• ceenote@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Voting is not a medium for self-expression, or at least not a good one. It’s a tool to affect outcomes. People get angry about voting for harm reduction, but choosing to not even do that much just makes everything worse.

  • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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    4 months ago

    I am in favor of strategic voting but regardless of your opinion on this topic we need to be clear eyed that this election will not solve the US’s many very serious problems, regardless of its outcome.

    That can only be achieved by on the ground organizing. So I hope that all of the people who spend so much energy arguing about this topic are out there building local political coalitions that can force our representatives to do what is needed. That’s the only way real change will happen.

    • banner80@fedia.io
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      4 months ago

      I think that’s the point of the chart. Your elected officials are not going to magically know what you want and bend over backwards to give it to you. If you are serious about a topic, it’s on you to join the political process and have your points heard. That’s what they mean by “we work to find a fair balance.” The work part is a lot of political arguing back and forth. If you want to have influence, you have to make an informed argument for why what you want is better than what we have, and you have to square off with the group on the other side that thinks they have a better solution and will make their case too.

      The Democrats don’t guarantee you that the compromise will break your way. The guarantee is that you do get a voice if you choose to participate in the political process, which is not something that’s on offer with the other party.

      And to those that are annoyed by the Dems due to lack of progress or any other reason, we get it. Don’t think I’m not annoyed too. The difference between you and me is not that I don’t find the Dems disappointing, the difference is that I understand I would be disappointed with anyone because politics are about negotiation and compromise, not about having our whims fulfilled.

      We have to take the wins we can get, and then work on pushing for the next thing. Objectively, Biden has been one of the most progressive and effective presidents in history, let alone my lifetime. One of the first things he did within days of taking Office was move the min wage of gov positions to $15/hr. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/biden-sign-executive-order-raising-federal-contractors-minimum-wage-15-n1265427

      People forget how much he has done and how progressive he’s been compared to even Obama. People complain that Bernie got sidetracked, but Bernie’s movement is still in the conversation and pushed the Dems further left on a ton of things. That’s what discourse looks like, and if you want real change you have to get involved with the only party that is offering a path. That’s why Bernie and AOC caucus with the Dems, because being sour about what you want solves nothing, but getting involved is a real path.

      Vote for the only party that offers discourse and power to change things, and then get your voice in the mix as much as you’d like. Bernie is not sour, he is in the Senate getting things done, he is campaigning influencing the conversation, and he is constantly in the media making his points. A voice from within the system is way more powerful than one sitting on the sidelines pouting. Vote, and then tell your Officials what you want.

      • Verdant Banana@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        easy to forget when everything he did get accomplished never trickled down to most US citizens but certainly helped the elites

        • banner80@fedia.io
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          How did raising the min wage to $15/hr help the elites? Defending medicare, strengthening bank regulations, coming after junk fees, fighting the GOP on student loan forgiveness… or standing with unions on the picket line, and so forth. I bet I could write a list of 200 things he’s done in less than 4 years that were intended to help American workers, while I’d be surprised if anyone can come up with a list of a dozen things he did that helped only the rich and corporations.

          And if anyone is wondering if I’m exaggerating about “200 things,” you should consider how much the media’s low-effort coverage and Trump’s BS circus are keeping real stuff out of the news. Biden signed 52 executive orders in the first 100 days alone. A list of 200 things he’s done for regular people vs elites would be the highlights, not the full list.

          Here are his first 52 executive orders if you want to review his work: https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2021/politics/biden-executive-orders/index.html

          That massive list only gets you to April 2021.

          • Verdant Banana@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            did you read that list

            maybe one or two items on it might make a difference in US households maybe

            no healthcare, no raising of the minimum wage, nothing about women’s rights, no police reform minus the scrap about federal prisons, and these are just some things

            • banner80@fedia.io
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              4 months ago

              Perhaps the link is loading something different for you and me? Because just in the first 7 items I see:

              Raised the minimum wage Reverse draconian Trump policies on refugees and travelers Defended democracy by sanctioning Russia’s meddling Presidential commission to begin discussions to fix the SCOTUS Defended human rights by reversing bad Trump policies on the ICC New council on gender equality and equity Protect students from discrimination

              That’s just the first 7 items, of the list of 52 items covering only executive actions in the first 100 days. Keep reading just a few more points and you’ll see more defense of democracy, protection of minorities, improvements to the economy, etc. Again, I could be here all day talking about how Biden has done so much for people - if we include signed bills and Bully Pulpit work, it would take hundreds of items to cover even the highlights.

