"I support this war so much that I'm going to ignore the position of the vast majority of my constituents and party members even though it endangers our chances of re-election in the Fall" is also a take.
@seb321 @evan I said people who think like that have a bad take. I did not criticize them. I'm focused on the ideas and outcomes, not on criticizing people.
If I were to say the people who care about reproductive rights shouldn't avoid voting for Biden just because he has failed to get those rights passed into law, would that be criticizing people, or would that be addressing an illogical assessment?
I rather disagree with the idea that Biden "CLEARLY is doing his best to limit the violence"; he is doing a little, but he could do a lot more.
It's likely that the reason he isn't doing a lot more is that he's afraid of losing votes on the pro-Likud side if he does.
He might therefore do more to limit the violence if he had evidence that he should be afraid of losing votes on the anti-genocide side if he doesn't.
It's not like the choice is between two fixed and static positions, Biden-as-given and Trump-as-given. If Biden believes that genocide opponents will stay home if he keeps fully funding the genocide, there's a greater chance he'll stop doing that. His need for votes can change his behavior.
There's a whole issue about whether the anti-genocide people are actually bluffing of course, and whether they'd actually risk a Trump presidency by staying home if he doesn't do more for Palestine. And I think it's frankly best if he can't assume it's just a bluff.
@seb321 @augieray @evan so, given the exact circumstances you are describing, you would vote for the person who has explicitly advocated genocide over the person who is merely doing an insufficient amount to stop it?
Or alternately, you would stay at home, not willing to vote for the person who has done an insufficient amount to stop it, knowing that meant increasing the likelihood that the person who explicitly advocated genocide would get into power.
That doesn't make sense to me.
Voting is not fixing everything, it's more like repair and maintenance work, it's not gonna fix your car, but it will keep it running and maybe even improve it a little. You have to keep doing it or the car will fall apart, even if you don't like doing oil changes.
In a choice between the lesser of two evils most philosophers would agree that choosing the lesser evil is the more moral choice, evil is not black and white, it's a spectrum ffs.
@augieray I do not think my reply was significantly more glib than your original post.
There is a lot that can be done to win back voters who are turned off of Biden because of the war. For example, emphasizing the leadership role the US has played in the ceasefire process. Getting food and medicine into Gaza. Conditioning aid.
Blaming people who oppose ethnic cleansing for the return of Trump isn't it, though.
I wish you good luck with your effort!
I don't want to minimize that because it is horrific.
That said, this is what Trump's stated goals are:
The eradication of the Palestinian people from Gaza,, plus the end of Ukraine as an independent nation (which could directly lead to open war in Europe,) the extermination of trans people in the US, end of most US social programs, countrywide ban on abortion, the end of public education... and these are only Trump's stated goals.
Now, I'll grant you, there's a very real possibility we will get some of those things _anyway_, no matter what we do, but there's a significant difference IMO between trying to prevent something and encouraging it.
@augieray Opposition to genocide is a peremptory norm or jus cogens. We don't get to opt out and say there are more important priorities. It's the highest priority.
@Pickle @augieray @evan Why are you pretending that there are more than two choices? There aren't. One of them will be POTUS. That's reality, whether you like it or not. Also reality: one of those men is 1,000 times worse for everyone on the planet, *especially* Palestinians.
I get wishing there were other choices. But there aren't. If that makes you feel like giving into nihilism, fine. Just don't drag literally the entire world down with you.
I really don't like being this guy but the risk analyst in me won't stop. Sorry.
The United States does not fully comply with this idea by and of itself, inside its own borders, on our own citizens; we openly use both torture and slavery in prisons, and additionally refoulement is fairly commonplace.
Just sayin': the US is not a good place.