WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

N&P: Discuss governments, nations, politics and recent related news here.

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital

Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Simon_Jester »

Thanas wrote:I am sure that you will retort with some "but I only voted for him because Romney is worse" crap, but that is pretty much like the "we had to shoot the villagers to save them" rhetoric, the justification of current evils with some nebulous fear that everything else would be worse otherwise.
I fail to see how this is nebulous. The Republicans spare no effort to tell me, in the clearest possible terms, that they intend to make everything worse, including the already-horrible civil rights situation. Am I simply to ignore all that they say, because they have to be better than Obama?
Which is pathetic, and also an unsupported assumption as Romney would not have won even with your vote counting for the third parties.
Under current American political circumstances, if I'm convinced to not vote for either major candidate I'd forget the third parties and write in whichever personal acquaintance I think America deserves in the White House.

It'd make about as much difference, even if no one else votes for her at all and she's not old enough to be president.
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
TheHammer
Jedi Master
Posts: 1472
Joined: 2011-02-15 04:16pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by TheHammer »

Grumman wrote:
Thanas wrote:Which is pathetic, and also an unsupported assumption as Romney would not have won even with your vote counting for the third parties.
This is a point I tried making before the election, but now that we've actually got the results...

The closest margin among all the states was in New Hampshire, where Obama won by 39,643 votes. If you are going to follow the realpolitik "I can't change the electorate, so I must vote purely to ensure Romney does not win" logic, does it make any difference whether he won by 39,643 votes or 39,642 votes, in a state that couldn't have decided the election anyway?
That's fucking asinine. The bluster from the media all predicted a "close" election. Looking back with 20/20 hindsight to see that "yes I could have made a protest vote" is about as dumb as it gets. You want to see how voting third party can hurt? Look at the 2000 elections. Green party candidate Ralph Nader grabbed 97,488 votes in the state of Florida. This dwarfed any of the other third party candidates out there lest you think that they would "offset". The bulk of those votes almost certainly would have went to Democrat Al Gore. Election and Supreme court shenanigans aside, if Gore takes as few as 51% of those votes it would have been far more than enough to allow him to carry the state, and thus the Presidential election. One has to wonder how different the world would look today if we'd had 4 or 8 years of President Gore vs what we had with Bush.

As I said before, by the time the presidential election rolls around there are TWO and ONLY TWO viable candidates. One of them WILL be President. Even if you don't agree entirely with the actions of the candidate you vote for, you have a duty to pick the lesser of two evils. It is too late in the game to try and make a political statement that will have fuck all impact on the electoral system, but could drastically affect the election for the worse.
User avatar
Alyrium Denryle
Minister of Sin
Posts: 22224
Joined: 2002-07-11 08:34pm
Location: The Deep Desert
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Thanas wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:If you want to be as much of a flaming idiot as the people who actually say that, fine.

But then I would have about as much respect for your intellect as I would for any of the redneck morons who think that way, and probably think Saddam Hussein told Osama bin Laden to attack on 9/11 because all Muslims hate FREEDOM.

It's pathetic when I see people criticizing me from the right on those grounds, it's equally pathetic when the criticism comes from the left.
You missed the point. I'll try to be more concise here. If you vote for a candidate you decide that you either share his views on the issues or at the very least are not put off by his views enough to stop voting for them. So yes, if you vote for Obama, apparently torture and unlicensed assassinations are not a big enough deal to you to stop voting for him. I am sure that you will retort with some "but I only voted for him because Romney is worse" crap, but that is pretty much like the "we had to shoot the villagers to save them" rhetoric, the justification of current evils with some nebulous fear that everything else would be worse otherwise. Which is pathetic, and also an unsupported assumption as Romney would not have won even with your vote counting for the third parties.
Thanas, your fundamental assumption here is not correct. Namely, that by voting for a candidate a person signals that they approve of their policies (or are at least not put off by them enough to not vote for them). Here is where it fails.

1st. There are only two viable options. No matter who I vote for, the only actual options in the election are Candidate 1, and Candidate 2.

2nd. Both candidates can have negative values for their payoff coefficient. Say Obama, because of his spinelessness with respect to the Tea Party congress, and his stances on Civil Liberties issues is at a -2. Romney we shall say is at -6, because of his stances on civil liberties issues, active collaboration with the Tea Party, opposition to legal humanity for gay people, and active disdain for (and working against the interests of) the working poor and middle class, and active opposition to birth control and abortion, and because his foreign policy was stuck in the 1970s

3. I can recognize that a negative number is a negative number. Not approve, and still vote for that candidate because a -2 is better than a -6.

That said, there are other options. There is a disconnect between who you vote for, and who wins, because the US election system does not work as a straight popular vote. I live in TX. I can (and did) vote for Jill Stein as a way of not having to punish Obama (for having a payoff of -2) by voting for Romney ( -6), because the state I live in is insane and there are not enough people in this state to willing to vote for Obama in the first place. Thus, my vote only matters insofar as the information it carries to the Democratic party that they are insufficiently progressive.

Ideally, if we could create a "Vote Green in Red States" movement within the democratic party, we could send a message to the DNC that they are not liberal enough, and we could do so without losing elections. We can keep the payoff coefficient at -2 (rather than -6), while not being morally culpable for that -2, AND working to increase that payoff to -1, 0 or even *gasp* positive integers.
GALE Force Biological Agent/
BOTM/Great Dolphin Conspiracy/
Entomology and Evolutionary Biology Subdirector:SD.net Dept. of Biological Sciences


There is Grandeur in the View of Life; it fills me with a Deep Wonder, and Intense Cynicism.

Factio republicanum delenda est
User avatar
Ziggy Stardust
Sith Devotee
Posts: 3114
Joined: 2006-09-10 10:16pm
Location: Research Triangle, NC

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

Lord Zentei wrote:Neither is anyone being personally held responsible for the outcome of the election.
That's exactly what you, and several other posters, have done.
Lord Zentei wrote:However, people can be held responsible for their personal vote during the election, and people can be told that they're culpable if they didn't at least attempt to do anything, especially while simultaneously complaining about what the government is doing. If America had a smarter voting system than first past the post, then a single vote wouldn't be able to swing anything either, given America's huge population, yet this is assumed to be some kind of a panacea for the evils of the system. "Ah, if we didn't have first past the post, I'd bother voting for something else than Fascist Lite... oh, well, given the system I might as well do it, it's not as if I make a difference anyway".
So your rebuttal to my complaint is to literally word-for-word restate the viewpoint I was calling moronic and unreasonable. Well done.
And what kind of talk is it to say "there's no viable third party candidate, therefore I don't vote"? It's not as if anything better will result if you stay at home, is it?
This is exactly what I'm talking about, asshole. There was no candidate in this election that I liked and respected enough to vote for. So I didn't vote. But according to you and Thanas, it doesn't matter.

