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[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 months ago

I'm not a psychic, so it's difficult to say, but I will answer Kamala since you are so insistent on unambiguous answers.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

So in the short and long term, based on our best assessments, we agree the better outcome of this election is for Kamala to win over Trump*.

Do you also agree that there is an (effectively) 0% chance of a third-party candidate winning this election? That come election night, the winner will either be Kamala or Trump?

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 4 points 3 months ago
[-] null@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 months ago

In that case, do you think people in swing states should vote for Kamala?

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

No. I don't live in a swing state, but even if I did, I wouldn't. However, I can respect their decision as long as they respect mine.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I'm not asking about you and your vote, I'm asking about the position and rhetoric you push around here.

If you agree that Kamala would be better than Trump short and long term, and that one of them will be president, then how can you, in good faith, advocate for people not to vote in a way that increases the odds of the better option and decreases the odds of the worse one?

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Because one being better than the other is not the same as being an acceptable choice. If I'm in a burning building, what fundamentally needs to happen is that I escape. You can argue that the flames on one side of the room are higher than the flames on the other side of the room, but I don't care, because if I stay in the room I'll die. The only thing that matters is finding the door.

You asked if I thought a third party could win this election, and the answer is no. But could a third party win a future election? The answer to that is yes, maybe. The results of this election will inform voters in future elections of whether a third party is viable. The most important thing is increasing the chances of getting to an acceptable outcome, everything else is secondary to that goal.

In the meantime, voting third party can influence things in other ways. If the Democrats can only win by getting a third party's endorsement, then they can potentially be brought to the bargaining table.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 4 points 3 months ago

Because one being better than the other is not the same as being an acceptable choice.

But you already agreed that for swing state voters, there are effectively only 2 choices, and that one is better than the other in both the short and long term.

If I'm in a burning building, what fundamentally needs to happen is that I escape. You can argue that the flames on one side of the room are higher than the flames on the other side of the room, but I don't care, because if I stay in the room I'll die.

Again, you agreed that escape is effectively not an option through voting. Moving toward the side of the room with fewer flames is objectively the better choice while you work on establishing an escape.

Why on earth would you stand in the middle and let the fire decide?

You asked if I thought a third party could win this election, and the answer is no. But could a third party win a future election? The answer to that is yes, maybe. The results of this election will inform voters in future elections of whether a third party is viable.

No. Not in a first-past-the-post system. Can't happen.

I bet we'd agree that that system needs to change, but it will not happen by voting 3rd party every 4 years.

The most important thing is increasing the chances of getting to an acceptable outcome, everything else is secondary to that goal.

Precisely. And within this system, with this short of a runway, Kamala is the only acceptable out of the 2 outcomes we agree are the only 2 possible.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

But you already agreed that for swing state voters, there are effectively only 2 choices

Hold up. All I agreed with is that in this election, it wasn't realistic for a third party to win. You're trying to take that as meaning there's no reason to vote third party. As I explained, it's possible for third parties to wield influence, and giving them more votes gives them more ability to do that.

There are effectively two possible winners but that's not the same as there being effectively two choices. The question isn't "Do you think a third party can win this election," the question is, "Do you think voting third party cause any positive effects?" to which my answer is yes.

Again, you agreed that escape is effectively not an option through voting.

I did no such thing. You're twisting my words and jumping to conclusions.

Moving toward the side of the room with fewer flames is objectively the better choice while you work on establishing an escape.

Why on earth would you stand in the middle and let the fire decide?

I'm amazed that you managed to miss the point that hard. I don't give a shit which fire is more comfortable to burn to death in. If there's no way out, then I will still try to wail on the walls until I can't anymore.

Kamala is the only acceptable

Kamala is fundamentally unacceptable. Again, you're just acting like things are established when they very much are not.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 months ago

Hold up. All I agreed with is that in this election, it wasn't realistic for a third party to win. You're trying to take that as meaning there's no reason to vote third party. As I explained, it's possible for third parties to wield influence, and giving them more votes gives them more ability to do that.

