s not the full story to say the Republican party was a third party that year. The previous opposition to the Democrats had a rift and came apart. I think you are underselling what “the right conditions” are. This is more like a new party filling a void.

        That year the Democrats themselves (regressives as this was well before Southern Strategy) split into two. Running both a candidate for “states’ rights” style slavery and another for “fuck you, slavery everywhere” style slavery.

      • Norah (pup/it/she)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        7 months ago

        I don’t think they really existed yet in his era. You’ve got to remember that Australia, a much younger country, invented the secret ballot. It was known as the “Australian Ballot” for a long time.

        • bradinutah@thelemmy.club
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          7 months ago

          Better systems existed but to your point, they were not well known.

          Leaders today, with access to Wikipedia if not researchers with Nobel prizes, do NOT have this excuse.

        • pressanykeynow@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I don’t think they really existed yet in his era

          In 1294-1621 the election of the Pope used Approval voting. Venice also used it.

          Australia, a much younger country, invented the secret ballot

          The election of the Pope required secret ballot since 1621. And the concept existed since Ancient Greece and was used in elections and courts of Roman Republic.

      • index@sh.itjust.works
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        7 months ago

        All it takes is a bunch of celebrities endorsing third parties and it’s done. At some point in your lifetime you will probably see a third party winning in the usa and it will simply happen with media and celebrities redirecting everyone vote. It happens all the time in other countries: people get tired of the local rulers and to keep protests and disorder at bay the government through mass media redirects attentions to a new and fresh party that already got bribed and corrupted by the ruling class.

    • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      I like CGP Grey and all, but power dynamics is an important aspect of poltics. An aspect he completely ignores in favour of spreadsheet thinking.

      Yeah so proportional representation systems kinda suck. Israel has one and it ended up with a conservative party making concessions to far right crazies to form a coalition. Sure minorities are in the parliament, but they have zero power because the only thing that matters is the backroom negotiations between parties to form a coalition.

      The biggest problem with FPTP is the name. Really we should call it a community representation system (which is what it is) and call proportional representation system a “party coalition” system, which is what it actually is. In a party coalition system the negotiations between party leaders to form coalitions is all that matters, everyone else is just there to fill seats which are owned by the parties.

      In a community representation system each seat is own by a representative of the community who can vote against their party or leave their party. Parties are incentivized to keep the community leaders happy or they could lose seats.

      If you want third parties, it’s better to go with a ranked choice system. That gives people more choice over who represents their community, and allow them to have compromise options in case their top choice doesn’t get enough votes. You don’t actually have to give parties full ownership of the seats (making them redundant) to have more options.

      • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 months ago

        Yeah so proportional representation systems kinda suck. Israel has one

        If you’re going to use a genocidal cult as your counter-example to democracy, why not just talk about the nazis?

      • bss03@infosec.pub
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        7 months ago

        I also generally prefer a Condorcet Method (ranked choice, single winner) over mixed-member-proportional, but either one would be a massive improvement over our current system.

        I’ll take Approval voting, even.

      • OpenStars@discuss.online
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        7 months ago

        An aspect he completely ignores in favour of spreadsheet thinking.

        That’s bc he explains each concept mostly in isolation of others, leaving other concepts for separate videos themselves. But in e.g. Rules for Rulers, he very much discusses power dynamics. And I thought he had another one - in addition to the more mathematical one - illustrating FPTP using the animal kingdom, where technically people might assume one thing to be true, but based on power dynamics in practice it never is.

        So watch Rules for Rulers yet if you haven’t - it may change literally everything about your understanding, as it did mine.

        Edit - references:

        1. FPTP explanained mathematically

        2. gerrymandering explained separately

        3. rules for Rulers, outlining necessary considerations involved with any path forward - i.e. it works against anyone and especially those who ignore this principle

        • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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          7 months ago

          Yeah I’ve seen all of these videos before. Problem is, these aren’t isolated concepts. There are very specific power dynamics within a proportional representation system that aren’t the same as the power dynamics in a community representation system. He doesn’t go into those details in the rules for rulers videos, only the broad concept of democracy is mentioned. He only goes into a some math on the FPTP video but doesn’t discuss the differences power dynamics for those different systems.