              Perhaps look into it a bit closer, here is a more complete list of 118 executive actions https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_executive_actions_by_Joe_Biden

    • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 months ago

      But one side will create many more problems, perscute many more people, and lead to many more unnecessary deaths. While the other would atleast keep the status quo, and try to marginally improve things.

      • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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        I don’t disagree but the status quo is quite bad, and will remain bad with small incremental improvements. So yes, vote for harm reduction but that is the bare minimum. Find like-minded orgs in your area and get involved. I think one reason the US is in such a sorry state today is that most people think voting is the beginning and end of their involvement in democracy. I felt this way for most of my life but gradually I realized that no matter how good the intentions of the person you vote into office, the system will force them to stay within the bounds outlined by the powers that be and their interests. That’s why we need to build an equal or greater mass movement to demand leaders fight back. Obama spoke of this when he was in office but I didn’t quite understand what he meant at the time.

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          Mostly agree, but as someone disabled and unable to work, so fully reliant on the state for survival, I find minimising voting / both sides are evil rhetoric is terrifying.

          It takes one very good election for the GOP, for me to become homeless, due to their proposes benefit cuts, and if I’m homeless I die. I’m severely immunodeficient and bedridden.

          • scarabine@lemmynsfw.com
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            4 months ago

            Yeah, voting is something that gets completely recharacterized when you think about it through the lens of harm reduction vs ideal broadcasting. (And, bluntly, for anyone reading this who might disagree: Since votes are private, they don’t cast ideals anyway.)

          • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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            4 months ago

            Damn that’s scary. Best of luck to you. But I still think your interests are best defended by grass-roots organizing. Of course my whole point is that this strategy is completely compatible with voting, so we need to do that as well.

  • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I want to add; while it is true political issues are complex, and the solutions are even more so, the actual rhetoric and political strategies are simple to deconstruct and understand.

    Focusing in on this portion of the “info-meme.”

    1. Over simplified “single issue”

    Abortion is the obvious example. The rights strategy is to paint every who one isn’t staunchly against abortion as, “murderers.” This emotionally charged argument allows zealotry to infest all discussion around the topic and gives every member of the GOP a platform. If you can’t decide your stance on abortion isn’t it easier to just error on the side of caution and say there is truth to the anti-choice peoples argument? The problem here is you never actually formed an opinion and in siding with the right you’ve rubber stamped all their horrible policy agendas that fly directly in the face of being “pro-life.”

    1. “The economy” misdirection

    Arguments about the economy is another example of you giving up agency because you are being emotionally manipulated. Financial burden is something most, if not all Americans, people, struggle with. So when a politician invokes “the economy” it brings up emotions people are very sensitive about. Except, all this discussion about the economy, doesn’t actually address the economic struggles the ordinary person goes through. Instead what happens is you link these bad emotions or good emotions to some period in time when you were told the economy was good or the economy was bad but never actually evaluate what about the economy was affecting your daily life.

    1. “Keep us safe” revisionist history

    This is straight fear mongering. Never have I felt particularly safe with a republican or democrat in charge. Corporations don’t worry about it either because no matter what the police exist solely to protect property and the value associated with that property. So when a politicain wants to say anything about your physical well being it should always be taken as a threat, like some mafioso, extorting you for your tax dollars.

    1. Dismantling of worker protections

    As of late, worker protections are the sacrificial lamb to the omnipotent “ecomnomy.” Guarnteed, no sitting politician puts more effort into their daily labor then that of the lowest earners while being rewarded orders more in income and benefits. When a CEO can make more money then could ever be spent through conventional means in a thousand thousand life times you know the restrictions placed on businesses are not what’s effecting their profit margins and workers take home pay.