Again -- no shot. Not in FPTP. You virtue signaling every 4 years has never and will never change that.

I did no such thing. You're twisting my words and jumping to conclusions.

Yes you did. You agreed that that only Trump or Kamala will be president after this election. Don't backtrack, there's a reason I insisted on these answers.

I'm amazed that you managed to miss the point that hard. I don't give a shit which fire is more comfortable to burn to death in. If there's no way out, then I will still try to wail on the walls.

Again, why would you not wail on the walls in the room with less fire? What an absurd stance...

Kamala is fundamentally unacceptable.

Again, you already agreed she is the better option of the only 2 outcomes that will happen. Don't twist my words ;)

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

Again – no shot. Not in FPTP. You virtue signaling every 4 years has never and will never change that.

That is incorrect. Lets say the polls show, Green 15%, Democrat 40%, Republican 45%, and the Greens say, "We'll endorse the Democrats if and only if they do X." You have not addressed why this is not a viable strategy at all. Saying "no shot" doesn't make it true.

Yes you did. You agreed that that only Trump or Kamala will be president after this election. Don’t backtrack, there’s a reason I insisted on these answers.

That's not the same thing. You're conflating "being able to win this election" with "being able to ever change things." It's possible to change things without winning, and it's possible for future elections to be different. You're taking a much more limited claim and expanding it to a much larger one that I never agreed with.

Again, why would you not wail on the walls in the room with less fire? What an absurd stance…

If anything, it'd be better to wail on the walls in the room with more fire, to die quicker. But the point is that that doesn't matter, the only thing that matters is escape.

Again, you already agreed she is the better option of the only 2 outcomes that will happen. Don’t twist my words ;)

And as I already stated, "better" does not mean "acceptable." In the same way if you push a vegan into saying beef is better than pork, that doesn't mean they consider beef an acceptable food.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 5 points 3 months ago

You have not addressed why this is not a viable strategy at all.

Because you haven't demonstrated it to be a viable strategy...

Can you give examples of this tactic playing out favorably in the past? How does your 3rd party vote materialize into meaningful, actionable pressure on the Democrats? Why am I not surprised you didn't say "We'll endorse the Democrats / Republicans if and only if they do X."?

It's possible to change things without winning.

Not under FPTP.

If anything, it'd be better to wail on the walls in the room with more fire, to die quicker. But the point is that that doesn't matter, the only thing that matters is escape.

If the only thing that matters is escape, then the only thing that makes sense is choosing the scenario that's most likely to allow for it. Which is to move to the area with less fire. This should be absurdly obvious.

You can't have both. If you choose the room with more fire then you're admitting that your whole position is a facade and you're actually just a deluded accelerationist. Which we both know you aren't.

And as I already stated, "better" does not mean "acceptable." In the same way if you push a vegan into saying beef is better than pork, that doesn't mean they consider beef an acceptable food.

If you think both of the only 2 possible outcomes are unacceptable, then acceptability is a moot point. Better and worse still exist, and you already agreed on which is which.

[-] Rhoeri@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

You’re destroying them at their own game. This is fucking beautiful!

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

Because you haven’t demonstrated it to be a viable strategy…

Can you give examples of this tactic playing out favorably in the past?

Parties are always looking at how to attract or retain voters. It's very intuitive that if a significant number of people defect from a party, the party will be reconsidering the issue that caused the break. I don't think this needs to be proven.

Why am I not surprised you didn’t say “We’ll endorse the Democrats / Republicans if and only if they do X.”?

Why would I? Are you suggesting that trying to influence the Republicans to become an acceptable party is a viable strategy?

If the only thing that matters is escape, then the only thing that makes sense is choosing the scenario that’s most likely to allow for it.

...what? I thought your whole reason for caring about the "more comfortable fire to die in" is because escape was ruled out entirely.

If you think both of the only 2 possible outcomes are unacceptable, then acceptability is a moot point.

No, it isn't. Unacceptable means unacceptable.

