• @agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    -14 months ago

    Another clever solution, but where’s the log? I don’t see one there, and the trolley is too close for you to have time to go off to find one.

    What even is the log in this scenario, another insurrection? Not voting isn’t throwing a log, it’s just not pulling the lever.

    What makes you think the accelerationist position of “exposing the fallacy” would actually make anything better? It’s very possible, I’d argue probable, that it would just make a lasting fascist regime more likely. What reason do you have to believe that a more transparent lie would be enough to make people actual do anything different?

    Personally, I don’t think that’s a gamble with very favorable odds.

    • young_broccoli
      link
      fedilink
      04 months ago

      Fixed it

      What even is the log in this scenario, another insurrection? Not voting isn’t throwing a log, it’s just not pulling the lever.

      As I see it, the lever is the choice being made, in this case dem. or rep., the tracks are the electoral system and the log is the third option they dont want us to give and have taught us it doesnt exist.
      In a true democracy we should be able to say “we dont like options given, do better” but those voices are conveniently ignored.

      What makes you think the accelerationist position of “exposing the fallacy” would actually make anything better?

      The first step in demanding the true is to realize you’ve been lied to. If everyone is voting it must mean that they agree the system works because people dont usually waste time in tasks that they believe are fruitless. I believe people will realize something is wrong with their “democracy” when its minorities choosing for everyone else and start demanding true democracy.
      Also, the fact that they, the rulling class, seems to be afraid of it. As I mentioned before, australia making vote compulsory when the numbers were geting “too low for comfort” is a good example.

      Personally, I don’t think that’s a gamble with very favorable odds.

      Its possible it could backfire, yes. And, as I said in another comment, right now wouldnt be the best time to do it. Vote, but be aware that the system you participate in is just mitigating the symptoms of a desease and not treating it. Pretending otherwise is not a good gamble either.
      Actions must be taken to change it. An organized effort to sabotage the elections by not voting could be one option.

      And you forget the fact that even if most people votes theres a chance trump will still win. Even if biden gets the popular vote, just like it happened in 2016. Who will you blame then?
      The way these types of conversations can get so heated is an indicator that people is still not placing the blame where it should be. People need to be shown the truth, which is hard when our whole lives we’ve been “educated” to believe a lie, and again, I think electoral sabotage is a good attempt at that.

      • @agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
        link
        fedilink
        -14 months ago

        In any nation with first past the post elections, like the United States, Leftists have exactly one rational voting strategy:

        Step 1. Identify the two front-runner parties, and determine which of the two is further left relative to the other.

        Step 2. Vote for that party in every single election (don’t forget midterms and local elections). Encourage everyone you know to do the same.

        Step 3. Once the (relative) left party has an overwhelming majority (over 2/3) and the relative right party becomes vanishingly irrelevant (under 1/3), then split the (relative) left party into its own relative left and right.

        Step 4. Repeat steps 1-3 with these new front-runner parties.

        Step 5. Iterate step 4 until your relative left party passes election reform such that elections are no longer susceptible to Duverger’s Law.

        Certainly try to push for reform within the relative left party between elections and during primaries, but at the ballot box the above is the only rational strategy. Voting third party, or refusing to vote the lesser evil, is not a rational strategy.