• OBJECTION!
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    3 hours ago

    Trump is worse than Harris, and one of them will win the election, that is true. But I don’t agree that that means I should vote for Harris. I believe it is necessary to hold politicians to a minimum standard, and that refusing to vote for a candidate that doesn’t meet that standard is a means of enforcing it. Even if a third party can’t win this election, voting for them still serves to establish a credible threat of defection. This is one of many reasons why the ideology of lesser-evilism is incorrect.

    Choosing to not vote or to vote third party reduces the chances of Harris winning and increases the chances of Trump winning

    It does neither of those things, actually. It neither increases nor decreases the chances of either candidate winning.

    • ultranaut@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      The things you believe do not make sense or map to actual reality.

      What do you think voting is doing if its not increasing or decreasing the likelihood of a candidate winning?

      If there’s only two possible outcomes between three choices, and one of those choices is clearly the worst outcome and another one of them is clearly not a possible outcome, which choice would you make and why?

      • OBJECTION!
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        1 hour ago

        If a large enough bloc of voters won’t vote unless you support a specific policy, then you have more of an incentive to support that policy. Do you dispute this?