If I voted for Obama, I am responsible for the drone killings. If I voted for Romney, then I am voting against gay rights, etc. If I voted for a 3rd party candidate or didn't vote, than nothing will get any better so I'm morally at fault too. Do you really not understand how fucking stupid this is?

Basically, every American poster on this board is being forced into a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't scenario for no reason other than for some posters to feel smug about how stupid and awful Americans are. It isn't at all constructive or helpful to impose these idiotic scenarios on anyone, because it ends up completely distracting from any real discussion of the issue (as has already happened in this thread) while pointlessly antagonizing everyone.

It's fine to criticize America, and its electoral system. I have done so many times. But blaming random American posters for Obama's actions is not only counterproductive, dodging the actual issue of Obama's actions, but reflects an incredibly naive and simplistic view of ... well, reality.
User avatar
Lord Zentei
Space Elf Psyker
Posts: 8742
Joined: 2004-11-22 02:49am
Location: Ulthwé Craftworld, plotting the downfall of the Imperium.

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Lord Zentei »

ITT we learn that Ziggy Stardust doesn't know the difference between being held responsible for the outcome of an election on the one hand, and being criticized for the vote he (didn't) cast on the other. Apparently, there is no difference between being personally empowered to change the result of the election on the one hand and merely buying into the prevailing attitude on voting which is a large part of the problem.
Ziggy Stardust wrote:This is exactly what I'm talking about, asshole. There was no candidate in this election that I liked and respected enough to vote for. So I didn't vote. But according to you and Thanas, it doesn't matter.
I sympathize with your lack of options. But how many candidates did you acquaint yourself with? How many of them are likely to assassinate the citizens of your country, and citizens abroad, for that matter?
Ziggy Stardust wrote:If I voted for Obama, I am responsible for the drone killings. If I voted for Romney, then I am voting against gay rights, etc. If I voted for a 3rd party candidate or didn't vote, than nothing will get any better so I'm morally at fault too. Do you really not understand how fucking stupid this is?
That's a strawman. Point me to the post where I or Thanas implied that you would be at fault for the same outcome resulting if you at least attempted to vote third party. You won't be able to find such a post.
Ziggy Stardust wrote:Basically, every American poster on this board is being forced into a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't scenario for no reason other than for some posters to feel smug about how stupid and awful Americans are. It isn't at all constructive or helpful to impose these idiotic scenarios on anyone, because it ends up completely distracting from any real discussion of the issue (as has already happened in this thread) while pointlessly antagonizing everyone.
Strawman, again. This thread is not about declaring how stupid Americans are, quit being so knee-jerk defensive. This thread is here to point out that the President of the United States is acting with dictatorial power, and that people are voting for him anyway, or at least not voting against him and the Republicans. If you can't criticize American voting patterns for that, then what the flying fuck does it take?
Ziggy Stardust wrote:It's fine to criticize America, and its electoral system. I have done so many times. But blaming random American posters for Obama's actions is not only counterproductive, dodging the actual issue of Obama's actions, but reflects an incredibly naive and simplistic view of ... well, reality.
I am not blaming you for Obama's actions, asshole. I'm blaming you for throwing your hands in the air.
CotK <mew> | HAB | JL | MM | TTC | Cybertron

TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet

And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! :mrgreen: -- Asuka
User avatar
Thanas
Magister
Magister
Posts: 30779
Joined: 2004-06-26 07:49pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Thanas »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:Thanas, your fundamental assumption here is not correct. Namely, that by voting for a candidate a person signals that they approve of their policies (or are at least not put off by them enough to not vote for them). Here is where it fails.

1st. There are only two viable options. No matter who I vote for, the only actual options in the election are Candidate 1, and Candidate 2.

2nd. Both candidates can have negative values for their payoff coefficient. Say Obama, because of his spinelessness with respect to the Tea Party congress, and his stances on Civil Liberties issues is at a -2. Romney we shall say is at -6, because of his stances on civil liberties issues, active collaboration with the Tea Party, opposition to legal humanity for gay people, and active disdain for (and working against the interests of) the working poor and middle class, and active opposition to birth control and abortion, and because his foreign policy was stuck in the 1970s

3. I can recognize that a negative number is a negative number. Not approve, and still vote for that candidate because a -2 is better than a -6.
Again, this is having your cake and eating it too. If you vote for Obama, than torture is not sufficiently heinous for you to not consider not supporting said candidate with your vote. Dressing it up as anything else is a simple case of "but I don't want you to phrase it that way".
Whoever says "education does not matter" can try ignorance
------------
A decision must be made in the life of every nation at the very moment when the grasp of the enemy is at its throat. Then, it seems that the only way to survive is to use the means of the enemy, to rest survival upon what is expedient, to look the other way. Well, the answer to that is 'survival as what'? A country isn't a rock. It's not an extension of one's self. It's what it stands for. It's what it stands for when standing for something is the most difficult! - Chief Judge Haywood
------------
My LPs
Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Simon_Jester »

Thanas, you keep trying to phrase it this way like it's an obvious, debate-winning truth.

To me it sounds more like a semantic game. I say "X is worse than Y, therefore I prefer Y to X." You say "clearly Y isn't bad enough to bother you!"

I honestly wonder how you ever manage to choose between unpalatable alternatives if you think like this all the time. Would you rather pay a fine or appear in court? Whichever you choose, is it the one that doesn't bother you? Hardly- no one wants to pay a fine. If you chose between losing a finger and losing an eye, would it not bother you that you'd lost one or the other?

Then again, you probably don't think that way all the time. Who could? It seems more likely that the core of your position is that people should not participate in elections between bad candidates, or should act in a way that effectively removes them from affecting the outcome. Which is at least self-consistent, but totally at odds with so many different models of how civic responsibility works. If you're going to try and keep up a pretense that this is a self-evident truth everyone should honor, I don't think you've got a leg to stand on.

You may even say "it's not like you as an anti-torture person would risk bringing the other guy into office by not voting for Obama." But this is nonsense- there are more than enough anti-torture Americans to guarantee permanent Republican majorities if they all bow out of politics. Like you're telling them to do.

This will simply not have the effect you desire. It's as if you were trying to protest world hunger by getting people to go on hunger strikes. It won't make the world fuller; at most it will make a handful of self-righteous people a bit happier.
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
TheHammer
Jedi Master
Posts: 1472
Joined: 2011-02-15 04:16pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by TheHammer »

Thanas wrote:
Alyrium Denryle wrote:Thanas, your fundamental assumption here is not correct. Namely, that by voting for a candidate a person signals that they approve of their policies (or are at least not put off by them enough to not vote for them). Here is where it fails.

