• MolotovHalfEmpty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    Yes, but I haven’t seen much in the way of wide spread and coordinated campaigns to put issues that matter in front of him and other Dems until fairly recently.

    The uncommitted campaign was in April.

    People have been protesting, organising, and in some cases taking legal action for ten months now since October 7th.

    There’s been an international protest, legal, and lobbying effort for Palestinian rights since the late 1940s.

    That’s the issue, without a group of voters, large enough to change the outcome of elections

    But who swear infinite loyalty that they never actually will refuse to vote for said party, no matter what.

    How do you force a party to do something it’s diametrically opposed to while insisting you and everyone will always support them and obliterating even the mildest possible leverage you have?

    Yes, but I haven’t seen much in the way of wide spread and coordinated campaigns to put issues that matter in front of him and other Dems until fairly recently.

    • notabot@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      The uncommitted campaign was in April.

      Yes, which is ‘fairly recently’. The good news is it did have some effect, which rather illustrates what I’m saying. Enough voters speaking in one voice, in a way that doesn’t cause the republicans to have more power, works.

      People have been protesting, organising, and in some cases taking legal action for ten months now since October 7th.

      They have, yes, and I take my hat off to them for spending that energy doing it, but there aren’t enough of them. Until there are enough that their numbers make an electoral difference, all the protesting achieves is ‘awareness’ amongst the electorate. Given enough time and dedication that might be enough to swell the numbers to the point they have an effect, but until that point politicians are going to carry on. As I mentioned to someone else, the opinion polls I’ve found regarding American’s view of the conflict suggest about the same number of people see it as genocide as those who don’t, which is utterly horrifying, but explains why politicians are sticking to their path. When those numbers change, so will the political response.

      How do you force a party to do something it’s diametrically opposed to while insisting you and everyone will always support them

      You don’t. You, as a large enough group, make that support contingent on conditions being met. The issue is that if your group is too small, it has no effect, but if it’s bigger than that, is ignored, and withholds its votes, it hands victory to the opposing party, which is likely to be detrimental to that group, so the group needs to be large enough that it can’t be ignored. Gathering that size of group, coordinating them and getting the message across is a large undertaking, but without it you’ve got little chance of having an effect.

      • MolotovHalfEmpty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        Believe me, a website full of marxist are well aware of the power of numbers.

        My point, again, is that you advocate that the only acceptable action is one that makes organising, growing those numbers, and using that power impossible.

        Your arguement is bullshit, full of impossibilities, internal contradictions, and circular logic. And we both know fine well what you’re doing here. But like an insomniac cat with a ball of string, it can be fun to bat it around for a while, especially if others might stumble in here and see how it unravels.

        meow-tankie

        • notabot@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          It’s not so much the only acceptable action as the one that minimises the damage over the next term. It certainly doesn’t make organising or growing numbers impossible, just difficult. As far as I can see though, the thing that makes it even more difficult is that no one is making a clear and compelling case for a different approach. So, as I’ve asked several of your fellow posters, given the current reality, what, in your personal opinion, should people do, and what do you expect the outcome of that to be?

          • MolotovHalfEmpty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            5 months ago

            the one that minimises the damage over the next term

            Your original premise, that you’ve repeated, is that not doing this is unacceptable. You also never addressed why you draw the line there when I asked elsewhere.

            It certainly doesn’t make organising or growing numbers impossible, just difficult

            Then why would one do something that you acknowledge makes the task much more difficult? And then add all the other myriad restrictions you’ve dictated (and haven’t address when I’ve pointed them out)? Unless of course, you’re full of shit and are doing piss-weak concern trolling.

            no one is making a clear and compelling case for a different approach

            Literally hundreds of millions, perhaps billions, of people throughout history have done this to great success, as I have pointed out elsewhere. Once again, you don’t engage on those points. I wonder why.

            People in this thread have articulated everything from broad marxist philosphies on developing proletarian power, to specific use of strikes, to even electoral strategies that fit within your deliberately impossibly narrow ‘acceptable’ electoral frame. You’ve ignored or handwaved all of them away.

            If you don’t engage in good faith, you don’t get further effort and discussion. And you haven’t, even when you’ve been offered it.

            But if you really want to look deeper into the issue I’d suggest starting here.

            • notabot@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              If you don’t engage in good faith, you don’t get further effort and discussion. And you haven’t, even when you’ve been offered it.

              As mentioned in another thread, I’ve been getting replies on about 25 threads, and I’m trying to reply to each in a reasonable way. I wasn’t really expecting this level of response to what I thought was a relatively uncontroversial comment that the supreme court had been packed by trump. We’ve definitely covered a fair amount more since then, and I appreciate the time people have taken to do so. I’ve also noticed that you are one of the most prolific of those responders, so thank you, I know I am almost certainly trying your patience.