          Basically in a community representation system (called FPTP by people trying to make it sound arbritrary an unfair) the power flows up from the communities. In a proportional representation system the power flows down from the party leadership.

          Considering the “rules for rulers” video it seems CGP Grey thinks all government has to be top down, so he doesn’t seem to have even considered the possibility of power flowing upwards from a community. This is what happens in the system he thinks is bad, so I’d say he hasn’t adequately considered everything about the subject.

          We don’t actually elect rulers we elect people to represent our communities. Sure they’re usually part of a party but because we elect representatives, not parties, that representative has the option of leaving the party if it serves the interests of the community they represent. Since parties can lose seats between elections they have to listen to the the elected representatives (community leaders) to avoid losing seats. People in a community put pressure on their representative, the reps but pressure on the party leadership, power flows upwards from the people.

          Proportional representation only seems better if you think as CGP does and believe we can only be ruled over and we need to find a better way to select rulers. It’s a fundamental misunderstanding of representative democracy.

          • Eyron@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            It seems you are mixing the concepts of voting systems and candidate selection. FPP nor FPP should not sound scary. As a voting systems, FPP works well enough more often than many want to admit. The name just describes it in more detail: either First Preference Plurality.

            Every voting system is as bottom-up or top-down as the candidate selection process. The voting system itself doesn’t really affect whether it is top down or bottom up. Requiring approval/voting from the current rulers would be top-down. Only requiring ten signatures on a community petition is more bottom up.

            The voting systems don’t care about the candidate selection process. Some require precordination for a “party”, but that could also be a party of 1. A party of 1 might not be able to get as much representation as one with more people: but that’s also the case for every voting system that selects the same number of candidates.

            Voting systems don’t even need to be used for representation systems. If a group of friends are voting on where to eat, one problem might be selecting the places to vote on, but that’s before the vote. With the vote, FPP might have 70% prefer pizza over Indian food, but the Indian food vote might still win because the pizza voters had another first choice. Having more candidates often leads to minority rule/choice, and that’s not very good for food choice nor community representation.

          • OpenStars@discuss.online
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            7 months ago

            He seems to think like a mathematician or philosopher and enjoyed considering each of those items separately, in isolation from one another - plus as a YouTuber, he needs to release moar content, moar often, so multiple videos helps him maintain his existence that way as opposed to a single, larger video, especially on a complex topic that since it is >1 minute long, the vast majority of people are not going to watch anyway.:-P

            But anyway, if he’s already mathematically proved certain things about e.g. ranked-choice, and how it differs from whatever else, then why should he bother going further into the weeds, that the vast majority of people don’t care the tiniest bit about? After all, a look at basically every election ever, especially recently, reveals that the common people know next to nothing about how the system works. e.g. people voting against Hillary Clinton in 2016, either by voting 3rd party, or switching to the “Never Hillary” movement to actively vote for Trump, but then being shocked - shocked I tell you! SHOOKETH! - when he won. So if we can’t figure out that 1+1=2, then differential calculus, much less simple algebra, is going to be beyond us (collectively) as well.

            So, I took it as not that he refused to consider those other possibilities, just that he was focusing his description to explain one thing in isolation of other concepts, as much as possible at least. e.g. regardless of whether he should have been talking about (or naming it as) FPTP, that’s what he was aiming to do, so that’s what he did.

            About the Rules for Rulers I think similarly as above but also: the “rulers” there aren’t necessarily the ones in charge, as is true for the monarchies & totalitarian regimes, but rather the “voters” who put those people in charge. In that formulation, why should the non-voters (e.g. literal children, people who are mentally disabled, etc.) have power over & above that of the voters, i.e. the responsible “rulers”?