    1. Defending social programs

    One of the easiest ways to retain power is to split the electorate into factions and pit them against each other. With a military budget that exceeds all other nations military budgets combined you can assume social programs are not what’s failing you. Greed is having the power of the American economy and coveting it as your own. The money we put into society is there to make society better. Your neighbors struggles are as real as your own and for you to pass judgement on them must mean you are willing to undergo undue suffering for the sake of holding someone else down.

    1. Tax breaks and bailouts for the rich

    To big to fail, is an incomplete sentence. To big to fail for you to win re-election, maybe? To big to fail to prevent human suffering, possibly? It begs the question, who would really suffer? Say instead of bailing out the bank you took that money and bailed out the people who would lose their income due to bank going under? If these monolithe are always “too big to fail” there would be no way of knowing. We, as a country, took on a global pandemic. The government handed out money left and right. Is the human suffering we experienced then more impactful then any of the human suffering we’ve experienced over the last 30 years? I’d guess, not.

    1. Shrink the middle class, cap salaries

    We are heading down a road. It’s a well beaten path. It exists all over in different parts of the world. Caste systems, apartheid, authoritians, dictators, monarchys, etc. all are still there. Why, would any good person, who has experienced the watered down taste of real American freedom, ask for something more laced with actual shit?

    • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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      “The economy” misdirection

      This one is far, far more complex than people imagine. It’s nearly impossible to overstate how complicated it is. Economy good/economy bad barely even touches on how it affects individual people. Like, sure, the economy is doing really well right now, employment is at near historic lows, real incomes are, on average, much higher than they were just a few years ago, but I’m still feeling economic stress.

      To[o] big to fail, is an incomplete sentence.

      It is, but mostly because people don’t understand what that means. Let’s take, for instance, General Motors. There are 167,000 people that work directly for GM. If GM hadn’t been bailed out by Obama’s administration, that would have been >150,000 out of jobs immediately. But that’s not where it would have stopped; it would have been the first in a very large chain of dominoes. For instance, GM spun Delphi off about 20 years ago (and it’s gone through numerous restructurings, etc. since); Delphi was one of GM’s largest suppliers. No GM means no Delphi, and that’s another 20,000 jobs. Look at all the companies the sell products and services to GM; when GM dies, large parts of those companies’ business also goes, leading to more job losses. And what about all the businesses that those individual employees patronize? Like, say, the restaurant just outside of the GM plant in Bay City, MI? When GM closes, there goes 95% of their business, and now the 20 employees of that restaurant are out of work and can’t make their mortgage payments.

      When politicians say, “too big to fail”, that’s what they mean; failure of certain single companies and banks would have such a disastrous effect on the country as a whole that it’s better for everyone if the gov’t saves their ass. (And, BTW, I believe that all of the car companies ended up repaying the gov’t after they were bailed out.)

      • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        If they are too big to fail there should be a plan to split them up. There is no reason thay a single entity should be allowed to exist with the power to plung the entire country into turmoil.

        200,000 jobs sure does sound like a lot but you are completely discrediting Americans ability to rebound. Ffs for all we know the vacuum created by such a draw could fast track decades worth of innovation.

        America has the ability to support this entire country getting its entire lights knocked out and we proved it with the pandemic.

  • TrippyFocus@lemmy.ml
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    Edit: The US presidential election is not based on popular vote so if you live outside of the ~5-6 swing states that decide the election you can go ahead and vote for a candidate that fits your beliefs even if it’s 3rd party (shoutout PSL), there’s no argument not to. Continuing to vote for the lesser evil when it’s not needed just means they can take your vote for granted.

    Make sure to pay attention to local/state elections too, those who often affect your life even more. As always voting is only a small part in how we affect change, find local organizations and agitate for change that way.

    • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      Just be careful and look well at the data, states that non-election forcasting nerds would consider not be swing states still have a >10% chance of going the other way according to the best statistical models.

      So if you live in: Texas, Ohio, South and North Carolina ®, or New Mexico, Colorado, Oregon, Virginia, Minnesota, New Hampshire (D)

      You still live in a state that has a statistically significant chance of going either way >10%.

