FemMecha
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- Joined
- Apr 23, 2007
- Messages
- 14,068
- MBTI Type
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- 496
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
I was thinking about this just yesterday when someone was complaining about campaign ads not influencing decisions. I would suspect any person in a state of mind to be undecided would have no intention of bothering to vote. It's a bigger bother this year, so you have to be more invested which correlates with strength of decision.If they were actually undecided, it leaves one wondering whether they will actually vote or whether they'll remain undecided and then just not do anything... because yeah, at this point, I'm not sure what new things could be brought to light about either candidate.
I've only voted in years that I found one option really upsetting. I voted early this year which is very uncharacteristic of me because in the past, even if I preferred a candidate, I have some of that Gen X-er feeling that things won't change that much regardless of candidate. I'm not proud of it, but I haven't voted in most elections, although had some dim preference each time, but have never been consistent about a party. I don't feel any identity with politics.
I have a notion that the best political ideology for a global system hasn't been invented yet, and many of the existing ideologies work differently depending on culture, context, and scale and that possibly none work at the global scale. I think Libertarianism works when there are few people and a lot of natural resources, but that the more compressed the resources, the more they need to be negotiated, so that more socialist reasoning applies. This can be seen in disaster scenarios where Capitolistic approaches wreak havoc and atrocity because people will pay anything to survive and get the last slice of bread. You actually need more systemic control to get a humanitarian result. There are also issues of natural culture, whether focused on individual rights or family systems. I think culture that value extended families can also do better with socialist ideologies because they already negotiate and compromise for the well being of the group. There is no political ideology that exists in a vaccuum. In the same way the system of marriage can have every conceivable moral result based on the context of specific individuals where it is applied, I think the same is true of political systems. You can get both constructive and destructive results based on the culture and concrete elements upon which it is imposed. Anyway, a bit of a diversion, but it took its springboard from this idea of political undecidedness. I understand in most contexts that feeling because I've always considered it complicated to determine how the marriage of a theory and concrete culture/environment will turn out.
I am vehemently against Trump and it has absolutely nothing to do with rejecting conservatism as an ideology. I think every society needs healthy, intelligent debates between true conservatives and liberals. We need one side protecting established systems and another side questioning established systems to have a healthy society.