PHOENIX (AP) – The 2024 presidential election is drawing an unusually robust field of independent, third party and long shot candidates hoping to capitalize on Americans’ ambivalence and frustration over a likely rematch between Democrat Joe Biden and Republican Donald Trump.

    • stopthatgirl7@kbin.socialOP
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      I think a lot of people thinking about voting third party are going to need reasons TO vote for someone, not reasons to not vote for the other guy. Telling them “it’s just voting for Trump” isn’t going to convince them.

      And no, I’m not planning on voting third party. But finger-wagging won’t convince anyone already looking elsewhere.

      • Blackbeard@lemmy.world
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        If a Trump presidency doesn’t scare the shit out of them at this point, then they were already looking for excuses to support him, and “I want someone to vote FOR” is just a stupid excuse.

        Like, I want a gazillion dollars and a private island, but I also don’t smear shit on the walls of the public library when I wake up and don’t get those things. Anyone who does, just wanted to smear shit on the walls.

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          Yup. It is basically the same as how Romney and Cheney are “good republicans” because they want all the same shit trump does but want to pretend they are classier than that

        • APassenger@lemmy.world
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          I haven’t seen Dark Brandon in a while. Like, months.

          I vote FOR Dark Brandon. I’ll give Biden my vote over Trump. Those are different things, even if the objective measure looks the same.

          I’d like to vote for DB and get him.

          • Blackbeard@lemmy.world
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            Hey man, the dude has enough sense to understand that between the situations in Ukraine and Israel, the world is in a fucked up place at the moment. He’s a lifelong statesman, and he’s probably telling his more aggressive political advisors to back the hell off so we can figure out what the hell is going on and maybe get our hostages to safety. I respect him for that, and I’m not entirely convinced that being combative or bellicose would be even remotely helpful right now, despite the fact that it would make you feel better in the here and now.

            So you don’t get Dark Brandon exactly when you want him? And you have to wait…checks notes…a few months? Tough shit. If you have to wait months for him to come out, imagine how many decades you’re going to wait for the institutions of this country to recover from this. If “I had to wait months for Dark Brandon” is enough for you to waffle on the gravity of your decision in 2024, then you were already lost before this conversation started.

            • HarkMahlberg@kbin.social
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              To be fair to OP, I’ve seen “Dark Brandon” more as a meme to vex conservatives, used when Biden accomplishes a one of his policies, and particularly when fighting to get student loans forgiven.

              • APassenger@lemmy.world
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                This.

                Dark Brandon gets policy wins, judges in seats, he moves things. He gets funding for Ukraine.

                I haven’t seen as much of that.

                Israel isn’t something I agree as much with him on, but that’s not what I was talking about.

            • APassenger@lemmy.world
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              It’s been a few days so this thread should largely be inert.

              I’m not sure who you were replying to because it wasn’t me.

              I said nothing about Israel. I said I’d give him my vote. Your tone was dismissive to someone who wrote what you wanted to read, but I did not say or imply.

              Not interested in a flame war, only discussion. If you respond with hostility or more bad faith, you’ll get the last word - I’ll not reply.

              • Blackbeard@lemmy.world
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                Joe Biden and Dark Brandon are the same person. You’re splitting rhetorical hairs for the sake of argumentation, based largely on a meme, and there’s no need for me to substantially respond to what is largely a meaningless assertion. You just refuse to give Biden credit for Dark Brandon’s accomplishments, which is insane.

                • APassenger@lemmy.world
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                  I used a rhetorical device to easily distinguish what excites me about him being president versus what’s meh. It worked and works.

                  Most people know they aren’t going to see a DB meme for the Israel topic *that you introduced from… Somewhere? *

                  He’s chalked up wins and I know he’ll end up with L’s. But I prefer seeing him using his political capital on the economy, green energy, trust busting, courts… The virtuous things Roosevelts did.

                  You keep implying I said something I didn’t and your post history is argumentative. Smart, but too many elbows. This will be my last reply.

