• Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      If she had bothered to campaign in the Midwest and had just generally been a much better candidate, more people would have.

      It’s the job of a politician to earn votes and faithfully represent the priorities of the majority of the voters. People like Hillary, Biden, Schumer and the rest of the Dem leadership seldom do either.

      • gregorum@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        It’s also the job of the electorate to educate themselves on the consequences of their vote (and non-vote). Don’t act like nobody knew who Trump was, what he had already done, or was listening to what he was saying.

        • Gigasser@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Not job, DUTY. Otherwise I get your point. I’d like to add that it is also the duty of those more educated to try to educate others in a non-hostile, factual, and rhetorically effective way in order to bolster the numbers of people who can make informed/educated decisions on these things.

        • Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Again you are completely taking Biden out of his responsibility. Why do you want to vote for a guy that rather wants to lose to Trump, than provide decent policies around basic human rights, like the right not to get genocided?

          Biden and the DNC rulers are a group of psychopaths. They will not care as long as they get the money form their rich donors, who don’t care if Biden or Trump is doing their bidding.

          • glimse@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            “I don’t like Biden’s support for Israel’s genocide so I’m going to make it more likely that the guy who would support Israel’s genocide even more gets into office.”

            Incredibly dumb take.

            • Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              “I am telling my politicians that they dont need to listen to me, they will get my vote no matter what. Oh why do they never listen to me?”

              Incredible big brain take.

              • glimse@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                “The time to make a change is election year and once it’s over I’ll go back to being politically inactive”

                • Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  How many demonstrations have you been to in the past three years? If the number is below 30 you should stop projecting

          • gregorum@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            Again you are completely taking Biden out of his responsibility.

            Ve done nothing of the sort. If you think anything I’ve said even comes close to that, you’re hallucinating. Or lying.

            Why do you want to vote for a guy that rather wants to lose to Trump, than provide decent policies around basic human rights, like the right not to get genocided?

            That’s such a loaded question and so absurdly fallacious on its face, I’m not going to even dignify it by answering it, but I will say that you clearly don’t care what I want, just to push an agenda.

            But, since you didn’t ask, what I want is for Trump to lose, and that math is simple: any vote not for Biden helps Trump, and no matter how much you dislike Biden, Trump will be 1000x worse. We know, because Trump has promised that.

            Biden and the DNC rulers are a group of psychopaths.

            Compared to Trump, they’re saints, and if you can’t see that, you’re clearly incapable of rational discourse on the matter. Or you’re clearly here to feebly undermine confidence in Biden in support of Trump.

            Either way, your argument is transparent, fact-free, and little more than Fox News fodder.

            • Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              By voting Biden you declare your support of his policies. That is the fundamental way of how democracies work. You vote your representative because you think he is representing you.

              By attacking anyone who says you shouldn’t approve of genocide as your representation you abolish your representative from his responsibility of not supporting genocide and instead blame it on the people who think that genocide is never an acceptable representation for them.

              For you individually as a citizen there is only one legal way to hold a politician responsible. And that is by denying them further support in the next election. Now if it comes to group action through demonstrations, unions, lobbying etc. that is great and even better to do. But if it is down to you and the ballot the only direct thing is to declare before what your political demands are and vote accordingly. If your demand is “genocide is okay” then you will have to make that up with your consciousness, the victims and survivors and eventually towards future generations.

              • gregorum@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                By voting Biden you declare your support of his policies.

                Wrong. But if telling lies makes you feel better about voting for a literal fascist (or doing nothing to stop him) who promises to be a dictator from day 1, don’t blame me for trying to stop that when it’s clearly what you want.

        • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          It’s also the job of the electorate to educate themselves on the consequences of their vote (and non-vote).

          It actually isn’t, no. Nobody is paying them to do that and, in the case of millions if not tens of people who are amongst the working poor because of the kind of economic policy the Dems have been putting out ever since she and her husband remade the party in their own image in 1992, they aren’t realistically able to with neither candidates nor mainstream media helping them sort the wheat from the chaff.

          When you’re already working 60 hours a week trying (and often failing) to make ends meet on top on whatever family commitments you may have, you can’t be expected to have energy left to fact check candidates and media outlets for free. It’s simply not that voter’s responsibility to keep powerful and well-paid people honest.

          Don’t act like nobody knew who Trump was, what he had already done, or was listening to what he was saying.

          Then maybe Hillary and the media shouldn’t shouldn’t have done all they could to make sure he became the candidate!

          That the fascist ever got anywhere near the nomination, let alone the presidency itself, is hundreds of times more the fault of the rich and powerful people paid to prevent it than the people they failed to convince to vote for an evil, however lesser it would have been.