[-] Rhoeri@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

Dude… you are getting wrecked here. You should seriously start thinking about finding something else to do with your time. Because this Isn’t working out very well for you.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Parties are always looking at how to attract or retain voters.

And under FPTP there can only and will only be 2 parties with any real opportunity to enact policy. Do you think the Democrats are worried that you're going to vote Republican? That the GOP is going to start appealing to Leftists?

Why would I? Are you suggesting that trying to influence the Republicans to become an acceptable party is a viable strategy?

Of course not. But the implication is that the Democrats could be influenced. Which is exactly why I can't agree with advocating for swing state voters to do anything but vote against Trump.

...what? I thought your whole reason for caring about the "more comfortable fire to die in" is because escape was ruled out entirely.

Nah, I think escape is possible, but we need to move away from the bigger flames. You're the one who thinks standing still and letting the fire choose is the way to go -- for some reason...

Unacceptable means unacceptable.

It sure does. It's still moot in this context though.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

Do you think the Democrats are worried that you’re going to vote Republican?

Yes? That's why they're all about Dick Cheney.

Nah, I think escape is possible, but we need to move away from the bigger flames. You’re the one who thinks standing still and letting the fire choose is the way to go – for some reason…

Then you agree that escape is what matters and choosing the more comfortable flames to die in is not what's important. There's a difference between claiming "I can survive longer in these flames which will help me to escape" vs the previous position you were arguing for, "Forget escaping, what matters is these flames are more comfortable than those flames."

It sure does. It’s still moot in this context though.

No it isn't.

[-] Rhoeri@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

How many different analogies and what-if scenarios does it take for you to finally have a valid point?

Jesus man!

The moment someone calls out your bullshit you move on to another ridiculous version of reality to try and mold into something that resembles an actual point-

And you fail every time!

[-] null@slrpnk.net 4 points 3 months ago

Yes? That's why they're all about Dick Cheney.

"The Democrats are all about this hardcore Republican as a means of capturing the Leftist vote"

...huh?

Then you agree that escape is what matters and choosing the more comfortable flames to die in is not what's important.

Yes I agree, your burning house analogy isn't actually applicable to the scenario at hand (like the vegan analogy you keep doubling down on). That's my bad for trying to take it in good faith.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

“The Democrats are all about this hardcore Republican as a means of capturing the Leftist vote”

They are trying to appeal to right-leaning democrats and centrists who might consider voting republican. What I mean is that they are concerned about the possibility of their voters changing sides, not Leftists specifically.

Yes I agree, your burning house analogy isn’t actually applicable to the scenario at hand

Whether it is directly applicable or not isn't important, and if you're trying to take it that way, I guess that explains your absurd takes on it. The purpose of the analogy is to demonstrate that one thing can be marginally less bad than another, but both options still fundamentally unacceptable and not worthy of consideration. "Would you rather burn to death in these flames or those flames," "Would you rather eat a bowl of rusty nails or a bowl of arsenic," whatever, I could give you an answer if you really push me, but if you can't take my answer and serve me one and expect me to accept it. Because the real answer is that both are fundamentally unacceptable, so which one is preferable doesn't really matter.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 months ago

They are trying to appeal to right-leaning democrats and centrists who might consider voting republican.

Correct. What they are not concerned about is far-Leftists somehow becoming Republicans. Which is why your game of pressuring them by voting 3rd party in a federal election is ridiculous.

Whether it is directly applicable or not isn't important

It doesn't matter if your analogy is analogous? Gee, that explains a lot.

The purpose of the analogy is to demonstrate that one thing can be marginally less bad than another, but both options still fundamentally unacceptable

No shit. But it completely ignores the part where you are stuck with one of those "unacceptable" options no matter what.

Every single one of your analogies conveniently ignores that vital factor.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Correct. What they are not concerned about is far-Leftists somehow becoming Republicans. Which is why your game of pressuring them by voting 3rd party in a federal election is ridiculous.

That doesn't follow at all. Just because they're not concerned about leftists becoming republicans, that in no way shows that they're not concerned about leftists voting third party.