        • Neato@kbin.social
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          Anyone not terrified of a Republican and/or Trump presidency has a shitton of privilege and needs to fucking check it. Cishet, white and men are prominent demographics for “he won’t hurt me too badly” and by the time the redcaps come for those not in lockstep it’ll be far, far too late.

      • Potatofish@lemmy.ml
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        Nah, the number one reason to vote lately is to prevent Trump from pissing all over democracy. Even Republicans are joining in.

          • BluJay320@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            We’re not a democracy, we’re a republic.

            Not that that’s any better, but there is a difference between the two

            • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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              We’re not a democracy, we’re a republic.

              Things Republicans say when defending voter suppression.

              • BluJay320@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                If me stating a simple fact upsets you, that’s your own problem.

                I am far from a republicunt, buddy. Even a 2-second look through my profile should show you that.

                Maybe stop drawing absurd conclusions

                • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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                  If you don’t want me pointing out that you’re using the same argument here that Republicans use when they’re defending voter suppression, select a different argument than the one Republicans use when they’re defending voter suppression.

      • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        In other words lots of people have an incredibly childish attitude about voting and are completely prepared to throw a little tantrum in the voting booth even if it means fascists get to take over the whole federal government. I’m becoming pretty convinced that people like that are just incapable of rational decision making.

        • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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          It’s crazy how people view voting. In life we have so many situations where we look at realistic options and choose the best thing, or even the least bad thing, from those options.

          But then with voting people feel like making their vote should be like wishing on a birthday cake. It’s totally irrational, as you say.

          • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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            If you’re at a restaurant and they don’t have anything you want, you can go to a different restaurant.

            In this case I’m tied to a chair and forced to pick a douche or a shit sandwich while people tell me I’m a bad person for not wanting either.

            • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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              An apt analogy would be: you are diagnosed with cancer, and you can choose to (a) go through treatment and have a high chance of survival, or (b) let the cancer run its course and die.

              Voting third party in this country is equivalent to saying “I’m going to go to a faith healer instead”. You think you’re choosing a more appealing option but you’re actually just choosing option b.

            • Blackbeard@lemmy.world
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              Nah, fuck that. A restaurant doesn’t serve cocaine-laced cupcakes that give you an orgasm, yet you still down the bacon cheeseburger because the latter tastes good and the former simply isn’t an option. Anyone who walks in and refuses to order from the menu because they can’t get a blowjob and a back massage with it, is a fucking moron.

              • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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                You don’t walk in an order from the menu. You’re born in the restaurant, tied to a chair, told it’s the greatest restaurant ever created, and given two horrible choices.

                And then people like you yell at me for pointing this out.

          • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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            If we don’t accept that irrational people exist and do what we can to get their votes, we risk the return of Trump.

            But it’s way more fun to shout at them.

            • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              One can’t cater to or court the irrational. We can however stop humoring them and giving them undeserved respect. That might lead more rational people to mistakenly consider them.

              • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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                One can’t cater to or court the irrational.

                Republicans keep doing it. They beat Clinton in 2016 by doing it.

                Centrist Democrats would rather lose than debase themselves by moving one Planck length to the left.

                • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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                  And it’s coming back to bite them in the ass. Further, condoning and catering to those views only speeds up the rotting brain mush that is the current American political psyche. Making it easier for fascist strong men to take over. On undeliverable promises of candy mountains and soda pop swimming pools. As a socialist largely opposed to Democrats neoliberal economic plans. I can still support them, as our best current possible option. But they absolutely do need to promote themselves better.

                  But Republicans have cornered the market on those who enjoy being lied to at infinitem. And it is simply not a viable tactic for democrats to even try to steal that group from them.

        • Sybil@lemmy.world
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          lots of people have an incredibly childish attitude about voting and are completely prepared to throw a little tantrum in the voting booth even if it means fascists get to take over the whole federal government. I’m becoming pretty convinced that people like that are just incapable of rational decision making.

          i would believe you were talking about people voting for republicans or people voting for democrats. everyone else is trying to avoid a further slide into fascism.

      • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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        And no, I’m not planning on voting third party. But finger-wagging won’t convince anyone already looking elsewhere.