            Although that is exactly what always ends up happening… eventually, in any such system. Imagine a person who votes, individually, but then also is responsible for gerrymandering a district of lets say a million people. So they should have had power equal to 1/1000000, though instead they overturned the decisions of those million people and single-handedly altered the election, FAR in excess of their individual voting power. They cannot overturn the collective weight of a full million voters all speaking with a single unified voice… but they could make a vote for e.g. 1/10th vs. 9/10ths end up with the former rather than the latter being in charge, which is pretty damn powerful (it doesn’t have to be “perfect”, it just has to work - possibly in conjunction with other things like removing certain classes of people as voters). So here, irl rather than in pure theory in isolation of irl considerations, “rulers” end up NOT being the voters, but rather those in charge b/c they are willing to cheat the system, to keep themselves in charge or at least others exactly like them, using non-voting schemes. i.e. it is the True Rulers™ who are “in charge” rather than the voting ones, who were put into place by non-voting systems, so the entire system gets turned upon its head and does if not 100% then still effectively the opposite of what it was originally intended to - that is, it ignores/overturns votes rather than uses them to determine the outcomes of elections.

            So if we, the aspiring rulers i.e. voters, wish to actually rule, then we need to know what we are up against. And if others cheat… well then that does not mean that we have to as well, but we should at least be aware that that is what is going on!?! To some degree at least, even if not 100%, hence it is “biased” and “unfair” and “rigged”. That is what I took from those videos, collectively.

    • Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      In Australia government funding is distributed to political parties based on the number of first preference votes they get as well so even if your first choice doesn’t get in, you still helped them by putting them first.

      • x00za@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 months ago

        Yeah, even getting a party 1 seat can be great. They are required to be heard. They can raise issues which the other parties must address.

  • eestileib@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    Primary elections are how parties change. Primary elections are how the Republican party became what it is today. They are often the highest-leverage vote you can cast if you’re in a solid district.

    • reallykindasorta@slrpnk.net
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      7 months ago

      Primary elections aren’t democratic either (see party delegates). I feel like people who say this are rarely politically engaged in their communities. Same with the people who say to get involved in local city politics to make change.

      Ultimately you’re supporting a facist system that is historically atrocious and currently financially supporting a genocide almost singlehandedly but go ahead and keep telling people that the best way to maintain some semblance of moral character is to vote in this sham.

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      7 months ago

      Yup. People don’t realize there is already a not horrible approximation of runoff voting that still avoids the spoiler effect.

      And just look at what happened when Sanders realized that. He went from being a meme about how nobody watches C-SPAN to one of the more influential politicians on the Left.

      • NewNewAccount@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Remind me who won in 2016? How do you think all those Bernie supporters felt about the election that was still very much influenced by FPTP dynamics.

      • davidgro@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Primaries are still subject to spoiler effects and such.

        In my very blue state this year where the top two in the primary go on to the general, there was a local position which had a whole bunch of well qualified Democrats vs just a couple of Republicans. (Incumbent not running)

        The dem vote was split enough that we very nearly had just the two Republicans in the general. Like less than 60 votes away.

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          7 months ago

          And there are scenarios under runoff voting where similar can occur (e.g. two seats, 2 right wing, 4 left wing) and is where the “election theory” aspect of things that certain folk are still bitching about (because that is the most important thing to have happened in the past 8 years, clearly). The party needs to take the results of the primary and downselect who actually runs to avoid splitting their own vote.

          No voting system is perfect. But people should really understand what we have and what their NEED improves and fails to improve rather than just insisting “new is better”.

      • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        Well I’d say it’s still pretty bad with the super delegates and such. But yeah it’s runoff system of sorts and people should pay more attention to it.

        But a lot of the “system is broken” angst comes from people being not happy over who the majority of people vote for. But that’s just democracy, baby.

        But the Electoral College, yeah that shit is broken.

    • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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      7 months ago

      Do you apply this same logic to Trump winning the election or are presidents only this powerless when they have a D next to their name and are being criticized for supporting abhorrent legislation?

      • someguy3@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What? Trump was the leader of the party and had a cult following through and through. You’re making no sense.

        • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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          7 months ago

          I’m not making sense? You just stated that congress has all the power while now arguing that Trump would have all the power because he’s “the leader of the party.” That doesn’t make sense as you can’t have it both ways unless you’re just trying to spread misinformation.

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            7 months ago

            Seriously? Ok one more attempt. Trump is the leader of the republican party. The people in the republican party selected him as their leader. I don’t know how to make it any clearer but I’ll try with a tiny fib: Trump is the republican party. The republican party is Trump.

