So if someone wanted to vote for “a society in which snipers are not deployed against student protests,” which candidate should they vote for?
So if someone wanted to vote for “a society in which snipers are not deployed against student protests,” which candidate should they vote for?
The democrats hold office now, while snipers are being deployed against students
So we should vote for the party that’s overseeing violent repression of protests, because that party will (sometime in the future) be better or be replaced by something better?
@HeavenlyPossum no. You should vote to *make sure* you will have a chance to vote again in four years.
This advice come from experience. I live in a country where we could not (freely) vote for 50 years.
But that’s not what I asked at all. It’s ok if the answer to the question “who should you vote for to end the violent suppression of protests” is “no one.”
No, not voting is not voting.
@HeavenlyPossum you may *want* it to be like that, but in your actual political system, it's not how it works. If 60% don't vote and the winning party gets 51% of the votes, it means something like 21% of the population won the vote.
And that's even ignoring the fact that with your bonkers system you don't even need a majority of the *total votes* to win.
No, not voting is not voting. There is no moral universe in which declining to participate in a process makes you responsible for that process.
This begs the question that opposing a system requires participating in that system, which is untrue, and presumes that we’re limited in our opposition to participation, which is also untrue.