It doesn’t matter if your analogy is analogous? Gee, that explains a lot.

I don't think you understand how analogies work. An analogy doesn't have to reflect every aspect of reality. It only has to be comparable as far as it's relevant to the specific point that it's attempting to establish or explain. The specific point of the analogy is that one option being better than another does not mean that either option is worth considering. That's not specifically about the election, it's a general point.

All analogies deviate from reality in some way, that's what an analogy is. The question is whether it deviates in a way that's relevant to the specific point being discussed. I only made the analogy to establish that specific point, and not as a more general reflection of the election, as you're trying to take it.

you are stuck with one of those “unacceptable” options no matter what.

There's a difference between there being two possible winners and there being two possible choices. Just because Trump and Harris are the only ones likely to be elected doesn't mean I have to vote for either of them. We've been over this, I feel like.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

Just because they're not concerned about leftists becoming republicans, that in no way shows that they're not concerned about leftists voting third party.

Exactly -- I agree that the two are unrelated, so I'm not sure why you used it to support your claim. It makes perfect sense for them to try to steal voters directly from their only other actual opponent. That means they gain a vote and the other side loses a vote.

I see no reason why they would feel any more pressure to capture 3rd party voters than they would to capture apathetic voters or any other non-Republican-voting group.

There's a difference between there being two possible outcomes and there being two possible choices. Just because Trump and Harris are the only ones likely to be elected doesn't mean I have to vote for either of them. We've been over this, I feel like.

Of course there are more than two possible choices. You could choose to saw your arm off and put it in the ballot box. Choosing to use your vote to prevent the worse of the only two possible outcomes from happening is a better choice than throwing it away.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Exactly – I agree that the two are unrelated, so I’m not sure why you used it to support your claim.

You're the one who brought up the question of whether democrats are concerned about me voting Republican. The point is that they are concerned about the possibility of gaining or losing voters, which honestly isn't a point I should even have to argue for, because it's obvious.

Choosing to use your vote to prevent the worse of the only two possible outcomes from happening is a better choice than throwing it away.

I disagree, you haven't established this. Since neither option is acceptable, it is not correct to accept either.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

You're the one who brought up the question of whether democrats are concerned about me voting Republican.

Right, in response to your ridiculous assertion that voting 3rd party puts any meaningful pressure on them.

The point is that they are concerned about the possibility of gaining or losing voters, which honestly isn't a point I should even have to argue for, because it's obvious.

I agree, it's extremely obvious. I'm not arguing against it. I'm arguing against your claim that voting 3rd party puts any meaningful pressure on Democrats.

I disagree, you haven't established this.

Because it's obvious. The outlandish claim is that throwing away your vote is better than using it to avoid the worse outcome.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I agree, it’s extremely obvious. I’m not arguing against it. I’m arguing against your claim that voting 3rd party puts any meaningful pressure on Democrats.

It's not "outlandish" at all. You can't agree that it's "extremely obvious" that democrats care about gaining or losing votes in one case and that it's "outlandish" in another, it's completely arbitrary.

Because it’s obvious. The outlandish claim is that throwing away your vote is better than using it to avoid the worse outcome.

I don't consider that obvious at all. First off, I dispute the claim that voting third party is "throwing your vote away," because I've already established the effects it can have regardless of not winning. But I also assert that it's better to throw away your vote than to support someone who is fundamentally unacceptable.

I do not subscribe to the ideology of lesser evilism, or to act utilitarianism. It is not ethical to kill a healthy person to get the organs necessary to save five people. It is not ethical to murder someone because someone threatens to murder two people if you don't. Y'all act like your ethical framework is just "obvious," objectively true, and the only one that exists, but that's completely false, and it falls apart as indefensible under scrutiny.

In addition, it's just a bad negotiation tactic.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

It's not "outlandish" at all. You can't agree that it's "extremely obvious" that democrats care about gaining or losing votes in one case and that it's "outlandish" in another, it's completely arbitrary.