          • gregorum@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            It actually isn’t, no. Nobody is paying them to do that

            That is the worst and most entitled excuse for the abandonment for any and all personal responsibility since I heard my 3-year-old niece try to convince my brother she should never have to wipe her own butt because he will always be there to do it for her.

            Wow. Shame on you.

            • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Clearly, you didn’t understand what I was trying to explain any better than your niece would have.

              If anyone’s abandoning personal responsibility, it’s the awful candidates who don’t do their job and then blame people who suffer for it much more than the candidates ever will.

              I’m not saying that it’s a good or even neutral thing to not vote for the lesser evil when only evils are available. Of course that’s had.

              I’m saying that it’s the responsibility of the candidates to not be evil and to convince enough voters of it that the greater evil doesn’t win.

              • gregorum@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                Clearly, you didn’t understand what I was trying to explain any better than your niece would have.

                I understand that you’re trying to blame others for something that’s your own responsibility: educating yourself, and the consequences of your own actions, such as your vote

                And while you whine about candidates “not being evil” and refuse to vote for Biden, you help the far more “evil” Trump win.

                But I’m sure, just like my 3 year-old niece, you’ll find someone else to blame for the consequences of your actions.

                • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  I understand that you’re trying to blame others for something that’s your own responsibility: educating yourself

                  Clearly you don’t understand since that’s in no way what I’m doing. I DO educate myself about the candidates, their policy positions and their trustworthiness at every election. I’m saying that not everyone CAN s that since they already have more to do than can be reasonably expected of them.

                  and the consequences of your own actions, such as your vote

                  Again, not myself I’m talking about. I’m gonna be at my local polling place come election day no matter how much I have to hold my nose and suppress my gag reflex

                  I have it easier than just tens of millions of working poor: I don’t have to work long hours on election day. I don’t have children I’d need to get someone to look after and my local polling place isn’t understaffed and the only one available to hundreds of thousands if not millions of people.

                  Voting isn’t easy for everyone as it is for me and evidently also you.

                  And while you whine about candidates “not being evil” and refuse to vote for Biden

                  Again not once since I turned 18 23 years ago have I missed a chance to cast my vote

                  you help the far more “evil” Trump win.

                  Nope, that’s you lot with your insistence that everyone shut up and obey your crappy candidates and never demand good choices.

                  A good candidate would beat the orange man-child in a landslide ten times out that ten. Only awful candidates lose to him or barely scrape a win.

                  • gregorum@lemm.ee
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                    5 months ago

                    Clearly you don’t understand since that’s im no way what I’m doing

                    It’s the first thing you said in your first reply to me. lol

                    Again, not myself I’m talking about.

                    When it’s your vote, of course it is. you’re just trying to deflect responsibility for that (and educating yourself) onto others. It was the very first thing you said to me.

                    Voting isn’t easy for everyone as it is for me and evidently also you.

                    And

                    Nope, that’s you lot with your insistence that everyone shut up and obey your crappy candidates and never demand good choices.

                    Making up stories again as an excuse to blame others for the consequences of your actions.

                    And you’re hallucinating again if you heard anyone say that you can’t demand good choices. But you’re also delusional if you believe that helping Trump win by not voting for Biden will accomplish anything but the opposite.

    • Mossy Feathers (They/Them)@pawb.social
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      5 months ago

      I honestly regret not voting for Hillary. I didn’t vote for Trump either, I voted third-party because I thought Hillary was going to win, and even if she didn’t win, what’s the worst Trump could do, huh? So I figured it wouldn’t hurt to vote for a third-party with the hope they’d get enough points to be on the debate stage during the next general election.

      Granted, my vote probably wouldn’t have made a difference. Tbh, considering I live in a state with winner-takes-all voting, I’m not even sure my vote actually matters now; but I’m still going to vote for Biden. It’s better than assuming he’ll win and risking another Trump victory.


      Yes, I know I’m not the main character and I’m only one person. I know that changing my vote alone won’t make a difference. However, what might make a difference is if I talk about my reasoning in a public forum. Then, people might stop, read my post, and change their minds. Now, it’s not one vote, it’s two. They might spread their view as well, and two votes becomes four. Four votes becomes eight; and eight becomes sixteen. As small as that sounds, sixteen votes can make all the difference in an election. There are elections that have come down to one or two votes.

      • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        I did the same thing, in a solidly blue state, with the same thought processes; I voted for Jill Stein. Even after Trump won, I figured he couldn’t fuck it up too badly. I even thought he might manage to get one thing right (I’m very solidly pro-2A), but nope, he couldn’t even do that.

        Biden isn’t nearly far enough left for me. But I’ll vote for him without even a hint of hesitation, because he’s so much better than the only realistic possibility. And I live in a purple state now, so it might end up mattering.

    • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      *in certain states

      She won the popular vote, she lost the electoral vote. Where you live MATTERS towards your vote in this country, by design, for situations like this