      However, if you live in Washington DC, or Wyoming, by all means…

    • Armok_the_bunny@lemmy.world
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      For the record, if you want to change the fact that the US president is not elected by popular vote, depending on your state there’s an initiative called the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Popular_Vote_Interstate_Compact), where a bunch of states are setting up trigger laws so that when enough states with enough electoral college votes have signed it into law, each of those states will vote for the candidate who won the popular vote.

    • takeda@lemmy.world
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      It is BS even if you are in the “safe” states you should not do that.

      This is not really a protest and you don’t make any statement that anyone will care about.

      What you should do that would actually have an impact is to push your local officials to switch to Ranked Choice Voting (like it was done in Alaska and Maine)

      Also make sure your state passes this compact:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Popular_Vote_Interstate_Compact

  • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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    The problem you have there is called a feedback loop. A vicious spiral. The whole thing moves right with each election.

    • WldFyre@lemm.ee
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      Yeah, the Republicans have been successful in accomplishing their goals by not voting repeatedly for 20+ years! /s

      ffs

      • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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        Look, if you were using this extension of time to do something better, to build dual power, to corrode the foundation of the system, I’d agree with you. That’s the point of extensions, no? To get time. The destination is the same in both scenarios, but you have time in the lesser one. Are you using that time on not-you activity?

    • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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      Welp, better to tiptoe to the right than double-time goose step. A slow move to the right is better for leftists than a fast one.

      • Seasm0ke@lemmy.world
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        Counterpoint, libs cared about kids in cages when it was trump doing it. Ive never seen so many people energetic and aware about government abuses. It was the same with war in the middleast when Obama took over from Bush. All the average antiwar blues stopped watching and couldnt car less about drone bombing funerals and ambulances.

        The two party system does not promote engagement or representation. I get this is a bigger issue than the election but my biggest fear is that the slow walk to fascism under the “we’re the good party” will be more enduring and successful than the attempts from Red to March forward.

        The average lib “shut up and vote blue or you support fascism” crybully will fall asleep again for four years and sleepwalk their way to the same goal without any self reflection along the way.

        Note this is not in favor of accelerationism, but a criticism of this idea that all we can do is slow the roll with a vote every now and then and throw our hands up.

        • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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          Note this is not in favor of accelerationism, but a criticism of this idea that all we can do is slow the roll with a vote every now and then and throw our hands up.

          No one has suggested that idea. It certainly isn’t all we can do, but it is the minimum. The alternative is accelerationism.

      • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Is it better? It seems like the creeping motion is much better at avoiding opposition than the double-time. Sort of like how the climate is heating just slow enough for most of the humans to think that it’s somewhat normal and usual, and the crises are somewhat normal.

          • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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            I didn’t say accelerationism. Accelerationism is a fascist position.

            I’m saying that the issue here is people not realizing that,

            as an analogy,

            Being threatened with a gun to the head vs being threatened with a dart containing deadly radioactive oncogenic particles should be treated the same. The problem is optimism and hope, it’s what allows conservatives to play the long game.

            And in terms of the strategy you hold dear, understand that capitalists and their fascist pets will bring down the whole biosphere.

            Essentially, the ethics of this aren’t about “lesser evil”, they’re about how willing are you to burden the youngest generations and soon to be born with an exponentially more difficult (deadly) challenge, so you can live your life in the “normal” way and keep your head down.

            • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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              When you’re talking about the merits of the greater evil, i.e. speeding towards fascism so people are more likely to take direct revolutionary action, you’re talking about accelerationism. However you try to justify it to yourself, that’s what you’re promoting. And it’s fundamentally a gamble, you’re hoping that it leads to a regime that can be deposed, and a populace willing and able to depose it. The gamble could very easily just lead to enduring fascism.

              I use the tools at my disposal. Voting for the lesser evil buys time and fosters a slightly, but distinctly, more favorable political landscape. That gives people the opportunity to organize, to spread their message, to build campaigns for representatives that represent them, and elevate those representatives to higher offices.

              how willing are you to burden the youngest generations and soon to be born with an exponentially more difficult (deadly) challenge, so you can live your life in the “normal” way and keep your head down.