1st. There are only two viable options. No matter who I vote for, the only actual options in the election are Candidate 1, and Candidate 2.

2nd. Both candidates can have negative values for their payoff coefficient. Say Obama, because of his spinelessness with respect to the Tea Party congress, and his stances on Civil Liberties issues is at a -2. Romney we shall say is at -6, because of his stances on civil liberties issues, active collaboration with the Tea Party, opposition to legal humanity for gay people, and active disdain for (and working against the interests of) the working poor and middle class, and active opposition to birth control and abortion, and because his foreign policy was stuck in the 1970s

3. I can recognize that a negative number is a negative number. Not approve, and still vote for that candidate because a -2 is better than a -6.
Again, this is having your cake and eating it too. If you vote for Obama, than torture is not sufficiently heinous for you to not consider not supporting said candidate with your vote. Dressing it up as anything else is a simple case of "but I don't want you to phrase it that way".
No, its a case of starving man eating eating dogfood over a shit sandwhich. There is no cake to be found. If you know one of two candidates will win, and neither is likely to be any different over torture, then torture becomes an irrelevent issue on which to base your vote. Therefore a logical person will look at the key differences between the viable candidates rather than wring their hands over a particular issue. Your suggestion that they throw away their vote on a third party may well hand the election to their least preferred candidate, which is why they aren't willing to do it.

The bottom line is its too damned late to try and push a third party candidate during the presidential election. The time to do that is during the primary season.
User avatar
Lord Zentei
Space Elf Psyker
Posts: 8742
Joined: 2004-11-22 02:49am
Location: Ulthwé Craftworld, plotting the downfall of the Imperium.

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Lord Zentei »

There seems to be this consistent idea that voting third party is "throwing away your vote". Here's another way you can do that: voting for someone who doesn't serve your interests. If your vote wouldn't sway the election in favor of the third party, then it wouldn't have swung it in favor of Obama either. Besides which, as I've already pointed out, Obama is not as progressive on domestic issues as people apparently assume: Obama can assign Tim Geithner to negotiate for him on the fiscal cliff and people still think he's different from the Republicans.
CotK <mew> | HAB | JL | MM | TTC | Cybertron

TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet

And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! :mrgreen: -- Asuka
User avatar
Thanas
Magister
Magister
Posts: 30779
Joined: 2004-06-26 07:49pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Thanas »

Simon_Jester wrote:Thanas, you keep trying to phrase it this way like it's an obvious, debate-winning truth.

To me it sounds more like a semantic game. I say "X is worse than Y, therefore I prefer Y to X." You say "clearly Y isn't bad enough to bother you!"
"bother you enough". The emphasis matters.
I honestly wonder how you ever manage to choose between unpalatable alternatives if you think like this all the time. Would you rather pay a fine or appear in court? Whichever you choose, is it the one that doesn't bother you? Hardly- no one wants to pay a fine. If you chose between losing a finger and losing an eye, would it not bother you that you'd lost one or the other?
Sure it would bother me. However, I also happen to think there are some lines that should not be crossed. After all, Saddam is a better alternative than Hitler yet nobody would find it a good idea or even a moral choice to vote for either. Unless you are one of the people who think that human rights are merely a negotiable commodity instead of absolutes.
Then again, you probably don't think that way all the time. Who could? It seems more likely that the core of your position is that people should not participate in elections between bad candidates, or should act in a way that effectively removes them from affecting the outcome. Which is at least self-consistent, but totally at odds with so many different models of how civic responsibility works.
Oh that is rich, crying about civic responsibility from the guy who is going "no way do I support unlimited presidential power over life and death but I consistently vote for the guy who does. But in no way am I responsible for the guy being in power".
This will simply not have the effect you desire. It's as if you were trying to protest world hunger by getting people to go on hunger strikes. It won't make the world fuller; at most it will make a handful of self-righteous people a bit happier.
I am sure when the truth comes out in a few decades people will be all "oh golly, we could never have foreseen that and btw, we never voted for the policies". After all, after 1945 nobody suddenly voted for Hitler either.
Whoever says "education does not matter" can try ignorance
------------
A decision must be made in the life of every nation at the very moment when the grasp of the enemy is at its throat. Then, it seems that the only way to survive is to use the means of the enemy, to rest survival upon what is expedient, to look the other way. Well, the answer to that is 'survival as what'? A country isn't a rock. It's not an extension of one's self. It's what it stands for. It's what it stands for when standing for something is the most difficult! - Chief Judge Haywood
------------
My LPs
User avatar
Alyrium Denryle
Minister of Sin
Posts: 22224
Joined: 2002-07-11 08:34pm
Location: The Deep Desert
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Thanas wrote:
Alyrium Denryle wrote:Thanas, your fundamental assumption here is not correct. Namely, that by voting for a candidate a person signals that they approve of their policies (or are at least not put off by them enough to not vote for them). Here is where it fails.

1st. There are only two viable options. No matter who I vote for, the only actual options in the election are Candidate 1, and Candidate 2.

2nd. Both candidates can have negative values for their payoff coefficient. Say Obama, because of his spinelessness with respect to the Tea Party congress, and his stances on Civil Liberties issues is at a -2. Romney we shall say is at -6, because of his stances on civil liberties issues, active collaboration with the Tea Party, opposition to legal humanity for gay people, and active disdain for (and working against the interests of) the working poor and middle class, and active opposition to birth control and abortion, and because his foreign policy was stuck in the 1970s

3. I can recognize that a negative number is a negative number. Not approve, and still vote for that candidate because a -2 is better than a -6.
Again, this is having your cake and eating it too. If you vote for Obama, than torture is not sufficiently heinous for you to not consider not supporting said candidate with your vote. Dressing it up as anything else is a simple case of "but I don't want you to phrase it that way".
No. They both bother me. This is not something you appear to understand. I will take a classic example (a bit modernized)

Say I am in the control seat of a subway train. The folks at security CCTV calls me up and lets me know that down my track a bunch of (lets say 6) goths are reveling in the darkness of their souls in the subway tunnel, and are far enough away that if I continue they will become rail-sausage because they have no hope of escaping the tunnel. Down the only alternative track, Security CCTV also informs me that a pair of homeless people have gotten REALLY drunk and are wandering the track with no hope of escape.
I try hitting the breaks. They break. No chance at repair. However the break system works, little pieces of it are all over the tracks. Damn lowest-bidder contracting.

