• centof@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    A vote for an independent candidate is a vote for Trump.

    No. It is a vote for an independent candidate.

    • RandomPancake@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Which will remove yet another barrier to Trump becoming president.

      I’m all for breaking the two-party stranglehold but do it in a local election where it will make a difference. This year is the absolute worst year to try a failed presidential run.

      • centof@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        I never advised anyone to vote for an independent candidate. I am simply correcting your misleading rhetoric.

        Good advice on focusing locally for third parties.

        • Pelicanen@sopuli.xyz
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          5 months ago

          The rhetoric isn’t misleading. When voter turnout is low, ergo the total number of votes for Republicans and Democrats are low, Republicans fare better. The US uses a first-past-the-post system of voting which devolves into a two-party system. This means that voting for a third party removes votes from the total number of ballots cast for one of the two actual candidate parties, which means fewer votes for Republicans and Democrats, which usually benefits Republicans far more than Democrats.

          All this to say that when you vote for a third party, Trump is more positively impacted than Biden, so you’re effectively increasing Trump’s chance of winning.

          • centof@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            I agree with your general point that third party votes don’t matter nationally. This is kinda blunt, but you are making the false assumption that Party politicans are entitled to everyone’s votes. You can’t remove a vote that was never casted for a particular candidate.

            “The rhetoric isn’t misleading.”

            It is to me. A vote for an independent candidate does not in any way, shape, or form count as a vote for Trump. They are not the same thing.

            It is a fact that a vote for an independent candidate is not tallied the same as a vote for trump. It is nonsense to say they are the same. It’s like saying a vote for Hawaiian pizza is a vote for Pepperoni Pizza. It is hokum.

            • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Do you understand that some words mean something beyond their literal, exact definition? If someone says “it’s raining buckets”, would you come in and say “that rhetoric is misleading, I looked outside and no buckets are falling from the sky”?

              • centof@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                Of course. The problem is that when someone says one thing is another thing, that is not obviously metaphorical. Maybe you’d be able to tell in person but not through text where the message is monotonized and broadcasted to the entire internet.