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So I vote for Harris and she doesn't win, it's my fault she lost? and i'm personally responsible for USAID being dismantled?
No. Politics isn't just about voting. It's everything Every action. Every shitty post on the Internet. Everything you buy - you're voting with your dollars. Your attention. Your time.
No, you individually probably don't contribute that much to the direct decisions, but your voice reaches others, helps mold their opinions, change how they see and interact with the world. Then they go and do the same thing. That's all politics.
I'm getting the vibe here that you think your political involvement is supposed to either improve your life or that you're responsible directly for positive or negative outcomes.
If you're going to take part in a democratic process, you are assuming some level of responsibility for the outcome, but you share that with a lot of other people whether you like it or not, it's a much larger thing than just your vote or your involvement, it's spread across a sociological grouping, it's fairly abstract so you shouldn't have feelings about it, it's just what it means to be part of a larger system.
If the idea of that responsibility bothers you, it's a good place to think about why and what you could do to feel better about your involvement, win or lose.
I'm against self-righteous twats who declare they know best for everyone and anyone who doesn't agree with them is an idiot or bad person.
I am actively politically involved and have been my entire life. I just missed the memo where that gives me the right to browbeat and harass and lecture other people for not choosing to do that. Am I being irresponsible for not lecturing you about going to local town meetings like I do? Or writing your city councilmen, or voting in in local referendum elections?
And yeah, I do think politics is about direct impacts. being politically involved on an abstract level is nothing more than mental masturbation. It's ego stroking. hence why people on the internet love it so much. they get to faff off how superior they are to other people in the abstract, without dealing with any of the real world specifics that complicate their moralizing of their own superiority over 'apolitical' people and how 'stupid' they are.
my brother in law can't vote. he's not a citizen. he can opine all day, but literally can't vote for anything or affect any real change. he has no rights to do so. he is effectively apolitical, as he's not allow to participate in the democratic process by law.
You're doing a terrible job making your point, to the degree that all I can take away from your chain of headache-inducing rhetorical questions here is that you don't like being made to feel feelings by strangers, and honestly, that's a skill issue.
do you ever ask yourself why does it upset you that other people are different than you? have you ever asked yourself that?
or is it that if people think differently than you, they are bad and wrong, because it invalidates your personal choices and thoughts? and you need yours to be validated by other people's agreement?
and why you must insult and demean anyone who doesn't validate your views, rather than consider their validity as their lives, experiences, and knowledge are very different than yours?
I don't even know what you're going off about and I am not dedicating another minute to trying to decode why you sound like a child who had their ice cream taken away when all you've done here is whinge at people who seem to care a lot more than you.