Raymond Genovese
- Joined Mar 5, 2016
- 1,653
This thread started as the TS claiming to want to know why people vote. It continued as an exchange between the TS and now, at least one other participant, as an effort to justify not voting on the basis of it having no effect, being statistically non-significant (note that non-significance is not a test of equality, but that is a statistical issue) and being ineffectual. Whether or not it is simply a provocative and disingenuous position, as I have suggested, The TS and supporters’ position is clear: There is no reason to vote because it doesn’t matter.
Just as the TS asked why one would vote while claiming that it is meaningless, I ask why a person does not vote. While the original position offers the premise that voting is ineffectual, and thus, irrational, my opinion is that those who engage in the “I don’t vote” behavior, in general, do so for one of three reasons, but I welcome the offer of additional reasons.
1. Religious and/or genuine (not just convenient) philosophical views. This, I believe, is the rarest of categories, but does exist. A member of the Jehovah’s Witnesses religion falls into this category. I note that, in general, people who don’t vote for this reason do not proselytize in this regard. That is, they do not directly encourage others not to vote (or challenge why they do), but may very well encourage others to join their religion.
2. Too lazy. This, I believe is the most common category. It takes an effort to vote. You have to register (in most States) and you have to identify yourself. You also need to educate yourself on the ballot and the issues and the candidates – at least in order to vote rationally. Moreover, there exists the comfort of diffusion of responsibility, making it easy to “hide”. They don’t issue “I didn’t Vote” stickers. In this thread, the hiding is done by presumed anonymity. I note that those in this category are the ones to pronounce loudly that voting simply does not matter, despite all evidence to the contrary.
3. Narcissism. These are the folks that believe that they are above the system and not a part of the system, again, despite all evidence to the contrary. They believe that they are not a part of the very system that they depend on every moment of their lives. These are the folks that think they are smarter than 95%-99% of the people out there. They know that voting doesn’t matter because of their perceived superiority – they have proclaimed it, thus, it is fact. While they also intellectually claim that people are more similar than dissimilar, it only applies to others and not themselves, because they are special. They claim a right based on self-selection and that right allows them to rationalize that they do not need to engage in civic duties like voting or jury duty, since they are above civilization. While I have some forgiveness for the luxury of youth when they behave that way, in my view, any mature adult in this category is clearly misguided to the point of dysfunction, if not pathology. These are the folks who howl the loudest when they believe they are the victim of some civil action.
The issue comes up around election time since that is when we hear the call to vote most often. It is when their “I don’t vote because it doesn’t matter” position is scrutinized the most. That is understandable.
Just as the TS asked why one would vote while claiming that it is meaningless, I ask why a person does not vote. While the original position offers the premise that voting is ineffectual, and thus, irrational, my opinion is that those who engage in the “I don’t vote” behavior, in general, do so for one of three reasons, but I welcome the offer of additional reasons.
1. Religious and/or genuine (not just convenient) philosophical views. This, I believe, is the rarest of categories, but does exist. A member of the Jehovah’s Witnesses religion falls into this category. I note that, in general, people who don’t vote for this reason do not proselytize in this regard. That is, they do not directly encourage others not to vote (or challenge why they do), but may very well encourage others to join their religion.
2. Too lazy. This, I believe is the most common category. It takes an effort to vote. You have to register (in most States) and you have to identify yourself. You also need to educate yourself on the ballot and the issues and the candidates – at least in order to vote rationally. Moreover, there exists the comfort of diffusion of responsibility, making it easy to “hide”. They don’t issue “I didn’t Vote” stickers. In this thread, the hiding is done by presumed anonymity. I note that those in this category are the ones to pronounce loudly that voting simply does not matter, despite all evidence to the contrary.
3. Narcissism. These are the folks that believe that they are above the system and not a part of the system, again, despite all evidence to the contrary. They believe that they are not a part of the very system that they depend on every moment of their lives. These are the folks that think they are smarter than 95%-99% of the people out there. They know that voting doesn’t matter because of their perceived superiority – they have proclaimed it, thus, it is fact. While they also intellectually claim that people are more similar than dissimilar, it only applies to others and not themselves, because they are special. They claim a right based on self-selection and that right allows them to rationalize that they do not need to engage in civic duties like voting or jury duty, since they are above civilization. While I have some forgiveness for the luxury of youth when they behave that way, in my view, any mature adult in this category is clearly misguided to the point of dysfunction, if not pathology. These are the folks who howl the loudest when they believe they are the victim of some civil action.
The issue comes up around election time since that is when we hear the call to vote most often. It is when their “I don’t vote because it doesn’t matter” position is scrutinized the most. That is understandable.