I sat out the 1972 election between Nixon and Humphrey. Many sat out 2000 and 2016 elections. Here are the consequences.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    Yeah, I said that incremental change is still an important thing, even if someone isn’t actually supporting democrats. They might not achieve their goals in that election, but you get a chain of increasingly aligned presidents and senators, it achieves the same goal eventually. Or did my comment not post right? I’ll check and make sure, then edit this if it didn’t.

    As far as someone that doesn’t care being privileged, sure, whatever, that’s one possibility. But, as I said in response to another comment, if they’re in that state of privilege, why would we want them to vote? Are you assuming they’ll vote the way you and I prefer? I’m not. Again, I’m repeating myself, but there are people that voted for trump the first time because they thought it was funny.

    Humans are not exactly the smartest thing in the universe. We’re prone to narcissism, apathy, and outright malice. If someone that’s like that wants to stay home, I’m glad. I don’t want some chowderhead twit voting for the laugh of it. I don’t want people voting by flipping a coin. I don’t want people deciding to vote against sanity just because they’re contrarian jerks they get tired of being told they have to vote, and have to vote one particular way.

    And you can’t guarantee protest voters would vote the way you want. I know too many of them, I can promise you that just because they’re left wing doesn’t mean they’d vote democrat. Judge that as you will, but I’ll be glad if they stay home.

    I may be voting for what I see as the lesser evil, but I’m also going to be voting sane, and effectively.