              Your original premise, that you’ve repeated, is that not doing this is unacceptable. You also never addressed why you draw the line there when I asked elsewhere.

              It seems to me that at each election, the sensible thing to do is act to minimise the resultant harm. Between elections is when the work of changing course needs to happen. Yes there are multiple cycles of elections at different levels, each can be treated as it’s own task. I think that’s what you’re asking, but I’m not certain.

              Then why would one do something that you acknowledge makes the task much more difficult?

              Because not doing so makes it even harder. The further right politics drifts the harder it will be to pull it left and the harder life will be for a great many people.

              And then add all the other myriad restrictions you’ve dictated

              The only things I’ve be advocating are not doing anything that would increase the chance of trump winning and making sure that candidates in any election know why you would withhold your vote early enough that they can actually do something about it without losing more of the rest of their voters.

              Literally hundreds of millions, perhaps billions, of people throughout history have done this to great success, as I have pointed out elsewhere.

              I think we’re talking at cross-purposes here. Yes, many have advocated for different approaches throughout history, and in other countries, with some success. What I am referring to is the here-and-now. Over the last electoral cycles, where has the messaging been to actually inspire large enough groups of the electorate that there is a better way? The fact that large enough groups haven’t been inspired to demand change means the messaging isn’t getting out effectively.

              People in this thread have articulated everything from broad marxist philosphies on developing proletarian power, to specific use of strikes, to even electoral strategies that fit within your deliberately impossibly narrow ‘acceptable’ electoral frame. You’ve ignored or handwaved all of them away.

              They have, and I thank them for it. I have tried to respond as best I can, if I have missed points, or not articulated myself well that’s on me, but I have certainly not handwaved away anyone. I do worry that the approach of “I’m not going to vote for biden because he is evil/hasn’t earned my vote/isn’t left enough/whatever” ignores the fact that the outcome of the presidential election is a simple either/or at this point. Assuming you are closer to biden’s politics that trumps, not voting just tips the balance slightly towards trump. This doesn’t penalize biden in any meaningful way, but it does penalize the people who trump wants to harm. He’s made it clear he supports all the same genocide that biden does, but to an even greater degree, so that won’t change for the better, and he’s demonizing minorities, so they’ll suffer even more. To me that seems like a simple choice, but it seems it’s not to everyone. Further down ticket I feel like the dems remain the least bad choice, if only to limit trump should he get in.

              One of the other posters suggested they would vote for a presidential candidate who couldn’t win, and then dems doe the rest of the ticket, and whilst that certainly wasn’t my first approach, I agreed that it could actually work. They made a good point that that could open up some space for more left wing candidates by showing the votes were there if they were earned. That approach sort of matches with what I was saying before that as long as the dems hold one or more of the houses it would limit the harm from a trump presidency. I don’t like the concept, but I can see how it could have the desired outcome.

              But if you really want to look deeper into the issue I’d suggest starting here.

              Har har. I was sort of expecting that. As I said, I’m doing my best to engage in good faith, but I think we might be coming at this from such different directions that neither of us are actually getting our meaning across effectively.

              • MolotovHalfEmpty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                5 months ago

                Good faith isn’t just about being polite and sounding civil. It’s about actually engaging with other ideas presented. I don’t believe you’ve done that, as evidenced by simply restating the exact same point again and again - vote Biden because he’s better than Trump - across a dozen replies to me and more to others, despite the fact that they’ve articulated why they either don’t agree or reject that extremely narrow framework altogether.

                You seem to be caught in a trap that everything is about a message that would be accepted if only it was articulated correctly; whether that’s me ‘understanding you’ or politicians ‘hearing us’ despite having directly opposing material interests.

                I understand your meaning. I just don’t agree and reject it for the many reasons I’ve stated.

                The rest I’ve addressed elsewhere.

                So continuing in this circular arguement would be pointless at this point since you clearly have nothing new to add. Hence, PigPoopBalls.

                • notabot@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  Good faith isn’t just about being polite and sounding civil. It’s about actually engaging with other ideas presented.

                  I concur, and I have genuinely been trying to engage with the ideas people post. You’re right that I have been focused on an extremely narrow framework, because that is what I see before us. I’ve been asking what people suggest doing in that framework because I’m trying to understand people’s position and what actions they think would be appropriate at that scale. The wide points eloquently made by you and other posters involve seem extreme to me, and I accept you may see that as a failing on my part. That makes it hard to engage with them on more than a superficial level. I felt like the conversations continuously ended up with us talking at cross-purposes, which is why I kept trying to bring them back to the points I was trying to understand.

                  I still struggle to see how people don’t see trump as a greater threat to their freedom (or whatever freedom they feel they have) than biden, but I’m not trying to change anyone’s mind either, just to comprehend their point of view.

                  I thank you for actually continuing to discuss this with me, but I think I’ve tried your patience more than sufficiently, so I’m going to disengage from the various threads we have now.