I didn't say it was "outlandish" to claim they care about gaining votes. I said it's outlandish to claim that voting 3rd party does anything to meaningfully pressure them into changing their policies to capture your vote. They are more concerned about changing their policies to capture the center-right, like you said.

I don't consider that obvious at all. First off, I dispute the claim that voting third party is "throwing your vote away," because I've already established the effects it can have regardless of not winning

No you have not.

But I also assert that it's better to throw away your vote than to support someone who is fundamentally unacceptable.

That is a ridiculous assertion.

I do not subscribe to the ideology of lesser evilism, or to act utilitarianism.

There it is. You don't care any of the work that has to happen over the next 4 years to push for positive change. You just care about virtue-signaling.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

more concerned

I agree that they are more concerned about the center-right (mostly because the center-right is more prone to defecting while the left just falls in line), but that does not mean that they are not at all concerned about losing the left, or that a change in strategy couldn't make them concerned about that.

There it is. You don’t care any of the work that has to happen over the next 4 years to push for positive change. You just care about virtue-signaling.

How does not being an act utilitarian mean that I just care about virtue-signaling? Do you know what act utilitarianism is? Do you think it has something to do with taking actions vs not taking actions?

Act utilitarianism is an ethical framework that is based around judging specific acts to determine which action produces the most utility, in contrast to rule utilitarianism, which is about judging which general rules tend to produce the most utility.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

I think I see where this is headed.

Am I right to say that you view casting a vote as an endorsement of a candidate/party (like MAGA does), rather than as a chess move (like Liberals do)?

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

Obvious, a vote is an endorsement, yes. Whether MAGA does or Liberals don't, I don't know anything about that and don't particularly care.

But even if you want to treat it as a chess move, it's a bad one. It's tactically wrong as well as ethically.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Obvious, a vote is an endorsement, yes.

Nope, that's merely your opinion.

It's tactically wrong

False.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago
[-] null@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

Then prove that voting is objectively and endorsement of a candidate/party. That's your claim.

For the second, you already agreed previously that it is tactically the best move.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Then prove that voting is objectively and endorsement of a candidate/party. That’s your claim.

That's just definitionally what those words mean. To say "This candidate is the best choice, I'm voting for them and others should to" is an endorsement, and to say "I endorse this candidate" means, "This candidate is the best choice, I'm voting for them and others should too." I suppose you could argue they're technically different if you lie about how you're voting or don't tell anyone about it.

For the second, you already agreed previously that it is tactically the best move.

Blatant lie. I have consistently disagreed with that at every single point of this conversation.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

That's just definitionally what those words mean. To say "This candidate is the best choice, I'm voting for them and others should to" is an endorsement, and to say "I endorse this candidate" means, "This candidate is the best choice, I'm voting for them and others should too."

Under FPTP, one can absolutely use their vote to denounce a candidate and vote against them taking office. Especially if that vote has a chance of actually pushing the needle far enough to make that happen.

Blatant lie. I have consistently disagreed with that at every single point of this conversation.

Blatant lie.

You agreed that:

  • Kamala or Trump will be elected president
  • Trump losing would be better overall in the short term
  • Trump losing would be better overall in the long term

Do you need me to link that for you?

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Under FPTP, one can absolutely use their vote to denounce a candidate and vote against them taking office.

Only by contradicting yourself. To denounce a candidate is to say that you shouldn't vote for them.

Do you need me to link that for you?

None of those things are the same as concluding that voting for Kamala is tactically correct, which I have repeatedly explained to you and been completely consistent on. That you think I should conclude that is not the same as me concluding it. To say that that's what I concluded and that I already conceded the point when I've plainly told you otherwise is a blatant lie. You will retract that claim or this conversation is over, I will not continue with someone who lies about what I said.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

Only by contradicting yourself.

Prove it.

None of those things are the same as concluding that voting for Kamala is tactically correct

Define "tactically correct".

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

I'm getting an error of "max comment depth reached," so it seems we'll have to call it.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

Good a place as any.

Cheers.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

Prove it.

To denounce a candidate is to say that you shouldn’t vote for them. To vote for a candidate who you say doesn't deserve a vote is self-contradiction.