              The irony is palpable. This is precisely the outcome of your strategy: give the young generations a despotic fascist regime they’ll have to overthrow with chaos and bloodshed, rather than a functioning democracy that they can push to the left.

              Yes, our system is dominated by capitalists and fascists, but that’s precisely because 30+% of people refuse to use their vote. The system has within it the mechanisms for meaningful change, fantasies about a popular uprising against a despotic government are childish and irresponsible.

  • TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    In before the green party shill drops in to wax philosophical about how superior his conscience is voting for people who sit enjoying dinner with murders, war criminals, and a traitor.

    • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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      In Canada we call our green party Conservatives on bikes.

    • neobunch@lemmy.world
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      It is certainly more refreshing than the constant brain-rot of liberals calling everything they don’t like a “russian asset”.

      As to the op, both mainstream political parties are right wing, but it is right on the money

    • Verdant Banana@lemmy.world
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      https://www.newsweek.com/jill-stein-ties-vladimir-putin-explained-1842620

      They added: “The Senate Intelligence Committee later investigated the trip and found no wrongdoing whatsoever. Dr. Stein’s commitment to diplomacy is more needed than ever and stands in stark contrast to the two warmongering ruling parties, which are driving us toward WWIII [World War III] and draining resources urgently needed here at home.”

      The event featuring Stein and Putin was a December 2015 gala in Moscow in celebration of the Russian state television channel RT’s tenth anniversary. The channel has been banned in several countries for spreading Russian propaganda since the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

      The channel regularly featured Stein during her 2016 campaign. When asked about the dinner by NBC that year, Stein said it was a “shameful commentary” on U.S. media that she had received more air time on Russian news as a third party candidate.

      Speaking to The Intercept in 2017, she said the notion that it was an “intimate roundtable” was “mythology,” and that Putin and his associates “weren’t at the table for very long.” Stein said that “nobody introduced anybody to anybody” and that she “didn’t hear any words exchanged between English speakers and Russians” due to the lack of a translator.

      Stein said that Putin had appeared to make a speech and left immediately after. “Nobody cared to make introductions. This wasn’t intended to be a discussion of any sort,” she told the outlet.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein

      Russia probe and controversy On December 18, 2017, The Washington Post reported that the Senate Intelligence Committee was looking at Stein’s presidential campaign for potential “collusion with the Russians.”[90] The Stein campaign released a statement stating it would work with investigators.[91]

      In December 2018, two reports commissioned by the US Senate found that the Internet Research Agency boosted Stein’s candidacy through social media posts, targeting African-American voters in particular. After consulting the two reports, NBC News reporter Robert Windrem said that nothing suggested Stein knew about the operation, but added that “the Massachusetts physician ha[d] long been criticized for her support of international policies that mirror Russian foreign policy goals.” Windrem reported that his publisher (NBC News) had found that in 2015 and 2016 there had been over 100 favorable stories about Stein on Russian state-owned media networks RT and Sputnik.[92] In 2015, Stein was photographed dining at the same table as Russian president Vladimir Putin at the RT 10th anniversary gala in Moscow, leading to controversy.[93][94] Stein contended that she had no contact with Putin at the dinner and described the situation as a “non-event”.[95]

      In an official statement, Stein called one of the reports, the one authored by New Knowledge, “dangerous new McCarthyism” and asked the Senate Committee to retract it, saying the firm was “sponsored by partisan Democratic funders” and had itself been shown to have been “directly involved in election interference” in the 2017 US Senate election in Alabama.[96]

      By July 31, 2018, Stein had spent slightly under $100,000 of the recount money on legal representation linked to the Senate probe into election interference.[97] In March 2019, Stein’s spokesman David Cobb said she had “fully cooperated with the Senate inquiry.”[98]

      In October 2019, Hillary Clinton said that Russia’s ongoing efforts to influence U.S. elections included a plot to support a third-party candidate in 2020, which could either be Jill Stein, whom she described as a “Russian asset,” or Tulsi Gabbard.[99] A few days later, Clinton’s comments were clarified to indicate that she thought that it was, in fact, Republicans who were behind the plot.[100] Stein denounced Clinton’s comments on both herself and Gabbard, describing them as “slanderous”.[101]

  • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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    This infographic is way too credulous about the centrists’ claims. It’s a “big tent,” but you’re not in it, only the owner class gets a say. It just happens that some of the owner class is smart enough to realize they can’t fuck over the working class too much without it coming back to bite them.

  • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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    It’s what I’ve been saying for a while now: If you want to be happy with who you vote for, lower your expectations of what you’re gonna get. It will be ugly sausage making and they will make stupid decisions that you will hate, things won’t improve nearly as quickly as you want, and this is the best we can do as a species because coordinating the actions of tens or hundreds of millions of people is going to suck.

    • TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee
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      That and 40-50 year steady march of the Overton Window to the right won’t be undone with a single election. It’s going to take multiple ones to fix what’s been broken by the Republicans.

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    As someone not from the USA: I guess I agree that, for the upcoming presidential election at least, voting centrist is the only viable option. But the generalized “vote centrist because it could he worse” is infuriating and makes me want to punch whomever made this. Just because they’re not actively anti-working class doesn’t mean they’re in any real way champions of the working class. They’re in the pocket of industrialists just like the right, and thus will never meaningfully challenge the status quo.

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    4 months ago

    Calling Harris/Walz “centrist” is selling them short. Centrism would have been the fantasy ticket proposed in the press where they tapped a moderate Republican like Romney to run alongside Harris on a “let’s go back to 2016” ticket, attempting to capture the less fashy conservatives, placate big business and let the left know in no uncertain terms that their ideas are not an option, only a status quo that’s not an inch left of centre or the abyss of fascism. They did not do that, and while nobody (at least, nobody unafflicted by FoxNews brainworms) will mistake them for Bolsheviks, they’re decidedly centre-left, with pro-worker policies, albeit in the language of “regular folks” rather than theorists. The Democratic congress itself ranges from the uncompromising left (AOC and Bernie) to the centre-right (Manchin/Sinema and their ilk), though its centre of gravity is left of the notional centreline of US politics.

    • hobovision@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      They may not be centerists when seen through that Overton window of the USA in 2024, but in terms of the modern political spectrum they definitely are. There’s barely a social policy they have that isn’t already enacted for decades in more progressive countries and states.

  • SquirtleHermit@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I wonder if people realize posts like this only push away potential converts?

    Even if Centrists were as good as this post makes them out to be (which sadly they’re not), smugly asserting that everyone else is worse than you is a terrible method of persuasion.

    Though I suppose the point is to feel morally and intellectually superior to people who would vote differently. Rather than to actually try to woo the most voters.

    Edit: Fwiw, I believe the best option we have currently is to vote for the Democrats. I simply don’t see an alternative option that is as likely to keep Trump out of the Whitehouse again. Though damage mitigation is not my favorite strategy to employ, in this case I believe it is the “strongest” play available.

  • AllHailTheSheep@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    fellas, is it ok to ask for accountability from a politician and point out issues with them while still voting for them? I really hate this rhetoric of “life is messy and no one’s perfect.” true, but no one expects a perfect candidate, they want a candidate who actually listens to the people. rhetoric like this just shields politicians from actual, constructive criticism.

  • PumpkinSkink@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I often wonder who these are for. It makes no attempt to engage in an honest way with criticisms and hesitations that non-Democrat voters have so it doesn’t have any ability to persuade them. It also infantalizes the view points of both the republican opposition and anyone outside the two party system so it’s not helpful for self-critique for “centrists”. So as far as I can tell it’s just red meat aimed at Democrat supports to keep them all hopped up and believing that they are “the party of responsible governance” (in comparison to the Republicans) and therefore all criticism is invalid and everyone else is childish. Like, if this is supposed to be something else you really need a new way of engaging, because this “there is no alternative” shit is what turned me away from Democrats back in the Obama years.

  • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I don’t feel centrist is the right word here. Or at least centrist has been co-opted by a group of right wingers wanting to platform fascists.

    I’d go with big tent, labor coalition, or I dunno.