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Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
Relative to a million votes, yes, but relative to the amount of time and effort it takes to vote...?I think, at least colloquially, "no meaning" and "practically no meaning" are pretty interchangeable. The fact that my vote has less than .0001% meaning, but that's still meaning!, is not really going to convince me my vote is meaningful. Because it's closer to meaningless.
Answer the question of where does the percentage change from meaningless to meaningful. I don't care if that's not the point of your argument, answer it anyway.
Relative to a million votes, yes, but relative to the amount of time and effort it takes to vote...?
EDIT: Assume we're using SI units for meaning, time and effort.
I concede that Barack Obama has done some less-than-favorable things, in addition to doing many things that have greatly benefitted the country. I don't mean to come off as an overly-enthusiastic Obama fanboy, but I feel like it's necessary to remember that the alternative is infinitely worse. Progressives, both self-identified and not, have an awful tendency to completely cannibalize their own. I'm experiencing first-hand what how a terrible corporate puppet can come in and fuck things up completely on a state level, and I'd really like the USA to at least pretend it wants to catch up to the rest of the first world. I think I'm preaching to the choir here, but you know.list of links
No, it isn't, and no, I haven't been. Please don't insult my intelligence like that. My ideology is not represented in the mainstream media whatsoever, which is incredibly frustrating.Light said:That's pretty much every politician, ever. Also, the fact that you regard him as "a terrible human being" shows that you have been polarized by the media. :/
I am sure many people who are not terrible human beings do shit like this (tw for animal abuse) and this! (more tw for animal abuse)Also, the fact that you regard him as "a terrible human being" shows that you have been polarized by the media. :/
Right.So, enlighten me about one detail. Where I live, voting is compulsory, but you have two voting options that are basically equivalent to the reasons why somebody wouldn't vote -- the blank vote (equivalent to "I don't really care") and the null vote (equivalent to "all the candidates suck"). If the amount of null votes were to exceed the amount of candidate votes, however (too optimistic a scenario, given a widespread lack of political conscience, even among the educated), that would oblige the parties to launch new candidates; I don't know all too many of the details, but, there's that. Does American voting not have any similar mechanisms, wherein one would be allowed to call for a different set of options?
Why?
So, enlighten me about one detail. Where I live, voting is compulsory, but you have two voting options that are basically equivalent to the reasons why somebody wouldn't vote -- the blank vote (equivalent to "I don't really care") and the null vote (equivalent to "all the candidates suck"). If the amount of null votes were to exceed the amount of candidate votes, however (too optimistic a scenario, given a widespread lack of political conscience, even among the educated), that would oblige the parties to launch new candidates; I don't know all too many of the details, but, there's that. Does American voting not have any similar mechanisms, wherein one would be allowed to call for a different set of options?
The thing is, Obama is not a good choice. He's the lesser of the two evils. In presidential elections, I'd vote for him because I have no choice; any third party candidate I pick is going to lose, but I would not be happy about voting for him.
I like to think that the Lib Dems did what they did for the greater good. They scarified their integrity and honour (and any chances of re-election) in order to mitigate as best as they could against the worst excesses of a Conservative government. For example, Lib Dems regularly cockblock Tory policies such as the new surveillance laws, and because they're members of a coalition government they can actually throw a spanner in the works, whereas if the Conservatives controlled a minority government then they could do willy nilly without any meaningful opposition.Like I said, the Tories ended up winning in my constituency anyway, but now I feel dirty for voting LibDem because they teamed up with the Tories to run the government (gross oversimplification ahoy!) and have turned their backs on pretty much everything they said they'd do in their campaign, like university tuition fees (although they sort of have the excuse of the rules changing a bit when they teamed up with the Tories... the Tories wrecking the NHS after campaigning with promises like this just proves that they're the scumbags they've always been). There's no way on earth the Green party would ever win in my area, but I'd feel a whole lot better having voted for them than the backstabby LibDems.
Brazil. Unfortunately, though, as I've alluded, most people don't quite realize the existance of that system, so instead, people think they can sabotage the system with hipster votes (i.e. into candidates with zero political background, fame coming from other endeavors and no pretense of good politics whatsoever) and that actually ends up breeding more corruption.Huh. That is pretty cool. Where do you live?
I really, really wish people were given the option to vote either for a candidate or against a candidate. Mathematically it would work out the same, and you wouldn't have to vote for a lesser evil - only against a greater one.
...and I guess there's also a bit of tribal loyalty. Which shouldn't really be influencing my political leanings, but it's still a *thing*! I might be slowly drifting a little more to the right, but when my mum and her brothers are all Labour voters since the 70s (my mum even worked for her local party branch in her 20s!), when my cousins swear by their Labour allegiance, when most of my friends all want to vote Labour even though they agree that the party's gone downhill since Blair (when I told my best friend that I was beginning to agree with certain aspects of Conservative economic theory, you should have seen the look of horror on his face!), it's hard not to feel a sense of fraternity.
The problem is, there isn't really a mainstream party in the UK political system which subscribes to socially progressive/fiscally conservative politics. If I want to support small state policies, I have to vote Conservative (or I suppose UKIP, but I find their Little Englander rhetoric just too unbearable to endorse). On the other hand, if I want to support progressive social policy I have to vote Labour (or some third-party candidates depending on what constituency I'm in). You can't really have your cake and eat it in those circumstances.Social and economic policies don't have to go hand in hand. You can be fiscally conservative and socially progressive at the same time, which is why I voted for D66 (Democraten 66) last time, which is basically the Dutch version of the Lib-Dems
they don't really represent my views tbh. :PWhy don't you just keep voting Lib Dems?
I like to think that the Lib Dems did what they did for the greater good. They scarified their integrity and honour (and any chances of re-election) in order to mitigate as best as they could against the worst excesses of a Conservative government. For example, Lib Dems regularly cockblock Tory policies such as the new surveillance laws, and because they're members of a coalition government they can actually throw a spanner in the works, whereas if the Conservatives controlled a minority government then they could do willy nilly without any meaningful opposition.