        [finger-wagging intensifies]

        • YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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          Trump might be the biggest reason to vote against him, but Republicans have played all their cards and threatened the American people’s rights. Even if he is locked up, Biden would still win.

      • spider@lemmy.nz
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        Telling them “it’s just voting for Trump” isn’t going to convince them.

        They also use that argument against people who don’t show up to vote – the very same people who might show up for a candidate they want to vote for.

        In other words, despite conventional wisdom to the contrary, they might not vote for a two-party candidate anyway.

        • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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          There are people who, despite the entirety of human history, fail to take into account that people aren’t always rational. In fact, they’re deeply offended by the suggestion and become hostile towards anyone who suggests that they should take this into account, even in situations in which the consequences for failing to do so are dire.

  • don@lemm.ee
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    lol if you think I’ve forgotten about the sewage-chugging fest that was the 45th presidency, you’re out of your fucking mind. I’m not thrilled with Biden’s age, but I am dramatically less fucking thrilled with the conservative’s current shitbag choice. Show me a 3rd party with eye-wateringly powerful support from Democrats, and I’ll certainly consider it. But until then, for as long as conservatives are mouth-frothingly determined to usher in fascism unheralded, I won’t be swayed.

    • chaogomu@kbin.social
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      Yup, a bunch of people want to push third party candidates.

      They either ignore the fact that under FPtP (First Past the Post), a third party candidate is always a spoiler candidate, or they’ve been paid off by conservatives to weaken the chances of Democrats doing the bare minimum and holding on to power that they should have been actually using.

      Which bring up the second evil of FPtP, as long as conservatives are batshit crazy and openly embracing fascism, all the Democrats have to do, it not be conservatives… And sadly, that’s a very high bar for them.


      The fix to all of this is, of course, to ditch FPtP voting. My current favorite replacement is called STAR. It’s about the single best single winner voting system ever created. (another link)

      For anyone else who finds voting systems fascinating, there’s an entire wiki devoted to just that. I’ll admit to having read most of it over the last few years. I might need better hobbies.

      • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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        tl;dr Our system of government sucks and math says you need to vote for Biden.

        I hate it, too, but them’s the facts.

          • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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            That’s the neat part: You get genocide no matter what you choose. Even if you vote third party you’ll have a “president” you “elected” that kills people all over the globe. Even Mr. Hope & Change came up with the double-tap.

            Welcome to being a citizen of a dying empire. Maybe in a 100 years your children will get to vote for someone they actually like, after this decrepit, undemocratic government splinters and falls on its face like all the other presidential republics in this hemisphere

      • don@lemm.ee
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        I recall learning about STAR a while ago, and I agree that both that FPtP sucks ass, and STAR is vastly better. All we’d need to do is get it instituted to replace FPtP, which is the real hurdle.

      • flamingarms@feddit.uk
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        I may be off here because this is the first I’m reading about STAR, but it seems worse than instant-runoff ranked-choice voting because of the “top two candidates based on first results are the final two candidates”. It seems like ranked-choice but broken to keep the States in a two party system.

        For instance: Let’s say there are 4 parties: blue, red, green, and yellow. Let’s say the majority of people have red (27%) and blue (26%) as their top pick, so those are automatically #1 and #2. Green is a close third (25%). The remainder (21%) vote for yellow, then green, then red, then blue. STAR would say every other candidate is eliminated except Red and Blue, and then redistribute the other votes. Instant-runoff would say: eliminate yellow and redistribute based off their second choice. In this example, all those votes would switch to green and green would become first. Then blue would be eliminated, those votes redistributed, and then you’d have to see what would happen. Instant-runoff to me allows for the opportunity for a meeting in the middle - everyone potentially agreeing on their second choice; while STAR seems like it will just continue to encourage people to put their primary pick up top.

        • chaogomu@kbin.social
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          You actually have it backwards.

          Ranked Choice (otherwise known as Instant Runnoff Voting) is the worse system by far.

          It comes down to the mechanics of both.

