Online left-wing infighting seems to me to be about applying labels to people because they argue or have argued one thing on a particular topic, and then use it to discredit an unrelated argument topic or paint their overall character. I know there are pot-stirring trolls and compulsive contrarians, but I do witness users I personally judge to have genuine convictions do this amongst each other.

Within US politics, CA Gov. Newsom is an illustrative example (plenty of examples exist too for other countries and around Lemmy/Fedi). I don’t particularly like him, he has done things I think are good, some things I think are funny, something things I think are bad and some things I think are downright horrible. Yet I have encountered some users online who will say they can’t ever applaud a move of his if one specific other policy or set of other unrelated policies crossed a line for them. I’m not asking people to change their mind on what they think of a person because of an isolated good thing they do, but to at least acknowledge it as a good thing or add nuance describing what about it you like or don’t. I can accept saying “I don’t think this is a good thing in this circumstance”, “this person will not follow through with this thing I think is good thing because ___”, or “they are doing a good thing for wrong and selfish reasons” too. But to outright deny any support for an action because of a wildly extrapolated character judgement of the person doing it, when that user would support it otherwise, vexes me greatly.

I know this is not every or most interactions on Lemmy, but these are just some thoughts I have to get out of my head. You don’t have to agree with me. I’m using ‘left-wing’ because the definition of ‘leftist’ or ‘liberal’ is wide-ranging depending on who you talk to. And on the side of the spectrum I’m calling left to left-centre, we seem to let the fewer things we disagree with get in the way of the many more things we would agree with each other. That’s all, thanks for reading.

  • PhilipTheBucket@quokk.au
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    2 days ago

    I’m just pointing out that voting is not a real solution to the problems we face.

    Correct

    Because reforms to the two party system are basically impossible to achieve by working from within the system, by design.

    Correct

    By all means vote, but let’s not pretend it will achieve any sort of meaningful change in the economic status quo.

    Correct

    I’m more of the view it will take a revolution or mass protest movement of some kind (like a general strike) to achieve any serious reforms to the economic and political status quo.

    Correct

    The problem I have with electoralists is that there is an implicit and sometimes explicit suggestion that one can simply vote fascism and oligarchy away.

    I have literally never heard anyone say this. Not once. There seems like there is this strawman that somehow people who are saying you should vote are also saying that you should not do any other thing, but in my experience the correlation is the exact opposite: The people who are strongly minded about voting tend to do other work in and out of the system to try to make things better.

    But even then, conditions for US workers are unlikely to change materially. Wealth inequality will be just as bad as before and the Dems will do nothing serious to address it. We all surely recognise that.

    I more or less agree with this. It’s a pretty big fucking problem. How does refusing to vote help solve it?

    For what it’s worth, Biden did the first reduction in income inequality and the biggest increase in people’s take-home pay in decades after making a huge corporate tax increase to pay for it. Almost no one knows that that even happened. I get what you mean, it’s a drop in the bucket compared to the kind of change that would be required… but in my experience, the people who are anti-voting just as a general rule also often tend to be negative even about people like Bernie Sanders who are trying to fight to fix all of this on a more fundamental level, and generally unaware of when things change or what is happening in the places where big rules that could affect the oligarchy get made or unmade.

    If you can’t be bothered to support people who are fighting for you, by putting in an hour of action once every couple of years, how would you expect any progress to happen? Organizing outside government is needed also yes, but it’s going to be so much harder than supporting people inside government (the tiny handful of them) who are actually fighting to make things right.

    Like if you organize a general strike to enforce better working conditions, but then congress is 2/3rds Republicans because no one on the left was voting, doesn’t that make it harder for the general strike to accomplish anything? I don’t get this value proposition where voting is not a good use of time simply because it is not enough on its own (let alone affirmatively a bad thing that people should be banned for advocating for).

    I mean, sure if voting for the Dems stops the deportations and shuts down ICE completely then that’s worth a go in the meantime.

    I know multiple people personally who were not deported because of Obama-era reforms. ICE would probably not exist if Al Gore had won his election. And, of course, “anti-electoralism” to whatever extent it impacted the last election has had a massive impact on people’s safety and food safety and all the rest in the present day. Just because they were already hanging by a thread under the current system which urgently needs to change doesn’t mean it suddenly makes sense to let Trump in and cut the thread and let them just fall.

    • Unruffled [they/them]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      2 days ago

      If you can’t be bothered to support people who are fighting for you, by putting in an hour of action once every couple of years, how would you expect any progress to happen?

      That’s exactly what I’m trying to say. An hour of action every two years is nowhere near sufficient. Sure, do it, but don’t expect that to be sufficient.

      ICE would probably not exist if Al Gore had won his election.

      I really wish Gore had won that election.

      And, of course, “anti-electoralism” to whatever extent it impacted the last election has had a massive impact on people’s safety and food safety and all the rest in the present day.

      I really don’t think “anti-electoralism” had anything to do with US voter turnout in the last election. I think it had everything to do with the Dems repeatedly letting down their own constituencies, many of who are substantially further left than the establishment of the party is. At least that’s my impression from Lemmy (biased sample no doubt). It’s a fundamental rule of any campaign that if you offer nothing inspiring to vote for, then many people won’t leave their homes to vote. It feels wrong to me to blame the voters in that case - the blame falls squarely on the DNC and party leadership imo. They effectively sabotaged their own campaign because they didn’t want to budge on unpopular policy decisions, and it alienated them from their base. At least that’s the way I look at it.