(The more I think of this analogy, the more it works on a symbolic level)

There is a real-option set of 2. The train switches tracks to hit the homeless people, or it doesn't and hits the goths. Those are the options. Now, I dont have to make the choice. I can hold a vote of the train staff really quick, I can go get an usher etc. In the end though, I am still going to go down one track. If I dont make the choice myself, I am just passing the buck to someone else and permitting them to make the choice. I might even have a pretty good idea about what the person I choose will pick if I know them pretty well. For example, I can pick the guy who I know wont switch tracks, or the guy who I am pretty sure will. I might know that train is full of pacifists who wont switch tracks, or I might know that my train is full of people who hate goths, or who live in an area with a lot of annoying homeless beggers.

Does selecting the one option mean it does not bother me? No. Does it mean I like the one option? No. If I run over the homeless people does it mean that each of their lives is less valuable than the lives of the goths? No. It means that one way or the other, people are going to die and the only rational choice is to minimize that number. There is no "good" outcome.

Your model for what a vote indicates is just bad. Plain and simple.
There seems to be this consistent idea that voting third party is "throwing away your vote". Here's another way you can do that: voting for someone who doesn't serve your interests. If your vote wouldn't sway the election in favor of the third party, then it wouldn't have swung it in favor of Obama either.
Dont be an idiot. In a swing state with a narrow margin between Obama and Romney, one vote can actually matter. If 49% of the voters WILL vote for Obama, and 49% WILL vote for Romney, the central tendency of people who actually think through their voting choices and engage in electoral hand-wringing actually matters. Those same votes however will never swing the election in favor of a third party with a miniscule dedicated voter pool. I say this, having voted for Jill Stein in the election. However, I live in a red state where the number of dedicated Romney voters outweighs all the dedicated Obama voters + all the voters who are not dedicated in their selection for either.
Besides which, as I've already pointed out, Obama is not as progressive on domestic issues as people apparently assume: Obama can assign Tim Geithner to negotiate for him on the fiscal cliff and people still think he's different from the Republicans.
My voter payoff integers in my prior post were arbitrary. They could be -2 and -2.1 and voting for Obama would still be preferable. The difference could boil down to whether or not you want a person in charge of nuclear missiles to believe that native americans are the descendants of Evil Jews and that blessed undewear prevents demonic possession--or not. The difference could boil down to "who takes over in the event that the president chokes to death on a pretzel or dies in a car accident". In which case, Biden is a clearly superior choice to Ryan.
Sure it would bother me. However, I also happen to think there are some lines that should not be crossed. After all, Saddam is a better alternative than Hitler yet nobody would find it a good idea or even a moral choice to vote for either. Unless you are one of the people who think that human rights are merely a negotiable commodity instead of absolutes.
If you ONLY have two options, yeah. It would be preferable to vote for Saddam. Sorry. This is an objective fact. If by some antimiracle one of those two were guaranteed to become World Dictator, Saddam would be preferable. There may be other options you could choose, like not voting, or voting for a third candidate with no chance of winning. However, you are STILL RESPONSIBLE for whatever outcome your selecting that third option helps to come into being.

At the end of the day, the consequences of our choices are all that matter. The slav who dies on a Nazi-German plantation in the Volge river basin does not care that your intentions were to not vote for a bad person and in so doing you siphoned votes away from Saddam Hussein who--while a monster--would at least have refrained from enslaving or gassing most of the world's population.

The US election system is bit different, because there are some regions where not actively voting for the lesser of two evils will not affect the state-level outcome (like Texas or Utah) which in turn affects the national election. But in a straight up popular vote? In a swing state where ever vote by a non-partisan counts? In those conditions, every vote for someone other than Saddam is...half a vote for Hitler (you dont take one vote away from Saddam and add it to Hitler. You just take a vote away from Saddam. It has the mathematical effect of giving half a vote to Hitler).
GALE Force Biological Agent/
BOTM/Great Dolphin Conspiracy/
Entomology and Evolutionary Biology Subdirector:SD.net Dept. of Biological Sciences


There is Grandeur in the View of Life; it fills me with a Deep Wonder, and Intense Cynicism.

Factio republicanum delenda est
User avatar
Lord Zentei
Space Elf Psyker
Posts: 8742
Joined: 2004-11-22 02:49am
Location: Ulthwé Craftworld, plotting the downfall of the Imperium.

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Lord Zentei »

Dont be an idiot. In a swing state with a narrow margin between Obama and Romney, one vote can actually matter. If 49% of the voters WILL vote for Obama, and 49% WILL vote for Romney, the central tendency of people who actually think through their voting choices and engage in electoral hand-wringing actually matters. Those same votes however will never swing the election in favor of a third party with a miniscule dedicated voter pool. I say this, having voted for Jill Stein in the election. However, I live in a red state where the number of dedicated Romney voters outweighs all the dedicated Obama voters + all the voters who are not dedicated in their selection for either.
Nonetheless, your single vote is not going to change the outcome. And even so, there's legitimate reason to vote for another candidate. For further elaboration, see next point.

As an aside, if you're living in a heavily Red state, then my point stands. Why do you vote for Obama in this case?
My voter payoff integers in my prior post were arbitrary. They could be -2 and -2.1 and voting for Obama would still be preferable. The difference could boil down to whether or not you want a person in charge of nuclear missiles to believe that native americans are the descendants of Evil Jews and that blessed undewear prevents demonic possession--or not. The difference could boil down to "who takes over in the event that the president chokes to death on a pretzel or dies in a car accident". In which case, Biden is a clearly superior choice to Ryan.
So in a choice between Hitler and Stalin (rather than Hitler and Saddam), you still wouldn't vote for someone who "has no chance". If I understand your your view correctly, there is there NO point at which you would consider taking a principled stand and lodging a protest vote. The difference in voter payoff always outweigh intentions based on moral principle, even if it's about something relatively trivial. Unfortunately, if everyone (or at least enough people) holds this position, then that is definitely a self-fulfilling prophecy. Supporting the prevailing approach to analysis like this is itself an act with consequences. Meanwhile, aiming for higher ground does make sense, even if you have to pass through a local minimum in the utility curve to get there.