          See, IRV is just a bunch of small FPtP elections all on one ballot. This causes issues and extremely odd behaviors, that can result in the Condorcet winner, actually losing the election.

          IRV also has spoiler effects and horrible counting procedure.

          Did you know that to count an IRV election, you need to transport all ballots to a centralized location? It literally cannot be counted at the polling location due to the way the counting (and recounting) works.

          Also, IRV is one of the only voting systems ever invented to fail the Monotonicity criterion, i.e. ranking a candidate lower can sometimes lead to them winning the election. The likelihood of this happening approaches 100% the more candidates you have on the ballot.


          In Contrast, with STAR, You rate each candidate independently of the others on the ballot. You can have multiple candidates rated at the same level.

          This independent rating removes the spoiler effect completely, because you’re never forced to vote A instead of B.

          So, you’ve rated all your candidates on a scale of 0-5, then the counting happens. It can be done at the polling location. Each polling location reports the number of ballots cast, and the total scores of each candidate.

          This gives you a lot of data about each polling location. Particularly, you can average out those scores. This lets you know how the total population feels about any given candidate, not just how their direct supporters feel.

          Anyway, the total scores for the election are added up, and the top two candidates are then put into an automatic runoff.

          This automatic runoff is done ballot by ballot, if A is rated higher on that ballot than B, the final vote goes to A. If they’re rated the same, then the final vote is tallied as “No Preference” and here’s the important part, the No Preference votes are also reported in the final count.


          So in your example with four candidates, You have to ask more. Do Red voters also like Green? Do Blue voters like Yellow? That actually matters in the final count.

          It’s not just “my top pick didn’t win, so now it’s down to my less favorite” (Although that does happen as well).

          The best way to look at the results of a STAR election is to average out the scores. So, the candidates with a 3.8 and a 4.1 end up in the automatic runoff, while the candidates who got 2.5 and a 3.6 are dropped from the election.

          Then each ballot is checked, and if the candidate with a 4.1 does better on that ballot, they get the vote.

          The actual averages will likely be different. Districts that lean heavily one direction or the other might see a candidate with a very high average, districts that are more competitive will see winning averages in the 2s and 3s.

          This would also change the strategy around getting campaigning. Less negativity and mud slinging, more focus on issues and driving engagement.

          You can’t win on just being “Not the other guy”.

          • flamingarms@feddit.uk
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            Big thank you for writing all that out. There’s a lot of dynamics here I am not knowledgeable about, so I appreciate you providing links as well. I’ll have to read more on this before getting back to you. After your explanation, I have a much better understanding of the intended value of STAR. My gut is still saying that STAR will not allow 3rd parties into a polarized political environment, but I have no data to back that up. I just feel that people will vote 0 for the candidate they least want, 5 for the one they want, and 3 for the one they’re ambivalent about and that will devolve STAR to a two-round ranked choice that favors the two biggest political parties. Again, that’s definitely possibly me just not fully understanding the system. I’ll have to read more, crunch numbers, and see what numbers others have crunched and get back to you. Definitely very interesting and I love the concept of rating politicians independent of each other.

            • chaogomu@kbin.social
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              The main reason why STAR and other Cardinal voting systems can help grow third parties, is they don’t punish the voter for supporting them.

              That 3 rating that you give someone, You can give a bunch of them and not change the 5 rating that you also gave.

              One of the most common attacks against a voting system is called Cloning. You take a somewhat popular candidate and run someone who has almost exactly the same platform. Both then suffer from splitting the vote between the two.

              STAR and other Cardinal systems are immune to this attack. There’s no vote splitting, because the (initial) votes are completely independent of each other.

              Things can get a bit odd if two clone candidates make it to the final two, but even then, they theoretically have the same platform, and the voting public should be mostly happy with either one.

              But that’s where the tallied “No Preference” votes come in, to tell the winner just how little they’re preferred over their closest rival.

      • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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        Or you ditch direct presidential elections altogether, vote for congress with a proportional vote and let them decide who’s gonna be president. That way you’ll force the (now more than 2) parties to form coalitions and cooperate.

