Man, I got in this huge, flashy debate with people on the left and the right on Bluesky last night...Look, here's the deal.
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Man, I got in this huge, flashy debate with people on the left and the right on Bluesky last night...
Look, here's the deal.
I wish they had voted.
Nothing in life is simple. We want there to be easy, straightforward, singular reasons for the awful mess the planet and America are in. Unfortunately, the reasons are complex, based in psychology, sociology, technology, education, money, and the list goes on and on. And there's a hell of a lot of blame to go around. The entire ludicrous, racist MAGA movement, the greedy GOP and their gerrymandering and voter suppression, narcissist billionaires, weak and out of touch Democratic leadership, a culture of corruption and money-making in our senior levels of politics.
Then there's the voters. The ones who would sell their mom or kid before giving up being racist or homophobic. The ones who meant well but were so stuck on one issue that they they were willing to burn society down in multiple countries instead of compromising for a lesser evil. The massive, massive percentage who just couldn't be bothered to care enough to vote at all.
Yeah, it's the last two groups that hurt me the most as I watch America crumbling. I can understand -evil-. I can understand bigots who are so brainwashed in a bigoted, angry cult that it will take formal religious deprogramming to reach them. I grew up surrounded by them. I understand monsters. Okay, that's a problem to add to the pile.
But the people who still, even today haughtily defend not voting at all, or voting for a third party -for a general election president-, in what was visibly quite possibly the last free and fair election in American history... but have emotions, independent thought, care about issues. Those ones broke my heart more than anybody else.
Don't you dare accuse me of not caring about what's happening to Palestine or Ukraine. Don't you dare accuse me of not caring about trans rights. I'm marching and donating and phone banking shoulder to shoulder with everyone else. I've certainly been outspoken about Democratic party leadership's (especially the old guard's) weakness on geopolitical and social issues.
But this was it. 2024 was kind of the last chance. Gerrymandering and voter suppression is at unprecedented levels with few remaining checks and balances. A lot of government infrastructure and knowledge has been dismantled chaotically or even pushed out of the US. The supreme court is partisan now for a whole generation. Corporations and billionaires have gained money and influence.
The idealists who think we'll just spring back into a socialist paradise if we buck the man enough... IDK, guys. I spent a long military career across two miserable wars and a lot of natural disasters seeing just how quickly and horribly a healthy modern society can crumble. And the -cost-. The horrific human cost. The cost to infrastructure, health, education, science, art...
Revolutions are ugly and messy - and most in history haven't involved nuclear superpowers which over-equipped militaries and militarized police. They're not a cute teen dystopian novel. They're not Le Mis with nice costumes and a cocktail. We rely on incredibly complex critical infrastructure. Transportation. Just in time logistics. Do your plans include how to live without sewage in a city for a month? Where you'll get medication? The boring stuff.
I really hope I'm wrong and America has a fair election in 2028 and it's like Newsom Buttigieg or whatever you guys want, and we're able to force the democratic party to take on AOC and Sanders' excellent talking points and replace the old guard. That would be super duper. I just can't see this ending with the utopia you want. Ukraine and Gaza are still starving and burning. Our neighbors are being taken to camps. Trans rights are being stripped apace. And now we have no influence at all to help them via a government. And rich politicians are still safe as houses.
I wish they had voted.
-
Man, I got in this huge, flashy debate with people on the left and the right on Bluesky last night...
Look, here's the deal.
I wish they had voted.
Nothing in life is simple. We want there to be easy, straightforward, singular reasons for the awful mess the planet and America are in. Unfortunately, the reasons are complex, based in psychology, sociology, technology, education, money, and the list goes on and on. And there's a hell of a lot of blame to go around. The entire ludicrous, racist MAGA movement, the greedy GOP and their gerrymandering and voter suppression, narcissist billionaires, weak and out of touch Democratic leadership, a culture of corruption and money-making in our senior levels of politics.
Then there's the voters. The ones who would sell their mom or kid before giving up being racist or homophobic. The ones who meant well but were so stuck on one issue that they they were willing to burn society down in multiple countries instead of compromising for a lesser evil. The massive, massive percentage who just couldn't be bothered to care enough to vote at all.
Yeah, it's the last two groups that hurt me the most as I watch America crumbling. I can understand -evil-. I can understand bigots who are so brainwashed in a bigoted, angry cult that it will take formal religious deprogramming to reach them. I grew up surrounded by them. I understand monsters. Okay, that's a problem to add to the pile.
But the people who still, even today haughtily defend not voting at all, or voting for a third party -for a general election president-, in what was visibly quite possibly the last free and fair election in American history... but have emotions, independent thought, care about issues. Those ones broke my heart more than anybody else.
Don't you dare accuse me of not caring about what's happening to Palestine or Ukraine. Don't you dare accuse me of not caring about trans rights. I'm marching and donating and phone banking shoulder to shoulder with everyone else. I've certainly been outspoken about Democratic party leadership's (especially the old guard's) weakness on geopolitical and social issues.
But this was it. 2024 was kind of the last chance. Gerrymandering and voter suppression is at unprecedented levels with few remaining checks and balances. A lot of government infrastructure and knowledge has been dismantled chaotically or even pushed out of the US. The supreme court is partisan now for a whole generation. Corporations and billionaires have gained money and influence.
The idealists who think we'll just spring back into a socialist paradise if we buck the man enough... IDK, guys. I spent a long military career across two miserable wars and a lot of natural disasters seeing just how quickly and horribly a healthy modern society can crumble. And the -cost-. The horrific human cost. The cost to infrastructure, health, education, science, art...
Revolutions are ugly and messy - and most in history haven't involved nuclear superpowers which over-equipped militaries and militarized police. They're not a cute teen dystopian novel. They're not Le Mis with nice costumes and a cocktail. We rely on incredibly complex critical infrastructure. Transportation. Just in time logistics. Do your plans include how to live without sewage in a city for a month? Where you'll get medication? The boring stuff.
I really hope I'm wrong and America has a fair election in 2028 and it's like Newsom Buttigieg or whatever you guys want, and we're able to force the democratic party to take on AOC and Sanders' excellent talking points and replace the old guard. That would be super duper. I just can't see this ending with the utopia you want. Ukraine and Gaza are still starving and burning. Our neighbors are being taken to camps. Trans rights are being stripped apace. And now we have no influence at all to help them via a government. And rich politicians are still safe as houses.
I wish they had voted.
@hacks4pancakes
Great post.Voting is not a singular thing that fixes everything, and there will never be perfect, all boxes checked, candidates.
People need to vote election after election to be able to push things in directions.
It's something especially right wing people have done over the years, causing many previously extreme viewpoints into mainstream, because votes matter. -
@hacks4pancakes
Great post.Voting is not a singular thing that fixes everything, and there will never be perfect, all boxes checked, candidates.
People need to vote election after election to be able to push things in directions.
It's something especially right wing people have done over the years, causing many previously extreme viewpoints into mainstream, because votes matter.@svelmoe Yes. And people also need to recognize (and internalize) that *every vote* matters.
It's easy to show starting from a reductio ad absurdum position: if everyone except one person believes that, and therefore does not vote, then the *one* person who votes decides the outcome. With each additional person's vote, the impact of any one vote (extremist or reasonable) becomes smaller, but it never becomes zero.
Not voting is voting for "whatever".
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