SomeRandomG33k

We must dismantle Capitalism

Just an Anarcho-Syndicalist that wants to improve the world for the better. Loves Good Anime. Has over 2000 video games. Pop Culture Mage


posts from @SomeRandomG33k tagged #voting

also:

I have been reading the Democratic Party Platform for 2024 on my YouTube and Twitch channels. (SomeRandomG33k on both if you haven't follow yet.) And something I need to remind my audience is that I hate the concept of "policies" in general. I hate the idea that only a small handful of us in society get to decide on how to run society. I rather it be done collectively. And I rather that positions of power over others don't exist at all as much as possible. And I don't believe that "Politicians will listen to us," as Liberals believe because there will become a point that the Democrats won't pass what we want because their donors don't want it. And Democrats will give the excuse of "unforeseen consequences" for not passing anything progressive. Or it is whoever is the latest Joe Manchin. Who ever is the most conservative member of their party. And the Dems never fight against their most conservative members too. Or have rarely done so in the last two decades.

But I also like what David Graeber said about policies in the last chapter of his book Bullsh*t Jobs: A theory.....

"Another reason I hesitate to make policy suggestions is that I am suspicious of the very idea of policy. Policy implies the existence of an elite group—government officials, typically—that gets to decide on something (“a policy”) that they then arrange to be imposed on everybody else. There’s a little mental trick we often play on ourselves when discussing such matters. We say, for instance, “What are we going to do about the problem of X?” as if “we” were society as a whole, somehow acting on ourselves, but, in fact, unless we happen to be part of that roughly 3 percent to 5 percent of the population whose views actually do affect policy makers, this is all a game of make-believe; we are identifying with our rulers when, in fact, we’re the ones being ruled. This is what happens when we watch a politician on television say “What shall we do about the less fortunate?” even though at least half of us would almost certainly fit that category ourselves. Myself, I find such games particularly pernicious because I’d prefer not to have policy elites around at all. I’m personally an anarchist, which means that, not only do I look forward to a day sometime in the future when governments, corporations, and the rest will be looked at as historical curiosities in the same way as we now look at the Spanish Inquisition or nomadic invasions, but I prefer solutions to immediate problems that do not give more power to governments or corporations, but rather, give people the means to manage their own affairs."

And of course, here is the book. https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/david-graeber-bullshit-jobs



So, Kamala Harris has pick Tim Walz as her VP. Is it a good pick? Are there issues with him? One of us has finally gotten some therapy? What is happening in the UK? All this and more on the Patron show of Social Justice Alchemy.



So, am I an Insufferable Fatalist Leftist if I don't have faith in the Democratic party in the USA, I say the USA is a Fascist country no matter what is the team colors of the person holding the oval office, and that electoralism is a dead end?

Oh I still vote.

Voting takes about ten minutes one or two days out of a year.

But voting won't achieve what I want to happen. And it is a big distraction towards my political goals. Elections in the USA are kind of like the bread & circus in political theatre.

I also just really really hate how much energy gets sucks up by "voting" and "elections" in political discourse. Especially if Liberals dominates the conversation.



SomeRandomG33k
@SomeRandomG33k

I really wish Liberals would understand that. But I wonder if they do. Chances, by the fact that they are Liberals, they don't.


SomeRandomG33k
@SomeRandomG33k

I will also say that electoralism just really has it limits. We shouldn't really expect electoralism to bring about significant change. Especially for how much little effort it should be to vote. Just ten minutes in one day. You spend your time and energy doing other things.