    • samus12345@lemmy.world
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      I’m not thrilled with Biden’s age

      I don’t get this when his opponent is less than 4 years younger than him.

    • kpw@kbin.social
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      Show me a 3rd party with eye-wateringly powerful support from Democrats

      How large is this eye-watering powerful support among Democrats? 50 percent? 80 percent? 100 percent? Who will in the election in those cases?

  • Nightwingdragon@lemmy.world
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    During almost any other election, I’d be all sorts of in favor of 3rd party candidates. But I’m also willing to acknowledge the reality of the situation, and the choices are this:

    1. Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
    2. Donald J. Trump.
    3. A Third Party Candidate Donald J. Trump
    4. Stay Home Donald J. Trump
    5. A Write-in Candidate Donald J. Trump

    That’s it. Those are your options. Third party candidates have exactly zero chance in our political system in today’s hyper-partisan environment. If you are voting for anybody other than Biden, or opting not to vote at all, you’re essentially giving your vote to Trump. All of these people refusing to put support behind Biden because he’s too old, or because of Israel, or whatever, refuse to accept that the alternative is exponentially worse for them.

    It’s Biden or Trump. There is no choice C. And in the immortal words of Rush, If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

    • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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      All of these people refusing to put support behind Biden because he’s too old, or because of Israel, or whatever, refuse to accept that the alternative is exponentially worse for them.

      Ok. So you’ve pointed out the reality of the situation. How do we proceed? How do we get them back? “Trump is worse than Biden, moron!!!” hasn’t done the trick. If we need their votes, how do we get their votes?

      If we don’t need their votes, we don’t get to retroactively need their votes if we need someone to blame for a loss, either.

      • YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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        If Trump wins, you stop investing your money, pull it completely out of the bank, do not buy anything at all beyond basic needs. You want the economy to implode and your investments are safe at home. Beyond that you can’t do much else.

        • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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          I have a few ideas. There’s been a pattern in the Biden administration. I call it “lose big, win small, celebrate huge.”

          Example: BBB. We lost big there. Over the course of months, BBB was systematically gutted and then killed. Americans got to watch as things Biden ran on, things that could have improved their lives in tangible ways, the reasons many of them voted for Biden in the first place, get removed, one by one, until the bill was eventually killed, at the behest of a member of Biden’s own party.

          This was followed up with a comparatively modest win: The Inflation Reduction Act, which has indirect limited benefits to individuals, like Medicare being able to negotiate prices on a laughably tiny selection of prescription drugs. It’s something, yes, but we voted for childcare and family leave.

          Then Biden’s supporters completely ignore the big loss, and instead celebrate the Inflation Reduction Act as though it was a bigger win than passing BBB, with all sorts of puffery about how it’s the least pathetic attempt to address the climate emergency so far.

          I can provide other examples, but this is the most glaring one.

          Now, compare this to how Biden has handled student loans. Biden started with half measures and his supporters acted like forgiving fraudulent loans for select borrowers was huge, even though it was mandated by existing law. Then Biden actually listened to progressives and tried to forgive student loans. Actual, tangible benefit to voters. That was killed by the courts. Crucially, it was not killed by Biden’s own party. Unlike childcare and family leave, Biden didn’t immediately give up forever. He instead did what he could to forgive what he could. He had a contingency plan and kept going. His supporters could point to the failure, admit it failed, blame those responsible, and show in real terms how Biden wasn’t gonna let that be the last word on the subject.

          There’s other examples of this as well, but as before, this is the most glaring.

          We need to keep trying to do what voters voted for, not acting like they won the showcase showdown when they’re going home with the consolation prize.

          And for the love of god, we can’t keep acting like “not trump” is a sufficient argument to get all the voters we need to win. It might be, but the consequences of failure are so dire that that mustn’t be our only message. That and we need the administration to step up between now and the election. The administration needs a win between now and then.

          And before anyone is like “well, you’re not getting one so vote for Biden anyway,” I’m already voting for Biden. I’m saying what I think is needed to convince enough people to vote for Biden so that we can be confident about beating Trump.

