• Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I vote in every election. Even in the odd years when it’s for prothonotary and constable and weird shit like that. So it’s not like all I’m doing is voting for a president every four years. My parents have been involved in the local Democratic Party since the 80s so I know all about going door to door and bothering my neighbors.

    I think it’s easier to make change on a local level

    I thought that, too, until I saw how much “change” my dad could make when he got elected to the town council. Same ugly car-brained developments going up with no plans for bike infrastructure beyond “here’s some road paint, good luck.”

    When I asked him about it he shrugged and said “That’s the best we can do. Trust me, the other designs were a lot worse.”

    And that summarizes my experience with government: This is literally the best we can do. We have to run like crazy to stay in place. We’ll get one step ahead - like not getting busted for weed - and take two or more steps back - Roe overturned, Israel killing children, Trump still not in fucking jail.

    It’s futile and disheartening and I’m sick of it, and I don’t get to opt out. I just have to wait until it falls apart and vote blue like a good little human.

    My dad got into local politics because he thought he could help, but after two terms on the town council he’s so sick of not getting a damn thing done he’s resigning.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      2 months ago

      If I rewound by 20 years and told you or your dad back then that if you got real involved in politics you could get weed legalized, what would you have told me?

      • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Sounds about right that it took 20 years. It takes the government a really long fucking time to do reasonable and sane things. And the more reasonable and sane, the longer it’s going to take. Just look how we started a war against Iraq fucking five minutes after a bunch of Saudis crashed planes into things, but we still don’t give hungry children food in school

        Plus I’m in an illegal state, and broke federal law to bring my medicine here. So it’s been 20 fucking years and it’s still not done yet. Oh, and Roe is now overturned, Israel is still killing children, and there are shitty car-brained developments still going up.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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          2 months ago

          I guess what I’m saying is, what is the alternative?

          If you’re a Nicaraguan whose family got killed in the 80s by contras, or a Honduran whose kid got taken away in Arizona who still hasn’t seen him and probably never will, I think it probably sounds pretty silly for someone who could have worked to make the system that’s trying to destroy them behave more humanely to say “Yeah I could have, but it would have been a bunch of work and taken time, so I didn’t. I just got discouraged and decided it was all the same.”

          I don’t think it will happen in 20 years, or 200, if you’re waiting for “the government” to do these reasonable and sane things. That’s just the nature of the beast; they will not. But, they’re amenable to working for change. If your dad was political then you and he are probably well familiar with it… yeah, the people on the evil side more or less never stop and they have some advantages. It sucks. But again, what’s the alternative? Just wait for it to get worse until they start coming for you directly in an immediate and physical sense?

          • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            That’s why I’m so frustrated: There isn’t an alternative to this shitty, broken, infuriating system. We have to vote blue as fast and often as we possibly can just to keep from backsliding completely. Any gains we make are gonna either be wiped out with the next session of Congress, or they’re going to make something else even worse in the event we miraculously make something better. If I honestly thought being active in politics did anything but give me heartburn, I’d do it.

            But it’s going to collapse eventually, as all things will, and that gives me a little bit of peace.

            • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              That’s why I’m so frustrated: There isn’t an alternative to this shitty, broken, infuriating system.

              He knows it. He loves it. He’s gloating.