• deaf_fish
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    29 days ago

    Ok, I think I understand the confusion. Running for a 3rd party and voting 3rd party are two different things.

    I think that running for a 3rd party has good outcomes, it generates news and discussion and gets your ideas out in front of a lot of people. Maybe, when the time is right, you won’t be a 3rd party anymore and become one of the mainstream parties.

    I think that voting for a 3rd party has bad outcomes. As our previous discussions, thanks to the dumb first past the post. Only the two most popular candidates matter. So you should vote for the lesser evil even if they suck (and they will).

    When a 3rd party candidate becomes popular enough they edge out one of the standard party candidates and the voting strategy changes in our favor.

    • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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      29 days ago

      But that doesn’t make any sense. Running as a third party candidate means doing a political project in which you’re trying to attract supporters to vote for you. If that political project is good, then it’s good to vote for, if it’s bad, then it’s bad to start it in the first place.

      If no one voted for a third party, that party would lose relevance and wouldn’t be able to accomplish the goal of spreading ideas like you mentioned earlier.

      Also, you suggest that once a sort of critical mass of voters prefer a third party candidate, the voting strategy changes and they should vote third party. But it doesn’t work that way. How can we tell when we’ve reached that point, if everyone follows your advice and votes for the less-bad major party? By all appearances, it would seem that the third party has no meaningful support, even if the majority supported it, because they’re voting for who they expect to win rather than who they most prefer. For all we know, that could be the situation right now. People can’t just all spontaneously decide together to switch, unless you have some means of coordinating it. Enough people have to switch for it to start to seem plausible that it could actually work, and that means those first people would have to act contrary to your rationale.

      • deaf_fish
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        29 days ago

        Running as a third party candidate means doing a political project in which you’re trying to attract supporters to vote for you.

        This has always been a stretch goal of any 3rd party candidate, because it almost never ever happens. You run 3rd party to tank the votes of one of the primary candidates, for a book deal, or to spread information and awareness.

        If no one voted for a third party, that party would lose relevance and wouldn’t be able to accomplish the goal of spreading ideas like you mentioned earlier.

        The strategy is to gracefully step down after you have spread information and before any of the voting happens. You can support a 3rd party candidate and plan to not vote for them unless they get popular.

        How can we tell when we’ve reached that point

        We won’t be able to tell the instant it happens, because it’s impossible to track all the voters, but signs will start showing up.

        You know we are past the point when the democrat or republican candidate starts getting ignored like 3rd party candidates currently do. Remember how Bernie’s run looked? Before the Dems did an op and kicked him out, it was looking very interesting.

        For all we know, that could be the situation right now.

        Maybe, keep your eye on the polls. If your 3rd party candidate has comparable polling to Biden or Trump then we can start talking about the possibility of that happening. We have to overcome the normies.

        By all appearances, it would seem that the third party has no meaningful support, even if the majority supported it,

        Disagree, like I said, you can support a 3rd party candidate without planning on voting for them. Everyone knows you have to eat shit on voting day, but before then, you can point out all the good things about a particular candidate, even if you know they are not going to win.

        People can’t just all spontaneously decide together to switch, unless you have some means of coordinating it.

        Yes, this is why it may happen an election or two after we get critical mass. It’s a limitation of the tools we have.

        Remember if the 3rd party candidate has the support, they are no longer a 3rd party. People can say they are 3rd party, but they would be wrong or coping.

        • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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          29 days ago

          Yes, this is why it may happen an election or two after we get critical mass.

          This is fundamentally not how things work. It won’t just spontaneously happen, just like that, it isn’t a trivial issue. Even if every single Democratic voter would prefer the Green Party (for instance), each of them individually would think, “Well, I may want to switch, but nobody else is going to, so it would be a wasted vote.” There’s no reason this wouldn’t continue indefinitely.

          This also ignores the fact that certain vote thresholds are necessary to be recognized as a major party and receive things like federal campaign funding and a spot in televised debates. Collecting votes doesn’t only help in terms of perceived relevancy, but it also directly helps in spreading the message.

