• FreshParsnip
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    3 days ago

    Yes, I think voting is a necessity. In Canada’s last federal election, there were regions near me where liberals won by only a few votes. Every vote matters.

  • Theatomictruth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    Yes, I always vote at every opportunity. The reason is that I live in a US state that has universal mail in voting so it’s incredibly easy for me. I receive a ballot in the mail, fill it out whenever I have time, and drop it back in the mailbox, if I want I can check the status online to make sure it’s accounted for. No reason not to unless you have some kind of moral or political opposition to voting.

    • CameronDev@programming.dev
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      4 days ago

      Mail in voting really needs to be the default. The information provided at the polling booth is inadequate to chose a candidate, and at home you have the entire internet to research who actually represents you best. You can spend as much time as you need to make an actually informed decision.

  • CameronDev@programming.dev
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    4 days ago

    Yes, it’s a legal requirement in Australia.

    There are fringe groups who vote consistently. If you don’t use your vote, those fringe groups become the majority, and you end up with politicians that don’t represent the majorities interests.

    There is always a greater evil that can be voted against, even if it means voting for a lesser evil.

  • baggachipz@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    Yes I do, especially in the small local elections. My vote proportionally counts for a lot more in those. In an election with hundreds of votes, I have much larger say in who wins.

  • Midnight Wolf@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Yes, ever since I became able. I feel like most people are absolute morons that blindly throw support for whoever seems popular or catchy, but I take the time to research every candidate from every party and see what their positions/stances are on topics, who they are trying to support (and why), how much of a commitment do I see (do they have a website, or just a Facebook page? Are they detailed in why they support/oppose certain things, or are they vague and repetitive? Do they have any online presence at all, or are they just a name on the ballot?). Are they advertising or have groups promoting them, and if so, who and why?

    I have a couple of topics that one must meet, and most others are flexible. For example, a candidate must not be against LGBT individuals, full stop. Something like renewable energy is a positive thing, but if the only candidate is pro-LGBT but neutral on renewables, they are still getting my vote. Repairing infrastructure, important, but if they are making an effort to balance the budget for a term, totally understandable to hold off. Other things are more nuanced - bringing in more travelers means more money for the town, but can our transit network bare the additional load? Would we simply be bringing in money to immediately spend it, therefore more congestion, more pollution, for no real benefit? Can the businesses that are built around this plan survive if the basketball team relocates, or are we dooming the town with grandiose ideas that may wither and fail?

    Most people I feel are ‘taxes bad’ and ‘I saw their name somewhere so they must be good’, so I try to inject a bit of logic and sanity into the system.

  • Drusas@fedia.io
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    3 days ago

    Yes. I especially get involved in local elections and only skip voting if it’s on something which I think is better answered by others (for example, between twoperfectly fine candidates for school board when I don’t have kids or otherwise interact with the school system; I will vote if one of them seems crazy).

  • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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    3 days ago

    I look at the other side of the Pacific and see how hard the Republicans are fighting to take away minorities’ votes. I’d need to be a moron not to value My vote after seeing that.

  • TabbsTheBat (they/them)@pawb.social
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    4 days ago

    I always vote :3 in the presidential, parliament, and EU elections at least. Not so much the municipality ones, but that’s more to do with my bad memory leading to forgetting to lol.

    But yeah, in school they always emphasized how important voting is, so I guess that’s why :3. Not that my vote has accounted for much so far lol

    • CameronDev@programming.dev
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      4 days ago

      No one vote counts, but the overall numbers do matter (at least in functioning democracies).

      If your preferred party gets in, great, your vote almost directly counted.

      If the party you disliked gets in, sad, but your vote still sends a message that the winner that they have alienating you any the others who didn’t vote for them. If they keep doing that to more voters, they risk losing the next election.

      (Again, all requires a functional democracy)

  • brendansimms@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    all of em - and almost always for a third party candidate. im the person giving the openly socialist candidates 0.001% of the vote.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    No, but only when disability or similar issues prevent it.

    The reason I try to is that local shit matters to me. I know some of the assholes running for things, and I’ll be fucked if I’ll let them get in without an opposition vote.

    Seriously, if it weren’t for that I’d only vote for state and federal major elections. Those, you kinda have to vote if you give a damn at all. But locals, it’s easy enough to shrug off for something as minor as a headache if you aren’t (well, if I’m not) invested in some way. As it is, knowing the assholes is good motivation to push past minor issues.