As another aside, this approach is EXACTLY how Hitler was able to gain enough votes to grab power in 1933. People knew very well that he was bad news (though they didn't realize quite how bad), but they voted for him anyway since at least he wasn't a Communist, and the centrist parties didn't have enough support for them to be considered "viable".
If you ONLY have two options, yeah. It would be preferable to vote for Saddam. Sorry. This is an objective fact. If by some antimiracle one of those two were guaranteed to become World Dictator, Saddam would be preferable. There may be other options you could choose, like not voting, or voting for a third candidate with no chance of winning. However, you are STILL RESPONSIBLE for whatever outcome your selecting that third option helps to come into being.
The UK has a FPP voting system and they manage to maintain a third party just fine. And while all people have responsibility for the outcome, they don't hold equal blame.
At the end of the day, the consequences of our choices are all that matter. The slav who dies on a Nazi-German plantation in the Volge river basin does not care that your intentions were to not vote for a bad person and in so doing you siphoned votes away from Saddam Hussein who--while a monster--would at least have refrained from enslaving or gassing most of the world's population.
Really? It would certainly matter to me, were I in his shoes. In any case, considering how Saddam Hussein acted WRT Iran and Kuwait, I'm not so sure he'd be all that genial to his neighbors if he would have had the same military might relative to the rest of the world as Hitler did.
CotK <mew> | HAB | JL | MM | TTC | Cybertron

TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet

And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! :mrgreen: -- Asuka
User avatar
Erik von Nein
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1747
Joined: 2005-06-25 04:27am
Location: Boy Hell. Much nicer than Girl Hell.
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Erik von Nein »

What about the part where, even if you voted for a third party, whomever it was, that their ability to do anything as president will be marginalized to insignificance through both parties not wanting to lose their political power? If you haven't already made motion to switch the political nature of our nation then tossing in a vote all of a sudden to a third party in the middle of a presidential election won't change a thing.

It's the efforts of political groups like the Occupy movement and (sadly enough) the Tea Party movement that are changing what candidates run and how they appeal to the electorate. And that's really all you can do. Because if you don't have a base of politicians that support your ideals it won't matter who is president, they'll end up blowing along with the majority through compromise or sheer inability to perform and given action.

Which is why you end up with Clinton signing DOMA and enacting DADT, with Nixon starting the EPA and ending the Vietnam War; the political will was with those actions every time.
"To make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe."
— Carl Sagan

Image
User avatar
Soontir C'boath
SG-14: Fuck the Medic!
Posts: 6860
Joined: 2002-07-06 12:15am
Location: Queens, NYC I DON'T FUCKING CARE IF MANHATTEN IS CONSIDERED NYC!! I'M IN IT ASSHOLE!!!
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Soontir C'boath »

Reasons why I am not in the Democratic Party in the state of New York.
  1. I am one less person they can trumpet in their party rolls total.
  2. On the other hand, I can increase the amount of third party/non-affiliated voter totals in the state. Currently, they are comparable to the Republicans in numbers with about 2.25 million people stating they are party-less and about 430,000 people in the Independence Party. NYS BOE
As someone who lives in a Democratic stronghold, my vote for a Democrat would be throwing it away and an admission that I approve of what they do. For example, my Democratic US Senator won re-election by more than 3 million votes so frankly it doesn't matter whether I voted for her or not.

I rather express in my own small way in the voting booth and enrollment totals my disappointment with the shift to the right by voting third party and I can only hope more people follow suit instead of not voting at all or voting for the major parties for the lesser evil.
I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who constantly says: "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action"; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a "more convenient season."
User avatar
Alyrium Denryle
Minister of Sin
Posts: 22224
Joined: 2002-07-11 08:34pm
Location: The Deep Desert
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

As an aside, if you're living in a heavily Red state, then my point stands. Why do you vote for Obama in this case
I didnt. As I have said in this thread. Twice. Good job reading.
So in a choice between Hitler and Stalin (rather than Hitler and Saddam), you still wouldn't vote for someone who "has no chance". If I understand your your view correctly, there is there NO point at which you would consider taking a principled stand and lodging a protest vote. The difference in voter payoff always outweigh intentions based on moral principle, even if it's about something relatively trivial.
My intentions are to minimize harm and maximize benefit. Both are broadly defined to include terms like "justice", but I am nonetheless a consequentialist, and a consistent one.

Protest votes are only useful under a constrained set of circumstances. If there was a high probability that protest votes would affect the election in such a way that the choice between Hitler and Stalin was expanded to include a third option, that would be one thing. If one candidate was vastly more likely to win than the other but the pool of protest votes is insufficient to change that likelihood, that is another such thing (because you lose nothing in a protest vote. Your conscience is assuaged, which is of some if limited benefit). However, if neither of these conditions hold, it is better to vote for the lesser of two evils because at least it is the lesser.

Simply put: I do not believe it is useful or ethical to do something because it makes me feel better, if the cost of my doing so negatively impacts a lot of other people, or makes makes such a negative condition more likely to occur.
The UK has a FPP voting system and they manage to maintain a third party just fine. And while all people have responsibility for the outcome, they don't hold equal blame.
Yes well electoral politics are different between countries. I am not saying that a nation with an FPP voting system cannot have third parties that are viable. It is harder, but they can. I am saying that under conditions where they dont have viable third parties, in the short term, protest voting (save for under very constrained conditions like being in a red state in the US with its electoral college) is not a rational choice.

The real goal is long-term change in the US electoral map. That is the long view. Punishing one of the major parties with protest votes every four years just wont do the job. They dont get the message. In fact, if they lose an election (or think they lose an election) because of protest voting (like what the popular image is of what happened in 2000), they get the exact wrong message. The democrats swung to the right after the republican revolution in the 1990s, and in 2000. Third parties wont become viable in the US presidential elections until such time as they have local bases of voters who can win lower level offices. Or, you know... a major party splits and one side of that split does not get subsumed by the other party.

A good example is Vermont. Vermont fields Bernie Sanders--an actual socialist--to congress because it has a long tradition of having socialists in its state legislature etc. On a national level, third parties dont have the multgenerational knee-jerk loyalty that the republicans and democrats do such that children are taught to identify with a party and indoctrinated into it in the same way that religion is taught. They dont have a stable base. The green party (for example) needs to start pushing hard in local elections, winning city council and mayor elections, then move into the state legislature. Then congress. Then, once they have the name recognition and for that matter, automatic ballot access in all 50 states THEN they can field presidential candidates and maybe have a hope of winning elections. Or at the very least, they can have the clout to caucus/coalition with democrats and swing the party leftward.
Last edited by Alyrium Denryle on 2013-01-10 08:05pm, edited 1 time in total.
GALE Force Biological Agent/
BOTM/Great Dolphin Conspiracy/
Entomology and Evolutionary Biology Subdirector:SD.net Dept. of Biological Sciences


There is Grandeur in the View of Life; it fills me with a Deep Wonder, and Intense Cynicism.

