• MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Look up the spoiler effect. Please! This vassal is begging you.

    The question under your system (please inform yourself about first-past-the-post) isn’t who do you want to win, it’s who you do you want NOT to win.

    If you vote for your third-party candidate, it’s equivalent to not having voted at all, if they have no chance of winning.

    You’re going to get Biden or Trump with how people vote (spoiler effect, look it up), one of those is going to win, make your peace with that.

    So, which would you rather?

    I am happy to spell out in greater detail why voting for a third party candidate is a waste of time under your system, happy to chat if there’s still any confusion about it.

    • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      The question under your system (please inform yourself about first-past-the-post) isn’t who do you want to win, it’s who you do you want NOT to win.

      wrong. the question is “who do i want to vote for” and i want to vote for the person i want to win. incidentally, i don’t want to vote for someone i don’t want to win.

          • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Please, do go on to explain how the spoiler effect is a myth. I’ll wait. I’d like to see your logic on that one. (Inb4 you don’t)

            • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              first, i think it will be helpful to recall what a myth is: it’s a story we tell to explain the world around us. the spoiler effect is one of those stories: it explains, for some people, why clinton won in 1992. but analysis of the facts of that election find that, in fact, perot hurt clinton’s margin of victory.

              this myth is persistent, and reinforced by multiple media sources and even academics, but there is no way to actually produce a test of the theory of its existence or its mechanisms. so while you might like to tell this story, even if only to yourself, to justify voting for people who do bad things, to pretend that this myth is objective fact, that it is a natural law, is either misguided or dishonest, depending on whether you actually believe the myth.

    • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      If you vote for your third-party candidate, it’s equivalent to not having voted at all, if they have no chance of winning.

      this is election misinformation. my vote is still counted for the candidate, even if they don’t win, just as trump votes were counted in 2020.

      • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        If you lived somewhere with a decent preferential voting system, you’d be right.

        You don’t though, and it’s not misinformation to say that under a first part the post system, voting for a third candidate that is not going to win is a waste of the influence you have. CGPGrey explains it well

          • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            🤦‍♂️ It’s a “law” in the mathematical/scientific sense. It is a model that explains something.

            You’re just spouting smart sounding words without actually proving anything.

            Please, please, do explain how the spoiler effect is wrong.

            Tell me how when you have first past the post and a two party system, voting for a third candidate who won’t win isn’t just making it more likely the candidate you’d like less to win.

            Please, would love to hear you well reasoned and sound argument.

            • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              it’s not a law. it’s an empty tautology.

              it argues that a certain type of election system tends to lead to a two-party system. however, from a critical perspective, this theory might be untestable. why? because someone could argue that any outcome can be explained by the theory. for instance, if there are more than two parties, it could be said that the system still favors two but this is just a temporary exception. this kind of reasoning makes it very difficult to disprove the theory, turning it more into a statement that’s true by definition than an actual hypothesis based on evidence. similar arguments have been made about economic theories that rely on assuming everything else stays the same. to be more than just a statement, this theory would need a way to be tested with evidence and potentially proven wrong. that way, it could be a useful theory for understanding political systems instead of just an unfalsifiable claim.

              • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                The evidence is all of the first past the post systems that trend toward two dominant parties. There are 1000s of example elections, and the elections which don’t conform to this are just as bad, because the winner will win with even FEWER votes than 50%. If you have 5 candidates and people are voting fairly evenly between them, you can win with just over 20% of the vote. I hope you can believe that, that’s just the mathematical reality (that I’m really hoping we don’t have to debate over, it’s a fairly simple mathematical problem).

                The myth is that what you have can actually provide voters with a meaningful choice. That’s the media narrative, that first past the post is meaningful and gives the president a mandate because people voted for them, but it most certainly doesn’t.

                • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  it seems that you are already trying to explain away exceptions rather than accepting that this myth lacks predictive power and may not, in fact, accurately explain any past elections at all.

                  • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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                    6 months ago

                    Lets just focus on this particular election then.

                    Do you think anyone other than Biden or Trump will win? If you do, then your choice is clear, and as much as you question the existence of the spoiler effect (which is not being spread much by the media in the US, it’s being spread by detractors of the current voting system), it doesn’t really matter. People will vote towards those two candidates (hope we can agree that this is the likely outcome).

                    If that’s the case, voting for a third candidate is as good as not voting because if your candidate doesn’t win, and you COULD have voted for your next choice (why ranked voting is so much better, and it’s the voting system letting you down), then the candidate you most don’t want (assuming 3 candidates) has a better chance of winning (since you didn’t vote for your second choice).

                    You say this isn’t provable because it’s about people’s beliefs and it can’t be tested, but sorry, elections are about human choices, beliefs are at play. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that democracies with ranked choice voting have more first preference votes to smaller parties, and that it’s overwhelmingly so.

                    You can’t really escape the fact that even if people just voted for their favourite candidate in first past the post, people would win with less than 50% of the vote (unless you’re saying that the votes don’t add up to 100% then I dunno what to say)

                • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  ask yourself: what test can we make that would disprove the theory?

                  maybe i’m just not smart enough to come up with one, but i can’t conceive of one. an untestable, that is, an undisprovable hypothesis, is an empty tautology. or, at least modern epistemologists and critical rationalists have treated them this way.

                  maybe disprovability isn’t a necessary facet of sound scientific theories. i tend to agree with popper, though.

                  • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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                    6 months ago

                    Okay, the test would be that we have first past the post (single winner elections, like for president, or local electorates with single candidates elected, not proportional voting, which is better), produce elections with a spread of votes across many candidates, and don’t consistently trend towards two.

                    This is definitely testable and disprovable, it’s just that the outcome is overwhelmingly the case I have described, the spoiler effect leading to two dominant parties. There may be outliers and times where a third candidate does win, but these are the overwhelmingly rare exceptions.

      • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Then Ms 8h account with their full name (deeeeefinitelty not a shill, deeeefinitelt a genuine user. Yeah people on Lemmy toooootally use their full name as if it were facebook), I’ll just have to conclude you’re trying to sway leftists not to vote for Biden, so the world ends up with trump.

        I hope you’re unsuccessful.

          • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Okay 👍 Please do explain your whacky logic though. I came to the conclusion you’re a troll because you’re not really engaging by explaining your position beyond: “I don’t wanna, it’s a lie! The media is lying!!”

            Go learn maths, go understand the mechanism behind the spoiler effect. Go look at the literal mountains of examples of it in play. Unless you think it’s just some massive coincidence that every first-past-the-post system trends towards two parties.

            I’m very keen and willing hear to any actual logic you bring to the table to justify your belief.

              • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                Sorry, that’s my bad. Your initial response was quite frustrating.

                Emotions are high because this election affects people around the world, and hearing that you don’t care enough to make a difference, is not very pleasant.

                I apologise.

                • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  you don’t care enough to make a difference,

                  if the difference i made put biden in power, i would feel terrible. same for trump. so i will vote for someone i do want to have the office for 4 years.

                  • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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                    6 months ago

                    Alrighty, then I suppose you just aren’t voting. Which is your choice, just as long as you’re clear on that.

                    Your candidate is not going to win, and I think you know that.

                    And if you think these choices are equally as bad, that’s a whole different topic that let’s not get in to.

            • Victoria Antoinette @lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              you asked for the same explanation in three separate comments in succession. perhaps you could wait until you get teh explanation before badgering me.