      • vagrantprodigy@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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        If we need their votes, how do we get their votes?

        In my opinion, the Democrats need to work on broadly popular legislation, like marijuana legalization. Try to push it through, and if it fails, which it probably would in the house, they need to make a stink over it, and then use that for campaign ads, with the promise that if they win all 3 branches next election, they will make it happen. Then they actually need to do that, rather than waffling like they have in the past.

  • JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Third parties should sit it out until trump is convicted and behind bars. If the third party candidates are serious about the country, they’d recognize the danger that orange moron poses and do just that.

    • Landsharkgun@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      People do realize that being behind bars does nothing to stop someone from serving in an elected office, right?

      • Rolder@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        True but it would definitely hinder his ability to hold his stupid rallies and what have you.

  • Candelestine@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s always funny to me when these articles claim dems are worried about this No Labels group. It’s kinda asinine. That’s just not the kinda thing that appeals to dems that much. Makes me almost certain it’s just someone writing that kinda wants dems to be worried.

    We, honestly, kinda like labels. They’re terribly convenient. Like, when you run into a Jewish-hating, militaristic, strong ethno-state type individual, it’s just really nice if there can just be this one word that can be used to describe that person. Because, y’know, “Jewish-hating militaristic ethno-state individual” is just a pain in the ass to use.

    Now, certain types really don’t like labels. They like to whine about identity politics for instance. I think they will like this party.

  • palordrolap@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Do they mean weary, or do they mean wary?

    Weary means worn down (it’s literally the “wear” as in “wear and tear” with a y on the end to make an adjective), usually signifying tiredness or apathy.

    Wary means overly aware (it’s literally the “ware” as in “aware” with a y on the end to make an adjective*), usually signifying nervousness or apprehension.

    Given the context, they could mean either. Or both.

    * Though for orthographic reasons, the e is dropped. I see you, fellow pedants.

  • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Democrats need to appeal to people who are considering leaving for third parties before they lose them.

    This is a controversial statement.

    • agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Simply blame the voters for not feeling oblogated enough to pick your party until you win the elections of course. Taking responsibility for their own choices just cuts too much into our donor base.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    People want fine-tuned success when we’re still at broad-stroke level of change required.

    This go-around, focus on

    • all people are people
    • everyone gets a vote
    • armed demonstrations get Armed Response
    • lies get lawsuits
    • prisoners get at least Geneva Convention-level treatment

    Later, we can work on the other things we need. You know, allowing for Texit if they build their walls, eminent-domaining prisons back for cruelty reasons, taxing the wealthy, all that. But now, let’s just get the absolute basics in.

  • DLSantini@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Yeah, no one is voting-in a 3rd party. That’s just not ever going to be a thing, sorry. And if through some miracle, they somehow did get elected, what the fuck are they going to do? Not a fucking thing. In spite of Trump’s best efforts, presidents are not dictators. Neither Democrats nor Republicans are going to work with a president who isn’t part of their little clubs. They probably couldn’t get approval for a new brand of toilet paper in the white house bathrooms, let alone do anything meaningful.

  • Copernican@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I kind of think the 3rd party vote for president is a general election really depends on the state you vote in. If your state is a stronghold for a party and has a candidate that has no chance in losing, I think it makes sense to vote 3rd party if that aligns with your politics. But id voting in a contested battleground state, you have to be more strategic about your vote and be willing to compromise or vote for damage control to prevent the other candidate from winning. I think ideally participating in democracy is an ends in itself regardless of whether your candidate wins or not. All participants in an election should be able to look at results and get a feel for what the voice of the people is, and that does mean knowing what the minority voted for and in what numbers.

  • insomniac_lemon@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Many library-goers are worried about ice on the sidewalk to the front entrance due to the extremely cold temperature. A guy pouring his lukewarm coffee on the ground hopes he can help.

  • undermine@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 year ago

    I think Trump will win and AGI will be created on the same day, and before the end of his term AGI will solve mortality and we can watch Trump and Biden go back and forth for eternity. I can’t wait.