Gut feeling, plain and simple.
Not by much, to be blunt. The basic principle remains the same, but the overall outcome is improved. It remains a choice between whether one's principles admit the support of a rapist or mandate that that support be withheld, even at the cost of a negative outcome.How does your analysis of the options change if the data shows that Biden has a chance of winning ?
Not on hand, but you've mistaken my point. The illegitimacy is determined after the fact once subsequent civil disobedience and revolt declares it to be so, and no-saying begins with the refusal to vote and extends into civil disobedience.I'm not sure I follow this.No-saying is the basis for future civil disobedience and revolt because it helps to indicate that the election was not in fact legitimate.
Do you have any historical basis to suggest that a large number of people choosing not to vote* leads to the election being considered illegitimate ?
If not, why do you think 2020 will be any different ?
*People being unable to vote is a different matter.
You know, it's funny. I'm not working towards a defeat here. I'm not working towards anything but trying to get you to understand the nature of democracy and to be willing to actually own your position. Being as I'm not an American and lack a meaningful platform, very little I do or say can meaningfully impact on the outcome of the election in any way, except insofar as it influences individual voters. As Ralin is a bad faith actor, nothing I say will influence his decision, and I very much doubt that a clarification of the concept of no-saying is going to motivate anyone else on this board to fill a null ballot even if they accept the premise of assent to consent-based governance. And given that my own personal position, removed from this issue of democratic theory, is that yes - this is a time you swallow voting for a repugnant actor and then try and live with the consequences of that action, or even engage in treasonous acts of rebellion if the election turns up a Trump victory - I'm not in favour of surrender at all. I'm just not in favour of allowing the further collapse of the democratic process into conditions of discursive non-rationality that render actual democratic engagement impossible, which an unvarnished 'Blue no matter who' position that rejects the possibility of principled no-saying represents.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2020-04-09 03:16am "Biden can't win" is an utterly unproveable assertion either way, but one that is not supported by what polling data we currently have or the precedent of Presidents who bungled a national crisis on this scale. It is, however, an increasingly popular excuse for Leftists who don't want to support him.
To be blunt, it strikes me as (ironically, given what I've been accused of) a way for them to avoid taking responsibility for their actions, by claiming that the defeat they're working toward is inevitable. Inevitability is always a real nice excuse to do shitty things.
It's really not, it's just a personal position. I don't think Biden can win, period, but if he can, it shifts the equation only slightly - the underlying clash of value judgments remains the same. Do you support a rapist to stop a fascist, and in doing so, legitimate the system that made you pick between Rapist Neoliberal A and Worse Rapist and Fascist B? Maybe it's more palatable if you have 100% certainty that your single vote will be the deciding factor between the two evils - it'd certainly motivate me to swallow my disgust and support a rapist to stop a fascist - but that central underlying question remains the same whether the odds are 0%, 50%, or 100%. Those who answer yes ought to be prepared to accept that actually, yes - they are supporting a rapist. They are saying, by participating in the election that gave them those two choices, that they are okay with that choice being offered. Democracy is often ugly in this way, but it only gets uglier when we don't remember that there is the third choice of no-saying and civil disobedience when neither presented option is acceptable.bilateralrope wrote: ↑2020-04-09 03:22am I remember how many people were saying that Trump couldn't beat Hillary. Until election night. I suspect that all the people saying he couldn't win then helped him win by convincing Democrat voters that they didn't need to go to the polls and convincing Republican voters that they needed to turn up. If so, I'm not sure if I want the people saying that Biden can't win to stop.
I'm only questioning it here because it's a major assumption in Loomer's reasoning.
This is why it is imperative that those voting for Biden for the sake of democracy fully own that position. Voting for Biden is voting for a rapist. It is supporting a rapist, and it is saying 'yes, I am okay with voting for a rapist' even in the face of protests to the contrary because by participating in the vote at all, one signals one's acceptance of its legitimacy and the (presumed) legitimacy of its candidates. This, again, may be a sacrifice worth making - but if those advocating for it lose sight of the full extent of what it is they demand people do, they actually threaten the further erosion of the speech conditions necessary for a functioning modern democracy.