(water is wet and fire is hot).

  • @melpomenesclevage
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    22 months ago

    Oh my god do you think nobody’s Fucking tried this? It doesn’t work. The elections are fake, my dude. Remember 2000? Remember 2016 dem primary? Remember 194…4(?)? 2020 dem primary?

    And I live in California. My vote literally does not count.

    Fuck your bullshit elections, I can’t respect that shit

    Gotta respect your choice of home Lemmy tho. I feel ashamed for not thinking to do the same.

    • @Mikael@lemmynsfw.com
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      32 months ago

      The issue isn’t lack of effort, it’s lack of scope. If everyone whinging online signed up to a party today, started attending every single local meeting from tomorrow onwards, put themselves forward for roles within that party, actually put in time and effort to get selected, get elected, move up, keep moving up, keep aiming higher, we’d have a completely overhauled political system in 5 years.

      Granted it might be harder in the States (UK here), but for us, we have 650 members of parliament. That means we only need 326 individuals, members of any party, out of nearly 70 million people, who will vote in favour of any policy that will benefit future generations, be it climate related, electoral reform, workers rights reform, anything beneficial, and the country and world would start to get better. Instead hopelessness is pervasive, very few people try and as you point out, if they do try, they find themselves alone. Well now, how about we all just agree to do it? There are thousands, possibly millions of people who are under 30 and sick of all of this crap and follow pages on reddit, Facebook, Instagram, tiktok, any of the random new social media that I stopped keeping up with once I turned 25, pages dedicated to ‘antiwork’, political reform, climate issues, the general decline of western society under late stage capitalism.

      If even 10% got off their asses and actually did something about it, everything would be fine. If YOU get off your ass and do something, it will help. I’m literally an elected politician at the local level in the UK. I tell anyone who asks that I’m only involved because I hated the idea that the climate crisis was raging and nobody was doing anything, so I may as well do something myself. I have seen that things can change at the local level because I’m there, changing them. I’m one person. In this mid-sized town, there are probably hundreds or thousands of others who are also scared that nobody is doing anything, but they’re lazy, or apathetic, or just not aware of the possibilities, so I’m alone for the moment.

      You asked what anyone can do, but you’re complaining that you don’t like the answer. Live in California? Move. It’s expensive as hell anyway, so move to Arkansas or Missouri. Pretend you’re a republican. Infiltrate. Change that party from the inside. Or move to a smaller town. Join the town council. Then run for mayor. Then for governor. Just do something. That is the only answer. There is no quick fix, no easy path. The solution is simple - make sure every decision you make for at least the next 5 years will get you closer to your goal of attaining political power so you can change things. That is the only way anything will ever change. Left to the hands of the ‘default’ political classes, they won’t do anything. They won’t change anything. They have it easier than you. They have connections at prestigious universities, they have more money, they have better access to internships and people of influence. Tough luck, but that isn’t an excuse for you not to try. You will be alone at the start. Be the example. Bring people with you. Constantly encourage anyone you know who feels the same as you to get involved. Things can be changed for the better, but the first step is on you. Stop waiting for other people to make things better.

      • @melpomenesclevage
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        42 months ago

        So I’m in the united states. The second (or third) major step towards fascism… Well here’s how I remember it:

        It was the year 2000, first election I was remotely politically conscious for. I, uh, didn’t vote. Had opinions tho.

        So there was this fascist piece of shit-his dad was a former CIA director, his grandpa was point man for a failed fascist coup (thank you smedley butler. Not that I knew about this at the time, being a literal child), and the guy running against him was kind of a bland milquetoast wonk-but his credentials and rep were, in retrospect, pretty perfect. Conscious and cautious about global warming, knew about the internet, kind of all the right shit for the moment.

        So when the fascist piece of shit took office, everyone gave my mom shit, because she voted for a third party and allowed it to happen. Nevermind that we live(d) in CA, where votes in federal elections are between like 1/5th and 1/500th of a full citizen, and the electoral votes for CA still went to the bullshit wonk. She caught shit for years. And it kind of confused me.

        Because here’s the thing; the bland milquetoast wonk won the election. I don’t mean “he won the popular vote; the electoral college is bullshit” (although he did and it is) but he won in college votes too. He won by every metric.

        Nobody cared. Because elections don’t count. They’re not real, and you will never win begging. It was entirely a wasted effort. The aristocracy just appointed the guy they wanted. Don’t get me started on 2008, the first one I did vote in, and how that bastard betrayed every single fucking thing he promised.

        You tell me to get off my ass and do something, have you ever actually done anything in your life? I don’t mean sucking some aristocrat’s dick, so you can beg them for scraps later, that aren’t worth 1/10 of the effort you spent doing the lobbying, much less getting them their throne, but actually fixing building solving something with your own fucking hands abd organizational capacity?

        Ever? Or are you so obsessesed with being in a fucked up machine you can’t even see what it’s for, what its doing, and what purpose you serve within it?

        When you see someone dying on the street between five buildings, all of them with ‘(residential) for rent’ signs on them so old they’re barely legible, what’s your first thought? Do you think every politician doesn’t fucking know? Is your first thought to beg all the people who are profiting off this poor fuckers death? This isnt a hypothetical BTW, I saw this enough times this week that I straight up stopped fucking counting. So what should I have done, according to you?

      • KillingTimeItself
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        22 months ago

        If everyone whinging online signed up to a party today, started attending every single local meeting from tomorrow onwards, put themselves forward for roles within that party, actually put in time and effort to get selected, get elected, move up, keep moving up, keep aiming higher, we’d have a completely overhauled political system in 5 years.

        yes, if the system was built for people this would work. Currently it’s built for people with money and incumbency. The new guy in the race is going to need one hell of a financial backing to get his name out there. Do you think they just mail shit to people for free?

      • @Dulusa@lemmy.world
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        12 months ago

        Thank you! It’s so refreshing to see someone actually taking action and doing something.

        That constant stream of fingerpointing with the expectation that others need to do it, is just the prime form of entitlement.

        I hope people follow your role model and start really doing something!

      • @melpomenesclevage
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        02 months ago

        stop waiting for other people yo make things better

        But also

        beg the fuckers who ruined everything and the system designed to turn your horrified screams into complicit babble to make it better

        I’m gonna try the first, which is what I said, rather than the second, which you seem to favor.