Flagg wrote:Of course I do, which is why I stated in the post above that I don't believe you were advocating poll testing.
You're right and I apologize for the confusion.
I simply took issue with AD essentially wagging his finger in the faces of everyone who responded because some of us were talking about the broader issue, not accusing you of wanting to control who does and doesn't vote because you never specifically said you did, but the quote that was posted and replied to was, IMO, bordering on it.
Of the three people who brought it up, I think they
all took time to make accusations against me.
Also, is there
any way, in your opinion, to talk in a serious and fairly stern way about the responsibilities of a citizen in a democracy? Electorates voting in rotten demagogues is a very well known problem that's been an issue with democracy for thousands of years, and as far as I know there is literally no way to stop it from happening
except for the electorate to be alert and pay attention to the basic character and qualifications of the people they vote for.
I refuse to be moderate in my criticism of voters who make a mistake so common and basic that even
Plato (that bastard) thought it was a problem with democracy. A 2500-year-old mistake is one we should be smarter than to commit all over again. If I think voting for a person was a profoundly dumbass decision, then
on a forum founded with the principle of not having to pretend dumbassery is normal and acceptable, I am darn well going to call that decision 'dumbass.'
And when people try to use that as a launchpad for "Simon hates democracy! Do you want a poll tax or an entrance exam for voting, Simon?" it strikes me as extremely dishonest. It's the kind of mindset that ultimately
enables the failure of democracy. Because it's promoting blind worship of election results, rather than serious discussion of those results, understanding of how they can lead to bad outcomes, and striving to prevent those bad outcomes.
If I
wanted democracy to crash and burn, you can bet that I would spend lots of time criticizing anyone who thought voters were under any kind of due-diligence requirements. I don't... so I don't.
Wild Zontargs wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Do you comprehend the difference between me saying "Bob does not deserve X," and me saying "there should be a law against Bob getting X?"
Please clarify if I'm wrong, but I'm understanding you as "I really wish I lived in the world where Bob would choose of his own free will not to do X
unless and until he meets criteria Y, but nobody should act to stop him from doing X because that would be wrong."
You did not act as though that was your understanding. Furthermore,
even after I explained that you had misunderstood the nature of X, you continued to act as though I'd been saying "people of low educational attainment should be denied the vote or have their votes discounted," rather than saying "people who do not think about their votes do not deserve to have the vote." There is a significant difference between:
1) Thinking sanely about your vote,
2) Having degrees from institutions of higher learning, and
3) Being able to correctly answer a quiz about American civics.
These are not the same thing. A civics quiz may or may not model whether a citizen has in fact done (1) correctly. Tracking voters by whether they have (2) or (3) does not automatically test whether they have (1).
Re. the article I was repeatedly quoting, I was not trying to hammer on "this is what would happen if somebody stopped the Bobs", but rather to point out that "this time around, the Bobs seem to have been more influential in Team Blue's favor, so Team Blue complaining about Bob letting Team Red win confuses me".
I have already explained this in my original reply to the post in which you posted your article. And at length, in my post after that.
I also don't understand what repeatedly saying "I really wish Bob would stop that" accomplishes that going up to Bob and saying "hey Bob, can I talk to you about X?" wouldn't. Crying into the ether about Bob, then getting defensive when someone asks what you would have Bob do instead seems unhelpful.
In the context of this thread, I am talking about the precise nature of what I believe to be a profound mistake. I am not, at this time, engaged in attempts to persuade those who made the mistake that it was a mistake.
I am being very, very blunt, something I feel entitled to do here on account of the forum rules explicitly saying people can do that.
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Now see THIS is an argument worth responding to.
Here's the catch.
Communists didn't stage rallies for Clinton. Communists grudgingly said "you should probably vote against Trump." They did not specifically endorse Clinton.
By contrast, David Duke and the KKK kept up a steady barrage of praise for Trump. They still are.
See, pay attention to what I actually said, not to what Strawman Jester said. I said "the active racist groups were enthusiastically supporting Trump" Note that word 'enthusiastically.' Their support was not grudging. They were not going "well, we wish someone else had won, or that we could run our own candidate, but it's a two-party system and we recognize that so we have to stand by the Republicans because they're most likely to protect the white race."
No, groups like the KKK wanted Trump to win, specifically. Not just "wanted Clinton to lose," wanted Trump to win.
That's the part that should have caused a thinking person to stop and reconsider, especially when combined with other well known facts about the situation.
Yes, I get that, and I wasn't trying to conflate the
level of support from the two groups, just the fact that both groups had support from unpopular sources.
Now, unpopular groups can support otherwise good policies for their own twisted reason. I'm not going to attempt to ascribe motives to the KKK, so let's imagine a group called the WTF. These WTF crazies don't like Mexicans for their own screwed-up reasons. Trump says he's going to deport all the people who are in the country illegally. There are
a lot of Mexicans who are in the country illegally, so that makes the WTFers happy. Then Trump's going to build a wall to prevent any more illegal immigration from Mexico. Now the WTFers need clean underwear, they're so happy.
We can already agree that these WTF people are not someone we'd want to hang out with. We can, however, have a valid reason for supporting the exact same policy. If we take a hard line on
illegal immigration but have no problem with
legal immigration, we might wish to deport illegal immigrants and prevent them from returning. In that case, it might make sense to vote for Trump.
Supporting Trump's wall doesn't make us WTF assholes, and the WTF assholes don't irredeemably contaminate Trump's wall idea, or his entire campaign by association. It really sucks that they keep getting in the news whenever the wall is discussed, but in the end, they're
3000-6000 lunatics in a country of 300 million people. There are currently more SDnet accounts than WTFers, and that probably holds true even if we purge the zero-posters.
To quote Scott Alexander from Crying Wolf:
Caring about who the KKK or the alt-right supports is a lot like caring about who Satanists support. It’s not something you would do if you wanted to understand real political forces. It’s only something you would do if you want to connect an opposing candidate to the most outrageous caricature of evil you can find on short notice.
The KKK may love Trump, but Trump has repeatedly "renounced" their endorsement. Trump does not appear to love the KKK back. The KKK's support for Trump is their own business, not Trump's, and not every other Trump voter's by osmosis.[/quote]
Soontir C'boath wrote:Yes, I read that you don't believe they deserve to vote and I logically takes to its conclusion. Otherwise, frankly you're just preaching to the choir which is boring...
So you decided to read a controversial opinion into what I said...
purely because otherwise it would be dull?
More seriously, my statement fit into a larger context, which is that democratic nations do not learn from making severe mistakes
until they admit to the mistake. If the people who enabled the mistake are unwilling to recognize that it was a mistake, that their bad choices created a disaster for their nation, then nothing is learned and the mistake will be repeated.