• PopShark
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      65 months ago

      A side as opposed to either side is how it should be. But don’t take my word for it, George Washington allegedly warned us of the potential perils of a two-party system on his deathbed but I’m unsure if that is common myth or actually true

      • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        65 months ago

        George Washington eschewed political parties because he didn’t want to establish a precedent where his choice as first president set the standard everyone else had to conform to, and there’s a little irony in people holding him up as an example in that light more than 200 years later.

        He, and the other founders largely, disliked political parties in their entirety, not just having some specific number of them.
        They also built the system that enshrined the two party dichotomy as the only option, actively sought to ensure that the “right” people could override the will of the people if needed, and founded the parties they had previously argued against.
        They are far from infallible bastions of correctness in this matter.

    • @AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      15 months ago

      It’s what modern elections are, and maybe even all historical elections, though I’m not old enough to determine that. What elections should be is throwing your support behind someone that you think is going to be beneficial for everyone. I know that is idealistic, and unfortunately the current system makes that basically impossible, but Washington said that partisan politics would be the downfall of this country, and his words are playing out in front of us. I really wish we would throw the parties, and lobbyists, out and force candidates to run on policy and merit.

      • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        25 months ago

        See, you’re talking partisan politics, I’m talking “you literally have to pick someone”. We’ve had these candidates before. You already know which one you’re going to vote for. You picked your side four years ago when you were asked the same question.

        Beyond that though, there’s “parties” and then theirs “sides”. One side is xenophobic, homophobic and actively wishes harm on a lot of people. The other side doesn’t, for all their flaws.
        There are more parties than there are sides in the past few elections.

        By saying you think you should vote for someone who will be good for everyone, you’ve picked a side. The side that doesn’t want to do good for only the “right” people, or make sure only the “right” people get hurt.
        The only question is if you’ll vote for that side to win, or if you’ll let idealism or anger drive you to vote otherwise.

        • @AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I shall, once again, for the 6th time in my life, hold my nose and vote for the milquetoast candidate the DNC has foisted on us. I wish we had RCV so I could vote for someone good, like Bernie, or heck I’d almost take Vermin Supreme at this point.

          • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            15 months ago

            Dude, have you actually read vermin Supremes platform, or rather his actual political philosophy and beliefs?

            I read through some of them once, and had the horrifying realization that the contemporary political figure that I think I agree with most closely is:

            • unelectable
            • best known for wearing a boot on his head

            I couldn’t find where a lot of his actual opinions got discussed a bit more formally, but this random video snippet from 2008 does a decent job capturing it.

            If I had (got? Got. I’d love to need to make the choice) to pick between a democratic socialist or a social anarchist, I think I’d honestly lean towards the social anarchist, all things being equal.

              • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                15 months ago

                Oh yeah, he’s totally not a viable candidate, but he does have an actual political philosophy and opinions that are surprisingly agreeable. He just lacks the actual political fortitude or will to get elected.