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by toyg
3903 days ago
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The problem is, everyone has his personal list of priorities topped by "something without which everything else does not make sense". * campaign reform: "how can you discuss anything when your counterpart is crooked?" * climate change: "how can you discuss anything if your house is underwater?" * fracking: "how can you discuss anything when people are causing earthquakes?" * poverty: "how can you discuss anything when people are dying of hunger?" * etc etc One should be humble enough to support the candidate that is the closest to one's personal pet argument, but who also has a chance to actually get elected. Lessig has no chance whatsoever, simple as. He wants hard to be a Nader but clearly lacks even the moderate mainstream popularity Nader had. |
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Support for people who aren't likely to win the general election at least shows what issues are important to voters, forcing them to give some concessions to those issues in order not to lose their base to third parties and independents. That's the real power of supporting people like Lessig and Sanders, even though they clearly won't win. Supporting someone you disagree with more just because they're likely to win is truly "throwing your vote away" - it's working against your own policy preferences to give more votes to someone who doesn't even need them.