Define “tactically correct”.

A tactically correct action is an action that best furthers your goals.

[-] null@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

To denounce a candidate is to say that you shouldn’t vote for them.

Or you can vote against them.

To vote for a candidate who you say doesn't deserve a vote is self-contradiction.

They deserve a vote solely for the reason that doing so is the only possible means of voting against the other candidate. It's not a self-contradiction.

A tactically correct action is an action that best furthers your goals.

What are the goals in this scenario?

[-] davidagain@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

Yeah, people already explained to you that you can choose neither beef nor pork and you will get neither beef nor pork, but if you choose neither the geriatric loony nor the sane candidate, you will still definitely get one of them. The vegan analogy is bogus because it's a scenario in which there's a free choice from a vast number of options. You keep saying you want neither, but you can't have neither. You have to have one of them as president.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

What a vegan wants isn't just to not eat either pork or beef, but for neither animal to be killed. You can kill them anyway, but that doesn't mean I have to eat. Same way, you can elect whichever of the awful candidates you want, but I don't have to support them.

[-] davidagain@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

Still doesn't compare.

If 10% of citizens who care about animals consistently don't eat pork or beef, the food industry reduces production and fewer pigs and cows get slaughtered for food.

If 10% of citizens who care about Palestinians don't vote, Trump wins and it's in Netanyahu's interest to prolong, advance and widen his genocidal flattening of Gaza, extend it to the whole of the West Bank, wipe out as much of Lebanon as he can and take the war to Iran. That and all the turning the military on left wing citizens, mass deportations, leaving women to lose their fertility or die for lack of healthcare nationality, put trans people in jail after calling them pedophiles and let their pedophile friends off scot free. Meanwhile the Democrats see that left wingers don't vote and the only votes they can chase are "centrists" and adopt more right wing policies because nothing moves the Overton window right more than a right wing government and there's no loopy logic that'll get you out of that reality.

If those 10% vote for Kamala Harris she continues to call publicly and privately for a ceasefire, and if the Democrats win both the House and the Senate they have the chance to actually change stuff and shit like the republicans' new law removing the president's power to delay and shipments gets washed away and there's a chance, albeit small, that Harris is in power long enough and securely enough to do as you advocate and pressurise Netanyahu to stop, but there's zero chance of that if she loses.

There's no third option. It's either Trump winning and everything getting worse, especially in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, the Middle East generally and the USA in particular, or Kamala winning and things getting marginally better.

Vegans make a positive difference by refusing both.

People like you make things much, much worse by refusing both.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

have the chance to actually change stuff

We've been over this, in the other thread where you can't address my point. Biden and Harris have no interest in stopping what's happening in Gaza, they fully support unconditional arms shipments to Israel. This is where you call me a secret Trump supporter because there's nothing you can say to that.

[-] davidagain@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Aw gee, look at my post about electoral arithmetic vs vegan arithmetic that you ignore completely and tell me DEmoCRats eViL as usual, with your favourite one sided unfair misrepresentation served up as the usual non sequitur with a side of classic @OBJECTION!-style glossing over how much worse trump would be for Palestine, the world and the USA.

[-] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

You're so predictable. Never have anything interesting or insightful to say, always just here to lambast me for not singing the praises of a candidate I don't even support. Boring.

[-] davidagain@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

If you don't support him, why do you spend so much time online parroting his talking points? It's weird. Anyway, still doesn't address the point that vegans choosing neither makes things better and voters who care about Gaza choosing neither makes Trump win and things would be worse for Palestine and the Middle East and the USA, and women and trans folk and education, and you'd have Epstein's "best friend" and "the best king of Israel" back in the Whitehouse. Unless you vote for the only person who can stop him, the imperfect but much, much better Kamala Harris.

Did you see the "Trump is planning a third red scare" news headline, starting the article with

Donald Trump and his allies aren’t making a secret of it: if they win, they’re going to launch a campaign of repression to destroy the pro-Palestinian movement and the organized left.

this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2024
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