Factio republicanum delenda est
User avatar
Lord Zentei
Space Elf Psyker
Posts: 8742
Joined: 2004-11-22 02:49am
Location: Ulthwé Craftworld, plotting the downfall of the Imperium.

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Lord Zentei »

Erik von Nein wrote:What about the part where, even if you voted for a third party, whomever it was, that their ability to do anything as president will be marginalized to insignificance through both parties not wanting to lose their political power? If you haven't already made motion to switch the political nature of our nation then tossing in a vote all of a sudden to a third party in the middle of a presidential election won't change a thing.

It's the efforts of political groups like the Occupy movement and (sadly enough) the Tea Party movement that are changing what candidates run and how they appeal to the electorate. And that's really all you can do. Because if you don't have a base of politicians that support your ideals it won't matter who is president, they'll end up blowing along with the majority through compromise or sheer inability to perform and given action.

Which is why you end up with Clinton signing DOMA and enacting DADT, with Nixon starting the EPA and ending the Vietnam War; the political will was with those actions every time.
A good point, though I don't think that movements like OWS and the Tea Party are all you can do to effect change. Rely on them alone, and they can be patronized, marginalized or ignored. However, third parties which adopt the positions of movements like them would be more effective than the third parties by themselves or the movements alone, even if only to make the incentive to change for the better more powerful.
CotK <mew> | HAB | JL | MM | TTC | Cybertron

TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet

And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! :mrgreen: -- Asuka
User avatar
Erik von Nein
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1747
Joined: 2005-06-25 04:27am
Location: Boy Hell. Much nicer than Girl Hell.
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Erik von Nein »

Oh, no, of course not. They were just examples of groups effectively coordinating.
"To make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe."
— Carl Sagan

Image
User avatar
Lord Zentei
Space Elf Psyker
Posts: 8742
Joined: 2004-11-22 02:49am
Location: Ulthwé Craftworld, plotting the downfall of the Imperium.

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Lord Zentei »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:I didnt. As I have said in this thread. Twice. Good job reading.
My bad, I misread your post.
Alyrium Denryle wrote:My intentions are to minimize harm and maximize benefit. Both are broadly defined to include terms like "justice", but I am nonetheless a consequentialist, and a consistent one.

Protest votes are only useful under a constrained set of circumstances. If there was a high probability that protest votes would affect the election in such a way that the choice between Hitler and Stalin was expanded to include a third option, that would be one thing. If one candidate was vastly more likely to win than the other but the pool of protest votes is insufficient to change that likelihood, that is another such thing (because you lose nothing in a protest vote. Your conscience is assuaged, which is of some if limited benefit). However, if neither of these conditions hold, it is better to vote for the lesser of two evils because at least it is the lesser.

Simply put: I do not believe it is useful or ethical to do something because it makes me feel better, if the cost of my doing so negatively impacts a lot of other people, or makes makes such a negative condition more likely to occur.
Now it's you who don't read. I just explained the justification for protest votes which have a low-to-zero chance of making a difference. Making people feel better was NOT the criteria.
Alyrium Denryle wrote:
The UK has a FPP voting system and they manage to maintain a third party just fine. And while all people have responsibility for the outcome, they don't hold equal blame.
Yes well electoral politics are different between countries. I am not saying that a nation with an FPP voting system cannot have third parties that are viable. It is harder, but they can. I am saying that under conditions where they dont have viable third parties, in the short term, protest voting (save for under very constrained conditions like being in a red state in the US with its electoral college) is not a rational choice.
Protest movements are seldom rational when they first begin. But making short term gains is not the point, as you yourself agree to in the following point.
Alyrium Denryle wrote:The real goal is long-term change in the US electoral map. That is the long view. Punishing one of the major parties with protest votes every four years just wont do the job. They dont get the message. In fact, if they lose an election (or think they lose an election) because of protest voting (like what the popular image is of what happened in 2000), they get the exact wrong message. The democrats swung to the right after the republican revolution in the 1990s, and in 2000. Third parties wont become viable in the US presidential elections until such time as they have local bases of voters who can win lower level offices. Or, you know... a major party splits and one side of that split does not get subsumed by the other party.
They got the message, all right - and their bosses and financiers then proceeded to alter the message in the media. After all it's not as if they're stupid. Do you seriously think that they believe that when Nader or whoever acts as a spoiler they don't understand that their base is slipping from under them? What's happening is twofold: On the one hand, they think that the breakaway faction is smaller than what they might gain from the center if they peddled to them some more. Second, they're punishing voters in turn: "so you want us to serve your interests, or you vote for someone else? Well, how about this: vote for us, or either we or the GOP will fuck you up". They can say that, because the same interest groups are the largest financiers for both parties. It's only when they genuinely think that they'll consistently lose, or when a protest movement becomes powerful enough that they have no choice but to assimilate it that they not only get the message, but actually accept it.
CotK <mew> | HAB | JL | MM | TTC | Cybertron

TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet

And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! :mrgreen: -- Asuka
Grumman
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2488
Joined: 2011-12-10 09:13am

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Grumman »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:In a swing state with a narrow margin between Obama and Romney, one vote can actually matter.
No, it can't. Forget the swing states - Obama could have lost California to the Republicans and he'd still be president.
User avatar
Alyrium Denryle
Minister of Sin
Posts: 22224
Joined: 2002-07-11 08:34pm
Location: The Deep Desert
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Sorry, I missed this.
As another aside, this approach is EXACTLY how Hitler was able to gain enough votes to grab power in 1933. People knew very well that he was bad news (though they didn't realize quite how bad), but they voted for him anyway since at least he wasn't a Communist, and the centrist parties didn't have enough support for them to be considered "viable".
How about you fuck yourself. I say this, not because you Godwined yourself (and you did), but because you are lying. The election was much more complicated than this, and the end result has nothing to do with third parties not being considered viable.

The german political system in 1931 was in shambles. The KPD, NSDAP, and SPD all had paramilitary wings that fought in the streets of Berlin. It was a madhouse. Neither the SPD or KPD could form a majority government and instead they were at eachother's throats with the SPD leading a weak minority government, the Nazis being the smaller opposition, and the KPD trying to literally kill everyone.

This sets the stage for Hindenburg's advisor Schleicher to convince him to dismiss his Chancillor Brüning, and and appoint von Papen. These two had reached what they they thought was a "gentlemen's agreement" with Hitler to support a new strong central government and called for new elections in the summer of 1932. The Nazis staged an electoral comeback, and won a decent plurality. He repudiated the agreement and wanted the chancillorship. Hindenberg refused. A no-confidence election was held. The Nazis lost votes. New talks happened and President Hindenberg was noted saying

" ... a presidential cabinet led by Hitler would necessarily develop into a party dictatorship with all its consequences for an extreme aggravation of the conflicts within the German people"

He was prescient.

