Fogdog
Well-Known Member
Fogdog: What they bring into the voting booth as their values is up to them. You don't get to decide.I'm not talking about "self interest", I'm talking about objectively best interest. What is good for someone who votes against their self interest
I agree
In what regard? Election results serve a completely different purpose than opinion polls. Both "matter" in their own light. This is another attempt at discrediting opinion polls outright when the results don't suit your narrative. You're actively denying the results of highly respected and established polling practices that have been used to direct public policy because you disagree with their results. Do you think Gallup and PEW are "fake news"?
Where in the world did you dig up that nonsense? Where did I ever say anyone wasn't a "worthy person" because they vote differently than me? It seems like it'd be your ilk doing that seeing as you call Trump supporters and actual progressives you disagree with 'deplorables' among many other pejoratives, constantly. Not a post goes by where you/they don't resort to personal attacks.
Why would a conservative voter vote for a conservative Democrat when they can just vote for the much more conservative Republican?
No, I'm demanding the politicians we elect actually represent us and not special interests. It's very unusual you would call that "authoritarian". It's become clear you don't understand the meaning of the word.
Demanding fair and equal representation from elected representatives is "authoritarian" now, is it?
Please explain your reasoning, cite examples and show your work
Pad: I agree
I don't understand what is the value of "objective interest". What difference does it make if a voter does or does not choose to vote in a manner that YOU would call against their objective interest? They vote according to their own set of values, which is what I mean by their own self interest. It's up to the candidates and campaign to convince the voter that voting for that candidate is in their self interest. This idea of objective interest is theoretical and not nearly as important as what voters see as their own self interest when they vote.
"Objective interest" assumes it is possible to know what the effects of a vote will be. When voting for a representative, one can't know for certain what that person will do. This is why I say self interest. At the time of the vote, the voter can't objectively know the outcome of their vote and so must make up their mind about what seems best at the moment.
All that matters is the vote. If you are so right about the objective result then convince the voter. Or disenfranchise them, which is what Republicans are doing. I oppose doing that and suppose you would too.
Do you think people can be moderate conservatives who don't support hard right wing ideology? I do. I'd like them to have a better choice than what today's Republicans give them. I see them as an opportunity for Democrats to pick up a few seats in red states. We have a lot of areas for agreement with moderate conservatives, such as public schools, unions, health care and environment. I'm not talking about rewriting the platform for the party, I'm just saying that an enemy of my enemy is my friend and I'd like to be able to partner with them rather than reject them because we differ on a few issues. Not bargaining the core values of the party but willing to work with people who don't always agree.
I also support the Justice Democrats effort to sign up liberal candidates who will take the pledge to forego legal donations from large donors and corporations. I'm all for letting as many ideas and people as possible compete for votes in the primary. The primaries are the time to test ideas. Winning the primary is a test for strength of ideas ahead of the main election, when the stakes are much higher. Let's test ideas before taking them to the main election. This is what I propose.
From what I can tell, Sandernistas would impose their values on the primary process by demanding up front that no Democratic candidates can accept legal big donations and corporate donations throughout the election cycle. Also one or two other litmus tests. That sounds pretty authoritarian to me.
What are you afraid of? If your idea is so great, candidates who take the pledge will win regardless if it's mandated tops down or not. Right?
Regarding opinion polls. Some are badly designed and purposely so. When discussing poll results, it's simple to throw out a number or a graph but a reasoned mind needs to ask which poll, and understand more about it. And then, we need to ask what does it mean? You throw out poll numbers as if they infer what a population of voters will do. From comparing voting results with pre-election polls, this is not reliably true. Because the numbers you throw out are not objectively reliable and because I don't think you are a total idiot and know this, I can only think that you are using those numbers to browbeat or conceal and not because they actually prove your claim. Maybe you are an idiot and believe they do prove your claim in spite of evidence to the contrary. I'd like to give you the benefit of the doubt.
I've observed the same as you when talking with conservatives -- we often agree on what we want for the people of this country. Yet, we disagree on the solutions or leaders to enact our solutions. This is confusing and irritating when we just want a problem fixed. Sorry about that.