            Trump tells his party “hey write up this legislation, do it because I’m the leader of the party that you are in”. Notice that part “because I’m the leader of the party that you are in”. That’s not “because I am president”, it’s “because I’m the leader of the party that you are in”. And by and large, the republican party will do that. They will listen to their party leader (the one they selected) and write up the legislation, try to pass it in the House of reps, try to pass it in the senate, and then it will land on Trumps desk.

            To be more specific, the party will meet, they will discuss what they want to do, listening heavily to what the president/leader wants to do because it was his “vision” for america that got them elected, then write up legislation.

            A third party candidate does not have party members in the house or senate that will do that.

            If that doesn’t make sense to you, you have some reading to do. I think I’m out.

  • edric@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    There’s a caveat: That statement only applies to a house that’s designed to only have 2 viable doors.

  • mlg@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    768 votes wth is wrong with Americans bruh

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistan_Tehreek-e-Insaf

    If you can create a successful grassroots political party in an environment where your party members and constituents are constantly attacked, murdered, bombed, jailed, tortured, votes faked, votes destroyed, and vote miscounts, you can definitely pull it off in the USA.

    It took Pakistan only 20 years to cause a collapse of their corrupt 2 party system and challenge the military dictatorship. People never believed PTI would mount any sort of challenge, but they did by building a solid populist movement, despite facing all of the above.

    The “you must vote the lesser evil” is a fallacy that both parties in the USA perpetuate in an attempt to convince you to believe 3rd party voting is a waste of time.

    You can’t just sit back and complain about the rigged system like “but muh first past the poll voting” as if either Democrats or Republicans will change the system in any way to make it easier for their rivals.

    This is exactly why I dislike the Democratic party in particular so much. They are a corporate monolith that pretends to care about your leftist demands by handing out pennies worth of change to get your vote, then the second they refuse to actually significantly change something you demand, they have the audacity to blame you, the voter, for not sucking up to their shitty policies when they inevitably lose the election.

    Current case in point: "There is no genocide in Gaza, and we believe we can win without our constituents because our opponent is a mentally insane baby ".

    Shittiest take on this community by far.

  • sgibson5150@slrpnk.net
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    7 months ago

    I’m going to hold my nose and vote for Kamala but I won’t shame people who can’t bring themselves to do it.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I’m going to hold my nose and vote for Kamala but I won’t shame people who can’t bring themselves to do it.

      It must be nice, being privileged enough to see who wins this election as a fashion choice instead of something that will affect your life.

    • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      Noooo you must enjoy voting for our designated ghoul and voice your full throated support every day until November or else it’s basically a vote for Trump. Also, you can’t ask us to change any platforms whatsoever cause that’s divisive and a vote for Trump.

      • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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        7 months ago

        It’s really astounding to see how quickly Democratic sycophants mimic the MAGA folks they mock on the right. These are the same people that were telling those of us who wanted Biden to drop out that we were all secret Trump supporters paid by the Russians even though it was clear he was going to lose.

        • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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          7 months ago

          DNC komissars are using the same tactics, it is just politics 101… muhh side right, your side wrong bullshit while the two party regime is robbing us.

          People who see no nuance are either zealots or paid shills aka bad faith actors, treat them as such.

          Note how this conversion can’t be practically had in news or politics subs on lemmy…

    • jonne@infosec.pub
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      7 months ago

      And this criticism of ‘the greens only show up every 4 years’ is in bad faith. The greens run in other elections as well, you just only hear about the presidential elections because that’s the only time they get some media attention.

      This list has a bunch of school board members, city councillors, even a mayor on it. They do run in local elections, and even win sometimes.

      • friendlymessage@feddit.org
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        7 months ago

        And this criticism of ‘the greens only show up every 4 years’ is in bad faith.

        No, it’s really not. The Mayor of Galesburg, IL, a town of 30.000 is the highest office any green politician holds in the US. This is fucking ridiculous.

        By their own admission, only 130 Greens are currently in office in highly influential positions such as Zoning Board of Appeals Alternate or Cemetery Trust Fund Committee. This party is a fucking joke. And that’s the party whose presidential candidate accepts an invitation from Putin.

    • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      I’m “lucky” enough to live in a state where my vote doesn’t matter at all. I’m completely free to not vote for genocide. What an awesome “democracy”.