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Originally Posted by
Keikiolu forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_cad/viewpost.gif
*By NOT vote for a “may lean toward evil” is a BIG VOTE for a “certain evil”.
Where is the difficulty in understanding that?*
Just because the main candidates are “may lean toward evil”, and “certain evil” doesn’t mean there aren’t other candidates that are “not evil” that we can vote for, granted with no chance of winning, but a third choice is out there.
These days, at least, you have TWO choices. Dem or Rep.
If you “tend to vote” for a Rep, a non-Rep-vote is a vote FOR a Dem.
If you “tend to vote” for a Dem, a non-Dem-vote is a vote FOR a Rep.
You may certainly vote for a “no-chance-of-winning” candidate, but that qualifies as a non-“opposite Party of yours”-vote.
Thus, if the “less evil” candidate is of “your party”, and you don’t vote for him/her, you are actually voting for the “more evil” candidate.
Voting for no-chance-of-winning candidates is ALWAYS a vote for your least preferable candidate.
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We aren’t to vote for our PARTY! We are to vote for the group that is more likely to NOT BE EVIL.
I am not a party voter. I vote on principles
Excellent…!
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Though, if you want to allow a little MORE evil than is necessary this time in hopes of having a somewhat-less-evil-than-the-lesser-evil-this-time candidate,… just weigh the risks of that, as that choice creates more evil than necessary now.
A vote for MORE EVIL, by way of a vote for a non-winning candidate or not voting at all, to “teach OUR side a lesson” is the gamble of allowing more evil now so as to make “our side” look better (less evil) in the future.
That is a monsterous risk, in my opinion.
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If you’d rather not vote for the possibility of evil, then it’s probably best never to vote at all, ever, then, because there is no guarantee that ANY politician will be “spotless”.
A candidate doesn’t have to be spotless for me, they just have to believe that abortion is murder and that they will do everything in their power to see that it does not stay legal in the US.
In the present situation, all the Rep candidates believe that, they just can’t SAY that, and they can’t guarantee being able to implement it.
They can’t say it, because it energizes the opposition too much, and they can’t guarantee implementation because that is a legislative function and not an executive one.
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The time to pressure our politicians to be “good” is when we have them voted in on “our side”, and we use the as yet unused pressure of “getting on their case” WHILE they’re in office. Not WHILE their CAMPAIGNING.
I disagree. The only power you as an individual hold over a politician is your vote.
That was disproved by the results of the now-dead so-called “comprehensive immigration bill”.
We, the people, need to quit limiting ourselves to only paying attention during campaign season.
The 2-party system, which I think vastly superior over other systems, forces a binary choice, and then only at election time. The natural counter-balance of this “all or nothing” election system is that the mass of people need to CONSTANTLY apply “anger and bad-mouthing” pressure to those they’ve elected, as an elected politician hates nothing more than to be yelled at by the populace.
To be yelled at by those who are “on your side” is the ultimate nightmare of any politician.