Intrigue happened involving wargames and chancillor ousting. Schleicher became chancillor. Papen courted hitler and a few others. Eventually they pressured the aging, reluctant and at times senile Hindenburg to name Hitler to the office, as Papen thought he could control Hitler (Silly Man), provided the cabinet had a Nazi minority.

New elections were held in 1933. Now with more intimidation. KPD offices were raided by the NSDAP, the violence was then extended to the SPD the Centre parties and made it very difficult for them to campaign, seeing as their publications were banned. This intensified due to the Reichstag Fire Decree, passed in panic because six days before election day the Reischstag building conveniently caught fire, something Hitler was able to pin on the communists and the SPD got hit (intentionally) by the backlash. This also gave him a February Surprise surge just in time for the March 5th election. He won majority and was able to take over government by a tiny tiny margin with help from his DNVP coalition partners. Then the Enabling act passed just after the election. The rest is history.

Nothing to do with third parties being considered unviable. So fuck you.
GALE Force Biological Agent/
BOTM/Great Dolphin Conspiracy/
Entomology and Evolutionary Biology Subdirector:SD.net Dept. of Biological Sciences


There is Grandeur in the View of Life; it fills me with a Deep Wonder, and Intense Cynicism.

Factio republicanum delenda est
User avatar
Lord Zentei
Space Elf Psyker
Posts: 8742
Joined: 2004-11-22 02:49am
Location: Ulthwé Craftworld, plotting the downfall of the Imperium.

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Lord Zentei »

Go fuck yourself right back. I was not the one who first spoke about Hitler in this thread, so you can shove your Godwin invocation back up your rear. You had ALREADY answered a question from Thanas and you played along just fine until now.

And I am well aware of the historical events leading up to the ascension of Hitler, spare me your lectures. The point was to demonstrate that obviously you have to take more into your evaluations than merely taking the "lesser of evils" approach, which was unquestionably a key issue to Hitler's ascension. And you ignored this entirely in favor of ranting. And now you've also ignored my more recent post as well in which I responded to your points.
CotK <mew> | HAB | JL | MM | TTC | Cybertron

TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet

And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! :mrgreen: -- Asuka
User avatar
Nephtys
Sith Acolyte
Posts: 6227
Joined: 2005-04-02 10:54pm
Location: South Cali... where life is cheap!

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Nephtys »

You can calm down, as Alyrium was obviously using 'Hitler' and 'Saddam' as pegs for 'Very Bad Choice' and 'Bad Choice', and how not voting at all could be effectively a partial vote for bad choice when such things are extremely close run.

The argument of protest votes is that they're in physical terms, the exact equivalent of abstaining from voting at all. And thus, you have a higher chance of 'Very Bad Choice' occurring, instead of 'Bad Choice', because you could have voted for the lesser evil but chose not to. One can be all high minded about a better system, but that's not happening without a collective hivemind of individuals suddenly becoming extremely well organized and gaining massive resources. In the real world, your personal moral stance is utterly irrelevant to the physical reality of things, unless suddenly and spontaneously thousands of other people suddenly, visibly and very vocally align with you, while having the means to make this known.
User avatar
Alyrium Denryle
Minister of Sin
Posts: 22224
Joined: 2002-07-11 08:34pm
Location: The Deep Desert
Contact:

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Lord Zentei wrote:Go fuck yourself right back. I was not the one who first spoke about Hitler in this thread, so you can shove your Godwin invocation back up your rear. You had ALREADY answered a question from Thanas and you played along just fine until now.
Using Hitler as an illustrative example of evil to test the limits of one's convictions is one thing. It is what Thanas did, and it is OK. It is like testing Utilitarianism by asking questions about when torture is permissible and seeing if someone sticks to their guns and provide a good argument. Saying "your proposed course of action leads to or is equivalent to Hitler" is another, particularly when you lie about it, by omission or otherwise.
And I am well aware of the historical events leading up to the ascension of Hitler, spare me your lectures. The point was to demonstrate that obviously you have to take more into your evaluations than merely taking the "lesser of evils" approach, which was unquestionably a key issue to Hitler's ascension. And you ignored this entirely in favor of ranting. And now you've also ignored my more recent post as well in which I responded to your points.
I did not ignore it. I just have not gotten to it yet. And no. You do not get to backpedal and move the goal posts.
As another aside, this approach is EXACTLY how Hitler was able to gain enough votes to grab power in 1933. People knew very well that he was bad news (though they didn't realize quite how bad), but they voted for him anyway since at least he wasn't a Communist, and the centrist parties didn't have enough support for them to be considered "viable".
Where exactly did the point you say is there come in? Where is the awareness of history you claim to have demonstrated in there? I dont see it.

Now for the rest of your post.
Now it's you who don't read. I just explained the justification for protest votes which have a low-to-zero chance of making a difference. Making people feel better was NOT the criteria.
You mean this?
Unfortunately, if everyone (or at least enough people) holds this position, then that is definitely a self-fulfilling prophecy. Supporting the prevailing approach to analysis like this is itself an act with consequences. Meanwhile, aiming for higher ground does make sense, even if you have to pass through a local minimum in the utility curve to get there.
Was that a matter of me not reading, or was that edited in? The lag time between your post and my beginning a response was pretty quick, and in my initial reading, I do not remember this being there. Not an accusation. Just a question. I will address it presently.

I am speaking within a limited set of conditions. Namely, a 2 opponent race in which both have shored up large guaranteed pluralities and are fighting over leftovers insufficient to give the election to a third option. Under those conditions and just for that vote, voting for the lesser of two evils is the only viable option.

That does not mean that third parties being non-viable is self-fulfilling. You just have to understand the nature of the US political landscape. Very little of the vote in the US is actually apportioned based on positions and policies. Most of it is apportioned based on party loyalty. Group membership. Jim gets raised in a republican household and thus is highly likely to vote republican. Same goes for the democrats. You know those people who approved of the job Bush was doing when he left office? 35% or something like that. Yeah, those people. About the same number for the democrats. So, 70%ish of the electorate is made up of Die-Hard Will Support No Matter What fans of one party or the other. The other thirty percent are undecided voters. Of those undecided voters, only a minority think enough about policy to consider protest voting, and they may be right or left leaning (I for example am about Sweden level left-leaning). The rest are the mindless middle (which is not to say that the partisans cannot be mindless) who make up their minds based on trivial things like how personable the candidate is, and whether or not they might want to have a beer with the candidate, or who had the most recent public gaffe.