          I’d also like to point out that we’re not at election day and yet you don’t seem to be advocating for a third party, instead criticizing me for doing so. If your position is that you should support a third party up until it comes time to vote, then where is that support?

          • deaf_fish
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            29 days ago

            There’s no reason this wouldn’t continue indefinitely.

            Wait, what? Why would it continue indefinitely? Lets say we had a Green Party with polling showing 90% of the population interested in that party. In what reason would you not vote for the Green Party (Assuming they are aligned with your goals)? Even if the polls are off we still have an extremely good chance of winning.

            vote thresholds are necessary to be recognized as a major party and receive things like federal campaign funding and a spot in televised debates.

            You don’t technically need money to win an election, it helps, but all that matters is the votes. If you don’t debate a popular candidate, your opponent can call you a coward. No one wants to debate anyone, it’s just better optics to engage.

            If your position is that you should support a third party up until it comes time to vote, then where is that support?

            Ohhh, maybe you got me, I haven’t been paying much attention to the 3rd party polling. Any progressive 3rd party candidates coming close to Biden or Trump? If they are, then you win, and let me know.

            Also, let me just say, if it is not too late, that I support all candidates that agree with me. Have any candidates in particular you want me to verify?

            • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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              29 days ago

              Wait, what? Why would it continue indefinitely? Lets say we had a Green Party with polling showing 90% of the population interested in that party. In what reason would you not vote for the Green Party (Assuming they are aligned with your goals)? Even if the polls are off we still have an extremely good chance of winning.

              The Green Party would not be polling at 90%. When polls ask people who they intend to vote for, they would tell them that they intend to vote for the Democrats, because they consider the Greens nonviable.

              You know, like you said you’re doing when I asked why you’re not supporting them now.

              I guess you’re expecting people to lie to pollsters or something? Most people aren’t going to do that.

              You don’t technically need money to win an election, it helps, but all that matters is the votes. If you don’t debate a popular candidate, your opponent can call you a coward. No one wants to debate anyone, it’s just better optics to engage.

              This is so absurdly naive that it’s hardly worth answering. Money lets you spread your message. Being in a debate lets you spread your message. These are massive advantages that it’s virtually impossible to win without. People aren’t voting completely divorced from anything campaigns do.

              Seriously, this is completely ridiculous and I won’t entertain the notion further.

              • deaf_fish
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                29 days ago

                When polls ask people who they intend to vote for, they would tell them that they intend to vote for the Democrats, because they consider the Greens nonviable.

                Sounds like we need to organize more to get better information. Also, what is this I found? https://news.gallup.com/poll/512135/support-third-political-party.aspx Looks like a poll that supports 3rd party candidates without committing to vote on them.

                This is so absurdly naive that it’s hardly worth answering.

                I think you misread my statement that you quoted. I didn’t say money wasn’t helpful. And I never said we don’t need to debate. I said the debates will come to us if we are popular (You won’t have to doge bullets Neo).

                Seriously, this is completely ridiculous and I won’t entertain the notion further.

                Your call if you want to end on some bad arguments.

                • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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                  29 days ago

                  Sounds like we need to organize more to get better information. Also, what is this I found? https://news.gallup.com/poll/512135/support-third-political-party.aspx Looks like a poll that supports 3rd party candidates without committing to vote on them.

                  Well then, seeing as that poll shows 63%, I assume you’re voting third party with everyone else then, right? Because that’s apparently how you think the world works.

                  Stop giving me this nonsense and come back down to reality.

                  • deaf_fish
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                    29 days ago

                    Is that 63% specific candidate? Or is that 63% in general?

                    Because of its 63% for a specific candidate we can talk. Looks like it’s just in general. Which makes sense because the two candidates are particularly bad this upcoming election.

                    Oh man, looks like you have no good arguments to counter mine, otherwise you would have used them. Looks like I’ll have to put you back into the idiot category. Sorry.