• bobman@unilem.org
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    1 year ago

    Can’t we just vote for younger candidates?

    Doesn’t make sense to subvert the will of the people when they clearly support this.

    Also, her age isn’t what makes her shit. She’s a corporate democrat just looking out for different rich people.

    • LethalSmack@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The problem is that this isn’t the will of the people. Preliminaries don’t count as an election so your vote for which candidate that appears on the actual ballot is just a suggestion.

      The party committees gets final say on who’s on the ballot for that party to vote for.

      Which leads to the problem of the 2 party system where we vote for the least worst candidate

      • BoofStroke@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Maybe in a true democracy. No more gerrymandered districts, ranked choice voting, and term limits would be a good start. Let’s kill citizens united while at it.

        • bobman@unilem.org
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          1 year ago

          In a true democracy, we’d have direct voting.

          Which I’m a huge fan of. Not sure why we’d vote for people who won’t agree with us on everything when we can just vote ourselves and get true representation.

          • MindSkipperBro12@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’d prefer a republic, what the hell do I know about complex foreign policies with the relationship between Sudan and Egypt, or which tax policy will spur economic growth?

            • bobman@unilem.org
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              1 year ago

              That’s fine. Just don’t complain when the people you elect go against what you think is right.

              Personally, I think direct voting would result in people voting for the matters they care about, while ignoring the ones they don’t.

              • MindSkipperBro12@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Nah, I blame the Republicans for most of the nations current woes since, you know, they tend to be behind most of them.

                Plus, how can you see how the average American acts and think we’re still good for a democracy? We need a more fitting class of people to rule, as Adams and Hamilton envisioned it.

                • bhmnscmm@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  What do you think should be the criteria to be included in “a more fitting class of people?”

                • bobman@unilem.org
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                  1 year ago

                  Republicans are mostly to blame. Democrats are just the lesser evil.

                  Lo’ and behold, evil is still evil.

                  It doesn’t make sense to support the lesser evil when you could support no evil at all.

                  • MindSkipperBro12@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Aren’t you so lucky to be someone who can choose to sit on the fence and not suffer the consequences. Do you understand idiotic that statement is?

                    Jesus Christ, I hate to do Godwins Law here but just because when you have one side that is Nazi Germany that wants to dominate the world, kill all the undesirables, all that good stuff. Then you take a gander at the British; sure, they are a world colonial empire that deserves to be shattered but they are a democracy that DOESN’T dream of world conquest and killing everyone on earth, so any nonbraindead person would pick the side of the “br’ish”.

                    And you, over there just sitting there thinking “heh, one side has a small amount of evil while the other is the embodiment of evil so I’m going to do nothing.”

                    Sure, an extreme example, but the principal is the exact same.

                    Take Civil Rights, just because sometimes the civil rights people may be annoying and rarely takes a few things too far DOESN’T mean they’re the same as the horrific segregationists and the KKK, who’ll kill and lynch whoever they don’t like.

                    Please, grow and learn.

        • bhmnscmm@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I disagree. Fundamentally we have the final authority to elect our representation. Collectively we decide (and are ultimately responsible for) who is elected to office. Districts don’t vote, and corporations don’t vote. The people do.

          It is the collective responsibility of those not disenfranchised or otherwise excluded from the political system to rectify those problems. Failing to address those problems (or any political problem) isn’t a failure of the politicians–it’s a failure of us, as a collective, to choose the appropriate lawmakers. Especially when we repeatedly elect the same people over and over.

          I know it sounds naive to frame the system this way. But fundamentally the political system operates under the collective authority of voters.