Mathematically, protest voting in the presidential election is not a viable option for changing the outcome in a positive direction. There is no way to make it one in the short term. Instead, you have to change the game. Doing that cannot be accomplished by voting in a presidential election. No "message" will reach the major party that they need to shape up via disorganized protest voting--because their policies dont necessarily depend on what the voters want, they can manipulate the message of the election, and the signal to noise ratio of disorganized protest voting is too low because the votes are distributed across several third parties and reduced voter turnout. Moreover, if the local minimum in the Utility Curve is too low... well... any future gains may not be relevant, or it may nullify the end gain via less dramatic means.

What you have to do is induce changes in who gets elected in a direction you want, in a way that the party machinery cannot manipulate or ignore. You must make them afraid of an actual faction.

1) You can make your displeasure noted by abandoning the party in an organized fashion. Get the local liberals in states like texas who are often very liberal out of pure contrarianess to vote green in local and federal elections. You can win elections this way. They wont be the presidential election, but it will force local democratic politicians to swing left. It WILL make the party as a whole take notice when they start losing the few seats they have in the state legislature and federal congressional delegation. This is probably the hardest to do.

2) Primary challenges from the left in safe seats (where, if you win the primary challenges, you are likely to win the general due to the same party loyalty that otherwise might hamper you), and well-funded campaigns in what the republicans think are safe seats for them, in off-year elections with naturally low voter turnout when a few thousand mobilized votes can actually matter. This is what the Tea Party did. It worked.

3) Using the above strategies to build a base for either a more progressive democratic party that the power brokers must fear and placate, or a viable third party that can win elections and form a group-loyal party base. Hell, you can even do both.

You just have to organize it, and if the Tea Party can exist in the pocket of the Koch Brothers, such a progressive movement can be funded by Ted Turner, or individual donors. It is a possibility.
Protest movements are seldom rational when they first begin. But making short term gains is not the point, as you yourself agree to in the following point.
Protest movements can be very rational. In the long view. That does not mean that the methods taken are rational or effective. There is no point in protesting in a way that can never actually be effective. You instead protest in a way that is effective.
They got the message, all right - and their bosses and financiers then proceeded to alter the message in the media. After all it's not as if they're stupid.
Then you accept the argument that protest voting as we are presently discussing it (individuals doing it in a disorganized and ad hoc way) wont affect long term change. Gotcha.

It's only when they genuinely think that they'll consistently lose, or when a protest movement becomes powerful enough that they have no choice but to assimilate it that they not only get the message, but actually accept it.
Protest movements rarely actually work unless they are organized and unless they have concrete goals. This is one reason (among several) why the Tea Party worked to radicalize the GOP and make them more powerful, and why the Occupy movement has done no such thing.

The Tea Party had goals. It could mobilize voters. It put forth its candidates for office and took advantage of the off-year congressional elections. Occupy has few concrete policy goals. It did not put forth its own candidates. It got beaten, often literally. You can count Elizabeth Warren as the only politician at the national level that one could even come close to saying they elected. The other members of the progressive caucus predate them.

You are putting forth a protest movement aimed at the presidential election, and claim that somehow a bunch of people doing this can make long-term changes in the political landscape of a country even if they must pass the country through a local minimum in the utility function, with no short term benefit other than making people feel better about themselves (which is the only benefit, while passing through said local minimum). I am offering a method by which long term benefit can be achieved, while not passing through that local minimum and gaining electoral benefit in the short and medium term.

Which is superior?
GALE Force Biological Agent/
BOTM/Great Dolphin Conspiracy/
Entomology and Evolutionary Biology Subdirector:SD.net Dept. of Biological Sciences


There is Grandeur in the View of Life; it fills me with a Deep Wonder, and Intense Cynicism.

Factio republicanum delenda est
User avatar
Thanas
Magister
Magister
Posts: 30779
Joined: 2004-06-26 07:49pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Thanas »

TimothyC wrote:
Thanas wrote:You missed the point. I'll try to be more concise here. If you vote for a candidate you decide that you either share his views on the issues or at the very least are not put off by his views enough to stop voting for them. So yes, if you vote for Obama, apparently torture and unlicensed assassinations are not a big enough deal to you to stop voting for him. I am sure that you will retort with some "but I only voted for him because Romney is worse" crap, but that is pretty much like the "we had to shoot the villagers to save them" rhetoric, the justification of current evils with some nebulous fear that everything else would be worse otherwise. Which is pathetic, and also an unsupported assumption as Romney would not have won even with your vote counting for the third parties.
I've got no dog in this discussion (I didn't vote for Obama either time), but who would you have voted for Thanas?
Third party, obviously, if I had been able to vote. Or I'd have written in Patrick Leahy.
Whoever says "education does not matter" can try ignorance
------------
A decision must be made in the life of every nation at the very moment when the grasp of the enemy is at its throat. Then, it seems that the only way to survive is to use the means of the enemy, to rest survival upon what is expedient, to look the other way. Well, the answer to that is 'survival as what'? A country isn't a rock. It's not an extension of one's self. It's what it stands for. It's what it stands for when standing for something is the most difficult! - Chief Judge Haywood
------------
My LPs
User avatar
Thanas
Magister
Magister
Posts: 30779
Joined: 2004-06-26 07:49pm

Re: WH wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret

Post by Thanas »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:If you ONLY have two options, yeah. It would be preferable to vote for Saddam. Sorry. This is an objective fact. If by some antimiracle one of those two were guaranteed to become World Dictator, Saddam would be preferable. There may be other options you could choose, like not voting, or voting for a third candidate with no chance of winning. However, you are STILL RESPONSIBLE for whatever outcome your selecting that third option helps to come into being.
Actually, you are not responsible for acts of evil governments if you oppose said governments. That is one of the tenets of resistance everywhere on the planet.

As to the general argument here - and which somehow is still getting derailed and strawmanned, I'll simply ask this (for Alyrium or anyone who is inclined to answer) - where are you going to draw the line if not at human rights? I mean, if one candidate wants to gas all the gays and the other wants to gas a third of the population, do you still vote for the first one? IMO there needs to be a line drawn and that line stops to me with unlimited presidential power over the life of the citizens.
Whoever says "education does not matter" can try ignorance
------------
A decision must be made in the life of every nation at the very moment when the grasp of the enemy is at its throat. Then, it seems that the only way to survive is to use the means of the enemy, to rest survival upon what is expedient, to look the other way. Well, the answer to that is 'survival as what'? A country isn't a rock. It's not an extension of one's self. It's what it stands for. It's what it stands for when standing for something is the most difficult! - Chief Judge Haywood
------------
My LPs
Post Reply